|
Cause. God.
Monad, Dyad, Triad
Where the paternal monad is.
The monad is enlarged, which generates two.
For the dyad sits by him, and glitters with intellectual
sections.
And to govern all things, and to order all things
not ordered,
For in the whole of the world shineth the triad,
over which the monad rules. (5)
This order is the beginning of all section.
For the mind of the father said, that all things
be cut into three.
Whose will assented, and all things were divided.
For the mind of the Aeternal father said into
three,
Governing all things by the mind.
And there appeared in it (the Triad) virtue and
wisdom. (10)
And Multiscient verity.
This way floweth the shape of the triad, being
pre-existant.
Not the first (essence) but where they are measured.
For thou must conceive that all things serve these
three principles.
The first course is sacred, butin the middle.
Another the third, aerial; which cherished the
earth in fire.
And fountain of fountains, and of all fountains.
The matrix containing all things.
Thence abundantly springs forth the genration
of mutivarious matter.
Thence extracted a prester the flower of glowing
fire,
Flashing into the cavities of the world: for all
things from hence
Begin to extend downwards their admirable beams.
Father Mind
The father hath snatched away himself;
Neither hath he shut up his own fire in his intellectual
power.
[all things have issued from that fire]
For the father perfected all things, and delivered
them over to the second mind,
Which the whole race of men call the first
Light begotten of the father; for he alone
Having crop’d the flower of the mind from
the fathers vigor.
For the paternal self-begotten mind understanding
[his] work,
Sowed in all the firey bond of love,
That all things might continue loving forever.
Neither those things which are intellectual in
context in the light of the father in all things.
That being the elements of the world they might
persist in love.
For it is bound of the paternal depth, and the
fountain of the intellectuals.
Neither went he forth, but abode in the paternal
depth,
And in the adytum according to divinely nourished
silence.
For the fire once above, shutteth not his power
Into matter by actions, but by the mind.
For the paternal mind hath sowed symbols thro’
the world,
Which understandeth intelligibles, and beutifieth
ineffables.
Wholly division and indivisible.
By mind he contains the intelligibles, but introduceth
sense into the worlds.
By mind he contains the intelligibles, but introduceth
soul into the world.
Mind Intelligibles Intellectuals
And of the one mind, the intelligible (mind).
For the mind is not without the intelligible;
It exists not without it.
These are Intellectuals, and Intelligibles, which
being understood, understand.
For the intelligible is the ailment of the intelligent.
Learn the Intelligible, since it exists beyond
the mind.
And of the mind which moves the Empyreal Heaven.
For the Framer of the fiery World is the Mind
of the Mind.
You who know certainly the supermundane paternal
depth.
The intelligible is predominant over all section.
There is somethingIntelligible, which it behooves
thee to understand with the flower of the Mind.
For if thou enclinest thy mind, thou shalt understand
this also;
Yet understanding something [of it] thoushalt
not understand this wholly,
For it is a power fo circumlucid strength, glittering
with intellectual sections (rays).
But it behooves not to consider this intelligible
with vehemence of intellection,
But with ample flame of ample mind, which measureth
all things,
Except this intelligible: but it behooves to understand
this.
For if thou inclinest thy mind, thou shalt understand
this also,
Not fixedly, but having a pure turning eye [thou
must]
Extend the empty mind of thy soul twoards the
intelligible,
That thou mayest learn the intelligible, for it
exists beyond the mind.
But every mind undeerstands this god;
For the mind is not without the intelligible,
Neither is the intelligible without the mind.
To the intellectual presters of the intellectual
fire,
All things by yielding are subservient to the
persuasive counsel of the father.
And to understand, and always to remain in a restless
whirling.
But insinuating into worlds the venerable name
in a sleepless whirling.
Fountains and principles; to turn, and to always
remain in a restless whirling.
By reason of the terrible menace of the father.
Under two minds the life generating fountain souls
is contained;
And the maker, who self operating framed the world.
Who sprang out of the first mind.
Cloathing Fire with Fire, binding them together
to mingle.
The fountainous craters, preserves the flower
of his own fire.
He glittereth with intellectual sections, and
filled all things with love.
Like swarms they are carried being broken,
About the bodies of the world.
That things unfashioned may be fashioned.
What the mind speaks, it speaks by understanding.
Power is with them, Mind is from her.
Iynges Ideas Principles
These being many ascend to the lucid worlds.
Springing into them, and in which there are three
Tops.
Beneath them lies the chief of immaterials.
Principles which have understood the intelligible
works of the father.
Disclosed them in sensible works as in bodies;
Being (as it were) the ferry-man betwixt the father
and matter.
And producing manifest images of unmanifest things.
And inscribing unmanifest things in the manifest
frame of the world.
The mind of the father made a jarring noise, understanding
by vigorous counsel,
Omniform ideas; and flying out of one fountain
They spring forth; for, from the father was the
counsel and end,
By which they are connected to the father, by
alternate life from several vehicles.
But they were divided, being by intellectual fire
distributed into other intellectuals:
For the king did set before the multiform world
an intellectual, incorruptable pattern;
This print through the world he promoting,
Of whose form according to which the world appeared
Beautified with all kinds of ideas, of which there
is one fountain,
Out of which come rushing forth others undistributed,
Being broken about the bodies of the world, which
through the vast recesses,
Like swarms, are carried round about every way.
Intellectual notions from the paternal fountain
cropping the flower of fire.
In the point of sleepless time, of this primigenious
idea.
The first self-budding fountain of the father
budded.
Intelligible Iynges do (themselves) also understand
from the father:
By unspeakable counsels, being moved so as to
understand.
Hecate, Synoches, Teletarchs
For out of him spring all implacable thunders,
And prester receiving cavities of the entirely-lucid
strengthof father begotten hecate
And he who begirs the flower of fire, and the
strong spirit of the poles fiery above.
He gave to hispresters that they should guard
the tops.
Mingling the power of his own strength in the
synoches.
O how the world hath intellectual guides inflexible!
Because she is the Operatrix,
Because she is the dispensatrix of life giving
fire.
Because also it fills the life producing bosom
of Hecate.
And instills in the Synoches the enlivening strength
of potent fire.
But they are guardians of the works of the father.
For he disguises himself, professing to be clothed
with the print of images.
The Teletarchs are comprehended with the Synoches,
To these intellectual presters of intellectual
fire,
All things are subservient.
But as many as serve the material syncohes,
Have put on the completely armed vigour of resounding
light.
With Triple strength fortifying the soul and the
mind.
To put into the mind the symbol of variety.
And not to walk dispersedly on the Empyrael channels;
But stiffly
These frame indivisables, and sensibles,
And Corporiforms, and things destin’d to
matter.
Soul. Nature.
For the soul being a bright fire, by the power
of the father remains immortal,
And is mistress of life,
And possesseth many complexions of the cavities
of the world:
For it is in immitation of the mind; but that
which is born have something of thew body.
The channels being intermixed, she performs the
worls of incorruptible fire.
Next the paternal conceptions I (the soul) dwell,
Warm, hjeating all things;
For he did put the mind in the soul, , the soul
in the dull body.
Of us the father of gods and men imposed,
Abundantly animating Light, Fire, Aether, Worlds.
For natural works co-exist with the intellectual
light of the father,
For the soul which adorned the great heaven, and
adorning with the father.
But her horns are fixed above,
But about the shoulders of the Goddess, immense
nature is exhalted.
Again, indefatigueable Nature commands the worlds
and works.
The heaven drawing an eternal course may run.
And the swift sun might come about the center
as he useth.
Look not into the fatal name of this nature.
The World
The maker who operating by himself framed this
world.
And there was another bulk of fire,
By it self operating all things that the body
of the world might be perfected,
That the world might be manifest and not seem
membranous.
The whole world of Fire, Water and Earth., and
all nourishing Aether,
The unexpressible watch words of the world.
One life by another from the distributed channels
Passing form above to the opposite part,
Through the center of the Earth; and another fifth
middle:
Fiery channel, where it descends to the material
channels life bringing fire,
Stirring himself up with the goal of resounding
light.
Another foutnainous, which guides the Empyreal
world.
The center from which all (Lines) which way so
ever are equal.
For the paternal mind sowed symbols through the
world.
For the center of everyone is carried betwixt
the fathers.
For it is an immitation of the mind,
But that which is born hath something of the body.
Heaven
For the father congregated seven firmaments of
the world;
Circumscribing Heaven in a round figure,
He fixed a great company of inerratic stars,
And he constituted a septenary of erratic annimals.
Placing Earth in the middle and water in the middle
of the Earth.
The Air above these.
He fixed a great company of inerratic stars,
To be carried not by laborious and troublesome
tension,
But a settlement which hath not error.
He fixed a great company of inerratic stars,
Forcing Fire to Fire,
To be carried by a settlement which hath not error.
He constituted them six; casting into the midst
the fire of the sun,
Suspending their disorder in well-ordered zones.
For the Goddess brings forth the great Sun, and
the bright Moon.
O Aether, son, spirit, guides of the moon and
of the air;
And of the solar circles, and of the monthly clashings.
And of the aerial recesses.
The melody of the aether, and of the passages
of the sun, and moon, and of the air,
And the wide Air, and the Lunar course, and the
pole of the sun.
Collecting it, and receiving the melody of the
aether,
And of the sun, and of the moon, and of all that
are contained in the air.
Fire, the derivation of fire, and the dispenser
of fire;
His Hair pointed is seen by his native light;
Hence comes Saturn.
The sun assessor beholding the pure pole;
And the Aetherial course, and the vast motion
of the moon,
And the Aerial fluxions,
And the great sun, and the bright moon.
Time
The Mundane god; Aeternal, infinite.
Young, and old, of a spiral form.
And another fountainous, who guides the Empyreal
heaven.
Soul. Body. Man
It behooves thee to hasten to the light, and to
the beams of the father;
From whence was sent to thee a soul clothed with
much mind.
These things the father conceived, and so the
mortal was animated
For the paternal mind sowed symbols in souls;
Replenishing the soul with profound love
For the father of the gods and men placed the
mind in the soul;
And in the body he established you.
For all divine things are corporeal.
But bodies are bound in them for your sakes:
Incorporeals not being able to contain the bodies.
By reasons of the corporeal nature in which you
are concentrated.
And they are in god, attracting strong flames.
Descending from the father, from which descending
the soul
Corps of empyreal fruits the soul-nourishing flower.
And therefore conceiving the worlds of the father
They avoid the audacious wing of fatal destiny;
And though you see this soul manumitted,
Yet the father sends another to make up their
number.
Certainly these are superlatively blessed above
all souls;
They are sent forth from heaven to earth,
And those rich souls which have unexpressible
fates;
As many of them (O King) as proceed from shining
thee,
Or from (Jove,god?) himself,
Under the strong power of his thread.
Let the immortal depth of thy soul be predominant;
But all thy eyes extend upward.
Stoop not down to the dark world,
Beneath which lies a faithless depth,
And Hades dark all over, squallid, delighting
in images, unintelligible,
Precipitous, creaggy, a depth;
Always rolling, always espousing an opacous, idle
breathless body,
And the light hating world, and the winding currents,
By which many things are swallowed up.
Seek Paradise;
Seek thou the way of the soul,
Whence or by what order having served the body,
To the same place from which thou didst flow.
Thou must rise up again, joining action to sacred
speech,
Stoop not down, for a precipice lies below the
earth;
Drawing through the ladder which hath seven steps,
Beneath which is the throne of necessity.
Enlarge not thy destiny.
The soul of man will in a manner clasp go to herself;
Having nothing mortal, she is wholly inebriated
from god:
For she boasts harmony, in which the mortal body
exists.
If thou extend the fiery mind
To the work of piety, thou shalt preserve the
fluxible body.
Theres room for the image also in the circumlucid
place.
Every way to the unfashioned soul stretch the
reigns of fire.
The fire glowing cognition hath the first rank.
For the mortal approaching the fire, shall have
the light of god.
For to the slow mortal the gods are swift.
The furies are stranglers of men.
The burgeons, even of ill matter, are profitable
good.
Let hope nourish the in the fiery angelic region.
But the paternal mind accepts not her will,
Until she got of oblivion, and pronounce a word,
Inserting the rememberance of the pure paternal
symbol.
To these be gave the docible character of life
to be comprehended.
Those who were asleep he made fruitful by his
own strength.
Defile not thy spirit nor deepen the superficies.
Leave not the dross of matter on a precipice.
Bring her not forth, least going forth she have
something.
The souls of those who quit the body violently,
are most pure.
The ungirders of the soul, which give her breathing,
are easy to be loosed.
In the side sinister of Hecate, there is a fountain
of vertue;
Which remains entire within, not emitting her
virginity.
O man the machine of boldest nature!
Subject not to thy mind the vast measures of the
earth.
Nor measure the measures of the sun, gathering
together cannons;
He is moved by the aeternal will of the father,
not for thy sake.
Let alone the swift course of the moon: she runs
ever by the swift impulse of necessity.
The progression of the stars was not brought forth
for thy sake.
The aetherial wide flight of birds is not veracious,
And the dissection of entrails and victims all
these are toys,
The supports of gainful cheats; fly thou these
If thou intend to open the sacred paradise of
piety
Where virtue, wisdom, and equity, are assembled.
For thy vessel the beastd of the earth shall inhabit.
These the earth bewails, even to her children.
Daemons Rites
Nature persuades there are pure daemons;
The burgeons, even all ill matter, are profitable
and good,
But these things I revolve in the reclusive temples
of my mind,
Extending the like fire sparklingly into the spaceous
air or fire unfigur’d,
A voice issuing forth.
Or fire abundant whizzing and winding about the
earth,
But also to see a horse more glittering than light.
Or a boy on thy shoulders riding a horse,
Fiery or adorned with gold, or divested,
Or shooting and standing on [thy] shoulders.
If thou speak often to me, thou shalt see absolutely
that which is spoken:
For then neither appears the caelestial concave
bulk,
Nor do the stars shine: the light of the moon
is covered,
The earth stands not still, but all things apear
thunder.
Invoke not the self-conspicuous image of nature;
For thou must not behold these before thy body
be initiated.
When soothing souls they always reduce them from
these myteries.
Certainly out of the cavities of the earth spring
terrestial dogs.
Which show not tru figure to mortal man.
Labour about the hekatic strophalus.
Never change the barbarous names;
For there are names in every nation given from
god,
Which have unspeakable power in rites.
When thou seest a sacred fire without form,
Shining , flashingly through the depths of the
world,
Hear the voice of fire.
|