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cbe plADecs Che same metaphysical correspondences apply to another teaching that hermetism also shares with the most ancient traditions: that of the Seven—which prevails in the symbolism of the seven planets.
Metaphysically, Seven expresses the Three added to the Four. According to the established meaning of these numeric symbols, Seven is the manifestation of the creative principles (triad) in relation to the world made up of the four elements (3 + 4): the full expression of nature creating nature (natura nacurans) in action.1 These seven principles are simultaneously internal and external,137138 residing in man and the world in the visible and invisible aspect of both. Sometimes in the teaching they undergo a duplication, which expresses die duality existing between the Sun ("being”) aspect and the Moon ("energy”) aspect of each individual power (whence the hermetic symbolism of the two trees each with seven braches or seven fruits, arbor soils er arbor /unae); or else the duplication is that existing between the septenary as it is in itself, and what the septenary becomes upon the intervention of the "Fall" and the domination of the Harth element.
As for references, we can start with this from the Corpus Hermcticum: "The intellectual entity male and female god (the primordial androgyne composed of 0
and C ], which is Life and Light, engenders by means of the Logos, another creative intelligence, God of Fire and Fluid, who in turn creates seven ministers, who enclose within their circles die sense-perceived world. Their dominion is called sipappevf} (Fate).139 Here tile last phrase sends us back to the tradition referred to by Plato as the Wheel of Fate composed of seven spinning spheres, ruled by the "daughters of necessity.” The preceding distinction makes this necessity the work of a second god, beyond whose realm, however, exists an even higher intellectual androgynous entity. And in the function of this higher region can be seen the same seven principles.
Besides, in that gnostic, mystery ambience in which the Greek alchemical texts took form, it was customary to teach the existence of two septenaries, a lower, called the "sevenfold serpent, daughter of Ialdabaoth” (a name for the "second god”) and the other, higher and celestial, which in its totality could be made to correspond to the eighth sphere (that "beyond the Seven”) or ogdoad,140141 also placed by Plato above those of "necessity.”^ The gnostic Valentinus calls it the "Heavenly Jerusalem. "142 A gnostic-hermetic papyrus conceives of it as the "Holy Name, ” being the seven Greek vowels taken as symbols for the "Seven Heavens,” while the Eighth is the "Monad” or unity "of another kind,” which repeats them on a higher plane; we can then establish a connection with the schematic of the eight-rayed stars in the Chrysopoeia o/ Cleopatra.143 And vice versa we can consider, above all, the higher septenary and see in the last of the seven forms the substratum of the inferior septenary, which is born through the symbolic "Earth.” It is in this way that Roehme sees in the seventh principle, "Nature," the expansion (exteriorization) of the other six—the "body” being the seventh, and the others being its "life” (in a transcendent sense): "The seventh spirit is the spirit-fountain of nature. Once engendered, it becomes the mother of the other seven. It comprises in itself the other six, and generates them in turn (that is, manifests them in her own form by making them manifestations in visible nature; for example, die seven visible planets, which are the sense-perceived symbols of the invisible): since in the seventh exists the natural and corporeal essence ... In this, one of the seven forms of nature dominates the others, and each one collaborates according to its own essential strength, naturalizing itself in the body according to its rank.”8 "Body,” here, of course, has to be understood in the broadest sense, in which the tangible human body is merely a particular case of its own.
These same doctrines, presented in the form of myths and descriptions of cosmic entities, must be related to the meanings and possibilities of inner experience, especially with regard to the differentiation between the two septenaries. We can thus return to the hermetic text cited above9 wherein it is said that man, once awakened to a will to create, wants to bypass the limits of the circles of necessity and master the power residing in Fire. This is clearly a variation on the Promethean myth, which also ends in a "fall”: the man who is "superior to harmony [that is, to the universal order, the unity of the various laws and natural conditions], to harmony becomes a slave. Although hermaphrodite like the Father and above sleep, he remains dominated by sleep.”10 But sleep is an esoteric word traditionally meaning consciousness weighed down by the conditions of the animal body, in antithesis to the symbol of the awakening of the initiate with the work of descroying sleep (nidrdbhdngd in the Hindu texts), by the "sleepless” intellectual nature—t)
f which Plotinus speaks. As Buddhistic avidya, so this symbolic "sleep” can be considered equivalent as well to "oblivion," the Greek Xi)9r}, "lethe.” Macrobius11 transmits the tradition of the division of the "materia”— if/lr/— into two parts, of which one, as ambrosia, is the sustenance of the gods, and the other, as drink of the souls, constitutes the waters of the river Lethe, the water of forgetfulness; and this tradition clarifies the meaning of the teaching of the two septenaries.
It is not a question of two really different orders, but of the same reality with two different modes of manifestation.12 That which leads from one mode to the other is the event referred to in the Corpus Hermecicum, the epilogue of which is the "state of sleep,” "forgetting,” the loss of spiritual consciousness, the alteration of the most profound principle.
This teaching is explained by a disciple of Boehme, Georg Gichtel, who speaks of a fire (that is, an ego-power) that, when separated from the Light (that is, from the diffuse vitality), is turned into desire; this fire hotly devours all "oily wetness,” by which the light is extinguished13 and a black precipitation is produced (the color 144 of Saturn, whose dark point, in an engraving of Basil Valentine, is precisely directed toward the corpus principle). It is the "corruption of the luminous paradisiacal body" that in sleep (Gichtel uses exactly this word) is replaced by the black terrestrial body, "seat of an insatiable appetite, of sickness and death.” Gichtel continues: inwardly dead, the Soul (that original Fire) is converted into "Hell,” where eternal corruption takes place. "And then appear seven forms, daughters of the Fire Dragon, Spirit-of-this-world, who are the seals that keep the non-regenerated from perceiving the Divine Fire. ”145 Transmitted as motifs in fairy tales and fables are dragons with seven heads who guard "caverns” (that is to say the accesses to the interior of the "Earth,” to the depths locked in the corporeal) or "treasures" (Gold, or precious stones—in alchemy and before that in Gnosticism, gems frequently signified "powers”). According to Mithraism the soul, in order to free itself, must go through seven spheres marked by seven gates, each one of which is guarded by an angel of the "God of Light," an equivalence to the seals that bar the spiritual ascent to the higher septenary (the seven "heavens”).146 To each gate corresponds a degree of the Mithraic initiation, however, which confirms that it is not a question of theological abstractions but of allusions to transcendental forms of consciousness, which have been paralyzed by the power that acts on those who have been conquered by symbolic sleep.147 Fifteen