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THE ORPHIC THEOGONY
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The
Orphic Pantheon
by
G. R. S.
Meade
UNAGING
TIME
Orpheus designated the Supreme Cause, although it is in reality ineffable,
Chronus (Time). This Time, and with it other ineffable Powers, was prior to
Heaven, Uranus (Procl. in Crat., p. 71, Boiss.). The name Chronus
closely resembles the name Cronus (Saturn), remarks Proclus (loc. sit.,
p. 64) suggestively; and in the same passage he says that ' "God-inspired"
words [Oracles] characterize this divinity [Cronus] as Once Beyond.' This may
mean that Chronus is ideal Unending Duration, and Cronus Time manifested;
though this leaves unexplained the strange term 'Once Beyond,' which is found
in the Chaldæan system. The same statements are found elsewhere in Proclus'
works (Tim., i.86; Theol., i.28, 68; Parm., vii.230).
And Philo (Quad Mand. Incorr., p. 952, b) says: 'There was
once a Time when Cosmos was not.' This is called 'Unborn Time, The Æon,' by
Timæus of Locris (p. 97). It is the 'First One, the Supersubstantial, the
Ineffable Principle.' It may be compared to the Zervan of the Avesta, the En
Suph and Hidden of the Hidden of the Kabalah, the Bythos of the Gnostics, the
Unknown Darkness of the Egyptians, and the Parabrahman of the Vedântins.
ÆTHER, CHAOS
AND NIGHT
Next come Æther and Chaos, Spirit-Matter, the Bound and Infinity of Plato
(Proc., Tim., ii. 117), the Purusha-Prakriti of the Sânkhya. Orpheus
calls this Æther the Mighty Whirlpool (Simplicius, Ausc., iv.123);
called Magna Vorago by Syrianus (Metaph., ii.33a). And Proclus
(Tim., ii.117), speaking of Chaos, says: 'The last Infinity, by which
also Matter is circumscribed--is the Container, the field and plane of ideas.
About her is "neither limit, nor foundation, nor seat, but excessive
darkness".' This is the Mûlaprakriti or Root-Matter of the Vedântins, and
Æther is the so-called first Logos, Æther-Chaos being the second. 'And dusky
Night comprehended and hid all below the Ether; [Orpheus thus] signifying that
Night came first.' (Malela, iv.31; Cedrenus, i.57, 84.)
Then comes the Dawn of the First Creation. In the Unaging Time, Chaos,
impregnated by the whirling of Æther, formed itself into
THE COSMIC
EGG
Proclus (Parm., vii.168) calls this Chaos the 'Mist of the
Darkness.' It is the first break of the Dawn of Creation, and may be compared
to the 'fire-mist' stage in the sensible universe. Thus the author of the
Recognitions (X.vii.316) tells us: 'They who had greater wisdom among
the nations proclaim that Chaos was first of all things; in course of the
eternity its outer parts became denser and so sides and ends were made, and it
assumed the fashion and form of a gigantic egg.' For before this stage, the
same writer tells us (c. xxx): 'Orpheus declares that Chaos first existed,
eternal, vast, uncreate--it was neither darkness, nor light, nor moist, nor
dry, nor hot, nor cold, but all things intermingled.'
Apion (Clement, Homil., VI.iv.671) writes that: 'Orpheus likened Chaos to
an egg, in which the primal "elements" were all mingled together. . . . This
egg was generated from the infinitude of primal matter as follows. [The first
two principles were] primal matter innate with life, and a certain vortex in
perpetual flux and unordered motion--from these there arose an orderly flux
and interblending of essences, and thus from each, that which was most
suitable to the production of life flowed to the centre of the universe, while
the surrounding spirit was drawn within, as a bubble in water. Thus a
spherical receptacle was formed. Then, impregnated in itself by the divine
spirit which seized upon it, it revolved itself into manifestation--with the
appearance of the periphery of an egg.'
Proclus (Crat., p. 79) mentions this circular motion as follows:
'Orpheus refers to the occult diacosm [primary or intellectual creation] in
the words, "the boundless unweariedly revolved in a circle".' He also refers
to it elsewhere (in Euclid, ii.42; Parm., vii.153), and in his
Commentary on the Timæus (iii. 160), he writes: 'The spherical is most closely
allied to the all.. . . This shape, therefore, is the paternal type of the
universe, and reveals itself in the occult diacosm itself.'
And Simplicius (Aus., i.31, b) writes: 'If he [Plato in
Parmenides,] says that Being closely resembles the circling mass of the
sphere, you should not be surprised, for there is a correspondence between it
and the formation of the first plasm of the mythologist [Orpheus]. For how
does this differ from speaking, as Orpheus does, of the "Silver-shining Egg"
?'
And so Proclus (Tim., i.138) sums up the question of the Egg by
reminding us that: 'The Egg was produced by Æther and Chaos, the former
establishing it according to limit, and the latter according to infinity. For
the former is the rootage of all, whereas the latter has no bounds.'
It would be too long to point to the same idea in other religions, whether
Phoenician, Babylonian, Syrian, Persian, or Egyptian (cf. Vishnu
Parâna, Wilson, i.39; and Gail's Recherches sur la Nature du Culte
de Bacchus en Grèce, pp. 117, 118); it is sufficient to refer readers to the
Hiranyagarbha of the Hindus, the Resplendent Egg or Germ, which is set
forth at length in the Upanishads and Purànas.
It is a most magnificent idea, this Germ of the Universe, and puts the
doctrine of the ancients as to cosmogony on a more rigidly scientific basis
than even the most advanced scientists of our day have arrived at. And if this
shape and this motion are the 'paternal types of the universe' and all
therein, how is it possible to imagine that the learned of the ancients were
not acquainted with the proper shape and motion of the earth?
But as the subject is of great interest not only from a cosmogonical
standpoint, but also from an anthropogonical point of view, some further
information may with advantage be added. This Egg of the Universe, besides
having its analogy in the germ-cell whence the human and every other kind of
embryo develops, has also its correspondence in the 'auric egg' of man, of
which much has been written and little revealed. The colour of this aura in
its purest form is opalescent. Therefore we find Damascius (Quæst.,
147) quoting a verse of Orpheus in which the Egg is called 'silver-white',
that is to say, silver-shining or mother o' pearl; he also calls it, again
quoting Orpheus (op. cit., p. 380), the 'Brilliant Vesture' or the
'Cloud'.
Leucippus and Democritus (Plutarch, Placitt., II.vi.396) also
'stretch a circular vesture and membrane round the cosmos'. It is interesting
to compare this idea of a membrane or chorion with a passage in the Vishnu
Purâna (I.ii; Wilson's trans., i.40). Parâshara is describing the Vast
Egg, 'which gradually expanded like a bubble of water' (the very simile used
by Apion), and referring to the contents of the Jagad-yoni or World-matrix, he
says 'Meru was its amnion, and the other mountains were its
chorion'--(Merurulbamabhûttasya jarâyushcha mahîdharâh--see
Fitzedward Hall's note loc. cit.). These two membranes, which play such
an important part in embryology, are easily explained in the world-process,
when we remember that Meru is the Olympus of the Greeks, the Celestial Arch,
whereas the 'other mountains' are the circular ranges, or spheres, which
separate the 'oceans' of space from each other.
In this connection also we should remember that the Egg contains the
'Triple God', the 'Dragon-formed'. Without the spermatozoon the ovum would
remain unfertilized. But the Dragon-formed will be referred to again later on.
In connection with this graphic symbol of an Egg, we must briefly mention the
Mixing-Bowl or
THE
CRATER
This is so called from the Goblet which the Deity orders to be given to
the souls to drink from, in order that they may imbibe the intelligence of all
things. Proclus (Tim., v.316) speaks of several of these Crateres:
'Plato in the Philebus hands on the tradition of the Vulcanic Crater
[the Cup of Fire] . . . and Orpheus is acquainted with the Cup of Dionysus,
and ranges many other such Cups round the Solar Table.' That is to say, that
the various spheres were each in their turn Cups containing the essence of the
Spheres or Eggs. We may compare this with the Cup of Anacreon and of the sûfi
mystics. For the same idea, and the same term, in the Chaldæan Oracles and the
Books of Hermes, see my Simon Magus (p. 56). Proclus (Tim.,
v.291) identifies this Crater with the Egg and Night, the mother and wife of
Phanes. And Plato, in his psychogony, speaks of two mixtures or Crateres; in
the one the Deity mixed the All-Soul of Universal Nature, and from the other
he ladled out the minds of men (Lobeck, op. cit., 786). And Macrobius
(Somn., XI.ii.66) says that: 'Plato speaks of this in the Phædo,
and says that the soul is dragged back into a body, hurried on by new
intoxication, desiring to taste a fresh draught of the overflow of matter,
whereby it is weighed down and brought back [to earth]. The sidereal Crater of
Father Liber [Dionysus, Bacchus] is a symbol of this mystery; and this is what
the ancients called the River of Lethe; the Orphics saying that Father Liber
was the Material Mind [Indra, Lord of the Senses].'
This shows us that we must continually bear in mind the aphorism 'as above
so below', if we would understand the intricacies of the system. There is the
Supernal Crater of the Super-sensible World, and the Material Crater of the
Sensible World--and others also. The following passages from Proclus'
Theology of Plato, however, will throw further light on this
interesting subject. Thus the Demiurgus is said to 'constitute the psychical
essences in conjunction with the Crater' (V.xxxi)--this in the Sensible World.
Again, 'the Crater is the peculiar cause of souls, and is co-arranged with the
Demiurgus and filled from him, but fills souls'. Thus the Crater is called the
'fountain of souls', the 'cause of souls'
(c. xxxi). But we must pass on to the God born from the Egg and his
associate deities.
PHANES,
ERICAPÆUS AND METIS
The Triple God born from the Egg was called Phanes, and also Metis and
Ericapaeus, the three being aspects of one Power.
As Clemens Alexandrinus (Lobeck, p. 478, gives his authority as 'Clemens,
p. 672'--an absolutely useless reference) writes: 'The Egg of Life, having
been brought forth from boundless Mother Substance, and kept in motion by this
subjective and ever-moving Mother Substance, manifests endless changes. For
from within its periphery a male-female living Power [the absolute "Animal"]
is ideated, by the foreknowledge of the divine [Father] Spirit [Æther], which
is in it [the Egg], which Power Orpheus calls Phanes, for on its shining forth
the whole universe shone forth by the light of Fire--the most glorious of the
elements--brought to perfection in the Moist [Principle--Chaos]. And so the
Egg, the first and last [of all things], heated by the living creature within
it, breaks; and the enformed [Power] comes forth, as Orpheus says, "when the
swollen wide-capacious Egg brake in twain"; and thus the outer membrane [skin,
shell, or chorion] contains the diacosmic evolution [that is to say, the two
diacosms, or in other words, the upper half of the membrane is the container
of the intellectual cosmos, and the lower of the sensible cosmos]; but he
[Phanes] presides over the Heaven [which lies between], as it were seated on
the heights of a mountain range, and in secret shines over the boundless Eon.'
In Hindu mythography this mountain range is figured as circular.
Malela and Cedrenus, in the passage referred to under 'Night', add that
Orpheus tells us that: 'Light [Phanes, "Bright Space Son of Dark Space"]
having burst through the Æther [the Âkâshic Eggl illuminated the Earth [the
First Earth--or Cosmos]; meaning that this Light was the Light which burst
through the highest Æther of all--[and not the sensible light that we see].
And the names of it Orpheus heard in prophetic vision, and declares them to be
Metis, Phanes and Ericapæus, which by interpretation are Will, Light and
Light-giver [or Consciousness, Light, and Life]; adding that these three
divine powers of names are the one power and one might of the One God, whom no
man sees--and from his power all things are created, both incorporeal
principles, and the sun and moon and all the stars.'
This deity is also called Protogonus, the First-born (Lactantius,
Inst., I.v.28), and Proclus (Tim., ii.132) quotes a verse of
Orpheus in which he is named Sweet Love, son of most beauteous Æther; and the
same mystic philosopher (Theol. Plat., III.xx.161) tells us that: 'He
is the most brilliant of the Noëtic Powers, the Noëtic Mind, and Radiant
Light, which amazes the Noëric Powers and causes even Father [Zeus, the
Demiurge] to wonder.' And Hermias (in Phædr., p. 141) quotes the lines of
Orpheus which describe the brilliancy of the First-born: 'And none could gaze
on Phanes with their eyes, save holy Night alone. The others, all, amazed
beheld the sudden Light in Space. Such was the light which streamed from
Phanes' deathless fame.'
As Metis (the Mahat of the Vedântins), Phanes is said to bear the
'far-famed seed of the Gods' (Proc. in Crat., pp. 36, 52; in
Tim., v.303, ii.137; Damascius, p. 346).
Of the three aspects, Phanes is said to be the 'father', Ericapæus the
'power', and Metis the 'intellect', in Platonic terms (see Damascius,
Quæst., p. 380). Damascius (p. 381) further describes this Power as being
symbolized by Orpheus as 'a God without a body, with golden wings on his
shoulder and having on his sides the heads of bulls, and on his head a
monstrous dragon with the likeness of every kind of wild beast.' This
symbolism is more simply given in the same passage as 'a dragon with the heads
of a bull and lion and in the midst the face of a God, with wings on the
shoulders.' This was the symbol of Pan, the All-Father, the Universal Creative
Power or absolute 'Animal'--the source of all living creatures. And Proclus
(in Tim., iii.130) writes of the same symbol: 'The first God, with
Orpheus, bears the heads of many animals, of the ram, the bull, the snake, and
bright-eyed lion; he came forth from the Primal Egg, in which the Animal is
contained in germ.' And later on (p. 131) he adds: 'And first of all he was
winged.'
I would venture to suggest that this graphic symbol, in one of its
meanings, traces evolution from reptile to bird, animal and man. But there are
other meanings. For Hermias (op. cit., p. 137) quotes a verse of
Orpheus which speaks of Phanes 'gazing in every direction with his four eyes,'
and 'being carried in every direction by his golden wings,' he also rides upon
various 'steeds'. This has most probably some connection with soul-powers.
Eliphas Levi, the French Kabalist, in his Dogme et Rituel de la Haute
Magie (p. 333) gives a most interesting drawing, which may with advantage
be compared with the symbol of Phanes. It is a pantacle made out of the two
interlaced triangles composed of wings; in the centre is the head of a man, on
the left the head of a bull, on the right that of a lion, and above the head
of an
eag
le. Beneath are two other pantacles called respectively
the Wheel of Pythagoras and the Wheel of Ezekiel. The figure is also called
the 'fourheaded sphinx', and is symbolized in India by the Svastika
contained in a circle. These four 'beasts' are said to typify the four
elementary kingdoms--earth, air, fire, and water--and much else. They are
given by Christian mystics as the symbols of the four Gospels. In brief, they
signify the four great creative forces of the cosmos.
But with regard to Phanes, in the Orphic Theogony, these forces are
noëtic, and not sensible. For Phanes is the creator of the Gods, and the
great-grandfather of Zeus, the creator of the sensible universe. As Lactantius
(Inst., I.v.28) says:
'Orpheus tells us that Phanes is the father of all the Gods, for their
sake he created the heaven [the intellectual universe] with forethought for
his children, in order that they might have a habitation and a common
seat--"he founded for the immortals an imperishable mansion".'
Now Phanes, as we have already remarked, was also called Love (Erôs). This
is that Primal Love or Desire (Kâma-Deva) which arose in the All; in the words
of the Rig Veda, the 'primal germ of Mine--that which divides entity
from non-entity,' and which also unites entity with non-entity. This Love is
admirably explained by Proclus, in his Commentary on the First
Alsibiades of Plato (see Taylor, Myst. Hymns, pp. 117-120,
and also his notes on the speech of Diotima in the Banquet of Plato,
Works, vol. iv), where he writes as follows: 'The [Chaldæan] Oracles,
therefore, speak of Love as binding and residing in all things; and hence, if
it connects all things, it also couples us with the government of dæmons
[cosmic and nature powers]. But Diotima calls Love a "Great Dæmon", because it
everywhere fills up the medium between desiring and desirable natures. . . .
But among the intelligible and occult Gods [the Noëtic Order], it unites
intelligible intellect to the first and secret Beauty, by a certain life [the
"higher life"] better than Intelligence. Hence [Orpheus] the theologist of the
Greeks calls this Love "blind", for he says of intelligible intellect
[Phanes], "in his breast feeding eyeless, rapid Love." But in instances
posterior to intelligibles, it imparts by illumination an indissoluble
bond to all things perfected by itself; for a bond is a certain union, but
accompanied by much separation. On this account the Oracles are accustomed to
call the fire of love a "coupler"; for proceeding from intelligible intellect,
it binds all following natures with each other, and with itself [the "love for
all that lives and breathes"]. Hence it conjoins all the gods with
intelligible Beauty, and dæmons with gods; and conjoins us with both gods and
dæmons. In the gods indeed it has a primary subsistence; in dæmons a secondary
one; and in partial souls a subsistence through a certain third procession
from principles. Again, in the gods it subsists above essence for every genus
of gods is super-essential. But in dæmons it subsists according to essence;
and in souls according to illuminations.'
Phanes is also called the Limit or Boundary, since 'that God who closes
the paternal order is said by the wise to be the only deity among the
intelligible Gods that has a name; and theurgy ascends as far as this order'
(Procl., in Crat., Taylor, op. cit., p. 183). It is curious to
notice that the same term, Limit or Boundary, is used in the Gnostic
Valentinian System, and in precisely the same sense: 'It is called the
Boundary because it shuts off (bounds) the Hysterêma [Sensible World] without
from the Plerôma [Super-sensible World]' (Hippolytus, Philosophumena,
IV.xxx; see my translation of Pistis-Sophia, in Lucifer,
vi.233).
NIGHT
Closely associated with Phanes (intelligible 'Light'), as mother or wife,
or daughter, is Night (intelligible 'Darkness') which may be compared with the
Maya or Avidya (root-objectivity), of the Vedântins.
Just as there are three aspects of Phanes, so there are three Nights. Thus
Proclus (Tim., ii.137): 'Phanes comes forth alone, the same is sung of
as male and generator, and he leads with him the [three] Nights, and the
Father mingles [noëtically] with the middle one.' And so Patricius
(Discuss. Perip., III.i.293): 'For we know from Olympiodorus that
Orpheus evolved all the Gods from one Egg, from which [proceeded] first
Phanes, then Night, and then the rest.'
And again Proclus (op. cit., v.291) tells us that Phanes and Night
'preside over the Noëtic Orders, for they are eternally established in the
Adytum [the Vestibule of the Good in the Noëtic Order], as says Orpheus, for
he calls their occult Order the Adytum.'
Night, then, is the Mother of the Gods, or, as Orpheus says, 'the Nurse of
the Gods is immortal Night' (Proc., in Crat., p. 57). Just as Mâyâ is
the consort and power of Mâyi, or Ishvara (the Logos, or ideal Creative Cause)
of the Upanishads, and thus all Gods and all men are under her sway, so Phanes
hands over his sceptre to his consort Night. As Proclus tells us
(ibid.): 'Night receives the sceptre from the willing hands of
Phanes--"he placed his far-famed sceptre in the hands of Goddess Night, that
she might have queenly honour".'
To her was given the highest art of divination, for Mâyâ is the creative
power of the Deity, the means whereby he 'imagines' the universe, or thinks it
into being. Thus she, his spouse, is in the secret of his thoughts, and thus
presides over the highest divination. So Hermias (Phædr., p. 145):
'Orpheus, speaking of Night, tells us that "he [Phanes] gave her the mantic
[i.e., pertaining to divination] art that never fails, to have and hold
in every way".' And further back the same writer (p. 144), tells us that of
the three Nights, Orpheus 'ascribes to the first the gift of prophecy, but the
middle [Night] he calls humility, and the third, he says, gave birth to
righteousness'. These are said to be referred to by Plato when he discourses
of Prudence, Understanding (for true understanding is always humble or
modest), and Righteousness.
And so in prudence, and understanding, and righteousness, Night (the
occult power of Deity) gives birth to the noumenal and phenomenal universes;
in the words of Orpheus (Hermias, ibid.): 'And so she brought forth
Earth [the phenomenal universe] and wide Heaven [the noumenal], so as to
manifest visible from invisible.'
This is most graphically set forth by Proclus in his Commentary on the
Timæus (pp. 63, 96; as given by Taylor, Mst. Hymns, pp. 78, 79):
'The artificer of the universe [Zeus, the creative aspect of Phanes], prior to
his whole fabrication [says Orpheus], is said to have betaken himself to the
Oracle of Night, to have been there filled with divine conceptions, to have
received the principles of fabrication, and, if it is lawful so to speak, to
have solved all his doubts. Night, too, calls upon the father Zeus to
undertake the fabrication of the universe; and Zeus is said by the theologist
[Orpheus] to have thus addressed Night:
-
- ' "O Nurse supreme of all the powers divine,
- Immortal Night! how with unconquer'd mind
- Must I the source of the Immortals fix?
- And how will all things but as one subsist,
- Yet each its nature separate preserve?"
-
- 'To which interrogation the Goddess thus replies:
-
- ' "All things receive enclos'd on ev'ry side,
- In Æther's wide, ineffable embrace;
- Then in the midst of Æther place the Heav'n,
- In which let Earth [visible Cosmos] of infinite extent,
- The Sea [the Ocean of Space], and Stars the crown of Heav'n be fixt." '
It is curious to notice that the original for 'Nurse' is Maia
(Maîa). In Sanskrit i before another vowel changes into
y. The Greek Maia, therefore, bears a most suspicious resemblance to
the Sanskrit Maya. But this is philology, the most fallacious of all
'sciences', while Maia, the Nurse of the Gods, is the queen of the mantic art
that 'never fails'.
HEAVEN
Chief of the children of Night was Heaven (Uranus), the Lord of the
Noëtic-noëric Triad in Platonic terminology. As Hermias (op. cit., p.
141) says: 'After the order of the Nights [triple Night] are three orders of
divine Powers, Heaven, the Cyclopes, and the Hundred-handed. For first came
forth from him [Phanes] Heaven and Earth.' This Earth is the first Sphere of
the Sensible World, the true Earth, for we read of 'another earth', our
globe. And Heaven has the characteristic of his parent, for we learn from
Achilles Tatius (Arat., p. 85): 'The Heaven of Orpheus is meant to be
the Boundary and Guard of all.' Taylor (Myst. Hymns, p. 16, n.) quotes
the same sentence from Damascius, on First Principles, but gives no reference.
And between this divine Earth and divine Heaven there is the first 'marriage'.
For as Proclus (in Tim., v.293) remarks: ' "Marriage" is peculiar to
this order. For he [Orpheus] calls Earth the first bride, and the first
marriage, her union with Heaven. For between Phanes and Night there is no
"marriage", they being at-oned in a noëtic union.'
THE
CHILDREN OF HEAVEN AND EARTH
From their union arises a strange and curious progeny, the Fates (Parcæ),
Hundred-handed (Centimani), and They-who-see-all-round (Cyclopes). As
Athenagoras (xviii. 18, Gall.) writes: 'Heaven uniting with Earth begets the
female [powers] Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos; and the males, the
Hundred-handed, Cottus, Gyges, Briareus; and the Cyclopes Brontes, and
Steropes and Argos; whom he bound and cast into Tartarus, learning that he
would be driven from his kingdom by his children.'
The Fates are the Karmic Powers, which adjust all things according to the
causes of prior Universes; while the Centimani and Cyclopes are the Builders,
or rather the Overseers or Noëtic Architects, who supervise the Builders of
the Sensible Universe. Thus Hermias (p. 141), calls the Cyclopes the
'Builder-handed' (meaning a 'builder'). And so these first Builders are fabled
by Orpheus (Proc., Tim., ii.100), to be they who 'devised the thunder
for Zeus, and fashioned the lightning [the Svastika]; and they it was who
taught Vulcan and Minerva all the cunning tasks which Heaven works
within'--that is to say, which Heaven works poetically; whereas Vulcan and
Minerva are Builders in the Sensible World.
These were the first progeny of Heaven and Earth, and were cast down to
Tartarus, for they worked within all things, and so, as evolution proceeded,
permeated every kingdom of nature. But then, without the knowledge of Heaven,
Earth brought forth, says Orpheus (Proc., Tim., iii.137), 'seven fair
daughters, bright-eyed, pure, and seven princely sons, covered with hair'; and
these are called the 'avengers of their brethren'. And the names of the
daughters are Themis and Tethys, Mnemosyne and Thea, Dione and Phoebe, and
Rhea; and of the sons, Caus and Crius, Phorcys and Cronus, Oceanus and
Hyperion, and Iapetus (Proc., op. cit., v.295). And these are the
Titans.
It is difficult to thread one's way through the legends of the Builders
and Titans, and their correspondences, the Curetes and Corybantes, or to find
any clear distinctions between Heaven and Saturn and Zeus, in the 'battles
fought for space'--dim legends of primary creation and nature-workings, and
much else. Let us, however, take the Titans first.
THE
TITANS
So 'Our Lady' Earth, enraged at the banishment of her first-born, 'brought
forth virgin youths descended from Heaven, to whom, indeed, they give the
title of Titans [the Retributors], because they exacted retribution from
starry Heaven' (Orpheus, quoted by Athenagoras, loc. cit.). But Hesiod
(Theog., v.207) says that the name means 'Stretchers' or 'Strivers'.
But of all the Titans, Night, their mother's mother, the nurse of the
Gods, loved Cronus (Saturn) most, for, by her gift of prophecy, she knew he
was destined for the kingship of the world, and thus she nursed and tended
him, so that he became of all the most subtleminded. And so, led on by their
mother, the Titans revolt against Heaven, with the exception of Ocean. That is
to say, the spiritual forces break the bonds of their restrainer Heaven, and
descend into matter--all except Ocean, who remained as the Ocean of Space
within his father's kingdom (Proc., loc. cit., p. 295). And Cronus
becomes their leader. Thus Porphyry (De Ant. Nymph., xv.) writes: 'The
first of those who set themselves against Heaven is Cronus, and so Cronus
receives the powers that descend from Heaven, and Zeus receives those that
descend from Cronus.' And so they dismember their father; and from his blood
the Giants are born (Etym. M., sub voc.).
And thus Saturn establishes his kingdom. 'Orpheus tells us that Cronus
seized on celestial Olympus, and there enthroned reigned over the Titans--but
Ocean dwelt in the ineffable waters' (Proc., loc. cit., p. 295).
In the Sensible World, the Giants play the same rôle with regard to
Zeus as the Titans with regard to Heaven, as we learn from Proclus in the
fragments of his Commentary on the Republic of Plato; who also, after giving a
full philosophical explanation of the operations of the Divine Powers, says:
'Is it, therefore, any longer wonderful, if the authors of fables, perceiving
such contrariety in the Gods themselves and the first of beings, obscurely
signified this to their pupils through battles?' And again, 'hence fables,
concealing the truth, assert that such powers fight and war with each other'
(see Taylor's Myst. Hymns, pp. 71, 74). And Proclus (Tim.,
v.292, Taylor) writes: 'Of the divine Titannic hebdomads, Ocean both abides
and proceeds, uniting himself to his father [Heaven], and not departing from
his kingdom. But all the rest of the Titans, rejoicing in progression,
are said to have given completion to the will of Earth, but to have assaulted
their father, dividing themselves from his kingdom, and proceeding unto
another order. Or rather, of all the celestial genera, some alone abide in
their principles, as the first two triads.'
Thus far the legend of the Titans with regard to the Gods, or the
macrocosm; next follows the fable with regard to the human soul, or the
microcosm. The Sacred Rites of Dionysus restored by Orpheus, depended on the
following 'arcane narration' (Taylor's Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries
[Wilder's edition], pp. 126, 127): 'Dionysus, or Bacchus [Zagreus, the human
Soul], while he was yet a boy, was engaged by the Titans, through the
stratagems of Juno, in a variety of sports, with which that period of life is
so vehemently allured; and among the rest, he was particularly captivated with
beholding his image in a mirror [the Astral Light which allures the young
soul]; during his admiration of which he was miserably torn in pieces by the
Titans [cosmic and elemental powers, which absorb the energy of the soul
through its desires for things of sense]; who, not content with this cruelty,
first boiled his members [powers] in water [the psychic sphere], and after
roasted them by the fire [the spiritual sphere]. But while they were tasting
his flesh, thus dressed, Jupiter [the parent-soul], roused by the odour, and
perceiving the cruelty of the deed, hurled his thunder at the Titans--[the
human soul as it grows in stature turns to its father-soul, and the divine
fire (thunder) "converts the Titans to its own essence"]--but committed the
members of Bacchus to Apollo, his brother [the solar part of the soul, or
"Higher Ego"; Bacchus being the lunar part, or "Lower Ego"] that they might be
properly interred [converted by the alchemy of spiritual nature]. And this
being performed, Dionysus (whose "heart" during his laceration was snatched
away by Pallas [Athena, Minerva]), by a new regeneration [through a series of
reincarnations] again emerged, and being restored to his pristine life and
integrity, he afterwards filled up the number of the Gods. [The soul reaches
liberation and the man becomes a Jîvan-mukta.] But in the meantime, from the
exhalation arising from the ashes of the burning bodies of the Titans, mankind
was produced. [This refers to the "transmigration of life-atoms" composing the
bodies of men.]'
On this passage Taylor (Myst. Hymns p. 88) summarizes the
Commentary of Olympiodorus on the Phædo of Plato, as follows: 'We are
composed from fragments because through falling into generation,
i.e., into the sublunary region, our life has proceeded into the most
distant and extreme division; but from Titanic fragments, because the
Titans are the ultimate artificers of things, and the most proximate to their
fabrications. Of these Titans, Bacchus, or the Mundane Intellect, is
the monad, or proximately exempt
producing cause.' Bacchus is said to be the 'spiritual part of the mundane
soul' in one aspect, and also the highest of the 'mundane gods' in another,
this both macrocosmically and microcosmically .
Now Ficinus (L. IX, Enn., i.83, 89), says that: 'Because men were
generated from the Titans, who had been nourished with the body of Dionysus,
he [Orpheus], therefore, calls them Dionysiacal, as though some of their
members were from the Titans [and came from Dionysus], so that the human body
is partly of a Dionysiacal [psychic], and partly of a mundane [physical]
nature.' For the smoke from the ashes of the Titans 'became matter,' we are
told (Mustoxides and Schinas, Anecd., iv.4).
The Platonists called Dionysus 'Our Master' for 'the mind in us is
Dionysiacal and the image of Dionysus [the Mundane Soul]' (Proc.,
Crat., 59, 82, 114).
Dio Chrysostom (Or., xxx.550) has a curious sentence on this point,
when he writes: 'I will tell you something which is neither pleasant nor
agreeable. We men are of the blood of the Titans [Asuras]; and since they are
hostile to the Gods [Devas], we also are not friends with the latter, but are
ever being punished by them and ever on the watch for punishment to fall on
our heads.'
And not only are our animal bodies thus generated, but also the bodies of
animals themselves (Ther., v.7; Acusilaus, Fragm., p. 227; Fabric. ad Sext. c.
Gramm., I.xii.272).
The legend therefore, can be interpreted from the macrocosmic and
microcosmic standpoint. From the former we see the symbolical drama of the
World-Soul being differentiated into individual souls; from the latter the
mystical spectacle of the individual soul, divided into many personalities, in
the long series of rebirths or palingeneses, through which it threads its path
on earth.
As Macrobius says (Somn., I.xii.67): 'By Father Liber [Dionysus]
the Orphics seem to understand the Hylic Mind [Mundane Soul, or human soul],
which is born from the Impartible [Mind] and is separated into individual
minds [or personalities]. And so in their Sacred Rites, [Dionysus] is
represented to have been torn into separate members, and the pieces buried [in
matter], and then again he is resurrected intact.' This Proclus (Tim.,
i.53) explains as 'a partible progression from the impartible creation'. And
Hermias (in Phædr., p. 87) says: 'This God is the cause of
reincarnation.
Proclus (Parm., iii.33, Cousin) further tells us that: 'The
theologists say the mind [the higher mind, called the "heart" of Bacchus in
the fable], in this Dionysiacal dismemberment, was preserved intact by the
wisdom of Athena; it was the soul [lower mind] that was first divided, and it
was divided sevenfold.'
And Plutarch (On the E. at Delphi, ix; see King's Plutarch's
Morals, p. 183), referring to the same legend, writes: 'The wiser sort,
cloaking their meaning from the vulgar, call the change into fire, "Apollo",
on account of the reduction to one state (a--"not", and polloi--
"many"), and also "Phoebus" on account of its freedom from defilement and its
purity, but the condition and change of his turning and subdivision into airs
and water and earth, and the production of animal and plants, they
enigmatically term "Exile" and "Dismemberment". They name him "Dionysus" and
"Zagreus" and "Nycteleos" and "Isodi"; they also tell of certain destructions
and disappearances and deceases and new births, which are riddles and fables
pertaining to the aforesaid transformations; and they sing the dithyrambic
song, filled with sufferings, and allusions to some change of state that
brought with it wandering about and dispersion.'
Thus the story of Dionysus and the Titans is a dramatic history of the
wanderings of the 'Pilgrim-Soul'. And curiously enough we end the story of the
resurrection of Dionysus, after his dismemberment by the Titans, compared by
the most learned of the Christian Fathers with the resurrection of the Christ.
Thus Origen (Contra Celsum., iv. 171, Spenc.), after making the
comparison, remarks apologetically and somewhat bitterly: 'Or, forsooth, are
the Greeks to be allowed to use such words with regard to the soul and
speak in allegorical fashion , and we forbidden to do so ?'--thus
clearly declaring that the 'resurrection' was an allegory of the soul, and not
historical. And so Damascius (Vit. Isodori, Phot. ccxlii.526), speaking
of the dismemberment and resurrection of Osiris, remarks, 'this should be a
mingling with God, an all-perfect at-one-ment, a return upwards of our souls
to the divine.'
But let us return to the elder children of Heaven and Earth, and first
give our attention for a brief space to
CRONUS-SATURN
Proclus, in his Commentaries on the Cratylus of Plato (Taylor,
Myst. Hymns, pp. 172-178), tells us many things about Cronus. There are
six kings, or rulers holding the sceptre of the Gods, viz., Phanes,
Night, Heaven, Saturn, Jupiter and Bacchus. In this series there is an orderly
succession as far as Heaven, and from Saturn to Bacchus; 'but Saturn alone
perfectly deprives Heaven of the kingdom, and concedes dominion to Jupiter,
cutting and being cut off, as the fable says'. And, therefore, Saturn is said
to have taken the kingdom by violence or insolently, and he is therefore
called the Insolent (corresponding to the Sanskrit Râjasa in this connection).
He is also called by Plato the Great Dianoëtic Power of the Intellectual
Universe, and thus rules over the dianoëtic part of the soul, 'for he produces
united intellection into multitude, and fills himself wholly with excited
intelligibles, whence also he is said to be the leader of the Titanic race,
and the source of all-various separation and diversifying power. . . the
division and separation of wholes into parts receives its beginning from the
Titans.'
And yet Saturn is an intellectual power and not a builder of sensibles:
'for King Saturn is intellect, and the supplier of all intellectual life; but
he is an intelligible exempt from co-ordination with sensibles, immaterial and
separate, and converted to himself. He likewise converts his progeny, and
after producing them into light, again embosoms and firmly establishes them in
himself. For the demiurgus of the universe [Zeus], though he [also]
is a divine intellect, yet he orderly arranges sensibles, and provides
for subordinate natures. But the mighty Saturn is
essentialized in separate intellections, which transcend wholes. "For
the fire which is beyond the first [Creative Fire--of the Sensible World],"
says the Chaldæan Oracle, "does not incline its power downwards." '
Now the Noëtic Order of the Powers consists of Saturn, Rhea, Jupiter, the
three Curetes and the separating monad Ocean. But Saturn is the chief of the
seven, and, as such, is the Noëtic Power of the Noëric Order. And 'this
impartible and imparticipable transcendency of Saturn' is characterized as
'Purity'. Thus it is that Saturn is Lord of the Curetes (the Virgin
Youths or Kumâras); and as the Oracle says: 'The intellect of the Father
[Saturn] riding on these rulers [Curetes], they become refulgent with the
furrows of inflexible and implacable fire.' They are the powers of the
Fire-Self or Intellectual Creative Power of the Universe; they are the Flames
and the Fires.
So, as the same Oracles tell us, 'from him leap forth the implacable
Lightning-bolts, and the comet-nursing Breasts of the all-fiery might of
father-born Hecate [Rhea] . . . and the Mighty Breath beyond the Fiery Poles'.
And with regard to the three Minds, Proclus writes: 'Again, every
intellect (nous) either abides, and is then intelligible [noëtic], as
being better than motion; or it is moved, and is then intellectual [noëric];
or it is both, and is then intelligible and at the same time intellectual
[noëtic-noëric]. The first of these is Phanes; the second, which is
alone moved, is Saturn; and the third, which is both moved and permanent, is
Heaven.' So far for Saturn among the Gods, but Saturn is also among men; and
certain of the early races of mankind, which follow an orderly progression,
like to the genera of the Gods, are said in their turn to be appropriately
ruled over by Saturn. Thus Lactantius (I.xiii.11): 'Orpheus tells us that
Saturn also reigned on earth and among men--"Saturn ruled first over men on
earth." ' And Proclus (Scholium ad Hesiod. Opp. 126): 'Orpheus
says that Cronus ruled over the silver race, meaning that, according to the
pure [esoteric] sense of the word, those who lived a "silver life"; just as
those who lived according to the [pure] mind are golden.' And again,
commenting on v.113, 'Orpheus says that the hair of Cronus was ever black; and
Plato (Philebus, 270, D), that men in the Age of Cronus cast aside old
age and were ever young.' This explains why the seven Titans are said above to
be 'covered with hair'. And also in his Theology of Plato (V.x.264):
'Freedom from old age is peculiar to this order, as the barbarians
[non-Greeks] and Orpheus say. For the latter says mystically that the hair on
Saturn's face was ever black, and never whitened . . . "they lived eternal
years, with pure cheeks, and lovely fresh locks, nor were they mingled with
the white flower of infirmity".'
And thus that blessed race lived in the happy days of Father Saturn, in
Elysian Fields, and peaceful Paradise, 'and all who had the heart to keep
their soul from every sin, essayed the Path of Zeus, to Saturn's Tower'
(Pindar, Ol.,ii.123); that is to say, they became perfect and ascending
to the Gods by the Path, 'which Zeus commands the pious to tread,' sat them
down in Saturn's Tower (Olympus, Meru) secure from sorrow and ignorance.
And Plutarch (Symp., VIII.iv.2) says: 'The plane-tree [phoenix] is
the longest lived of all trees, as Orpheus somewhere bears witness--"a living
being like to the leafy branches of plane trees".' These were the 'trees' in
the 'garden'. In the Purânas and Upanishads, in the books of the Chaldæans and
Jews, of the Egyptians and Gnostics, 'trees' were the glyphs of men, and
especially of men perfected.
THE FOUR
AGES
But with regard to these various ages and races, let us pause a moment to
add a few remarks. Nigidius (De Diis, iv) writes: 'Certain divide the
Gods and their orders into periods and ages, and among these Orpheus; and
these ages are first of Saturn, then of Jupiter, next of Neptune, then of
Pluto, and some also, for instance the Magi, speak of the reign of Apollo.'
And Servius (on Ecl., iv.4) says: 'The Cumæan Sibyl divides the ages
according to the metals; she also tells us which is to be ascribed to each
metal, the last being that of the Sun, meaning by that the tenth. . . . She
said also that when these ages had all run their course they were again
renewed.' This period was called the Great Year (Magnus Annus, or
Mahâ-Manvantara in Sanskrit). And Censorinus (xviii) says: 'The mid-winter of
this Great Year is a destruction by water, but the mid-summer a destruction by
fire.'
This period was said to be marked by the stars apparently returning to the
starting points of their respective courses. And Proclus cites an opinion
based on Orpheus that the end of the Great Year is marked by 'Cronus squaring
the account of the Gods and taking his kingdom again; or in other words, he
assumes dominion of that most primæval darkness, the zodiacal cycles that
control the stars' (Lobeck, op. sit., p. 793). And Pliny (VI.xxi) calls
it 'that eternal and final night that impends over the world'.
The account of Hesiod (Opp. et Dies 109-120, 127-142) differs
considerably from that of Orpheus, but there are some interesting details that
may with advantage be set down here from Decharme's Mythologie de la Grèce
Antique (pp. 288-290).
The men of the Golden Age lived exempt from suffering and
care, the earth fed them spontaneously; they never grew old, and when death
finally came upon them, they fell peacefully asleep. After their death they
became the guardians, who 'wrapped in clouds' (Nirmânakâyas) winged their
flight over the earth and watched over its inhabitants.
The men of the Silver Age are far inferior to the former.
They die in youth, are impious and revilers of the Gods. After death they too
become Genii, but evil instead of beneficent, and so they are plunged in
subterranean abodes. They are the 'race of sorcerers,' they of the Black Path.
The men of the Age of Bronze are strong and violent; their
heart has the 'hardness of steel.'
The fourth period is the Age of Iron; its men are, or rather
will be, 'virtuous and just,' for the Age of Iron is still in progress. But we
must leave this interesting subject and return to Cronus and his wife
RHEA
According to Orphic and Platonic theology, Rhea holds the middle rank
between Cronus and Zeus in the Noëric Order. 'She is filled from Saturn with
an intelligible and prolific power which she imparts to Jupiter, the Demiurgus
of the universe: filling his essence with a vivitic abundance.' (See Taylor,
Myst. Hymns, pp. 41-45.)
Plato in Cratylus mystically connects her name (Rhea) with the idea
of 'flowing' (from the Greek reo--'to flow') [Rheology, for
example, is the science of fluid flow.], meaning thereby simply 'that fontal
power by which she contains in transcendent union the divisible rivers of
life'. Rhea, is, therefore, the 'mother of lives,' the mystical Eve, the
'mother of all living.'
Proclus (Theol. Plat. Taylor's ed., i.267) says that according to
Orpheus, 'This Goddess, when considered as united to Saturn by the most
exalted part of her essence, is called Rhea; but considered as producing
Jupiter, and together with Jupiter unfolding the total and partial orders of
the Gods [i.e., the powers of the Sensible World], she is called
Ceres.' This is a very important distinction to bear in mind.
Now Rhea, as Ceres, in Hymn XIV, is called 'brass-sounding' and
'drum-beating'. This has reference to the mystical results of certain sounds
and rhythm, part and parcel of what the Hindus call Mantravidyâ. I remember
reading a curious old French book in the Bibliothèque de la Ville of
Clermont-Ferrand, one of the books confiscated from the Minime Monastery of
the same town, at the time of the Revolution. This work dealt with the magical
properties of music, and described for what especial purposes the various
instruments of music were used in the Temple-service of the Jews. Now
Iamblichus (De Mysteriis, III.ix) goes into the matter of the so-called
Corybantic and Bacchic 'frenzies' produced by musical instruments in the
Mysteries of Ceres and Bacchus; and in his Life of Pythagoras (xxv) he,
further, tells us that: 'The whole Pythagoric school went through a course of
musical training, both in harmony and touch, whereby, by means of appropriate
chants, they beneficially converted the dispositions of the soul to contrary
emotions. For, before they retired to rest, they purified their minds of the
[mental, says Quintilian] confusion and noises of the day, by certain songs
and peculiar chants, and so prepared for themselves peaceful repose with
either few or pleasant dreams. And again, when they rose from sleep, they
freed themselves from drowsiness by songs of another character. And sometimes
by means of melodies without words they cured certain affections and diseases,
and this they said was the real means of "charming". And it is most probable
that the word "charm" (epode) came into general use from them. It was
thus, then, that Pythagoras established a most salutary system of regenerating
the morals by means of "music" [Mantravidyâ].' (Op. cit. Kiessling's
text, pp. 245, 246; see also Taylor, Iamblichus on the Mysteries, 2nd
ed., pp. 130, 131, n.)
Music and Mantras, therefore, were used by the Orphics to attract, or call
down, the influence of the Mother of the Gods, who at the same time was the
'Store-house of Life', of Divine Nature. Thus Proclus in his Commentary on
Euclid (ii) tells us that 'the Pole of the World is called by the
Pythagoreans the Seal of Rhea' (Myst. Hymns, p. 63). Now the pole
is the conductor of the vital and magnetic forces of the earth-envelope, and
is, therefore, appropriately called by this name, as being the seal and
signature of the vital forces of Divine Nature, whereby all diseases can be
healed and all states of the soul vitalized.
Rhea was also called Brimô by the Phrygians, and her son (Zeus) was called
Brimos. This in the macrocosm; in the microcosm Rhea was the Spiritual Soul
(Buddhi) which gave birth to the Human Soul (Manas). Thus Hippolytus, in the
Philosophumena (v.6): 'The Phrygians also (he [the writer of the book
from which the Church Father took his information] says) called it [the Human
Soul] the "Plucked Green Wheat-ear." And after the Phrygians the Athenians, in
their Eleusinian Mysteries, show those who are initiated in silence into the
great and marvelous and most perfect mystery of the Epopts [those who "see
face to face"], a plucked wheat-ear. Now this wheat-ear is also with the
Athenians the Illuminator from the Undelineable [Spiritual Soul, Great Mother,
the Soul of Peace (Shânta Atman) of the Kathopanishad], perfect and
great, just as the hierophant also--not emasculated like Attis, but made
eunuch with hemlock juice [soma-juice] and divorced from all fleshly
generating--in the night, at Eleusis, from beneath many a cloud of fire
[doubtless some psychic phenomenon], accomplishing the great and ineffable
mysteries, shouts and cries aloud, saying: "Our Lady hath borne a sacred son,
Brimô [hath given birth to] Brimos"--that is to say, the strong to the strong.
Our Lady (he says) is the spiritual generation, the celestial, the above; and
the "strong" he who is born.' That is, the new 'Twice-born,' or Initiate who
is born from the 'Fountain of Life.' (But see my translation in
Lucifer, xiii.47). We next pass to Rhea's royal son and husband, Zeus.
ZEUS-JUPlTER
The sacred fable tells us that 'when Jupiter was born, his mother Rhea, in
order to deceive Saturn, gave him a stone wrapped in swaddling bands, in the
place of Jupiter, at the same time informing Saturn that what she gave him was
her offspring. Saturn immediately devoured the stone; and Jupiter who was
secretly educated, at length obtained the government of the world.'
(Phornutus, see Opusc. Mythol., p. 147; see also Taylor, Myst.
Hymns, pp. 44, 45.) This 'stone' has been a stumbling-block to all
the scholars. Whatever is the meaning of the 'perfect cube' and
'corner-stone', the same is the meaning of Jupiter's
substitute. Thus Damascius, On First Principles, writes: 'The
ogdoad pertains to Rhea, as being set in motion [remember the idea of
"flowing" contained in the name] towards everything according to its
differentiation, and yet nevertheless remaining firmly and cubically
established.'
Taylor explains this by saying (loc. cit.): 'Damascius uses the
word "cubically", because eight is a cubic number. Rhea, therefore,
considered as firmly establishing her offspring Jupiter in Saturn, who exists
in unproceeding union, is fabulously said to have given Saturn a stone instead
of Jupiter, the stone indicating the firm establishment of Jupiter in Saturn.
For all divine progeny, at the same time that they proceed from, abide in
their causes. And the "secret" education of Jupiter indicates his
being nurtured in the intelligible [noëtic] order, for this order is
denominated by ancient theologists "occult".'
All this is very obscure. I can only suggest that, as Rhea is the third of
the three Supernal Mothers, Night and Earth being the first and second, and
that, as the mothers all correspond to duads, according to the numeration of
Pythagoras, that, therefore, the cube naturally pertains to Rhea (2 X 2 X 2 =
8). The solid figure the cube is figured by the square in plane geometry, and
the square is the symbol of the lower or sensible world, and
therefore of its ruler Jupiter, just as the triangle is the glyph of the
supersensible world.
Another interesting explanation of this famous 'stone' is that it means
the 'discus', that is to say, the Svastika, which is the glyph of the
fourfold creative forces of the universe. 'By Zeus he means the
discus, on account of the stone swallowed by Cronus instead of Zeus, as Hesiod
says in his Theogony, which he stole without acknowledgment and
disfigured from the Theogony of Orpheus' (Schol. ad Lyc., 399).
Now Zeus being the creative power of the sensible world, and,
therefore, corresponding with the creative soul or mind in man, is said to be
closely associated in his creation with Karma, for he
builds the universe according to the karmic causes set going by preceding
universes, for 'there are many Words on the tongue of the Ineffable,'
according to one of the gnostic philosophers. Thus Proclus writes
(Tim., v.323): 'The Demiurgus [Zeus], as Orpheus says, is nursed by
Adrastia [her "from whom none can escape," from a, "not", and
didrasko, "to run"]; but he marries Necessity, and begets [a daughter]
Fate.' For 'Adrastia is the one goddess that remains with Night [the most
supernal Mother, the great Grandmother of all], and her sister is Form . . .
for Adrastia is said [mystically] to clash her cymbals before the Cavern of
Night. [That is to say, she directs the sound, that sound which "goes out into
all worlds," and by the sound all forms are created.] For back in the Inner
Chamber [Adytum] of the Cavern of Night sits Light (Phanes), and in the midst
Night, who delivers prophetic judgment to the gods, and at the mouth is
Adrastia. Nor is she the same as Justice, for Justice, who is there, is said
to be the daughter of Law and Devotion. . . . And these are said to be the
nurses of Zeus in the Cavern of Night.' (Schol. in Plat., p. 64;
Hermias, Phædr., p. 148.)
And so Proclus (Theol. Plat., IV.xvi.206): 'Adrastia is said by
Orpheus to guard the Demiurgus; "with brazen cymbals and sounding drums in her
hands" she sends forth sounds so that all the gods may turn to her.'
In the sensible universe, the 'language of the gods' is said to
consist of 'sound and colour.' Sounds and colours attract certain 'elementals'
which immediately and mechanically respond to the call.
There is some confusion as to the nurses or guardians of Zeus. For
sometimes they are said to be Adrastia, and Eidê (Form) and Dicê (Justice),
and then again they are said to be the three Curetes. Thus Proclus (Theol.
Plat., VI.xiii.382): 'The life-producing goddess placed the Curetes first
of all as a sure guard, who are said to surround the Demiurgus of wholes, and
dance round him, brought into manifestation by Rhea.' And again (op.
cit., V.iii.253): 'Orpheus places the Curetes as guards to Zeus, being
three in number; and the religious institutions of the Cretans and the whole
Grecian theology refer the pure and undefiled life to this order; for
coron [whence Curetes and Corybantes] means nothing else than "pure".'
The nurses and guards are, therefore, apparently six, three male and three
female. But we will return to this subject later.
And so Zeus having reached his full stature, Orpheus tells us (Porphyry,
Ant. Nymph., xvi), uses honey to ensnare his parent Cronus. And thus
Cronus 'fills himself full of the honey and loses his senses, and becoming
drunk as though from wine, falls asleep. . . . And so he is captured and
dismembered, like Heaven (Uranus) was.'
That is to say, that the delights of the sensible world enslave the
soul, and so the lord of the senses rules in its stead.
And so Zeus attaining the sovereignty constructs the universe with the
help of the powers of Saturn and Night for Night is the great providence of
the gods, and dispenser of divine foresight. For 'the gods beneath Zeus are
not said to be united with Phanes [the Ideal Cause], but only Zeus, and he by
means of the midmost Night [the spouse of Phanes]' (Hermias, op. cit.,
p. 141).
It is because of this union that Zeus is said to 'swallow' Phanes. For the
creative deity and architect of the sensible world must first imbibe the ideal
and eternal types of things before he can fashion them forth into sensible
shape. Thus Proclus (Tim., iv.267): 'Orpheus called God the Manifestor
(phaneta--Phanes) as manifesting the noëtic monads, and stored within
him the types of all living creatures [calling him the Absolute Creature or
"Animal Itself"], as being the first container of noëtic ideas. And he called
him the "Key of the Mind". . . . And the Demiurgus [Zeus] is made dependent
upon him [Phanes]; and thus Plato said that the latter "looked toward" the
Absolute Animal ; and Orpheus that he "leaped upon him and swallowed him" at
the instance of Night.'
And thus the noëtic creation comes in contact with the sensible world; and
the Above is embosomed in the Below. And so Proclus (Tim., ii.137),
again writes: And 'therefore, Zeus is also called Metis and Absolute
Daimon--"One might, one Daimon" was he, great cause of all'. And again (Op.
cit., iii.156): 'The Demiurgus contains himself in himself the cause of
Love; for Metis is "First Progenitor and All-pleasing Love": and Pherecydes
said that Zeus when he began to create was changed into Love.'
And also again (Parm., iii.22): 'Orpheus says that after swallowing
Phanes, all things were generated in Zeus; for all things were manifested
primally and unitedly in the former, but secondarily and partibly in the
Demiurgus, the cause of the Mundane Order. For in him are the sun and the
moon, and the heaven itself and the elements, and "All-pleasing Love," and all
things being simply one, "were massed in the belly of Zeus".'
And thus Plato (Legg., iv.715, D) writes of Zeus: 'God, as the
ancient Scripture [of Orpheus] tells us, possessing the beginning and end and
middle of all things, with direct course accomplishes his path, cycling round
according to natural law; and Justice ever is with him to seek retribution
from those who leave the path of divine law.'
The special idea connected with creation was that of Law, in
substantiation of which many passages could be brought forward. The following,
however, from Proclus (Tim., ii. 96), is sufficient for the purpose:
'Following the advice of Night he [Zeus] takes to himself an assistant and
makes Law sit by his side, as Orpheus also says.'
And thus it is that the visible world is created--this creation being
summed up by Proclus (Crat., p. 53) as follows: 'Orpheus hands down the
tradition that he [Zeus] created the whole of the celestial creation, and made
the sun and moon and all the starry gods, and created the elements below the
moon.' And in the same place (p. 52) the great commentator sums up the two
creations, intellectual and sensible, in the words: 'The noëric emanation of
the Gods being bounded by the king of the divine orders of wholes [Phanes],
but proceeding by the three Nights and celestial hypostases [the aspects of
Uranus] into the Titanic order [of supernal Architects or Builders], which
first separated itself from the Fathers [Phanes and Uranus, when Cronus
rebelled against Uranus], and then it was that there arose the whole demiurgic
order of Gods. . . . And Zeus before all the other creative powers came into
the united power of the whole demiurgic line . . . and was filled with all the
powers above himself [referring to the swallowing of Phanes].'
We next pass to the wives of Zeus. The record is imperfect; but they were
most probably three and seven in number. The chief of these is Ceres, mother
of Proserpine.
VESTA,
CERES, JUNO
Now Ceres is the same as Rhea, or in other words both are aspects of
one and the same power. Thus Proclus (Crat., p. 96): 'When
Orpheus says that Demeter [Ceres] is the same as Rhea, he means
that when she is above with Cronus she is Rhea, and it is contrary to her
nature to proceed into evolution, but when she evolves . . . she is Demeter.'
And again (op. cit., p. 85): 'Orpheus says that in one aspect Demeter
is the same as the whole life-production, and in another aspect she is not the
same [that is, she belongs to the partible life-production]: for above
she is Rhea, but below with Zeus, Demeter.'
It is exceedingly difficult to distinguish clearly one power from another,
when we reach this plane of secondary differentiation. Of the other wives of
Zeus, Metis and Themis, Eurynome and Leto, and Hestia (Vesta), it is
sufficient to merely mention the names of the first four. Nor can much here be
said of Hera, or Juno, and Vesta, for it is necessary to keep this essay
within reasonable limits. Proclus (Tim., ii.137), however, tells us
that: 'great Zeus was united with Hera; wherefore also she is called [by
Orpheus] the sharer in his privileges .' And again (op. cit., v.315) he
speaks of the emanation of a goddess 'vivifying the whole cosmos, whom Orpheus
calls the sharer of equal privileges with the Demiurgus, and joins her to him.
The Barbarians [Chaldaæans, etc.] call this life-endowing source the Soul,
which is manifested together with the sources of virtue from the reins of the
universal life-giving divinity. But the theologist of the Greeks [Orpheus]
calls her Hera.'
And again Proclus (Theol. Plat., i.483, Taylor) tells us that 'Juno
is the source of the procreation of the soul [of man]'. From the same writer's
Commentary on the Cratylus, however, we are enabled to pick out the
three chief syzygies of Zeus, as the Gnostics would have called them, for he
writes that 'The Theology of Hesiod [based on Orpheus] from the
monad Rhea produces, according to things that are more excellent in the
co-ordination, Vesta [Hestia]; but according to those that are subordinate,
Juno; and according to those that subsist between, Ceres' (Myst.
Hymns, Taylor, p. 195). That is to say, that the Triad proceeding from
Rhea, and conjoined with Zeus, is
Therefore Vesta and Juno are distinguished as follows by Proclus
(Crat., p. 83): 'Vesta imparts from herself to the Gods an
uninclining permanency and seat in themselves, and an indissoluble essence.
But Juno imparts progression, and a multiplication into things
secondary. . . . She [Juno] generates maternally such things as
Jupiter generates paternally. But Vesta abides in herself, possessing an
undefiled virginity, and being the cause of sameness to all things. . . . The
orbs of the planets, likewise, possess the sameness of their revolutions from
her; and the poles and centres are always allotted from her their permanent
rest.'
Now 'in her mundane allotment', that is on this physical plane,
Vesta is the Goddess of the Earth. Thus it is that Philolaus (apud
Stobæum, Eclog. Phys., p. 51) says: 'That there is a fire in the middle
at the centre, which is the Vesta [Hearth] of the Universe, the House of
Jupiter, the Mother of the Gods, and the basis, coherence, and measure of
nature.' All of which puts us in mind of gravity, the god of modern science.
And Simplicius in his Commentary on Aristotle's De Cælo (ii) says: 'But
those who more genuinely participate of the Pythagorean doctrines say that the
fire in the middle is a demiurgic power, nourishing the whole earth from the
middle, and exciting whatever it contains of a frigid nature. Hence some call
it the Tower of Jupiter, as he [i.e., Aristotle] narrates in his
Pythagorics. But others denominate it Guardian of Jupiter, as Aristotle
relates in the present treatise. And according to others it is the Throne of
Jupiter. They called, however, the earth a star, as being itself an
instrument of time; for it is the cause of day and night.' (For the above see
Taylor's Myst. Hymns, pp. 155-157.) All of which proves that the
Pythagoreans knew of the sphericity of the earth and its revolution on its own
axis, and further the real cause of gravity; for if we recollect what has been
said above of Rhea, the primal source of life and magnetism, and the pole, the
seat of Rhea, it will be easy to understand why Vesta, her eldest daughter, is
described by the above mystical names. Microcosmically, again,
Vesta is the 'ether in the heart' of the Upanishads, the 'flame' of
life; and he who knows the mysteries of Tapas, that practice which calls to
its aid the creative, preservative, and regenerative powers of the universe,
as Shankarâchârya explains in his Bhâshya on the Mundakopanishad (i),
will easily comprehend the importance of Vesta both macrocosmically and
microcosmically.
Now Proclus (Crat., see Myst. Hymns, pp. 195-197) tells us
that Ceres 'comprehends Vesta and Juno; in her right hand parts Juno, who
pours forth the whole order of souls; but in her left hand parts Vesta, who
leads forth all the light of virtue. . . . For Ceres, our sovereign mistress,
not only generates life, but that which gives perfection to life; and this
from supernal natures to such as are last; for virtue is the perfection
of souls. . . . Again, the conjunction of the demiurgic intellect with
the vivid causes is triple [Rhea-Ceres, Juno and Proserpine]; for it is
conjoined with the fountains prior to itself [Rhea]; is present with its
kindred co-ordinate natures [Juno]; and co-energizes with the orders posterior
to itself [Proserpine, daughter of Ceres and Jupiter]. For it is present with
the mother prior to itself convertively with Proserpine posterior to
itself providentially; and with Juno co-ordinate to itself with
amatory energy. Hence Jupiter is said to be enamoured of Juno. . . .
And this love indeed is legal, but the other two appear to be illegal. This
Goddess [Juno] therefore produces from herself, in conjunction with the
demiurgus and father, all the genera of souls, the supermundane [supercosmic]
and mundane [cosmic], the celestial and sublunary, the divine, angelic,
demoniacal, and partial [? Human]. . . . Through this ineffable union
therefore of these divinities, the world participates of intellectual souls.
They also give subsistence to intellects who are carried in souls [the soul
being the psychic and substantial envelope of the monad, and the intellect the
mind], and who together with them give completion to the whole fabrication of
things. The series of our sovereign mistress, Juno, beginning from on high,
pervades to the last it of things; and her allotment in the sublunary region
[on the elemental plane] is the air. For air is a symbol of
soul, according to which also soul is called a spirit
(pneuma); just as fire is an image of intellect, but
water of nature, by which the world is nourished , through which
all nutriment and increase are produced. But earth is the image of
body, through its gross and material nature.'
From which we get the following interesting correspondences with the
Vedântic koshas or envelopes.

These correspond to the Kâma Rûpa, Prâna, Linga Sharîra and Sthûla Sharîra
of the Esoteric Philosophy; this being all in the Sublunary Region. (For the
meaning of 'Nature' see Chapter VI, 'On Nature and Emanation.')
But let us now leave the Noëric Order and pass on to the Supercosmic.
PROSERPINE
Of the three syzygies of Zeus (Ceres, Juno and Proserpine) Proserpine is
in the Supercosmic Order, and following the usual correspondence and analogy,
as Proclus says (ibid.), 'possesses triple powers, and impartibly and
uniformly comprehends three monads of Gods. But she is called Core
(korh)through the purity of her essence, and her undefiled
transcendency in her generations. She also possesses a first, middle, and last
empire. And according to her summit, indeed, she is called Diana
by Orpheus; but according to her middle Proserpine; and
according to the extremity of the order Minerva.'
From the union of Core with Zeus in the Supercosmic Order, Bacchus is
born. But this Zeus is the Celestial Jupiter who is the invisible ruler over
the Inerratic Sphere of the Visible Cosmos, and Core is then said to be
the 'connective unity of the three vivific principles', viz., the 'zoogonic
triad', Diana-Proserpine-Minerva. Whereas the Core that is conjoined
with Pluto or Hades is Core, as Proserpine, her middle aspect.
Now Pluto is 'Subterranean Jupiter', the invisible ruler over the
Sublunary Region of the Visible Cosmos. And it is in this connection
and aspect that she begets the Furies, for she 'imparts vivification to the
last of things', and the Furies are only the elemental correspondences
of the supernal Karmic Deities, Adrastia, Necessity and Fate.
'Hence in the Proserpine conjoined with Pluto [i.e., the lower
Core], you will find the peculiarities of Hecate and Minerva; but these
extremes subsist in her occultly, while the peculiarity of the middle
[Proserpine] shines forth, and that which is characteristic of ruling soul,
which in the supermundane Core was of a ruling nature, but here
subsists according to a mundane peculiarity.'
And Proserpine is said to derive her name mystically 'through
separating souls perfectly from bodies, through a conversion to things on
high, which is the most fortunate slaughter and death, to such
as are worthy of it' (ibid.).
Now the King of the Dead in the ordinary sense is Hades or Pluto.
But there was another death--'a death unto sin and a new birth unto
righteousness'. It was by Core, the pure, the spouse of the 'king of
terrors', that the bright side of death was revealed, and so she was
pre-eminent in the Mysteries, and the 'Rape of Proserpine' was enacted for the
instruction of all neophytes, in a mystical drama (Clemens Alexandrinus,
Cohort., I.ii.12). In the drama she was symbolically represented as
having 'two ordinary eyes, and two in her forehead, with her face at the back
of her neck, and horned' (Athenagoras, xx.292)--this signifying spiritual
sight, or the possession of the so-called 'third eye', and other spiritual
powers. It is interesting to read in the same passage of Athenagoras, that
Zeus after dismembering his father and taking the kingdom, pursued his mother
Rhea who refused his nuptials. 'But she having assumed a serpent form, he also
assumed the same form, and having bound her, with what is called the "Noose of
Hercules", was joined with her. And the symbol of this transformation is
the Rod of Hermes [the Caduceus]. And afterward he violated his
daughter Proserpine [who was born from the above-mentioned union], she too,
assuming a serpentine form.'
Now Hercules is a transformation of the 'Dragon of Wisdom', Phanes, for
the 'god is a twisted dragon--a certain spiral force, called
Kundalini (the 'serpentine') among the Hindu mystics, which lies
coiled in three and a half coils in man [at the base of the spine]; it is a
fiery energy which must be roused before the 'third eye' will open. The
Caduceus of Hermes is a symbolical wand, consisting of a male and
female serpent twisted round a central wand, which is sometimes also
represented as a serpent. In treatises on Yoga, the male force is called the
Pingalâ (the sun force), and the female Idâ (the
moon force) and the centre tract is denominated Sushumnâ, whose
locus in man is said to be the spinal cord, for the symbolism applies to
man as well as to the universe. Here we have another clear proof that
the Greater Mysteries dealt with practical psychological instruction,
and that their inner secrets pertained to Theurgy and the Yoga-art.
These spiral creative, vital and magnetic currents are, in the psychic
envelope of man, what the serpentine Phanes is in the World-Egg, which symbol
has been already explained.
Now the work that Core performs is that of weaving; she
plies her shuttle in 'the roaring loom of time', and weaves out the universe.
Thus we read in Proclus (Theol. Plat., VI.ii.371): 'The story of the
theologists who handed on to us the tradition of the most holy Mysteries at
Eleusis, is that she [Core-Proserpine] remains above in the
house of her mother [Ceres], which her mother with her own hands prepared in
the inaccessible regions.' And so when she proceeds from her own habitation,
she is said (Proclus, Tim., v.307) 'to have left her webs
unfinished, and to have been carried off [by Pluto] and married'. And
the same writer (Crat., p. 24) tells us that 'she is said to weave the
diacosm of life'. And Claudianus (Rapt., i.254) speaks of a goddess
weaving a web for her mother, 'and in it she marks out the procession of the
element and the paternal seats with her needle, according to the laws whereby
her mother Nature has decreed.'
And Diodorus (v.3) tells us that when Proserpine dwelt with her sisters
Diana and Minerva, she 'weaved a robe for Zeus.' And we are also told by
Sidonius (Carm., xv.354) that Minerva also worked a mantle marvelously
interwoven with pictures of the sky and sea, like the robe which Plutarch
describes (Vit. Demetrii, xli) as 'the image of the cosmos and heavenly
phenomena'. All of which plainly shows us the part played by Core
macrocosmically, and also the part enacted by this power in weaving the
vital vesture of man.
Now Proclus (Crat., see Taylor, Myst. Hymns, p. 201) quotes
a verse of Orpheus which says that Core bore to Zeus 'nine azure-eyed
flower-weaving daughters'. These are most probably the Muses, for whom I must
refer the reader to Chapter VI, 'The Gods and their Shaktis'. It is
interesting to remark that there was a feast in honour of Core-Proserpine, the
Anthesphoria, for Proserpine was carried off while 'plucking flowers', that is
to say was distracted from her work by the attraction of the senses.
Thus the Muses, her daughters, are said to be flower-weaving, for, as
shown above, they are the higher side of psychic sensation and emotion,
whereas the Sirens are the lower. Perhaps this may with advantage be
compared with a phrase of the Fragment from the Book of the Golden Precepts,
called 'The Voice of the Silence,' rendered into English by H. P. Blavatsky,
who in referring to these realms graphically portrays this 'pleasureground of
sense' as filled with blossoms and 'under every flower a serpent coiled'.
DIANA
AND MINERVA
Diana is the Chaldæan Hecate, but her three aspects so closely resemble
those of Core that it would take too long to explain the niceties of
distinction in this place. Of Minerva, again, much could be said, but it is
only necessary here to refer to two of her characteristics, the 'defensive'
and 'perfective', thus explaining why she is armed and a warrior goddess, and
why she is also the goddess of wisdom. 'For the former characteristic
preserves the order of wholes undefiled, and unvanquished by matter, and the
latter fills all things with intellectual delight' (Proc., Crat.,
loc. cit.).
Thus Plato in Timæus calls her both 'philo-polemic' and
'philo-sophic'. And of the three aspects of Minerva the highest is noëric, the
second supercosmic, and the third liberated. In the first she is with Zeus, in
the second with Core, and in the third 'she perfects and guards the whole
world, and circularly invests it with her powers, as with a veil'
(ibid.). In her guardian capacity she is called Pallas, but in her
perfective Minerva.
Now 'Orpheus says that Zeus brought her forth from his head--"shining
forth in full panoply, a brazen flower to see" ' (Proc., Tim., i.51).
And in so far as she 'circularly invests the world with her powers,'
Minerva is the revealer of the 'rhythmical dance' of the celestial bodies
(Proc., Crat., p. 118). Moreover 'while she remains with the demiurgus
[Zeus] she is wisdom, but when she is with the "leading" Gods [the supercosmic
demiurgic powers], she reveals the power of virtue' (Proc., Tim.,
i.52).
NEPTUNE AND
PLUTO
The 'Marine Jupiter' (see Chart) is the reflection of Ocean, the
'separating deity' who remained behind with Father Heaven when Saturn and the
others revolted. As already explained so often these gods have their
aspects on every plane. Thus in the sublunary sphere we
are told that 'Heaven terminates, Earth corroborates, and Ocean moves
all generation' (Proc., Tim., v.298). Here we see the reason
why Neptune is between Zeus and Pluto, a middle and not an extreme. The
kingdom of Neptune extends as far as the sublunary regions, all below that
properly belonging to Hades or Pluto. But there is yet another
reflection of Ocean and his consort Tethys ('who imparts permanency to the
natures which are moved by Ocean') in the sublunary regions themselves, so
that 'their last processions are their divisible allotments about the earth:
both those which are apparent on its surface, and those which under the earth
separate the kingdom of Hades from the dominion of Neptune' (Proc.,
Crat.; Taylor, Myst. Hymns, p. 189)--a mysterious depth that I
must leave to the reader to fathom.
It may be of advantage, however, to point out that the Earth was imagined
as surrounded on all sides by Ocean that Heaven was above and Tartarus below.
Now of the three, Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto, 'Jupiter subsists
according to being; but Neptune according to power; and
Pluto according to intellect. And though all these divinities
are the causes of the life of all things, yet one is so essentially,
another vitally, and another intellectually. . . . Neptune
is an intellectual demiurgic God, who receives souls descending into
generation [reincarnation]; but Hades is an intellectual demiurgic God, who
frees souls from generation.
'For as our whole period receives a triple division, into a life prior to
generation [beyond the sphere of reincarnation] which is Jovian, into a life
in generation, which is Neptunian, and into a life posterior to generation
which is Plutonian; Pluto, who is characterized by intellect, very properly
converts [this being the characteristic of intellect] ends to beginnings,
effecting a circle without a beginning and without an end, not only in souls,
but also in every fabrication of bodies, and in short of all periods; which
circle also he perpetually convolves. Thus for instance, he converts the ends
to the beginnings of the souls of the stars, and the convolution of souls
about generation and the like. [He is Lord of the Cycle of Generation
and the Cycle of Necessity, and the Guardian of the "Ring Pass Not", on every
plane.] Whereas Jupiter is the guardian of the life of souls
prior to generation' (loc. cit., ibid., pp. 190-192).
Socrates in the Cratylus denies that Pluto has anything to do with
the wealth of the earth or that Hades is 'invisible, dark and dreadful'. He
refers the name of Pluto, as intellect, to the wealth of prudence, and that of
Hades to an intellect knowing all things. 'For this God is a sophist [in a
good sense], who, purifying souls after death, frees them from generation. For
Hades is not, as some improperly explain it, evil: for neither is death evil;
though Hades to some appears to be attended with perturbations [of a passional
nature, a state of emotion]; but it is invisible [Hades meaning the Unseen]
and better than the apparent; such as is everything intelligible. Intellect,
therefore, in every triad of beings convolves itself to being and the paternal
cause, imitating in its energy the circle' (ibid.).
But indeed the kâmalokic aspect of this Unseen is dreadful for the evil;
still Socrates preferred to insist more on the devachanic aspect, and,
therefore, Proclus continues: 'Men who are lovers of body badly [erroneously]
refer to themselves the passions of the animated nature, and on this account
consider death to be dreadful, as being the cause of corruption. The truth,
however, is, that it is much better for man to die and live in Hades a life
according to nature, since a life in conjunction with body is contrary to
nature, and is an impediment to intellectual energy. Hence it is necessary to
divest ourselves of the fleshly garments with which we are clothed, as Ulysses
did of his ragged vestments, and no longer like a wretched mendicant, together
with the indigence of body, put on our rags. For, as the Chaldaean Oracle
says, "Things divine cannot be obtained by those whose intellectual eye
is directed to body; but those only can arrive at the possession of them who
stript of their garments hasten to the summit" ' (ibid. p.
193).
And so we are finally told that: 'Neptune, when compared with
Jupiter [the one] is said to know many things; but Hades,
compared with souls to whom he imparts knowledge is said to know
all things; though [in fact] Neptune is more total than Hades'
(ibid.).
And thus we bid farewell to the demiurgic triad of the Supercosmic
Order, or Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto, the Creator, Preserver and
Regenerator, or Celestial Jove, Marine Jove and Subterranean Jove.
APOLLO
We next pass to Apollo, who is said, conformably to Orpheus, to be in the
Supercosmic Order what Jupiter is in the Noëric Order (Taylor, Myst.
Hymns, p. 83, n.). This is Apollo as a monad. But just as Jupiter has
three reflections in the Order immediately below him (see Chart of Orphic
Theogony), so Apollo has also his triple reflection in the Liberated Order.
(Compare also Chart of Chaldæan Theogony.)
In Hymn XXXIV, Apollo is said to 'fix his roots beyond the starry-eyed
darkness.' Now Apollo, the Sun, is something vastly different from the visible
orb of day, according to this theology. For this 'starry-eyed darkness' is the
sphere of the fixed stars, the region immediately beyond which consists of the
ethereal worlds, which according to the Chaldæans are three. 'For they assert
that there are seven corporeal worlds, one empyrean and the first; after this,
three ethereal, and then three material worlds, which last consist of the
inerratic sphere, the seven planetary spheres and the sublunary regions.'
(Taylor, op. cit., p. 78; see also Chart of Chaldæan Theogony, and also
Chart of the Muses, Supra.)
It is somewhat difficult to make out precisely what these Ethereal Worlds
are. The worlds, however, are apparently in triads, just as the Powers are.
Thus there seem to be three triads, Heaven, Earth and Sea, each reflecting the
other, with an all-containing Æther encompassing all, and thus we get the
scale:
Thus we read in Orpheus, quoted by Proclus (Tim., i.96), that the
Demiurgus was counseled by Night to 'surround all things with Æther; and in
its midst to place the Heaven; and in that, the boundless Earth [Earth Proper,
Prima Materia, that which Eugenius Philalethes assures us, on his honour, no
man has seen]; and in that, the Sea [Astral Envelope]; and in that all the
Stars wherewith Heaven crowns his head.'
'We also learn from Psellus, that according to the Chaldæans there are two
Solar Worlds; one of which is subservient to the ethereal profundity; the
other zonaic [i.e., having a definite location in space], being one of
the seven [planetary] spheres' (Taylor, ibid.). From which I deduce
that this Upper Solar World belongs to the Azonic or Liberated Order.
And Proclus (Tim., i.264) informs us further, that 'the most
mystical of the logia have handed on that the wholeness [monadic essence] of
the Sun is in the supercosmic order; for there is the [true] Solar World, and
the totality of light, as the Chaldæan Oracles say.' From which I further
deduce that the Sun is a monad and a triad, and a hebdomad,
respectively on the supercosmic, liberated and cosmic planes. For by
'wholeness' Proclus means 'the sphere in which the visible orb of the sun is
fixed, and which is called a "wholeness", because it has a perpetual
subsistence, and comprehends in itself all the multitude of which it is the
cause' (Taylor, ibid.). That is to say, that sphere which gives the
solar power to all the stars, which are equally suns with our own sun.
And thus it is that Julian, the Emperor (Orat., v), says: 'The orb
of the [true] Sun revolves in the starless [spheres, which transcend the
visible stars], much above the inerratic sphere. Hence it is not the middle of
the planets, but of the three [ethereal] worlds, according to the telestic
[i.e., that of the initiates] hypothesis.'
And so we can understand the meaning of Apollo being 'rooted beyond the
starry-eyed darkness.' For in symbology these 'roots' signify his divine
origin. The 'heavenly trees' have all their roots upward, and branches below;
compare this with the Ashvattha Tree in the Upanishads and Gîtâ. And Proclus
(Parmen., vi) finely explains the symbology by writing:
'As
trees by their extremities are firmly established in the earth, and all that
pertains to them is through this earthly; after the same manner are divine
natures by their extremities rooted in the one, and each of them is a
unity and one, through an unconfused union with the one itself.'
But we must leave this interesting subject, and put off the symbology of
Apollo's Lyre till a later chapter. With Apollo is closely associated Hermes
(Mercury) who is also said to have invented the lyre. But, indeed, we must
hasten to bring our Orphic Pantheon to a conclusion, for it has already run
into greater length than was intended. Many other names could be introduced,
and many interesting side-paths of mythology entered into, but these must be
reserved for another occasion. Of Venus, Mars, and Vulcan, however, we must
say a few words.
VULCAN,
VENUS, MARS
There are three main aspects of Venus, one connected with Uranus, the
second with Saturn, and the third With Jupiter. The name of the middle Venus
is Dione. Venus is said to be produced from sea-foam, the creative
energy of the father being cast into the sea. And the highest and
lowest Venus are said to be 'united with each other through a similitude of
subsistence: for they both proceed from generative powers; one from that of
the connectedly containing power of Heaven, and the other from Jupiter, the
Demiurgus. But the sea signifies an expanded and circumscribed life; its
profundity, the universally extended progression of such life; and its foam,
the greatest purity of nature, that which is full of prolific light and power,
and that which swims upon all life, and is as it were its highest flower'
(Proc., Crat., Taylor, Myst., Hymns, p. 194).
And Venus is married to Vulcan, who, the theologists say, 'forges
everything' (Proc., Tim., ii.101), that is to say, Vulcan is the
formative power, and Venus the vivific.
'Venus, according to her first subsistence, ranks among the supermundane
divinities. She is the cause of all the harmony and analogy in the
universe, and of the union of form and matter, connecting and
comprehending the powers of all the mundane elements' (Taylor, op.
cit., p. 113, n.).
As to Mars, Proclus (Plat. Rep., p. 388) tells us that he 'is
the source of division and motion, separating the contrarieties of the
universe, which he also perpetually excites, and immutably
preserves in order that the world may be perfect and filled with forms of
every kind. . . . But he requires the assistance of Venus that he may insert
order and harmony into things contrary and discordant.'
Thus we see that, in the Sensible World Vulcan is the Creator, Venus
the Preserver, and Mars the Regenerator. And so the myth exhibits
Vulcan as the legitimate husband, but Mars as the lover of Venus.
As to Mars, the God of War, this is a vulgar conception; in
reality, as says Hermias (Phædr.), 'the "slaughter" which is ascribed
to Mars signifies a divulsion from matter through rapidly turning from it, and
no longer energizing physically, but intellectually. For slaughter, when
applied to the Gods, may be said to be an apostasy from secondary natures,
just as slaughter in this terrestrial region signifies a privation of the
present life.'
And finally Taylor tells us (op. cit., p. 129, n.) that: 'Vulcan is
that divine power which presides over the spermatic and physical productive
powers which the universe contains; for whatever Nature [the psycho-physical
forces] accomplishes by verging to bodies, that Vulcan effects in a divine and
exempt manner, by moving Nature, and using her as an instrument in his own
proper fabrication.'
In order finally to complete the subject, we must add a few more notes
on the Constructive and Preservative Powers.
THE
CYCLOPES AND CENTIMANI
In this connection I would refer the reader to what has been already said
of the Titans, and especially of the Cyclopes and Centimani, the Primal
Architects and Guardian Powers. Now Hermias (Phædr., Taylor,
op. cit. pp. 12-14) tells us that:
'Theology says that figure is first unfolded into light in these, and that
the divinities, the Cyclopes, are the first principles and causes of the
figures which subsist everywhere. Hence theology says that they are "manual
artificers". For this triad [Cyclopes] is perfective of figures, "And in their
forehead one round eye was fix'd" (Hesiod, Theog., v.145). [This
has reference to the "third eye" and the creative force of the power which
energizes thereby.]
'In the Parmenides, likewise, Plato, when he speaks of the
straight, the circular, and that which is mixed [from both these], obscurely
indicates this order. [The "straight" (1), or diameter, or "bound", is
the paternal creative power; the "circular" (o), or circumference, or
"infinity", is the maternal vitalizing power; and the "mixed" (all numbers) is
the resulting universe, or the son.]
'But these Cyclopes, as being the first causes of figures taught
Minerva and Vulcan the various species of figures. . . . For (1) Vulcan is the
cause of corporal figures, and of every mundane figure; but (2)
Minerva of the psychical and intellectual figure; and (3) the
[triple] Cyclopes of divine, and the everywhere existing
figure.'
This is the line of the Architects and Builders. But closely united with
them is the triad of the Centimani, both triads being in the Noëtic-noëric
Order, for as Hermias tells us (ibid.), 'the triad of the
Centimani is a guardian nature.'
CURETES AND
CORYBANTES
The reflection of this Guardian Triad is found on both the noëtic and
supercosmic planes, in the triads (and also hebdomads) respectively of the
Curetes and Corybantes.
The Curetes and Corybantes are frequently confused; they are the
Guardians of the Creative Power, while it is yet too weak to defend
itself. Therefore they watch over Zeus when a child. Now as the
Guardians are closely associated with the Formative Powers, we naturally find
the appropriate Minervas associated with both the Curetes and Corybantes, they
being armed as she is armed (Proc., Polit., p. 387). These Guardian
Powers are also given the dragon-form (Nonnus, vi.123).
So much for the Orphic Pantheon, an apparent chaos of unmeaning verbiage,
but on closer inspection, a marvelous procession and return of divine and
nature powers, ever revealing similar characteristics in orderly sequence, and
affording an example of permutation and combination according to law, that it
will be difficult to find paralleled elsewhere. But the most stupendous
thought of all is, that all this multiplicity is, after all, One Deity;
emanating, evolving, converting and reabsorbing itself; creating and
preserving, destroying and regenerating itself; the Self, by itself, knowing
itself, and separating from itself, and transcending itself.
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