Brother Manly P. Hall, 33ø
An Holy Excerpt from his Greate
Alchymeckal Worke of 1928:
The Secret Teachings of All Ages:
An Encyclopaedic Outline of
Masonic, Hermetic, Qabbalistic
and Rosicrucian Symbolical
Philosophy
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| Magician Invoking Elementals |
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The magician, having drawn his circle, is here shown invoking the various elemental beings, who are emerging from their respective haunts. From the earth at his feet come the gnomes, from the water the undines, from the fire the salamanders, and from the air the winged sylphs. In like fashion, we observe the Modern Magicians (Greer, Mack, Boylan, Strieber, et al) employing their Holy Scientific Protocols to invoke the "Little Grey Space Alien" Elementals of our day; languishing in the terminal errata of their absurdly inappropriate culture-bound mythos. |
Caeruleus Excerptus
"The idea once held, that the invisible elements surrounding and
interpenetrating the earth were peopled with living, intelligent
beings, may seem ridiculous to the prosaic mind of today. This
doctrine, however, has found favor with some of the greatest
intellects the world. The sylphs of Facius Cardan, the
philosopher of Milan; the salamander seen by Benvenuto Cellini;
the pan of St. Anthony; and le petit homme rouge (the little
red man, orgnome) of Napoleon Bonaparte have found their places
in the pages of history ...Not so very long ago the greatest
minds of the world believed in the existence of fairies, and it
is still an open question as to whether Plato, Socrates, and
Iamblichus were wrong when they avowed their reality.
"Paracelsus, when describing the substances which constitute the
bodies of the elementals, divided flesh into two kinds, the
first being that which we have all inherited through Adam. This
is the visible, corporeal flesh. The second was that flesh
which had not descended from Adam and, being more attenuated,
was not subject to the limitations of the former. The bodies of
the elementals were composed of this transubstantial flesh.
Paracelsus stated that there is as much difference between the
bodies of men and the bodies of the Nature spirits as there is
between matter and spirit.
"Yet," he adds, "the Elementals are not spirits, because they
have flesh, blood and bones; they live and propagate offspring;
they eat and talk, act and sleep, etc., and consequently they
cannot be properly called 'spirits.' They are beings occupying
a place between men and spirits, resembling men and spirits,
resembling men and women in their organization and form, and
resembling spirits in the rapidity of their locomotion."
(Philosophia Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann.) Later the
same author calls the creatures composite, inasmuch as the
substance out of which they are composed seems to be a composite
of spirit and matter. He uses color to explain the idea.
Thus, the mixture of blue and red gives purple, a new color,
resembling neither of the others yet composed of both. Such
is the case with the nature spirits; they resemble neither
spiritual creatures nor material beings, yet are composed of
the substance which we may call spiritual matter, or aether.
"The gnomes are of various sizes -- most of them much smaller
than human beings, though some of them have the power of
changing their stature at will. This is the result of the
extreme mobility of the element in which they function.
Concerning them the Abbe de Villars wrote: "The earth is filled
well nigh to its center with gnomes, people of slight stature,
who are the guardians of treasures, minerals and precious stones.
They are ingenious, friends of man, and easy to govern."
"Not all authorities agree concerning the amiable disposition of
the gnomes. Many state that they are of a tricky and malicious
nature, difficult to manage, and treacherous. Writers agree,
however, that when their confidence is won they are faithful and
true. The philosophers and initiates of the ancient world were
instructed concerning these mysterious little people and were
taught how to communicate with them and gain their cooperation
in undertakings of importance. The magi were always warned,
however, never to betray the trust of the elementals, for if
they did, the invisible creatures, working through the
subjective nature of man, could cause them endless sorrow and
probably ultimate destruction. So long as the mystic served
others, the gnomes would serve him, but if he sought to use
their aid selfishly to gain temporal power they would turn upon
him with unrelenting fury. [Will someone
please alert Laurence Rockefeller and Bob Bigelow immediately?
-B:.B:.]
"Great trees also have their Nature spirits, but these are much
larger than the elementals of smaller plants. The labors of the
pygmies include the cutting of the crystals in the rocks and the
development of veins of ore. When the gnomes are laboring with
animals or human beings, their work is confined to the tissues
corresponding with their own natures.
[Hmmm....given the propensity of many of the Clever Grey "Space
Aliens" to core-out the assholes of many of their hapless Bovine
Victims, we cannot but wonder at this point precisely how the
Grand Cosmic Natures of the Iconoclastic Martians correspond to
their peculiar selection of bodily tissues. -B:.B:.]
"Paracelsus differs somewhat from the Greek mystics concerning
the environmental limitations imposed on the Nature spirits.
The Swiss philosopher constitutes them of subtle invisible
ethers. According to this hypothesis they would be visible only
at certain times and only to those en rapport with their
ethereal vibrations. The Greeks, on the other hand, apparently
believed that many Nature spirits had material constitutions
capable of functioning in the physical world. Often the
recollection of a dream is so vivid that, upon awakening, a
person actually believes that he has passed through a physical
experience. The difficulty of accurately judging as to the end
of physical sight and the beginning of ethereal vision may
account for these differences of opinion.
["alien abductions," anyone...? -B:.B:.]
"Even this explanation, however, does not satisfactorily account
for the satyr which, according to St. Jerome, was captured
alive during the reign of Constantine and exhibited to the
people. It was of human form with the horns and feet of a goat.
After its death it was preserved in salt and taken to the
Emperor that he might testify to its reality. (It is within the
bounds of probability that this curiosity was what modem science
knows as a monstrosity. [Roswell "Space
Aliens," anyone...? -B:.B:.])
"The salamanders are as varied in their grouping and arrangement
as either the undines or the gnomes. There are many families of
them, differing in appearance, size, and dignity. Sometimes the
salamanders were visible as small balls of light. Paracelsus
says: "Salamanders have been seen in the shapes of fiery balls,
or tongues of fire, running over the fields or peering in houses."
(Philosophia Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann.)
["Ball lightning" / BoL phenomena, anyone...? -B:.B:.]
"They [the fairies] were supposed to be diminutive aerial beings,
beautiful, lively and beneficent in their intercourse with
mortals, inhabiting a region called Fairy Land, Alf-heinner;
commonly appearing on earth at intervals -- when they left
traces of their visits, in beautiful green rings, where the dewy
sward had been trodden in their moonlight dances."
[crop circles, anyone...? -B:.B:.]
"The sylphs sometimes assume human form, but apparently for only
short periods of time. Their size varies, but in the majority
of cases they are no larger than human beings and often
considerably smaller. It is said that the sylphs have accepted
human beings into their communities and have permitted them to
live there for a considerable period; in fact, Paracelsus wrote
of such an incident, but of course it could not have occurred
while the human stranger was in his physical body.
[Paracelsus -- 15th century "space alien abductee"...?
-B:.B:.]
"The terms incubus and succubus have been applied
indiscriminately by the Church Fathers to elementals. The
incubus and succubus, however, are evil and unnatural creations,
whereas elementals is a collective term for all the inhabitants
of the four elemental essences. According to Paracelsus, the
incubus and succubus (who are male and female respectively) are
parasitical creatures subsisting upon the evil thoughts an
emotions of the astral body. These terms are also applied to
the superphysical organisms of sorcerers and black magicians.
While these larvae are in no sense imaginary beings, they are,
nevertheless, the offspring of the imagination. By the ancient
sages they were recognized as the invisible cause of vice
because they hover in the ethers surrounding the morally weak
and continually incite them to excesses of a degrading nature.
For this reason they frequent the atmosphere of the dope den,
the dive, and the brothel, [and Whitley's
house, apparently -B:.B:.] where they attach
themselves to those unfortunates who have given themselves up to
iniquity.
[End Caeruleus Excerptus]
Air is, therefore, twofold in nature -- tangible atmosphere and
an intangible, volatile substratum which may be termed spiritual
air. Fire is visible and invisible, discernible and
indiscernible -- a spiritual, ethereal flame manifesting through
a material, substantial flame. Carrying the analogy further,
water consists of a dense fluid and a potential essence of a
fluidic nature. Earth has likewise two essential parts -- the
lower being fixed, terreous, immobile; the higher, rarefied,
mobile, and virtual. The general term elements has been applied
to the lower, or physical, phases of these four primary
principles, and the name elemental essences to their
corresponding invisible, spiritual constitutions. Minerals,
plants, animals, and men live in a world composed of the gross
side of these four elements, and from various combinations of
them construct their living organisms.
Henry Drummond, in Natural Law in the Spiritual World, describes
this process as follows: "If we analyse this material point at
which all life starts, we shall find it to consist of a clear
structureless, jelly-like substance resembling albumen or white
of egg. It is made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen.
Its name is protoplasm. And it is not only the structural unit
with which all living bodies start in life, but with which they
are subsequently built up. 'Protoplasm,' says Huxley, simple or
nucleated, is the formal basis of all life. It is the clay of
the Potter.'"
The water element of the ancient philosophers has been
metamorphosed into the hydrogen of modern science; the air has
become oxygen; the fire, nitrogen; the earth, carbon.
Just as visible Nature is populated by an infinite number of
living creatures, so, according to Paracelsus, the invisible,
spiritual counterpart of visible Nature (composed of the tenuous
principles of the visible elements) is inhabited by a host of
peculiar beings, to whom he has given the name elementals, and
which have later been termed the Nature spirits. Paracelsus
divided these people of the elements into four distinct groups,
which he called gnomes, undines, sylphs, and salamanders. He
taught that they were really living entities, many resembling
human beings in shape, and inhabiting worlds of their own,
unknown to man because his undeveloped senses were incapable of
functioning beyond the limitations of the grosser elements.
The civilizations of Greece, Rome, Egypt, China, and India
believed implicitly in satyrs, sprites, and goblins. They
peopled the sea with mermaids, the rivers and fountains with
nymphs, the air with fairies, the fire with Lares and Penates,
and the earth with fauns, dryads, and hamadryads. These Nature
spirits were held in the highest esteem, and propitiatory
offerings were made to them. Occasionally, as the result of
atmospheric conditions or the peculiar sensitiveness of the
devotee, they became visible. Many authors wrote concerning
them in terms which signify that they had actually beheld these
inhabitants of Nature's finer realms. A number of authorities
are of the opinion that many of the gods worshipped by the
pagans were elementals, for some of these invisibles were
believed to be of commanding stature and magnificent deportment.
The Greeks gave the name daemon to some of these elementals,
especially those of the higher orders, and worshipped them.
Probably the most famous of these daemons is the mysterious
spirit which instructed Socrates, and of whom that great
philosopher spoke in the highest terms. Those who have devoted
much study to the invisible constitution of man realize that it
is quite probable the daemon of Socrates and the angel of Jakob
Bohme were in reality not elementals, but the overshadowing
divine natures of these philosophers themselves. In his notes
to Apuleius on the God of Socrates, Thomas Taylor says:
"As the daemon of Socrates, therefore, was doubtless one of the
highest order, as may be inferred from the intellectual
superiority of Socrates to most other men, Apuleius is justified
in calling this daemon a God. And that the daemon of Socrates
indeed was divine, is evident from the testimony of Socrates
himself in the First Alcibiades: for in the course of that
dialogue he clearly says, 'I have long been of the opinion that
the God did not as yet direct me to hold any conversation with
you.' And in the Apology he most unequivocally evinces that the
daemon is allotted a divine transcendency, considered as ranking
in the order of daemons."
The idea once held, that the invisible elements surrounding and
interpenetrating the earth were peopled with living, intelligent
beings, may seem ridiculous to the prosaic mind of today. This
doctrine, however, has found favor with some of the greatest
intellects the world. The sylphs of Facius Cardan, the
philosopher of Milan; the salamander seen by Benvenuto Cellini;
the pan of St. Anthony; and le petit homme rouge (the little
red man, orgnome) of Napoleon Bonaparte have found their places
in the pages of history.
Literature has also perpetuated the concept of Nature spirits.
The mischievous Puck of Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream,
the elementals of Alexander Pope's Rosicrucian poem, The Rape of
the Lock, the mysterious creatures of Lord Lytton's Zanoni,
James Barrie's immortal Tinker Bell; and the famous bowlers that
Rip Van Winkle encountered in the Catskill Mountains, are well-
known characters to students of literature. The folklore and
mythology of all peoples abound in legends concerning these
mysterious little figures who haunt old castles, guard measures
in the depths of the earth, and build their homes under the
spreading protection of toadstools.
Fairies are the delight of childhood, and most children give
them up with reluctance. Not so very long ago the greatest
minds of the world believed in the existence of fairies, and it
is still an open question as to whether Plato, Socrates, and
Iamblichus were wrong when they avowed their reality.
Paracelsus, when describing the substances which constitute the
bodies of the elementals, divided flesh into two kinds, the
first being that which we have all inherited through Adam. This
is the visible, corporeal flesh. The second was that flesh
which had not descended from Adam and, being more attenuated,
was not subject to the limitations of the former. The bodies of
the elementals were composed of this transubstantial flesh.
Paracelsus stated that there is as much difference between the
bodies of men and the bodies of the Nature spirits as there is
between matter and spirit.
"Yet," he adds, "the Elementals are not spirits, because they
have flesh, blood and bones; they live and propagate offspring;
they eat and talk, act and sleep, etc. , and consequently they
cannot be properly called 'spirits.' They are beings occupying
a place between men and spirits, resembling men and spirits,
resembling men and women in their organization and form, and
resembling spirits in the rapidity of their locomotion." (
Philosophia Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann. ) Later the
same author calls the creatures composite, inasmuch as the
substance out of which they are composed seems to be a composite
of spirit and matter. He uses color to explain the idea. Thus,
the mixture of blue and red gives purple, a new color,
resembling neither of the others yet composed of both. Such is
the case with the nature spirits; they resemble neither
spiritual creatures nor material beings, yet are composed of the
substance which we may call spiritual matter, or aether.
Paracelsus further adds that whereas man is composed of several
natures (spirit, soul, mind, and body) combined in one unit, the
elemental has but one principle, the aether out of which it is
composed and in which it lives. The reader must remember that
by ether is meant the spiritual essence of one of the four
elements. There are as many ethers as there are elements and as
many distinct families of Nature spirits as there are ethers.
These families are completely isolated in their own ether and
have no intercourse with the denizens of the other ethers; but,
as man has within his own nature centers of consciousness
sensitive to the impulses of all the four ethers, it is possible
for any of the elemental kingdoms to communicate with him under
proper conditions.
The Nature spirits cannot be destroyed by the grosser elements,
such as material fire, earth, air, or water, for they function
in a rate of vibration higher than that of earthy substances.
Being composed of only one element or principle (the ether in
which they function), they have no immortal spirit and at death
merely disintegrate back into the element from which they were
originally individualized. No individual consciousness is
preserved after death, for there is no superior vehicle present
to contain it. Being made of but one substance, there is no
friction between vehicles: thus there is little wear or tear
incurred by their bodily functions, and they therefore live to
great age. Those composed of earth ether are the shortest lived;
those composed of air ether, the longest. The average length
of life is between three hundred and a thousand years.
Paracelsus maintained that they live in conditions similar to
our earth environments, and are somewhat subject to disease.
These creatures are thought to be incapable of spiritual
development, but most of them are of a high moral character.
Concerning the elemental ethers in which the Nature spirits
exist, Paracelsus wrote: "They live in the four elements: the
Nymphae in the element of water, the Sylphes in that of the air,
the Pigmies in the earth, and the Salamanders in fire. They are
also called Undinae, Sylvestres, Gnomi, Vulcani, etc. Each
species moves only in the element to which it belongs, and
neither of them can go out of its appropriate element, which is
to them as the air is to us, or the water to fishes; and none of
them can live in the element belonging to another class. To
each elemental being the element in which it lives is
transparent, invisible and respirable, as the atmosphere is to
ourselves." (Philosophia Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann.)
The reader should be careful not to confuse the Nature spirits
with the true life waves evolving through the invisible worlds.
While the elementals are composed of only one etheric (or atomic)
essence, the angels, archangels, and other superior,
transcendental entities have composite organisms, consisting of
a spiritual nature and a chain of vehicles to express that
nature not unlike those of men, but not including the physical
body with its attendant limitations.
To the philosophy of Nature spirits is generally attributed an
Eastern origin, probably Brahmanic; and Paracelsus secured his
knowledge of them from Oriental sages with whom he came in
contact during his lifetime of philosophical wanderings. The
Egyptians and Greeks gleaned their information from the same
source. The four main divisions of Nature spirits must now be
considered separately, according to the teachings of Paracelsus
and the Abbe de Villars and such scanty writings of other
authors as are available.
Just as there are many types of human beings evolving through
the objective physical elements of Nature, so there are many
types of gnomes evolving through the subjective ethereal body
of Nature. These earth spirits work in an element so close in
vibratory rate to the material earth that they have immense
power over its rocks and flora, and also over the mineral
elements in the animal and human kingdoms. Some, like the
pygmies, work with the stones, gems, and metals, and are
supposed to be the guardians of hidden treasures. They live in
caves, far down in what the Scandinavians called the Land of the
Nibelun . In Wagner's wonderful opera cycle, The Ring of the
Nibelungen, Alberich makes himself King of the Pygmies and
forces these little creatures to gather for him the treasures
concealed beneath the surface of the earth.
Besides the Pygmies, there are other gnomes, who are called tree
and forest sprites. To this group belong the sylvestres, satyrs,
pans, hamadryads, durdalis, elves, brownies, and little old men
of the woods. Paracelsus states that the gnomes build houses of
substances resembling in their constituencies alabaster, marble,
and cement, but the true nature of these materials is unknown,
having no counterpart in physical nature. Some families of
gnomes gather in communities, while others are indigenous to the
substances with and in which they work. For example, the
hamadryads live and die with the plants or trees of which they
are a part. Every shrub and flower is said to have its own
Nature spirit, which often uses the physical body of the plant:
as its habitation. The ancient philosophers, recognizing the
principle of intelligence manifesting itself in every department
of Nature alike, believed that the quality of natural selection
exhibited by creatures not possessing organized mentalities
expressed in reality the decisions of the Nature spirits
themselves.
C.M. Gayley, in The Classic Myths, says: "It was a pleasing
trait in the old paganism that it loved to trace in every
operation of nature the agency of deity. The imagination of the
Greeks peopled the regions of earth and sea with divinities, to
whose agency it attributed the phenomena that our philosophy
ascribes to the operation of natural law." Thus, in behalf of
the plant it worked with, the elemental accepted and rejected
food elements, deposited coloring matter therein, preserved and
protected the seed, and performed many other beneficent offices.
Each species was served by a different but appropriate type of
Nature spirit. Those working with poisonous shrubs, for example,
were offensive in their appearance. It is said the Nature
spirits of poison hemlock resemble closely tiny human skeletons,
thinly covered with a semi-transparent flesh. They live in and
through the hemlock, and if it be cut down remain with the
broken shoots until both die, but while there is the slightest
evidence of life in the shrub it shows the presence of the
elemental guardian.
Great trees also have their Nature spirits, but these are much
larger than the elementals of smaller plants. The labors of the
pygmies include the cutting of the crystals in the rocks and the
development of veins of ore. When the gnomes are laboring with
animals or human beings, their work is confined to the tissues
corresponding with their own natures.
[Hmmm....given the propensity of many of the Clever Grey "Space
Aliens" to core-out the assholes of many of their hapless Bovine
Victims, we cannot but wonder at this point precisely how their
Grand Cosmic Natures correspond to their peculiar selection of
bodily tissues. -B:.B:.] Hence they work with
the bones, which belong to the mineral kingdom, and the ancients
believed the reconstruction of broken members to be impossible
without the cooperation of the elementals.
The gnomes are of various sizes -- most of them much smaller
than human beings, though some of them have the power of
changing their stature at will. This is the result of the
extreme mobility of the element in which they function.
Concerning them the Abbe de Villars wrote: "The earth is filled
well nigh to its center with gnomes, people of slight stature,
who are the guardians of treasures, minerals and precious stones.
They are ingenious, friends of man, and easy to govern."
Not all authorities agree concerning the amiable disposition of
the gnomes. Many state that they are of a tricky and malicious
nature, difficult to manage, and treacherous. Writers agree,
however, that when their confidence is won they are faithful and
true. The philosophers and initiates of the ancient world were
instructed concerning these mysterious little people and were
taught how to communicate with them and gain their cooperation
in undertakings of importance. The magi were always warned,
however, never to betray the trust of the elementals, for if
they did, the invisible creatures, working through the
subjective nature of man, could cause them endless sorrow and
probably ultimate destruction. So long as the mystic served
others, the gnomes would serve him, but if he sought to use
their aid selfishly to gain temporal power they would turn upon
him with unrelenting fury. [Will someone
please alert Laurence Rockefeller and Bob Bigelow immediately?
-B:.B:.] The same was true if he sought to
deceive them.
The earth spirits meet at certain times of the year in great
conclaves, as Shakespeare suggests in his Midsummer Night's
Dream, where the elementals all gather to rejoice in the beauty
and harmony of Nature and the prospects of an excellent harvest.
The gnomes are ruled over by a king, whom they greatly love and
revere. His name is Gob; hence his subjects are often called
goblins. Mediaeval mystics gave a comer of creation (one of the
cardinal points) to each of the four kingdoms of Nature spirits,
and because of their earthy character the gnomes were assigned
to the North -- the place recognized by the ancients as the
source of darkness and death. One of the four main divisions of
human disposition was also assigned to the gnomes, and because
so many of them dwelt in the darkness of caves and the gloom of
forests, their temperament was said to be melancholy, gloomy,
and despondent. By this it is not meant that they themselves
are of such disposition, but rather that they have special
control over elements of similar consistency.
The gnomes marry and have families, and the female gnomes are
called gnomides. Some wear clothing woven in the element in
which they live. In other instances, their garments are part of
themselves and grow with them, like the fur of animals. The
gnomes are said to have insatiable appetites, and to spend a
great part of the time eating, but they earn their food by
diligent and conscientious labor. Most of them are of a miserly
temperament, fond of storing things away in secret places.
There is abundant evidence of the fact that small children often
see the gnomes, inasmuch as their contact with the material side
of Nature is not yet complete and they still function more or
less consciously in the invisible worlds.
According to Paracelsus, "Man lives in the exterior elements and
the elementals live in the interior elements. The latter have
dwellings and clothing, manners and customs, languages and
governments of their own, in the same sense as the bees have
their queens and herds of animals their leaders." (Philosophia
Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann.)
Paracelsus differs somewhat from the Greek mystics concerning
the environmental limitations imposed on the Nature spirits.
The Swiss philosopher constitutes them of subtle invisible
ethers. According to this hypothesis they would be visible only
at certain times and only to those en rapport with their
ethereal vibrations. The Greeks, on the other hand, apparently
believed that many Nature spirits had material constitutions
capable of functioning in the physical world. Often the
recollection of a dream is so vivid that, upon awakening, a
person actually believes that he has passed through a physical
experience. The difficulty of accurately judging as to the end
of physical sight and the beginning of ethereal vision may
account for these differences of opinion.
Even this explanation, however, does not satisfactorily account
for the satyr which, according to St. Jerome, was captured
alive during the reign of Constantine and exhibited to the
people. It was of human form with the horns and feet of a goat.
After its death it was preserved in salt and taken to the
Emperor that he might testify to its reality. (It is within the
bounds of probability that this curiosity was what modem science
knows as a monstrosity. [or a Roswell
"Space Alien" -B:.B:.])
There are many groups of undines. Some inhabit waterfalls,
where they can be seen in the spray; others are indigenous to
swiftly moving rivers; some have their habitat in dripping,
oozing fens or marshes; while other groups dwell in clear
mountain lakes. According to the philosophers of antiquity,
every fountain had its nymph; every ocean wave its oceanid.
The water spirits were known under such names as oreades,
nereides, limoniades, naiades, water s rites sea maids mermaids,
and potamides. Often the water nymphs derived their names from
the streams, lakes, or seas in which they dwelt.
In describing them, the ancients agreed on certain salient
features. In general, nearly all the undines closely resembled
human beings in appearance and size, though the ones inhabiting
small streams and fountains were of correspondingly lesser
proportions. It was believed that these water spirits were
occasionally capable of assuming the appearance of normal human
beings and actually associating with men and women. There are
many legends about these spirits and their adoption by the
families of fishermen, but in nearly every case the undines
heard the call of the waters and returned to the Sea.
Practically nothing is known concerning the male undines. The
water spirits did not establish homes in the same way that the
gnomes did, but lived in coral caves under the ocean or among
the reeds growing on the banks of rivers or the shores of lakes.
Among the Celts there is a legend to the effect that Ireland
was peopled, before the coming of its present inhabitants, by a
strange race of semi-divine creatures; with the coming of the
Celts they retired into the marshes and fens, where they remain
even to this day. Diminutive undines lived under lilly pads and
in little houses of moss sprayed by waterfalls. When seen, the
undines generally resembled the goddesses of Greek statuary.
They rose from the water draped in mist and could not exist very
long apart from it.
There are many families of undines, each with it's peculiar
limitations. It is impossible to consider them here in detail.
Their ruler, Necksa, they love and honor, and serve untiringly.
Their temperament is said to be vital, and to them has been
given as their throne the western corner of creation. They are
rather emotional beings, friendly to human life and fond of
serving mankind. They are sometimes pictured riding on dolphins
or other great fish and seem to have a special love of flowers
and plants, which they serve almost as devotedly and
intelligently as the gnomes. Ancient poets have said that the
songs of the undines were heard in the West Wind and that their
lives were consecrated to the beautifying of the material earth.
The salamanders are as varied in their grouping and arrangement
as either the undines or the gnomes. There are many families of
them, differing in appearance, size, and dignity. Sometimes the
salamanders were visible as small balls of light. Paracelsus
says: "Salamanders have been seen in the shapes of fiery balls,
or tongues of fire, running over the fields or peering in houses."
(Philosophia Occulta, translated by Franz Hartmann.)
Mediaeval investigators of the Nature spirits were of the
opinion that the most common form of salamander was lizard-like
in shape, a foot or more in length, and visible as a glowing
Urodela, twisting and crawling in the midst of the fire. Another
group was described as huge flaming giants in flowing robes,
protected with sheets of fiery armor. Certain mediaeval authorities,
among them the Abbe de Villars, held that Zarathustra (Zoroaster)
was the son of Vesta (believed to have been the wife of Noah) and
the great salamander Oromasis. Hence, from that time onward,
undying fires have been maintained upon the Persian altars in
honor of Zarathustra's flaming father.
One most important subdivision of the salamanders was the
Acthnici. These creatures appeared only as indistinct globes.
They were supposed to float over water at night and occasionally
to appear as forks of flame on the masts and rigging of ships (
St. Elmo's fire). The salamanders were the strongest and most
powerful of the elementals, and had as their ruler a magnificent
flaming spirit called Djin, terrible and awe-inspiring in
appearance. The salamanders were dangerous and the sages were
warned to keep away from them, as the benefits derived from
studying them were often not commensurate with the price paid.
As the ancients associated heat with the South, this corner of
creation was assigned to the salamanders as their throne, and
they exerted special influence over all beings of fiery or
tempestuous temperament. In both animals and men, the
salamanders work through the emotional nature by means of the
body heat, the liver, and the blood stream. Without their
assistance there would be no warmth.
"And upon the earth are animals and men, some in a middle region,
others [elementals] dwelling about the air as we dwell about
the sea; others in islands which the air flows round, near the
continent; and in a word, the air is used by them as the water
and sea are by us, and the ether is to them what the air is to
us. Moreover, the temperament of their seasons is such that
they have no disease [Paracelsus disputes this], and live much
longer than we do, and have sight and hearing and smell, and all
the other senses, in far greater perfection, in the same degree
that air is purer than water or the ether than air. Also they
have temples and sacred places in which the gods really dwell,
and they hear their voices and receive their answers, and are
conscious of them and hold converse with them, and they see the
sun, moon, and stars as they really are, and their other
blessedness is of a piece with this." While the sylphs we
believed to live among the clouds and in the surrounding air,
their true home was upon the tops of mountains.
In his editorial notes to the Occult Sciences of Salverte, Antho
Todd Thomson says: "The Fayes and Fairies are evidently of
Scandinavian origin, although the name of Fairy is supposed to
be derived from, or rather [is] a modification of the Persian
Peri, an imaginary benevolent being, whose province it was to
guard men from the maledictions of evil spirits; but with more
probability it may referred to the Gothic Fagur, as the term
Elves is from Alfa, general appellation for the whole tribe. If
this derivation of the name of Fairy be admitted, we may date
the commencement of the popular belief in British Fairies to the
period of the Danish conquest. They were supposed to be
diminutive aerial beings, beautiful, lively and beneficent in
their intercourse with mortals, inhabiting a region called Fairy
Land, Alf-heinner; commonly appearing on earth at intervals --
when they left traces of their visits, in beautiful green rings,
where the dewy sward had been trodden in their moonlight dances."
[crop circles, anyone...? -B:.B:.]
To the sylphs the ancients gave the labor of modeling the snow
flakes and gathering clouds. This latter they accomplished with
the cooperation of the undines who supplied the moisture. The
winds were their particular vehicle and the ancients referred to
them as the spirits of the air. They are the highest of all the
elementals, their native element being the highest in vibratory
rate. They live hundreds of years, often attaining to a
thousand years and never seeming to grow old. The leader of the
sylphs is called Paralda, who is said to dwell on the highest
mountain of the earth. The female sylphs were called sylphids.
It is believed that the sylphs, salamanders, and nymphs had much
to do with the oracles of the ancients; that in fact they were
the ones who spoke from the depths of the earth and from the air
above.
The sylphs sometimes assume human form, but apparently for only
short periods of time. Their size varies, but in the majority
of cases they are no larger than human beings and often
considerably smaller. It is said that the sylphs have accepted
human beings into their communities and have permitted them to
live there for a considerable period; in fact, Paracelsus wrote
of such an incident, but of course it could not have occurred
while the human stranger was in his physical body.
[Paracelsus -- 15th century "space alien abductee"...? -B:.B:.
]
By some the muses of the Greeks are said to have been sylphs,
for these spirits are said to gather around the mind of the
dreamer, the poet, and the artist, and inspire him with their
intimate knowledge of the beauties and workings of Nature. To
the sylphs were given the eastern corner of creation. Their
temperament is mirthful, changeable, and eccentric. The
peculiar qualities common to men of genius are supposedly the
result of the cooperation of sylphs, whose aid also brings with
it the sylphic inconsistency. The sylphs labor with the gases
of the human body and indirectly with the nervous system, where
their inconstancy is again apparent. They have no fixed
domicile, but wander about from place to place -- elemental
nomads, invisible but ever-present powers in the intelligent
activity of the universe.
Wars were also fought within the groups themselves; one army of
gnomes would attack another army, and civil war would be rife
among them. Philosophers of long ago solved the problems of
Nature's apparent inconsistencies by individualizing and
personifying all its forces, crediting them with having
temperaments not unlike the human and then expecting them to
exhibit typical human inconsistencies. The four fixed signs of
the zodiac were assigned to the four kingdoms of elementals.
The gnomes were said to be of the nature of Taurus; the undines,
of the nature of Scorpio; the salamanders exemplified the
constitution of Leo; while the sylphs manipulated the emanations
of Aquarius.
The Christian Church gathered all the elemental entities
together under the title of demon. This is a misnomer with far-
reaching consequences, for to the average mind the word demon
means an evil thing, and the Nature spirits are essentially no
more malevolent than are the minerals, plants, and animals.
Many of the early Church Fathers asserted that they had met and
debated with the elementals.
As already stated, the Nature spirits are without hope of
immortality, although some philosophers have maintained that in
isolated cases immortality was conferred upon them by adepts and
initiates who understood certain subtle principles of the
invisible worlds As disintegration takes place in the physical
world, so it takes place in the ethereal counterpart of physical
substance. Under normal conditions at death, a Nature spirit is
merely resolved back into the transparent primary essence from
which it was originally individualized. Whatever evolutionary
growth is made is recorded solely in the consciousness of that
primary essence, or element, and not in the temporarily
individualized entity of the elemental. Being without man's
compound organism and lacking his spiritual and intellectual
vehicles, the nature spirits are subhuman in their rational
intelligence, but from their functions -- limited to one element
-- has resulted a specialized type of intelligence far ahead of
man in those lines of research peculiar to the element in which
they exist.
The terms incubus and succubus have been applied
indiscriminately by the Church Fathers to elementals. The
incubus and succubus, however, are evil and unnatural creations,
whereas elementals is a collective term for all the inhabitants
of the four elemental essences. According to Paracelsus, the
incubus and succubus (who are male and female respectively) are
parasitical creatures subsisting upon the evil thoughts an
emotions of the astral body. These terms are also applied to
the superphysical organisms of sorcerers and black magicians.
While these larvae are in no sense imaginary beings, they are,
nevertheless, the offspring of the imagination. By the ancient
sages they were recognized as the invisible cause of vice
because they hover in the ethers surrounding the morally weak
and continually incite them to excesses of a degrading nature.
For this reason they frequent the atmosphere of the dope den,
the dive, and the brothel, [and Whitley's
house, it appears -B:.B:.] where they attach
themselves to those unfortunates who have given themselves up
to iniquity. By permitting his senses to become deadened through
indulgence in habit-forming drugs or alcoholic stimulants, the
individual becomes temporarily en rapport with these denizens
of the astral plane. The houris seen by the hasheesh or opium
addict and the lurid monsters which torment the victim of delirium
tremens are examples of submundane beings, visible only to those
whose evil practices are the magnet for their attraction.
Differing widely from the elementals and also the incubus and
succubus is the vampire, which is defined by Paracelsus as the
astral body of a person either living or dead (usually the
latter state). The vampire seeks to prolong existence upon the
physical plane by robbing the living of their vital energies and
misappropriating such energies to its own ends.
In his De Ente Spirituali, Paracelsus writes thus of these
malignant beings: "A healthy and pure person cannot become
obsessed by them, because such Larvae can only act upon men if
the latter make room for them in their minds. A healthy mind is
a castle that cannot be invaded without the will of its master;
but if they are allowed to enter, they excite the passions of
men and women, they create cravings in them, they produce bad
thoughts which act injuriously upon the brain; they sharpen the
animal intellect and suffocate the moral sense. Evil spirits
obsess only those human beings in whom the animal nature is
predominating. Minds that are illuminated by the spirit of
truth cannot be possessed; only those who are habitually guided
by their own lower impulses may become subjected to their
influences." (See Paracelsus, by Franz Hartmann.)
A strange concept, and one somewhat at variance with the
conventional, is that evolved by the Count de Gabalais
concerning the immaculate conception, namely, that it represents
the union of a human being with an elemental. Among the
offspring of such unions he lists Hercules, Achilles, Aeneas,
Theseus, Melchizedek, the divine Plato, Appolonius of Tyana, and
Merlin the Magician.
The Secret Teachings of All Ages:
"Just as visible Nature is populated by an infinite number of
living creatures, so, according to Paracelsus, the invisible,
spiritual counterpart of visible Nature (composed of the tenuous
principles of the visible elements) is inhabited by a host of
peculiar beings, to whom he has given the name elementals ...The
civilizations of Greece, Rome, Egypt, China, and India believed
implicitly in satyrs, sprites, and goblins
[just as America today believes implicitly in it's Little
Grey Space Aliens from Zeta Reticuli -B:.B:.]
Occasionally, as the result of atmospheric conditions or the
peculiar sensitiveness of the devotee, they became visible ...as
man has within his own nature centers of consciousness sensitive
to the impulses of all the four ethers, it is possible for any
of the elemental kingdoms to communicate with him under proper
conditions.
The Elements and Their Inhabitants
FOR the most comprehensive and lucid exposition of occult
pneumatology (the branch of philosophy dealing with spiritual
substances) extant, mankind is indebted to Philippus Aurcolus
Paracelsus (Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim), prince of
alchemists and Hermetic philosophers and true possessor of the
Royal Secret (the Philosopher's Stone and the Elixir of Life).
Paracelsus believed that each of the four primary elements known
to the ancients (earth, fire, air, and water) consisted of a
subtle, vaporous principle and a gross corporeal substance.
The Gnomes
The elementals who dwell in that attenuated body of the earth
which is called the terreous ether are grouped together under
the general heading of gnomes. (The name is probably derived
from the Greek genomus, meaning earth dweller. See New English
Dictionary.)
The Undines
As the gnomes were limited in their function to the elements of
the earth, so the undines (a name given to the family of water
elementals) function in the invisible, spiritual essence called
humid (or liquid) ether. In its vibratory rate this is close to
the element water, and so the undines are able to control, to a
great degree, the course and function of this fluid in Nature.
Beauty seems to be the keynote of the water spirits. Wherever
we find them pictured in art or sculpture, they abound in
symmetry and grace. Controlling the water element -- which has
always been a feminine symbol -- it is natural that the water
spirits should most often be symbolized as female.
The Salamanders
The third group of elementals is the salamanders, or spirits of
fire, who live in that attenuated, spiritual ether which is the
invisible fire element of Nature. Without them material fire
cannot exist; a match cannot be struck nor will flint and steel
give off their spark without the assistance of a salamander, who
immediately appears (so the mediaeval mystics believed), evoked
by friction. Man is unable to communicate successfully with the
salamanders, owing to the fiery element in which they dwell, for
everything is resolved to ashes that comes into their presence.
By specially prepared compounds of herbs and perfumes the
philosophers of the ancient world manufactured many kinds of
incense. When incense was burned, the vapors which arose were
especially suitable as a medium for the expression of these
elementals, who, by borrowing the ethereal effluvium from the
incense smoke, were able to make their presence felt.
A Salamder

Note the clearly Draconian
features & attributesThe Sylphs
While the sages said that the fourth class of elementals, or
sylphs, lived in the element of air, they meant by this not the
natural atmosphere of the earth, but the invisible, intangible,
spiritual medium -- an ethereal substance similar in composition
to our atmosphere of the earth, but far more subtle. In the
last discourse of Socrates, as preserved by Plato in his Phaedo,
the condemned philosopher says:
General Observations
Certain of the ancients, differing with Paracelsus, shared the
opinion that the elemental kingdoms were capable of waging war
upon one another, and they recognized in the battlings of the
elements disagreements among these kingdoms of nature spirits.
When lightning struck a rock and splintered it, they believed
that the salamanders were attacking the gnomes. As they could
not attack one another on the plane of their own peculiar
etheric essences, owing to the fact that there was no vibratory
correspondence between the four ethers of which these kingdoms
were composed, they had to attack through a common denominator,
namely, the material substance of the physical universe over
which they had a certain amount of power.
Excerpt from:
An Encyclopedic Outline of Masonic, Hermetic, Qabbalistic
and Rosicrucian Symbolical Philosophy
1988 by Manley P. Hall, ISBN 0-89314-830-X
Philosophical Research Society, Inc.
3910 Los Feliz Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90027
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