A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism (Gareth Knight)
4
My serious interest in occult literature began during work on my MA English. At that time a friend of mine (another university student) was an outstanding chemist who enjoyed writing fiction. We would meet occasionally and compare ideas. His fiction invariably centered on debunking any remnants of medieval, "demon-haunted", religious, occult thinking still persisting into the twenty-first century. He sought, through his fiction, to disabuse us of our fantasies. He was always humorously disheartened to learn from me - fresh from the Humanities side of our university - that several of our greatest English authors (Spenser, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Tennyson, TS Eliot, WB Yeats, James Joyce, Thomas Pynchon) were well-versed in occultism, and that the psychology of occultism was so integral to Western culture up into the twentieth century that any serious appraisal of English literature demands at least a nodding familiarity.
Hence this review.
This work by Gareth Knight is his most authoritative, and takes its place on any well-stocked reference shelf with the works of Peter De Abano, Frater Achad, Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, Dante Alighieri, Anonymous (author of Meditations on the Tarot), St Athanasius, Franz Bardon, Francis Barrett, St Bernard of Clairvaux, HP Blavatsky, Jacob Boehme, St Bonaventure, Giordano Bruno, Raymond Buckland, WE Butler, Joseph Campbell, Catherine of Siena, RS Clymer, Aleister Crowley, Deng Ming Dao, John Dee, Melita Denning and Osborne Phillips, Lon Milo Duquette, Abraham Ibn Ezra, Steven A Fisdel, Dion Fortune, Marsilio Ficino, U.D. Frater, David Frawley, JG Frazer, Sigmund Freud, Matityahu Glazerson, Johann von Goethe, William G Gray, Gurdjieff and Ouspensky, Steven Guth, Charles F Haanel, Manly P Hall, Robert M Haralick, Iamblichus, St Ignatius, St John of the Cross, CG Jung, Aryeh Kaplan, Aaron Leitch, Eliphas Levi, William Lilly, Joseph Lisiewski, Jason Lotterhand, SL MacGregor Mathers, Adam McLean, Draja Mickaharic, William Oribello, Kala Pajeon, Papus, Joseph H Peterson, DovBer Pinson, Proclus, PB Randolph, Rankine and Skinner, Israel Regardie, Frances Rolleston, Carroll Runyon, Mouni Sadhu, Gershom Scholem, Sepharial, Austin Osman Spare, Adin Steinsaltz, Doreen Sturzaker, Thomas Taylor, Isaiah Tishby, Donald Tyson, Rabbi Chaim Vital, AE Waite, Robert Wang, Samael Aun Weor, WW Westcott, Bill Whitcomb, Abraham von Worms, and Rabbi Simeon bar Yohai.
Gareth Knight examines each of the thirty-two paths of the Hermetic Kabbalistic Tree. His assignations are those of the traditional Golden Dawn (exclusive of Crowley's improvisation on the fifteenth and twenty-eighth paths, which Knight considers "has not stood the test of time"). There is no fluff in this book. The book is beefy and pure protein, though at times Knight verges perilously close to the circular prose of AE Waite. Another proviso is that, in just a few instances, Knight's exegesis of certain paths veers toward generalities ignoring specifics.
A highly commended, useful, and outstanding reference on Western Hermeticism.