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Gods of the Earth
Taken from Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry
Occultists, from Paracelsus to Elephas Levi, divide the nature
spirits into gnomes, sylphs, salamanders, undines; or earth, air,
fire, and water spirits. Their emperors, according to Elephas, are
named Cob, Paralda, Djin, Hicks respectively. The gnomes are covetous,
and of the melancholic temperament. Their usual height is but two
spans, though they can elongate themselves into giants. The sylphs
are capricious, and of the bilious temperament. They are in size
and strength much greater than men, as becomes the people of the
winds. The salamanders are wrathful, and in temperament sanguine.
In appearance they are long, lean,and dry. The undines are soft,
cold, fickle, and phlegmatic. In appearance they are like man. The
salamanders and sylphs have no fixed dwellings.
It has been held by many that somewhere out of the void there is
a perpetual dribble of souls; that these souls pass through many
shapes before they incarnate as men -hence the nature spirits. They
are invisible - except at rare moments and times; they inhabit the
interior elements, while we live upon the outer and the gross. Some
float perpetually through space, and the motion of the planets drives
them hither and thither in currents. Hence some Rosicrucians have
thought astrology may foretell many things; for a tide of them flowing
around the earth arouses there, emotions and changes, according
to its nature.
Besides those of human appearance are many animal and bird-like
shapes. It has been noticed that from these latter entirely come
the familiars seen by Indian braves when they go fasting in the
forest, seeking the instruction of the spirits. Though all at times
are friendly to men - to some men - "They have," says
Paracelsus, "an aversion to self-conceited and opinionated
persons, such as dogmatists, scientists, drunkards, and gluttons,
and against vulgar and quarrelsome people of all kinds; but they
love natural men, who are simple-minded and childlike, innocent
and sincere, and the less there is of vanity and hypocrisy in a
man, the easier will it be to approach them; but otherwise they
are as shy as wild animals."
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