Ennead V
Eighth tractate: On the intellectual beauty
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. It is a principle with us that one who has attained to the vision
of the Intellectual Beauty and grasped the beauty of the Authentic Intellect
will be able also to come to understand the Father and Transcendent of that
Divine Being. It concerns us, then, to try to see and say, for ourselves and as
far as such matters may be told, how the Beauty of the divine Intellect and of
the Intellectual Kosmos may be revealed to contemplation.
- Let us go to the realm of magnitudes: Suppose two blocks of stone
lying side by side: one is unpatterned, quite untouched by art; the other has
been minutely wrought by the craftsman's hands into some statue of god or man,
a Grace or a Muse, or if a human being, not a portrait but a creation in which
the sculptor's art has concentrated all loveliness.
- Now it must be seen that the stone thus brought under the artist's
hand to the beauty of form is beautiful not as stone- for so the crude block
would be as pleasant- but in virtue of the form or idea introduced by the art.
This form is not in the material; it is in the designer before ever it enters
the stone; and the artificer holds it not by his equipment of eyes and hands
but by his participation in his art. The beauty, therefore, exists in a far
higher state in the art; for it does not come over integrally into the work;
that original beauty is not transferred; what comes over is a derivative and a
minor: and even that shows itself upon the statue not integrally and with
entire realization of intention but only in so far as it has subdued the
resistance of the material.
- Art, then, creating in the image of its own nature and content, and
working by the Idea or Reason-Principle of the beautiful object it is to
produce, must itself be beautiful in a far higher and purer degree since it is
the seat and source of that beauty, indwelling in the art, which must naturally
be more complete than any comeliness of the external. In the degree in which
the beauty is diffused by entering into matter, it is so much the weaker than
that concentrated in unity; everything that reaches outwards is the less for
it, strength less strong, heat less hot, every power less potent, and so beauty
less beautiful.
- Then again every prime cause must be, within itself, more powerful
than its effect can be: the musical does not derive from an unmusical source
but from music; and so the art exhibited in the material work derives from an
art yet higher.
- Still the arts are not to be slighted on the ground that they create
by imitation of natural objects; for, to begin with, these natural objects are
themselves imitations; then, we must recognise that they give no bare
reproduction of the thing seen but go back to the Ideas from which Nature
itself derives, and, furthermore, that much of their work is all their own;
they are holders of beauty and add where nature is lacking. Thus Pheidias
wrought the Zeus upon no model among things of sense but by apprehending what
form Zeus must take if he chose to become manifest to sight.
- 2. But let us leave the arts and consider those works produced by
Nature and admitted to be naturally beautiful which the creations of art are
charged with imitating, all reasoning life and unreasoning things alike, but
especially the consummate among them, where the moulder and maker has subdued
the material and given the form he desired. Now what is the beauty here? It has
nothing to do with the blood or the menstrual process: either there is also a
colour and form apart from all this, or there is nothing unless sheer ugliness
or a bare recipient, as it were the mere Matter of beauty.
- Whence shone forth the beauty of Helen, battle-sought; or of all
those women like in loveliness to Aphrodite; or of Aphrodite herself; or of any
human being that has been perfect in beauty; or of any of these gods manifest
to sight, or unseen but carrying what would be beauty if we saw?
- In all these is it not the Idea, something of that realm but
communicated to the produced from within the producer just as in works of art,
we held, it is communicated from the arts to their creations? Now we can surely
not believe that, while the made thing and the Idea thus impressed upon Matter
are beautiful, yet the Idea not so alloyed but resting still with the creator-
the Idea primal, immaterial, firmly a unity- is not Beauty.
- If material extension were in itself the ground of beauty, then the
creating principle, being without extension, could not be beautiful: but beauty
cannot be made to depend upon magnitude since, whether in a large object or a
small, the one Idea equally moves and forms the mind by its inherent power. A
further indication is that as long as the object remains outside us we know
nothing of it; it affects us by entry; but only as an Idea can it enter through
the eyes which are not of scope to take an extended mass: we are, no doubt,
simultaneously possessed of the magnitude which, however, we take in not as
mass but by an elaboration upon the presented form.
- Then again the principle producing the beauty must be, itself, ugly,
neutral or beautiful: ugly, it could not produce the opposite; neutral, why
should its product be the one rather than the other? The Nature, then, which
creates things so lovely must be itself of a far earlier beauty; we,
undisciplined in discernment of the inward, knowing nothing of it, run after
the outer, never understanding that it is the inner which stirs us; we are in
the case of one who sees his own reflection but not realizing whence it comes
goes in pursuit of it.
- But that the thing we are pursuing is something different and that
the beauty is not in the concrete object is manifest from the beauty there is
in matters of study, in conduct and custom; briefly in soul or mind. And it is
precisely here that the greater beauty lies, perceived whenever you look to the
wisdom in a man and delight in it, not wasting attention on the face, which may
be hideous, but passing all appearance by and catching only at the inner
comeliness, the truly personal; if you are still unmoved and cannot acknowledge
beauty under such conditions, then looking to your own inner being you will
find no beauty to delight you and it will be futile in that state to seek the
greater vision, for you will be questing it through the ugly and impure.
- This is why such matters are not spoken of to everyone; you, if you
are conscious of beauty within, remember.
- 3. Thus there is in the Nature-Principle itself an Ideal archetype of
the beauty that is found in material forms and, of that archetype again, the
still more beautiful archetype in Soul, source of that in Nature. In the
proficient soul this is brighter and of more advanced loveliness: adorning the
soul and bringing to it a light from that greater light which is beauty
primally, its immediate presence sets the soul reflecting upon the quality of
this prior, the archetype which has no such entries, and is present nowhere but
remains in itself alone, and thus is not even to be called a Reason-Principle
but is the creative source of the very first Reason-Principle which is the
Beauty to which Soul serves as Matter.
- This prior, then, is the Intellectual-Principle, the veritable,
abiding and not fluctuant since not taking intellectual quality from outside
itself. By what image thus, can we represent it? We have nowhere to go but to
what is less. Only from itself can we take an image of it; that is, there can
be no representation of it, except in the sense that we represent gold by some
portion of gold- purified, either actually or mentally, if it be impure-
insisting at the same time that this is not the total thing-gold, but merely
the particular gold of a particular parcel. In the same way we learn in this
matter from the purified Intellect in ourselves or, if you like, from the Gods
and the glory of the Intellect in them.
- For assuredly all the Gods are august and beautiful in a beauty
beyond our speech. And what makes them so? Intellect; and especially Intellect
operating within them [the divine sun and stars] to visibility. It is not
through the loveliness of their corporeal forms: even those that have body are
not gods by that beauty; it is in virtue of Intellect that they, too, are gods,
and as gods beautiful. They do not veer between wisdom and folly: in the
immunity of Intellect unmoving and pure, they are wise always, all-knowing,
taking cognisance not of the human but of their own being and of all that lies
within the contemplation of Intellect. Those of them whose dwelling is in the
heavens, are ever in this meditation- what task prevents them?- and from afar
they look, too, into that further heaven by a lifting of the head. The Gods
belonging to that higher Heaven itself, they whose station is upon it and in
it, see and know in virtue of their omnipresence to it. For all There is
heaven; earth is heaven, and sea heaven; and animal and plant and man; all is
the heavenly content of that heaven: and the Gods in it, despising neither men
nor anything else that is there where all is of the heavenly order, traverse
all that country and all space in peace.
- 4. To "live at ease" is There; and, to these divine beings, verity is
mother and nurse, existence and sustenance; all that is not of process but of
authentic being they see, and themselves in all: for all is transparent,
nothing dark, nothing resistant; every being is lucid to every other, in
breadth and depth; light runs through light. And each of them contains all
within itself, and at the same time sees all in every other, so that everywhere
there is all, and all is all and each all, and infinite the glory. Each of them
is great; the small is great; the sun, There, is all the stars; and every star,
again, is all the stars and sun. While some one manner of being is dominant in
each, all are mirrored in every other.
- Movement There is pure [as self-caused] for the moving principle is
not a separate thing to complicate it as it speeds.
- So, too, Repose is not troubled, for there is no admixture of the
unstable; and the Beauty is all beauty since it is not merely resident [as an
attribute or addition] in some beautiful object. Each There walks upon no alien
soil; its place is its essential self; and, as each moves, so to speak, towards
what is Above, it is attended by the very ground from which it starts: there is
no distinguishing between the Being and the Place; all is Intellect, the
Principle and the ground on which it stands, alike. Thus we might think that
our visible sky [the ground or place of the stars], lit, as it is, produces the
light which reaches us from it, though of course this is really produced by the
stars [as it were, by the Principles of light alone, not also by the ground as
the analogy would require].
- In our realm all is part rising from part and nothing can be more
than partial; but There each being is an eternal product of a whole and is at
once a whole and an individual manifesting as part but, to the keen vision
There, known for the whole it is.
- The myth of Lynceus seeing into the very deeps of the earth tells us
of those eyes in the divine. No weariness overtakes this vision, which yet
brings no such satiety as would call for its ending; for there never was a void
to be filled so that, with the fulness and the attainment of purpose, the sense
of sufficiency be induced: nor is there any such incongruity within the divine
that one Being there could be repulsive to another: and of course all There are
unchangeable. This absence of satisfaction means only a satisfaction leading to
no distaste for that which produces it; to see is to look the more, since for
them to continue in the contemplation of an infinite self and of infinite
objects is but to acquiesce in the bidding of their nature.
- Life, pure, is never a burden; how then could there be weariness
There where the living is most noble? That very life is wisdom, not a wisdom
built up by reasonings but complete from the beginning, suffering no lack which
could set it enquiring, a wisdom primal, unborrowed, not something added to the
Being, but its very essence. No wisdom, thus, is greater; this is the authentic
knowing, assessor to the divine Intellect as projected into manifestation
simultaneously with it; thus, in the symbolic saying, Justice is assessor to
Zeus.
- [Perfect wisdom] for all the Principles of this order, dwelling
There, are as it were visible images protected from themselves, so that all
becomes an object of contemplation to contemplators immeasurably blessed. The
greatness and power of the wisdom There we may know from this, that is embraces
all the real Beings, and has made all, and all follow it, and yet that it is
itself those beings, which sprang into being with it, so that all is one, and
the essence There is wisdom. If we have failed to understand, it is that we
have thought of knowledge as a mass of theorems and an accumulation of
propositions, though that is false even for our sciences of the sense-realm.
But in case this should be questioned, we may leave our own sciences for the
present, and deal with the knowing in the Supreme at which Plato glances where
he speaks of "that knowledge which is not a stranger in something strange to
it"- though in what sense, he leaves us to examine and declare, if we boast
ourselves worthy of the discussion. This is probably our best starting-point.
- 5. All that comes to be, work of nature or of craft, some wisdom has
made: everywhere a wisdom presides at a making.
- No doubt the wisdom of the artist may be the guide of the work; it is
sufficient explanation of the wisdom exhibited in the arts; but the artist
himself goes back, after all, to that wisdom in Nature which is embodied in
himself; and this is not a wisdom built up of theorems but one totality, not a
wisdom consisting of manifold detail co-ordinated into a unity but rather a
unity working out into detail.
- Now, if we could think of this as the primal wisdom, we need look no
further, since, at that, we have discovered a principle which is neither a
derivative nor a "stranger in something strange to it." But if we are told
that, while this Reason-Principle is in Nature, yet Nature itself is its
source, we ask how Nature came to possess it; and, if Nature derived it from
some other source, we ask what that other source may be; if, on the contrary,
the principle is self-sprung, we need look no further: but if we are referred
to the Intellectual-Principle we must make clear whether the
Intellectual-Principle engendered the wisdom: if we learn that it did, we ask
whence: if from itself, then inevitably, it is itself Wisdom.
- The true Wisdom, then [found to be identical with the
Intellectual-Principle] is Real Being; and Real Being is Wisdom; it is wisdom
that gives value to Real Being; and Being is Real in virtue of its origin in
wisdom. It follows that all forms of existence not possessing wisdom are,
indeed, Beings in right of the wisdom which went to their forming but, as not
in themselves possessing it, are not Real Beings.
- We cannot therefore think that the divine Beings of that sphere, or
the other supremely blessed There, need look to our apparatus of science: all
of that realm, all is noble image, such images as we may conceive to lie within
the soul of the wise- but There not as inscription but as authentic existence.
The ancients had this in mind when they declared the Ideas to be Beings,
Essentials.
- 6. Similarly, as it seems to me, the wise of Egypt- whether in
precise knowledge or by a prompting of nature- indicated the truth where, in
their effort towards philosophical statement, they left aside the writing-forms
that take in the detail of words and sentences- those characters that represent
sounds and convey the propositions of reasoning- and drew pictures instead,
engraving in the temple- inscriptions a separate image for every separate item:
thus they exhibited the mode in which the Supreme goes forth.
- For each manifestation of knowledge and wisdom is a distinct image,
an object in itself, an immediate unity, not as aggregate of discursive
reasoning and detailed willing. Later from this wisdom in unity there appears,
in another form of being, an image, already less compact, which announces the
original in an outward stage and seeks the causes by which things are such that
the wonder rises how a generated world can be so excellent.
- For, one who knows must declare his wonder that this Wisdom, while
not itself containing the causes by which Being exists and takes such
excellence, yet imparts them to the entities produced in Being's realm. This
excellence whose necessity is scarcely or not at all manifest to search,
exists, if we could but find it out, before all searching and reasoning.
- What I say may be considered in one chief thing, and thence applied
to all the particular entities:
- 7. Consider the universe: we are agreed that its existence and its
nature come to it from beyond itself; are we, now, to imagine that its maker
first thought it out in detail- the earth, and its necessary situation in the
middle; water and, again, its position as lying upon the earth; all the other
elements and objects up to the sky in due place and order; living beings with
their appropriate forms as we know them, their inner organs and their outer
limbs- and that having thus appointed every item beforehand, he then set about
the execution?
- Such designing was not even possible; how could the plan for a
universe come to one that had never looked outward? Nor could he work on
material gathered from elsewhere as our craftsmen do, using hands and tools;
feet and hands are of the later order.
- One way, only, remains: all things must exist in something else; of
that prior- since there is no obstacle, all being continuous within the realm
of reality- there has suddenly appeared a sign, an image, whether given forth
directly or through the ministry of soul or of some phase of soul, matters
nothing for the moment: thus the entire aggregate of existence springs from the
divine world, in greater beauty There because There unmingled but mingled here.
- From the beginning to end all is gripped by the Forms of the
Intellectual Realm: Matter itself is held by the Ideas of the elements and to
these Ideas are added other Ideas and others again, so that it is hard to work
down to crude Matter beneath all that sheathing of Idea. Indeed since Matter
itself is in its degree, an Idea- the lowest- all this universe is Idea and
there is nothing that is not Idea as the archetype was. And all is made
silently, since nothing had part in the making but Being and Idea further
reason why creation went without toil. The Exemplar was the Idea of an All, and
so an All must come into being.
- Thus nothing stood in the way of the Idea, and even now it dominates,
despite all the clash of things: the creation is not hindered on its way even
now; it stands firm in virtue of being All. To me, moreover, it seems that if
we ourselves were archetypes, Ideas, veritable Being, and the Idea with which
we construct here were our veritable Essence, then our creative power too would
toillessly effect its purpose: as man now stands, he does not produce in his
work a true image of himself: become man, he has ceased to be the All: ceasing
to be man- we read- "he soars aloft and administers the Kosmos entire";
restored to the All he is maker of the All.
- But- to our immediate purpose- it is possible to give a reason why
the earth is set in the midst and why it is round and why the ecliptic runs
precisely as it does, but, looking to the creating principle, we cannot say
that because this was the way therefore things were so planned: we can say only
that because the All is what it is, therefore there is a total of good; the
causing principle, we might put it, reached the conclusion before all formal
reasoning and not from any premises, not by sequence or plan but before either,
since all of that order is later, all reason, demonstration, persuasion.
- Since there is a Source, all the created must spring from it and in
accordance with it; and we are rightly told not to go seeking the causes
impelling a Source to produce, especially when this is the perfectly sufficient
Source and identical with the Term: a Source which is Source and Term must be
the All-Unity, complete in itself.
- 8. This then is Beauty primally: it is entire and omnipresent as an
entirety; and therefore in none of its parts or members lacking in beauty;
beautiful thus beyond denial. Certainly it cannot be anything [be, for example,
Beauty] without being wholly that thing; it can be nothing which it is to
possess partially or in which it utterly fails [and therefore it must entirely
be Beauty entire].
- If this principle were not beautiful, what other could be? Its prior
does not deign to be beautiful; that which is the first to manifest itself-
Form and object of vision to the intellect- cannot but be lovely to see. It is
to indicate this that Plato, drawing on something well within our observation,
represents the Creator as approving the work he has achieved: the intention is
to make us feel the lovable beauty of the autotype and of the Divine Idea; for
to admire a representation is to admire the original upon which it was made.
- It is not surprising if we fail to recognise what is passing within
us: lovers, and those in general that admire beauty here, do not stay to
reflect that it is to be traced, as of course it must be, to the Beauty There.
That the admiration of the Demiurge is to be referred to the Ideal Exemplar is
deliberately made evident by the rest of the passage: "He admired; and
determined to bring the work into still closer likeness with the Exemplar": he
makes us feel the magnificent beauty of the Exemplar by telling us that the
Beauty sprung from this world is, itself, a copy from That.
- And indeed if the divine did not exist, the transcendently beautiful,
in a beauty beyond all thought, what could be lovelier than the things we see?
Certainly no reproach can rightly be brought against this world save only that
it is not That.
- 9. Let us, then, make a mental picture of our universe: each member
shall remain what it is, distinctly apart; yet all is to form, as far as
possible, a complete unity so that whatever comes into view shall show as if it
were the surface of the orb over all, bringing immediately with it the vision,
on the one plane, of the sun and of all the stars with earth and sea and all
living things as if exhibited upon a transparent globe.
- Bring this vision actually before your sight, so that there shall be
in your mind the gleaming representation of a sphere, a picture holding sprung,
themselves, of that universe and repose or some at rest, some in motion. Keep
this sphere before you, and from it imagine another, a sphere stripped of
magnitude and of spatial differences; cast out your inborn sense of Matter,
taking care not merely to attenuate it: call on God, maker of the sphere whose
image you now hold, and pray Him to enter. And may He come bringing His own
Universe with all the Gods that dwell in it- He who is the one God and all the
gods, where each is all, blending into a unity, distinct in powers but all one
god in virtue of that one divine power of many facets.
- More truly, this is the one God who is all the gods; for, in the
coming to be of all those, this, the one, has suffered no diminishing. He and
all have one existence while each again is distinct. It is distinction by state
without interval: there is no outward form to set one here and another there
and to prevent any from being an entire identity; yet there is no sharing of
parts from one to another. Nor is each of those divine wholes a power in
fragment, a power totalling to the sum of the measurable segments: the divine
is one all-power, reaching out to infinity, powerful to infinity; and so great
is God that his very members are infinites. What place can be named to which He
does not reach?
- Great, too, is this firmament of ours and all the powers constellated
within it, but it would be greater still, unspeakably, but that there is
inbound in it something of the petty power of body; no doubt the powers of fire
and other bodily substances might themselves be thought very great, but in
fact, it is through their failure in the true power that we see them burning,
destroying, wearing things away, and slaving towards the production of life;
they destroy because they are themselves in process of destruction, and they
produce because they belong to the realm of the produced.
- The power in that other world has merely Being and Beauty of Being.
Beauty without Being could not be, nor Being voided of Beauty: abandoned of
Beauty, Being loses something of its essence. Being is desirable because it is
identical with Beauty; and Beauty is loved because it is Being. How then can we
debate which is the cause of the other, where the nature is one? The very
figment of Being needs some imposed image of Beauty to make it passable and
even to ensure its existence; it exists to the degree in which it has taken
some share in the beauty of Idea; and the more deeply it has drawn on this, the
less imperfect it is, precisely because the nature which is essentially the
beautiful has entered into it the more intimately.
- 10. This is why Zeus, although the oldest of the gods and their
sovereign, advances first [in the Phaidros myth] towards that vision, followed
by gods and demigods and such souls as are of strength to see. That Being
appears before them from some unseen place and rising loftily over them pours
its light upon all things, so that all gleams in its radiance; it upholds some
beings, and they see; the lower are dazzled and turn away, unfit to gaze upon
that sun, the trouble falling the more heavily on those most remote.
- Of those looking upon that Being and its content, and able to see,
all take something but not all the same vision always: intently gazing, one
sees the fount and principle of Justice, another is filled with the sight of
Moral Wisdom, the original of that quality as found, sometimes at least, among
men, copied by them in their degree from the divine virtue which, covering all
the expanse, so to speak, of the Intellectual Realm is seen, last attainment of
all, by those who have known already many splendid visions.
- The gods see, each singly and all as one. So, too, the souls; they
see all There in right of being sprung, themselves, of that universe and
therefore including all from beginning to end and having their existence There
if only by that phase which belongs inherently to the Divine, though often too
they are There entire, those of them that have not incurred separation.
- This vision Zeus takes, and it is for such of us, also, as share his
love and appropriate our part in the Beauty There, the final object of all
seeing, the entire beauty upon all things; for all There sheds radiance, and
floods those that have found their way thither so that they too become
beautiful; thus it will often happen that men climbing heights where the soil
has taken a yellow glow will themselves appear so, borrowing colour from the
place on which they move. The colour flowering on that other height we speak of
is Beauty; or rather all There is light and beauty, through and through, for
the beauty is no mere bloom upon the surface.
- To those that do not see entire, the immediate impression is alone
taken into account; but those drunken with this wine, filled with the nectar,
all their soul penetrated by this beauty, cannot remain mere gazers: no longer
is there a spectator outside gazing on an outside spectacle; the clear-eyed
hold the vision within themselves, though, for the most part, they have no idea
that it is within but look towards it as to something beyond them and see it as
an object of vision caught by a direction of the will.
- All that one sees as a spectacle is still external; one must bring
the vision within and see no longer in that mode of separation but as we know
ourselves; thus a man filled with a god- possessed by Apollo or by one of the
Muses- need no longer look outside for his vision of the divine being; it is
but finding the strength to see divinity within.
- 11. Similarly any one, unable to see himself, but possessed by that
God, has but to bring that divine- within before his consciousness and at once
he sees an image of himself, himself lifted to a better beauty: now let him
ignore that image, lovely though it is, and sink into a perfect self-identity,
no such separation remaining; at once he forms a multiple unity with the God
silently present; in the degree of his power and will, the two become one;
should he turn back to the former duality, still he is pure and remains very
near to the God; he has but to look again and the same presence is there.
- This conversion brings gain: at the first stage, that of separation,
a man is aware of self; but, retreating inwards, he becomes possessor of all;
he puts sense away behind him in dread of the separated life and becomes one in
the Divine; if he plans to see in separation, he sets himself outside.
- The novice must hold himself constantly under some image of the
Divine Being and seek in the light of a clear conception; knowing thus, in a
deep conviction, whither he is going- into what a sublimity he penetrates- he
must give himself forthwith to the inner and, radiant with the Divine
Intellections [with which he is now one], be no longer the seer but, as that
place has made him, the seen.
- Still, we will be told, one cannot be in beauty and yet fail to see
it. The very contrary: to see the divine as something external is to be outside
of it; to become it is to be most truly in beauty: since sight deals with the
external, there can here be no vision unless in the sense of identification
with the object.
- And this identification amounts to a self-knowing, a
self-consciousness, guarded by the fear of losing the self in the desire of a
too wide awareness.
- It must be remembered that sensations of the ugly and evil impress us
more violently than those of what is agreeable and yet leave less knowledge as
the residue of the shock: sickness makes the rougher mark, but health,
tranquilly present, explains itself better; it takes the first place, it is the
natural thing, it belongs to our being; illness is alien, unnatural and thus
makes itself felt by its very incongruity, while the other conditions are
native and we take no notice. Such being our nature, we are most completely
aware of ourselves when we are most completely identified with the object of
our knowledge.
- This is why in that other sphere, when we are deepest in that
knowledge by intellection, we are aware of none; we are expecting some
impression on sense, which has nothing to report since it has seen nothing and
never could in that order see anything. The unbelieving element is sense; it is
the other, the Intellectual-Principle, that sees; and if this too doubted, it
could not even credit its own existence, for it can never stand away and with
bodily eyes apprehend itself as a visible object.
- 12. We have told how this vision is to be procured, whether by the
mode of separation or in identity: now, seen in either way, what does it give
to report?
- The vision has been of God in travail of a beautiful offspring, God
engendering a universe within himself in a painless labour and- rejoiced in
what he has brought into being, proud of his children- keeping all closely by
Him, for pleasure He has in his radiance and in theirs.
- Of this offspring- all beautiful, but most beautiful those that have
remained within- only one has become manifest without; from him [Zeus,
sovereign over the visible universe] the youngest born, we may gather, as from
some image, the greatness of the Father and of the Brothers that remain within
the Father's house.
- Still the manifested God cannot think that he has come forth in vain
from the father; for through him another universe has arisen, beautiful as the
image of beauty, and it could not be' lawful that Beauty and Being should fail
of a beautiful image.
- This second Kosmos at every point copies the archetype: it has life
and being in copy, and has beauty as springing from that diviner world. In its
character of image it holds, too, that divine perpetuity without which it would
only at times be truly representative and sometimes fail like a construction of
art; for every image whose existence lies in the nature of things must stand
during the entire existence of the archetype.
- Hence it is false to put an end to the visible sphere as long as the
Intellectual endures, or to found it upon a decision taken by its maker at some
given moment.
- That teaching shirks the penetration of such a making as is here
involved: it fails to see that as long as the Supreme is radiant there can be
no failing of its sequel but, that existing, all exists. And- since the
necessity of conveying our meaning compels such terms- the Supreme has existed
for ever and for ever will exist.
- 13. The God fettered [as in the Kronos Myth] to an unchanging
identity leaves the ordering of this universe to his son (to Zeus), for it
could not be in his character to neglect his rule within the divine sphere,
and, as though sated with the Authentic-Beauty, seek a lordship too recent and
too poor for his might. Ignoring this lower world, Kronos
[Intellectual-Principle] claims for his own father [Ouranoo, the Absolute, or
One] with all the upward-tending between them: and he counts all that tends to
the inferior, beginning from his son [Zeus, the All-Soul], as ranking beneath
him. Thus he holds a mid position determined on the one side by the
differentiation implied in the severance from the very highest and, on the
other, by that which keeps him apart from the link between himself and the
lower: he stands between a greater father and an inferior son. But since that
father is too lofty to be thought of under the name of Beauty, the second God
remains the primally beautiful.
- Soul also has beauty, but is less beautiful than Intellect as being
its image and therefore, though beautiful in nature, taking increase of beauty
by looking to that original. Since then the All-Soul- to use the more familiar
term- since Aphrodite herself is so beautiful, what name can we give to that
other? If Soul is so lovely in its own right, of what quality must that prior
be? And since its being is derived, what must that power be from which the Soul
takes the double beauty, the borrowed and the inherent?
- We ourselves possess beauty when we are true to our own being; our
ugliness is in going over to another order; our self-knowledge, that is to say,
is our beauty; in self-ignorance we are ugly.
- Thus beauty is of the Divine and comes Thence only.
- Do these considerations suffice to a clear understanding of the
Intellectual Sphere, or must we make yet another attempt by another road?
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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