Table of contents
MAGNETISM.
CHAP. I. THE MAGNETIC, OR ATTRACTIVE POWER OR FACULTY
CHAP. II. OF SYMPATHETIC MEDICINES
CHAP. III. OF THE MAGNETIC OR SYMPATHETIC UNGUENT...
CHAP. IV. OF THE ARMARY UNGUENT, OR WEAPON SALVE, ETC
CHAP. V.
CHAP. VI. OF WITCHCRAFT
CHAP. VII. OF THE VITAL SPIRIT, ETC
CHAP. VIII. OF THE MAGICAL POWER, ETC
CHAP. IX. OF THE EXCITING OR STIRRING UP THE MAGICAL VIRTUE
CHAP. X. OF THE MAGICAL VIRTUE OF THE SOUL, AND THE MEDIUMS BY WHICH IT ACTS
THE CABALA
CHAP. I. OF THE CABALA, ETC
CHAP. II. WHAT DIGNITY AND PREPARATION IS ESSENTIALLY NECESSARY TO HIM WHO WOULD BECOME A TRUE MAGICIAN
CHAP. III. THAT THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE TRUE GOD IS NECESSARY FOR A MAGICIAN
CHAP. IV.
CHAP. V. OF THE POWER AND VIRTUE OF THE DIVINE NAMES
CHAP. VI. OF INTELLIGENCES AND SPIRITS...
CHAP. VII. OF THE ORDER OF EVIL SPIRITS, AND THEIR FALL, AND DIFFERENT NATURES
CHAP. VIII. OF THE ANNOYANCE OF EVIL SPIRITS, AND THE PRESERVATION WE HAVE FROM GOOD SPIRITS
CHAP. IX. THAT THERE IS A THREEFOLD KEEPER OF MAN, AND FROM WHENCE EACH OF THEM PROCEED
CHAP. X. OF THE TONGUE OF ANGELS, AND OF THEIR SPEAKING AMONGST THEMSELVES AND WITH US
CHAP. XI. OF THE NAMES OF SPIRITS...
CHAP. XII. THE CABALISTS DRAW FORTH THE SACRED NAMES OF ANGELS...
CHAP. XIII. OF FINDING OUT THE NAMES OF SPIRITS AND GENII, FROM THE DISPOSITION OF THE CELESTIAL BODIES
CHAP. XIV. OF THE CALCULATING ART OF SUCH NAMES BY THE TRADITION OF CABALISTS
CHAP. XV. OF THE CHARACTERS AND SEALS OF SPIRITS
CHAP. XVI. ANOTHER WAY OF MAKING CHARACTERS, ACCORDING TO THE CABALISTS
CHAP. XVII. THERE IS ANOTHER KIND OF CHARACTERS, OR MARKS OF SPIRITS, WHICH ARE RECEIVED ONLY BY REVELATION
CHAP. XVIII. ON THE BONDS OF SPIRITS, AND THEIR ADJURATIONS, AND CASTINGS OUT
CHAP. XIX. BY WHAT MEANS MAGICIANS AND NECROMANCERS CALL FORTH THE SOULS OF THE DEAD
CHAP. XX. OF PROPHETICAL DREAMS
THE PERFECTION AND KEY OF THE CABALA, OR CEREMONIAL MAGIC
OF MAGIC PENTACLES AND THEIR COMPOSITION
OF THE CONSECRATION OF ALL MAGICAL INSTRUMENTS AND MATERIALS WHICH ARE USED IN THIS ART
THE CONSECRATION OF WATER
CONSECRATION OF FIRE
THE CONSECRATION OF OIL
OF THE BENEDICTION OF LIGHTS, LAMPS, WAX, ETC
THE CONSECRATION OF PLACES, GROUND, CIRCLE, ETC
OF THE INVOCATION OF EVIL SPIRITS, AND THE BINDING, OF, AND CONSTRAINING OF THEM TO APPEAR
AN INVOCATION OF THE GOOD SPIRITS
THE PARTICULAR FORM OF THE LAMEN
OF ORACLES BY DREAMS
OF THE METHOD OF RAISING EVIL OR FAMILIAR SPIRITS...
OF THE PARTICULAR COMPOSITION OF THE MAGICAL CIRCLE
CONSIDERATIONS AND CONJURATIONS FOR EVERY DAY IN THE WEEK
OF THE MAKING OF THE CRYSTAL AND THE FORM OF PREPARATION FOR A VISION
BIOGRAPHIA ANTIQUA
Francis Barret
The Magus. Book II
ISBN: 9788892698185
Youcanprint Self-Publishing
MAGNETISM.
CHAP. I. THE MAGNETIC, OR ATTRACTIVE POWER OR FACULTY
AS
concerning an action locally at a distance, wines do suggest a
demonstration unto us: for, every kind of wine, although it be bred
out of co-bordering provinces, and likewise more timely blossoming
elsewhere, yet it is troubled while our country vine flowereth;
neither doth such a disturbance cease as long as the flower shall
not
fall off from our vine; which thing surely happens, either from a
common motive-cause of the vine and wine, or from a particular
disposition of the vine, the which indeed troubles the wine, and
doth
shake it up and down with a confused tempest: or likewise, because
the wine itself doth thus trouble itself of its own free accord, by
reason of the flowers of the vine: of both the which latter, if
there
be a fore-touched conformity, consent, co-grieving, or
congratulation; at least, that cannot but be done by an action at a
distance: to wit, if the wine be troubled in a cellar under ground,
whereunto no vine perhaps is near for some miles, neither is there
any discourse of the air under the earth, with the flower of the
absent vine; but, if they will accuse a common cause for such an
effect, they must either run back to the stars, which cannot be
controuled by our pleasures and liberties of boldness; or, I say,
we
return to a confession of an action at a distance: to wit, that
some
one and the same, and as yet unknown spirit, the mover, doth govern
the absent wine, and the vine which is at a far distance, and makes
them to talk and suffer together. But, as to what concerns the
power
of the stars, I am unwilling, as neither dare I, according to my
own
liberty, to extend the forces, powers, or bounds of the stars
beyond
or besides the authority of the sacred text, which faith (it being
pronounced from a divine testimony) that the stars shall be unto us
for signs, seasons, days, and years: by which rule, a power is
never
attributed to the stars, that wine bred in a foreign soil, and
brought unto us from far, doth disturb, move, or render itself
confused: for, the vine had at some time received a power of
encreasing and multiplying itself before the stars were born: and
vegetables were before the stars, and the imagined influx of these:
wherefore also, they cannot be things conjoined in essence, one
whereof could consist without the other. Yea, the vine in some
places
flowereth more timely; and, in rainy, or the more cold years, our
vine flowereth more slowly, whose flower and stages of flourishing
the wine doth, notwithstanding, imitate; and so neither doth it
respect the stars, that it should disturb itself at their
beck.In
the next place, neither doth the wine hearken unto the flourishing
or
blossoming of any kind of capers, but of the wine alone: and
therefore we must not flee unto an universal cause, the general or
universal ruling air of worldly successive change; to wit, we may
rather run back unto impossibilities and absurdities, than unto the
most near commerces of resemblance and unity, although hitherto
unpassable by the schools.Moreover,
that thing doth as yet far more manifestly appear in ale or beer:
when, in times past, our ancestors had seen that of barley, after
whatsoever manner it was boiled, nothing but an empty ptisana or
barley-broth, or also a pulp, was cooked; they meditated, that the
barley first ought to bud (which then they called malt) and next,
they nakedly boiled their ales, imitating wines: wherein, first of
all, some remarkable things do meet in one; to wit, there is
stirred
up in barley, a vegetable bud, the which when the barley is dried,
doth afterwards die, and loseth the hope of growing, and so much
the
more by its changing into meal, and afterwards by an after-boiling,
it despairs of a growing virtue; yet these things nothing
hindering,
it retains the winey and intoxicating spirit of aqua vitæ, the
which
notwithstanding it doth not yet actually possess: but at length, in
number of days, it attaineth it by virtue of a ferment: to wit, in
the one only bosom of one grain one only spirit is made famous with
diverse powers, and one power is gelded, another being left: which
thing indeed, doth as yet more wonderfully shine forth; when as the
ale or beer of malt disturbs itself while the barley flowereth, no
otherwise than as wine is elsewhere wont to do: and so a power at a
far absent distance is from hence plain to be seen: for truly there
are cities from whom pleasant meadows do expel the growing of
barley
for many miles, and by so much the more powerfully do ales prove
their agreement with the absent flowering barley; in as much as the
gelding of their power hath withdrawn the hopes of budding and
increasing: and at length the aqua vitae being detained and shut up
within the ale, hogshead, and prison of the cellar, cannot with the
safety of the ale or beer wandering for some leagues unto the
flowering ear of barley, that thereby, as a stormy retainer, it may
trouble the remaining ale with much confusion. Certainly there is a
far more quiet passage for a magnetical or attractive agreement
among
some agents at a far distance from each other, than there is to
dream
an aqua vitæ wandering out of the ale of a cellar, unto the
flowering barley, and from thence to return unto the former
receptacles of its pen-case, and ale: But the sign imprinted by the
appetite of a woman great with child, on her young, doth fitly, and
alike clearly confirm a magnetism or attractive faculty and its
operation at a distance: to wit, let there be a woman great with
child, which desires another cherry, let her but touch her forehead
or any other place with her finger; without doubt, the young is
signed in its forehead with the image of the cherry, which
afterwards
doth every year wax green, white, yellow, and at length looks red,
according to the tenor of the trees: and it much more wonderfully
expresses the same successive alteration of maturities in Spain
than
in Germany: and so hereby an action
at a distance is
not only confirmed, but also a conformity or agreement of the
essences of the cherry tree, in its wooden and fleshly trunk; a
consanguinity or near affinity of a being impressed
upon the part by on instantaneous imagination, and by a successive
course of the years of its kernel: surely the more learned ought
not
to impute those things unto evil spirits, which, through their own
weakness, they are ignorant of; for these things do on all sides
occur in nature, the which, through our slenderness, we are not
able
to unfold; for to refer whatsoever gifts of God are in nature
(because our dull capacity does not comprehend the same rightly) to
the devil, shews both ignorance and rashness, especially when, as
all
demonstration of causes from a former thing or cause is banished
from
us, and especially from Aristotle, who was ignorant of all nature,
and deprived of the good gifts which descends from the Father of
Lights; unto whom be all honour and glory.Note.
We may, by the aforesaid chapter, see the wonderful working power
of
the attractive or universal spirit, which can by no other means be
so
clearly demonstrated as by the sympathies in natural things, which
are inherent throughout all nature; and, upon this principle of
sympathy and antipathy, we say is founded that spiritual power
which
tends to things and objects remote one from the other, i.
e. a
magnetic attraction, which does actually exist, as we shall clearly
prove by experiment, where we fully shew the action and passion
that
is between natural spirits, by which means wonderful effects are
produced which have ignorantly been attributed to divers
superstitions, as Sorcery,
Inchantment, Nigromancy,
or the
Black Art,
&c.
CHAP. II. OF SYMPATHETIC MEDICINES
IN
the year 1639, a little book came forth, whose title was, 'The
Sympathetical Powder of Edricius Mohynus, of Eburo,' whereby wounds
are cured without application of the medicine unto the part
afflicted, and without superstition; it being sifted by the sieve
of
the reasons of Galen and Aristotle; wherein it is Aristotetically,
sufficiently, proved, whatsoever the title of it promises; but it
hath neglected the directive
faculty,
or virtue,
which may bring the virtues of the sympathetical powder, received
in
the bloody towel or napkin, unto the distant wound.Truly,
from a wound, the venal blood, or corrupt pus, or sanies, from an
ulcer, being received in the towel, do receive, indeed, a balsam
from
a sanative or healing being; I say, from the power of the vitriol,
a
medicinal power connected and limited in the aforesaid mean; but
the
virtues of the balsam received are directed unto the wounded
object,
not indeed by an influential virtue of the stars, and much less do
they fly forth of their own accord unto the object at a distance:
therefore the ideas of him that applieth the sympathetical remedy
are
connected in the mean, and are made directresses of the balsam unto
the object of his desire: even as we have above also minded by
injections concerning ideas of the desire. Mohyns supposed that the
power of sympathy depends upon the stars, because it is an imitator
of influences: but I draw it out of a much nearer subject: to wit,
out of directing ideas, begotten by their mother Charity, or a
desire
of goodwill: for, from hence does that sympathetic powder operate
more successfully, being applied by the hand of one than another:
therefore I have always observed the best process where the remedy
is
instituted by a desire of charity; but, that it doth succeed, with
small success, if the operator be a careless or drunken person;
and,
from hence, I have more esteemed the stars of the mind, in
sympathetical remedies, than the stars of heaven: but that images,
being conceived, are brought unto an object at a distance, a
pregnant
woman is an example of, because she is she who presently transfers
all the ideas of her conception on her young, which dependeth no
otherwise on the mother than from a communion of universal
nourishment. Truly, seeing such a direction of desire is plainly
natural, it is no wonder that the evil spirit doth require the
ideas
of the desires of his imps to be annexed unto a mean offered by
him.
Indeed, the ideas of the desire are after the manner of the
influences of heaven cast into a proper object how locally remote
soever; that is, they are directed by the desire, especially
pointing
out an object for itself, even as the sight of the basilisk, or
touch
of the torpedo, is reflected on their willed object; for I have
already shewn in its place, that the devil doth not attribute so
much
as any thing in the directions of things injected; but that he hath
need of a free, directing, and operative power or faculty. But I
will
not disgrace sympathetical remedies because the devil operates
something about things injected into the body: for what have
sympathetical remedies in common? Although Satan doth co-operate in
injections by wicked natural means required from his bond slaves;
for
every thing shall be judged guilty, or good, from its ends and
intents: and it is sufficient that sympathetical remedies do agree
with things injected in natural means, or medicines.
CHAP. III. OF THE MAGNETIC OR SYMPATHETIC UNGUENT...
OF
THE MAGNETIC OR SYMPATHETIC UNGUENT, THE POWDER OF SYMPATHY, ARMARY
UNGUENT, CURING OF WOUNDS, ECSTASIES, WITCHCRAFT, MUMMIES,
&C.WE
shall now show some remarkable operations that are effected by
magnetism, and founded upon natural sympathy and antipathy,
likewise
how by these means some extraordinary cures may be
performed.The
goodness of the Creator every where extended, created every thing
for
the use of ungrateful man; neither did he admit any of the
theologists, or divines, as assistants in council, how many or how
great virtues he should infuse into things natural. But there are
those who venture to measure the wonderful works of God by their
own
sharpened and refined wit, whereby they deny God to have given such
virtue to things; as though man (a worm) was able, by his narrow
and
limited capacity, to comprehend Omniscience; he therefore measures
the minds of all men by his own, who think that cannot be done,
which
they cannot understand. They therefore
can only develope the mysteries of nature, who being versed in the
art of Cabala, Fire, and Magic, examined the properties of things,
and draw, from darkness into light, the lurking powers of Man,
Animals, Vegetables, Minerals,
and Stones,
and, separating the crudities, dregs, poisons, heterogenities, that
are the thorns implanted in virgin nature from the curse. For an
observer of nature sees daily she doth distil,
sublime, calcine, ferment, dissolve, coagulate, fix,
&c. therefore we who are the ministers of nature do separate,
&c.
finding out the causes and effects of every phenomena she
produces.Now,
as magnetism is ordained for the use of man, and for the curing of
the various disorders incident to human nature, we shall first
touch
upon the grand subject of magnetism, known to possess wonderful
properties, and which are not only evident to every eye, but shew
us
sufficient grounds for our admitting the possibility and reality of
magnetism in general.The
loadstone possesses an eminent medicinal faculty, against many
violent and implacable disorders. Helmont says, that the back of
the
loadstone, as it repulses iron, so also it removes gout, swellings,
rheum, &c. that is of the nature or quality of iron. The iron
attracting faculty, if it be joined to the mummy of a woman, and
the
back of the loadstone be put within her thigh, and the belly of the
loadstone on her loins, it safely prevents a miscarriage, already
threatened; but the belly of the loadstone applied within the thigh
and the back to her loins, it doth wonderfully facilitate her
delivery.Likewise
the wearing the loadstone cases and prevents the cramp, and such
like
disorders and pains.Uldericus
Balk, a dominican friar, published a book at Frankfort in the year
1611, concerning the lamp of life; in which we shall find (taken
from
Paracelsus) the true magnetical cure of many diseases, viz. the
dropsy, gout, jaundice, &c. For if thou shalt enclose the warm
blood of the sick in the shell and white of an egg, which is
exposed
to a nourishing warmth, and this blood, being mixed with a piece of
flesh, thou shalt give to a hungry dog, the disorder departs from
thee into the dog; no otherwise than the leprosy of Naaman passed
over into Gehazi through the execration of the prophet.If
women, weaning their infants, shall milk out their milk upon hot
burning coals, the breast soon dries.If
any one happens to commit nuisance at thy door, and thou wilt
prevent
that beastly trick in future, take the poker red-hot, and put it
into
the excrement, and, by magnetism, his posteriors shall become much
scorched and inflamed.Make
a small table of the lightest, whitest, and basest kind of lead;
and
at one end put a piece of amber, and, three spans from it, lay a
piece of green vitriol; this vitriol will soon lose its colour and
acid: both which effects are found in the preparation of amber. The
root of the Caroline thistle being plucked up when full of juice
and
virtue, and tempered with the mummy of a man, will exhaust the
powers
and natural strength out of a man, on whose shadow thou shalt
stand,
into thyself.
CHAP. IV. OF THE ARMARY UNGUENT, OR WEAPON SALVE, ETC
THE
principal ingredient in this confection, is the moss of a dead
man's
skull, which Van Helmont calls the excrescencies or superfluities
of
the stars. Now the moss growing on the skull of a dead man, seeing
it
has received its seed from the heavens, but its increase from the
mummial marrow of the skull of man, or tower of the microcosm, has
obtained excellent astral and magnetic powers beyond the common
condition of vegetables, although herbs, as they are herbs, want
not
their own magnetism.Now,
the magnetism of this unguent draws out that strange disposition
from
the wound (which otherwise, by a disunion of the parts that held
together, and by which, I say, strange disposition and foreign
quality is produced) from whence it slips, not being overburdened
or
oppressed by any accident, suddenly grow together; and this is
effected by the armary unguent, or weapon salve. From this it
appears
that the unguent, or weapon salve, its property is to heal suddenly
and perfectly without pain, costs, peril, or loss of strength;
hence
it is manifest that the magnetical virtue is from God.It
is now seasonable to discover the immediate cause of magnetism in
the
unguent.First
of all, by the consent of mystical divines, we divide man into the
external and internal man, assigning to both the powers of a
certain
mind, or intelligence: for so there doth a will belong to flesh and
blood, which may not be either the will of man or the will of God;
and the heavenly Father also reveals some things unto the more
inward
man, and some things flesh and blood reveals, that is, the outward
and sensitive, or animal man. For, how could the service of idols,
envy, &c. be rightly numbered among the works of the flesh,
seeing they consist only in the imagination, if the flesh had not
also its own imagination and elective will?Furthermore,
that there are miraculous ecstasies belonging to the more inward
man,
is beyond dispute. That there are also ecstasies in the animal man,
by reason of an intense, or heightend imagination, is, without
doubt.
Martin del Ris, an elder of the society of Jesus, in his Magical
Disquisitions or Enquiries, makes mention of a certain young man in
the city Insulis that was transported with so violent a desire of
seeing his mother, that through the same intense desire, as if
being
rapt up by an ecstasy, he saw her perfectly, although many miles
absent from thence; and, returning again to himself, being mindful
of
all that he had seen, gave many true signs of his true presence
with
his mother.Now
that desire arose from the more outward man, viz. from
blood and sense, or flesh, is certain; for, otherwise, the soul
being
once dislodged, or loosened from the bonds of the body, cannot,
except by miracle, be reunited to it; there is therefore in the
blood
a certain ecstatical or transporting power, which, if at any time
shall be excited or stirred up by an ardent desire and most strong
imagination, it is able to conduct the spirit of the more outward
man
even to some absent and far distant object, but then that power
lies
hid in the more outward man, as it were, in potentia,
or by way of possibility; neither is it brought into act, unless it
be roused up by the imagination, inflamed and agitated by a most
fervent and violent desire.