(NOTE: The Sepher Yetzirah is one of the most famous of the ancient
Qabalistic texts. It was first put into writing around 200 C.E. Westcott's
Translation of the Sepher Yetzirah was a primary source for the rituals
and Knowledge Lectures of the Golden Dawn. This is the Third Edition of
Westcottís translation, first published in 1887. A Fourth Revised
Edition by Darcy Kúntz, complete with Hebrew text, notes and bibliography,
is available from Holmes Publishing Group, P.O. 623, Edmonds, WA 98020.)
_______________________________________________________________________
The "Sepher Yetzirah," or "Book of Formation," is
perhaps the oldest Rabbinical treatise of Kabalistic philosophy which is
still extant. The great interest which has been evinced of 1ate years in
the Hebrew Kabalah, and the modes of thought and doctrine allied to it,
has induced me to translate this tractate from the original Hebrew texts,
and to collate with them the Latin versions of mediaeval authorities; and
I have also published An Introduction to the Kabalah which may be
found useful to students.
Three important books of the "Zohar," or "Book of Splendour,"
which is a great storehouse of Kabalistic teaching, have been translated
into English by S. L. MacGregor Mathers, and the "Sepher Yetzirah"
in an English translation is almost a necessary companion to these abstruse
disquisitions: the two books indeed mutually explain each other.
The "Sepher Yetzirah," although this name means "The Book
of Formation," is not in any sense a narrative of Creation, or a substitute
Genesis, but is an ancient and instructive philosophical treatise upon one
aspect of the origin of the universe and mankind; an aspect at once archaic
and essentially Hebrew. The grouping of the processes of origin into an
arrangement, at once alphabetic and numeral, is one only to be found in
Semitic authors.
Attention must be called to the essential peculiarity of the Hebrew language,
the inextricable and necessary association of numbers and letters; every
letter suggesting a number, and every group of letters having a numerical
signification, as vital as its literal meaning.
The Kabalistic principles involved in the reversal of Hebrew letters, and
their substitution by others, on definite schemes, should also be studied
and borne in mind.
It is exactly on these principles that the "ground-work idea"
'of this disquisition rests; and these principles may be traced throughout
the Kabalistic tractates which have succeeded it in point of time and development,
many of which are associated together in one volume known as the "Zohar,"
which is in the main concerned with the essential dignities of the Godhead,
with the Emanations which have sprung therefrom, with the doctrine of the
Sephiroth, the ideals of Macroprosopus and Microprosopus, and the doctrine
of Re-incarnation.
The "Sepher Yetzirah," on the other hand, is mainly concerned
with our universe and with the Microcosm. The opinions of Hebrew Kabalistic
Rabbis and of modern mystics may be fitly introduced here.
The following interesting quotation is from Rabbi Moses Botarel, who wrote
his famous Commentary in 1409:--"It was Abraham our Father--blessed
be he--who wrote this book to condemn the doctrine of the sages of his time,
who were incredulous of the supreme dogma of the Unity. At least, this was
the opinion of Rabbi Saadiah--blessed be he--as written in the first chapter
of his book The Philosopher's Stone. These are his words: The sages
of Babylon attacked Abraham on account of his faith; for they were all against
him although themselves separable into three sects. The First thought that
the Universe was subject to the control of two opposing forces, the one
existing but to destroy the other, this is dualism; they held that there
was nothing in common between the author of evil and the author of good.
The Second sect admitted Three great Powers; two of them as in the first
case, and a third Power whose function was to decide between the two others,
a supreme arbitrator. The Third sect recognised no god beside the Sun, in
which it recognised the sole principle of existence."
Rabbi Judah Ha Lévi (who flourished about 1120), in his critical
description of this treatise, wrote: "The Sepher Yetzirah teaches us
the existence of a Single Divine Power by shewing us that in the bosom of
variety and multiplicity there is a Unity and Harmony, and that such universal
concord could only arise from the rule of a Supreme Unity."
According to Isaac Myer, in his Quabbalah (p. 159), the "Sepher
Yetzirah" was referred to in the writings of Ibn Gebirol of Cordova,
commonly called Avicebron, who died in A.D. 1070.
Eliphas Levi, the famous French Occultist, thus wrote of the "Sepher
Yetzirah," in his Histoire de la Magie, p. 54: "The Zohar
is a Genesis of illumination, the Sepher Jezirah is a ladder formed of truths.
Therein are explained the thirty-two absolute signs of sounds, numbers and
letters: each letter reproduces a number, an idea and a form; so that mathematics
are capable of application to ideas and to forms not less rigorously than
to numbers, by exact proportion and perfect correspondence. By the science
of the Sepher Jezirah the human spirit is fixed to truth, and in reason,
and is able to take account of the possible development of intelligence
by the evolutions of numbers. The Zohar represents absolute truth, and the
Sepher Jezirah provides the means by which we may seize, appropriate and
make use of it."
Upon another page Eliphas Lévi writes: "The Sepher Jezirah and
the Apocalypse are the masterpieces of Occultism; they contain more wisdom
than words; their expression is as figurative as poetry, and at the same
time it is as exact as mathematics.
In the volume entitled La Kabbale by the eminent French scholar,
Adolphe Franck, there is a chapter on the "Sepher Yetzirah." He
writes as follows:--
"The Book of Formation contains, I will not say system of physics,
but of cosmology such as could be conceived at an age and in a country where
the habit of explaining all phenomena by the immediate action of the First
Cause, tended to check the spirit of observation, and where in consequence
certain general and superficial relations perceived in the natural world
passed for the science of Nature."Ö"Its form is simple and
grave; there is nothing like a demonstration nor an argument; but it consists
rather of a series of aphorisms, regularly grouped, and which have all the
conciseness of the most ancient oracles."
In his analysis of the "Sepher Yetzirah," he adds:--"The
Book of Formation, even if it be not very voluminous, and if it do not altogether
raise us to very elevated regions of thought, yet offers us at least a composition
which is very homogeneous and of a rare originality. The clouds which the
imagination of commentators have gathered around it, will be dissipated,
if we look for, in it, not mysteries of ineffable wisdom, but an attempt
at a reasonable doctrine, made when reason arose, an effort to grasp the
plan of the universe, and to secure the link which binds to one common principle,
all the elements which are around us."
"The last word of this system is the substitution of the absolute divine
Unity for every idea of Dualism, for that pagan philosophy which saw in
matter an eternal substance whose laws were not in accord with Divine Will;
and for the Biblical doctrine, which by its idea of Creation, postulates
two things, the Universe and God, as two substances absolutely distinct
one from the other.
"In fact, in the 'Sepher Yetzirah,' God considered as the Infinite
and consequently the indefinable Being, extended throughout all things by
his power and existence, is while above, yet not outside of numbers, sounds
and letters--the principles and general laws which we recognise."
"Every element has its source from a higher form, and all things have
their common origin from the Word (Logos), the Holy SpiritÖ.
So God is at once, in the highest sense, both the matter and the form of
the universe. Yet He is not only that form; for nothing can or does
exist outside of Himself; His substance is the foundation of all, and all
things bear His imprint and are symbols of His intelligence."
Hebrew tradition assigns the doctrines of the oldest portions of the "Zohar"
to a date antecedent to the building of the Second Temple, but Rabbi Simeon
ben Jochai, who lived in the reign of the Emperor Titus, A.D. 70-80, is
considered to have been the first to commit these to writing, and Rabbi
Moses de Leon, of Guadalaxara, in Spain, who died in 1305, certainly reproduced
and published the "Zohar."
Ginsburg, speaking of the Zoharic doctrines of the Ain Suph, says that they
were unknown until the thirteenth century, but he does not deny the great
antiquity of the "Sepher Yetzirah," in which it will be noticed
the "Ain Suph Aur" and "Ain Suph" are not mentioned.I
suggest, however, that this omission is no proof that the doctrines of "Ain
Suph Aur" and "Ain Suph" did not then exist, because it is
a reasonable supposition that the "Sepher Yetzirah" was the volume
assigned to the Yetziratic World, the third of the four Kabalistic Worlds
of Emanation, while the "Asch Metzareph" is concerned with the
Assiatic, fourth, or lowest World of Shells, and is on the face of it an
alchemical treatise; and again the "Siphra Dtzenioutha" may be
fittingly considered to be an Aziluthic work, treating of the Emanations
of Deity alone; and there was doubtless a fourth work assigned to the World
of Briah--the second type, but I have not been able to identify this treatise.
Both the Babylonian and the Jerusalem Talmuds refer to the "Sepher
Yetzirah." Their treatise, named "Sanhedrin," certainly mentions
the "Book of Formation," and another similar work; and Rashi in
his commentary on the treatise "Erubin," considers this a reliable
historical notice.Other historical notices are those of Saadya Gaon, who
died A.D. 940, and Judah Ha Levi, A.D. 1150; both these Hebrew classics
speak of it as a very ancient work. Some modern critics have attributed
the authorship to the Rabbi Akiba, who lived in the time of the Emperor
Hadrian, A.D. 120, and lost his life in supporting the claims of Barchocheba,
a false messiah: others suggest it was first written about A.D. 200.
Graetz however assigns it to early Gnostic times, third or fourth century,
and Zunz speaks of it as post Talmudical, and belonging to the Geonim period
700-800 A.D.; Rubinsohn, in the Bibliotheca Sacra, speaks of this
latter idea as having no real basis.
The Talmuds were first collected into a concrete whole, and printed in Venice,
1520 A.D.
The "Zohar" was first printed in Mantua in 1558; again in Cremona,
1560; and at Lublin, 1623; and a fourth edition by Knorr von Rosenroth,
at Sulzbach in 1684. Some parts are not very ancient, because the Crusades
are mentioned in one chapter. Six extant Hebrew editions of the "Sepher
Yetzirah" were collected and printed at Lemberg in 1680. The oldest
of these six recensions was that of Saadjah Gaon (by some critics called
spurious).There are still extant three Latin versions, viz., that
of Gulielmus Postellus; one by Johann Pistorius; and a third by Joannes
Stephanus Rittangelius; this latter gives both Hebrew and Latin versions,
and also "The Thirty-Two Paths" as a supplement.
There is a German translation, by Johann Friedrich von Meyer, dated 1830;
a version by Isidor Kalisch, in which he has reproduced many of the valuable
annotations of Meyer; an edition in French by Papus, 1888; an edition in
French by Mayer Lambert, 1891, with the Arabic Commentary of Saadya Gaon;
and an English edition by Peter Davidson, 1896, to which are added "The
Fifty Gates of Intelligence" and "The Thirty-Two Ways of Wisdom."
The edition which I now offer is fundamentally that of the ancient Hebrew
codices translated into English, and collated with the Latin versions of
Pistorius, Postellus, and Rittangelius, following the latter, rather than
the former commentators. As to the authenticity of "The Sepher Yetzirah,"
students may refer to the Bibliotheca magna Rabbinica of Bartoloccio
de Cellerio, Rome, 1678-1692; to Basnage, History of the Jews, 1708;
and to The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah, by A. B. Waite,
1902.The following copies of the "Sepher Yetzirah" in Hebrew,
I have also examined, but only in a superficial manner:--
1. A Version by Saadiah, Ab. ben David, and three others, Mantua, 1562,
4to.
2. A Version with the commentary of Rabbi Abraham F. Dior, Amsterdam, 1642,
4to.
3. A Version with preface by M. ben J. Chagiz, Amsterdam, 1713, 16mo.4.
A Version, Constantinople, 1719, 8vo.
5. " " Zolkiew, 1745, 4to.
6. " " by Moses ben Jacob, Zozec, 1779, 4to.
7. " " Grodno, 1806, 4to.
8. " " Dyhernfurth, 1812, 8vo.
9. " " Salonica, 1831, 8vo.
10. A MS. copy dated 1719, in the British Museum.
I add here the full titles of the three Latin versions; they are all to
be found in the British Museum Library.
"Abrahami Patriarchae Liber Jezirah sive Formationis Mundi, Patribus
quidem Abrahami tempora praecedentibus revelatus, sed ab ipso etiam Abrahamo
expositus Isaaco, et per pro prophetarum manus posteritati conservatus,
ipsis autem 72 Mosis auditoribus in secundo divinae veritatis loco, hoc
est in ratione, quoe est posterior authoritate, habitus." Parisiis,
1552. Gulielmus Postellus."Id est Liber Jezirah, qui Abrahamo, Patriarchae
adscribitur, una cum Commentario Rabbi Abraham F.D. super 32 semitis Sapientiae,
a quibus Liber Jezirah incipit: Translatus et notis illustratus a Joanne
Stephano Rittangelio, Ling. Orient. in Elect. Acad. Regiomontana Prof. Extraord,"
Amstelodami, 1642.In Tomas Primus of "Artis Cabalisticae hoc est reconditae
theologiae et philosophiae scriptorum." Basileae 1587, is found "Liber
de Creatione Cabalistinis, Hebraice Sepher Jezira; Authore Abrahamo. Successive
filiis ore traditus. Hinc jam rebus Israel inclinatis ne deficeret per sapientes
Hierusalem arcanis et profundissimis sensibus literis commendatus."
Johannes Pistorius.
The "Sepher Yetzirah" consists of six chapters, having 33 paragraphs
distributed among them, in this manner: the first has 12, then follow 5,
5, 4, 3, and 4.
Yet in some versions the paragraphs and subject-matter are found in a different
arrangement. The oldest title has, as an addition, the words, "The
Letters of our Father Abraham" or "ascribed to the patriarch Abraham,"
and it is spoken of as such by many mediaeval authorities: but this origin
is doubtless fabulous, although perhaps not more improbable than the supposed
authorship of the "Book of Enoch," mentioned by St. Jude, of which
two MSS. copies in the Ethiopic language were rescued from the wilds of
Abyssinia in 1773 by the great traveller James Bruce. In essence this work
was, doubtless, the crystallisation of centuries of tradition, by one writer,
and it has been added to from time to time, by later authors, who have also
revised it. Some of the additions, which were rejected even by mediaeval
students, I have not incorporated with the text at all, and I present in
this volume only the undoubted kernel of this occult nut, upon which many
great authorities, Hebrew, German, Jesuit and others, have written long
Commentaries, and yet have failed to explain satisfactorily. I find Kalisch,
speaking of these Commentaries, says, "they contain nothing but a medley
of arbitrary explanations, and sophistical distortions of scriptural verses,
astrological notions, Oriental superstitions, a metaphysical jargon, a poor
knowledge of physics, and not a correct elucidation of this ancient book."
Kalisch, however, was not an occultist; these commentaries are, however,
so extensive as to demand years of study, and I feel no hesitation in confessing
that my researches into them have been but superficial. For convenience
of study I have placed the Notes in a separate form at the end of the work,
and I have made a short definition of the subject-matter of each chapter.
The substance of this little volume was read as Lecture before "The
Hermetic Society of London," in the summer of 1886, Dr. Anna Kingsford,
President, in the chair. Some of the Notes were the explanations given verbally,
and subsequently in writing, to members of the Society who asked for information
upon abstruse points in the "Sepher," and for collateral doctrines;
others, of later date, are answers which have been given to students of
Theosophy and Hermetic philosophy, and to my pupils of the Study Groups
of the Rosicrucian Society of England.
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Section 1. In thirty-two (1) mysterious Paths of Wisdom did
Jah, (2) the Jehovah of hosts, (3) the God of Israel,
(4) the Living Elohim, (5) the King of ages, the merciful
and gracious God, (6) the Exalted One, the Dweller in eternity,
most high and holy--engrave his name by the three Sepharim (7)
--Numbers, Letters, and Sounds.(8)
2. Ten are the ineffable Sephiroth. (9) Twenty-two are the Letters,
the Foundation of all things; there are Three Mothers, Seven Double and
Twelve (10) Simple letters.
3. The ineffable Sephiroth are Ten, as are the Numbers; and as there are
in man five fingers over against five, so over them is established a covenant
of strength, by word of mouth, and by the circumcision of the flesh.
(11)
4. Ten is the number of the ineffable Sephiroth, ten and not nine, ten and
not eleven. Understand this wisdom, and be wise by the perception. Search
out concerning it, restore the Word to its creator, and replace Him who
formed it upon his throne. (12)
5. The Ten ineffable Sephiroth have ten vast regions bound unto them; boundless
in origin and having no ending; an abyss (13) of good and of
ill; measureless height and depth; boundless to the East and the West; boundless
to the North and South; (14) and the Lord the only God,
(15) the Faithful King rules all these from his holy seat, (16)
for ever and ever.
6. The Ten ineffable Sephiroth have the appearance of the Lightning flash,
(17) their origin is unseen and no end is perceived. The Word is in
them as they rush forth and as they return, they speak as from the whirl-wind,
and returning fall prostrate in adoration before the Throne.
7. The Ten ineffable Sephiroth, whose ending is even as their origin, are
like as a flame arising from a burning coal. For God (18) is
superlative in his Unity, there is none equal unto Him: what number canst
thou place before One.
8. Ten are the ineffable Sephiroth; seal up thy lips lest thou speak of
them, and guard thy heart as thou considerest them; and if thy mind escape
from thee bring it back to thy control; even as it was said, "running
and returning" (the living creatures ran and returned) (19)
and hence was the Covenant made.
9. The ineffable Sephiroth give forth the Ten numbers. First; the Spirit
of the God of the living; (20) Blessed and more than blessed
be the Living God (21) of ages. The Voice, the Spirit, and the
Word, (22) these are the Holy Spirit.
10. Second; from the Spirit He produced Air, and formed in it twenty-two
sounds--the letters; three are mothers, seven are double, and twelve are
simple; but the Spirit is first and above these. Third; from the Air He
formed the Waters, and from the formless and void (23) made mire
and clay, and designed surfaces upon them, and hewed recesses in them, and
formed the strong material foundation. Fourth; from the Water He formed
Fire (24) and made for Himself a Throne of Glory with Auphanim,
Seraphim and Kerubim, (25) as his ministering angels; and with
these three (26) he completed his dwelling, as it is written,
"Who maketh his angels spirits and his ministers a flaming fire."
(27)
11. He selected three letters from among the simple ones and sealed them
and formed them into a Great Name, I H V, (28) and with this
He sealed the universe in six directions.
Fifth; He looked above, and sealed the Height with I H V.
Sixth; He looked below, and sealed the Depth with I V H.
Seventh; He looked forward, and sealed the East with H I V.
Eighth; He looked backward, and sealed the West with H V I.
Ninth; He looked to the right, and sealed the South with V I H.
Tenth; He looked to the left, and sealed the North with V H I.
12. Behold! From the Ten ineffable Sephiroth do, proceed--the One Spirit
of the Gods of the living, Air, Water, Fire; and also Height, Depth, East,
West, South and North. (29)
Section 1. The twenty-two sounds and letters are the Foundation of all
things. Three mothers, seven doubles and twelve simples. The Three Mothers
are Aleph, Mem and Shin, they are Air, Water and Fire Water is silent, Fire
is sibilant, and Air derived from the Spirit is as the tongue of a balance
standing between these contraries which are in equilibrium, reconciling
and mediating between them.
2. He hath formed, weighed, and composed with these twenty-two letters every
created thing, and the form of everything which shall hereafter be.
3. These twenty-two sounds or letters are formed by the voice, impressed
on the air, and audibly modified in five places; in the throat, in the mouth,
by the tongue, through the teeth, and by the lips. (31)
4. These twenty-two letters, which are the foundation of all things, He
arranged as upon a sphere with two hundred and thirty-one gates, and the
sphere may be rotated forward or backward, whether for good or for evil;
from the good comes true pleasure, from evil nought but torment.
5. For He shewed the combination of these letters, each with the other;
Aleph with all, and all with Aleph; Beth with all, and all with Beth. Thus
in combining all together in pairs are produced the two hundred and thirty-one
gates of knowledge. (32)
6. And from the non-existent (33) He made Something; and all
forms of speech and everything that has been produced; from the empty void
He made the material world, and from the inert earth He brought forth everything
that hath life. He hewed, as it were, vast columns out of the intangible
air, and by the power of His Name made every creature and everything that
is; and the production of all things from the twenty-two letters is the
proof that they are all but parts of one living body. (34)
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Section 1. The Foundation of all the other sounds and letters is provided
by the Three Mothers, Aleph, Mem and Shin; they resemble a Balance, on the
one hand the guilty, on the other hand the purified, and Aleph the Air is
like the Tongue of a Balance standing between them. (35)
2. The Three Mothers, Aleph, Mem and Shin, are a great Mystery, very admirable
and most recondite, and sealed as with six rings; and from them proceed
Air, Fire, and Water, which divide into active and passive forces. The Three
Mothers, Aleph, Mem and Shin, are the Foundation, from them spring three
Fathers, and from these have proceeded all things that are in the world.
3. The Three Mothers in the world are Aleph, Mem and Shin: the heavens
(36) were produced (37) from Fire; the earth from the Water;
and the Air from the Spirit is as a reconciler between the Fire and the
Water.
4. The Three Mothers, Aleph, Mem and Shin, Fire, Water and Air, are shown
in the Year: from the fire came heat, from the waters came cold, and from
the air was produced the temperate state, again a mediator between them.
The Three Mothers, Aleph, Mem and Shin, Fire, Water and Air, are found in
Man: from the fire was formed the head; from the water the belly; and from
the air was formed the chest, again placed as a mediator between the others.
5. These Three Mothers did He produce and design, and combined them; and
He sealed them as the three mothers in the Universe, in the Year and in
Man--both male and female. He caused the letter Aleph to reign in Air and
crowned it, and combining it with the others He sealed it, as Air in the
World, as the temperate (climate) of the Year, and as the breath in the
chest (the lungs for breathing air) in Man: the male with Aleph, Mem, Shin,
the female with Shin, Mem, Aleph. He caused the letter Mem to reign in Water,
crowned it, and combining it with the others formed the earth in the world,
cold in the year, and the belly in man, male and female, the former with
Mem, Aleph, Shin, the latter with Mem, Shin, Aleph. He caused Shin to reign
in Fire, and crowned it, and combining it with the others sealed with it
the heavens in the universe, heat in the year and the head in man, male
and female. (38)
Section 1. The Seven double letters, Beth, Gimel, Daleth, Kaph, Peh,
Resh, and Tau have each two sounds associated with them. They are referred
to Life, Peace, Wisdom, Riches, Grace, Fertility and Power. The two sounds
of each letter are the hard and the soft--the aspirated and the softened.
They are called Double, because each letter presents a contrast or permutation;
thus Life and Death; Peace and War; Wisdom and Folly; Riches and Poverty;
Grace and Indignation; Fertility and Solitude; Power and Servitude.
2. These Seven Double Letters point out seven localities; Above, Below,
East, West, North, South, and the Palace of Holiness in the midst of them
sustaining all things.
3. These Seven Double Letters He designed, produced, and combined, and formed
with them the Planets of this World, the Days of the Week, and the Gates
of the soul (the orifices of perception) in Man. From these Seven He bath
produced the Seven Heavens, the Seven Earths, the Seven Sabbaths: for this
cause He has loved and blessed the number Seven more than all things under
Heaven (His Throne).
4. Two Letters produce two houses; three form six; four form twenty-four;
five form one hundred and twenty; six form seven hundred and twenty; (39)
seven form five thousand and forty; and beyond this their numbers increase
so that the mouth can hardly utter them, nor the ear hear the number of
them. So now, behold the Stars of our World, the Planets which are Seven;
the Sun, Venus, Mercury, Moon, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars. The Seven are also
the Seven Days of Creation; and the Seven Gateways of the Soul of Man--the
two eyes, the two ears, the mouth and the two nostrils. So with the Seven
are formed the seven heavens, (41) the seven earths, and the
seven periods of time; and so has He preferred the number Seven above all
things under His Heaven. (42)
_______________________________________________________________________
NOTE.--This is one of several modern illustrations of the allotment of
the Seven Letters; it is not found in the ancient copies of the "Sepher
Yetzirah."
He produced Beth, and referred it to Wisdom ; He crowned it, combined and
formed with it the Moon in the Universe, the first day of the week, and
the right eye of man.
He produced Gimel, and referred it to Health; He crowned it, combined and
joined with it Mars in the Universe, the second day of the week, and the
right ear of man.
He produced Daleth, and referred it to Fertility; He crowned it, combined
and formed with it the Sun in the Universe, the third day of the week, and
the right nostril of man.
He produced Kaph, and referred it to Life; He crowned it, combined and formed
with it Venus in the Universe, the fourth day of the week, and the left
eye of man.
He produced Peh, and referred it to Power; He crowned it, combined and formed
with it Mercury in the Universe, the fifth day of the week, and the left
ear of man.
He produced Resh, and referred it to Peace; He crowned it, combined and
formed with it Saturn in the Universe, the sixth day of the week, and the
left nostril of man.
He produced Tau, and referred it to Beauty; He crowned it, combined and
formed with it Jupiter in the Universe, the Seventh Day of the week, and
the mouth of man.
By these Seven letters were also made seven worlds, seven heavens, seven
earths, seven seas, seven rivers, seven deserts, seven days, seven weeks
from Passover to Pentecost, and every seventh year a Jubilee.
Mayer Lambert gives:--Beth to Saturn and the Hebrew Sabbath--that is Saturday;
Gimel to Jupiter and Sunday; Daleth to Mars and Monday; Kaph to the Sun
and Tuesday; Peh to Venus and Wednesday; Resh to Mercury and Thursday; and
Tau to the Moon and Friday.
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1. The Twelve Simple Letters are Héh, Vau, Zain, Cheth, Teth,
Yod, Lamed, Nun, Samech, Oin, Tzaddi and Qoph; (43) they are
the foundations of these twelve properties: Sight, Hearing, Smell, Speech,
Taste, Sexual Love, Work, Movement, Anger, Mirth, Imagination, (44)
and Sleep. These Twelve are also allotted to the directions in space: North-east,
South-east, the East above, the East below, the North above, the North below,
the South-west, the Northwest, the West above, the West below, the South
above, and the South below; these diverge to infinity, and are as the arms
of the Universe.
2. These Twelve Simple Letters He designed, and combined, and formed with
them the Twelve celestial constellations of the Zodiac, whose signs are
Teth, Shin, Tau, Samech, Aleph, Beth, Mem, Oin, Qoph, Gimel, Daleth, and
Daleth. (45) The Twelve are also the Months of the Year: Nisan,
(46) Yiar, Sivan, Tamuz, Ab, Elul, Tishri, Hesvan, Kislev, Tebet,
Sabat and Adar. The Twelve are also the Twelve organs of living creatures:
(47) the two hands, the two feet, the two kidneys, the spleen, the
liver, the gall, private parts, stomach and intestines.
He made these, as it were provinces, and arranged them as in order of battle
for warfare. And also the Elohim (48) made one from the region
of the other.
Three Mothers and Three Fathers; and thence issue Fire, Air and Water. Three
Mothers, Seven Doubles and Twelve Simple letters and sounds.
3. Behold now these are the Twenty and Two Letters from which Jah, Jehovah
Tzabaoth, the Living Elohim, the God of Israel, exalted and sublime, the
Dweller in eternity, formed and established all things; High and Holy is
His Name.
_______________________________________________________________________
NOTE.--This is a modern illustration of the allotment of the Twelve Letters;
it is not found in the ancient copies of the "Sepher Yetzirah."
1. God produced Hé predominant in Speech, crowned it, combined and
formed with it Aries in the Universe, Nisan in the Year, and the right foot
of Man.
2. He produced Vau, predominant in mind, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Taurus in the Universe, Aiar in the Year, and the right kidney of
Man.
3. He produced Zain, predominant in Movement crowned it, combined and formed
it with Gemini in the Universe, Sivan in the Year, and the left foot of
Man.
4. He produced Cheth, predominant in Sight, crowned it, combined and formed
it with Cancer in the Universe, Tammuz in the year, and the right hand of
Man.
5. He produced Teth, predominant in Hearing, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Leo in the Universe, Ab in the Year, and the left kidney in Man.
6. He produced Yod, predominant in Work, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Virgo in the Universe, Elul in the Year, and the left hand of Man.
7. He produced Lamed, predominant in Sexual desire, crowned it, combined
and formed with it Libra in the Universe, Tishri in the Year, and the private
parts of Man. (Kalisch gives "gall.")
8. He produced Nun, predominant in Smell, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Scorpio in the Universe, Heshvan in the Year, and the intestines
of Man.
9. He produced Samech, predominant in Sleep, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Sagittarius in the Universe, Kislev in the Year, and the stomach
of Man.
10. He produced Oin, predominant in Anger, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Capricornus in the Universe, Tebet in the Year, and the liver of
Man.
11. He produced Tzaddi, predominant in Taste, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Aquarius in the Year, and the gullet in Man).
12. He produced Qoph, predominant in Mirth, crowned it, combined and formed
with it Pisces in the Universe, Adar in the Year, and the spleen of Man.
NOTE.--Mediaeval authorities and modern editors give very different allocations
to the twelve simple letters.
_______________________________________________________________________
Section 1. Three Fathers and their generations, Seven conquerors and
their armies, and Twelve bounds of the Universe. See now, of these words,
the faithful witnesses are the Universe, the Year and Man. The dodecad,
the heptad, and the triad with their provinces; above is the Celestial Dragon,
T L I, (49) and below is the World, and lastly the heart of Man.
The Three are Water, Air and Fire; Fire above, Water below, and Air conciliating
between them; and the sign of these things is that the Fire sustains (volatilises)
the waters; Mem is mute, Shin is sibilant, and Aleph is the Mediator and
as it were a friend placed between them.
2. The Celestial Dragon, T L I, is placed over the universe like a king
upon the throne; the revolution of the year is as a king over his dominion;
the heart of man is as a king in warfare. Moreover, He made all things one
from the other; and the Elohim set good over against evil, and made good
things from good, and evil things from evil: with the good tested He the
evil, and with the evil did He try the good. Happiness (50) is
reserved for the good, and misery (51) is kept for the wicked.
3. The Three are One, and that One stands above. The Seven are divided;
three are over against three, and one stands between the triads. The Twelve
stand as in warfare; three are friends, three are enemies; three are life
givers; three are destroyers. The three friends are the heart, the ears,
and the mouth; the three enemies are the liver, the gall, and the tongue;
(52) while God (53) the faithful king rules over all. One
above Three, Three above Seven, and Seven above Twelve: and all are connected
the one with the other.
4. And after that our father Abraham had perceived and understood, and had
taken down and engraved all these things, the Lord most high (55)
revealed Himself, and called him His beloved, and made a Covenant with him
and his seed; and Abraham believed on Him (56) and it was imputed
unto him for righteousness. And He made this Covenant as between the ten
toes of the feet--this is that of circumcision; and as between the ten fingers
of the hands and this is that of the tongue. (57) And He formed
the twenty-two letters into speech (58) and shewed him all the
mysteries of them. (59) He drew them through the Waters; He burned
them in the Fire; He vibrated them in the Air; Seven planets in the heavens,
and Twelve celestial constellations of the stars of the Zodiac.
Attached to some editions of the "Sepher Yetzirah" is found
this scheme of Kabalistic classification of knowledge emanating from the
Second Sephira Binah, Understanding, and descending by stages through the
angels, heavens, humanity, animal and vegetable and mineral kingdoms to
Hyle and the chaos. The Kabalists said that one must enter and pass up through
the Gates to attain to the Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom; and that even Moses
only passed through the forty-ninth Gate, and never entered the fiftieth.
See the Oedipus Aegyptiacus of Athanasius Kircher, vol. ii. p. 319.
First Order: Elementary.
1. Chaos, Hyle, The first matter.
2. Formless, void, lifeless.
3. The Abyss.
4. Origin of the Elements.
5. Earth (no seed germs).
6. Water.
7. Air.
8. Fire
9. Differentiation of qualities.
10. Mixture and combination.
Second Order: Decad of Evolution.
11. Minerals differentiate.
12. Vegetable principles appear.
13. Seeds germinate in moisture.
14. Herbs and Trees.
15. Fructification in vegetable life.
16. Origin of low forms of animal life.
17. Insects and Reptiles appear.
18. Fishes, vertebrate life in the waters.
19. Birds, vertebrate life in the air.
20. Quadrupeds, vertebrate earth animals.
Third Order: Decad of Humanity.
21. Appearance of Man.
22. Material human body.
23. Human Soul conferred.
24. Mystery of Adam and Eve.
25. Complete Man as the Microcosm.
26. Gift of five human faces acting exteriorly.
27. Gift of five powers to the soul.
28. Adam Kadmon, the Heavenly Man.
29. Angelic beings.
30. Man in the image of God.
Fourth Order: World of Spheres.
31. The Moon.
32. Mercury.
33. Venus.
34. Sol.
35. Mars.
36. Jupiter.
37. Saturn.
38. The Firmament.
39. The Primum Mobile.
40. The Empyrean Heaven.
Fifih Order: The Angelic World.
41. Ishim--Sons of Fire.
42. Auphanim--Cherubim.
43. Aralim--Thrones.
44. Chashmalim--Dominions.
45. Seraphim--Virtues.
46. Malakim--Powers.
47. Elohim--Principalities.
48. Beni Elohim--Angels.
49. Cherubim--Arch-angels.
Sixth Order: The Archetype.
50. God. Ain Suph. He Whom no mortal eye bath seen, and Who has been known
to Jesus the Messiah alone.
NOTE.--The Angels of the Fifth or Angelic World are arranged in very different
order by various Kabalistic Rabbis.
_______________________________________________________________________
Translated from the Hebrew Text of Joannes Stephanus Rittangelius,
1642: which is also to be found in the "Oedipus Aegyptiacus" of
Athanasius Kircher, 1653.
(These paragraphs are very obscure in meaning, and the Hebrew text is probably
very corrupt.)
The First Path is called the Admirable or the Hidden Intelligence (the Highest
Crown): for it is the Light giving the power of comprehension of that First
Principle which has no beginning; and it is the Primal Glory, for no created
being can attain to its essence.
The Second Path is that of the Illuminating Intelligence: it is the Crown
of Creation, the Splendour of the Unity, equalling it, and it is exalted
above every head, and named by the Kabalists the Second Glory.
The Third Path is the Sanctifying Intelligence, and is the foundation of
Primordial wisdom, which is called the Creator of Faith, and its roots are
AMN; and it is the parent of Faith, from which doth Faith emanate.
The Fourth Path is named the Cohesive or Receptacular Intelligence; and
is so called because it contains all the holy powers, and from it emanate
all the spiritual virtues with the most exalted essences: they emanate one
from the other by the power of the Primordial Emanation. The Highest Crown.)
(1)
The Fifth Path is called the Radical Intelligence, because it resembles
the Unity, uniting itself to the Binah, (2) or Intelligence which
emanates from the Primordial depths of Wisdom or Chokmah. (3)
The Sixth Path is called the Mediating Intelligence, because in it are multiplied
the influxes of the emanations, for it causes that influence to flow into
all the reservoirs of the Blessings, with which these themselves are united.
The Seventh Path is the Occult Intelligence, because it is the Refulgent
Splendour of all the Intellectual virtues which are perceived by the eyes
of intellect, and by the contemplation of faith.
The Eighth Path is called the Absolute or Perfect Intelligence, because
it is the means of the primordial, which has no root by which it can cleave,
nor rest, except in the hidden places of Gedulah, (4)
Magnificence, from which emanates its own proper essence.
The Ninth Path is the Pure Intelligence, so called because it purifies the
Numerations, it proves and corrects the designing of their representation,
and disposes their unity with which they are combined without diminution
or division.
The Tenth Path is the Resplendent Intelligence, because it is exalted above
every head, and sits on the throne of Binah (the Intelligence spoken
of in the Third Path). It illuminates the splendour of all the lights,
and causes an influence to emanate from the Prince of countenances. (5)
The Eleventh Path is the Scintillating Intelligence, because it is the essence
of that curtain which is placed close to the order of the disposition, and
this is a special dignity given to it that it may be able to stand before
the Face of the Cause of Causes.
The Twelfth Path is the Intelligence of Transparency, because it is that
species of Magnificence called Chazchazit, (6) the place whence
issues the vision of those seeing in apparitions. (That is the prophecies
by seers in a vision.)
The Thirteenth Path is named the Uniting Intelligence, and is so called
because it is itself the Essence of Glory. It is the Consummation of the
Truth of individual spiritual things.
The Fourteenth Path is the Illuminating Intelligence and is so called because
it is that Chashmal (7) which is the founder of the concealed
and fundamental ideas of holiness and of their stages of preparation.
The Fifteenth Path is the Constituting Intelligence, so called because it
constitutes the substance of creation in pure darkness, and men have spoken
of these contemplations; it is that darkness spoken of in Scripture, Job
xxxviii. 9, "and thick darkness a swaddling band for it."
The Sixteenth Path is the Triumphal or Eternal Intelligence, so called because
it is the pleasure of the Glory, beyond which is no other Glory like to
it, and it is called also the Paradise prepared for the Righteous.
The Seventeenth Path is the Disposing Intelligence, which provides Faith
to the Righteous, and they are clothed with the Holy Spirit by it, and it
is called the Foundation of Excellence in the state of higher things.
The Eighteenth Path is called the Intelligence or House of Influence (by
the greatness of whose abundance the influx of good things upon created
beings is increased), and from its midst the arcana and hidden senses are
drawn forth, which dwell in its shade and which cling to it, from the Cause
of all causes.
The Nineteenth Path is the Intelligence of the Secret of all the activities
of the spiritual beings, and is so called because of the influence diffused
by it from the most high and exalted sublime glory.
The Twentieth Path is the Intelligence of Will, and is so called because
it is the means of preparation of all and each created being, and by this
intelligence the existence of the Primordial Wisdom becomes known.
The Twenty-first Path is the Intelligence of Conciliation and Reward, and
is so called because it receives the divine influence which flows into it
from its benediction upon all and each existence.
The Twenty-second Path is the Faithful Intelligence, and is so called because
by it spiritual virtues are increased, and all dwellers on earth are nearly
under its shadow.
The Twenty-third Path is the Stable Intelligence, and it is so called because
it has the virtue of consistency among all numerations.
The Twenty-fourth Path is the Imaginative Intelligence, and it is so called
because it gives a likeness to all the similitudes which are created in
like manner similar to its harmonious elegancies.
The Twenty-fifth Path is the Intelligence of Probation, or Temptation, and
is so called because it is the primary temptation, by which the Creator
trieth all righteous persons.
The Twenty-sixth Path is called the Renewing Intelligence, because the Holy
God renews by it all the changing things which are renewed by the creation
of the world.
The Twenty-seventh Path is the Active or Exciting Intelligence, and it is
so called because through it every existent being receives its spirit and
motion.
The Twenty-eighth Path is called the Natural Intelligence; by it is completed
and perfected the nature of all that exists beneath the Sun.
(This Path is omitted by Rittangelius: I presume by inadvertence.)
The Twenty-ninth Path is the Corporeal Intelligence, so called because it
forms every body which is formed in all the worlds, and the reproduction
of them.
The Thirtieth Path is the Collective Intelligence, and Astrologers deduce
from it the judgment of the Stars and celestial signs, and perfect their
science, according to the rules of the motions of the stars.
The Thirty-first Path is the Perpetual Intelligence; but why is it so called?
Because it regulates the motions of the Sun and Moon in their proper order,
each in an orbit convenient for it.
The Thirty-second Path is the Administrative Intelligence, and it is so
called because it directs and associates the motions of the seven planets,
directing all of them in their own proper courses.
_______________________________________________________________________
It is of considerable importance to a clear understanding of this Occult
treatise that the whole work be read through before comment is made, so
that the general idea of the several chapters may become in the mind one
concrete whole. A separate consideration of the several parts should follow
this general grasp of the subject, else much confusion may result.
This hook may be considered to he an Allegorical Parallel between the Idealism
of Numbers and Letters and the various parts of the Universe, and it sheds
much light on many mystic forms and ceremonies yet extant, notably upon
Freemasonry, the Tarot, and the later Kabalah, and is a great aid to the
comprehension of the Astro-Theosophic schemes of the Rosicrucians. To obtain
the full value of this Treatise, it should he studied hand in hand with
Hermetic attributions, the "Isiac Tablet," and with a complete
set of the designs, symbols and allocation of the Trump cards of the Tarot
pack, for which see my translation of The Sanctum Regnum of the Tarot,
by Eliphas Levi.
Note that the oldest MSS. copies of the "Sepher Yetzirah" have
no vowel points: the latest editions have them. The system of points in
writing Hebrew was not perfected until the seventh century, and even then
was not in constant use. Ginsburg asserts that the system of vowel pointing
was invented by a Rabbi Mocha in Palestine about A.D. 570, who designed
it to assist his pupils. But Isaac Myer states that there are undoubted
traces of pointing in Hebrew MSS. of the second century. According to A.
E. Waite there is no extant Hebrew MSS. with the vowel points older than
the tenth century.
The words "Sepher Yetzirah" are written in Hebrew from right to
left, SPR YTzYRH, Samech Peh Resh, Yod Tzaddi Yod Resh Heh; modes of transliteration
vary with different authors. Yod is variously written in English letters
as I, Y, or J, or sometimes Ie. Tzaddi is property Tz; but some write Z
only, which is misleading because the Hebrew has also a true Z, Zain.
_______________________________________________________________________
The twelve sections of this chapter introduce this philosophic disquisition
upon the Formation and Development of the Universe. Having specified the
subdivision of the letters into three classes, the Triad, the Heptad, and
the Dodecad, these are put aside for the time; and the Decad mainly considered
as specially associated with the idea of Number, and as obviously composed
of the Tetrad and the Hexad.
1. Thirty-two. This is the number of the Paths or Ways of Wisdom,
which are added as a supplement. 32 is written in Hebrew by LB, Lamed and
Beth, and these are the last and first letters of the Pentateuch. The number
32 is obtained thus--2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2=32. Laib, LB as a Hebrew word, means
the Heart of Man.
Paths.The word here is NTIBUT, netibuth; NTIB meant primarily a pathway,
or foot-made track; but is here used symbolically in the same sense as the
Christian uses the word, way--the way of life: other meanings are--stage,
power, form, effect; and later, a doctrinal formula, in Kabalistic writings.
2. Jah. This divine name is found in Psalm lxviii. 4; it is translated
into Greek as kurios, and into Latin as dominus, and commonly
into the English word, Lord: it is really the first half of the word
IHVH or Jehovah, or the Yahveh of modern scholars.
3. Jehovah Tzabaoth. This divine name is printed in English Bibles
as Jehovah Sabaoth, or as "Lord of hosts" as in Psalm xxiv. 10.
TzBA is an army.
4. God of Israel. Here the word God is ALHI, which in unpointed Hebrew
might be God, or Gods, or My God.
5. The Elohim of the Living. The words are ALHIM ChIIM. Alhim, often
written in English letters as Elohim, or by Godftey Higgins as Aleim, seems
to be a masculine plural of the feminine form Eloah, ALH, of the divine
masculine name EL, AL; this is commonly translated God, and means strong,
mighty, supreme. Chiim is the plural of Chi--living, or life.
ChIH is a living animal, and so is ChIVA. ChII is also life.
Frey in his dictionary gives ChIIM as the plural word lives, or vitae.
The true adjective for living is ChIA. Elohim Chiim, then, apart
from Jewish or Christian preconception, is "the living Gods,"
or "the Gods of the lives, i.e., living ones." Rittangelius
gives Dii viventes, "The living Gods," both words in the plural.
Pistorius omits both words. Postellus, the orthodox, gives Deus Vivus. The
Elohim are the Seven Forces, proceeding from the One Divine, which control
the "terra viventium," the manifested world of life.
6. God. In this case we have the simple form AL, EL.
7. Sepharim. SPRIM, the plural masculine of SPR, commonly translated
book or letter: the meaning here is plainly "forms of
expression."
8. Numbers, Letters and Sounds. The three Hebrew words here given
are, in unpointed Hebrew, SPR, SPR and SIPUR. Some late editors, to cover
the difficulty of this passage, have given SPR, SPUR, SIPR, pointing them
to read Separ, Seepur, Saypar.
The sense of the whole volume appears to need their translation as Numbers,
Letters and Sounds. Pistorius gave "Scriptis, numeratis, pronunciatis."
Postellus gave "Numerans, numerus, numeratus," thus losing the
contrasted meanings; and so did Rittangelius, who gave "Numero, numerante,
numerato."
9. The Ineffable Sephiroth. The words are SPIRUT BLIMH, Sephiruth
Belimah. The simplest translation is "the voices from nothing."
The Ten Sephiruth of the Kabalah are the "Ten Primary Emanations from
the Divine Source," which are the primal forces leading to all manifestation
upon every plane in succession. Buxtorf gives for Sephiruth--predicationes
logicae. The word seems to me clearly allied to the Latin spiritus--spirit,
soul, wind; and is used by Quintilian as a sound, or noise. The meaning
of Belimah is more doubtful. Rittangelius always gives "praeter
illud ineffabile." Pistorius gives "praeter ineffabile."
Postellus evades the difficulty and simply puts the word Belimah into his
Latin translation. In Frey's Hebrew Dictionary BLIMH is translated as nothing,
without any other suggestion; BLI is "not," MR is "anything."
In Kabalistic writings the Sephiruth, the Divine Voices and Powers, are
called "ineffbilis," not to be spoken of, from their sacred nature.
10. The classification of the Hebrew letters into a Triad, Heptad and Dodecad,
runs through the whole philosophy of the Kabalah. Many ancient authors added
intentional blinds, suds as forming the Triad of A.M.T., Ameth, truth; and
of AMN, Amen.
11. The Two Covenants, by the Word or Spirit, and by the Flesh, made by
Jehovah with Abraham, Genesis xvii. The Covenant of Circumcision was to
be an outward and visible sign of the Divine promise made to Ahraham and
his offspring. The Hebrew word for circumcision is Mulah, MULH: note that
MLH is also synonymous with DBR, dabar,--verbum or word.
12. Rittangelius gives "replace the formative power upon his throne."
Postellus gives restore the device to its place."
13. Abyss; the word is OUMQ for OMQ, a depth, vastness, or valley.
14. My Hermetic rituals explained this Yetziratic attribution.
15. The Lord the only God. The words are ADUN IChID AL, or "Adonai
(as commonly written) the only El."
16. Seat. The word is MOUN, dwelling, habitation, or throne.
17. Lightning flash. In the early edition the words "like scintillating
flame" are used: the Hebrew word is BRQ. Many Kabalists have shown
how the Ten Sephiroth are symbolised by the zig-zag lightning flash.
18. God; the Divine name here is Jehovah.
19. The text gives only RTzUAV ShUB--"currendo et redeundo," but
the commentators have generally considered this to be a quotation from Ezekiel
i. 14, referred to H ChIVT, the living creatures, kerubic forms.
20. The Spirit of the Gods of the Living. RUCh ALHIM ChIIIM; or as R. gives
it, "spiritus Deorum Viventium." Orthodoxy would translate these
words "The spirit of the living God."
21. AL ChI H OULMIM; "the Living God of Ages"; here the word God
really is in the singular.
22. The Voice, Spirit and Word are QUL, RUCh, DBR. A very notable Hebrew
expression of Divinatory intuition was BATh QUL, the Daughter of the Voice.
23. Formless and Void. THU and BHU; these two words occur in Genesis i.
2, and are translated "waste and void."
24. Note the order in which the primordial elements were produced. First,
Spirit (query Akasa, Ether); then Air, Vayu; then Water, Apas, which condenses
into solid elementary Earth, Prithivi; and lastly from the Water He formed
Fire.
25. The first name is often written Ophanim, the letters are AUPNIM; in
the Vision of Ezekiel i. 16, the word occurs and is translated "Wheels."
ShRPIM are the mysterious beings of Isaiah vi. 2; the word otherwise is
translated Serpent, and in Numbers xxi. 6, as "fiery serpents":
also in verse 8 as "fiery serpent" when Jehovah said "Make
thee a fiery serpent and set it upon a pole." Kerubim. The Hebrew words
arc ChIVTh H QDSh, holy animals: I have ventured to put Kerubim, as the
title of the other Biblical form of Holy mysterious animal, as given in
1 Kings vi. 23 and Exodus xxv. 18, and indeed Genesis iii. 24. Bible dictionaries
generally give the word as Cherubim, but in Hebrew the initial letter is
always K and not Ch.
26. Three. In the first edition I overlooked this word three; and
putting and for as, made four classes of serving beings.
27. This is verse 4 of Psalm civ.
28. Here follow the permutations of the name IHV, which is the Tetragrammaton--Jehovah,
without the second or final Heh: IHV is a Tri-grammaton, and is more suitable
to the third or Yetziratic plane. HVI is the imperative form of the verb
to be, meaning be thou; HIV is the infinitive; and VIH is
future. In IHV note that Yod corresponds to the Father; Heh to Binah, the
Supernal Mother; and Vau to the Microprosopus--Son.
29. Note the subdivision of the Decad into the Tetrad--four elements; and
the Hexad--six dimensions of space.
This chapter consists of philosophic remarks on the twenty-two sounds
and letters of the Hebrew alphabet, and hence connected with the air by
speech, and it points out the uses of those letters to form words--the signs
of ideas, and the symbols of material substances.
30. Soul; the word is NPSh, which is commonly translated soul,
meaning the living personality of man, animal or existing thing: it corresponds
almost to the Theosophic Prana plus the stimulus of Kama.
31. This is the modern classification of the letters into guttural, palatal,
lingual, dental and labial sounds.
32. The 231 Gates. The number 242 is obtained by adding together
all the numbers from 1 to 22. The Hebrew letters can he placed in pairs
in 242 different positions: thus ab, ag, ad, up to at; then
ba, bb, bg, bd, up to bt, and so on to ts, tt: this
is in direct order only, without reversal. For the reason why eleven are
deducted, and the number 231 specified, see the Table and Note 15 in the
edition of Postellus.
33. Non-existent; the word is AIN, nothingness. Ain precedes Ain
Suph, boundlessness; and Ain Suph Aur, Boundless Light.
34. Body; the word is GUP, usually applied to the animal material
body, but here means "one whole."
This chapter is especially concerned with the essence of the Triad, as
represented by the Three Mothers, Aleph, Mem, and Shin. Their development
in three directions is pointed out, namely in the Macrocosm or Universe;
in the Year or in Time; and in the Microcosm or Man.
35. The importance of equilibrium is constantly reiterated in the Kabalah.
The "Siphra Dtzeniouta," or "Book of Mystery," opens
with a reference to this Equilibrium as a fundamental necessity of stable
existence.
36. Heavens. The Hebrew word Heshamaim HShMIM, has in it the element
of Aesh, fire, and Mim, water; and also Shem, name; The Name is IHVH,
attributed to the elements. ShMA is in Chaldee a name for the Trinity (Parkhurst).
ShMSh is the Sun, and Light, and a type of Christ, the Sun of Righteousness.
Malachi iv. 2.
37. Were produced. The Hebrew word BRA, is the root. Three Hebrew
words are used in the Bible to represent the idea of making, producing or
creating.
BRIAH, Briah, giving shape, Genesis i. 1.
OShIH, Ashiah, completing, Genesis i. 31.
ITzIRH, Yetzirah, forming, Genesis ii. 7.
To these the Kabalists add the word ATzLH, with the meaning of "producing
something manifest from the unmanifested."
Emanation. | Shin. | Aleph. | Mem. |
Macrocosm. | Primal Fire. | Spirit. | Primal Water. |
Universe. | Heavens. | Atmosphere. | The Earth. |
Elements. | Terrestrial Fire. | Air. | Water. |
Man. | Head. | Chest. | Belly. |
Year. | Heat. | Temperate. | Cold. |
This is the special chapter of the Heptad, the powers and properties
of the Seven. Here again we have the threefold attribution of the numbers
and letters to the Universe, to the Year, and to Man. The supplemental paragraphs
have been printed in modern form by Kalisch; they identify the several letters
of the Heptad more definitely with the planets, days of the week, human
attributes and organs of the senses.
39. These numbers have been a source of difference between the editors and
copyists, hardly any two editors concurring. I have given the numbers arising
from continual multiplication of the product by each succeeding unit from
one to seven. 2x1=2, 2x3=6, 6x4=24, 24x5=120, 120x6=720, 720x7=5040.
40. In associating the particular letters to each planet the learned Jesuit
Athanasius Kircher allots Beth to the Sun, Gimel to Venus, Daleth to Mercury,
Kaph to Luna, Peh to Saturn, Resh to Jupiter, and Tau to Mars. Kalisch in
the supplementary paragraphs gives a different attribution; both are wrong,
according to clairvoyant investigation. Consult the Tarot symbolism given
by Court de Gebelin, Eliphas Levi, and my notes to the Isiaic Tablet
of Bembo. The true attribution is probably not anywhere printed. The
planet names here given are Chaldee words.
41. The Seven Heavens and the Seven Earths are printed with errors, and
I believe intentional mistakes, in many occult ancient books. Some Hermetic
MSS. have the correct names and spelling.
42. On the further attribution of these Seven letters, note that Postellus
gives: Vita--mors, Pax--afflictio, Sapientia--stultitia, Divitiae (Opus)--paupertas,
Gratia--opprobrium, Proles--sterilitas, Imperium--servitus. Pistorius gives:
Vita--mors, Pax--bellum, Scientia--ignorantia, Divitiae--paupertas, Gratia--abominatio,
Semen (Proles)--sterilitas, Imperium (Dominatio)--servitus.
This chapter is specially concerned with the Dodecad; the number twelve
is itself pointed out, and the characters of its component units, once more
in the three zones of the universe, year and man; the last paragraph gives
a recapitulation of the whole number of letters: the Supplement gives a
form of allotment of the several letters.
43. It is necessary to avoid confusion between these letters; different
authors translate them in different manners. Heh or Hé not be confused
with Cheth, or Heth, Ch. Teth, Th also must be kept distinct from the final
letter Tau, T, which is one of the double letters; the semi-English pronunciation
of these two letters is much confused, each is at times both t and th; Yod
is either I, Y, or J; Samech is simple S, and must not be confused with
Shin, Sh, one of the mother letters; Oin is often written in English Hebrew
grammars as Ayin, and Sometimes as Gnain; Tzaddi must not be confused with
Zain, Z; and lastly Qoph, Q, is very often replaced by K, which is hardly
defensible as there is a true K in addition.
44. Postellus gives suspicion and Pistorius, mind.
45. These letters are the initials of the 12 Zodiacal signs in Hebrew nomenclature.
They are:
Teth | Telah | Aries | Mem | Maznim | Libra |
Shin | Shor | Taurus | Oin | Oqereb | Scorpio |
Tau | Thaumim | Gemini | Qoph | Qesheth | Sagittarius |
Samech | Sartan | Cancer | Gimel | Gedi | Capricornus |
Aleph | Aryeh | Leo | Daleth | Dali | Aquarius |
Beth | Bethuleh | Virgo | Daleth | Dagim | Pisces |
This chapter is a resumé of the preceding five; it calls
the universe and mankind to witness to the truth of the scheme of distribution
of the powers of the numbers among created forms, and concludes with the
narration that this philosophy was revealed by the Divine to Abraham, who
received and faithfully accepted it, as a form of Wisdom under a Covenant.
49. The Dragon, TLI, Theli. The Hebrew letters amount in numeration to 440,
that is 400, 30 and 10. The best opinion is that Tali or Theli refers to
the 12 Zodiacal constellations along the great circle of the Ecliptic; where
it ends there it begins again, and so the ancient occultists drew the Dragon
with its tail in its mouth. Some have thought that Tali referred to the
constellation Draco, which meanders across the Northern polar sky; others
have referred it to the Milky Way; others to an imaginary line joining Caput
to Cauda Draconis, the upper and lower nodes of the Moon. Adolphe Franck
says that Theli is an Arabic word.
50. Happiness, or a good end, or simply good, TUBH.
51. Misery, or an evil end, or simply evil, ROH.
52. This Hebrew version omits the allotment of the remaining six. Mayer
gives the paragraph thus:--The triad of amity is the heart and the two ears;
the triad of enmity is the liver, gall, and the tongue; the three life-givers
are the two nostrils and the spleen; the three death-dealing ones are the
mouth and the two lower openings of the body.
53. God. In this case the name is AL, EL.
54. This last paragraph is generally considered to be less ancient than
the remainder of the treatise, and by another author.
55. The Lord most high. OLIU ADUN. Adun or Adon, or Adonai, ADNI, are commonly
translated Lord; Eliun, OLIUN, is the more usual form of "the
most high one."
56. Him. Rittangelius gives "credidit in Tetragrammaton,"
but this word is not in the Hebrew.
57. Tongue. The verbal covenant.
58. Speech. The Hebrew has "upon his tongue."
59. The Hebrew version of Rabbi Judah Ha Levi concludes with the phrase,
"and said of him, Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee."
Rabbi Luria gives the Hebrew version which I have translated. Postellus
gives: "He drew him into the water, He rose up in spirit, He inflamed
him in seven suitable forms with twelve signs." Mayer gives: "Er
zog sie mit Wasser, zundet sie an mit Feuer; erregte sie mit Geist; verbannte
sie mit sieben, goss sie aus mit den zwolf Gestirnen." "He drew
them with water, He kindled them with fire, He moved them with spirit, distributed
them with seven, and sent them forth with twelve."
1. The Highest Crown is Kether, the First Sephira, the first emanation
from the Ain Suph Aur, the Limit-less Light.
2. Binah, or Understanding, is the Third Sephira.
3. Chokmah, Wisdom, is the Second Sephira.
4. Gedulah is a synonym of Chesed, Mercy, the Fourth Sephira.
5. Metatron, the Intelligence of the First Sephira, and the reputed guide
of Moses.
6. This word is from ChZCh, a seer, seership. Chazuth is a vision.
7. This word means "scintillating flame."
The "Thirty-two Paths of Wisdom" refer to the Ten Sephiroth and
the Twenty-two letters, each supplying a type of divine power and attributes.
In my Introduction to the Kabalah will be found a diagram showing
how the Paths from Eleven to Thirty-two connect the several Sephiroth, and
are deemed to transmit the divine influence. Some teachers of Occult Science
also allot the Twenty-two Trumps of the Tarot Cards to the twenty-two Paths.
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