William Blake Research Paper

592 Words3 Pages

Chapter 10 Revival The Hermetic Laws set the balance of power the church can have at what seemed to be its zenith. As a result, the Hermetica was able to reach a wider audience that was used by Catholics to come join their church. Ironically enough, the tablet was used to bridge the cup to the church fathers and the Cathars. Until the hermetic was claimed to have been debunked and therefore its power waned. Although it was put out to that masses as such. It was still used by the tree masons, Rosicrucians, and western magical tradition. It was even used by the Faust folklore. The folklore in tale told of a legend that this necromancer bought his lover Helen of Troy back to life. Possibly one of the biggest advocates for Gnostics/Cathars was a Moor named Blake. He himself wasn’t a full-fledged Gnostic but was initiated through his experiences. Blake had written several books on them, and, his best works were actually in his poems. It is in these poems that the reader would have to thick on a multi-layered level or be lost. One of Blake’s greatest works came from a writing he made in response to other Gnostic writers at the time (cited in Gnostics, p. 209). Mental things are alone real: what: What is call’d corporeal, nobody knows of its dwelling place! It is in fallacy …show more content…

People, such as Madam Blavatsky, created a group called the Theosophic Society. With her helper Aleister Crowley, they were allowed to be the mask on the tall that is real Moorish science. Unfortunately, they were able to get certain people to join. They also created groups to get people to join without knowing, such as the Ecclesia Gnostica. Then they both did the under headed thing and sounded like