The Canon

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THE CANON “Certain adhering partly to these [Ptolmey’s measures of the universe] as if having propounded great conclusions, and supposed things worthy of reason, have framed enormous and endless heresies: and one of these is Colarbasus, who attempts to explain religion by measures and numbers.”—HIPPOLYTUS, “Refutation,” bk. iv., ch. iii. THE CANON A N E XPOSITION OF THE P AGAN M YSTERY PERPETUATED IN THE CABALA AS THE R ULE OF ALL THE A RTS BY W ILLIAM S TIRLING “Every number is infinite – there is no difference.” The Book of the Law. CELEPHAÏS PRESS First published anonymously London, Elkin Matthews 1897 Reprinted, with corrections, by Research Into Lost Knowledge Organisation, London, 1974 and 1981 This electronic edition issued by Celephaïs Press, somewhere beyond the Tanarian Hills, 2003 This text is in the public domain. CONTENTS CHAP I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. XIII. PAGE PREFACE . . . . . INTRODUCTION . . . THE HOLY OBLATION . THE CABALA . . . . NOAH’S ARK . . . . NAMES OF THE GODS . THE HOLY ROOD . . THE TOWER OF BABEL . THE TEMPLES . . . . FREEMASONRY . . . MUSIC OF THE SPHERES . RITUAL . . . . . GEOGRAPHY . . . . RHETORIC . . . . INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii . 1 . 16 . 39 . 68 . 82 . 139 . 157 183 . 238 . 258 . 275 . 301 . 334 . 399 PREFACE TO “SYMBOLISTS” CONTEMPT of ancient learning is a sure sign of an enlightened mind. We are the men. Before our time, reason but little influenced mankind. The demonstration of the above assertion being that in times gone by there were no railways, steamboats, torpedoes, or any of those anaesthetic inventions in regard to time and space on which we pride ourselves, and upon which we base our claim to have advanced the general welfare of mankind. Marvels of science, mechanical improvements, increase of wealth (and income tax), and the perfection of all warlike apparatus, seem to blind us to the fact that abstract qualities of mind have shown no symptoms of progression. A rich barbarian, pale and dyspeptic, florid or flatulent, seated in a machine travelling at eighty miles an hour, with the machine luxuriously upholstered and well heated, and yet the traveller's mind a blank, or only occupied with schemes to cheat his fellows vii viii PREFACE. and advance himself is, in the abstract, no advance upon a citizen of Athens, in the time of Pericles, who never travelled faster than a bullock cart could take him, in all his life. Science has no marvels; every so-called discovery heralded as marvellous (for men of science understand the power of bold advertisement to the full as well as scientists in clog dancing, in hair dressing, and tightrope walking), is not a marvel in the true meaning of the word. The Röntgen Rays, the microphone, the phonograph, are all as simple in themselves as is the property of amber rubbed to take up straws. From the beginning there have been Roentgen Rays, and the principles of microphone and phonograph are coeval with the world. The wonder lies not in the discovery (so-called), but in the fact they have remained so long unknown. The real mystery of mysteries is the mind of man. Why, with a pen or brush, one man sits down and makes a masterpiece, and yet another, with the selfsame instruments and opportunities, turns out a daub or botch, is twenty times more curious than all the musings of the mystics, works of the Rosicrucians, or the mechanical contrivances which seem to-day so fine, and which our children will disdain as clumsy. The conquests of the mind never grow stale, let he who doubts it read a page of Plato and compare it with some à la mode philosopher. I tak