Transcendental Magic
Table of contentsPREFACEINTRODUCTIONCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VI.CHAPTER VII.CHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IXCHAPTER XCHAPTER XICHAPTER XIICHAPTER XIIICHAPTER XIVCHAPTER XVCHAPTER XVICHAPTER XVIICHAPTER XVIIICHAPTER XIXCHAPTER XXCHAPTER XXICHAPTER XXIICopyright
Table of contents
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
CHAPTER XXII
PREFACE
ELIPHAS LEVI ZAHED is a pseudonym which was adopted in his occult
writings by Alphonse Louis Constant, and it is said to be the
Hebrew equivalent of that name. The author of the Dogme et Rituel
de la Haute Magie was born in humble circumstances about the year
1810, being the son of a shoemaker. Giving evidence of unusual
intelligence at an early age, the priest of his parish conceived a
kindly interest for the obscure boy, and got him on the foundation
of Saint Sulpice, where he was educated without charge, and with a
view to the priesthood. He seems to have passed through the course
of study at that seminary in a way which did not disappoint the
expectations raised concerning him. In addition to Greek and Latin,
he is believed to have acquired considerable knowledge of Hebrew,
though it would be an error to suppose that any of his published
works exhibit special linguistic attainments. He entered on his
clerical novitiate, took minor orders, and in due course became a
deacon, being thus bound by a vow of perpetual celibacy. Shortly
after this step, he was suddenly expelled from Saint Sulpice for
holding opinions contrary to the teaching of the Roman Catholic
Church. The existing accounts of this expulsion are hazy, and
incorporate unlikely elements, as, for example, that he was sent by
his ecclesiastical superiors to take duty in country places, where
he preached with great eloquence what, however, was doctrinally
unsound; but I believe that there is n<r precedent for the
preaching of deacons in the Latin Church. Pending the appearance of
the biography which has been for some years promised in France, we
have few available materials for a life of the "Abbe"" Constant. In
any case, he was cast back upon the world, with the limitations of
priestly engagements, while the priestly career
was closed to him—and what he did, or how he contrived to support
himself, is unknown. By the year 1839 he had made some literary
friendships, including that of Alphonse Esquiros, the forgotten
author of a fantastic romance, entitled " The Magician";* and
Esquiros introduced him to Ganneau, a distracted prophet of the
period, who had adopted the dress of a woman, abode in a garret,
and there preached a species of political illuminism, which was
apparently concerned with the restoration of la vraie UgitimiU. He
was, in fact, a second incarnation of Louis XVII.—" come back to
earth for the fulfilment of a work of regeneration." t Constant and
Esquiros, who had visited him for the purpose of scoffing, were
carried away by his eloquence, and became his disciples. Some
element of socialism must have combined with the illuminism of the
visionary, and this appears to have borne fruit in the brain of
Constant, taking shape ultimately in a book or pamphlet, entitled "
The Gospel of Liberty," to which a transient importance was
attached, foolishly enough, by the imprisonment of the author for a
term of six months. There is some reason to suppose that Esquiros
had a hand in the production, and also in the penalty. His
incarceration over, Constant came forth undaunted, still cleaving
to his prophet, and undertook a kind of apostolic mission into the
provinces, addressing the country people, and suffering, as he
himself tells us, persecution from the ill-disposed. I But the
prophet ceased
* M. Papus, a contemporary French occultist, in an extended study
of the "Doctrine of Eliphas Levi," asks scornfully: " Who now
remembers anything of Paul Augnez or Esquiros, journalists
pretending to initiation, and posing as professors of the occult
sciences in the salons they frequented ?" No doubt they are
forgotten, but Eliphas Levi states, in the Histoire de la Magie,
that, by the publication of his romance of " The Magician,"
Esquiros founded a new school of fantastic magic, and gives
sufficient account of his work to show that it was in parts
excessively curious.
A woman who was associated with his mission, was, in like manner,
supposed to have been Marie Antoinette.—See Histoire de la Magie,
1. 7., c. 5.
A vicious story, which has received recently some publicity in
Paris, charges Constant with spreading a report of his death soon
after his release from prison, assuming another name, imposing upon
the Bishop of Eveux, to prophesy, presumably for want of an
audience, and la vraie Ugitimitd was not restored, so the disciple
returned to Paris, where, in spite of the pledge of his diaconate,
he effected a runaway match with Mdlle. Noe'iny, a beautiful girl
of sixteen. This lady bore him two children, who died in tender
years, and subsequently she deserted him. Her husband is said to
have tried all expedients to procure her return,* but in vain, and
she even further asserted her position by obtaining a legal
annulment of her marriage, on the ground that the contracting
parties were a minor and a person bound to celibacy by an
irrevocable vow. The lady, it may be added, had other domestic
adventures, ending in a second marriage about the year 1872. Madame
Constant was not only very beautiful, but exceedingly talented, and
after her separation she became famous as a sculptor, exhibiting at
the Salon and elsewhere under the name of Claude Vingmy. It is not
impossible that she may be still alive; in the sense of her
artistic genius, at least, she is something more than a
memory.
At what date Alphonse Louis Constant applied himself to the study
of the occult sciences is uncertain, like most other epochs of his
life. The statement on page 142 of this translation, that in the
year 1825 he entered on a fateful path, which led him through
suffering to knowledge, must not be understood in the sense that
his initiation took place at that period, which was indeed early in
boyhood. It obviously refers to his enrolment among the scholars of
Saint Sulpice, which, in a sense, led to suffering, and perhaps
ultimately to science, as it certainly obtained him education. The
episode of the New Alliance—so Gannean termed his system—connects
with transcendentalism, at least and obtaining a licence to preach
and administer the sacraments in that diocese, though he was not a
priest. He is represented as drawing large congregations to the
cathedral by his preaching, but at length the judge who had
sentenced him unmasked the impostor, and the sacrilegious farce
thus terminated dramatically.
* Including Black Magic and pacts with Lucifer, according to the
silly calumnies of his enemies.
on the side of hallucination, and may have furnished the required
impulse to the mind of the disciple ; but in 1846 and 1847, certain
pamphlets issued by Constant under the auspices of the Libraire
Societaire and the Libraire Phal-anste'rienne shew that his
inclinations were still towards Socialism, tinctured by religious
aspirations. The period which intervened between his wife's
desertion* and the publication of the Dogme de la Haute Magie, in
1855, was that, probably, which he devoted less or more to occult
study. In the interim he issued a large " Dictionary of Christian
Literature," which is still extant in the encyclopaedic series of
the Abbe* Migne; this work betrays no leaning towards occult
science, and, indeed, no acquaintance therewith. What it does
exhibit unmistakably is the intellectual insincerity of the author,
for he assumes therein the mask of perfect orthodoxy, and that
accent in matters of religion which is characteristic of the voice
of Rome. The Dogme de la Haute Magie was succeeded in 1856 by its
companion volume the Hituel, both of which are here translated for
the first time into English. It was followed in rapid succession by
the Histoire de la Magie, 1860; La Clef des Grands Mysteres, 1861 ;
a second edition of the Dogme et Rituel, to which a long and
irrelevant introduction was unfortunately prefixed, 1862; Fables ct
Symloles, 1864; Le Sorcier de Meudon, a beautiful pastoral idyll,
impressed with the cachet cabalistique ; and La Science des
Esprits, 1865. The two last works incorporate the substance of the
amphlets published in 1846 and 1847.
The precarious existence of Constant's younger days was in one
sense but faintly improved in his age. His books did not command a
large circulation, but they secured him admirers and pupils, from
whom he received remuneration
* I must not be understood as definitely attaching blame to Madame
Constant for the course she adopted. Her husband was approaching
middle life when he withdrew her—still a child—from her legal
protectors, and the runaway marriage which began by forswearing
was, under the circumstances, little better than a seduction thinly
legalised, and it was afterwards not improperly dissolved.
in return for personal or written courses of instruction. He was
commonly to be found chez lui in a species of magical vestment,
which may be pardoned in a French magus, and his only available
portrait —prefixed to this volume— represents him in that guise. He
outlived the Franco-German war, and as he had exchanged Socialism
for a sort of transcendentalised Imperialism, his political faith
must have been as much tried by the events which followed the siege
of Paris as was his patriotic enthusiasm by the reverses which
culminated at Se"dan. His contradictory life closed in 1875 amidst
the last offices of the church which had almost expelled him from
her bosom. He left many manuscripts behind him, which are still in
course of publication, and innumerable letters to his pupils—Baron
Spedalieri alone possesses nine volumes—have been happily preserved
in most cases, and are in some respects more valuable than the
formal treatises.
No modern expositor of occult science can bear any comparison with
Sliphas Levi, and among ancient expositors, though many stand
higher in authority, all yield to him in living interest, for he is
actually the spirit of modern thought forcing an answer for the
times from the old oracles. Hence there are greater names, but
there is no influence so great—no fascination in occult literature
exceeds that of the French magus. The others are surrendered to
specialists and the typical serious students to whom all dull and
unreadable masterpieces are dedicated, directly or not; but he is
read and appreciated, much as we read and appreciate new and
delightful verse which, through some conceit of the poet, is put
into the vesture of Chaucer. Indeed, the writings of filiphas Levi
stand, as regards the grand old line of initiation, in relatively
the same position as the " Earthly Paradise " of Mr William Morris
stands to the " Canterbury Tales." There is the recurrence to the
old conceptions, and there is the assumption of the old drapery,
but there is in each case the new spirit. The " incommunicable
axiom " and the " great arcanum," Azoth,
Inri, and Tetragrammaton, which are the vestures of the occult
philosopher, are like the " cloth of Bruges and hogsheads of
Guienne, Florence gold cloth, and Ypres napery " of the poet. In
both cases it is the year 1850 ct seq., in a mask of high fantasy.
Moreover, " the idle singer of an empty day " is paralleled fairly
enough by " the poor and obscure scholar who has recovered the
lever of Archimedes." The comparison is intentionally grotesque,
but it obtains notwithstanding, and even admits of development, for
as Mr Morris in a sense voided the raison d'etre of his poetry,
and, in express contradiction to his own mournful question, has
endeavoured to " set the crooked straight " by betaking himself to
Socialism, so filiphas LeVi surrendered the rod of miracles and
voided his Doctrine of Magic by devising a one-sided and insincere
concordat with orthodox religion, and expiring in the arms of " my
venerable masters in theology," the descendants, and decadent at
that, of the " imbecile theologians of the middle ages." But the
one is, as the other was, a man of sufficient ability to make a
paradoxical defence of a position which remains untenable. Students
of ICliphas LeVi will be acquainted with the qualifications and
stealthy retractations by which the somewhat uncompromising
position of initiated superiority in the " Doctrine and Eitual,"
had its real significance read out of it by the later works of the
magus. I have dealt with this point exhaustively in another place,*
and there is no call to pass over the same ground a second time. I
propose rather to indicate as briefly as possible some new
considerations which will help us to understand why there were
grave discrepancies between the " Doctrine and Ritual of
Transcendent Magic" and the volumes which followed these. In the
first place, the earlier books were written more expressly from the
standpoint of initiation, and in the language thereof; they
obviously contain much which it would be mere folly to construe
after a literal fashion, and
* See the Critical Essay prefixed to " The Mysteries of Magic : a
Digest of the Writings of Eliphas Levi." London : George Redway.
1886.
what filiphas LeVi wrote at a later period is not so much
discrepant with his earlier instruction—though it is this also — as
the qualifications placed by a modern transcen-dentalist on the
technical exaggerations of the secret sciences. For the proof we
need travel no further than the introduction to " The Doctrine of
Magic," and to the Hebrew manuscript cited therein, as to the
powers and privileges of the magus. Here the literal interpretation
would be insanity; these claims conceal a secret meaning, and are
trickery in their verbal sense. They are what filiphas LeVi himself
terms "hyperbolic," adding: "If the sage do not materially and
actually perform these things, he accomplishes others which are
much greater and more admirable" (p. 223). But this consideration
is not in itself sufficient to take account of the issues that are
involved; it will not explain, for example, why filiphas Levi, who
consistently teaches in the " Doctrine and Ritual" that the dogmas
of so-called revealed religion are nurse-tales for children, should
subsequently have insisted on their acceptation in the sense of the
orthodox Church by the grown men of science, and it becomes
necessary here to touch upon a matter which, by its nature, and
obviously, does not admit of complete elucidation.
The precise period of study which produced the " Doctrine and
Eitual of Transcendent Magic" as its first literary result is not
indicated with any certainty, as we have seen, in the life of the
author, nor do I regard filiphas LeVi as constitutionally capable
of profound or extensive book study. Intensely suggestive, he is at
the same time without much evidence of depth; splendid in
generalisation, he is without accuracy in detail, and it would be
difficult to cite a worse guide over mere matters of fact. His
"History of Magic" is a case in point; as a philosophical survey it
is admirable, and there is nothing in occult literature to approach
it for literary excellence, but it swarms with historical
inaccuracies ; it is in all respects an accomplished and in no way
an erudite performance, nor do I think that the writer much
concerned himself with any real reading of the authorities whom he
cites. The French verb parcourir represents his method of study,
and not the verb appro-fondir. Let us take one typical case. There
is no occult writer whom he cites with more satisfaction, and
towards whom he exhibits more reverence, than William Postel, and
of all Postel's books there is none which he mentions so often as
the Clavis Absconditorum a Constitutione Mundi ; yet he had read
this minute treatise so carelessly that he missed a vital point
concerning it, and apparently died unaware that the symbolic key
prefixed to it was the work of the editor and not the work of
Postel. It does not therefore seem unreasonable to affirm that had
LeVi been left to himself, he would not have got far in occult
science, because his Gallic vivacity would have been blunted too
quickly by the horrors of mere research; but he did somehow fall
within a circle of initiation which curtailed the necessity for
such research, and put him in the right path, making visits to the
Bibliotheque Rationale and the Arsenal of only subsidiary
importance. This, therefore, constitutes the importance of the "
Doctrine and Eitual"; disguised indubitably, it is still the voice
of initiation; of what school does not matter, for in this
connection nothing can be spoken plainly, and I can ask only the
lenience of deferred judgment from my readers for my honourable
assurance that I am not speaking idly. The grades of that
initiation had been only partly ascended by filiphas Levi when he
published the " Doctrine and Ritual," and its publication closed
the path of his progress : as he was expelled by Saint Sulpice for
the exercise of private judgment in matters of doctrinal belief, so
he was expelled by his occult chiefs for the undue exercise of
personal discretion in the matter of the revelation of the
mysteries. Now, these facts explain in the first place the
importance, as I have said, of the " Doctrine and Eitual," because
it represents a knowledge which cannot be derived from books ; they
explain, secondly, the shortcomings of that work, because it is not
the result of a full knowledge; why, thirdly, the later writings
contain
no evidences of further knowledge ; and, lastly, I think that they
materially assist us to understand why there are retractations,
qualifications, and subterfuges in the said later works. Having
gone too far, he naturally attempted to go back, and just as he
strove to patch up a species of modus vivendi with the church of
his childhood, so he endeavoured, by throwing dust in the eyes of
his readers, to make his peace with that initiation, the first law
of which he had indubitably violated. In both cases, and quite
naturally, he failed.
It remains for me to state what I feel personally to be the chief
limitation of LeVi, namely, that he was a tran-scendentalist but
not a mystic, and, indeed, he was scarcely a transcendentalist in
the accepted sense, for he was fundamentally a materialist —a
materialist, moreover, who at times approached perilously towards
atheism, as when he states that God is a hypothesis which is "very
probably necessary "; he was, moreover, a disbeliever in any real
communication with the world of spirits. He defines mysticism as
the shadow and the buffer of intellectual light, and loses no
opportunity to enlarge upon its false illuminism, its excesses, and
fatuities. There is, therefore, no way from man to God in his
system, while the sole avenues of influx from God to man are
sacramentally, and in virtue merely of a tolerable hypothesis. Thus
man must remain in simple intellectualism if he would rest in
reason; the sphere of material experience is that of his knowledge;
and as to all beyond it, there are only the presumptions of
analogy. I submit that this is not the doctrine of occult science,
nor the summum "bonum of the greater initiation; that
transcendental pneumatology is more by its own; hypothesis than an
alphabetical system argued kabbalis-tically; and that more than
mere memories can on the same assumption be evoked in the astral
light. The hierarchic order of the visible world has its complement
in the invisible hierarchy, which analogy leads us to discern,
being at the same time a process of our perception rather than a
rigid law governing the modes of manifestation in all things seen
and unseen; initiation takes us to the bottom step of the ladder of
the invisible hierarchy and instructs us in the principles of
ascent, but the ascent rests personally with ourselves; the voices
of some who have preceded can be heard above us, but they are of
those who are still upon the way, and they die as they rise into
the silence, towards which we also must ascend alone, where
initiation can no longer help us, unto that bourne from whence no
traveller returns, and the influxes are sacramental only to those
who are below. An annotated translation exceeded the scope of the
present undertaking, but there is much in the text which follows
that offers scope for detailed criticism, and there are points also
where further elucidation would be useful. One of the most obvious
defects, the result of mere carelessness or undue haste in writing,
is the promise to explain or to prove given points later on, which
are forgotten subsequently by the author. Instances will be found
on p. 65, concerning the method of determining the appearance of
unborn children by means of the pentagram; on p. 83, concerning the
rules for the recognition of sex in the astral body; on p. 9*7,
concerning the notary art; on p. 100, concerning the magical side
of the Exercises of St Ignatius; on p. 123, concerning the alleged
sorcery of Grandier and Girard; on p. 125, concerning Schroepffer's
secrets and formulas for evocation; on p. 134, concerning the
occult iconography of Gaffarel. In some cases the promised
elucidations appear in other places than those indicated, but they
are mostly wanting altogether. There are other perplexities with
which the reader must deal according to his judgment. The
explanation of the quadrature of the circle on p. 37 is a childish
folly; the illustration of perpetual motion on p. 55 involves a
mechanical absurdity ; the doctrine of the perpetuation of the same
physiognomies from generation to generation is not less absurd in
heredity ; the cause assigned to cholera and other ravaging
epidemics, more especially the reference to bacteria, seems equally
outrageous in physics. There is one other matter to which attention
should be directed; the Hebrew quotations in the original — and the
observation applies generally to all the works of Le'vi— swarm with
typographical and other errors, some of which it is impossible to
correct, as, for example, the passage cited from Eabbi Abraham on
p. 266. So also the Greek conjuration, pp. 277 and 278, is simply
untranslatable as it stands, and the version given is not only
highly conjectural, but omits an entire passage owing to
insuperable difficulties. Lastly, after careful consideration, I
have judged it the wiser course to leave out the preliminary essay
which was prefixed to the second edition of the " Doctrine and
Ritual "; its prophetic utterances upon the mission of Napoleon
III. have been stultified by subsequent events; it is devoid of any
connection with the work which it precedes, and, representing as it
does the later views of Levi, it would be a source of confusion to
the reader. The present translation represents, therefore, the
first edition of the Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie, omitting
nothing but a few unimportant citations from old French grimoires
in an unnecessary appendix at the end. The portrait of Levi is from
a carte-de-visite in the possession of Mr Edward Maitland, and was
issued with his " Life of Anna Kingsford," a few months ago.
INTRODUCTION
BEHIND the veil of all the hieratic and mystical allegories of
ancient doctrines, behind the shadows and the strange ordeals of
all initiations, under the seal of all sacred writings, in the
ruins of Nineveh or Thebes, on the crumbling stones of the old
temples, and on the blackened visage of the Assyrian or Egyptian
sphinx, in the monstrous or marvellous paintings which interpret to
the faithful of India the inspired pages of the Vedas, in the
strange emblems of our old books of alchemy, in the ceremonies at
reception practised by all mysterious societies, traces are found
of a doctrine which is everywhere the same, and everywhere
carefully concealed. Occult philosophy seems to have been the nurse
or god-mother of all intellectual forces, the key of all divine
obscurities, and the absolute queen of society in those ages when
it was reserved exclusively for the education of priests and of
kings. It reigned in Persia with the magi, who at length perished,
as perish all masters of the world, because they abused their
power; it endowed India with the most wonderful traditions, and
with an incredible wealth of poesy, grace, and terror in its
emblems ; it civilised Greece to the music of the lyre of Orpheus ;
it concealed the principles of all the sciences and of all human
intellectual progress in the bold calculations of Pythagoras ;
fable abounded in its miracles, and history, attempting to
appreciate this unknown power, became confused with fable; it shook
or strengthened empires by its oracles, caused tyrants to tremble
on their thrones, and governed all minds, either by curiosity or by
fear. For this science, said the crowd, there is nothing
impossible; it commands the elements, knows the language of the
stars, and directs the planetary courses; when it speaks, the moon
falls blood-red from heaven; the dead rise in their graves and
articulate ominous words as the night wind blows through their
skulls. Mistress of love or of hate, the science can dispense
paradise or hell at its pleasure to human hearts; it disposes of
all forms, and distributes beauty or ugliness; with the rod of
Circe it alternately changes men into brutes and animals into men;
it even disposes of life or death, and can confer wealth on its
adepts by the transmutation of metals and immortality by its
quintessence or elixir compounded of gold and light. Such was magic
from Zoroaster to Manes, from Orpheus to Apollonius of Tyana, when
positive Christianity, at length victorious over the brilliant
dreams and titanic aspirations of the Alexandrian school, dared to
launch its anathemas publicly against this philosophy, and thus
forced it to become more occult and mysterious than ever. Moreover,
strange and alarming rumours began to circulate concerning
initiates or adepts; these men were everywhere surrounded by an
ominous influence; they killed or drove mad those who allowed
themselves to be carried away by their honeyed eloquence or by the
fame of their learning. The women whom they loved became Stryges,
their children vanished at their nocturnal meetings, and men
whispered shudderingly and in secret of bloody orgies and
abominable banquets. Bones had been found in the crypts of ancient
temples, shrieks had been heard in the night, harvests withered and
herds sickened when the magician passed by. Diseases which defied
medical skill at times appeared in the world, and always, it was
said, beneath the envenomed glance of the adepts. At length an
universal cry of execration went up against magic, the mere name
became a crime, and the common hatred was formulated in this
sentence : " Magicians to the flames!" as it was shouted some
centuries earlier: " To the lions with the Christians !" Now the
multitude never conspires except against real powers; it possesses
not the knowledge of what is true, but it has the instinct of what
is strong. It remained for the eighteenth century to deride both
Christians and magic, while infatuated with the homilies of
Eousseau and the illusions of Cagliostro.
Science, notwithstanding, is at the basis of magic, as at the
foundation of Christianity there is love, and in the Gospel symbols
we see the Word incarnate adored in his cradle by three magi, led
thither by a star (the triad and the sign of the microcosm), and
receiving their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, a second
mysterious triplicity, under which emblem the highest secrets of
the Kabbalah are allegorically contained. Christianity owes,
therefore, no hatred to magic, but^luiman^ ignorance has ever stood
in fear of the unknown. The science was driven into hiding to
escape the impassioned assaults of a blind love ; it clothed itself
with new hieroglyphics, dissimulated its labours, denied its hopes.
Then it was that the jargon of alchemy was created, a permanent
deception for the vulgar, a living language only for the true
disciple of Hermes.
Extraordinary fact! Among the sacred books of the Christians there
are two works which the infallible Church makes no claim to
understand and has never attempted to explain; these are the
prophecy of Ezekiel and the Apocalypse, two Kabbalistic Keys
assuredly reserved in heaven for the commentaries of magician
Kings, books sealed with seven seals for faithful believers, yet
perfectly plain to an initiated infidel of the occult sciences.
There is also another book, but, although it is popular in a sense
and may be found everywhere, this is of all most occult and
unknown, because it has the key of all others; it is in public
evidence without being known to the public; no one dreams of
seeking it where it actually is, and elsewhere it is lost labour to
look for it. This book, possibly anterior to that of Enoch, has
never been translated, but is still preserved unmutilated in
primeval characters, on detached leaves, like the tablets of the
ancients. A distinguished scholar has revealed, though no one has
observed it, not indeed its secret, but its antiquity and singular
preservation ; another scholar, but of a mind more fantastic than
judicious, passed thirty years in the
study of this book, and has merely suspected its whole importance.
It is, in fact, a monumental and extraordinary work, strong and
simple as the architecture of the pyramids, and consequently
enduring like those—a book which is the sum of all the sciences,
which can resolve all problems by its infinite combinations, which
speaks by evoking thought, is the inspirer and regulator of all
possible conceptions, the masterpiece perhaps of the human mind,
assuredly one of the finest things bequeathed to us by antiquity,
an universal key, the name of which has been explained and
comprehended only by the learned William Postel, an unique text,
whereof the initial characters alone exalted the devout spirit of
Saint Martin into ecstasy, and might have restored reason to the
sublime and unfortunate Swedenborg. We shall speak of this book
later on, and its mathematical and precise explanation will be the
complement and crown of our conscientious undertaking. The original
alliance of Christianity and the science of the magi, once it is
thoroughly demonstrated, will be a discovery of no second-rate
importance, and we question not that the serious study of magic and
the Kabbalah will lead earnest minds to the reconciliation of
science and dogma, of reason and faith, heretofore regarded as
impossible.
We have said that the Church, whose special office is the custody
of the Keys, does not pretend to possess those of the Apocalypse or
of Ezekiel. In the opinion of Christians the scientific and magical
clavicles of Solomon are lost; yet, at the same time, it is certain
that, in the domain of intelligence ruled by the Word, nothing
which has been written can perish; things which men cease to
understand simply cease to exist for them, at least in the order of
the Word, and they enter then into the domain of enigma and
mystery. Furthermore, the antipathy, and even open war, of the
official church against all that belongs to the realm of magic,
which is a kind of personal and emancipated priesthood, is allied
with necessary and even with inherent causes in the social and
hierarchic constitution of Christian sacerdotalism. The Church
ignores magic—for she must either ignore it or perish, as we shall
prove later on; yet she does not the less recognise that her
mysterious founder was saluted in his cradle by the three magi—
that is to say, by the hieratic ambassadors of the three parts of
the known world and the three analogical worlds of occult
philosophy. In the school of Alexandria, magic and Christianity
almost joined hands under the auspices of Ammonius Saccas and of
Plato ; the doctrine of Hermes is found almost in its entirety in
the writings attributed to Denis the Areo-pagite; and Synesius
sketched the plan of a treatise on dreams, which was later on to be
annotated by Cardan, and composed hymns which might have served for
the liturgy of the Church of Swedenborg, could a church of the
illuminated possess a liturgy. With this period of fiery
abstractions and impassioned warfare of words there must also be
connected the philosophic reign of Julian, called the Apostate
because in his youth he made an unwilling profession of
Christianity. Everyone is aware that Julian was sufficiently
wrongheaded to be an unseasonable hero of Plutarch, and was, if one
may say so, the Don Quixote of Roman Chivalry ; but what most
people do not know is that Julian was one of the illuminated and an
initiate of the first order; that he believed in the unity of God
and in the universal doctrine of the Trinity; that, in a word, he
regretted nothing of the old world but its magnificent symbols and
its exceedingly gracious images. Julian was not a pagan; he was a
Gnostic allured by the allegories of Greek polytheism, who had the
misfortune to find the name of Jesus Christ less sonorous than that
of Orpheus. The Emperor personally paid for the academical tastes
of the philosopher and rhetorician, and after affording himself the
spectacle and satisfaction of expiring like Epaminondas with the
periods of Cato, he had in public opinion, already thoroughly
Christianised, anathemas for his funeral oration and a scornful
epithet for his ultimate celebrity.
Let us skip the little men and small matters of the Bas-Empire, and
pass on to the Middle Ages. . . . Stay, take this book! Glance at
the seventh page, then seat yourself on the mantle I am spreading,
and let each of us cover our eyes with one of its corners. . . .
Your head swims, does it not, and the earth seems to fly beneath
your feet ? Hold tightly, and do not look around. . . . The vertigo
ceases; we are here. Stand up and open your eyes, but take care
before all things to make no Christian sign and to pronounce no
Christian words. We are in a landscape of Salvator Rosa, a troubled
wilderness which seems resting after a storm; there is no moon in
the sky, but you can distinguish little stars gleaming in the
brushwood, and you can hear about you the slow flight of great
birds, who seem to whisper strange oracles as they pass. Let us
approach silently that cross-road among the rocks. A harsh,
funereal trumpet winds suddenly, and black torches flare up on
every side. A tumultuous throng is surging round a vacant throne;
all look and wait. Suddenly they cast themselves on the ground. A
goat-headed prince bounds forward among them; he ascends the
throne, turns, and by assuming a stooping posture, presents to the
assembly a human face, which, carrying black torches, every one
comes forward to salute and to kiss. With a hoarse laugh he
recovers an upright position, and then distributes gold, secret
instructions, occult medicines, and poisons to his faithful
bondsmen. Meanwhile, fires are lighted of fern and alder, piled
over with human bones and the fat of executed criminals. Druidesses
crowned with wild parsley and vervain immolate unbaptised children
with golden knives and prepare horrible love-feasts. Tables are
spread, masked men seat themselves by half-nude females, and a
Bacchanalian orgie begins; there is nothing missing but salt, the
symbol of wisdom and immortality. Wine flows in streams, leaving
stains like blood; obscene talk and fond caresses begin, and
presently the whole assembly is drunk with wine, with pleasure,
with crime, and singing. They rise, a disordered throng, and hasten
to form infernal dances. . . .
Then come all legendary monsters, all phantoms of nightmare ;
enormous toads play inverted flutes and blow with their paws on
their flanks; limping scarabaei mingle in the dance; crabs play the
castanets ; crocodiles beat time on their scales ; elephants and
mammoths appear habited like Cupids and foot it in the ring ;
finally, the giddy circles break up and scatter on all sides. . . .
Every yelling dancer drags away a dishevelled female. . . . Lamps
and candles formed of human fat go out smoking in the darkness. . .
. Cries are heard here and there, mingled with peals of laughter,
blasphemies, and rattlings of the throat. Come, rouse yourself, do
not make the sign of the cross ! See, I have brought you home ; you
are in your own bed, somewhat worn-out, possibly a trifle
shattered, by your night's journey and dissipation ; but you have
witnessed something of which everyone talks without knowledge; you
have been initiated into secrets no less terrible than the grotto
of Triphonius; you have been present at the Sabbath. It remains for
you now to preserve your reason, to have a wholesome dread of the
law, and to keep at a respectful distance from the Church and her
faggots.
Would you care, as a change, to behold something less fantastic,
more real, and also more truly terrible ? You shall assist at the
execution of Jacques de Molay and his accomplices or his brethren
in martyrdom. . . . Do not, however, be misled, confuse not the
guilty and the innocent! Did the Templars really adore Baphomet ?
Did they offer a shameful salutation to the buttocks of the goat of
Mendes ? What was actually this secret and potent association which
imperilled Church and State, and was thus destroyed unheard ? Judge
nothing lightly ; they are guilty of a great crime ; they have
allowed the sanctuary of antique initiation to be entered by the
profane. By them for a second time have the fruits of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil been gathered and shared, so that
they might become the masters of the world. The sentence which
condemns them has a higher and earlier origin than the tribunal
of
pope or king: " On the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt
surely die," said God Himself, as we see in the book of
Genesis.
What is taking place in the world, and why do priests and
potentates tremble ? What secret power threatens tiaras and crowns
? A few madmen are roaming from land to land, concealing, as they
say, the philosophical stone under their ragged vesture. They can
change earth into gold, and they are without food or lodging !
Their brows are encircled by an aureole of glory and by a shadow of
ignominy ! One has discovered the universal science and goes vainly
seeking death to escape the agonies of his triumph—he is the
Majorcan Raymond Lully. Another heals imaginary diseases by
fantastic remedies, giving a formal denial in advance to the
proverb which enforces the futility of a cautery on a wooden leg—he
is the marvellous Paracelsus, always drunk and always lucid, like
the heroes of Rabelais. Here is William Postel writing naively to
the fathers of the Council of Trent, informing them that he has
discovered the absolute doctrine, hidden from the foundation of the
world, and is longing to share it with them. The council does not
concern itself with the maniac, does not condescend to condemn him,
and proceeds to examine the weighty questions of efficacious grace
and sufficing grace. He whom we see perishing poor and abandoned is
Cornelius Agrippa, less of a magician than any, though the vulgar
persist in regarding him as a more potent sorcerer than all because
he was sometimes a cynic and mystifier. What secret do these men
bear with them to their tomb ? Why are they wondered at without
being understood ? Why are they condemned unheard ? Why are they
initiates of those terrific secret sciences of which the Church and
society are afraid ? Why are they acquainted with things of which
others know nothing ? Why do they conceal what all men burn to know
? Why are they invested with a dread and unknown power ? The occult
sciences ! Magic ! These words will reveal all and give food for
further thought! De omni re scibili et quibus-dam aliis.
But what, as a fact, was this magic ? What was the power of these
men who were at once so proud and so persecuted ? If they were
really strong, why did they not overcome their enemies ? But if
they were weak and foolish, why did people honour them by fearing
them ? Does magic exist ? Is there an occult knowledge which is
truly a power, which works wonders fit to be compared with the
miracles of authorised religions? To these two palmary questions we
make answer by an affirmation and a book. The book shall justify
the affirmation, and the affirmation is this. Yes, there existed in
the past, and there exists in the present, a potent and real magic;
yes, all that legends have said of it is true, but, in contrariety
to what commonly happens, popular exaggerations are, in this case,
not only beside but below the truth. There is indeed a formidable
secret, the revelation of which has once already transformed the
world, as testified in Egyptian religious tradition, symbolically
summarised by Moses at the beginning of Genesis. This secret
constitutes the fatal science of good and evil, and the consequence
of its revelation is death. Moses depicts it under the figure of a
tree which is in the centre of the Terrestrial Paradise, is in
proximity to the tree of life and has a radical connection
therewith ; at the foot of this tree is the source of the four
mysterious rivers; it is guarded by the sword of fire and by the
four figures of the Biblical sphinx, the Cherubim of Ezekiel. . . .
Here I must pause, and I fear already that I have said too much.
Yes, there is one sole, universal, and imperishable dogma, strong
as the supreme reason; simple, like all that is great;
intelligible, like all that is universally and absolutely true; and
this dogma has been the parent of all others. Yes, there is a
science which confers on man powers apparently superhuman ; I find
them enumerated as follows in a Hebrew manuscript of the sixteenth
century : —
" These are the powers and privileges of the man who holds in his
right hand the clavicles of Solomon, and in his left the branch of
the blossoming almond. « Aleph. —He beholds God face to face,
without dying, and converses familiarly with the seven genii who
command the entire celestial army, n Beth. — He is above all
afflictions and all fears. J Ghimel. — He reigns with all heaven
and is served by all hell. 1 Daleth. — He disposes of his own
health and life and can equally influence that of others, n He. —He
can neither be surprised by misfortune, nor overwhelmed by
disasters, nor conquered by his enemies. 1 Vau. —He knows the
reason of the past, present, and future. ? Dzain. —He possesses the
secret of the resurrection of the dead and the key of
immortality.
" Such are the seven chief privileges, and those which rank next
are as follows :—
" n Cheth. —To find the philosophical stone. B Teth. —To enjoy the
universal medicine. s lod. —To be acquainted with the laws of
perpetual motion and in a position to demonstrate the quadrature of
the circle. 3 Caph. —To change into gold not only all metals, but
also the earth itself, and even the refuse of the earth. ? Lamed.
—To subdue the most ferocious animals and be able to pronounce the
words which paralyse and charm serpents. » Mem. —To possess the Ars
Notoria which gives the universal science. 3 Nun. —To speak
learnedly on all subjects, without preparation and without
study.
" These, finally, are the seven least powers of the magus —
" D Samech. —To know at first sight the deep things of the souls of
men and the mysteries of the hearts of women. V Gnain. —To force
nature to make him free at his pleasure, a Phe. —To foresee all
future events which do not depend on a superior free will, or on an
undiscernible cause. V Tsade. —To give at once and to all the most
efficacious consolations and the most wholesome counsels. P Copli.
— To triumph over adversities. "» Resch. —To conquer love and hate.
W Schin. — To have the secret of wealth, to be always its master
and never its slave. To know how to enjoy even poverty and never
become abject or miserable, n Tau. —Let us add to these three
septenaries that the wise man rules the elements, stills tempests,
cures the diseased by his touch, and raises the dead!
" At the same time, there are certain things which have been sealed
by Solomon with his triple seal. It is enough that the initiates
know, and as for others, whether they deride, doubt, or believe,
whether they threaten or fear, what matters it to science or to us
?"
Such are actually the issues of occult philosophy, and we are in a
position to withstand an accusation of insanity or a suspicion of
imposture when we affirm that all these privileges are real. To
demonstrate this is the sole end of our work on occult philosophy.
The philosophical stone, the universal medicine, the transmutation
of metals, the quadrature of the circle, and the secret of
perpetual motion, are thus neither mystifications of science nor
dreams of madness. They are terms which must be understood in their
veritable sense; they are expressions of the different applications
of one same secret, the several characteristics of one same
operation, which is defined in a more comprehensive manner under
the name of the great work. Furthermore, there exists in nature a
force which is immeasurably more powerful than steam, and by means
of which a single man, who knows how to adapt and direct it, might
upset and alter the face of the world. This force was known to the
ancients ; it consists in an universal agent having equilibrium for
its supreme law, while its direction is concerned immediately with
the great arcanum of transcendent magic. By the direction of this
agent it is possible to change the very order of the seasons; to
produce at night the phenomena of day; to correspond
instantaneously between one extremity of the earth and the other;
to see, like Apollonius, what is taking place on the other side of
the world; to heal or injure at a distance; to give speech an
universal success and reverberation. This agent, which barely
manifests under the uncertain methods of Mesmer's followers, is
precisely that which the adepts of the middle ages denominated the
first matter of the great work. The Gnostics represented it as the
fiery body of the Holy Spirit; it was the object of adoration in
the secret rites of the Sabbath and the Temple, under the
hieroglyphic figure of Baphomet or the Androgyne of Mendes. All
this will be proved.
Such are the secrets of occult philosophy, such is magic in
history; let us now glance at it as it appears in its books and its
achievements, in its initiations and its rites. The key of all
magical allegories is found in the tablets we have already
mentioned, and these tablets we regard as the work of Hermes. About
this book, which may be called the keystone of the whole edifice of
occult science, are grouped innumerable legends which are either
its partial translation or its commentary renewed endlessly under a
thousand different forms. Sometimes these ingenious fables combine
harmoniously into a great epic which characterises an epoch, though
how or why is not clear to the uninitiated. Thus, the fabulous
history of the Golden Fleece both resumes and veils the Hermetic
and magical doctrines of Orpheus, and if we recur only to the
mysterious poetry of Greece, it is because the sanctuaries of Egypt
and India to some extent dismay us by their resources, and leave
our choice embarrassed in the midst of such abundant wealth. We are
eager, moreover, to reach the Thebaid at once, that dread synthesis
of all doctrine, past, present, and future, that, so to speak,
infinite fable, which comprehends, like the Deity of Orpheus, the
two extremities of the cycle of human life. Extraordinary fact! The
seven gates of Thebes, attacked and defended by seven chiefs who
have sworn upon the blood of victims, possess the same significance
as the seven seals of the sacred book interpreted by seven genii,
and assailed by a monster with seven heads, after being opened by a
living yet immolated lamb, in the allegorical work of St John. The
mysterious origin of (Edipus, found suspended from the tree of
Cytheron like a bleeding fruit, recalls the symbols of Moses and
the narratives of Genesis. He makes war upon his father, whom he
slays without knowing—alarming prophecy of the blind emancipation
of reason without science ; he then meets with the sphinx — the
sphinx, that symbol of symbols, the eternal enigma of the vulgar,
the granite pedestal of the science of the sages, the voracious and
silent monster whose invariable form expresses the one dogma of the
great universal mystery. How is the tetrad changed into the duad
and explained by the triad ? In more common but more emblematic
terms, what is that animal which in the morning has four feet, two
at noon, and three in the evening ? Philosophically speaking, how
does the doctrine of elementary forces produce the dualism of
Zoroaster, while it is summed by the triad of Pythagoras and Plato
? What is the ultimate reason of allegories and numbers, the final
message of all symbolisms ? QEdipus replies with a simple and
terrible word which destroys the sphinx and makes the diviner King
of Thebes ; the answer to the enigma is Man ! . . . Unfortunate !
He has seen too much, and yet with insufficient clearness; he must
presently expiate his calamitous and imperfect clairvoyance by a
voluntary blindness, and then vanish in the midst of a storm, like
all civilisations which may at any time divine the answer to the
riddle of the sphinx without grasping its whole import and mystery.
Everything is symbolical and transcendental in this titanic epic of
human destinies. The two hostile brethren express the second part
of the grand mystery divinely completed by the sacrifice of
Antigone; then comes the last war; the brethren slay one another,
Capaneus is destroyed by the lightning which he defies, Amphiaraiis
is swallowed by the earth, and all these are so many allegories
which, by their truth and their grandeur, astonish those who can
penetrate their triple hieratic sense. ^Eschylus, annotated by
Bal-lanche, gives only a weak notion concerning them, whatever the
primeval sublimities of the Greek poet or the beauty of the French
critic.
The secret book of antique initiation was not unknown to Homer, who
outlines its plan and chief figures on the shield of Achilles, with
minute precision. But the gracious fictions of Homer replaced
speedily in the popular memory the simple and abstract truths of
primeval revelation. Humanity clung to the form and allowed the
idea to be forgotten; signs lost power in their multiplication;
magic also at this period became corrupted, and degenerated with
the sorcerers of Thessaly into the most profane enchantments.
Thejjrime of (Edipus brought forth its deadly fruits, and the
science of good and evil erected evil into a sacrilegious divinity.
Men, weary of the light, took refuge in the shadow of bodily
substance; the dream of the void, which is filled by God, soon
appeared to be greater than God himself in their eyes, and thus
hell was created.
When, in the course of this work, we make use of the consecrated
terms God, Heaven, and Hell, let it be thoroughly understood, once
for all, that our meaning is as far removed from that which the
profane attach to them as initiation is distant from vulgar
thought. God, for us, is the AZOT of the sages, the efficient and
final principle of the great work.
Returning to the fable of (Edipus, the crime of the King of Thebes
was that he failed to understand the sphinx, that he destroyed the
scourge of Thebes without being pure enough to complete the
expiation in the name of his people. The plague, in consequence,
avenged speedily the death of the monster, and the King of Thebes,
forced to abdicate, sacrificed himself to the terrible manes of the
sphinx, more alive and voracious than ever when it had passed from
the domain of form into that of idea. (Edipus divined what was man
and he put out his own eyes because he did not see what was God. He
divulged half of the great arcanum, and, to save his people, it was
necessary for him to bear the remaining half of the terrible secret
into exile and the tomb.
After the colossal fable of (Edipus we find the gracious poem of
Psyche, which was certainly not invented by Apuleius. The great
magical arcanum reappears here under the figure of a mysterious
union between a god and a weak mortal abandoned alone and naked on
a rock. Psyche must remain in ignorance of the secret of her ideal
royalty, and if she behold her husband she must lose him. Here
Apuleius commentates and interprets Moses, but did not the Elohim
of Israel and the gods of Apuleius both issue from the sanctuaries
of Memphis and Thebes ? Psyche is the sister of Eve, or, rather, is
Eve spiritualised. Both desire to know and lose innocence for the
honour of the ordeal. Both deserve to go down into hell, one to
bring back the antique box of Pandora, the other to find and to
crush the head of the old serpent, who is the symbol of time and of
evil. Both are guilty of the crime which must be expiated by the
Prometheus of ancient days and the Lucifer of the Christian legend,
the one delivered, the other overcome, by Hercules and by the
Saviour. The great magical secret is, therefore, the lamp and
dagger of Psyche, the apple of Eve, the sacred fire of Prometheus,
the burning sceptre of Lucifer, but it is also the holy cross of
the Eedeemer. To be acquainted with it sufficiently to abuse or
divulge it is to deserve all sufferings ; to know it as one should
know it, namely, to make use of and conceal it, is to be master of
the absolute.
Everything is contained in a single word, which consists of four
letters; it is the Tetragram of the Hebrews, the AzpT of the
alchemists, the Thot of the Bohemians, or the Taro of the
Kabbalists. This word, expressed after so many manners, means God
for the profane, man for the philosophers, and imparts to the
adepts the final word of human sciences and the key of divine power
; but he only can use it who understands the necessity of never
revealing it. Had (Edipus, instead of killing the sphinx, overcome
it, harnessed it to his chariot, and thus entered Thebes, he would
have been king without incest, without misfortunes, and without
exile. Had Psyche, by meekness and affection, persuaded Love to
reveal himself, she would never have lost Love. Now, Love is one of
the mythological images of the great secret and the great agent,
because it at once expresses an action and a passion, a void and a
plenitude, a shaft and a wound. The initiates will understand me,
and, on account of the profane, I must not speak more
clearly.
After the marvellous Golden Ass of Apuleius, we find no more
magical epics. Science, conquered in Alexandria by the fanaticism
of the murderers of Hypatia, became Christian, or, rather,
concealed itself under Christian veils with Ammonius, Synesius, and
the pseudonymous author of the books of Dionysius the Areopagite.
In such times it was needful to excuse miracles by the garb of
superstition and science by an unintelligible language.
Hieroglyphic writing was revived; pantacles and characters were
invented to summarise an entire doctrine by a sign, a whole
sequence of tendencies and revelations in a word. What was the end
of the aspirants to knowledge ? They sought the secret of the great
work, or the philosophical stone, or the perpetual motion, or the
quadrature of the circle, or the universal medicine—formulas which
often saved them from persecution and hatred by causing them to be
taxed with madness, and all signifying one of the phases of the
great magical secret, as we shall shew later on. This absence of
epics continues till our Romance of the Rose ; but the rose-symbol,
which expresses also the mysterious and magical sense of Dante's
poem, is borrowed from the transcendent Kabbalah, and it is time
that we should have recourse to this immense and concealed source
of universal philosophy.
The Bible, with all its allegories, gives expression to the
religious knowledge of the Hebrews in only an incomplete and veiled
manner. The book which we have mentioned, the hieratic characters
of which we shall explain subsequently, that book which William
Postel names the Genesis of Enoch, certainly existed before Moses
and the prophets, whose doctrine, fundamentally identical with that
of the ancient Egyptians, had also its exotericism and its veils.
When Moses spoke to the people, says the sacred book allegorically,
he placed a veil over his face, and he removed it when addressing
God; this accounts for the alleged Biblical absurdities which so
exercised the satirical powers of Voltaire. The books were only
written as memorials of tradition, and in symbols that were
unintelligible for the profane. The Pentateuch and the poems of the
prophets were, moreover, elementary works, alike in doctrine,
ethics, and liturgy ; the true secret and traditional philosophy
was not committed to writing until a later period, and under veils
even less transparent. Thus arose a second and unknown Bible, or
rather one which was not comprehended by Christians, a storehouse,
so they say, of monstrous absurdities, for, in this case,
believers, confounded in the same ignorance, speak the language of
sceptics; a monument, as we affirm, which comprises all that
philosophical genius and religious genius have ever accomplished or
imagined in the order of the sublime; a treasure encompassed by
thorns; a diamond concealed in a rude and opaque stone : our
readers will have already guessed that we refer to the Talmud. How
strange is the destiny of the Jews, those scapegoats, martyrs, and
saviours of the world, a people full of vitality, a bold and hardy
race, which persecutions have always preserved intact, because it
has not yet accomplished its mission! Do not our apostolical
traditions declare that, after the decline of faith among the
Gentiles, salvation shall again come forth out of the house of
Jacob, and that then the crucified Jew who is adored by the
Christians will give the empire of the world into the hands of God
his Father ?
On penetrating into the sanctuary of the Kabbalah one is seized
with admiration at the sight of a doctrine so logical, so simple,
and, at the same time, so absolute. The essential union of ideas
and signs ; the consecration of the most fundamental realities by
primitive characters ; the trinity of words, letters, and numbers;
a philosophy simple as the alphabet, profound and infinite as the
Word; theorems more complete and luminous than those of Pythagoras
; a theology which may be summed up on the fingers ; an infinite
which can be held in the hollow of an infant's hand ; ten figures
and twenty-two letters, a triangle, a square, and a circle ; these
are the entire elements of the Kabbalah. These are the component
principles of the written Word, reflection of that spoken Word
which created the world ! All truly dogmatic religions have issued
from the Kabbalah and return therein; whatsoever is grand or
scientific in the religious dreams of all the illuminated, Jacob
Boehme, Swedenborg, Saint Martin, &c., is borrowed from the
Kabbalah ; all masonic associations owe to it their secrets and
their symbols. The Kabbalah alone consecrates the alliance of
universal reason and the divine Word ; it establishes, by the
counterpoise of two forces apparently opposed, the eternal balance
of being; it only reconciles reason with faith, power with liberty,
science with mystery; it has the keys of the present, past, and
future !
To become initiated into the Kabbalah, it is insufficient to read
and to meditate upon the writings of Eeuchlin, G-alatinus, Kircher,
or Picus de Mirandola; it is necessary to study and to understand
the Hebrew writers in the collection of Pistorius, the Septer
Jetzirah above all; it is necessary also to master the great book
Zohar, read attentively in the collection of 1684, entitled Kallala
Denudata, the treatise of Kabbalistic Pneumatics, and that of the
Revolution of Souls ; and afterwards to enter boldly into the
luminous darkness of the whole dogmatic and allegorical body of the
Talmud. Then we shall be in a position to understand William
Postel, and can admit secretly that apart from his very premature
and over-generous dreams about the emancipation of women, this
celebrated, learned, illuminated man could not have been so mad as
is pretended by those who have not read him.
We have sketched rapidly the history of occult philosophy; we have
indicated its sources and analysed in a few words its principal
books. This work refers only to the science, but magic, or, rather,
magical power, is composed of two things, a science and a force;
without the force the science is nothing, or, rather, it is a
danger. To give knowledge to power alone, such is the supreme law
of initiations. Hence did the Great Revealer say: " The kingdom of
heaven suffereth violence, and the violent only shall carry it
away." The door of truth is closed like the sanctuary of a virgin;
he must be a man who would enter. All miracles are promised to
faith, and what is faith except the audacity of a will which does
not hesitate in the darkness, but advances towards the light in
spite of all ordeals, and surmounting all obstacles ? It is
unnecessary to repeat here the history of ancient initiations; the
more dangerous and terrible they were, the greater was their
efficacy. Hence, in those days, the world had men to govern and
instruct it. The sacerdotal art and the royal art consisted above
all in ordeals of courage, discretion, and will. It was a novitiate
similar to that of those priests who, under the name of Jesuits,
are so unpopular at the present day, but would govern the world,
notwithstanding, had they a truly wise and intelligent chief.
After passing our life in the search after the absolute in
religion, science, and justice; after turning in the circle of
Faust, we have reached the primal doctrine and the first book of
humanity. There we pause, there we have discovered the secret of
human omnipotence and indefinite progress, the key of all
symbolisms, the first and final doctrine, and we have come to
understand what was meant by that expression so often made use of
in the Gospel— the Kingdom of God.
To provide a fixed point as a fulcrum for human activity is to
solve the problem of Archimedes by realising the application of his
famous lever. This it is which was accomplished by the great
initiators who have electrified the world, and they could not have
done so except by means of the great and incommunicable secret.
However, as a guarantee of its renewed youth, the symbolical
phoenix never reappeared before the eyes of the world without
having solemnly consumed the remains and evidences of his previous
life. It is thus that Moses caused all those to perish in the
desert who could have known Egypt and her mysteries; thus, at
Ephesus, St Paul burnt all books which treated of the occult
sciences; thus, finally, the French Kevolution, daughter of the
great Johannite Orient and the ashes of the Templars, spoliated the
churches and blasphemed the allegories of the divine cultus. But
all doctrines and all revivals proscribe magic, and condemn its
mysteries to the flames and to oblivion. The reason is that each
cultus or philosophy which comes into the world is a Benjamin of
humanity which lives by the death of its mother; it is because the
symbolical serpent seems ever devouring its own tail; it is
because, as essential condition of existence, a void is necessary
to every plenitude, space for every dimension, an affirmation for
each negation; it is the eternal realisation of the phoanix
allegory.