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The Art of Synthesis: (How to Judge a Nativity Part II)
The Art of Synthesis: (How to Judge a Nativity Part II)
The Art of Synthesis: (How to Judge a Nativity Part II)
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The Art of Synthesis: (How to Judge a Nativity Part II)

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This book provides a richly detailed study of the relationship between planets and consciousness.

Alan Leo, born William Frederick Allan, was a prominent British astrologer, author, publisher and theosophist, and is considered by many to be the father of modern astrology.

This is the 3rd revised edition of the book.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 8, 2020
ISBN9781839744563
The Art of Synthesis: (How to Judge a Nativity Part II)

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    The Art of Synthesis - Alan Leo

    © Barakaldo Books 2020, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.

    Publisher’s Note

    Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.

    We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.

    The Art of Synthesis

    By

    ALAN LEO

    THIRD EDITION, REVISED

    (Formerly issued as How to Judge a Nativity, Part II.)

    ‘Mr. Alan Leo is so well-known among all who are interested in Astrology, and he has done so much to raise Astrology from the position of a superstition to that of a science, that any book from his pen is sure of a welcome among serious students. These books are the ripe outcome of his long experience and thorough knowledge of his subject summarised for the benefit of his younger brethren.’—Mrs. ANNIE BESANT in The Theosophist, February 1911.

    Table of Contents

    Contents

    Table of Contents 13

    PREFACE 14

    INTRODUCTION 15

    CHAPTER I — MAN AND THE PLANETS; CLASSIFICATION 20

    CHAPTER II — PLANETS AND CONSCIOUSNESS 28

    CHAPTER III — THE PLANETS AND THE SEVEN PRINCIPLES. INDIVIDUALITY AND PERSONALITY 34

    THE PERSONALITY 35

    THE BRIDGE 35

    THE INDIVIDUALITY 36

    CHAPTER IV — THE SUN, LIFE-GIVER 41

    CHAPTER V — THE MOON, MOTHER 48

    CHAPTER VI — MERCURY, THE THINKER 59

    CHAPTER VII — VENUS, THE UNIFIER 68

    CHAPTER VIII — MARS, THE ENERGISER 74

    CHAPTER IX — JUPITER, THE UPLIFTER 78

    CHAPTER X — SATURN, THE SUBDUER 84

    CHAPTER XI — URANUS, THE AWAKENER 88

    CHAPTER XII — NEPTUNE, THE MYSTIC 94

    I 97

    II 100

    III.—URANUS AND NEPTUNE CONTRASTED 105

    CHAPTER XIII — THE NATIVITY AND ITS RELATION TO HEREDITY 109

    CONSTELLATIONS, SIGNS, HOUSES 111

    CHAPTER XIV — CHARACTER IS DESTINY 117

    CHAPTER XV — THE RISE AND FALL OF PLANETS 123

    CHAPTER XVI — METHODS OF SYNTHESIS 131

    CHAPTER XVII — THE QUADRUPLICITIES, OR ‘QUALITIES,’ SYNTHESISED 141

    CHAPTER XVIII — THE TRIPLICITIES SYNTHESISED 148

    QUALITIES AND TRIPLICITIES COMBINED 151

    EXAMPLES OF HOROSCOPES 158

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 1 158

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES NO. 2 165

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 3 168

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 4 171

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 5 176

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 7 185

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 8 190

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 9 193

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 10 198

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES No. 11 ROBESPIERRE 201

    EXAMPLE HOROSCOPES NO 12 203

    APPENDIX 206

    THEOSOPHY AND MODERN SCIENCE. By G. E. SUTCLIFFE 206

    II. THE OCCULT SIGNIFICANCE OF THE PLANET URANUS 206

    AN ASTRO-THEOSOPHICAL GLOSSARY 212

    REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 234

    PREFACE

    The Art of Synthesis previously known as How to judge a Nativity, Part II, was originally issued in two parts, and finally bound in one complete volume for the convenience of students, when appreciation of that work necessitated an earlier reprint than was anticipated. This new edition afforded the opportunity of making a thorough revision, which resulted in a considerable rearrangement of the former plan and the inclusion of a large quantity of new matter; hence the book had again to be issued in two parts, each being a distinct and complete work in itself. The additional matter and the esoteric rendering of some of the chapters were again much appreciated by students, and the new edition sold more rapidly than was expected. This has given a further opportunity for a final revision and an improvement in the book, necessitating a definite change of title from: How to judge a Nativity Part II, to The Art of Synthesis.

    These alterations and improvements have given the student of Natal or Genethliacal Astrology two complete books for the judgment of nativities, the one analytical, and the other synthetic.

    The two companion books, How to judge a Nativity, and The Art of Synthesis are unique, inasmuch as they are not in any sense of the word а copy of any other work on the subject, but are the result of many years first hand experience, and in this work especially, for the first time in the history in western Astrology, the methods adopted in synthesising the judgment of nativities is revealed in a manner easily understood by all, whether amateurs, professionals, or advanced students of Astrology.

    The final expression of the ideas introduced into this work for practical judgments, will be found in the author’s new book entitled Esoteric Astrology.

    ALAN LEO.

    IMPERIAL BUILDINGS, E.C., 1912.

    INTRODUCTION

    BY practice alone the real art of judging a nativity comes. Some students are gifted in forming accurate and concise judgments, others however labour and toil for years without that understanding so necessary to arrive at correct conclusions.

    If there existed any ‘royal road’ by which the whole life history of the native could be seen at a glance, there would be many more thousands of students than at present; but then the joy of using the discriminative faculties would be lacking, and the pleasure found in real study would thus be lost so far as the appreciation of individual horoscopes is concerned.

    To become a successful delineator of horoscopes, the art of blending or ‘synthesising’ the whole nativity must be thoroughly understood. It is to aid in this desirable achievement that the writing of this book has been undertaken.

    It is the contention of some astrologers, that in order to give correct judgments the native’s heredity must be known, also the environment into which he or she was born; yet the skilful astrologer who has absorbed the true teachings regarding astrology will not be long in discovering the general nature of the birth and environment. Thus, it should never be difficult to ascertain whether the native is born of poor, middle-class, or well-to-do parents, and whether born into a mediocre or refined family. It is not always wise to accept without reserve statements regarding the native’s family history, as they are apt to prove misleading The author knew the case of a birth into a very poor family, in which the native (a male) had no education and no opportunity to learn a trade or profession: in fact he began work at the age of seven years, giving his parents the whole of his earnings until he practically came of age. Yet he rose to a high position in life and became a wealthy man. The nativity denoted innate refinement, great determination, and a persistent ambition to rise in life. He was wholly self taught, and none could tell that he had passed through such a hard early environment. There are also cases where men have been born into wealthy and refined families, and yet have fallen so low as to end their days in the workhouse. What it is necessary to know, is the exact vibratory power of the ego who is putting himself down into manifestation through the particular horoscope that is being studied.

    It cannot be wise to limit the judgment of any nativity to the physical body only, or to think that the ego manifesting through it is here on this earth for the first time, and we affirm after devoting fully twenty years’ close study to astrology, that any consideration of the science without the idea of reincarnation{1} is entirely dead, and leads the student nowhere. It has always been the teaching of what we have been obliged to term Esoteric Astrology, that:

    One in essentials, but manifesting differently, we are all spiritually the same. The mass of clay which is moulded into the potter’s bowl yields its form to the will of the workman. Each vessel used by the soul must bend to the will of the Higher Self, for the outward form is but the vehicle by which we gain experience at the behest of our Individual Star. As the Sun is to the solar system, so is this Star to the Sun of our being and existence. As the seven planets are to the Sun the media of its attributes, so are our seven principles to this our Star.

    We are distinctly seven-in-one, from the physical standpoint; but in reality, only three-in-one: the SPIRIT, or vital essence—the SOUL, or consciousness—and the BODY, or physical vehicle through which these may manifest. If we consider ourselves from the septenary standpoint we are but ONE, using sheaths, or vehicles, to express ourselves—the ONE being formless and abstract.

    The physical body at what we call death disintegrates and passes back into the earthy elements, the remaining sheaths withdrawing into the matrix upon which the physical body was built; but this also in a short time disappears, leaving the Saturnian vehicle to hold the others until the life-forces have exhausted themselves in ‘kâma-loka’—(the ‘purgatory’ of the Roman Catholics and the ‘hell’ of the Christians). When this has been accomplished and the grosser desires have been expended, the Triad rises with its Jupiterian vehicle into ‘devachan’ (the ‘heaven’ of the Christian), once more, after a period of rest, to reclothe itself with the concrete elements whereby it may gain fresh experiences, give effect to previous causes, and obtain unacquired virtues. For this Triad must know and realise; and only by contact with its opposite in Nature, can it test the development of its three attributes, POWER, WISDOM and ACTIVITY.

    From the practical standpoint, the most satisfactory method of learning the art of synthesis is first to gain some clear and definite idea with regard to the prevailing temperament shown in the horoscope, and then to bring together and synthesise the various planetary influences in accordance with this temperament.

    TEMPERAMENT literally means the ‘tempering’ of all the forces that pass through and out of the human body; and to have transcended the human stage means no less an achievement than the tempering of all the elements into one harmonious whole. Astrologers speak of the Martian, Jovian, Saturnian and other temperaments in a particular sense, knowing that the qualities attributed to each are the direct result of influences corresponding with the planets that govern the Martian, Jovian and Saturnian elements in nature.

    Where there is intelligence and a progressive spirit the temperament is very marked. The Martian temperament at its present stage of development is shown to the best advantage in our leading military men, explorers, and the great manufacturers, engineers and handicraftsmen. In contrast to these we may place the Saturnian temperament, which tempers the same universal force by turning it inward to be expressed in a more subtle, refined and diplomatic manner. The Martian takes risks and hazards adventures, relying upon his superabundance of out-rushing energy, while the Saturnian conserves his forces, undertaking responsibility with a fuller consciousness as to the results of his plans, meditating long over a course of action before entering upon it, and then not being lightly turned aside.

    It may be safely stated that astrologers are quite familiar with all the temperaments coming under the various planets, save those which belong to the Uranian and Neptunian group. Of these two much more is known of the former than the latter, but so far as experience goes up to the present, Uranus and Neptune appear to represent the two extremes of a certain temperament which may be termed, for want of a better word, the spiritual.

    The Uranian appears to go to the extreme on the side of independence and freedom, and in its highest form produces the genius or the exceptional talent which accompanies the man who hews out a path for himself, creating a school of thinkers who follow in his track. The reverse of this is the case, however, where the temperament ‘runs to seed,’ as it were, for then we find eccentricity, extreme opinions, indifference to the views or feelings of others, and peculiarly erratic tendencies.

    Some attempt has been made to sketch the various planetary types with a view to obtaining a facial presentation that will illustrate two or more temperaments coming under the same influence.

    The first portrait sketched by our artist attempts to describe the Uranian whose intelligence has carried him into the region of science allied to art, and just on to the borderland of genius, the portrait being sketched in such a manner as to give no clue to what particular department of art and science the temperament inclines.

    The second sketch which fellows depicts the more practical and utilitarian side of the Uranian. The face seems to denote intelligence allied to firmness, independence and originality. Both faces denote individuality to a marked degree, both are well proportioned with the will and intellect harmoniously blended, and both strike one as being faces of uncommon types—as indeed all Uranian individuals undoubtedly are.

    We are also favoured with two Neptunian sketches. The first shows an inclination to weirdness and a very highly-strung nervous temperament, with a dreamy cast of countenance, which is usually associated with the Neptunian, and we can imagine it to be the portrait of a transcendentalist, or a mystic who has refined his love nature to the point of transferring it beyond the claims of earthly affection alone; in any case it represents an extreme type. In the second there is an extreme of another type and the personality is accentuated to the sacrifice of the ideal and the spiritual.

    In both the Uranian and Neptunian types as illustrated, imagination has had to play a prominent part, owing to the scarcity of these types at our present stage of evolution.

    The Saturnine temperaments give a thoughtful and somewhat severe cast of feature as will be seen by the special illustrations given at the commencement of this book: No. 1 is the student type, and No. 2 the political type. Each gives the idea of steadiness, honesty and sobriety.

    The Jupiterian temperament is usually of the philosophic or religious order. Benevolence is the marked feature of this type, and that impression is conveyed in the illustration. It is a distinct type and is not easily mistaken, and there is very little variation from the type shewn in the sketch.

    The Mars types are more pronounced, self-assertion, positiveness and an enterprising spirit are the marked features of the Martian temperament. The eyes are usually piercing, bright and full of alertness.

    The Venus temperament is of a more refined and smoother type than the Martial, as seen in illustrations 1 and 2. The artist and the professional are here depicted, the cast being similar in both faces.

    In the Mercurial temperament we have a more general type: both denote intellect and a keen mind shown in the mental expression. No. 1 is the business mental, No. 2 the scholar and the active thinker.

    In the Solar types we have the impression of dignity and firmness, with a good physical temperament indicated. No. 1 is of the ancestral order, No. 2 the up-to-date modern solar man. The Lunar types are again distinct and show the dreamy, imaginative, and receptive temperament. The Solar gives a positive expression, and the Lunar a decidedly negative and receptive expression.

    The following are the comments of the well-known phrenologist and physiognomist ‘Viola’ on these types, the pictures having been presented to her for her judgment:—

    Uranus—No. 1. This shows the purely mental temperament, with a fine development of the frontal lobes. It is the temperament of the philosopher, the abstract thinker, and the genius: a man of lofty ideas and far-reaching views, who would always be in advance of his time and who steps in the van-guard of evolution.

    Uranus—No. 2. This shows the mental, vital temperament, and indicates the orator, the writer, the painter musician. There is a great deal of the social element combined with a strong will.

    Neptune—No. 1. Here we have the motivemental temperament from which we get the patriot, the enthusiast, the inventor, and the sculptor. It always indicates a man of action.

    Neptune—No. 2. This shows the motive type of temperament, without sufficient of the vital to induce stability, and to develop the social spirit. From this type comes the anarchist, the incendiary; the imagination not being led by the reason.

    Saturn—No. 1. Here we have shown the motivemental temperament, and from this comes the philosopher, the moralist, the judge and the statesman. The head indicates justice, conscientiousness; the moral growth is as large as the mental.

    Saturn—No. 2. This shows the purely mental temperament, pre-eminently the politician, diplomat, and ambassador; always the man of action rather than the student or a dreamer.

    Jupiter.—Here we have shown the mental, motive temperament, with a fine social and moral brain. It is the type which produces the philanthropist and the judge.

    Mars.—This shows the vital-motive temperament. It indicates the soldier, the sailor. There is a great deal of force and the power to command.

    Venus.—No. 1. This shows the vital temperament combined with the motive, while there is also a fair amount of the mental. There is great power here for sculpturing, for painting, for music. It shows the professional type.

    Venus.—No. 2. Here we have shown the mental temperament with scarcely enough of the vital or motive. There is talent indicated for the diplomatic service, also for foreign travel, or acting combined with some literary ability.

    Mercury—No. 1. This shows the vital-motive temperament, and indicates pre-eminently the inventor, the teacher and the preacher.

    Mercury—No. 2. Here we have the purely mental temperament shown, literary ability being the most marked feature. This person would be successful as a writer of novels, or any works of fiction, also the drama. The brain is extremely active and highly organised.

    Solar—No. 1. Here we have the vital temperament shown, indicating one who would make a ruler, general, or judge; one who must always be on the path of action. He would also make an excellent statesman or banker.

    Solar—No. 2. This type shows excellent power to organise and direct others, one who would make a financier, banker or barrister. It shows a well-balanced temperament.

    Moon—No. 1. This shows one who would make an engineer or a sailor, or even a business man. He possesses the vital-motive temperament.

    Moon—No. 2. This one would be successful as a swimmer or where she is engaged in any watery exploits; as bath attendant, or as a bath or hydro attendant; or barmaid.

    The various temperaments are illustrated in the examples given at the end of this book; and the ideas connected with the synthesis of the horoscope are explained in the following pages.

    THE ART OF SYNTHESIS

    CHAPTER I — MAN AND THE PLANETS; CLASSIFICATION

    EVERY soul is a ‘Divine Fragment’ with a long past history behind it. Before the beginning of the solar system, that great Being whom men ordinarily call God—the God of this system—and whom theosophists often refer to as the Solar Logos, held within His life and consciousness, inseparably united with him, all souls that were to evolve and progress under His guidance. They were sent forth into matter by an act of His will, and although they remain for ever in touch with their divine source, they descend lower and lower into matter, taking upon themselves denser and denser bodies as they pass downward from plane to plane, until they reach this physical world where the inner light is so obscured in the darkness of materiality that their origin is forgotten.

    All beings alike have this divine beginning, no matter what their present status may be, whether good or evil, savage or civilised, whether passing through the human kingdom or through some state below or above this—and there are countless millions both lower and higher than man—and no matter in what state they are functioning, whether the sublimest spiritual or the grossest material. Those that now rank as great Saints or superhuman spiritual intelligences have in bygone æons passed through the mud of earth, or at least through some lowly condition akin to that in which we now find ourselves; and those who now struggle and fail in the storms of temptation and the mists of ignorance will in future ages stand forth in the sunlight of the spirit and manifest the wisdom they will have gained during their long pilgrimage through matter.

    Souls come forth into manifestation to gain experience, to grow in wisdom, in love, and in power; and they can only do this by coming into practical touch with the world around them, by experimenting and then learning from the results. Power is gained by the exercise of practical ability, by going out into the world and living the life of action, by doing all manner of works, some wise, many unwise, and by registering within the soul the consequences that follow from each. Love is developed by realising gradually the common spiritual nature that animates all beings; and although this begins with the most crudely selfish desire for pleasure-giving objects, it is very slowly refined into unselfish sympathy and compassion after passing through countless bitter experiences that force home upon us the distinction between acts that result in lasting satisfaction and those which, although temporarily attractive, are followed by a preponderance of dissatisfaction and pain. Wisdom is developed at the same time and by the same experiences as those that call forth in us our capacity for power and for love; by noting why some actions are successful and others in the long run are the reverse; why some desirable objects give satisfaction and pleasantness while others, apparently equally desirable, prove ultimately to be pain-giving; and by gathering up within the soul the generalised results of these experiences gained in past ages and possessed by us today as a kind of innate untaught spiritual instinct.

    Man, at the present stage of his evolutionary career, may be said to be at about the half-way point of his pilgrimage. He is far distant from the starting point from which he set out, is deeply immersed in matter, has forgotten his spiritual origin, and is not yet sufficiently progressed to realise the grandeur and dignity that will be his when he has surmounted the limitations of his present condition and has achieved the final mastery over matter. The experiences through which we have passed in remote ages have been worked into the very fabric of the soul itself and are there contained as innate faculty, something that is born with the child and that often begins to show itself in the earliest years of life with little or no definite guidance from parents or tuition from teachers, and which, if not so born, is practically not acquired at all during life.

    The process by which experience is gained and the faculties of the soul are drawn out is that of intercourse with the environment. Action and reaction go on between man and the world in which he is functioning, as the result of which power and practical ability are called forth, discrimination between pleasure and pain-giving objects is obtained, and understanding of the method of life and the nature of the world is gained. The soul in its material vehicle has impacts poured upon it from outside sources and by agencies not itself, some pleasant and many unpleasant; some the result of its own actions, but others experienced through no promptings of its own. Existence is felt to be satisfactory and life is prolonged in proportion as man is able to adapt himself to the conditions and necessities of the world around him, or in proportion as he is successful in altering those conditions by the exercise of his own skill. But when, on the contrary, he fails in the continuous adjustment of himself to his surroundings, or when he is too weak or too unskilled to change a disadvantageous environment into one that furthers his well-being, existence is unsuccessful and life is shortened.

    From the point of view of any evolving being, whether belonging to the human or any other kingdom, the universe is divided into two great parts; firstly, the being, soul, man or creature; and secondly, its environment, the rest of the surrounding universe. Multitudes of stimuli of various kinds coming from the environment, the Not-self, fall upon the man, the Self, and evoke responses within, each according to its kind. Vibrations in the ether call out sensations of light and heat; those in the air, sensations of sound; and so on with the rest of the senses; each is stimulated into action by something in the Not-self, and each is the cause of some change of consciousness within the Self. Experience of the world is gained in this way; for sensations are combined into groups, which are again associated in larger groups, and the whole is classified, analysed, and synthesised in the mind until in the process of time it forms an accurate representation within of the nature and condition of things without, so that the man can act upon it and live out his life safely in accordance with it.

    It will be observed that this whole process consists in the outer world, the Not-self, mirroring itself in, or evoking an accurate correspondence of itself from, the Self, the man’s consciousness. For everything that exists in the world of nature without there is a correspondence established with something in the world of consciousness within. The taste of an apple is a fragment of inner experience that corresponds to certain properties possessed by an object in the outer world, which may also be proved to possess other properties capable of giving rise to other experiences within. The sound of a gun really exists only in consciousness; its outer correspondence consists of certain vibrations in the atmosphere. The sensation red is subjective, belongs only to the Self; in the Not-self it is nothing but vibrations of a certain rate in the ether. The idea of a ‘horse’ is a complex association of a great variety of sensations, each based upon some concrete experience, and the whole blended together in one. The idea of ‘truth’ is still more complex and is called forth by a far larger series of sensations, which have been classified and generalised in consciousness until the abstract idea has resulted.

    The belief that man, the microcosm or little universe, is an image of the macrocosm or great universe, which is itself, in Swedenborg’s phrase, a Grand Man, is extremely ancient. It can be examined and demonstrated from more than one point of view; and from the preceding paragraphs it will be seen that from the psychological point of view the whole growth and evolution of the soul may be represented as a process by which man becomes a more and more complete image of the outer world of things. Consciousness mirrors the universe; the world is reflected in the man; and although this process has small and humble beginnings, it is essential for the very existence of intelligence, and ever tends to approach nearer to perfection. Finally all experience will be possessed by man, and he will be a perfect representation of the universe in which he moves.

    We have seen that impacts from without call forth responses from within, and that the idea or feeling must correspond exactly to the outer scheme of things at the moment. The universe may be symbolised by a circle across which runs a diameter dividing it into two halves. One of these halves stands for the objective universe of the Not-self, and the other for the subjective universe of the Self; and these two exactly match each other.

    Astrologically, these two universes, the outer and the inner, are classified in terms of planets and signs. The impacts from without are poured upon us from the heavenly bodies; upon the growing body from conception to birth, and upon the self-conscious human being from birth to death. These impacts fall upon our senses, and they proceed from objects of every description, animate and inanimate, conscious and unconscious; and when properly classified these are the things that are said to be ruled or governed by the planets, in the sense that iron and weapons of war are governed by Mars, books and writings by Mercury, and so on. The responses to these impacts consist of psycho-physiological changes in body and in consciousness; that is to say, of psychological changes, which are feelings, ideas, and volitions, and physiological changes, which are states of bodily health; and when classified these are the types of character and person that are said to be ruled or bestowed by the planets, in the sense that Mars rules courage and feverish states of health, and Mercury rules thought and the nerves; and so on.

    All things may be classified astrologically in this way, and such a classification might be carried out in considerable detail. From the standpoint of any given human being, the total universe, objective and subjective, with all possible changes therein, is included under three heads. Firstly, there is the outer world of things innumerable, each of them governed by one or other of the planets, astrologically speaking; and this is the Not-self. Secondly, there is the inner world of the Self, its states and changes, its thoughts, feelings, and volitions; all again grouped under planets. And, thirdly, there are bodily conditions and functionings, similarly classified under planetary rulership; and this is intermediate between the other two, for body or vehicle serves the purpose of bringing the Self and the Not-self into relation with each other, and is the concrete representation of that relation.

    In these three regions of the total universe, if our knowledge and skill were sufficient, we might seek and expect to find three different presentations of any person’s horoscope. The first would be discovered in the outer universe; and of course, it is here that we look for and find the actual signs, planets, and aspects which are symbolised and tabulated in the map of the nativity; it is also here that folklore and popular legends incline many to search for omens and auguries of every description, which shall indicate the course of events according to the various methods of divination that have been followed from ancient to modern times. The second would be the inner world of consciousness, in the states and potentialities of which the experienced mind might trace a perfect representation and correspondence of the outer planets and signs, with all their consequences, good and evil; and this is that which has been rightly termed the horoscope within. The third is the body, where spirit and matter meet during life, where Self is brought into relation with Not-self, and every part of which is ruled by the heavenly bodies and is modelled in accordance with their positions in the zodiac at birth; for it is

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