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A Magical Sword
From Levi's The Magical
Ritual
Eliphas Levi describes the
preparation of a magical sword in substance as follows: The
steel blade should be forged in the hour of Mars, with new
tools. The pommel should be of hollow silver containing
quicksilver, and the symbols of Mercury and the moon and the
signatures of Gabriel and Samael should be engraved upon it.
The hilt should be encased with tin, with the symbol of
Jupiter and the signature of Michael engraved upon it. A
copper triangle should extend from the hilt along the blade a
short distance on each side: These should bear the symbols of
Mercury and Venus. Five Sephiroth should be engraved upon the
handle, as shown. The blade itself should have the word "Malchut"
upon one side and "Quis ut Deus" upon the other. The sword
should be consecrated on Sunday. MPH |
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A Magic Circle
From The Complete Book of
Magic Science (unpublished)
The above figure is a complete
and faithful representation of a magic circle as designed by
mediaeval conjurers for the invocation of spirits. The
magician accompanied by his assistant takes his place at the
point formed by the crossing of the central lines marked
MAGISTER. The words about the circle are the names of the
invisible intelligences, and the small crosses mark points at
which certain prayers and invocations are recited. The small
circle outside is prepared for the spirit to be invoked, and
while in use has the signature of the desired intelligence
traced within the triangle. MPH |
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The Pentagram
From Levi's
Transcendental Magic
The pentagram is the figure of
the microcosm—the magical formula of man. It is the one rising
out of the four—the human soul rising from the bondage of the
animal nature. It is the true light—the "Star of the morning."
It marks the location of five mysterious centers of force, the
awakening of which is the supreme secret of white magic.
MPH |
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Form of Pact with
the Spirit of Jupiter
From The Complete Book of
Magic Science
"The aforesaid Bond of Spirits,
together with the seal and character of the planetary angel,
must be written on virgin parchment and laid before the Spirit
[for signature] when he appears; at that time the invocant
must not lose confidence but be patient, firm, bold, and
persevering, and take care that he asks nor requires nothing
of the Spirit but with a view to the glory of God and the
well-being of his fellow creatures. Having obtained his
desires of the Spirit, the invocant may license him to
depart." MPH |
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The Pentacles of
the Seven Planets and the Seals and Characters of the
Planetary Angels
From a mediaeval Book of
Spirits (unpublished)
The seven large circles are the
pentacles of the planets, while the two small circles under
each contain the seal and the character of the controlling
intelligence of the planet. MPH |
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A Salamander,
According to Paracelsus
From Paracelsus'
Auslegung von 30 Magischen Figuren
The Egyptians, Chaldeans, and
Persians often mistook the salamanders for gods, because of
their radiant splendor and great power. The Greeks, following
the example of earlier nations, deified the fire spirits and
in their honor kept incense and altar fires burning
perpetually. MPH |
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Conventional Gnomes
From Gjellerup's Den
AEldre Eddas Gudesange
The type of gnome most frequently
seen is the brownie, or elf, a mischievous and grotesque
little creature from twelve to eighteen inches high, usually
dressed in green or russet brown. Most of them appear as very
aged, often with long white beards, and their figures are
inclined to rotundity. They can be seen scampering out of
holes in the stumps of trees and sometimes they vanish by
actually dissolving into the tree itself. MPH |
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A Mermaid
From Lycosthenes'
Prodigiorum ac Ostentorum Chronicon
Probably the most famous of the
undines were the mythological mermaids, with which early
mariners peopled the Seven Seas. Belief in the existence of
these creatures, the upper half of their bodies human in form
and the lower half fishlike, may have been inspired by flocks
of penguins seen at a great distance, or possibly seals. In
mediaeval descriptions of the mermaids, it was also stated
that their hair was green like seaweed and that they wore
wreaths twisted from the blossoms of subaqueous plants and sea
anemones. MPH |
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A Sylph
From sketch by Howard Wookey
The sylphs were volatile,
changeable entities, passing to and fro with the rapidity of
lightning. They work through the gases and ethers of the earth
and are kindly disposed toward human beings. They are nearly
always represented as winged, sometimes as tiny cherubs and at
other times as delicate fairies. MPH |
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The Phoenix on its
Nest of Flames
From Lycosthenes’
Prodigiorum ac Ostentorum Chronicon
The phoenix is the most
celebrated of all the symbolic creatures fabricated by the
ancient Mysteries for the purpose of concealing the great
truths of esoteric philosophy. Though modern scholars of
natural history declare the existence of the phoenix to be
purely mythical, Pliny describes the capture of one of these
birds and its exhibition in the Roman Forum during the reign
of the Emperor Claudius. MPH |
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Title Page of the
Books of Alze
From Musaeum Hermeticum
Reformatum et Amplificatum
This title page is an example of
Hermetic and alchemical symbolism. The seven-pointed star of
the sacred metals is so arranged that one black point is
downward, thus symbolizing Saturn, the Destroyer. Beginning in
the space immediately to the left of the black point, a
reading clockwise discloses the cryptic word VITRIOL formed by
the capital letters of the seven Latin words in the outer
circle. MPH |
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Johannis Baptistae
Von Helmont
From von Helmont's Ausgang
der Artznen-Kunst
At the beginning of the 17th
century, von Helmont, the Belgian alchemist, while
experimenting with the root of A---, touched it to the tip of
his tongue, without swallowing any of the substance. He
himself describes the result in the following manner:
"Immediately my head seemed tied tightly with a string, and
soon after there happened to me a singular circumstance such
as I had never before experienced. I observed with
astonishment that I no longer felt and thought with the head,
but with the region of the stomach, as if consciousness had
now taken up its seat in the stomach. Terrified by this
unusual phenomenon, I asked myself and inquired into myself
carefully; but I only became the more convinced that my power
of perception was become greater and more comprehensive. This
intellectual clearness was associated with great pleasure. I
did not sleep, nor did I dream; I was perfectly sober; and my
health was perfect. I had occasionally had ecstasies, but
these had nothing in common with this condition of the
stomach, in which it thought and felt, and almost excluded all
cooperation of the head. In the meantime my friends were
troubled with the fear that I might go mad. But my faith to
God and my submission to His will, soon dissipated this fear.
This state continued for two hours, after which I had some
dizziness. I afterwards frequently tasted of the A---, but I
never again could reproduce these same sensations." |
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Nicholas Culpeper
From Culpeper’s
Semeiotica Uranica
This famous physician, herbalist,
and astrologer spent the greater part of his useful life
ranging the hills and forests of England and cataloguing
literally hundreds of medicinal herbs. Condemning the
unnatural methods of contemporaneous medicos, Culpeper wrote:
"This not being pleasing, and less profitable to me, I
consulted with my two brothers, DR. REASON and DR. EXPERIENCE,
and took a voyage to visit my mother NATURE, by whose advice,
together with the help of Dr. DILIGENCE, I at last obtained my
desire; and being warned by MR. HONESTY, a stranger in our
days, to publish it to the world, I have done it." (From the
Introduction to the 1835 Edition of The Complete Herbal.)
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Chemical Syllables
From De Monte-Snyders’
Metamorphosis Planetarum
De Monte-Snyders declares that
each of the above characters forms one syllable of a word
having seven syllables, the word itself representing the
materia prima, or first substance of the universe. As all
substance is composed of seven powers combined according to
certain cosmic laws, a great mystery is concealed within the
sevenfold constitution of God, man, and the universe. Of the
above seven characters, De Monte-Snyders writes: "Whoever
wants to know the true name and character of the materia prima
shall know that out of the combination of the above figures
syllables are produced, and out of these the verbum
significativum." MPH |
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A Symbolic Diagram
of the Operations of Nature
From Fludd’s Collectio
Operum
This plate, engraved by de Bry,
is the most famous of the diagrams illustrating the
philosophic principles of Robert Fludd. |

The Alchemical
Androgyne
From the Turbae
Philosophorum
The Turbae
Philosophorum is one of the earliest known documents on
alchemy in the Latin tongue. Its exact origin is unknown. It
is sometimes referred to as The Third Pythagorical Synod. As
its name implies, it is an assembly of the sages and sets
forth the alchemical viewpoints of many of the early Greek
philosophers. The symbol reproduced here is from a rare
edition published in Germany in 1750, and represents by a
hermaphroditic figure the accomplishment of the magnum opus.
The active and passive principles of Nature were often
depicted by male and female figures, and when these two
principles were harmoniously conjoined in any one nature or
body it was customary to symbolize this state of perfect
equilibrium by the composite figure above shown.
MPH |
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The
Elementary World
From Musaeum Hermeticum
Reformatum et Amplificatum
The outer circle contains the
figures of the zodiac; the second, their signs and that part
of the human body which they rule; the third, the months of
the year, with brief notes concerning temperaments, etc. The
fourth circle contains the elements accompanied by their
appropriate symbols, and the following seven circles mark the
orbits of the planets; also the planetary angels, the seven
major members of the Universal Man, and the seven metals, each
division appearing under its appropriate element according to
the elemental names in the fourth circle. In the twelfth
circle appear the words: "There are Three Principles, Three
Worlds, Three Ages, and Three Kingdoms." In the thirteenth
circle appear the names of the twelve arts and sciences which
are considered essential to spiritual growth. In the
fourteenth circle is the word Nature. The fifteenth circle
contains the following words: "It is the great honour of
faithful souls, that from their very birth an angel is
appointed to preserve and keep each of them." (See first
English translation, London, 1893.) MPH |
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Paracelsus
From The Complete
Writings of Paracelsus of Hohenheim
In his Biographia Antiqua,
Francis Barrett appends to the name of Paracelsus the
following titles of distinction: "The Prince of Physicians and
Philosophers by Fire; Grand Paradoxical Physician; The
Trismegistus of Switzerland; First Reformer of Chymical
Philosophy; Adept in Alchymy, Cabala, and Magic; Nature’s
Faithful Secretary; Master of the Elixir of Life and The
Philosopher’s Stone," and the "Great Monarch of Chymical
Secrets." |
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Albertus Magnus
From Jovius’ Vitae
Illustrium Virorum
Albert de Groot was born about
1206 and died at the age of 74. It has been said of him that
he was "magnus in magia, major in philosophia, maximus in
theologia." He was a member of the Dominican order and the
mentor of St. Thomas Aquinas in alchemy and philosophy; and
Bishop of Regensburg. He was beatified in 1622. Albertus was
an Aristotelian philosopher, an astrologer, and a profound
student of medicine and physics. During his youth, he was
considered of deficient mentality, but his sincere service and
devotion were rewarded by a vision in which the Virgin Mary
appeared to him and bestowed upon him great philosophical and
intellectual powers. Having become master of the magical
sciences, Albertus began the construction of a curious
automaton, which he invested with the powers of speech and
thought. The Android, as it was called, was composed of metals
and unknown substances chosen according to the stars and
endowed with spiritual qualities by magical formulae and
invocations, and the labor upon it consumed over thirty years.
St. Thomas Aquinas, thinking the device to be a diabolical
mechanism, destroyed it, thus frustrating the labor of a
lifetime. In spite of this act, Albertus Magnus left to St.
Thomas Aquinas his alchemical formulae, including (according
to legend) the secret of the Philosopher’s Stone.
On one occasion Albertus Magnus
invited William II, Count of Holland and King of the Romans,
to a garden party in midwinter. The ground was covered with
snow, but Albertus had prepared a sumptuous banquet in the
open grounds of his monastery at Cologne. The guests were
amazed at the imprudence of the philosopher, but as they sat
down to eat Albertus uttered a few words, the snow
disappeared, the garden was filled with flowers and singing
birds, and the air was warm with the breezes of summer. As
soon as the feast was over, the snow returned, much to the
amazement of the assembled nobles. (For details, see The Lives
of Alchemystical Philosophers.) MPH |
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Title Page of
Alchemical Tract attributed to John Cremer
From Musaeum Hermeticum
Reformatum et Amplificatum
John Cremer, the mythical Abbot
of Westminster, is an interesting personality in the
alchemical imbroglio of the 14th century. As it is now
reasonably certain that no abbot by such a name ever occupied
the See of Westminster, the question naturally arises, "Who
was the person concealing his identity under the pseudonym of
John Cremer?" Fictitious characters such as John Cremer
illustrate two important practices of mediaeval alchemists;
(1) many persons of high political or religious rank were
secretly engaged in Hermetic chemical research but, fearing
persecution and ridicule, published their findings under
various pseudonyms; (2) for thousands of years it was the
practice of those initiates who possessed the true key to the
great Hermetic arcanum to perpetuate their wisdom by creating
imaginary persons, involving them in episodes of
contemporaneous history and thus establishing these
non-existent beings as prominent members of society—in some
cases even fabricating complete genealogies to attain that
end. The names by which these fictitious characters were known
revealed nothing to the uninformed. To the initiated, however,
they signified that the personality to which they were
assigned had no existence other than a symbolic one. These
initiated chroniclers carefully concealed their arcanum in the
lives, thoughts, words, and acts ascribed to these imaginary
persons and thus safely transmitted through the ages the
deepest secrets of occultism as writings which to the
unconversant were nothing more than biographies. MPH |
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