Numbers Through Nature · 4

The Number 4 — The Seasons

Four seasons, four directions, four legs on the table — the number that stands steady.

For ages 5–7. Numbers arrive as qualities first, quantities second.

Watercolor of the seasons showing the number 4

Aim

To let the child meet the number 4 the Waldorf way: not as a mark on paper, but as a quality the world is made of — four seasons, four directions, four legs on the table — the number that stands steady.

Before a child counts, they should feel what each number IS. Quality first, quantity second, numeral last.

By age

Littles (3–4): the story and the nature walk are everything. No numerals.

Olders (5–7): the full path: story, finding the number in the world, walking and clapping it, gathering it, and writing it large at the end.

Materials

  • A basket for the gathering walk
  • Beeswax crayons and large paper
  • Smooth stones or chestnuts for counting work
  • Watercolors for the story picture

Opening Verse

Four bright seasons round the year,
Spring and summer, autumn near,
Winter resting white and still —
Four turns round and always will.

The Story

A child once asked the great tree in the yard, "Tree, why do you keep changing your clothes?"

The tree rustled and said, "I have four dresses, and I wear each in its turn.

My spring dress is pink blossom, when the birds build in my branches.

My summer dress is deep green, when you sit in my shade.

My autumn dress is red and gold — my festival dress — and I throw it to the wind leaf by leaf.

And my winter dress is bare branches and snow, my quietest and oldest one, when I rest."

"Which dress is best?" asked the child.

"The one I am wearing," said the tree. "That is the whole secret. Four turns of the year, four dresses, and each one is my favorite while it is on. Stand on your own four — spring, summer, autumn, winter — and you will always stand steady, and there will always be something coming to look forward to."

And the child noticed that the kitchen table stood on four legs, and the horse in the field on four, and the house on its four corners — the world likes to stand on four.

Finding It In The World

Hunt the fours: four legs under the table and the chair and the cat, four corners of the room, of the window, of the bed. Four directions from the front step — face each one and name what lives that way.

Gather the year on one table: a blossom or bud for spring, a green leaf for summer, a red leaf for autumn, a bare twig for winter — the four dresses of the tree, side by side.

Movement

Walk the year in a circle: tiptoe through spring planting seeds, stride through summer swinging arms in the sun, whirl through autumn like a falling leaf, and creep through winter slow and hushed — then spring again! The circle never stops.

Stand steady on all fours like the table and the horse: can anything tip you over? Four holds firm.

Writing Work

Only at the end of the week does the numeral come: write the 4 very large, once, beautifully, beside the child’s drawing of the story. The numeral is the nickname; the child has already met the whole name.

Spiritual Meaning

For the parent:

Arithmetic taught as pure abstraction bores children because it is homeless. Numbers found in suns, wings, and clover live somewhere — and a number that lives somewhere can be loved, remembered, and later reasoned with.

For the child, keep it simple:

4 is not just a mark. The world is full of fourness, and now you can see it everywhere.

Closing Blessing

Thank you, seasons, four and true,
Each one wearing something new,
Round the year and round again —
Four stands steady, now as then.

Extension Ideas

  • Hunt the number 4 in the kitchen, the garden, and the storybook shelf all week.
  • Model it in beeswax or form it with a rope on the floor.
  • Bake it: shape bread dough into the numeral for the table.
  • One number a week; go slowly and let each one become a friend.

Parent Note

Waldorf math walks from whole to parts: the sun is one whole, wings come in pairs, the clover opens in threes. Counting drills can wait; the feeling for number cannot be drilled in later.