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William Blake
'The Accusers'
Enitharmon,Los and Orc William Blake
Mysterium Magnum - part 1
1, free electronic text, 2009
Jacob Boehme
Mysterium Magnum - part 2
2, free electronic text, 2009
Jacob Boehme
Forwarded from Portal Ibis
"There is a light in the spirit of man illuminating everything, and by which he may even perceive supernatural things. Those who seek in the light of external Nature know the things of Nature; those who seek knowledge in the light of man know the things above Nature, which belong to the kingdom of God."

β€” Paracelsus ( Life of Paracelsus by Franz Hartmann)
Forwarded from Portal Ibis
Limestone stela with snake-bodied figures of Isis and Dionysos, 1stC BC-1stC AD, Roman Ptolemaic
Forwarded from Portal Ibis
The Tarot of the Bohemians by Papus

"This sign is the image of the deepest and most inconceivable mystery, the image of the knot which reunites, or of the point which separates, the nothing from the being. It is the universal convertible sign, which forms the passage from one nature to the other; communicating on one side with the sign of light and of spiritual sense, which is but a higher form of itself; on the other hand linking itself, the sign of darkness and of the material senses, which again is but a lower form of itself."

"Its signification proceeds from this:β€”

In the Divine. The Equilibrium between Will and Intelligenceβ€”

BEAUTY

(characteristic of the Holy Spirit).

In the Human. The Equilibrium between Power and Authorityβ€”

LOVE

(characteristic of Humanity).

CHARITY.

In Nature. The Equilibrium between the Universal soul and the Universal lifeβ€”

THE UNIVERSAL ATTRACTION.

Universal Love."
Forwarded from The Art Vault
🎨 The astronomer, circa 1668
by Vermeer πŸ‡³πŸ‡±
Oil on canvas. 50 x 45 cm.
Louvre, Paris

About the artwork:

In this painting, Vermeer depicts an astronomer engrossed in studying the heavens. The astronomer is typically shown at a table, upon which rests an open book, possibly an astronomy text or atlas, suggesting his search for knowledge about the stars. The figure is usually portrayed with tools of his trade, such as a celestial globe or astrolabe, emphasizing his scholarly pursuits.
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Forwarded from Portal Ibis
Explicatio Sephirarum & divinorum nominum, oder ErklΓ€rung des Cabbalistischen Systematis und der allerheyligsten Zehen Nahmen Gottes, wie solche unter dem Volcke Gottes in der Kirchen des Alten Testaments gebrΓ€uchlich gewesen und uns in heiliger Schrift hinterlassen sind - Cod.mag.2, ca. 1750
Forwarded from EN EREBOS PHOS
But in reality it is in itself ever invisible. Hence it comes about that the bottom of the sphere, if it be a part of or place in the sphere, is called in Greek Hades, for idein in Greek means to see, and the bottom of the sphere cannot be seen. Hence also ideas are called forms, because they may be seen as forms. Therefore, too, the infernal regions are called in Greek Hades, because they cannot be seen, and in Latin Inferi, because they are at the bottom of the sphere.

Hermes Trismegistus, Asclepius: The Perfect Discourse of Hermes Trismegistus, transl by Clement Salaman, (2007)
2025/06/29 15:33:05
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