Foreword to Four Fairy Tales

The colored booklet of the Waldorf-Astoria, Stuttgart, no year, no. 29 [1918]; also in: Through the spirit to the realization of the reality of the human riddle, Berlin, no year.

The following fairy-tale pictures came about when I felt compelled in my dramas to have characters say things that, as experiences of the soul, would immediately lose their essence if they were to be expressed in any other way than in such pictures. It seems to me that they can be taken out of the dramas and accepted as such pictures in their own right. For what is painted in these pictures can occur as an inner experience in every human soul. I have found people who found the fairy tales “difficult to understand”. I believe that they only feel this way if they lack the childlikeness of mind that a soul should retain through all ages in order to experience in certain hours that which “no mind of the reasonable” can experience in its true form. But I also believe that anyone who wants to interpret them rationally does not understand what is meant in the pictures. I myself, as they were presented to my soul, felt nothing but the content of the pictures in my soul. It was far from my mind to embody a “deeper meaning” that should be understood as something different from what the pictures say through them. But I do believe that certain secrets, which are contained in the life of nature and the human world, reveal themselves to the soul only when the soul has the sense to behold them in such images. Such secrets elude the human mind when it seeks to capture them in concepts. But they surrender to the intuitive perception that comes to life in the image.

Rudolf Steiner.

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