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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — The Hermetic and Alchemical Figures of Claudius De Dominico Celentano Vallis Novi from a Manuscript Written and Illuminated at Naples A.D. 1606
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Hermetic and Alchemical Figures of Claudius De Dominico Celentano Vallis Novi from a Manuscript Written and Illuminated at Naples A.D. 1606 (25)
Leaf 12. The three words at the top read: "This is Nature." The lines above the donkey read: "This is the Philosophers' donkey who wished to rise to the practice of the Philosopher's Some." The three lines below the animal are translated: "Frogs gather in multitudes but science consists of clear water made from the Sun and Moon." The text under the symbolic bird is as follows: "This is fortune with two wings. Whosoever has it knows that fruit will in such away be produced. A great philosopher has shown that the stone is a certain white sun, to see which needs a telescope. To dissolve it in water requires the Sun and Moon, and here one must open 200 telescopes, putting body and soul in one mass. And here is lost the mass; other sages cook the frogs and add nothing, if the juice of the Wise you wish to enjoy." To the Greeks the frog symbolized both metempsychosis and earthly humidity.
Western Esoteric
Inferno: Canto XI (5)
"Philosophy," he said, "to him who heeds it, Noteth, not only in one place alone, After what manner Nature takes her course From Intellect Divine,...
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Alchemical
The Sixty-Third Dictum (63)
PuiLosopHus* saith: I notify to posterity that the nature is male and female, wherefore the envious have called it the body of Magnesia, because...
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Alchemical
The Fifty-Seventh Dictum (57)
Acratus* saith: I signify to posterity that I make philosophy near to the Sun and Moon. He, therefore, that will attain to the truth let him take the...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter IV: Divine Things Wrapped Up in Figures Both in the Sacred and in Heathen Writers. (5)
Wishing to express Sun in writing, they make a circle; and Moon, a figure like the Moon, like its proper shape. But in using the figurative style, by...
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Alchemical
The Sixty-Fifth Dictum (65)
Horfolcus saith:t You must know, O all ye who love wisdom, that whereas Mundus hath been teaching this Art, and placing before you most lucid...
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Alchemical
The Forty-Second Dictum (42)
Ascanius saith: Too much talking, O all ye Sons of the Doctrine, leads this subject further into error! But when ye read in the books of the...
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Alchemical
The Twentieth Dictum (20)
Betus saith:—O disciples, ye have discoursed excellently!* PyTHAGoRAS answers:—Seeing that they are philosophers, O Belus, why hast thou called them...
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Alchemical
The Fifteenth Dictum (15)
Frictes saith:—O all ye seekers after Wisdom, know that the foundation of this Art, on account of which many have perished, is one only.t There is...
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