Authors of occult texts make manifold and strange claims. Yet, they oft confirm one another's revelations in mysterious guise. Behold:
[. . .] in like manner some are called Woodmen, some Mountaineers, some Fieldmen, some Domesticks. Hence the gods of the Woods, Country gods, Satyrs, familiars, Fairies of the fountains, Fairies of the Woods, Nymphs of the Sea, the Naiades, Neriades, Dryades, Pierides, Hamadryades, Potumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Pareades, Dodonæ, Feniliæ, Lavernæ, Pareæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the Graces, the Genii, Hobgoblins, and such like; whence they call them vulgar superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses; some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with humane perturbations, by whose instruction Plato thinketh that men do oftentimes wonderfull things, even as by the instruction of men, some beasts which are most nigh unto us, as Apes, Dogs, Elephants, do often strange things above their species; and they who have written the Chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testifie, that spirits of diverse kinds in those regions are subject to mens commands; moreover some of these to be corporeall and mortall, whose bodies are begotten and dy, yet to be long lived is the opinion of the Egyptians and Platonists, and especially approved by Proclus. Plutarch also and Demetrius the Philosopher, and Aemilianus the Rhetoritian affirm the same; [. . .] Henry Cornelius Agrippa (trans. James Freake), Three Books of Occult Philosophy (1651)
In like manner some are called woodmen, some mountaineers, some fieldmen, some domestics: hence the gods of the woods, country gods, satyrs, familiars, fairies of the fountains, fairies of the woods, nymphs of the sea, the Naïades, Nereïdes, Dryades, Piërides, Hamadryades, Patumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Parcades, Dodonæ, Fanilæ, Levernæ, Parcæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the graces, the genii, hobgobblins, and such like; whence the vulgar call them superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses: some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with human perturbations; by whose instructions Plato thinks that men do oftentimes wonderful things, even as by the instruction of men; some beasts which are most nigh to us, apes, dogs, elephants, do often strange things above their own species; and they who have written the chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testify that spirits of several kinds in those regions are subject to men's commands; moreover, some of these appear corporeal and mortal, whose bodies are begotten and die; yet to be long-lived is the opinion of the Egyptians and Platonists, and especially approved by Proclus, Plutarch also, and Demetrius the philosopher, and Æmilianus the rhetorician, affirm the same; [. . .] Francis Barrett, The Magus; or, Celestial Intelligencer: Being a Complete System of Occult Philosophy (1801)
In like manner some are called woodmen, some mountaineers, some fieldmen, some domestics: hence the gods of the woods, country gods, satyrs, familiars, fairies of the fountains, fairies of the woods, nymphs of the sea, the Naiades, Nereides, Dryades, Pierides, Hamadryades, Patumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Parcades, Dodonæ, Finilæ, Levernæ, Parcæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the graces, the genii, hodgobblins [sic], and such like; whence the vulgar call them superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses: some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with human perturbations; by whose instructions I say that men do oftentimes wonderful things, even as by the instruction of men; some beasts which are most nigh to us, apes, dogs, elephants, do often strange things above their species; and they who have written the chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testify that spirits of several kinds in those regions are subject to men's commands; moreover, some of these appear corporeal and mortal, whose bodies are begotten and die; yet to be long-lived is the sacred teachings of the Lamas and Yoghees and especially approved by Bxuzin, Muxdinba also, and Demetrius the philosopher and Ximandibuz the rhetorician, affirm the same; [. . .] L.W. de Laurence, The Great Book of Magical Art, Hindu Magic and East Indian Occultism and the Book of Secret Hindu, Ceremonial, and Talismanic Magic (1915)
"Tho-ag in Zhi-gyu slept seven Khorlo. Zodmanas zhiba. All Nyug bosom. Konch-hog not; Thyan-Kam not; Lha-Chohan not; Tenbrel Chugnyi not; Dharmakaya ceased; Tgenchang not become; Barnang and Ssa in Ngovonyidj; alone Tho-og Yinsin in night of Sun-chan and Yong-grub (Parinishpanna), &c., &c.," -- The Book of Dzyan.
On Jul 5, 5:21 am, Dan Clore <cl...@columbia-center.org> wrote:
> Authors of occult texts make manifold and strange claims. Yet, they oft > confirm one another's revelations in mysterious guise. Behold:
Ah, yes. I had seen criticisms of Barrett and Laurence for cribbing from Agrippa; in the case of Barrett, that was obvious enough, with diagrams and mystical alphabets copied over, but you have truly supplied a smoking gun of plagiarism.
> Authors of occult texts make manifold and strange claims. Yet, they oft confirm one another's revelations in mysterious guise. Behold:
> [. . .] in like manner some are called Woodmen, some Mountaineers, some Fieldmen, some Domesticks. Hence the gods of the Woods, Country gods, Satyrs, familiars, Fairies of the fountains, Fairies of the Woods, Nymphs of the Sea, the Naiades, Neriades, Dryades, Pierides, Hamadryades, Potumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Pareades, Dodonæ, Feniliæ, Lavernæ, Pareæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the Graces, the Genii, Hobgoblins, and such like; whence they call them vulgar superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses; some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with humane perturbations, by whose instruction Plato thinketh that men do oftentimes wonderfull things, even as by the instruction of men, some beasts which are most nigh unto us, as Apes, Dogs, Elephants, do often strange things above their species; and they who have written the Chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testifie, th
at spirits of diverse kinds in those regions are subject to mens commands; moreover some of these to be corporeall and mortall, whose bodies are begotten and dy, yet to be long lived is the opinion of the Egyptians and Platonists, and especially approved by Proclus. Plutarch also and Demetrius the Philosopher, and Aemilianus the Rhetoritian affirm the same; [. . .]
> Henry Cornelius Agrippa (trans. James Freake), Three Books of Occult Philosophy (1651)
> In like manner some are called woodmen, some mountaineers, some fieldmen, some domestics: hence the gods of the woods, country gods, satyrs, familiars, fairies of the fountains, fairies of the woods, nymphs of the sea, the Naïades, Nereïdes, Dryades, Piërides, Hamadryades, Patumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Parcades, Dodonæ, Fanilæ, Levernæ, Parcæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the graces, the genii, hobgobblins, and such like; whence the vulgar call them superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses: some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with human perturbations; by whose instructions Plato thinks that men do oftentimes wonderful things, even as by the instruction of men; some beasts which are most nigh to us, apes, dogs, elephants, do often strange things above their own species; and they who have written the chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testify that spirits of se
veral kinds in those regions are subject to men's commands; moreover, some of these appear corporeal and mortal, whose bodies are begotten and die; yet to be long-lived is the opinion of the Egyptians and Platonists, and especially approved by Proclus, Plutarch also, and Demetrius the philosopher, and Æmilianus the rhetorician, affirm the same; [. . .]
> Francis Barrett, The Magus; or, Celestial Intelligencer: Being a Complete System of Occult Philosophy (1801)
> In like manner some are called woodmen, some mountaineers, some fieldmen, some domestics: hence the gods of the woods, country gods, satyrs, familiars, fairies of the fountains, fairies of the woods, nymphs of the sea, the Naiades, Nereides, Dryades, Pierides, Hamadryades, Patumides, Hinnides, Agapte, Pales, Parcades, Dodonæ, Finilæ, Levernæ, Parcæ, Muses, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconides, Pegasides, Meonides, Phebiades, Camenæ, the graces, the genii, hodgobblins [sic], and such like; whence the vulgar call them superiors, some the demi-gods and goddesses: some of these are so familiar and acquainted with men, that they are even affected with human perturbations; by whose instructions I say that men do oftentimes wonderful things, even as by the instruction of men; some beasts which are most nigh to us, apes, dogs, elephants, do often strange things above their species; and they who have written the chronicles of the Danes and Norwegians, do testify that spirits of several
kinds in those regions are subject to men's commands; moreover, some of these appear corporeal and mortal, whose bodies are begotten and die; yet to be long-lived is the sacred teachings of the Lamas and Yoghees and especially approved by Bxuzin, Muxdinba also, and Demetrius the philosopher and Ximandibuz the rhetorician, affirm the same; [. . .]
> L.W. de Laurence, The Great Book of Magical Art, Hindu Magic and East Indian Occultism and the Book of Secret Hindu, Ceremonial, and Talismanic Magic (1915)
> -- > Dan Clore
LOL. I got a chuckle out of that post. Yes, Barrett was a bold-faced plagiarist, nothing more. And De Laurence was a pirate publisher who thought nothing of putting his own name on the works of other men. Let's hope both men are burning in hell together.
: Quadibloc <jsav...@ecn.ab.ca> : Ah, yes. I had seen criticisms of Barrett and Laurence for cribbing : from Agrippa;
And in some ways a pity, since without that, a certain harmony can be achieved, since Tibault cancels out Capo Ferro unless you've cribbed from Agrippa.
Quadibloc wrote: > On Jul 5, 5:21 am, Dan Clore <cl...@columbia-center.org> wrote: >> Authors of occult texts make manifold and strange claims. Yet, they >> oft confirm one another's revelations in mysterious guise. Behold:
> Ah, yes. I had seen criticisms of Barrett and Laurence for cribbing > from Agrippa; in the case of Barrett, that was obvious enough, with > diagrams and mystical alphabets copied over, but you have truly > supplied a smoking gun of plagiarism.
I thought the really funny part was where Laurence substituted names with inventions like Bxuzin, Muxdinba, and Ximandibuz. These are supposed to be Hindus, but they are extremely unconvincing (not to mention that he left Demetrius unaltered in the middle of these purported Hindu names). Actually, the last one would make a pretty good name in a Vancian or Klarkash-Tonian type fantasy. Once I get writing some fantasy again, I just might have to see what I can plunder from Laurence--
Strange pleasures are known to him who flaunts the immarcescible purple of poetry before the color-blind. -- Clark Ashton Smith, "Epigrams and Apothegms"
>: Quadibloc <jsav...@ecn.ab.ca> >: Ah, yes. I had seen criticisms of Barrett and Laurence for cribbing >: from Agrippa;
>And in some ways a pity, since without that, a certain harmony can >be achieved, since Tibault cancels out Capo Ferro unless you've >cribbed from Agrippa.
Unless you're a Spaniard who hasn't even got sense enough to use a wall.
-- Bill Snyder [This space unintentionally left blank]
> >: Quadibloc <jsav...@ecn.ab.ca> > >: Ah, yes. I had seen criticisms of Barrett and Laurence for cribbing > >: from Agrippa;
> >And in some ways a pity, since without that, a certain harmony can > >be achieved, since Tibault cancels out Capo Ferro unless you've > >cribbed from Agrippa.
> Unless you're a Spaniard who hasn't even got sense enough to use a > wall.
> -- > Bill Snyder [This space unintentionally left blank]