114 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
114 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
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ASTROLOGY:
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Emerson--America's Great New Age Mystic
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Surely the spring of 1803 was a most benefic time for America. In April
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the Louisiana Territory, called the biggest real estate bargain of all time,
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was acquired, greatly enlarging its boundaries. And in May there was born in
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New England one destined to become a New Age pioneer.
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Even the pulpit of one of the most forward-looking churches was not
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sufficiently progressive for him. He resigned, and travelled to Europe to
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meet some of its avant garde thinkers like Wordsworth, Carlyle, Coleridge.
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On returning, he founded (in 1836) with Margaret Fuller, Henry Thoreau, and
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others, the movement that came to be known as Transcendentalism, no doubt
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the nation's most influential New Age initiative of the time.
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At first glance, his chart does not appear at all unique. It seems to be
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just another Splash pattern with the planets scattered in seven signs. He
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himself is credited with the saying that concentration is genius' essence,
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yet his own planetary energies seem widely dispersed. (Of course he also
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said that a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.) For his
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activity was broadly focused: he travelled, wrote, and lectured widely, yet
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he was a genius nevertheless.
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Our big clue to understanding his chart is in the 3rd house. Neptune is
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closely conjunct the Part of Fortune; this symbolic point's closest aspect
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often points to where the emphasis is. The configuration's meaning: "A sense
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of participation in vast social or spiritual movements."1
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It is well to remember that in charts where Neptune is prominent, much
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is submerged, subtly concealed. After all, Neptune is "monarch" of the
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maritime; we must look deeply. In doing so, we find Neptune and Pluto in
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mutual reception. Uranus' solstice point is also with them: all the three
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New Age planets are together in the 6th house of work.
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Too, they are linked by (minor) aspects. Uranus and Neptune form a semi-
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square; Neptune and Pluto a biseptile (103 degrees, small orb allowed) of
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destiny. The extra-Saturnian orbs are very strongly interconnected, even
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though in a somewhat concealed, typically Neptunian manner. They have
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congregated in Neptune's sign that, greatly increasing its importance. Even
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though Gemini is the Sun sign and chart signature, Pisces is the real basis
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of Emerson's achievements.
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We have his own words for this: "The greatest genius is he who offers
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fewest obstacles to the illumination from above."2 Pisces is the sign most
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capable of self-abnegation, giving itself away. Only an empty vessel can be
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filled. How regrettable that the sign of the fishes is at times referred to
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with such disparaging remarks as "dustbin of the zodiac" when potentially it
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is most capable of responding to divine dynamics.
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This goes along with the 8th cusp of regeneration, bringing out the
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best, whose degree symbol is "An empty hammock."3 Nature <20> incidentally,
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this is the brief title of the book that helped launch Transcendentalism <20>
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abhors a vacuum. It will eventually be filled by something, in the spiritual
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realm either by demons or divinity.4 Surely Emerson emptied his own
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"hammock," or vessel, for an inflow from above, and with the strength of his
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New Age planets as noted above, his bent was to respond to their positive
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vibrations.
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All the more because we also glimpse two Finger of God configurations.
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Even one in a chart is quite rare; what comment would be adequate when there
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are two? Especially when their components are so exquisitely harmonious? In
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one, Venus, Jupiter, and Neptune are all in some way tied to Pisces: Venus
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is exalted therein, the other two orbs dignified. In the other, Mars,
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Uranus, and Pluto are all related to Scorpio: Uranus is exalted, the other
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two dignified. The more harmonious the components of a configuration, the
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greater its potential. The apexes of the two figures of destiny are in the
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6th and 8th houses; esoteric work was his appointed assignment.
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And esoteric astrology further helps explain his success. In addition to
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the regular mutual reception already noted, he has an esoteric one. Venus is
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Gemini's esoteric ruler; Mercury that of Aries; they're in each others'
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signs.5 Hence, special emphasis and relationship. Gemini is the logo of
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communicating where Emerson excelled. Aries is not only the symbol of
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forcefulness (here Venus removes abrasiveness), also of simplicity. It was
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said of a preacher, Six days a week he's invisible, the seventh he's
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incomprehensible. By contrast, Emerson was highly visible and just as
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comprehensible, a fact supported by these important degree meanings:
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The Ascendant: "Vibrant simplicity."
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The M.C.: "Warmth of simple living."
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The 12th cusp: "Death of useless things."6
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Mercury: "A man trimming palms."7 In the sense of getting rid of the
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unnecessary, this surely is a step in the direction of simplicity.
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"Trimming" also implies making something short, brief. Emerson could not be
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accused of being long-winded. When lecturing, he would put his watch on the
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lectern and always stop at the time promised.
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There was a self-authenticating naturalness about Emerson's message.
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Though rightly called New Age, it was part of the Ageless Wisdom. This is
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clearly indicated by the chart. Straddling the Ascendant are Saturn,
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Jupiter, Uranus. The first represents the old, the last the new; since
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Jupiter is almost exactly in their middle it ties them all together even
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though no actual aspect exists.9
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Emerson once said, "Astrology is astronomy brought to earth and applied
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to the affairs of men."9 It can similarly be said that the New Age Message
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is the Ageless Wisdom adapted and applied to this age.
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--A Probationer
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1. The Lunation Cycle, Dane Rudhyar, p. 116.
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2. Emerson, Lillian A. Maulsby, p. 14.
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3. The Sabian Symbols, Marc Edmund Jones, p. 166.
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4. Matthew 12:43-45.
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5. Astrology, The Divine Science, Moore and Douglas, pp. 697, 699.
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6. Astrology of Personality, Dane Rudhyar, pp. 360, 351, 357.
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7. Marc Edmund Jones, op. cit., p. 234.
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8. Astrology, Ronald C. Davison, p. 111.
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9. A to Z Horoscope Maker and Delineator, Llewellyn George, p. 255.
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