96,38 €
107,09 €
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Celtic Chess
Celtic Chess
96,38
107,09 €
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W.B. Yeats's Celtic Enochian Chess A black imitation-leather, gold unpublished notebook dated December 1898, shows us the Yeats-Gonne-Pollexfen team at work. Virginia Moore transcribes in 1954 this record of these three Celtic Twilight magicians exploring the four fabled "Cities," of Falias, Murius, Findias, and Gorias - regions of the four elements, earth, water, air, and fire - under their respective Gods (the Dagda, Danu, Brigid, and Lugh) and High Druids. On questioning the four Druids, Mau…
107.09
  • Publisher:
  • Year: 2020
  • Pages: 196
  • ISBN-10: 1906958947
  • ISBN-13: 9781906958947
  • Format: 15.6 x 23.4 x 1.8 cm, kieti viršeliai
  • Language: English
  • SAVE -10% with code: EXTRA

Celtic Chess (e-book) (used book) | Steve Nichols | bookbook.eu

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W.B. Yeats's Celtic Enochian Chess

A black imitation-leather, gold unpublished notebook dated December 1898, shows us the Yeats-Gonne-Pollexfen team at work. Virginia Moore transcribes in 1954 this record of these three Celtic Twilight magicians exploring the four fabled "Cities," of Falias, Murius, Findias, and Gorias - regions of the four elements, earth, water, air, and fire - under their respective Gods (the Dagda, Danu, Brigid, and Lugh) and High Druids.

On questioning the four Druids, Maud Gonne discovered she and Yeats had received the Initiation of the Cauldron (purification/water). Gonne also received the Initiation of the Stone (earth); whereas Yeats had attracted the powers of the Wand (air) signifying supernatural inspiration. Beyond these Elemental Initiations came that of the White Globe, governed by the elder-god Elathan (front cover). Yeats and Pollexfen went - or thought they went - with help of talismans to Falias, wherein a rough stone house George saw a skeleton of gold with diamond teeth. Next they went to Murias (water), where a Druid showed them a bath full of indolent bathers. Trips continued to Findias (air), and Gorias (fire), where Pollexfen saw the lower part of the fire God Aengus ("passive form of Lug").

This amazing sixteen board sub-elemental extension to the Golden Dawn Enochian Chess system was the culmination of such endeavours by W.B. Yeats and his circle. Full board designs, details of talismanic constructions, suggested pieces, and my account of Yeats's magickal feud with McGregor Mathers, is published here - much for the first time.

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  • Author: Steve Nichols
  • Publisher:
  • Year: 2020
  • Pages: 196
  • ISBN-10: 1906958947
  • ISBN-13: 9781906958947
  • Format: 15.6 x 23.4 x 1.8 cm, kieti viršeliai
  • Language: English English

W.B. Yeats's Celtic Enochian Chess

A black imitation-leather, gold unpublished notebook dated December 1898, shows us the Yeats-Gonne-Pollexfen team at work. Virginia Moore transcribes in 1954 this record of these three Celtic Twilight magicians exploring the four fabled "Cities," of Falias, Murius, Findias, and Gorias - regions of the four elements, earth, water, air, and fire - under their respective Gods (the Dagda, Danu, Brigid, and Lugh) and High Druids.

On questioning the four Druids, Maud Gonne discovered she and Yeats had received the Initiation of the Cauldron (purification/water). Gonne also received the Initiation of the Stone (earth); whereas Yeats had attracted the powers of the Wand (air) signifying supernatural inspiration. Beyond these Elemental Initiations came that of the White Globe, governed by the elder-god Elathan (front cover). Yeats and Pollexfen went - or thought they went - with help of talismans to Falias, wherein a rough stone house George saw a skeleton of gold with diamond teeth. Next they went to Murias (water), where a Druid showed them a bath full of indolent bathers. Trips continued to Findias (air), and Gorias (fire), where Pollexfen saw the lower part of the fire God Aengus ("passive form of Lug").

This amazing sixteen board sub-elemental extension to the Golden Dawn Enochian Chess system was the culmination of such endeavours by W.B. Yeats and his circle. Full board designs, details of talismanic constructions, suggested pieces, and my account of Yeats's magickal feud with McGregor Mathers, is published here - much for the first time.

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