Yesterday
we presented a selection from Benvenuto Cellini’s autobiography, La Vita, in
which he describes two experiments of conjuration. Published magical journals
and accounts from the Middle Ages and he Renaissance our, to our detriment, not
incredibly common. So, while this account is not an account by a magician it is
one with which we should be familiar. Such accounts can help us get a broader
picture of how magic was actually practiced.
There is of course in modern magic some debate regarding
how to interpret the grimoires. The idea that they are woefully incomplete such
as to be unworkable is more or less, fortunately, dismissed. The idea that they
are full of blinds and mis-directions is also, again fortunately, more or less
dismissed. Now the question is more one of discreet and perfect textual
adherence, or consideration of magic within a context that allows some blending
and idiosyncrasy.
Jason Miller has often pointed out that if magicians did
precisely what the grimoires said all the time we would have many more examples
of physical magical artifacts surviving, and for the most part we don’t. I have
pointed out many times that the idea that texts were viewed as distinct and
even holy instructions written by individual groups of spirits is shown faulty,
not simply by the spirits often being the same book to book, but by the fact
that we can trace literary lineages. Books clearly copy and draw from one
another. Working books clearly copy pieces from other books and blend them
together and make adjustments. Further what we generally see are translations
which may combine multiple differing manuscript sources each source having
differences, and so our readings are often not the readings of a singular book
by a singular hand. Work books, and the books of cunningfolk show blending and
adaptation, and accounts of the work of cunningfolk do as well.
One might counter that the cunningfolk are not quite the
same as the educated magicians who used the grimoires. This distinction is a
faulty one when we consider the actual history. Even forgetting that that is
the case, we have Cellini’s account of a priest, who has studied necromancy,
performing magic. So, what does that account tell us?
Firstly, Cellini’s priest performs the conjuration in two
different ways. He works with a virgin boy scryer in one instance after having
worked without the boy in the first. The conjurations he uses the second time
are different than the first. His circle construction is more complicated the
second time. Aside from that the description of the magician’s work is not
particularly varied. It does not seem so much that he is using a different
system each time but rather that he is ratchetting up his effort the second
time by using what he believes to be more powerful conjurations and circle
constructions. Cellini says that the first conjuration did not obtain his
desire and upon that the magician offered a second attempt and assured that
second attempt would secure success. This, to me, indicates that he was leveling
up his game in the second attempt.
There is no description of special clothing or of special
tools, save that the necromancer has a robe or robes. One man holds a pentacle
in the first attempt, and the other two deal with fires and perfumes. Curiously, he describes each being introduced to the circle as if there is some ritual of
bringing someone in. While the grimoires, when describing a master and acolytes,
instruct that the acolytes hold a sword and a candle, and stand in a particular
spot, none of that is done here. The necromancer likely had a sword or rod because
he drew circles on the ground, but no other such indication is given of him
using any tools during the conjuration. They also do not describe any altar or
table.
It seems that Cellini and the necromancer were both able to
perceive the devils they conjured, it also seems that they did not necessarily
perceive the same things, the necromancer having to relay the answer to Cellini
regarding his request. The boy clearly sees different things from what they
see. Cellini’s account does not seem concerned about this. The lack of concern
either suggests that it was a given, or that it simply did not concern Cellini
and regardless of the difference he was satisfied with the experience.
The primary materials seem to be the perfumes of which
there seem to be a significant amount. The perfumes seem to be
the main tool by which the spirits are called, along with the conjurations. The
foul-smelling drugs, and flatulence, seem to be the most effective items in
banishing them, more so than the magician’s dismissals. This seems to fit some
of the ideas Dr. Stephen Skinner has put forth regarding spirits and smells.
In both instances Cellini’s necromancer either did not call
forth a particular single spirit. In the first it is unclear, but in the second
he called on several spirits by name. In both cases many spirits arrive. The
magician seems unable to determine the number of spirits conjured or to command
the legion of spirits. It seems as if the conjuration generally calls forth
spirits. There is no effort to bind the spirits to a particular space,
behavior, or appearance. This would suggest that the method is not strictly Solomonic
in nature. In fact, most elements of a Solomonic conjuration seem to be missing
from the description, whether or not they were missing from what was done.
Regarding the conjurations they were a combination of Hebrew,
Greek and Latin. Cellini does not mention the use of Italian. It may be that
conjurations were not performed in the vernacular or that it was not worth
being mentioned that the vernacular was used. It is likely that at this point,
in a Catholic country, a priest would work magic in Latin given that magic was
a parallel to liturgy.
One of the things which has always been of interest to me
is that the magician has several books with him. These books are in use in the
ceremony because he must collect and bundle them at the end, therefore they
have been taken out from their bundling. The books are not his consecrated
ritual book upon which spirits have sworn. We know this because he asks for
Cellini to help him in creating such a book. To me this has always suggested
that the magician reads from a book when making his conjuration…although this
would be more reasonable with a single consecrated book having all the
conjurations he might use rather than several. It also counters the oft asserted
idea that magicians were lucky to have a single magical text and would study
and probe that singular text because they were unlikely to ever see another.
All textual evidence shows thoroughly that this was untrue, yet it is still
repeated as a justification for some modern approaches and interpretations.
This account makes it very clear that even this random necromancer priest had
multiple books at his disposal simultaneously. This also indicates that it was
unlikely that a single book of magic was viewed as a discreet and unalterable
thing, or he would not have needed multiple books with him at the time of his
efforts.
By the Renaissance the Colosseum was a ruin and an unkept
space. It had been used as a quarry and thus the structure was in decay with
parts of the building having been removed. Some locals used it for keeping stalls
of their animals. So, it was a relatively abandoned space in the city. We
sometimes note that the grimoires are not particularly express about the spaces
in which to conjure, but what information we have often suggests far off and
remote spaces. Abandoned spaces. The Colosseum would be such despite being
within a city.
Cellini’s account is an account of a priest who was learned
in nigromancy, along with a partner with experience in nigromancy, during the Renaissance
rather than a later account of a cunning person. It is an account of someone
who is an example of a magician operating within the grimoire tradition during
its own period of time. We don’t know how complete or how incomplete the
account is, but Cellini does recount two instances similarly. Based on Cellini’s
account one operating in this manner would retreat to a remote or abandoned
space. The principle exorcist needs a
robe but additional participants do not need special clothes or preparations. A
circle is to be drawn, and ritual preparations are made while drawing it – one would
assume the psalms. Once everyone enters the circle fires are lit – I would
assume braziers; and rich and fine perfumes are placed thereon. A pentacle is
held up, if there is a scryer the pentacle is held above the scryer. The
conjurer recites conjurations and prayers calling upon God, and upon the
spirits by name. When the spirits arrive, they may be asked for a request. Once
finished the spirits may be dismissed using foul odors and instructions to
depart, or the Church bells striking morning prayers might dismiss them.
Cellini’s
account presents a very stripped-down version of conjuration. Before we dismiss this though, consider John
Dee’s approach. It was largely a prayer of praise and confession and then
prayers for the appearance of angels. There was not much more to it than that.
Trithemius’s Art of Drawing Spirits into Crystals (DSIC) looks very similar to
the means by which Dee worked. DSIC might be a spurious text, but still seems
to indicate well enough a basic approach to crystallomancy. This approach
follows the essential idea of the grimoires but eschews the complexity of the
tools and rituals. With that in mind, Cellini’s account, while not detailed,
probably covers the main beats of what happened and still illustrates for us
that conjuration in that context need not be as complicated as sometimes
described.
So,
in our previous post I noted that in today’s post I would provide some
information on my new book, Luminarium: A Guide to Cunning Conjuration. In
short, the book is a quick read, my test readers were all done it within a
couple of days. The goal of the book is to give magicians a system they can use
and begin doing conjurations with very little prep time. Reading the book,
gathering and preparing the materials, and preparing yourself could all be done
within a few days to a week – even if you’ve never done magic. Its goal is to
help get new magicians off the sidelines, but also to provide a new and
empowered way, drawing on old and traditional techniques, to give those already
experimenting with conjuration a simplified and powerful method. The method
essentially uses magic to augment the preparations and the conjuration itself
to make things simpler and more accessible for the magician.
Here
is some initial feedback the book has gotten:
“I think it absolutely is
fantastic this is so much needed and I think this is going to be really ground
breaking and game changing.” – Anneliese Anthoinette
“I had recently
petitioned Hekate to assist me with opening the ways to contact my HGA. My
first go-around attempt a few years ago did not go well and I did not make it
to the rite. The prayers and directions in your text were exactly what I was
looking for to start a different approach!” – Jonathan Masters
“All I gotta say is....
WOAH. That was powerful. And I am buzzing. Also, some real interesting physical
manifestation stuff happened” – Alexander Deckman
“I’m really excited for
people to read this.” – Aequus Nox
The Kindle Edition of
Luminarium is available for pre-order on Amazon now, it will go live June 7th.
The paperback edition should be available on Amazon either June 6th
or 7th. A paperback and a hardback edition will be available through
Barnes and Noble in a few weeks, as will paperback and hardback editions of
Living Spirits.
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