Marty. 14. Wensday. mane circa hora: 91. |
||
- Being desirous to proceed in this manner by consent, we bent | ||
ourselves to the Action. And after that Edward Talbot had called | ||
Uriel and saw him, I came to the desk from my Oratory. | ||
|
||
|
||
instead of Uriel3, did earnestly require the spiritual creature | ||
appearing, to shew who he was, and what was his name. At length he | ||
answered, and said to the hearing of Edward Talbot: |
||
i. | Uriel is my name, with difference called *Nariel4. | |
|
||
-
Then he went away for a while; and came again, and said thus: |
||
Uriel: The strength of God is always with thee. Dost thou know | ||
what thou writest? |
||
- In two senses, I may understand it; either that the good Angel | ||
ii. | Gabriel is always with me, though invisibly: or else that the | |
strength, and mighty hand of God, always is my defence. |
||
Uriel: Fortitudo Dei, tecum5 semper est. | ||
|
||
- He went away again, and came again, following or waiting upon | ||
another, and before that other, was a man having his head all | ||
covered with black. Then he that came so in the middle, did sit | ||
down in the chair, and spoke this word following: |
||
Michaël: Note. |
||
- This was Michaël, with his sword in his right hand. Then came | ||
Uriel to the man (having his head all hid, as it were in a black | ||
hood) and took off that black hood; and then lifted up the Table | ||
cloth. He looked under it, and put it down again; and lifted it up | ||
again. The Man stood still before Michaël. Then Michaël rose; | ||
and took off all the man's clothes, and left him as it were, only | ||
in his shirt. | ||
|
||
bigness of a six pence, having two letters in it thus: |
||
|
||
And gave it to Michaël. Uriel lifted up the Table cloth; and | ||
from thence, seemed to take apparel, and put it on the man, it | ||
seemed to be silk: and very full of wrinkles or pleats. And the | ||
man kneeled, and held up his hand. Uriel took like a Laurel bush6 | ||
and set upon the man's head. And then the man kneeled before | ||
Michaël. Michaël took the round thing with the Letters; and | ||
gave it to the man to eat, and he did eat it. |
||
Uriel: Lo are things covered. |
||
- Then he covered the Table and plucked the cloth over it, down | ||
to the ground, on every side. The man rose up: and Michaël | ||
dubbed him on the head with his sword. Then the man stood up. | ||
Then the man turned his face towards [Edward Talbot] the Skryer, | ||
and the man did resemble me (John Dee) in countenance. And then he | ||
turned to Michaël again. | ||
|
||
ANGELVS TVAE7 PROFESSIONES |
||
THE ANGEL OF YOUR PROFESSION |
||
iii. | - Then Edward Talbot asked me, if there were such Angels of a | |
Man's Profession: and I answered yea; as in Agrippa, and others is | ||
declared. |
||
Michaël: Leave your folly. Hold thy peace. | ||
|
||
unto him. |
||
- Yes
forsooth. |
||
Michaël: Thou camest hither to learn, and not to dispute. | ||
Laudate Dominum in operibus suis8. | ||
The Lard is praised in his workings |
||
- The
man kneeled down, and so went out of sight. |
||
Michaël: He has eaten strength against trouble. | ||
|
||
iv. | The + name NA9 be praised in trouble. |
|
- Now Michaël thrust out his right arm; With the Sword, and | ||
bade the Skryer to look. Then his Sword did cleave in two, and a | ||
great fire flamed out of it vehemently. Then he took a Ring out of | ||
the flame of his sword, and gave it to Uriel, and said thus: |
||
Michaël: The strength of God is unspeakable. Praised be God | ||
forever and ever. |
||
-
Then Uriel did make curtsy unto him. |
||
Michaël: After this sort must thy Ring be. Note it. |
||
- Then he rose and disappeared out of the Chair. And by and by | ||
came again, and said as follows: |
||
Michaël: I will reveal this Ring which was never revealed since | ||
the death of Solomon; with whom I was present, I was present with | ||
him in strength and mercy. | ||
|
||
works and wonders were wrought by Solomon10: |
||
|
||
This is it, which I have revealed unto thee: This is it, which | ||
philosophy dreamth of. This is it which the Angels scarce know. | ||
This is it, and blessed be his Name. Yea his name be blessed | ||
forever. |
||
-
Then he laid the Ring down upon the Table and said: |
||
Note. |
||
- It shewed to be a Ring of gold: with a seal engraved in it, and | ||
had a round thing in the middle of the Seal, and a thing like a V | ||
through the top of the circle, and an L in the bottom, and a bar | ||
clean through it. |
||
v. | And had 4 Letters in it, P.E.L.E.11 | |
|
||
vi. | seemed to fall through the Table, and he said thus: |
|
Michaël: So shall it do, at thy commandment. | ||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-
Then he went away, and came in again by and by. |
||
Michaël: Note. |
||
- Then he brought in the Seal, which he had shewed the other day: | ||
and opened his Sword, and bade the Skryer: read: and he read: | ||
vii. | EMETH14 |
|
|
||
Michaël: This I do open unto thee, because thou marveled at | ||
SIGILLVM DEI15. This is the Name of the Seal16, which be blessed | ||
forever. This is the Seal self17. This is Holy. This is pure. This | ||
is forever. Amen. |
||
- Then the Seal vanished away. And I said to my friend (the | ||
Skryer): Indeed, this other day, I considered diverse fashions of | ||
this Seal; and I found them much differing, one from another; and | ||
therefore I had need to know which of them I shall imitate, or how | ||
to make one perfect of them all. |
||
Michaël: Doubt not the making of it, for God has perfected all | ||
things. Ask not for the cause of my absence, nor of my apparel: for | ||
that Mystery is known to God. I have no clothing, as thou thyself | ||
shalt see. I am a spirit of Truth and Virtue. Yea you shall see | ||
me in Power, and I will visit you in HOPE. | ||
|
||
- Then he went away, and Uriel followed him. And then I said to | ||
my Skryer: it were good, We had ever some watch-word when we should | ||
not look for anymore matter at their hands, every time of their | ||
visiting us. | ||
|
||
Michaël: We lead time, Time leadeth not us. | ||
Put up thy pen. |
||
The Name of God, be blessed forever.
|
||
- Then they lifted up their hands heavenward (which heaven | ||
appeared also in the stone) and turned towards us and said: | ||
Valete |
||
Fare Well
|
||
- So they departed; and at their going, the chair, and the Table | ||
in the Stone, did seem to shake. |
||
-------------------------- Soli Deo omnis honor | ||
Laus et Gloria |
||
Amen. |
||
All Honor Praise and Glory |
||
to the One God. |
||
Amen. |
||
.oOo. |
-------------------------------------------------------------
's Notes
i. Agrippa has so; Cap. 24 Lib. 3. of The Occult Philosophy18.
ii. Potius erat dicendium Michaël Nam Gabriel est Praevalescentia Dei: et ita fortitudo quidem, sed altioris gradus.
iii. vide Agrippam de Triplice homonis Custode. Lib.3. Cap.22.
iv20. vide Reuchlinium de Verbo Mirifico de noie NA21.
v. vide Reuchlinium de verbo Mirifico de noie PELE22.
vi. The use of the Ring.
vii. De Sigilo Emeth vide Reuchlinium Arte Cabalisticvm.
-------------------------------------------------------------
notes
1. Wednesday March 14th MDLXXXII anno domini.