The Hermetic Books.
The Hermetic System AND THE Significance of its Present Revival.
An Introduction TO THE Virgin of the World.
THE VIRGIN OF THE WORLD. I.
PART II.
PART III.
A Treatise on Initiations; or, Asclepios. PART I.
PART II.
PART III.
PART IV.
PART V.
PART VI.
PART VII.
PART VIII.
PART IX.
PART X.
PART XI.
PART XII.
PART XIV.
PART XV.
FRAGMENTS of the WRITINGS of HERMES to AMMON. PART I.
PART II.
PART III.
PART IV.
PART V.
PART VI.
VARIOUS HERMETIC FRAGMENTS.PART I.
PART II.
PART III.
PART IV.
PART V.
PART VI.
PART VII.
PART VIII.
The Hermetic Books.
THE Sacred Books of Hermes, says Mrs. Child in
her admirable compendium, 1 containing the laws, science, and
theology of Egypt, were declared by the priests to have been
composed during the reign of the Gods, preceding that of their
first king, Menes. Allusions on very ancient monuments prove their
great antiquity. There were four of them, and the sub-divisions of
the whole make forty-two volumes. These numbers correspond exactly
to those of the Vedas, which the Puranas say were carried into
Egypt by the Yadavas at the first emigration to that country from
Hindostan. The subjects treated of in them were likewise similar;
but how far the Books of Hermes were copied from the Vedas remains
doubtful. They were deposited in the inmost holy recesses of the
temples, and none but the higher order of priests were allowed to
read them. They were carried reverently in all great religious
processions. The chief priests carried ten volumes relating to the
emanations of the Gods, the formation of the world, the divine
annunciation of laws and rules for the priesthood. The prophets
carried four, treating of astronomy and astrology. The leader of
the sacred musicians carried two, containing hymns to the Gods, and
maxims to guide the conduct of the king, which the chanter was
required to know by heart. Such were the reputed antiquity and
sanctity of these Egyptian hymns that Plato says they were ascribed
to Isis, and believed to be ten thousand years old. Servitors of
the temple carried ten volumes more, containing forms of prayer and
rules for offerings, festivals, and processions. The other volumes
treated of philosophy and the sciences, including anatomy and
medicine.
These books were very famous, and later were much sought
after for alchemical purposes, especially for that of making gold.
The Roman Emperor Severus collected all writings on the Mysteries
and buried them in the tomb of Alexander the Great; and Diocletian
destroyed all their books on alchemy lest Egypt should become too
rich to remain tributary to Rome. The once-renowned Books of Hermes
have been lost these fifteen hundred years.
Thus much concerning the Hermetic Books generally.
The Fragments comprised in this reprint have been the subject
of much learned research. In the early centuries of
Christianity--Dr. Louis Menard tells us 1--they enjoyed a high
repute as of undoubted genuineness, the Fathers invoking their
testimony on behalf of the Christian mysteries, while
Lactantius--the "Christian Cicero"--said of them, "Hermes, I know
not how, has discovered well-nigh the whole truth." He was regarded
as an inspired revealer, and the writings which bore his name
passed for genuine monuments of that ancient Egyptian theology in
which Moses had been instructed. And this opinion was accepted by
Massilius Ficinus, Patricius, and other learned men of the
Renaissance, who regarded them as the source of the Orphic
initiations and of the philosophy of Pythagoras and Plato. Doubts,
however, arose. They were ascribed, variously, on the strength of
internal evidence, to a Jew, a Christian, and a Gnostic. And the
conclusion come to by recent critics and accepted by Dr. Menard, is
that their place is among the latest productions of Greek
philosophy, but that amid the Alexandrian ideas, on which they are
based, there are some traces of the religious doctrine of ancient
Egypt. It was, he says, from the conjunction of the religious
doctrines of Egypt, with the philosophic doctrines of Greece, that
the Egyptian philosophy sprang which has left no other memorial
than the books of Hermes, in which are to be recognised, under an
abstract form, the ideas and tendencies which had before been
presented under a mythological form.
Another comparison is that which he institutes between some
of the Hermetic writings and the Jewish and Christian Scriptures,
especially the Book of Genesis and the fourth Gospel, and the works
of Philo and the Shepherd of Hernias. 1 "The advent of Christianity
presents at first sight the appearance of a radical revolution in
the manners and beliefs of the Western World. But history knows
nothing of sudden changes and unanticipated transformations. To
comprehend the passage from one religion to another, one should not
contrast their two extreme terms--the Homeric mythology and the
Nicene symbology. It is necessary to study their intermediate
remains--the multiple products of an epoch of transition, when the
primitive Hellenism, under philosophical discussion, changed more
and more by admixture with the religions of the East, which were
then confused by advancing upon Europe. Christianity represents the
latest terms of this incursion of Oriental conceptions into the
West. It did not fall like a thunderbolt into the midst of an old
world surprised and aghast. It had its period of incubation; and
while it sought a definitive form for its doctrines, the problems,
the solution of which it sought, equally preoccupied the minds of
Greece, Asia, and Egypt. The ideas were already in the air, which
became combined in every kind of proportion.
"The multiplicity of the sects springing up in our days can
give but a slight notion of that astonishing intellectual chemistry
which had established its chief laboratory at Alexandria. Humanity
had put up to competition vast moral and philosophical issues--the
origin of evil, the destiny of souls, their fall and their
redemption; the prize offered was the dictatorship of consciences.
The Christian solution prevailed."
Our critic proceeds to distinguish in the books of Hermes
Trismegistus between that which, in his view, belonged respectively
to Egypt and to Judea. "When we meet in these books," he remarks,
"Platonist or Pythagorean ideas, we must ask whether the author had
recovered them from the ancient sources whence Pythagoras or Plato
had drawn them before him; or whether they represent an element
purely Greek. There is, then, room to discuss the influence, real
or supposed, of the East on the Hellenic philosophy. One is
generally too liable, on the strength of the belief of the Greeks
themselves, to exaggerate this influence, and especially to set
back the date of it. It is only after the foundation of Alexandria
that a permanent and consistent connection was established between
the thought of Greece and that of other peoples; and in these
exchanges Greece had much more to give than to receive. The
Orientals--at least, such of them as came into contact with the
Greeks--appeared never to have had a philosophy properly so called.
Psychic analysis, research for the foundations of knowledge and of
moral laws, and their application to social life, were things
absolutely unknown to the East before the invasion of Alexander.
The expression respecting his countrymen which Plato ascribes to
the Egyptian priest, 'You Greeks are but children; and there are no
old men among you,' might be referred to the East and to Egypt
itself. The scientific spirit is as alien to those peoples as the
political instinct. They can endure, through long ages, but they
can never reach their manhood. They are elderly youths, always in
leading strings, and as incapable of searching for truth as of
accomplishing justice.
"Initiated into philosophy by Greece, the East could but give
in return that which it had,--the exaltation of religious
sentiment; Greece accepted the exchange. Weary of the scepticism
produced by the strife of her schools, she cast herself, by a
reaction, into mystic fervours, precursors of a renewal of faith.
The books of Hermes Trismegistus are a bond of union between the
dogmas of the past and those of a future, and it is by this bond
that they attach themselves to questions actual and living. If they
belong still to paganism, it is to paganism in its last hours,
always full of disdain for the new faith, and declining to abdicate
in her favour, because it guards the depository of the old
civilisation which will become extinct with it, already tired of a
hopeless struggle, resigned to its destiny, and returning to sleep
for evermore in its first cradle, the old Egypt, the land of the
dead."
Dr. Menard thus concludes:--"The Hermetic books are the last
monuments of paganism. They belong at once to the Greek philosophy
and the Egyptian religion, and in their mystic exaltation they
impinge already upon the Middle Age. Between a world which is
ending and a world which is commencing, they resemble those animals
who by their undecided nature serve as a link between different
orders of organisations. These mixed creations are always inferior
to each of the groups which they connect together. Not to be
compared either with the religion of Homer or Christianity, the
Books of Hermes enable us to comprehend the method of the world's
passage from one to the other. In them the beliefs which were being
born, and, the beliefs which were dying, met and clasped hands."
In contrast to, and also, as we hold, in correction of, the
view thus expressed concerning the relative philosophies of Greece
and the East, we adduce the following passages from Mr. Plumptre's
"History of Pantheism":-- 1
"From our earliest childhood we have generally been taught to
regard the Hebrews as those to whom we owe all our knowledge of
theology and religion; and in a great measure even our knowledge of
God Himself. We have been taught to regard the Greeks as those from
whom we have gained all our acquaintance with the arts and
sciences, philosophy, and, to a certain extent, all that is
comprised within the word wisdom. And in like manner it is upon the
Romans we have been told to look as upon those from whom we have
gained all our notions of discipline and law. As regards our
relations to the Hebrews and Romans, the definition is fairly
accurate. Not so with the Greeks. There is, indeed, a certain
superficial accuracy about the statement. We do, of course, owe a
good deal of our knowledge and learning to the Greeks. But where
the definition is erroneous is in this: it leads us to imply from
it that the Greeks were the first people who cultivated the love of
learning for its own sake; that they gained their knowledge from no
other nations, but were the authors of it themselves. It might
almost lead us to imply that they were the first people who had
ever attained any degree of civilisation.
"The slightest acquaintance with Egyptian or Hindoo history
is sufficient to make us detect such an obvious fallacy, and lead
us readily to discredit the assertion. The civilisation of Egypt
goes so far back in the world's history that it is almost
impossible to say when it began. It is almost generally
acknowledged now that Moses gained the greater portion of his
knowledge from his connection with the Egyptians; and in that case
even our first ideas of religion may be traced to an Egyptian
source."
Mr. Plumptre goes on to spew that while the Hindoos and
Egyptians had long been in possession of religio-philosophical
systems of the highest intellectual order, the Greeks were sunk in
ignorance and superstition of the most irrational kind, until the
occurrence of an event which revolutionised, or, rather, which gave
the first impulse to Greek thought, so that in a short time after
it Greece sprang from a state of childish ignorance into one in
which she became, both commercially and philosophically, the
leading power of the world. This momentous event was the opening of
the Egyptian ports by Psammetichus, B.C. 670. Previous to that
time, the Egyptians had been shut out from all intercourse with
Europe and the Mediterranean by an exclusion more rigorous than
that which until lately was practised in China and Japan; and Egypt
was to the Greeks but a land of mystery and fable, as witness the
allusions to it in Homer and Hesiod. But with the system of
isolation overthrown which had prevailed for so many thousands of
years, the influence of the event upon the progress of Europe was
such as to be incapable of exaggeration. First Greece, then the
rest of the world, owed their civilisation to it. It destroyed the
belief in the old mythologies, and gave birth to Greek philosophy.
There is one respect in which this statement requires
modification. The Greek mythologies may indeed have been but
irrational fables as popularly received and without the key to
their interpretation. But in reality they were symbols denoting,
while concealing, profound occult truths. And while their presence
in Greece at so early a period shews that colleges of the Sacred
Mysteries flourished there long before the rise of Greek
philosophy, the identity of the doctrines they symbolised with
those of Egypt and the East shews that there had been religious
intercourse between these countries long before there was any
political, commercial, or philosophical intercourse. Foreign
missionary enterprise by no means originated with Christianity. The
Sacred Mysteries were continually migrating and planting themselves
in new ground in advance of secular civilisation. The migration of
Abraham and the flights of Bacchus and of Moses were doubtless all
of them events of this character.
Mr. Plumtre's conclusion that whatever there was of
coincidence between Greek and Egyptian philosophic thought was due
to the recognition and adoption of the latter by the Greeks, is one
which it seems to us impossible to escape. And we regard M.
Menard's inferences to the contrary as due to his failure to
combine with his classical knowledge a knowledge of Hermetic and
Kabbalistic methods and traditions. Comprising as do these the
world's spiritual history, it is impossible apart from them to form
any sound judgment on the matters in question. Those who, enamoured
of conventional methods, are unable to recognise any organon of
knowledge except the superficial faculties, or any plane of
knowledge transcending the range of those faculties, are
necessarily intolerant of the idea that there has been in the world
from the earliest times a system of esoteric and positive doctrine
concerning the most hidden mysteries of Existence, of such a
character, and so obtained as to fulfil all the conditions
requisite to constitute a divine revelation. Nevertheless, this is
the conclusion to which we have found ourselves compelled by sheer
force of evidence, at once exoteric and esoteric. It is in
Hindostan and Egypt that we find its earliest traces; and if, as
assuredly is the case, there are coincidences between the ancient
doctrines of those lands, and those of Greece, Judæa, and
Christendom, it is because the same truth has passed from people to
people, everywhere finding recognition, and undergoing
re-formulation according to the genius of the time and place of its
sojourn. And this, we may add, is a process which must inevitably
continue until man has become either so far degenerate as to lose
all care for and perception of truth; or so far regenerate as to
attain to the full perception of it, and fix it for evermore as his
most precious possession.
But be this as it may, we have seen that even the most
destructive criticism is forced to make these three important
admissions
(1) That the doctrine contained in the Hermetic books is in
part, at least, a survival from the times of ancient Egypt, and
therein really Hermetic.
(2) That there is a coincidence between the doctrine which
has thus survived and that of Christianity. And,
(3) That this coincidence has been recognised and welcomed by
the Church, to the admission that Christianity, so far from being
something wholly new and unprecedented at the time of its
inception, represents a development from, or re-formulation of;
doctrine long pre-existent.
Footnotesi:1 "The Progress of Religious Ideas."
ii:1 Hermès Trismegistus. Traduction complète; précédée d’une
étude sur l’origine des livres Hermétiques. Par Dr. Louis Ménard,
2nd Ed., Paris, 1867.
This translation has been used, but not entirely followed, in
the present work, as also have some of the notes, those which are
not initialled being Dr. Menard's.
iii:1 A title identical with that of the Pymander, or
Shepherd, of Hermes.
v:1 Vol. I, B. II.