Dublin in the 70`s

Dublin in the 70`s
Dublin in the 70`s

Thursday 16 July 2015

Purple (colour) by Noel MacEntee



A mix of the primary colours of red and blue.
The red of passion balanced by the blue of reason,
or the real by the ideal, or love by wisdom, or
earth by heaven, or
psychologically, for union of opposing energies
within an individual.
In Taoism, a transition between Yang and Ying.
Beyond kingly splendour,
much of its symbolic meaning comes from
the fact that it brings opposites together.
Christian symbolism relates purple to
spiritual process and growth.
Signifying martyrdom as a devoted “witnessing”.
Used on the altar at penitential seasons of
fasting and sober reflection, as Advent and Lent.
Christ portrayed in purple at the time of the Passion,
signifying the paradoxical union: the union of
divine and human nature combined in one being.
Imaginal Pope cloaked in the ambiguity
of majestic purple.
Regal hue of spiritual and secular royalty,
purple possesses a whole spectrum of colour.
Fruits and Flora offered to us by Nature;
Lavender, lilac, plum, grape and aubergine.
The purple of livid wounds and
the washed purples of the dying sun.
Roman “Tyrian purple” represented
wealth, worldly position and honour,
worn exclusively by the famous and powerful,
by law only by the Caesars themselves.
The Tyrian dye, precious and costly,
was made from a Mediterranean sea snail.
Roman purple lives on in:“Purple prose”,
a term used for rich showy writing,
full of ornate phrases.
“The precious purple tincture” was
a term for the Alchemists goal.
Jung translated the alchemical fantasy
into the idea of a spectrum.
It is through meditation that instinct
can be realised and assimilated into
the service of integrity, hence themselves
“purple robe”.
The many symbol systems:- the alchemical,
the Roman, the Aztec and Incan, the Chinese -
we find that the highest, most sacred values
are represented by purple.




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