Forwarded from Utumno
"Fidus
During the Art Nouveau era and into the 1920s, Ariosophy was a popular esoteric-philosophical movement. The illustration reproduced here is from this period and was created by the Art Nouveau artist Fidus. At first glance, the depiction is reminiscent of the great Baphomet of the Templars as well as their Magna Figura. However, it must seem highly doubtful whether there was any intellectual connection. The Fidus drawing is intended to be understood as a sexual-magical emblem. Sexual-magical components, however, were not part of Baphometic magic or the Magna Figura."
— Source
During the Art Nouveau era and into the 1920s, Ariosophy was a popular esoteric-philosophical movement. The illustration reproduced here is from this period and was created by the Art Nouveau artist Fidus. At first glance, the depiction is reminiscent of the great Baphomet of the Templars as well as their Magna Figura. However, it must seem highly doubtful whether there was any intellectual connection. The Fidus drawing is intended to be understood as a sexual-magical emblem. Sexual-magical components, however, were not part of Baphometic magic or the Magna Figura."
— Source
Forwarded from Utumno
"The Black Sun's continued feeding of us is our only hope in the world of the incomplete Golden Sun which, will always be subject to evil until the Black Sun is completely depleted and all of its energy is present here to make this into the new, perfect spiritual world, in which evil cannot survive. Until a new generation of souls are born. Then once again the dragon of darkness shall fly over the fields in a featherguise."
— Aelitic Avery
— Aelitic Avery
Forwarded from ᛉ Cult of Beauty ᛣ (🤡 The Sacred Clown 🤡)
If you want to learn old English, I started reading this book Osweald Bera. It would be a wonderful foundation for a child. The way they teach you the language is very easy to digest. I highly recommend for anyone looking for a good book.
I lived a dream-life, not knowing in which direction to turn my wavering steps. [...] Everything I did was trivial, without significance. Often my arms, raised to God in ardent prayer for strength, sank wearily and despairingly to my side. I was a plaything on the ocean of Time. Every wind blew me toward a different shore. Nevertheless, a prescient spirit drove me to continue seeking:
’Your hour must come, must come!’
It came.
And as a flash of lightning from heaven illuminates a fearfully dark nocturnal landscape, so that the smallest blade of grass can be distinguished, an understanding flashed through my heart: a Titanic belief in the God within Man, the God that is unfolded by the human spirit itself.
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words from the poem "Gott in mir" from the Brownshirt Princess, Princess Marie Adelheid of Lippe, who was a prolific writer and National Socialist supporter, and aide to Darré.
’Your hour must come, must come!’
It came.
And as a flash of lightning from heaven illuminates a fearfully dark nocturnal landscape, so that the smallest blade of grass can be distinguished, an understanding flashed through my heart: a Titanic belief in the God within Man, the God that is unfolded by the human spirit itself.
-
words from the poem "Gott in mir" from the Brownshirt Princess, Princess Marie Adelheid of Lippe, who was a prolific writer and National Socialist supporter, and aide to Darré.
here is a book about her (Princess Marie Adelheid of Lippe's) letters and poems. it was possiblyprobably written by a jew (actually wikipedia says he was scottish but who knows) by the last name, and is of course not favorable of right-wing ideas, but it is good in that it has some of her poems and writings translated which i am not sure where to find otherwise. of course the little paragraphs i have just shared are christian but there is a wider body of meaning to be extracted from them so sue me.
the book talks much of the ideas that fahrenkrog and the other early germanic revivalists had.
the book talks much of the ideas that fahrenkrog and the other early germanic revivalists had.