Good health, honored guest! Good health to any of you who come
to our doorstep hungry for health! I beg you, the guest who is
hungry,
to see how hospitable I am. For no sooner had you entered than I
asked about your health. Anticipating your health, I bid you good
health as soon as I saw you. When you entered here, unknown to
me,
I received you with great pleasure. If you follow my
customs,
I will give you the health promised (if God allows it).
You have
happened
upon a host who is friendly to everyone, and full of love toward
you.
If you bring a similar love, and if you have put aside all your hate,
what
vital medicines will you find here! For it was love and the
pleasure
of your parents that gave you life. Hatred and sorrow, on the
other
hand, destroy life. Any of you who is suffering from the sorrow
of
hate, then, there is no place here for you, no vital medicine left that
will ever help you. Therefore, I am speaking to you not so much
as
a host, but as a friend.
The laboratory
of your Marsilio is somewhat larger than just the space you see bounded
here. For not only is it enclosed in the following book, but in
the
two preceding books, too. All of it is offered as a kind of
medicine
for the powers of life, so that your life will be healthy and
long.
It is based here and there on the work of doctors who are helpful on
planetary
matters. Our laboratory here, our antidotes, drugs, poultices,
ointments
and remedies, offer different things to different types of
people.
If you do not like some of these things, just put them aside, lest you
reject the rest because of a few.
If you do not
approve of astronomical images, even those that have been found to be
good
for the health of mortals, remember that I, myself, do not so much
approve
of them as describe them. You can, with my permission, or even,
if
you prefer, with my recommendation, put such things aside. At
least
you should not neglect the medicines that have been strengthened with a
little planetary help - or you will have neglected life itself.
For
I have found, through frequent and long experience, that these
medicines,
as well as other things made correctly by astrologers, are as different
as wine is from water.
Even when I
was an infant, born in the eight month from conception, in Florence, in
the month of October, early in the evening, when I was half-alive with
Saturn in retrograde, only such diligence seemed to be what kept me
alive.
My life was almost returned to God. Such diligence kept me
healthy
for my first three years. Even if I must tell you more things
like
this, know that I speak the truth. I bring it up not to boast
(which
is something very wrong for a philosopher), but rather to exhort you.
But we have
spoken to you enough now, advising some things, exhorting you to
others.
Now let us speak with Plotinus, whom you must consult very carefully.
What the powers consist of, according to Plotinus, that draws the favor of the heavenly bodies, that is, the soul of the world, of the stars and of daemons; souls are easily allured by the proper forms of bodies
If there were only intellect and body in the world, but no soul, the
intellect would not be drawn to the body (for it is altogether
immobile,
and lacks the affect of motion, as if it were the furthest possible
distance
from the body), nor would the body be drawn to the intellect, since it
is ineffective and inept in itself for such motion, and very remote
from
the intellect. So if a soul, conforming to each, is placed
between
them, each one is easily attracted to the other.
We are easily
moved by the soul, first and foremost because it is the first mobile
thing,
mobile from itself and of its own doing. This is because, as I
have
said, it contains in itself all the middles of things, and is thus
nearest
to each. It is connected to all things, in the middle of these
things
that are distant from each other, for they are not distant from
it.
It conforms to divine things, and to things fallen, and it verges
on each with its affect, and is everywhere all the same.
The soul of
the world, the anima mundi, divinely contains at least as many seminal
reasons for things as there are ideas in the divine mind, and with
these
reasons it fabricates as many species in matter. Therefore, any
species
whatsoever answers through it sown seminal reasons to its own idea, and
can often easily receive through this something from that idea,
whenever
it is affected through it. Thus, whenever it degenerates from its own
form,
it can be formed again by this middle thing next to it, and through
this
middle thing it easily reforms. You thus correctly use many of
its
things, whether an individual’s or a species’, things which are
scattered
but conforming nonetheless to an idea.
Soon you draw
the singular function of gift from the idea into this material that has
been so conveniently prepared, and you draw it, as it were, through the
seminal reason of the soul. For it is not the intellect, itself,
but the soul that does this.
No one,
therefore,
should think that in certain materials of the world there are numinous
elements, separated, inside, from material, and that these elements get
drawn out; but one should rather think of these as demons and gifts of
the animate world and the living stars. No one, furthermore,
should
marvel that the soul can be, as it were, allured through material
forms.
If it can be allured to harmonious foods by these forms, it does so,
and
it always and freely dwells among them. There is nothing so
deformed
in the whole living world that it has no soul, no gift of soul
contained
in it. the congruities of these forms, therefore, to the reasons
of the soul of the world, are what Zoroaster called the divine lures,
and
Synesius agreed, calling them magic charms.
One certainly
should believe that all gifts are drawn out of the soul at a certain
time
and for their own material species, but for convenience the seminal
species
produce these gifts, with their seminal elements conforming.
Thus,
as a man, you pursue and claim your human gifts, and not those proper
to
fish or birds, who get their own. You pursue, however, things
which
pertain to a certain star or demon, going into the flow proper to this
star or demon, the way wood when it is doused with sulfur bursts into
flame.
This happens not only through the rays, themselves, of the star and
demon,
bur even through the anima mundi, itself, wherever it is present.
The reason of
the star and demon flourishes in the anima mundi, in part so that the
seminal
will be generated, and in part so that the exemplary will be recognized
and known. For the soul, according to the ancient Platonic
philosophers,
builds figures with its reasons beyond the stars in heaven, and some of
these are such that it becomes something of this figure itself.
It
impresses its properties on all these things. In the stars,
however,
and in figures, parts, and properties, all species of lower things are
contained, as well as their properties.
Altogether it
has forty-eight figures, as it were the twelve in the zodiac plus
thirty-six
more. Thirty-six must be added to the number of images in the
zodiac.
In the same way, the number of grades or stages is three hundred and
sixty.
For in any grade there are many stars, with which images are
made.
These images, beyond those in the zodiac, are divided into many
figures,
according to the same number of grades. Certain habits and
proportions
in the universal images are then set in place, and these are also
images.
Such figures have their continuity from the rays of their stars, one
after
another, each with its own special property.
From these most
carefully arranged forms hang the forms of lower things, as if they
were
arranged there. These heavenly bodies, as if they were disjunct
among
themselves, proceed to join by reasons of the soul. The mutable
ones
proceed from the stable ones. But these, to the extent that they
do not comprehend themselves, are carried back to the forms in the
mind,
comprehending themselves in the animal part or in something more
eminent.
They are a multiplicity, but they are, as it were, reduced into the one
that is simplest and good, like the heavenly figures at the pole.
But let us
return
to the soul. When the soul produces the special forms and powers
of the lower bodies, it makes these through its own reasons, with the
help
of what is under the stars and heavenly forms. The singular gifts
of individuals, which are often in some people much more marvelous than
those that appear in the species itself, are shown through similar
seminal
reasons. They do this not so much with the help of heavenly forms
and figures than with the location of the stars, the habit of their
movements,
and the aspects of the Planets. They are first shown among
themselves
and then in the more sublime stars.
Our soul, beyond
the powers of the limbs, produces a power of life common everywhere in
us, but especially in the heart, as if it were a fountain of fire
nearest
the soul. The anima mundi flourishes everywhere in the same way,
but it especially unfolds its own power of life in the Sun. Thus,
they locate the soul, both in us and in the world, as whole in any
limb,
and especially strong in the heart and in the Sun.
Yet always
remember
that just as the power of our soul adheres to the limbs through the
spirit,
so the power of the anima mundi, through the quintessence, which
everywhere
flourishes as if it were a spirit inside the worldly body, spreads out
through all things that are under the anima mundi. It especially
infuses its power into those which draw its spirit the most.
The fifth
essence,
however, can be taken inside more and more by us, if we know how to
separate
it from the other elements with which it is heavily mixed, or at least
if we know how to use those things which abound in it. This is
especially
true for things in which it is purer, as in select wines and sugar,
balsam
and gold, precious stones, things which are pleasantly fragrant and
things
which shine, especially those that have a warm, moist, and clear
quality
in a subtle substance, which, besides wine, includes the whitest sugar,
especially if you add gold to it, and the odor of cinnamon and roses.
Just as foods
that we eat properly, though they are not alive in themselves, return
us
to the form of our life through our spirit, so also our bodies draw the
most from worldly life when they are properly fitted to the spiritual
and
worldly body through worldly things and through our spirit. If
you
want food to take form for your brain or liver or stomach, you should
eat,
as much as you can, food such as brains, livers, and the stomachs of
animals
that are not far distant from human nature.
If you want
your body and spirit to receive power from some limb of the world, for
example from the Sun, learn which are the Solar things among metals and
stones, even more among plants, but among the animal world most of all,
especially among men. For there is no doubt that they confer on
you
similar qualities. These and more should be held forth and taken
inside for their powers, especially on a day and in an hour of the Sun,
with the Sun reigning in its figure in the sky. Solar things are
all those things that are called Heliotrope - because they are turned
to
the Sun - for example, gold and the color of gold, chrysolite,
carbuncle,
myrrh, incense, musk, amber, balsam, golden honey, aromatic calamus,
saffron,
spikenard, cinnamon, wood aloe, and other aromatics, the Ram, the Hawk,
the hen, the swan, the lion, the beetle, the crocodile, people who are
golden-haired, curly-haired, sometimes bald-headed people, and the
magnanimous.
Our bodies are
able to be fitted to these in part through foods, in part through
fragrant
ointments, and in part just through habituation. They should be
felt,
frequently thought about, and even loved. One should very much
seek
out light.
If you worry
about destroying your belly from a poultice of the liver, draw the
faculty
of the liver to the belly, first with massages, then with poultices
that
gather the liver, using chicory, endive, spode, agrimony, and liver
salve.
In the same way, lest your stomach be destroyed by Jove, move your body
on the day and in an hour when Jove is reigning, and meanwhile use
Jovial
things, like silver, amethyst, topaz, coral, crystal, beryl, spode,
sapphire,
green and airy colors, wine, white sugar, honey, and thoughts and
feelings
that are very Jovial, too: constant ones, balanced ones,
religious
and law-abiding ones. Associate with men of this kind, sanguine
and
handsome, venerable and versatile.
Remember,
against
cold things, the first things to be taken are gold and wine, mint and
saffron.
The Jovial animals are the lamb and the peacock, the eagle and the
calf.
In the same way, the power of Venus is drawn by turtle-doves, pigeons,
the white water-wagtail, and other things which modesty does not permit
me to list.
On the power of images according to the ancients, and on acquiring medicines from the heavens
Ptolemy said in the Centiloquium that the images of lower things are
subject to the celestial faces. Ancient wise men used to
fabricate
certain images, therefore, similar to the faces of the planets when
they
are in the sky, as if these faces then entered into examples of the
lower
things.
Even Haly
approves
of this, saying one can make a useful image of a snake when the Moon
goes
under the heavenly Snake, or happily faces it. Likewise, you can
make an effective effigy of Scorpio when the Moon enters the sign of
Scorpio,
and this sign holds one corner of its four. He says it was done
in
Egypt in his time, and that he was present when a seal of Scorpio on
bezoar
stone was impressed onto a figure of incense, and this was given in a
drink
to someone whom a scorpion itself had stung. The person was
suddenly
cured.
Even the
physician
Hahameth agrees that these are useful to make, and Serapio agrees
too.
Furthermore, Haly tells us that a famous wise man known to him made
images
with a similar industriousness, and these were made to move, which
effect
(I do not know how) we read of in Archytas.
Trismegistus
tells us of such things too, which the Egyptians made out of certain
things
of the world in order to get strength. He says they used to bring
the souls of daemons into these to good effect, including the soul of
his
ancestor, Mercury. In the same way, they used to make the
souls
of Phoebus, Isis, and Osiris descend into statues, to be for men’s use
or even to be harmful to men. Likewise, Prometheus snatched life
and heavenly light into a certain figment of clay.
But the Magi
who were followers of Zoroaster, in summoning spirit from Hecate, used
certain gold javelins marked with the characters of the heavens, on
which
a sapphire was inserted, and a whip made of bull’s hide was whirled
around,
during which time they changed. But I will pass over their
chants.
For the Platonist Psellus disapproves of them and mocks them.
The Hebrews,
when they were in Egypt, learned how to set up a golden calf, as the
astrologers
thought this would bring the favor of Venus and the Moon against the
influxes
of Scorpio and Mars that were unsafe for the Jews.
Porphyry, in
his Letter to Anebo, declares that images are effective and adds that,
at certain times, those who exhale with proper fumigations are
immediately
made strong by taking the airy daemons into their chests.
Iamblichus
agrees that in materials which are in natural agreement with the
heavenly
bodies, and which are properly and correctly gathered from all over and
brought together, the powers and effects are not only celestial, but
are
able to take on the daemonic and divine, too. Proclus and
Synesius
say the same.
The wonderful
works that can be done for health by doctors who are learned in
astrology
through stuff that is made up of many things, for example, powders,
liquors,
unguents, and tablets, seem to have a more likely value and reason in
themselves
than images: first, because powders, liquors, unguents, and
tablets,
made correctly, take on the heavenly influxes more easily and quickly
than
the harder materials from which images are usually made; second,
because
either the heavenly effects are taken inside us and converted into us
or
at least they inhere more and penetrate deeper; and third, because
images
are constructed from only one kind of thing, or from a few. The
powders,
and so forth, can be more selective because they consist of many
things.
So that if there were a hundred gifts of the Sun and Jove scattered
over
a hundred plants and animals, you could make up these hundred known to
you and put them into one form, and then you would seem to have nearly
the whole of the Sun and Jove.
You realize,
of course, that the lower nature cannot capture all the powers of the
higher
nature in one thing, and so these are scattered about us through many
natures,
and they can be more conveniently gathered through the works of doctors
than through images. Images made from wood, therefore, have
little
power, for wood, even if it is very hard, is easily taken for a
celestial
influx, and if it will receive it, will retain it less. Anything
that is ripped up out of the bowels of Mother Earth loses, in a little
while, all the vigor of its earthly life, and is easily converted into
another quality. Stones and metals, even if they seem too hard to
accept a heavenly gift, nonetheless retain it longer, if they receive
it,
as Iamblichus agrees. Their hardness , the vestiges and gifts of
worldly life, qualities they had when they were sticking to the earth,
are held by them after being dug out. For this reason they are
considered
at least suitable material for taking and holding the celestial powers.
It is likely,
as I said in the previous book, that things that are this beautiful
could
not have been formed under the earth except by a great effort of the
heavens,
and the power of this effort, once impressed on them, endures.
For
heaven has worked a very long time on these things, cooking and shaping
them.
Indeed, since
you cannot easily put together many things of this kind, you must try
diligently
to discover which metal, among all those on your list, belongs most to
some star, or which stone is the highest in rank, so that at least in
knowing
where this one ranks you might know the others for their powers,
too.
With this little undertaking you might even change the heavenly things
into being in agreement with it.
For the sake
of an example, in the Solar ranking, under a man of Phoebus, the hawk
or
rooster holds the highest place among the animals, balsam or laurel
among
the plants, gold among the metals, carbuncle or ruby among the stones,
and boiling air among the elements, for fire itself is considered
Martial.
As we have said, however, to increase the influx of the Sun, or Jove,
or
Venus, we know from common sense that one should not, from birth,
appear
the destroyer of these.
On the power of heaven, and on the powers of the rays from which images are thought to obtain their force
The staggering magnitude of the heavens, their immense power and
motion,
work in such a way that all the rays of all the stars penetrate
immediately
and easily right into the center of the earth, which is barely a
pinpoint
in the heavens, as the astronomers say. Here, as the Pythagoreans
and Platonists say, the rays are extremely strong, because they can
touch
right down to the center, and because they are all gathered in a narrow
place. Their violence down there makes the earth ignite, it is so
dry and far from any humor, and having ignited, it is thinned out and
dispersed
through its passages all over the place, spuming out lave and sulfur.
But they think
this fire is very smoky, and almost a fire that does not have any
light,
just as in the sky there is a light that does not have any fire.
This is a fire, however, that is between the celestial and the
infernal,
its light combined with a raging heat. They think, however, that
this fire flowing up from the center is a Vestal fire. They think
Vesta is the goddess and life of the earth. That is why the
ancients
used to construct a temple to Vesta in the middle of their cities and
place
a perpetual fire in the middle of it.
But lest we
go further off the track here, let us conclude that if the rays of the
stars penetrate the whole earth, it cannot easily be denied that they
penetrate
metal and stone, too, when they are suddenly engraved with images, and
whatever marvelous things one is able to impress on them. Indeed,
in the bowels of the earth these rays produce the most precious things.
But who would
deny that these things are penetrated by such rays? Even air and
quality, and sound, less effectively, pass through solid things
suddenly,
and affect them with a certain quality of their own. Indeed, if
hardness
were able to resist penetrating rays, light would pass through air much
more quickly than water, and water much more quickly than glass, and
glass
more quickly than crystal. But when they pierce through solid
spaces
as if they were liquid ones, it is apparent that no hardness can resist
such rays.
They say metals
receive heavenly rays and influxes, and even keep them fro a time,
binding
such things to heaven. They keep, I mean, a certain power created
by what is drawn out of the rays all running together. But why
should
this be, that a material not as hard as something can resist blows that
the harder material cannot? Well, a sword cuts though wood under
wool but will not cut the wool. A ray of lightning will strike a
leather skin without hurting it but will dissolve the metal that is
inside
it.
Since the
heavenly
nature is incomparably more preeminent than our kind of fire, it should
not be thought that it is the duty of the heavenly ray only to do the
work
that we see manifest in a ray of fire, such as to illuminate, to heat,
to dry out, to penetrate, to thin out, or to dissolve the things that
are
most known by our senses. No, the heavenly ray has many more
marvelous
powers and effects, although in other respects both the lower material
and the frail senses are made equal with the divinity of the heavens
inside.
Who will deny
that the hidden powers of things, which the doctors call special, are
not
accomplished by an elemental nature but by a heavenly one? Such
rays,
therefore, can impress on images (or so they say) hidden and marvelous
powers beyond what we see, in the same way that they put their powers
in
other things. For these rays are not immediate, like the rays of
a lantern, but like wines, and like sensual things they shine through
the
eyes of living bodies.
They bring
miraculous
gifts from the imaginations and minds of the heavens. They drive
a force that is extremely violent because of their strong affect.
They drive the body with an extremely rapid movement. They
especially
drive their heavenly rays into the spirit. Down from on high they
drive into bodies the hardest things, for these are the weakest things
to the heavens.
There are,
however,
in different stars different powers, and even in the rays themselves
there
are differences. In the blows of these rays that fall in one
place
rather than another, different powers are born. In the mutual
falling
of rays in one place or another, here or there or wherever, different
powers
arise suddenly with effects on one kind of thing, effects that are
greater
and faster than on another kind, and on other mixtures of elements and
the qualities of elements, even much faster than in Music, where
different
tones and numbers are struck in different places.
If you have
considered these things carefully, perhaps you will not be skeptical
when
it is said that with a certain hurling of rays these powers are
impressed
onto images, and different powers with a different hurling.
How do they
do this so quickly? I will not go into the enchantments that are
done with a sudden glance. I will skip also the extremely
poignant
cases where love is suddenly kindled by the rays of the eyes - these,
too,
a kind of enchantment - which I recommend you get from my book on
love.
I will not mention how quickly a red eye infects someone looking at it,
and a menstruating woman looking in a mirror. Were there not
supposed
to be certain angry families among the Illyrians and the Triballi who
could
kill a man with a glance? And certain women in Scythia who used
to
do the same thing? There are certain kinds of bulls and snakes
that
killed men by shooting rays from their eyes. The touch of an
electric
eel can stun you even at a distance through the staff in your
hands.
The sea-urchin is said to be able to stop a great ship just by its
touch.
There are certain spiders in Apulia who with either a bite or some
hidden
thing suddenly transform your spirit and soul into a stupor. What
does a rabid dog do, or is it not apparent from his bite? What
does
the scopa plant, or the wild strawberry do? Do they not stir up
poisons
and madness at the slightest touch? How can you deny, therefore,
that the heavenly bodies touch with the rays of their eyes, with which
our own see, and so immediately do wonderful things?
A pregnant
woman,
after all, with her touch, immediately leaves a mark on the limb of the
child being born, a mark that is much to be wished for. Do you
doubt
that rays, touching different places, do different things? When
you
are gathering the herb, hellebore, and you carry the leaf down or up,
suddenly
touching it, are you not made into hellebore, so that your humors flow
down or up accordingly? At the beginning of something or the
birth
of someone, do not the heavenly influxes, with their concoction and
digestion
of material, bestow their marvelous gifts in an instant, not over long
periods of time? Is it not true that when the face of the heavens
is favoring them, countless frogs and other creatures come leaping off
the beaches in a second? There is so much celestial power in
these
materials, so much speed.
If the kind
of fire we have is one that can be made instantly, why should the
heavenly
kind take so long? Would anyone doubt that the sky can ignite
great
things in a moment, even in materials less ready for it, when its flame
is so much bigger? Why do you doubt, then, that the heavens can
likewise
make things that are shaped into images? You will say, I suppose,
what I myself used to say, that these things have undergone the natural
stages of change. But one has to be pretty dumb to diminish this
heavenly gift and not receive it inside.
The Physics
people do not want an image fabricated on just any old stone or metal,
but on certain ones in which the heavenly nature has naturally started
the kind of power they want - and not just started but perfected, like
a flame in sulfur. It has finally perfected this power when this
material is driven, forcefully, through art, under a similar kind of
heavenly
influx. Once driven, it heats up.
Art, therefore,
arouses the inchoate power there, and while it renders this into a
figure,
similar to its own heavenly figure, it exposes further the Idea of
itself,
which, when it is exposed, is a completion of the heavenly power which
had begun at first like a flame in sulfur. Thus there is a
certain
power in amber, given to it by the heavens, for seizing chaff. No
matter how weak the amber is, though it is often made stronger by
friction
or heat, it suddenly does this.
Serapio writes
about a similar power given to the stone albugedis, which looks like a
sapphire, but it does not draw off the chaff until you have rubbed the
stone on your hair. It is like the Jovial stone bezoar, too,
which
saves you from death, as we have explained in our book Against
the
Plague. It receives this power against poisons from Jove, at
first,
but it does not get very strong until you have worked it up with other
materials. When under the heavenly influx of Scorpio you get an
image
of this supernal figure, it is said to contain a complete force against
scorpions, a force which is strengthened when mixed with mastic or
incense.
The same thing happens with a sapphire, a topaz, an emerald, and other
stones.
The art of such
images is never effective unless its material is in agreement with the
star and the effect for which the artist chose to make it, and not
unless
this same material returns through the image the same affects which it
had at its beginning. They say that no materials should be used
for
images except the ones that are known to you to have the force which
you
want.
They caution
you to scrutinize very carefully the powers of stones and metals, and
to
keep in mind, meanwhile, that among stones a certain carbuncle shimmers
in darkness, and the ruby is especially subject to the Sun, the
sapphire
to Jove, the emerald to Venus, Mercury, and the Moon. Among the
metals,
hardly any have power beyond gold and silver. It would be a safer
bet with these to refer pure gold to the Sun and Jove, to the sun
because
of its color, to Jove because of its temperate mixture, nothing being
more
temperate than Jove and gold; likewise, if you refer pure silver to the
Moon and Jove; to Venus, gold mixed with silver.
Above all, it
would make the image more effective if the element power in its
material
were in agreement with its special power that is inside it naturally,
and
this other special power thus helped capture the heavenly things
through
the figure, too.
Finally, you
must learn thoroughly how to make the lower figures and forms conform
to
the heavenly ones, as they say, as Perseus, with the cut-off head of
the
Medusa, was accustomed to predict the future beheading of some people,
and many similar things. Remember, nobody doubts that the Moon
and
other planets under certain signs move certain things in us.
What power is possessed by figures in the sky and figures under the sky
But lest you distrust figures too much, the ancients say you should
keep in mind that in this region under the elemental Moon, they can
also
have a very great elemental quality, changing into one element or
another,
like heat and cold, humor and dryness. Those qualities, however,
which are less elemental or material are, for example, lights, colors,
numbers, and figures. They are perhaps less able to change into
these,
though these are very strong, they say, in heavenly gifts. For in
the heavens, lights, numbers, and figures are virtually the most
powerful
of all things, especially since there is no matter there, as the
Peripatetics
and many others think.
Figures,
numbers,
and rays, therefore, since no other things are sustained there in
matter,
seem to be almost substantial. Since in the order of things
mathematical
forms come before physical ones, as if they were simple and less in
need
of anything, they rightly obtain great authority for themselves in the
stages of the world that come before them, that is, in the heavenly
stages,
so that there will not be anything less in number, figure, or light
than
there is in some elemental property. The sign of this authority
is
seen even under the Moon.
For material
qualities are shared with many species of things, so that when these
are
slightly changed, species are not themselves altogether changed.
The figures and numbers of natural parts, however, possess a property
that
is inseparable and peculiar to the species; namely, those heavenly
things
which have been destined to be with the species. They have a
special
connection with ideas in the mind, the queen of the world. When
these
same numbers and species are delineated there with their proper ideas,
it is no wonder that their proper powers are thus strengthened.
Thus
the species is drawn together in certain figures of natural
things.
Then movements and generations, and mutations, with certain numbers,
are
drawn together.
As for light,
what can I say? It is either an act of the intelligence, or an
image.
Colors, however, are certain kinds of light. This is why the
astrologers
say that where there are lights, that is, colors, figures, and numbers,
in material things, they can very easily prepare us for heavenly
things,
so that , they say, you should not deny these things. You should
not ignore the harmony that exists through their proportions and
numbers,
which has a marvelous power for strengthening, moving, and affecting
the
spirit, the soul, and the body.
Proportions,
however, that are constituted of numbers, are almost like figures, not
only because they are made out of lines and points, but because of
their
motion. Also, with their movement the heavenly figures maintain
themselves,
and with their harmonies, their rays, their movements penetrating
everything,
they thus affect the spirit, in a hidden way, from day to day, as
Music,
above all, can affect it in a more open way. Look how easily the
figure of a mourner moves many people to misery. And how much the
figure of a lovable person suddenly affects and moves the eyes and the
imagination, the spirit, and humors. Well, a heavenly figure is
no
less alive and effective. Does not the kind and smiling face of
the
prince of a city exhilarate everyone? The fierce or somber face
just
as suddenly scare everyone? What do you suppose, then, the
heavenly
faces can do, those lords of all earthly places?
When you think
that people who are making babies often imprint on their faces not only
their own actions but even what they were imagining, and this gets
imprinted
in turn on sons born long afterward, well, by the same token, the
heavenly
faces immediately infect matter with their marks, which seem sometimes
to hide for a long time, but which emerge in time. The faces of
heaven
are the celestial figures. You can call figures that are more
stable
there than others, faces. Faces, however, are figures which
change
there frequently. The aspects of the stars which are made among
themselves
with a daily motion, you can call their faces and their figures.
For they are called hexagons and tetragons.
Okay, someone
might say, we want heavenly figures that are powerful at doing things,
but how do we make figures with the art of images? The ancients
would
answer, not to worry about what is powerful - our figures are powerful
in themselves to do things - but whether they are ready for actions,
and
ready to receive the powers of the heavenly figures, to the extent that
they are made properly with such things ruling them, and shaped for
such
things by the carpenter’s ruler. For that figure forces the
figure
out.
When the lyre
is sounding, doe sit not happen that another starts making sounds
too?
It is enough if you make the figure the same and put it out of sight,
putting
your faith in it, and staying intent upon it. For what happens if
one lyre suddenly yields to another, other than that you have changed a
location, the form conforming to it being the same.
The gentle
figure
of a mirror, concave, shining in harmony with the sky, properly
receives
its heavenly gift that focuses collectively the rays of Phoebus into
itself,
and then burns even the most solid thing down to its core from this
focus.
So, they say, have no doubt, a certain kind of image can be made from
matter,
especially from matter that is harmonious with the heavens, a heavenly
gift that is given through the figure made with an art similar to
heaven’s
own. This gift is first conceived in the thing itself, then
passed
to the nearest person or the person carrying it.
When not only
the figure, but even its disposition is pervious - what they call
diaphanous
- it is to a certain extent ineffective and passive in its own
nature.
Because a pervious disposition is a special presentation of light in
heaven,
than whenever under heaven this is natural, when this disposition
obtains
something, a sudden celestial light is acquired and conserved.
The
heat with this is either fiery, as in flame, or somewhat airy, or
watery
and glutinous, as in moonlight or lanternlight or carbuncles, and
perhaps
even as in camphor.
Pay close
attention
now to what follows on images.
How the things below, exposed to the things above, draw down the things above; and how the most powerful worldly gifts are received through worldly materials
But lest we digress even further from what we started to do in the
beginning,
which was simply to interpret Plotinus, let us briefly sum it all up.
The world is
effected by the good itself (as Plato teaches, along with Timaeus the
Pythagorean)
as best as it can be effected. It is therefore not only
corporeal,
but sharing in the life and intelligence above. This is why,
beyond
this body of the world familiarly clear to the senses, there hides in
it
a certain spirit-body, exceeding the capacity of the fallen
senses.
In its spirit the soul thrives; in its soul the intelligence shines.
Just as, under
the Moon, air is not mixed with earth except through water, nor fire
mixed
with water except through air, so in the universe there is a certain
food
or kindling for the soul that couples it to the body, and this is what
we call spirit. The soul also is a kind of kindling in the spirit
and the body of the world, divinely following on the intelligence, just
as oil is used to penetrate a deep dryness in wood. The oil that
it drinks in is food for the fire. I call it the next thing to
heat.
Heat, itself, is the vehicle of light, and if this wood is of such a
kind
that it shines with the present fire, it does not burn, which is the
way
it is when we see it.
Now in this
example we see that for a man or anything else under the Moon vital
things
can be received as long as there are certain preparations, in part
natural,
in part artificial. Even certain good intellectual things somehow
come down , too.
What pertains
to religion here, let us discuss some other time, though Plotinus
himself
brings that subject up right here in the middle.
As for what
pertains to natural influxes, the kind that are coming down from above,
realize that they can be acquired in us and in our materials at any
age,
when nature supplies us with its poultices, and when heaven conspires
to
bring them. Does not nature, the creator of the foetus itself,
when
it affects the little body with a certain kind of arrangement it has,
and
shapes it, does it not bring forth spirit from the universe immediately
with this preparation, right in the foetus itself, as if it were a kind
of food it was giving it? And through this poultice, as it were,
does it not draw life and soul?
Finally, through
a certain species and disposition of the soul, the body is so alive
that
it is worthy now of a mind as if this were a gift of the heavens.
Nature, therefore, is everywhere a magician, as Plotinus and Synesius
have
said. It clearly entices certain things with certain foods, just
as gravity draws heavy things to the center of the earth, or the curve
of the Moon draws light things, or leaves are drawn by heat, or toots
are
drawn by water, and so on.
The wise men
of India say that by this same kind of attraction the world is bound to
itself, saying that the world is sometimes a masculine animal,
sometimes
a feminine one, and that it is everywhere copulating with itself out of
this mutual love of its own limbs. They say that it exists in
such
a way that the bonds that hold these limbs together are inside its own
mind, which, going through its limbs, works the whole mass and mixes
with
the great body itself.
Orpheus called
this nature of the world, and Jove’s world, both masculine and
feminine.
It is so because the world is everywhere hot to make love to its own
mutual
parts. Everywhere it is mixed between the masculine and feminine
sex, as the order of signs declares, where, in perpetual order, the
masculine
goes first, the feminine follows. The trees and herbs prove this
too, which have both sexes the same as animals.
I will pass
over the fact that fire goes to air, and water goes to earth, like man
to woman, because there is nothing surprising in the fact that the
world’s
limbs, among themselves and all its parts, lust for copulation with
each
other. The planets are in accord with this, too, part of them
being
masculine, part of them, in fact, feminine, and Mercury in particular
is
both masculine and feminine, as the father of Hermaphroditus.
If we turn to
agriculture, one prepares a field and sees for heavenly gifts, and with
certain graftings one propagates the life of a plant, leading to
another
and a better species. Doctors, physicians, and surgeons do
similar
things in our own bodies to nourish them and to make them acquire more
richly the nature of the universe. A philosopher learned in
natural
and astral matters, whom we call therefore a Magus, does the same
thing,
with certain earthly enticements drawing the heavenly things when he
does
it properly, sowing no differently than a farmer who is knowledgeable
in
grafting, who starts a new shoot off old stock.
This is exactly
what Ptolemy said, too, agreeing that a man who is wise in this way can
help in the work of the stars just like a farmer can in working the
power
of the earth. A magus subjects earthly things to the heavens, the
lower to the higher, so that everywhere things that are feminine are
made
fertile by things that are masculine, as iron is drawn to a magnet, as
camphor is sucked by boiling air, as crystal is illuminated by the Sun,
as sulfur and sublime liquor are ignited by fire, as the empty shell of
an egg, filled with dew, is lifted by the Sun; in fact, as an egg
itself
is nourished by a hen.
Just as some
nourish their eggs, others bring life from the universe even without
such
animals. by preparing certain materials for them, they create
animals
without eggs or apparent seeds, like the scorpion from clover, bees
from
a cow, blackbirds from sage, getting life from the world with certain
material
sat the right times.
Thus, the wise
man, when he knows a certain material, or those partly worked on by
nature,
partly finished by art, gathers them even if they are scattered, and
know
which heavenly influx they are able to receive. He gathers these
with the planet reigning whose influx they contain; he prepares them,
uses
them, and obtains for himself, through them, the heavenly gifts.
For whenever
a certain material is exposed to the higher beings, the way a mirror is
to your face and a wall is to the echo of your voice, it falls out,
obviously
through some extremely powerful agent everywhere present by its power
and
its marvelous life, that it acquires a passionate power, exactly the
way
a mirror reflects an image from your face and a wall represents an echo
from your voice.
Plotinus himself
uses these same examples, where he says that the high priests or
maguses,
imitating Mercurius, were accustomed to receiving something divine and
wonderful in their statues and sacrifices. He says, however,
along
with Trismegistus, that through these materials nothing numinous was
received
separate from the material inside, but only something worldly, as I
have
said from the beginning, and Synesius agrees.
By something
worldly, I mean a certain life, or something vital from the soul of the
world, and from the souls of the spheres and stars, or even a certain
movement,
a vital one, as if brought on by daemons; in fact, those same daemons
who
sometimes get into materials.
Mercurius
himself,
whom Plotinus follows, says that he made, through airy daemons and not
celestial or sublime ones, statues from herbs, trees, stones, and
aromatics,
that had some natural force of divinity (as he says) in them. He
adds that songs are like the heavenly things, from which he says they
delight
us, and that the heavenly things are present longer in them than in
statues,
both for the good or the ill of man.
He says, too,
that Egyptian wise men, who were also priests, when they were unable
once
to persuade the people that there are Gods, that is, certain spirits
above
men, thought to use this kind of illicit Magic to entice daemons into
statues
to appear to be Gods. But Iamblichus condemns the Egyptians for
this,
that they accepted daemons not only as certain steps to be used in
discovering
the higher Gods, but even more, that they adored them. he prefers
the Chaldaeans, in fact, for not employing daemons.
The Chaldaeans,
I say, were masters of religion, for we suspect that the astrologers of
the Chaldaeans, far more than those of the Egyptians, tried to draw
daemons
through the celestial harmony into earthen statues.
This is what
the Hebrew astrologer, Samuel, seems to mean, supported by the
authority
of David, his fellow astrologer, that the ancients clearly were makers
of images and statues that would predict the future. He says that
the harmony of the heavens was arranged in these. They would melt
some metal into the shape of a beautiful man, on a day of Mercury in
the
third hour, and certainly on a day of Saturn, when Mercury goes under
Saturn
in Aquarius, in the ninth region of heaven, which designates
prophecy.
Gemini is rising then, a star that signifies prophets, they say, and
Mars
is burned by the Sun; but Mercury is not looking on, and the Sun is
looking
at the place of its conjunction. Venus, meanwhile, is obtaining
some
corner in the West and is powerful, while the Moon looks at an
ascending
grade from her triangle, and Saturn does the same. The is what
Samuel
says.
I myself,
however,
first of all, following the opinion of blessed Thomas Aquinas, think
that
if they really did make statues that talked, they found these words not
simply through the influx of the stars but through daemons. And
secondly,
if by chance it happened that they got into statues of this kind, I do
not think they were bound there through a heavenly influx, but rather
they
yielded to the will of their worshippers and were finally trapped
there.
For a higher nature, sometimes, can be united to a lower one, but it
cannot
be confined. And that disposition of the stars, which I described
just a moment ago, cannot, perhaps, come about.
Although daemons
can be enclosed in statues through astronomical business, nevertheless,
where they appear because worship is shown towards them, Porphyry says,
they speak oracles according to astronomical rules. These are
frequently
ambiguous, and rightly so, because, as Iamblichus agrees, true prophecy
and certain prophecy come about not through daemons or human arts nor
through
nature, but by a divine inspiration in minds that have been cleansed.
But let us get
back to Mercurius - in fact, let us get back to Plotinus!
Mercurius
said priests received a power that was from the nature of the world,
and
that this was mixed. Plotinus, following him, thinks that
everything
can be easily conciliated in the soul of the world to the extent that
it
generates and moves the forms of natural things through certain seminal
reasons divinely inside it. He even calls these reasons Gods,
because
they are never apart from the ideas of the supreme mind.
Therefore,
through
reasons of this kind, the soul of the world easily applies itself to
materials
which it formed from the very beginning through these. Some magus
or priest will then use the forms of these things, collecting them
correctly
and at the right times. These forms belong properly to this or
that
reason, like the magnet to iron, rhubarb to bile, saffron to the heart,
agrimony and scoria to the liver, spice and musk to the brain.
This can be
done at any time, as long as you apply these reasons to the
forms.
The sublimer gifts will then descend, to the extent that their reasons
in the soul of the world are joined to the intellectual forms of this
same
soul, and through these to ideas in the divine mind. Iamblichus
approves
of this too, where he deals with sacrifices.
But this is
a subject we will discuss more appropriately some other time.
Then,
far from seeming the impure superstition of pagan people, it will seem,
quite the contrary, pure Evangelical piety. We have already in
fact
shown this in great part in our book On the Christian Religion.
in which he deals with medicine, astrology, the life of the world, and the Magi who greeted Christ immediately after he was born
Marsilio Ficino, the Florentine, sends greetings again and again to
his most beloved brothers in the search for truth, the three
Peters:
Nero, Guicciardini, and Soderini. I should more
appropriately
call you ‘Tripeter’ than three Peters. For just as the hand is
one,
and its many fingers do not make it many, so though you have three
bodies,
my friends, your one will makes you a Peter. Christ, the creator
of the heavenly kingdom, created a huge rock and built the immense
edifice
of his Church upon it. I, too, am given such huge rocks, by some
divine fate, that these three Peters will be enough now for my own
arduous
edifice.
Now, my friends,
if you do not already know it, you will need the fortress of Minerva if
we are to hold off from us the savage, giant force of these evil
people.
This is why I have shrunk your first fortress, constructed of three
rocks,
to one, to defend the life of my Three Books; to save, that is, their
public
life. You know, I assume, that I composed my Book of Life in a
division
of three little books. The first was called On the Healthy Life,
the second On Long Life, and the third On Heavenly Life. The food
of the title is pleasant in order to entice many people to taste it.
But in such
a large audience there will of course be many ignorant people and not a
few who are downright evil.
Someone, for
example, will say, “Is not Marsilio a priest? He certainly
is.
Well what do priests have to do with medicine? And furthermore,
what
business of his is astrology?”
Someone else
will say, “What does a Christian have to do with magic and images?”
Someone else,
someone unworthy of life itself, will deny heaven its life.
All those who
feel this way will be extremely ungrateful for our help to them, and
contrary
to our kindness, with which we counseled them publicly for the
prosperity
of their lives and for their faculty of mind, they will not hesitate to
be cruel.
Our struggle
in this will therefore be shared, and thus a little lighter, for there
are three of you against these three enemies. your battle
stations
are assigned. But do not refute invective with further invective
(you see how much I know what is on your mind.) You must suck
their
bitterness out (your own pleasantness is marvelous for this) and
overcome
them with the sweetness of your own honey.
First of all,
splendid Nero, you answer to the first charge: the priests of
antiquity
used to be doctors, and astronomers, too. The histories of the
Chaldaeans
and Persians, and the Egyptians, all testify to that. Nothing is
more pertinent to the pious priest than the singular duty of charity,
which
is exactly what one does when he offers the greatest help of all, and
in
this the ancient priests were especially brilliant. There can be
no question that the most magnificent service of all, one that is very
necessary, one that is most sought by humanity, is the work that gives
mankind a healthy mind in a healthy body. And even we can be good
at this, if we join medicine to the priesthood. But because
medicine
without the favor of the heavens (as Hippocrates and Galen confessed,
and
as we have discovered, too) is very often worthless, in fact, very
often
harmful, it is no wonder that Astronomy belongs to this same charity of
the priest’s to which we said medicine also belongs. This kind of
doctor, in my opinion, the sacred books compel us to honor, because the
Almighty, out of necessity, created him.
Christ himself,
the bestower of life, ordered his disciples to cure the sick throughout
the world, and taught his priests that if they could not heal with
words
they should at least heal with herbs and stones. And if these
were
not enough, he told them to do this with a certain breath of
heaven.
For he would himself at times move animals to his medicine with this
same
breath of heaven, to provide them abundantly with life. Thus,
divinely
aroused by an impulse of heaven, serpents are healed with fennel,
swallows
heal their eyes with swallow-wort, eagles troubled with birth find
eagle-stone
through divine providence, and with it they immediately force out their
eggs comfortably. Thus God himself, who, through the heavens,
stirs
the animal world to find medicines, certainly permits his priests to
expel
diseases; not for money, I mean, but for charity, using medicines that
have been strengthened by the heavens.
You can add
to this anything more that would help that your own mind can come up
with
to sting them.
Then you come
on strong right after this, Guicciardini, and answer the curious,
saying
that magic and images are not so much recommended by Marsilio but
described
by him, and that he is simply interpreting Plotinus. Which the
writings
plainly show, if they are read with an open mind.
Nor is Ficino
talking about the profane kind of magic which uses the cult of demons -
assert this strongly - but the natural kind of magic which seizes, from
the heavenly bodies through natural things, benefits for helping one’s
health - be sure to mention that. This faculty seems so much more
helpful to the minds that legitimately use it than even medicine or
agriculture
do in their way, and even more helpful depending on our industry in
joining
heavenly things to the earthly.
In this work
the first people of all were the Magi who worshipped Christ at his
birth.
Why, therefore, should you be afraid of the name ‘Magus’, as if it were
terrifying? It is a name pleasing to the Gospels, not something
wicked
and venomous, but signifying a wise man and a priest. Was not
such
a Magus the first worshipper of Christ? If you will permit me to
say it, he was like a farmer who cultivates a field, only he was a
cultivator
of the world. He did not worship the world, any more than a
farmer
worships the earth. But just as a farmer, for the sake of human
food,
tempers his field to the weather, so this wise man, this priest, for
the
sake of human health, tempered the lower things of the world to the
highest,
and like the eggs of a hen, subjected the earthly things to the warmth
of the heavens. This is something that God himself always does,
and
teaches us to do, and persuades us to do, that the lower things might
be
generated by the higher, and be moved and ruled.
So, there are
two kinds of magic. One, with a certain ritual, works with demons
and often makes predictions. This is driven out when the Prince
of
This World is driven out. The other kind, which subjects natural
materials to natural causes, works miraculously. There are two
types
of this artifice. One is curious, the other is necessary.
The former
manufactures
worthless omens for public display, as when the Persian Magi, using
sage
that has rotted under excrement while the Sun and Moon take the second
aspect of Leo and hold the same grade there, produced something like a
blackbird with a serpent’s tail, and then reduced this to ashes, poured
them into a brazier, and made a house seem immediately to be full of
serpents.
One should run from such silly and even health-endangering stuff.
The necessary
kind of artifice should be held onto, however, which joins medicine to
astrology.
If someone is
really persistent and presses this further, Guicciardini, this is the
way
you must take him on: tell him that no man should read these
harmful
things, nor know them, nor remember them, nor use them, if he is
unworthy
of such benefits. There are many other things which you will be
able
to come up with out of your own head in tackling this ungrateful
ignorance.
And now what
is there for you to do, our nimble Soderini? Whether or not you
will
lift up the superstitious and the blind, those who see life in the most
abject animals and the vilest herbs but do not see it in heaven or the
world, I do not know. If these little manikins allow life only in
the least particles of the world, what madness, what contempt they will
feel toward us! They will not want to know the whole world, they
will not want it to live, that whole in which we live and are moved and
exist.
Aratus
once sang about his, saying that Jove was the shared life of the world
body. I do not know what luck made me come upon these words of
Aratus
now.
Remember Luke
the Evangelist, and remember to use freely the words of the Apostle
Paul,
in which those wise men did not tremble at the life of the world.
But some
superstitious
person might object to these, and not easily be convinced by these
words
that Paul himself said of the world - that it has soul, but that it is
only under God, and that we live in this same God. that is all
right.
Let us not give it a name in the world, then, if soul does not please
them.
Let the name ‘soul’ be profane. Will it be okay at least to call
it some kind of life? Which god himself, the shaper of the world,
so happily and kindly breathed on as his work when it was finished,
since
he was not eager for just the vilest things to have such life, and
since
he daily presents this life through the heavens and through many things
which are so generously in the heavens.
Speak, my love,
do you not see cows and donkeys - O cow! O donkey! - who, with a
sort of touch bring forth living things from themselves to be
alive?
If these can bring forth living things just from some look, would you
not
assume that these other things live much more? This must be true,
if there is such life.
The sky is
married
to the earth but does not touch it (in most people’s opinion,
anyway).
He does not copulate with his wife, the earth, but he beholds his wife
through the pits of the stars, as if with the rays of eyes that are
everywhere,
and beholding her, he impregnates her and creates living things.
Now does not one who bestows life just by looking have a certain life
of
his own? Are you going to tell me that what gave life and a
living
aspect to a bird like the sparrow is worse off than a sparrow?
Bring
all this up - unless you are not convinced yourself - and you will
knock
the superstitious out; in fact, you will knock them dead!
In order to
get as many patrons for our cause as we can, Peter Neri, I want you to
recruit that Amphion of ours, Cristoforo Landino , our orator and
poet.
Our Amphion will quickly demolish the stone walls of our enemies with
the
wonderful smoothness of his music.
You, dear
Guicciardini,
my other chief, go now, go quickly, and rouse our Hercules,
Poliziano.
Whenever Hercules was in a particularly dangerous fight, he would call
for his Iolaus, so you now likewise go get our Hercules, that this
Hercules
Poliziano might attack these barbarian monsters now devastating Latium
and chew them up, murder them, maul them viciously, and safely defend
us.
He will then grab his club and bludgeon this hundred-headed Hydra that
is now threatening our books, and he will burn it up in flames.
Hey, my sweet
Soderini, come on, rise up, go get Pico, our Phoebus. I often
call
him my Phoebus, and he calls me in turn his Dionysus, his
Bacchus.
We are therefore brothers! Tell my Phoebus that the poisonous
Pytho
is after us, emerging once again from his swamp. Please, beg him
to bend his bow! Have him fire his arrows right now! Once
he
starts shooting, he will kill the whole poisonous pack with one shot,
and
I know what I am talking about.
Farewell now,
my dear lovely brothers, not just strong in health, but worthy of
happiness,
too. Care for the health and happiness of my books as they are
now
being brought into the light.