rchology of Color
BY
J.
C. F.
GRUMBINE
WASHINGTON,
D.C.
Psychology of Color
BY
J.
C. F.
GRUMBINE
AUTHOR OF "THE SYSTEM OF PHILOSOPHY CONCERNING DIVINITY" "TELEPATHY," "M ELCH IZ ED ECK,
THE SECRET DOCTRINE OF THE
BIBLE," ETC.
THE ORDER OF THE WHITE ROSE
CLEVELAND, OHIO
G?81 p
(Copyrighted 1921)
JAN 23 1922
r.!,A654359
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I.
Psychology as Applied to Supersensitiveness
and the Finer Effluences of Matter.
.
CHAPTER
Color.
Its
II.
General Effect Upon the Senses.
Stimulant, Irritant, Depressive
CHAPTER
The Dictionary
III.
of Color as
Psychologically Determined
CHAPTER
IV.
Color in the Nursery as a Moral, Somnolent and Corrective Agency
CHAPTER
V.
Temperamental Colors and Their
Psychic Reagencies
CHAPTER VI.
Dress. Why Brides We\r White
Color in
the Mourners Black.
Customs Analyzed
and
International
CHAPTER
I.
Psychology as Applied to Supersensitiveness
and the Finer Effluences of Matter.
Science
is
showing how much
finer,
thinner,
more impenetrable, denser in electrical and chemical substance and tenuity the ether is than any
known gas. Indeed, it is more and more believed that matter in all its infinite forms stands
up under so many kinds of conditions which demand other more highly developed and, perhaps,
differently constituted
mind
to
functions of the
human
apprehend and perceive them.
which the
equipped, is the most natural
process in the world, but to transcend this use,
to see, as the cat, and smell as the dog, depend
upon specialization of a sense beyond its normal
That the cat and dog have the sense of
use.
To use any
normal
man
of the five senses, with
is
sight and smell, extended in power, is true, but
it
is
also true that this
made
same
specialized organ
it were not for
the finer particles of matter, which their organs
detect, but which make no impression on the
ordinary senses of man. For the lack of a better word to express this finer chemical matter,
the word effluence is employed.
Matter is in
could not be
available, if
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
a state of disintegration.
Particles are separating from the gross, compact mass all the time.
Chemical combination is opposed by chemical
segregation.
No matter
really at rest.
is
It
may appear
superficially at rest, but this is only a passing
phenomenon
of its transition.
Its electrons
are
in a perpetual whirl of high speed vortices. SteeJ
is eaten up by the acids of the atmosphere, and
the granitic rocks dissolve under similar attri-
tions.
The dust
by attraction,
of the universe, held together
is
separated
by repulsion, and
science has not yet been able to find
its
con-
passes through the three
dimensions into the fourth, and back again withAnd yet not,
out betraying the occult secret.
crete resting place.
It
however, without imparting an effluence, which
is matter's ghostly shadow which betrays its
This effluence may be called
invisible presence.
an emanation. It is not without its appeal to
the mind, although the mind may not consciousNow, in order to perceive the presly sense it.
ence of these finer particles of matter, and know
only necessary to pass
to the superThis sense
sensuous, called supersensitiveness.
development or culture is not attained except
of their existence,
it
is
from ordinary sense perception,
under certain conditions.
Fortunately, there are
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
many who
are born clairsentiently*, that
are able to feel, see, hear, smell, taste,
is,
who
what
to
the average man is unknown. It is due
not only to the virility and virtue of the senses,
but to an aloofness or separation from vicious
The person whose several senses
indulgences.
in part,
are kept pure and clean has the advantage over
one who is interested more in sensations or the
pleasures which they afford than in their higher
uses.
deprave the senses is to force a
mental faculties and processes
which inhibit and sometimes atrophy them to
higher and more sublime impressions. This is why
A
abstemiousness is preferred to indulgence.
sense can be corrupted as easily as a moral action.
So when the effluences of matter impress
the sensory the mind should be sufficiently sensitized to permit whatever sense is employed in
any given perception to have a clear right of
way. Obstructions which are inherent in mind,
are more fatal to results than alien or external
physical influences such as are apt to disturb a
To
vitiate or
condition upon
perfect
comes
in
Supersensitiveness
concentration.
be-
time a habit.
*Clairsentiently
is
here
supernormal character.
used
to
express
acute
sensitiveness
of
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
Partial subjectification of one's senses, that
is,
applying them to perceive these finer forces and
effluences of matter, which are extremely delicate and unobtrusive in their impact upon the
sensory is necessary and inevitable. Each sense
must be rendered acute that is, as perfect in
its service as it is possible, before one can hope
to perceive the finer emanations.
No sense is
made more alive by destruction. Habitual em-
ployment of one's senses in an unrestricted attention to their value, efficiency and sublime service to the soul, will accomplish wonders.
When
understood, as it will be with the widespread publication of the findings of the Psychical Research Society that as Dr. Anna Bonus
Kingsford wrote over fifty years ago, "Matter
in its grossest form is the last term of a descending category", we shall not limit the descending
or ascending scale of variable forms of matter
which co-ordinate with the equally different conditions, states and functions of consciousness,
but will be watchful as well as careful of their
connections and inter-relations and observe how
the interior expression of life and intelligence
modifies the forms in which they manifest. In
this way, effects can be perceived, analyzed, tabulated, and a theory at last advanced which will
explain the unity of natural and spiritual law.
it
is
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
The interpenetration
no
of matter
less true of force, life
and
by the ether,
is
How,
is
spirit.
Science is dangerously
be discovered.
near the secret, if not the solution. Professor
Thompson has shown how very illusive and thin
super
is the partition between electrons and
yet to
energy, which he does not call mind or spirit,
but which physical science is slowly admitting
to be in the ascending category of "energy."
However, potential energy is with life and intelmost remarkable attributes if such
ligence, its
they
may be
termed,
is
its
seemingly dualistic
and yet harmonial and unitary nature. Is there
any possible definition of "matter" that can define
"mind", or "mind" that can define "matter"?
And yet in the natural world, these two forms
of the one and same energy interplay in a symphony of life, at once complete and divine. This
energy is more than force and for the lack of
a scientific word which will convey its compliments of power it is called, "Divinity." In the
word "Divinity," there is all that is comprehended by the word spirit, soul, intelligence, mind,
personality, form, matter; for Divinity is
not less than the least, but greater than the
greatest of its evolutions or expressions. Therefore, the adaptability and elasticity of matter
are not properties or potentialities of matter, as
life,
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
tation
is understood, but modes of the manifesand expression of Divinity. So that, if
one
dealing with the effluences of matter, or
matter
is
the supersensitiveness of mind, both are within
the function and sphere of Divinity; and,
for the Divinity to perceive, not only its
prerogatives, to
of consciousness
there
is
know
and
its
own
life,
states
it
is
own
and planes
but to realize that
a unity of free, intelligent action be-
tween what seems within (function, sensitiveness, mind) and without (organism, matter, efPsychology is showing that however
fluence).
pragmatic the operations and acts of the normal
and supernormal powers of the mind should be,
action alone cannot gauge, determine or reveal
that is within, above and beyond mind and
Do not imagine that there is
yet of Divinity.
any mystery implied in this statement or use of
the word. On the contrary, there is so eminent
all
an authority as Ralph Waldo Emerson, who,
confronting the same reality, declared that
"there is that which is, but can never become,
and that which is becoming but can never be; n
and Dr. C. S. Whitly in his essay on Leibnitz
remarks that "the essence of things is too intangible to be caught in the coarse meshes of human
logic." Backunin says "Science comprehends the
thought of reality; not reality itself, the thought
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
10
not life." So, however occult matter and
are or however organism and mind or personality and Divinity are related, nothing supernatural or mysterious is implied by the connection.
It is nature on another plane of experiof
life,
life
mental expression, Burbanking her latent, but
potential powers in a dualistic relationship, without in any sense, interrupting or destroying any
lower, normal, mental or physical expression of
the unity of life. Physical senses perceive physical objects through physical sensations and form
mental concepts, accordingly. The gamut of sensations, measures coarse and dynamic as well as
fine and static impressions.
As a whole they are
grouped under sense perceptions. They are
known through the sensory. They are of the
objective, normal mind.
But there are other
impressions that may fill the gap between the
lowest audible and visible vibrations,
and the
and which we know exist, as for instance,
the ultra violet and infra red rays which can be
detected by chemical processes.
These can also
be felt and detected by and through one's Divinether,
without resorting to external, physical apSupersensitiveness is the film which
snaps these impressions and gives it to the
mind, when it is ready to develop it. Without
supersensitiveness, these effluences could not be
ity
paratus.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
11
caught or imprisoned by the mind, and the keener and finer
more
it
is
one's sensitiveness, that
becomes supernormal, the
is
the
less likely are
these impressions to be denied or neglected or
Academically, psychology has stood in its
lost.
own light for over a century, despite the rapid
accumulation of new and strange occult facts
which have forced upon it a new view point.
Despite, also, the verdict of men of science concerning the spiritual origin of mind as well as
the universe. Must the mind be abandoned as
plane after plane of finer matter is discovered
and exposed to view? Must it be forgotten that
mind has no place in this interior or finer field
of forces to function on its own account, to explore this field of effluences, which belong rightly
to the sphere of its supernormal powers as embraced in the word, supersensitiveness?
Every object in nature is enveloped in an aura
or cloud of emanations, which seems to be its
It discharges this aura by chemfield of action.
Conscious inical attraction and disintegration.
telligence parallels and responds to every form
of matter, and whether gross or coarse or fine,
no outer excitation or stimulus fails to make a
record on the nerve and sense centres of percepMore than this. The impression is retion.
flected, so that however dynamic or delicate and
12
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
unobtrusive it may be originally, the secondary
As the infra red and ultra
effect is not lost.
violet rays produce effects upon life, which cannot be measured or determined as are the primary colors by usual, mechanical or chemical
processes, but need an instrument peculiarly fitted as is the bolometre for detecting the infra
red rays, and the fluroscope for detecting the
ultra violet, so these phychological effects can
only be gotten at by the employment of supernormal powers normal powers so trained, deepened and purified, so that the sensitive perception can apprehend them.
Thus graded forms
of matter from the solid to the electrical and
etheric, relate to life and consciousness on the
ascending scale of sublimated psychic powers.
The sharp, concrete line cannot, of course, be
drawn experimentally between normal and supernormal powers, except to show in practice
that the normal are the potential supernormal
and the supernormal are the latent normal
powers; which means, that when the supernormal powers are active, they are normal, and
when the normal powers are active, the supernormal are passive or inactive. For experimentally, the supernormal use of any normal power
is different, not because it is an infringement of
natural law, but because it is tracing the grosser
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
13
impact of sensation on the sensory, not through
memory, or a cognition of the physical sense
perception, but through the perception or feeling
of the finer effects which cannot be detected by
the physical senses at all.
This is in part the
function of the subjective or what the late Dr.
Frederick Myers called "the subliminal mind," in
contra
distinction
"supraliminal
mind."
to
This
eliminates
mystery or miracle from the
psychological process, and proves
it
to be scien-
demonstrably pragmatic. Thousands of cases could be cited of how these emanations of matter which are so impossible to get
at by any known physical process, and yet, suffuse the forms of things, are discovered by anyone whose supernormal power of sensitiveness
(super sensitiveness) has become active even to
tific,
because
a small degree. For instance, however uncanny
or impossible the facts may be, it is a common
experience, that in certain houses, where crime
has been committed, a sensitive person feels the
"atmosphere" of the criminal, as well as the
emanations, which the criminal's aura, and the
physical struggle of a victim imparted to the
room, in which the deed was committed, and that
too, without knowing that any crime had taken
place. The wall, pictures, carpets, furniture, even
the room bespeaks the horror of the crime. This
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
14
may
occur years after the act took place, and
the room should be empty, re-papered or
refurnished.
Emanations are so powerfully
present and vital to the consciousness that can
apprehend them. One dislikes a street, or a locality, houses or things, not because of any outward ugliness in appearance, but because some
sinister influence of one person or a number of
persons, quite unknown to the sensitive, has impregnated them with what is so unpleasantly and
disagreeably repulsive.
Insomnia, restlessness,
fear, horror of impending disaster may come
to any one at night who, resting on a pillow or
bed, in a hotel or a home, in which a previous
guest, or guests were thus mentally disturbed.
These emanations discharged from the human
personality in subtile forms of matter adhere to
objects, and even time, the great healer, cannot
erase the effects.
Involved negatives of these
finer, kinetic influences adhere in the soul or
substance of matter, and what hitherto has been
tabooed by science or regarded as superstition,
is at last proven to be neither occult, nor supernatural, but a neglected field of finer vibrations,
too delicately unobtrusive to be detected except
even
if
by supersensitiveness.
Color, in its appeal to the human mind, affects
nerve and emotional centers through its efllu-
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
15
ences and these finer wave lengths of energy are
perceived and their influence felt by that function of the soul which is supersensitiveness,
which belongs to each one and is his psychic endowment, however unconscious he may be of it.
it
Perhaps, upon very close analytical scrutiny,
will be found that the psychology of this psy-
chic supersensitiveness will reveal a co-ordination of color vibrations to moral impulses, so
that there will be shown an ethical side to color,
which hitherto has been but faintly or indefinitely appreciated.
So that good or evil, moral and
immoral effects may be involved in every human
perception of physical light as light is reflected
in
However, involved and
color.
illusive
ethical side of the psychology of color
man
fect of color on the morals of
What
is
true of color
is
is
is,
the
the ef-
self-evident.
also true of sound.
The moral quality must not be associated with
the mere sensation and perception of the pleasure or pain which color may produce. In highly
organized or sensitized bodies, high, medium or
low pitch of sound waves produce proportionately painful and pleasurable effects, as witness as
shown by Mr. Aitken in his book on "THE
FIVE WINDOWS OF THE SOUL," how
and scorpions writhe
in pain
when
reptiles
the notes of
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
16
a piccolo are sounded and become enchanted
the flute is played.
To a serpent, a piccolo would be an instrument of torture and he
would attack and kill under its influence. The
moral effect on the reptile is to make it ill behaved, that is bad; on the contrary, the flute
would iron out its wrinkled coils, subdue its temper, soothe its nervous system and so cause it
to be well behaved, that is good.
when
Similarly, some forms of color excitation intensify the sensation of pain and the moral effect is bad, while other forms soothe the nerves
and the moral
effect is good.
This is especially
the therapeutic and pathological
values of the various forms of electrical discharge as the violet rays which overcome, to an
extent more and more appreciated by chromo-
significant
in
pathologists and electro therapeuti cists, functional and organic diseases.
Dr. Edward Babbit in
his pioneer
work on "The Philosophy
of Light"
furnishes unquestionable evidences of the beneficial and healing quality of color.
Color in nature is not only ornamental, but
It serves a purpose in vegetable, insect,
useful.
bird, fish
offensive
and all animal life which is not only
and defensive, and hence protective, but
contributes valuable suggestions relative to the
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
17
nature and habits of the species along lines of
struggle and survival.
If red, flaunted in the face of a bull infuriates
is none the less dythough not so spontaneous,
among men and women of low or elemental natures.
For red is thermal, a stimulus, an irritant, a fiery energy which arouses the blood and
passion of the animal nature, whether in beast
or man, while blue is a counter irritant, is depressing, electrical and soothing in its effect
upon the nerves. Blue is an antidote for the
effects of red, as red is an antidote for the effects
the beast, surely, the effect
namic and
hostile
of blue.
neutralizing effect of red or blue
produced by the red or blue being modified by
white.
The purer the color, that is, the more
is
transparent
tions.
it
is
the more forceful is its vibracolor is tinctured with mat-
The more a
ter of coarser substance
the
or slower vibrations,
more mixed and confusing
is its effect
upon
the sensory.
both physical, (that is chemical) and
(mental) in its effect upon the
mind. The chemical effect is a nervous one; the
psychological effect is psychic.
The nervous
system reflects its disturbances upon the mind,
hence the sensation of pain and pleasure, and
Color
is
psychological
18
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
emotional states which accompany them.
This is true of all the colors. Primary colors
are radical, elemental and fixed in their vibrations or wave lengths, and hence, when once the
effects of the sensations which they produce on
the mind are known, their uniformity can always
be depended upon. Red as thermal and a stimulent, and blue as electrical and depressing, act
uniformly on all forms of life. So with yellow.
Light by the spectrum analysis proves that its
seven colors are made up of vibrations or wave
lengths of mathematical exactness. If the seven
colors are modified in any way whatsoever, this
mathematical condition or unity is disturbed and
disarranged, and the effect upon the senses will
be determined by the alien substance which
causes the modification.
The difference can be
gotten as much by calculation as by subtle, psychological analysis.
For instance, the effect of
pink is different from light blue. Pink or red
in any form is a physical stimulant to the sensibilities, while blue is a physical depressant, but
a spiritual inspiration, so that by blue or its
modifications, a cooling influence or feeling is obtained, while by the red a warming influence or
feeling follows.
Surely, therefore, if one is trying to get these two opposite effects he will be
careful to use the correct one.
the
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
19
applied one given to exaggeration or falsification, should be treated
with blue and often the brilliant blues of turquoise, Italian or peacock blue, or Alice blue
As chromopathically
and efficaciously than the
Children who with active imaginations are apt to exaggerate or tell stories,
with only fancy for the foundation, should have
for a nursery a blue room and at night should
be put to sleep in a bed room papered in a delicate shade of blue and be covered with a blue
comforter. On the contrary, a child that is very
sober, thoughtful, spiritual, or even matter of
fact, should have a pink papered play room,
with a bedroom decorated with pink roses and
It will at
be covered with a pink comforter.
tints
delicate
and
white
once be perceived why
children,.
for
of blue and red are mostly chosen
The choice is not accidental, but deeply rooted in
work more
quickly
lighter effects.
a mother's intuition or instinct of what is most
Just red or
helpful and appealing to a child.
blue might be most irritating. This would be so
White, beto various individualized children.
cause of its suggestiveness of purity and cleanliness, having all colors latent in its form, while
pink, arousing gentle heat waves and so expressing and impressing the emotional quality of love
and amiability, while blue because cooling, in-
20
spiring
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
modesty,
humility,
goodness,
love
of
truth, in short, spirituality, arouses cooling vi-
brations and so causing to radiate the thoughts
Thus color and
of goodness and moral beauty.
its psychological effects, concealed in the gamut
of slow, rapid, coarse and fine, super slow
and
play unconin a powand
system
sciously upon our nervous
influence.
erful but invisible way, touch and
coarse and super rapid and
fine,
CHAPTER
II.
Color; Its General Effect Upon the Nerves
The
subtile effect of color
system and the senses
psychological.
is
The physical
upon the nervous
physical
as well
result
direct
is
as
and
the psychological is indirect. Involved in the
psychological is an emotional as well as moral
effect or influence.
Any appeal of color to the
senses is either agreeable or disagreeable, that
pleasurable or painful and it is this emotionwhich is the transcendent influence that
translates and carries the message of color to
is,
al effect
the mind.
Color serves
many
purposes.
It
not only acts
on the nerves, as a stimulant or depressant, but
serves as an ornament as well as a protection
as in the case of the plumage of birds and the
skins of animals. Among the fish, in temperate
waters the color of the scales and skin vary from
a silvery gray to a silvery brown with delicate
tints of the rainbow colors intermingling, while
in tropical waters, we find the most brilliant red,
blue, indigo, violet, yellow, turquois and black.
22
The
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
electrical
and magnetic
effects
of the
cli-
mate, heat and cold, with their stimulating and
depressing influences are indicated by these colors. When nature enploys color in her creations,
she has ends in view other than caprice. There
is every reason for believing that color is not accidental, but a means of affording individualized forms of life their nice relations to heat and
cold, light and darkness, on which all other
things being equal, they largely depend, and by
which their maximum of pleasure is obtained.
The great painters, Michael Angelo, DaVinci,
Raphael, Murillo, used the primary colors in
their pigments most effectively, and as they followed a religious canon in the use of coloration
the divine blues, superb reds, royal yellows, warm
browns and glorious purples and violets, conveyed spiritual ideas which the colors symbolized.
Blue, as we know symbolizes truth; red, love;
yellow, wisdom; brown, earthliness; purple and
violet, dignity
and
spiritual elevation.
the medieval artists
more than
later
Perhaps
painters
understood the psychology of color and schemed
and spread their colors on canvas with this idea ever in mind. Virgin white,
not only signifies cleanliness, but purity, and
naturally the mind is consciously as well as unconsciously affected by it.
"White as wool,"
their technique
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
28
"pure as ice," "chaste as snow," are sayings
which convey the electrical concept of purity
which is universally accepted the world over as
the triune interpretation of white, while "black as
sin," conveys the opposite concept. If, therefore,
a color symbolist or a psychologist wishes to
impress us, with purity and virtue or vice and
he need but hold before us the white or
sin,
form
black, the positive or negative
of the light.
He may
even use scarlet, for sin has frequently
been likened to scarlet, for reasons which are
psychological as well as ethical; for scarlet
and
sins be as scarlet"
in
(red)
is
"Though your
case of murder or
stain on a white garment;
so,
passion, "they shall be as white as wool," as in
the case of the spotless purity of the lamb, or
the seamless white garment of Jesus, symbolically pre-figuring the radiant glory of the Christ
consciousness or the soul clothed with the ineffable light of the sun.
Vibrations
the Ancients.
were known and understood by
Note their use in precious stones
and dress.
The physical science of the light assures us
that each color has a distinct frequency or viThe red has a
bration due to wave lengths.
larger wave length than the blue, which is pro-
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
24
portionately
much
shorter.
That
is
why
the
grave or slow and quick notes or tones of the
drum appeal to the savage or uncultivated mind.
They express in sound what the red expresses
in color, while the neutral notes or tones of the
flute, oboe or French horn and violins, appeal
They express in sound
to the more refined.
what the blue expresses
in color.
The synchronism and synthesis of effect should
be about the same in equal or similar sound and
light waves by the law of proportion.
When
this
is
understood, no one will doubt
power to soothe the
that music or color have
savage breast.
In order to direct the student of chromopathy
in a psychological analysis of color,
an attempt
be made to outline in a definite way the effects of certain colors on the emotional nature.
So that effects may be checked accordingly to
the color influence and the student may go as
far as he chooses in his experiments in a much
wider experimental field which is here but vaguewill
ly indicated.
It
will
be perceived that what
is
regarded
as a "temptation" and even a "sin" in certain
systems of Christian theology, is due as much to
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
25
the subtile influence of color on the imagination
as to human passion. Thus violence to ones
human nature follows an emotional color bath is
as certain, as grave or slow, gay or quick sounds
Of
opposite emotional effects.
course, to allow these physical and sense excitations in the forms of vibration to influence one
produce their
against ones better nature makes the temptation
possible, but the urge to do so is often not so
much a power from within as from without.
If the psychologist wishes to pursue an extensive and exhaustive investigation of the experimental phase of the subject, endless cases can
be found to prove the discovery. We have carelessly grown up in the midst of the riot and
chaos of color influences as to ignore their phys-
moral and spiritual values. They
can be and are helps or hindrances to the spirFor instance, black is the ecclesiasitual life.
ical,
tical
subtile,
or
canonical
color
in
the
Christian
world for mourning. Could any color be more
depressing and illogical for a Christian Church
to accept, that teaches the hope and knowledge
of a resurrection and a life beyond death?
Black negatives all joy, hope, or expectation of
personal survival and is it not a hopeless and
hideous, though conventional spectacle of human
ignorance to wear black for mourning when, to
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
26
say the least, one should rejoice to wear white
or gray, or electric colors as blue, since the message of Jesus Christ was and is the message of
survival of the human personality after death
and in short, "the resurrection and the life"? Is
not black a rebellious contradiction and defiant
denial of what the Christian Church believes and
teaches? Then why use black? Why not employ hopeful, cheerful, stimulating colors, instead of black, which is the pall and symbol of
gross ignorance, woe, evil death, non-entity?
Many Oriental nations wear violet, purple, white
and they certainly do so with more wisdom than
the Christian nations of the West.
This
is but one conspicuous instance where the
depresses one.
The faith in externals
should be demonstrated by color as much as by
creed and ritual.
color
In the future, the psychology of color will play
a more conspicuous and conscious part in our
moral education with the distinct advantage that
when any color is displayed in dress, or interior
and exterior house decorations, each one will
know the idea or group of ideas which the colors
and color schemes convey, very much as in the
selection and arrangement of flowers for indoor
or table decoration, the Japanese ladies express
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
their
etiquette
their guests.
If
27
and the subtle relationship to
anyone wishes to give warmth
an afternoon or evening house party, colors
which stimulate should be chosen. Especially
to
be so if the hostess is in feeble health,
or has just recovered from sickness. Should one
wish to appear simply modest, colors which are
not dynamic but spiritual in their suggestiveness
will this
will be used in dress.
Suggestions of delicate refinement might be
certain shades of orange, blues and
Amicability can be translated into pink
violets.
and light blue colors, or delicate tints of violet,
Elemental or primary
purple and lavenders.
colors often irritate a highly sensitive nature,
whereas were these same natures ill, the thermal
red and electrical blue, would act as gentle or
powerful stimulants. While red will stimulate,
blue will depress the same natures and vice
versa, complimentary and neutral colors are less
dynamic, but at the same time act as a buffer to
made by
the reds, blues and yellows.
CHAPTER
III.
The Dictionary
of Color Meanings as
Psychologically Determined
Each color has a distinct vibration and nervopsychic reaction and registers a particular sensation.
Therefore, emotionally, the sensations
produced by color can be interpreted as helpful
or harmful, pleasant or painful.
Patient and
long observation has developed what may here
be designated a color dictionary. In this dictionary, human temperaments and psycho physiological conditions are considered.
While the dictionary is experimental, it is nevertheless workable. All colors are classified and explained under
three special heads.
1
Mental
Motive
Vital
The first are symbolized by the blues, the second by the reds, and the third by the yellows, in
primary and complimentary forms. To attempt
to standardize any dictionary of color meanings
at this experimental stage of psychology, would
be futile and dangerous, for the reason that the
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
29
science of the psychology of color is in its infancy.
It may follow, however, that the dic-
tionary here offered which is the first of the kind
attempted, may serve as a basis for the serious
experimenter in this new
Color
field
of psychology.
Interpretation
Red
Love, feeling.
Yellow
Will, intuition,
Blue
Truth, thought,
Orange
Aspiration.
Green
Immortality, growth, youth, hope.
Straw
Intuitive perception.
Turquoise
wisdom.
intellect,
spirit.
Culture, morality, spirituality, infinity,
immensity.
Ecrue
Human passion,
Cafe-au-lait
Semi-consciousness, a worldly
Antwerp Bleu Beauty, power,
Coffee
Indecision,
desire, earthliness.
life.
nobility, integrity.
materiality,
attach-
ment, sensuous consciousness and
pleasure.
Purple
Royalty, Glory, Exaltation, Honor,
Attraction, Success,
Truthfulness.
M a g n e tic
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
30
Drab
Potential
Clairvoyance,
Genius, Precocity.
Sapphire
Spiritual perception,
Loveliness.
Seal
Brown
Instinct,
Realization,
Repulsion,
Coldness, Indifference,
Physical Comfort.
Violet
Love of Truth and Good, Consecration, Humility, Lowliness, Divine Zeal and Earnest of Spirit.
Mauve
Spiritual Affection.
Cherry
Connubial Love and Devotion.
Innocence, Harmlessness, Steadlastness, Patience, Prescience.
Salmon Pink
Ardency,
Lilac
Sweetness, Intensity,
ness, Impulsiveness.
Scarlet
Pearl
Buoyancy, Exuberancy,
Love of the World.
Aggressive-
Temper, Lust, Horror, Murder, Hate.
Grey Unobtrusiveness, Shyness, Taste,
Refinement, Spiritual Recognition.
Melon
Fullness
Magnetism,
of Life, Vivacity,
Impressibility, Susceptibility.
Olive
Green
Earthly,
Deceitful,
Treacherous,
Unfaithfulness, Fear, Jealousy.
Robins Egg Blue
Faithfulness,
Love of Truth,
Decision, Constancy, Trust.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
Pink
Gentleness,
Amiability,
Human
Friends, Pure
Heliotrope
Seriousness,
31
Fondness
for
Love.
Sadness, Individuality,
Loneliness.
Deep hope.
Green Differentiation,
Apple Green
Nile
Change,
Restless-
ness, Disappointment, Femininity.
Red Rose
Love
of
Sex,
Human Love
in
all
Natural Forms.
Lavender
Gentleness,
Soberness, Subtlety, Pen-
etration.
Magenta
Intense
Humanity, Philanthropy. De-
votion to Unpopular Cause or Truth,
Decided Character.
Corn
Light-heartedness,
Freedom
of
Mind,
Pleasure.
Cyan
Blue
Occultism,
Deepness,
Melancholy,
Visionary.
Lemon
Love
of Light, Peace, Serenity, Cheer-
fulness.
Moody,
Claret
Distrust,
Suspicion,
Weakness,
Passion.
Ocher
Earthly,
Vehemence, Coarse Affection,
and Sensual Attractions.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
32
Peacock Blue
Repose,
Self-love,
Egotism, Con-
centration.
Canary
Sunshiny, Brightness, Love of Spiritual
Things.
Clairvoyance.
Brown Earthly.
White Rose
Fawn Love of
Gray
Silence,
Power, Realization, God.
Life, Children, Nature, Helpless-
ness.
P o w e
Imperialism,
Grandeur,
Strength, Tyranny, Cruelty, War.
Gobelin Blue Same as Peacock Blue, but not so
Denned.
Terra Cotta Earthly.
Buff Perception, Sense, Reason, Judgment.
Cardinal
r,
Maroon Earthly
but also Gentleness, Obdience.
Additional
Dull Pink
Same as
cided,
Dark Crimson
Light Blue
Pink, but Wavering, Unde-
Showing Weakness.
Wickedness.
Sweet Reasonableness and Goodness.
Pale Greenish
ous.
Blue Spasmodic,
Subtle, Impetu-
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
33
Very Passionate and Earthly.
Royal in Every Sense.
Light Yellowish Brown Hard to Please,
Bright Red Very Pronounced and Forward.
Orange Brown Subtle and Worldly-wise.
Dark Brown Diabolical,
DestrucPale Yellow
love of
a Mystic, Poet,
Dreamer, Seer.
Dark Blue The same as Indigo, Very Occult.
Sage Green Lifelessness, Insanity, also VulgarCoarseness, Vileness.
Light Red Purple Love of favor, Power, PosiDull Orange Brown Frailty, Faulty,
Pale Greenish Blue Uniform Feeling, but EasDark Red
Purple
Irrita-
ble.
Iconoclastic,
tive.
Life,
Little
ity,
tion.
Selfish.
ily
Disturbed, Circumstantial.
Maturity, Old Age, Decay.
Pink Fickleness, Inconstancy,
Golden Brown
Dull Bluish
Flirt or Coquette.
Brown Earthly.
Dark Red Brown
Very
Disagreeable.
Bluish Pink Delightfully Entertaining, Evenly
Balanced, A Favorite.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
34
Dark Green Hate, Envy, Jealousy, Spite.
Dull Orange Adolescent Understanding, Youthful,
Love of
Life.
Roughness, Coarseness, Obstinacy.
Deep Rose Pink Devotion to the Personal and
Constancy of Love.
Gray Blue Depressed
Emerald Green Same as Pure Green.
Lead Color Psychic Power and Expression.
Dark Red Malevolent.
Purplish Black Black Magic, Necromancy.
Purplish WhiteWhite Magic, Leucomancy.
Neutral Grey A Mediator, Meditation, ReconLeather
Spirits.
ciliation, Justification.
This tabulation is incomplete because it is
merely suggestive and not final. Meditation and
observation will lead to precise and unfailing
and psycho therapeutic generaliza-
definitions
Both color and music arouse as well as
memory, imagination and ideality
There is no magic about the co-ordination between color and nervo psychic susceptibility. In
tions.
stimulate the
a very subtile as well subtle way the soul responds to color, but the appeal is first to the
eye, then to the perception and afterward to the
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
35
The subjective possibility of color is limOne can mentally visualize and telepath
color to a recipient and produce the same results
as objective color. As this phase of the subject
soul.
itless.
understood, far reaching benefits will be obtained; even color blindness will be no barrier
is
to the mental process.
The
effort is certain, be-
cause a subjective influence on the imagination.
Man's resourcefulness grows as he enters the
larger and illimitable field of his psychic and
divine potentalities.
CHAPTER
IV.
Color in the Nursery as a Moral and
Corrective Agency
The nursery
the chrysalis, into which the
moral and spiritual tendencies
and habits, and from which it should emerge as
a butterfly, ready for the new life in the outside world.
The nursery should never become
even in thought or fact, a penitentiary for the
children.
Nothing harms a child more than repression.
To punish it, by confining it in a
nursery is to subvert the ideal and actual function of the nursery and condemn it in the
child's mind as a place of unhappy dreams and
unpleasant recollections. The nursery as a room,
should be the most welcome and inviting chamber in the house and next to mother's arms and
father's knees, should be the sweetest and holiest of places.
To hurry or drag a child after
committing an error or indiscretion into the nursery, and there after locking the door, forcingit to remain under threat of a more severe punis
child fashions its
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
ishment,
is
to
condemn
ation) and rob
it
of
its
it
(to the child's
37
imagin-
charm and atmosphere.
Children are more often abused than understood by parents and even nurses and governesses.
And the nursery is chosen as a short
cut to obedience, because of a lack of the knowl-
edge of child psychology. A Doctor of Divinity,
after observing the behavior of certain children
asked the mother how she ever brought her children up (there were six of them) to be so obedient and so well behaved and she answered, "by
not sparing the rod." It is doubtful, if the rod
was necessary, and today, in the best and most
cultivated families, the rod would be regarded as
a weapon of barbarism, if not of cruelty to animals. And mothers and fathers who today punish their children to force
who box
their ears and
them
into obedience,
slap their faces or jerk
their arms, for a misdemeanor, surely needed to
learn before marriage, the higher law of love,
before they ever dared to bring children into the
world. A child is a potential angel.
If abnormal or subnormal, the child needs the
wisest and most tender care in a private or public
institution, for while the angel is there, either the
brain or nervo psychic organism is deranged
and unbalanced, and
it
would be brutality and
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
38
To keep them from
is necessary, but
others
and
harming themselves
no thought of punishment should enter into their
cruelty to punish them.
If the child is a potential angel, resembling in perfect spirit the sweet little cherubs
which Raphael, Angelo and da Vinci depicted in
many of their masterpieces, it brings with it into
itL earthly atmosphere and habitation, "trailing
treatment.
clouds of glory" as Wordsworth beautifully expressed it, which should be respected even if not
sensed by hard headed and materially minded
parents.
Perhaps the colors which suggest this atmosphere, and rare state of psychic expression in an
etherial world, are most appealing to children,
as has been discovered by patient and long observations by psychological and lay experts, because they intuitively feel their influence and
perceive their message. Reds, blues, yellows,
greens, browns, purples, violets, strike the child's
eyes because most obtrusive and dynamic, but
the softer and delicate tints and shades of pink,
amber, gray and green, are
and the psychological reactions
interior and spiritual. Primary colors pro-
light blue, turquoise,
more
more
subtile
duce effects or results almost instantaneously,
while complementary colors work more slowly.
practical suggestion, although a novel one, is
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
to
39
have curtains made of certain seven or ten
which could be rolled down from their
colors
poles at the top of the ceilings of the nursery,
changing the color scheme of the wall paper,
whatever it is (and originally it should always
be either a pink or light blue figured or flowered
paper), entirely covering the entire four walls
attaching the same at the base.
As nurseries
are small rooms, the expense for such curtains
would be commensurate with the purse. These
curtains could be made of a tough paper, or
window shade cloth, which would resist wear.
These curtains could be made according to a
psychological scheme which will be given, under
that branch of Psychological Pathology known as
chromopathic psychology, and should be made to
entertain the child's mind with affirmative and
never with negative colors as black or grays,
although of course they have their beneficient
uses as the darkness, when the child is put to
sleep, which suggests absence and forgetfulness
of light and of physical objects.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
40
Chromopathic Psychology
1
Red.
Excites,
Stimulates Love and Pleasure and Overcomes Hate. For children
who are peevish, weak and nervous. A
vitalizer.
Blue
Stimulates or Excites Truth and Overcomes
Falsification,
an
Exaggerated
Ego, Selfishness, Overeating, all Indulgences and Passions, as Anger.
For
Sleepless Children.
Yellow.
Excites or Stimulates the Will,
Obedience, and is for Disobedient, Incorrigible Children.
A Color Glorious-
ly
Adapted
dren,
Who
Overcome
to Sensitive, Intuitive Chil-
Love to be
Timidity
alone.
and
Helps to
bashfulness,
Shyness.
4
Pink.
Excites or Stimulates Hope, Joy, AmFrendliness
and overcomes
Ugliness and Distemper, Lack of Sociability.
Antidote for Blues.
iability,
Light Blue.
Excites
ality,
Fondness
Love
of
and Stimulates Spiritu-
for Books, Friends,
Truth, Neatness, Honesty,
Faith, Order, Harmony, Music.
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
6.
41
Violet. Stimulates the Will and the Moral
Nature, to Soothe and Comfort, to
Arouse Conscience, to Act as a Spiritual Tonic.
Purple. Arouses a Sense of Dignity, Self
Respect, to Impress Reverence and VenCan be substituted for blue
eration.
among
8
Green.
In
older children.
lighter
shades,
Stimulates
the
of Life, Energy,
Youth, Immortality. Offers a Relief to
tired eyes and nerves and therefore is
a tonic for any nervous or mental disVitality,
Emotion
order.
Not
a Color, of course, bat can be
used to suggest Purity, Wholeness, Sin-
White
cerity, Divinity, Perfection.
10
Brown. Suggests
Matter, Naand Wood and
Earthliness,
ture, Life in the Fields
valuable for Children who are Restless to go out of doors and who on
rainy days need a color adaptable to the
is
weather.
42
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
The scheme as here suggested is but a bare
what may, in practice, prove enormously helpful in results. For the efficacy of
outline of
chromopathic psychology is in its silent rather
than visible appeal. No audible counsel or advice
need be offered to the recipient. The color offers
its own motto, counsel, sermon, magic. It is felt
and psychically absorbed. The eyes, the win-
dows of the soul, reflect the colors of the soul,
and as plants absorb sunshine, indeed the whole
gamut of color contained in the light, so the
on the physical plane, a human plant growing in the garden of the world, absorbs its vitalizing, therapeutic and nervo psychic stimulus
from the colors.
soul,
Children need such beneficent and corrective
more than advice, reprimands or
punishment, and as they receive such subtile influences, duty and obedience now the two most
hated words in the vocabulary of childhood, will
take on new and inspiring meanings under color
alchemy. Alchemy indeed it is and magic too,
as these two words embody spiritual power,
usually not associated with chemistry, or physics, but a magic and alchemy, not involving any
sense of the supernatural or the infringement of
Law, but results of a higher and finer order.
influence far
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
43
Parents will do well to observe a patience
under the experimental use of color, and not betray a doubt of the result, nor show any violent
emotion as anger or use any physical force, when
conducting a child into the nursery when the
need for its chromopathic power is felt. Parents
need to share with their children the chromopathic uses to which the nursery is put, and indeed, its profit cannot be exaggerated.
For it
is often found that parents, rather than children
are often to blame for the temporary disposition
and ugly behavior of their offspring. The posture of the child while in the nursery need never
be that of attention or first position. The child
should be placed in the nursery to be free and at
ease, to play and enjoy itself, and should never
enter this sanctuary without its consent.
Nor
should it be coaxed or teased into going into it.
The true way is to lead the way by lovingly obtaining the child's consent, and this can usually
be done by any true and wise parent.
CHAPTER
V.
"Temperamental" Colors and Their Psychic
Reagencies and Reactions. Psychopathic
Influence of Color
What
is
meant by "temperamental"
colors are
the colors which are likely to appeal to ones
nature. Each one has a certain makeup or constitution. It has been found that "temperaments"
may
be grouped under certain heads and necesThere are the
religious, literary, musical or artistic and scientific temperaments, and each one may be defined
by the colors, blue, light blue, pink and orange
or yellow. Speaking of nationalism, the national spirit and the national color, blue symbolizes the Jew, Parsee, Mohammedan, Hindu and
pre-eminently the "religious" temperament, because it stands for Truth, Spirit, God and the
sarily fall into certain categories.
spiritual life.
Pink or red symbolizes Greek and Latin naand French, pre-eminently
typify the "artistic" temperament, because it
tions, as the Italian
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
45
symbolizes love, the affections, humanity, deeds
of heroic valor. Light blue symbolizes the British and American nations and pre-eminently the
"literary" temperament, because it stands for
knowledge and life, freedom, fraternity, happiness.
Yellow or orange symbolizes the will, the
highest function and power of our nature, and
pre-eminently typifies the "scientific" temperament.
There are exceptions to all classifications, for
groups of individuals or of nations can symbolize
both the composite, religious and literary, the
literary and musical, the musical and religious
or the scientific and literary temperaments. All
classification should be elastic and general, rather than fixed and arbitrary.
No attempt
is
made
to put nations into such
categories as are indicated by the colors of their
flags.
These flags standardize certain political
ideals,
rather than national traits, or tempera-
mental
likes or dislikes.
The law
of attraction
is
broadly shown in
these temperamental attractions to certain colors
For instance, the blues
or groups of colors.
would favor gradation of blue where white
is
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
46
predominant as violets, gray blue, Italian blue
and turquoise, but would disfavor its compliments as red or yellow and its contrasts as
orange.
The reds would favor gradations
of red as
pink, grey pink, purple, but
would disfavor its
complements as blue or yellow and its contrasts
as green. The yellows would favor gradations of
yellow as canary, orange, chrome, but would disfavor its complements as red and blue, and its
contrasts as purple. This law is chemical as well
as psychological and our natural constitution
thus plays in a field of light, selecting such colors as please it. It would be a strange and unnatural world, if this were not so.
*Contrasting and complementary colors often
and psychopathic re-agents. Not
only do they reveal the nature of the action of
other colors, but they supply under excess or
lack, what the sick need.
Such colors however
disagreeable under normal conditions, act as
stimulants or depressants when the nervo
psychic constitution is disordered.
act as chemical
coL
W
d'scoyered that one can
know
the harmonic contrast
of coloi by
hv its
t
complement, red forming a contrast with yellow
blue,
h,ch is green, and yellow forming a contrast
with red
blue, which is orange.
and
and
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
47
Were this a technical work on chromopathy,
much more could be written along these lines.
Suffice it to say that Dr. E. D. Babbitt has comprehended the field most thoroughly in his splen-
did book entitled
of Light and
that
however,
be added,
"The Principles
This much may
magnetic colors as the reds are thermal, and
Color."
stimulating, the electrical colors, as the blues,
are chemical and cooling, and in cases of headache, insanity, fever, the blues and violets should
be used, while in cases of tuberculosis, paralysis,
melancholia, loneliness, debility, the
purples should be employed.
reds
and
a purely psychological standpoint, along
lines of psycho-therapy, red and pinks excite
hope, inspire optimism and so neutralize the results or reactions of fear, distrust, despair, while
the blues and violets increase a fondness for
From
books, stimulate a love of intellectual, scientific
and spiritual pursuits, and so neutralize the results of materialism in all of its forms.
can be said that the artistic
temperament is balanced and neutralized best by
the colors, which appeal to the religious temperament and vice versa, as the scientific and musical temperaments find their balance and neuIn conclusion
it
48
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
trality in the artistic
they are in more or
as opposition.
and
religious,
less of
with
whom
conjunction as well
CHAPTER
Color in Dress.
Why
VI.
Brides
Wear White
International
and Mourners Black.
Customs Analyzed
and blue,
appealed to the elemental and simple minds of
the savage, because their vibrations were the
most physical in their effects on their senses.
The primary
colors of red, yellow
Reds are warm, blues are cooling, while yellow is
more or less neutral. The ruddy reds of the
earth, the rosy sunrises and sunsets and the
fierce flames of fire, and the blue of water and
So,
sky, strangely impressed the early peoples.
symred
the
that
learned
from sun and fire, they
and they used yellow and red pygmies, yellow and red feathers and yellow and
red garments, not only because they liked them
bolizes heat
as ornaments, but because they imitated nature
The blues were not
in her elementary moods.
commonly used because less dynamic and
were featured by the Jews, Egyptians, Arabs and the Orientals, in their tapesso
violent, but
3 t*S6 J
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
50
tries, robes, portieres, frescoes
and
ecclesiastical
reason for this is its
than emotional aprather
mental
and
spiritual
not due to a lack
was
This
senses.
the
peal to
fact, fully corrobknown
well
is
a
of dyes, as it
vestments.
The
subtle
orated by Wendell Phillips in his celebrated
oration on "The Lost Arts," that dyes were
known, as for instance the royal or Tyrian purple, thousands of years before Christ, which art
has since been lost. This was not only true of
Phoenecia, Egypt, Assyria, but of Persia and
India. The less bizarre and spectacular colors, as
the gray blues, gray pinks, grays, gray purples
and violets, fawn browns, yellows and greens
were used in the Mural decorations of temples
and the costumes of the women of royalty.* They
had developed a high, fascinating and unexcelled
artistry in color combinations which the modern
world has not surpassed. And the most remark-
was
their psycholvalues and the
subtile effect of color on the individual.
In fact,
color, among the Eastern nations, was a function
of religion, and the priests established, sanctioned and supported the function as long as they
able part of their use of color
ogical
were
knowledge of
in
its spiritual
power.
Aitistic evidences of Egyptian fondness fur subdued tones can
seen in the Museum at Cairo, also in the ruins of their temples
the Nile.
:?
be
on
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
51
The reason why brides wear white, is the
same which caused the Vestal Virgins among
Greeks and Romans to wear a white flowing
gown, centuries before Christianity dawned upon
the world.
White
typifies innocence, virginity,
chastity, without a stain, blemish or spot.
(or absence
is, therefore, the fitting color
color)
This
is
It
of
emblematic of maidenhood or virginity.
too evident to need further comment.
Black, on the other hand, typifies the universal negative, in which color is absorbed, hid and
emblematic of death, matloss of life
ter, oblivion, annihilation, nothing
and love. It therefore conveys no idea or thought
of immortality or survival of the personality of
death, and its effect upon human nature is denot manifest, and
is
pressing, joyless, sad, reproachful, hostile, evil.
In analyzing international habits and customs
of mourning, a criticism is made against the
time honored Christian fashion and precedent,
which have been blindly followed by society,
out of a loyal and sincere wish to pay the last
sad respects to the dead; for the simple reason
that such solemn respect should not spiritually
and rationally be associated with black.
As a Christian nation,
to know and prove the
believing
in, if
not able
survival of the soul at
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
52
death, black symbolizes a denial of the resurrection and an infamous repudiation of the affirmation of Jesus, "I
Life,"
have
am
the Resurrection and the
and "I came that ye might have
it
more abundantly."
life
and
It typifies faithless-
ness, blindness, death, annihilation, agnosticism,
atheism, materialism.
of
the
shield
throws a
pall
of
the
takes the divinity out
Christian Religion and
It
over the crown of
life.
It
delib-
though designed by the arch enemy of
truth, crushes the soul, by screening and camouflaging its vision with the darkest, blackest
clouds of nescience and ignorance.
A fashion,
which should be more honored in the breach
than in the observance, simply because a false
theology has made the Christian world falsely
believe that the body and soul sleep together in
the grave until doomsday, whereas the soul is
liberated instantly at death, no better, no worse
erately, as
in character because of death, but free of the
body, yet held by the life it lived on earth, to its
attractions and attachments, its karma, the
planes and spheres of thought and action in the
Spirit World. Therefore, any revolutionary tendencies to change the fashionable color of mourning, should be hailed as a contribution to an
enlightened public conscience and intelligence.
Purple, violet, gray, white could be used with
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
no suggestion of error or
ficent effect.
White
evil,
53
but with bene-
especially, as hinting at the
and suggesting however remotely, the
triumph over darkness and evil, would
be preferable to other colors, however nationalized by both tradition and custom. White is the
opposite of black, and as black typifies negation
light,
spirit's
life, white symbolizes positiveness of life.
This idea is a religious and scientific one of
survival, is important to teach and impress solemnly upon a none too spiritually minded generation, because it follows that if black, symbolizing death, evil and non existence is allowed to
continue to be the formal and popular color of
mourning, the fact of the soul's survival, will
expose our self elected ignorance and rebuke our
time honored stupidity. As a matter of fact, the
correct idea of death has made inroads upon
foolish western customs of mourning.
In some
quarters, black has been discarded altogether,
as has black crepe on doors and evergreen and
It would go a
flowers substituted in its place.
great way toward educating the masses in the
spiritual significance of death, if the corpse was
robed in white and placed in white coffins in-
of
stead of black, irrespective of age, and clergy-
men
taught from pulpits and in homes and when
ever opportunity suggested the need, that white
54
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
preaches the best sort of a mute but comforting
sermon on the resurrection. As the dawn announces the rising of the sun and the advent of
day, so white announces the fact that death has
This
lost its sting and the grave its victory.
is the truest orthodox Christian teaching, however heterodox it may seem from an ecclesiastical and theological standpoint.
In Europe and England, the habit of mourning among men and women is still black, the custom being in part Roman, but under the Roman
Empire, white was worn by the women and
black by the men.
Turkey
white.
is violet, in
The color of mourning in
Egypt yellow, and in China,
Ecclesiastical,
thority fixes the color.
and sometimes
Now
civil
au-
in this age of science
and democracy, the custom of wearing black will
be more honored in the breach than in the observance, and sane, rational and spiritual ideals,
founded on the facts of a demonstrable immortality will popularize white, perhaps adding color
as one may be led, but discarding forever the
black.
Purple, violet, yellow, white, even blue have
and are vitalizing, stimulating and never depressing.
spiritual significance
PSYCHOLOGY OF COLOR
55
Brides are married in white and carry white
blossoms because white is the perfect symbol of
It lifts maidvirginity, innocence and chastity.
enhood and womankind by the sheer appeal to
the senses above the slightest cloud of material
suggestion of worldliness or earthliness,
translates her into the garden of paradise.
and
the Epiphany marks the earth's investment
of light and occurs twelve days after Christmas,
which heralds the actual rebirth of the New
Year, the ascent of the sun to the vernal equinox,
so the bride who goes forth to be married to the
bridegroom, takes on the light of this new life.
As
The psychological effect
groom should be reflective
of white on the brideof his spiritual station
and dignity and will be in fact, when man gives
to woman what woman gives to man and when
social laws and customs demand and grant equal
rights and privileges before the law. When the
integrity and unity of life is at last recognized
from matter to spirit and from the crystal to
God and all vibrations are registered and realized, color will
psychology of
be found to have
life,
and
it
its
will not
mere accident or coincidence
value in the
appear as a
of natural
phenom-
ena, but a service in the divine scheme of things.
Dr.
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