Corpus Hermeticum

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The Corpus Hermeticum is a collection of Egyptian texts from the early Christian era that were mistakenly thought to be much older. They discuss philosophy and theology from an Egyptian perspective.

The treatises are divided into the 'Poemandres', the 'General Sermons', the 'Key', four tractates on more mystical aspects, and the 'Definitions of Asclepius'.

The treatises were collected in Byzantine times and a copy was obtained by Lorenzo de Medici's agents. Marsilio Ficino translated them to Latin, which was first printed in 1463 and reprinted over 20 times in the following century and a half.

The Corpus Hermeticum

The Corpus Hermeticum are the core documents of the Hermetic tradition. Dating from early in the
Christian era, they were mistakenly dated to a much earlier period by Church officials (and everyone
else) up until the 15th century. Because of this, they were allowed to survive and we seen as an early
precursor to what was to be Christianity. We know today that they were, in fact, from the early Christian
era, and came out of the turbulent religious seas of Hellenic Egypt.
These are all taken from Mead's translations, which are in the public domain at this point.

An Introduction to the Corpus Hermeticum


I. Poemandres, the Shepherd of Men
II. To Asclepius
III. The Sacred Sermon
IV. The Cup or Monad
V. Though Unmanifest God Is Most Manifest
VI. In God Alone Is Good And Elsewhere Nowhere
VII. The Greatest Ill Among Men is Ignorance of God
VIII. That No One of Existing Things doth Perish,
but Men in Error Speak of Their Changes as Destructions and as Deaths
IX. On Thought and Sense
X. The Key
XI. Mind Unto Hermes
XII. About the Common Mind
XIII. The Secret Sermon on the Mountain

An Introduction to the Corpus Hermeticum


by John Michael Greer
The fifteen tractates of the Corpus Hermeticum, along with the Perfect Sermon or
Asclepius, are the foundation documents of the Hermetic tradition. Written by unknown
authors in Egypt sometime before the end of the third century C.E., they were part of a
once substantial literature attributed to the mythic figure of Hermes Trismegistus, a
Hellenistic fusion of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth.
This literature came out of the same religious and philosophical ferment that produced
Neoplatonism, Christianity, and the diverse collection of teachings usually lumped
together under the label "Gnosticism": a ferment which had its roots in the impact of
Platonic thought on the older traditions of the Hellenized East. There are obvious
connections and common themes linking each of these traditions, although each had its
own answer to the major questions of the time.

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The treatises we now call the Corpus Hermeticum were collected into a single volume in
Byzantine times, and a copy of this volume survived to come into the hands of Lorenzo
de Medici's agents in the fifteenth century. Marsilio Ficino, the head of the Florentine
Academy, was pulled off the task of translating the dialogues of Plato in order to put the
Corpus Hermeticum into Latin first. His translation saw print in 1463, and was reprinted
at least twenty-two times over the next century and a half.
The treatises divide up into several groups. The first (CH I), the "Poemandres", is the
account of a revelation given to Hermes Trismegistus by the being Poemandres or
"Man-Shepherd", an expression of the universal Mind. The next eight (CH II-IX), the
"General Sermons", are short dialogues or lectures discussing various basic points of
Hermetic philosophy. There follows the "Key" (CH X), a summary of the General
Sermons, and after this a set of four tractates - "Mind unto Hermes", "About the Common
Mind", "The Secret Sermon on the Mountain", and the "Letter of Hermes to Asclepius"
(CH XI-XIV) - touching on the more mystical aspects of Hermeticism. The collection is
rounded off by the "Definitions of Asclepius unto King Ammon" (CH XV), which may
be composed of three fragments of longer works.
The Perfect Sermon
The Perfect Sermon or Asclepius, which is also included here, reached the Renaissance
by a different route. It was translated into Latin in ancient times, reputedly by the same
Lucius Apuleius of Madaura whose comic-serious masterpiece The Golden Ass provides
some of the best surviving evidence on the worship of Isis in the Roman world.
Augustine of Hippo quotes from the old Latin translation at length in his City of God, and
copies remained in circulation in medieval Europe all the way up to the Renaissance. The
original Greek version was lost, although quotations survive in several ancient sources.
The Perfect Sermon is substantially longer than any other surviving work of ancient
Hermetic philosophy. It covers topics which also occur in the Corpus Hermeticum, but
touches on several other issues as well - among them magical processes for the
manufacture of gods and a long and gloomy prophecy of the decline of Hermetic wisdom
and the end of the world.
The Significance of the Hermetic Writings
The Corpus Hermeticum landed like a well-aimed bomb amid the philosophical systems
of late medieval Europe. Quotations from the Hermetic literature in the Church Fathers
(who were never shy of leaning on pagan sources to prove a point) accepted a traditional
chronology which dated "Hermes Trismegistus," as a historical figure, to the time of
Moses. As a result, the Hermetic tractates' borrowings from Jewish scripture and Platonic
philosophy were seen, in the Renaissance, as evidence that the Corpus Hermeticum had
anticipated and influenced both. The Hermetic philosophy was seen as a primordial
wisdom tradition, identified with the "Wisdom of the Egyptians" mentioned in Exodus
and lauded in Platonic dialogues such as the Timaeus. It thus served as a useful club in
the hands of intellectual rebels who sought to break the stranglehold of Aristotelian
scholasticism on the universities at this time.

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It also provided one of the most important weapons to another major rebellion of the age
- the attempt to reestablish magic as a socially acceptable spiritual path in the Christian
West. Another body of literature attributed to Hermes Trismegistus was made up of
astrological, alchemical and magical texts. If, as the scholars of the Renaissance believed,
Hermes was a historical person who had written all these things, and if Church Fathers
had quoted his philosophical works with approval, and if those same works could be
shown to be wholly in keeping with some definitions of Christianity, then the whole
structure of magical Hermeticism could be given a second-hand legitimacy in a Christian
context.
This didn't work, of course; the radical redefinition of Western Christianity that took
place in the Reformation and Counter-Reformation hardened doctrinal barriers to the
point that people were being burned in the sixteenth century for practices that were
considered evidences of devoutness in the fourteenth. The attempt, though, made the
language and concepts of the Hermetic tractates central to much of post-medieval magic
in the West.
The Translation
The translation of the Corpus Hermeticum and Perfect Sermon given here is that of
G.R.S. Mead (1863-1933), originally published as Vol. 2 of his Thrice Greatest Hermes
(London, 1906). Mead was a close associate of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, the founder
and moving spirit of the Theosophical Society, and most of his considerable scholarly
output was brought out under Theosophical auspices. The result, predictably, was that
most of that output has effectively been blacklisted in academic circles ever since.
This is unfortunate, for Mead's translations of the Hermetic literature were until quite
recently the best available in English. (They are still the best in the public domain; thus
their use here.) The Everard translation of 1650, which is still in print, reflects the state of
scholarship at the time it was made - which is only a criticism because a few things have
been learned since then! The Walter Scott translation - despite the cover blurb on the
recent Shambhala reprint, this is not the Sir Walter Scott of Ivanhoe fame - while more
recent than Mead's, is a product of the "New Criticism" of the first half of this century,
and garbles the text severely; scholars of Hermeticism of the caliber of Dame Frances
Yates have labeled the Scott translation worthless. By contrast, a comparison of Mead's
version to the excellent modern translation by Brian Copenhaver, or to the translations of
CH I (Poemandres) and VII (The Greatest Ill Among Men is Ignorance of God) given in
Bentley Layton's The Gnostic Scriptures, shows Mead as a capable translator, with a
usually solid grasp of the meaning of these sometimes obscure texts.
There is admittedly one problem with Mead's translation: the aesthetics of the English
text. Mead hoped, as he mentioned at the beginning of Thrice Greatest Hermes, to
"render...these beautiful theosophic treatises into an English that might, perhaps, be
thought in some small way worthy of the Greek originals." Unfortunately for this
ambition, he was writing at a time when the last remnants of the florid and pompous
Victorian style were fighting it out with the more straightforward colloquial prose that
became the style of the new century. Caught in this tangle like so many writers of the
time, Mead wanted to write in the grand style but apparently didn't know how. The result

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is a sometimes bizarre mishmash in which turn-of-the-century slang stands cheek by jowl


with overblown phrases in King James Bible diction, and in which mishandled
archaicisms, inverted word order, and poetic contractions render the text less than
graceful - and occasionally less than readable. Seen from a late twentieth century
sensibility, the result verges on unintentional self-parody in places: for example, where
Mead uses the Scots contraction "ta'en" (for "taken"), apparently for sheer poetic color,
calling up an image of Hermes Trismegistus in kilt and sporran.
The "poetic" word order is probably the most serious barrier to readability; it's a good
rule, whenever the translation seems to descend into gibberish, to try shuffling the words
of the sentence in question. It may also be worth noting that Mead consistently uses "for
that" in place of "because" and "aught" in place of "any", and leaves out the word "the"
more or less at random.
Finally, comments in (parentheses) and in [square brackets] are in Mead's original; those
in <angle brackets> are my own additions.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

I. Poemandres, the Shepherd of Men


<This is the most famous of the Hermetic documents, a revelation account describing a vision of the
creation of the universe and the nature and fate of humanity. Authors from the Renaissance onward have
been struck by the way in which its creation myth seems partly inspired by Genesis, partly reacting
against it. The Fall has here become the descent of the Primal Man through the spheres of the planets to
the world of Nature, a descent caused not by disobedience but by love, and done with the blessing of
God.
<The seven rulers of fate discussed in sections 9, 14 and 25 are the archons of the seven planets, which
also appear in Plato's Timaeus and in a number of the ancient writings usually lumped together as
"Gnostic". Their role here is an oddly ambivalent one, powers of Harmony who are nonetheless the
sources of humanity's tendencies to evil. - JMG>
1. It chanced once on a time my mind was meditating on the things that are, my thought was raised to a
great height, the senses of my body being held back - just as men who are weighed down with sleep after
a fill of food, or from fatigue of body.
Methought a Being more than vast, in size beyond all bounds, called out my name and saith: What
wouldst thou hear and see, and what hast thou in mind to learn and know?
2. And I do say: Who art thou?
He saith: I am Man-Shepherd (Poemandres), Mind of all-masterhood; I know what thou desirest and I'm
with thee everywhere.

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3. [And] I reply: I long to learn the things that are, and comprehend their nature, and know God. This is,
I said, what I desire to hear.
He answered back to me: Hold in thy mind all thou wouldst know, and I will teach thee.
4. E'en with these words His aspect changed, and straightway, in the twinkling of an eye, all things were
opened to me, and I see a Vision limitless, all things turned into Light - sweet, joyous [Light]. And I
became transported as I gazed.
But in a little while Darkness came settling down on part [of it], awesome and gloomy, coiling in
sinuous folds, so that methought it like unto a snake.
And then the Darkness changed into some sort of a Moist Nature, tossed about beyond all power of
words, belching out smoke as from a fire, and groaning forth a wailing sound that beggars all
description.
[And] after that an outcry inarticulate came forth from it, as though it were a Voice of Fire.
5. [Thereon] out of the Light [...] a Holy Word (Logos) descended on that Nature. And upwards to the
height from the Moist Nature leaped forth pure Fire; light was it, swift and active too.
The Air, too, being light, followed after the Fire; from out of the Earth-and-Water rising up to Fire so
that it seemed to hang therefrom.
But Earth-and-Water stayed so mingled with each other, that Earth from Water no one could discern. Yet
were they moved to hear by reason of the Spirit-Word (Logos) pervading them.
6. Then saith to me Man-Shepherd: Didst understand this Vision what it means?
Nay; that shall I know, said I.
That Light, He said, am I, thy God, Mind, prior to Moist Nature which appeared from Darkness; the
Light-Word (Logos) [that appeared] from Mind is Son of God.
What then? - say I.
Know that what sees in thee and hears is the Lord's Word (Logos); but Mind is Father-God. Not separate
are they the one from other; just in their union [rather] is it Life consists.
Thanks be to Thee, I said.
So, understand the Light [He answered], and make friends with it.
7. And speaking thus He gazed for long into my eyes, so that I trembled at the look of him.
But when He raised His head, I see in Mind the Light, [but] now in Powers no man could number, and
Cosmos grown beyond all bounds, and that the Fire was compassed round about by a most mighty
Power, and [now] subdued had come unto a stand.

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And when I saw these things I understood by reason of Man-Shepherd's Word (Logos).
8. But as I was in great astonishment, He saith to me again: Thou didst behold in Mind the Archetypal
Form whose being is before beginning without end. Thus spake to me Man-Shepherd.
And I say: Whence then have Nature's elements their being?
To this He answer gives: From Will of God. [Nature] received the Word (Logos), and gazing upon the
Cosmos Beautiful did copy it, making herself into a cosmos, by means of her own elements and by the
births of souls.
9. And God-the-Mind, being male and female both, as Light and Life subsisting, brought forth another
Mind to give things form, who, God as he was of Fire and Spirit, formed Seven Rulers who enclose the
cosmos that the sense perceives. Men call their ruling Fate.
10. Straightway from out the downward elements God's Reason (Logos) leaped up to Nature's pure
formation, and was at-oned with the Formative Mind; for it was co-essential with it. And Nature's
downward elements were thus left reason-less, so as to be pure matter.
11. Then the Formative Mind ([at-oned] with Reason), he who surrounds the spheres and spins them
with his whorl, set turning his formations, and let them turn from a beginning boundless unto an endless
end. For that the circulation of these [spheres] begins where it doth end, as Mind doth will.
And from the downward elements Nature brought forth lives reason-less; for He did not extend the
Reason (Logos) [to them]. The Air brought forth things winged; the Water things that swim, and
Earth-and-Water one from another parted, as Mind willed. And from her bosom Earth produced what
lives she had, four-footed things and reptiles, beasts wild and tame.
12. But All-Father Mind, being Life and Light, did bring forth Man co-equal to Himself, with whom He
fell in love, as being His own child; for he was beautiful beyond compare, the Image of his Sire. In very
truth, God fell in love with his own Form; and on him did bestow all of His own formations.
13. And when he gazed upon what the Enformer had created in the Father, [Man] too wished to enform;
and [so] assent was given him by the Father.
Changing his state to the formative sphere, in that he was to have his whole authority, he gazed upon his
Brother's creatures. They fell in love with him, and gave him each a share of his own ordering.
And after that he had well learned their essence and had become a sharer in their nature, he had a mind
to break right through the Boundary of their spheres, and to subdue the might of that which pressed upon
the Fire.
14. So he who hath the whole authority o'er [all] the mortals in the cosmos and o'er its lives irrational,
bent his face downwards through the Harmony, breaking right through its strength, and showed to
downward Nature God's fair form.
And when she saw that Form of beauty which can never satiate, and him who [now] possessed within
himself each single energy of [all seven] Rulers as well as God's own Form, she smiled with love; for

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'twas as though she'd seen the image of Man's fairest form upon her Water, his shadow on her Earth.
He in turn beholding the form like to himself, existing in her, in her Water, loved it and willed to live in
it; and with the will came act, and [so] he vivified the form devoid of reason.
And Nature took the object of her love and wound herself completely around him, and they were
intermingled, for they were lovers.
15. And this is why beyond all creatures on the earth man is twofold; mortal because of body, but
because of the essential man immortal.
Though deathless and possessed of sway o'er all, yet doth he suffer as a mortal doth, subject to Fate.
Thus though above the Harmony, within the Harmony he hath become a slave. Though male-female, as
from a Father male-female, and though he's sleepless from a sleepless [Sire], yet is he overcome [by
sleep].
16. Thereon [I say: Teach on], O Mind of me, for I myself as well am amorous of the Word (Logos).
The Shepherd said: This is the mystery kept hid until this day.
Nature embraced by Man brought forth a wonder, oh so wonderful. For as he had the nature of the
Concord of the Seven, who, as I said to thee, [were made] of Fire and Spirit - Nature delayed not, but
immediately brought forth seven "men", in correspondence with the natures of the Seven, male-female
and moving in the air.
Thereon [I said]: O Shepherd, ..., for now I'm filled with great desire and long to hear; do not run off.
The Shepherd said: Keep silence, for not as yet have I unrolled for thee the first discourse (logoi).
Lo! I am still, I said.
17. In such wise than, as I have said, the generation of these seven came to pass. Earth was as woman,
her Water filled with longing; ripeness she took from Fire, spirit from Aether. Nature thus brought forth
frames to suit the form of Man.
And Man from Light and Life changed into soul and mind - from Life to soul, from Light to mind.
And thus continued all the sense-world's parts until the period of their end and new beginnings.
18. Now listen to the rest of the discourse (Logos) which thou dost long to hear.
The period being ended, the bond that bound them all was loosened by God's Will. For all the animals
being male-female, at the same time with Man were loosed apart; some became partly male, some in like
fashion [partly] female. And straightway God spake by His Holy Word (Logos):
"Increase ye in increasing, and multiply in multitude, ye creatures and creations all; and man that hath
Mind in him, let him learn to know that he himself is deathless, and that the cause of death is love,
though Love is all."

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19. When He said this, His Forethought did by means of Fate and Harmony effect their couplings and
their generations founded. And so all things were multiplied according to their kind.
And he who thus hath learned to know himself, hath reached that Good which doth transcend
abundance; but he who through a love that leads astray, expends his love upon his body - he stays in
Darkness wandering, and suffering through his senses things of Death.
20. What is the so great fault, said I, the ignorant commit, that they should be deprived of deathlessness?
Thou seem'st, He said, O thou, not to have given heed to what thou heardest. Did I not bid thee think?
Yea do I think, and I remember, and therefore give Thee thanks.
If thou didst think [thereon], [said He], tell me: Why do they merit death who are in Death?
It is because the gloomy Darkness is the root and base of the material frame; from it came the Moist
Nature; from this the body in the sense-world was composed; and from this [body] Death doth the Water
drain.
21. Right was thy thought, O thou! But how doth "he who knows himself, go unto Him", as God's Word
(Logos) hath declared?
And I reply: the Father of the universals doth consist of Light and Life, from Him Man was born.
Thou sayest well, [thus] speaking. Light and Life is Father-God, and from Him Man was born.
If then thou learnest that thou art thyself of Life and Light, and that thou [happen'st] to be out of them,
thou shalt return again to Life. Thus did Man-Shepherd speak.
But tell me further, Mind of me, I cried, how shall I come to Life again...for God doth say: "The man
who hath Mind in him, let him learn to know that he himself [is deathless]."
22. Have not all men then Mind?
Thou sayest well, O thou, thus speaking. I, Mind, myself am present with holy men and good, the pure
and merciful, men who live piously.
[To such] my presence doth become an aid, and straightway they gain gnosis of all things, and win the
Father's love by their pure lives, and give Him thanks, invoking on Him blessings, and chanting hymns,
intent on Him with ardent love.
And ere they give up the body unto its proper death, they turn them with disgust from its sensations,
from knowledge of what things they operate. Nay, it is I, the Mind, that will not let the operations which
befall the body, work to their [natural] end. For being door-keeper I'll close up [all] the entrances, and
cut the mental actions off which base and evil energies induce.
23. But to the Mind-less ones, the wicked and depraved, the envious and covetous, and those who mured
do and love impiety, I am far off, yielding my place to the Avenging Daimon, who sharpening the fire,

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tormenteth him and addeth fire to fire upon him, and rusheth upon him through his senses, thus
rendering him readier for transgressions of the law, so that he meets with greater torment; nor doth he
ever cease to have desire for appetites inordinate, insatiately striving in the dark.
24. Well hast thou taught me all, as I desired, O Mind. And now, pray, tell me further of the nature of the
Way Above as now it is [for me].
To this Man-Shepherd said: When the material body is to be dissolved, first thou surrenderest the body
by itself unto the work of change, and thus the form thou hadst doth vanish, and thou surrenderest thy
way of life, void of its energy, unto the Daimon. The body's senses next pass back into their sources,
becoming separate, and resurrect as energies; and passion and desire withdraw unto that nature which is
void of reason.
25. And thus it is that man doth speed his way thereafter upwards through the Harmony.
To the first zone he gives the Energy of Growth and Waning; unto the second [zone], Device of Evils
[now] de-energized; unto the third, the Guile of the Desires de-energized; unto the fourth, his
Domineering Arrogance, [also] de-energized; unto the fifth, unholy Daring and the Rashness of
Audacity, de-energized; unto the sixth, Striving for Wealth by evil means, deprived of its
aggrandizement; and to the seventh zone, Ensnaring Falsehood, de-energized.
26. And then, with all the energisings of the harmony stript from him, clothed in his proper Power, he
cometh to that Nature which belongs unto the Eighth, and there with those-that-are hymneth the Father.
They who are there welcome his coming there with joy; and he, made like to them that sojourn there,
doth further hear the Powers who are above the Nature that belongs unto the Eighth, singing their songs
of praise to God in language of their own.
And then they, in a band, go to the Father home; of their own selves they make surrender of themselves
to Powers, and [thus] becoming Powers they are in God. This the good end for those who have gained
Gnosis - to be made one with God.
Why shouldst thou then delay? Must it not be, since thou hast all received, that thou shouldst to the
worthy point the way, in order that through thee the race of mortal kind may by [thy] God be saved?
27. This when He'd said, Man-Shepherd mingled with the Powers.
But I, with thanks and belssings unto the Father of the universal [Powers], was freed, full of the power
he had poured into me, and full of what He'd taught me of the nature of the All and of the loftiest Vision.
And I began to preach unto men the Beauty of Devotion and of Gnosis:
O ye people, earth-born folk, ye who have given yourselves to drunkenness and sleep and ignorance of
God, be sober now, cease from your surfeit, cease to be glamoured by irrational sleep!
28. And when they heard, they came with one accord. Whereon I say:
Ye earth-born folk, why have ye given yourselves up to Death, while yet ye have the power of sharing
Deathlessness? Repent, O ye, who walk with Error arm in arm and make of Ignorance the sharer of your

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board; get ye out from the light of Darkness, and take your part in Deathlessness, forsake Destruction!
29. And some of them with jests upon their lips departed [from me], abandoning themselves unto the
Way of Death; others entreated to be taught, casting themselves before my feet.
But I made them arise, and I became a leader of the Race towards home, teaching the words (logoi), how
and in what way they shall be saved. I sowed in them the words (logoi) of wisdom; of Deathless Water
were they given to drink.
And when even was come and all sun's beams began to set, I bade them all give thanks to God. And
when they had brought to an end the giving of their thanks, each man returned to his own resting place.
30. But I recorded in my heart Man-Shepherd's benefaction, and with my every hope fulfilled more than
rejoiced. For body's sleep became the soul's awakening, and closing of the eyes - true vision, pregnant
with Good my silence, and the utterance of my word (logos) begetting of good things.
All this befell me from my Mind, that is Man-Shepherd, Word (Logos) of all masterhood, by whom
being God-inspired I came unto the Plain of Truth. Wherefore with all my soul and strength
thanksgiving give I unto Father-God.
31. Holy art Thou, O God, the universals' Father.
Holy art Thou, O God, whose Will perfects itself by means of its own Powers.
Holy art Thou, O God, who willeth to be known and art known by Thine own.
Holy art Thou,who didst by Word (Logos) make to consist the things that are.
Holy art Thou, of whom All-nature hath been made an image.
Holy art Thou, whose Form Nature hath never made.
Holy art Thou, more powerful than all power.
Holy art Thou, transcending all pre-eminence.
Holy Thou art, Thou better than all praise.
Accept my reason's offerings pure, from soul and heart for aye stretched up to Thee, O Thou unutterable,
unspeakable, Whose Name naught but the Silence can express.
32. Give ear to me who pray that I may ne'er of Gnosis fail, [Gnosis] which is our common being's
nature; and fill me with Thy Power, and with this Grace [of Thine], that I may give the Light to those in
ignorance of the Race, my Brethren, and Thy Sons.
For this cause I believe, and I bear witness; I go to Life and Light. Blessed art Thou, O Father. Thy Man
would holy be as Thou art holy, e'en as Thou gave him Thy full authority [to be].

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The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

II. To Asclepius
This dialogue sets forth the difference between the physical and metaphysical worlds in the context of
Greek natural philosophy. Some of the language is fairly technical: the "errant spheres" of sections 6 and
7 are the celestial spheres carrying the planets, while the "inerrant sphere" is that of the fixed stars. It's
useful to keep in mind, also, that "air" and "spirit" are interchangeable concepts in Greek thought, and
that the concept of the Good has a range of implications which don't come across in the English word:
one is that the good of any being, in Greek thought, was also that being's necessary goal.
<The criticism of childlessness in section 17 should probably be read as a response to the Christian ideal
of celibacy, which horrified many people in the ancient world. - JMG>
1. Hermes: All that is moved, Asclepius, is it not moved in something and by something?
Asclepius: Assuredly.
H: And must not that in which it's moved be greater than the moved?
A: It must.
H: Mover, again, has greater power than moved?
A: It has, of course.
H: The nature, furthermore, of that in which it's moved must be quite other from the nature of the
moved?
A: It must completely.
2. H: Is not, again, this cosmos vast, [so vast] that than it there exists no body greater?
A: Assuredly.
H: And massive, too, for it is crammed with multitudes of other mighty frames, nay, rather all the other
bodies that there are?
A: It is.
H: And yet the cosmos is a body?
A: It is a body.
H: And one that's moved?

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3. A: Assuredly.
H: Of what size, then, must be the space in which it's moved, and of what kind [must be] the nature [of
that space]? Must it not be far vaster [than the cosmos], in order that it may be able to find room for its
continued course, so that the moved may not be cramped for want of room and lose its motion?
A: Something, Thrice-greatest one, it needs must be, immensely vast.
4. H: And of what nature? Must it not be, Asclepius, of just the contrary? And is not contrary to body
bodiless?
A: Agreed.
H: Space, then, is bodiless. But bodiless must either be some godlike thing or God [Himself]. And by
"some godlike thing" I mean no more the generable [i.e., that which is generated] but the ingenerable.
5. If, then, space be some godlike thing, it is substantial; but if 'tis God [Himself], it transcends
substance. But it is to be thought of otherwise [than God], and in this way.
God is first "thinkable" <or "intelligible"> for us, not for Himself, for that the thing that's thought doth
fall beneath the thinker's sense. God then cannot be "thinkable" unto Himself, in that He's thought of by
Himself as being nothing else but what He thinks. But he is "something else" for us, and so He's thought
of by us.
6. If space is, therefore, to be thought, [it should] not, [then, be thought as] God, but space. If God is also
to be thought, [He should] not [be conceived] as space, but as energy that can contain [all space].
Further, all that is moved is moved not in the moved but in the stable. And that which moves [another] is
of course stationary, for 'tis impossible that it should move with it.
A: How is it, then, that things down here, Thrice-greatest one, are moved with those that are [already]
moved? For thou hast said the errant spheres were moved by the inerrant one.
H: This is not, O Asclepius, a moving with, but one against; they are not moved with one another, but
one against the other. It is this contrariety which turneth the resistance of their motion into rest. For that
resistance is the rest of motion.
7. Hence, too, the errant spheres, being moved contrarily to the inerrant one, are moved by one another
by mutual contrariety, [and also] by the spable one through contrariety itself. And this can otherwise not
be.
The Bears up there <i.e., Ursa Major and Minor>, which neither set nor rise, think'st thou they rest or
move?
A: They move, Thrice-greatest one.
H: And what their motion, my Asclepius?

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A: Motion that turns for ever round the same.


H: But revolution - motion around same - is fixed by rest. For "round-the-same" doth stop
"beyond-same". "Beyond-same" then, being stopped, if it be steadied in "round-same" - the contrary
stands firm, being rendered ever stable by its contrariety.
8. Of this I'll give thee here on earth an instance, which the eye can see. Regard the animals down here a man, for instance, swimming! The water moves, yet the resistance of his hands and feet give him
stability, so that he is not borne along with it, nor sunk thereby.
A: Thou hast, Thrice-greatest one, adduced a most clear instance.
H: All motion, then, is caused in station and by station.
The motion, therefore, of the cosmos (and of every other hylic <i.e., material> animal) will not be caused
by things exterior to the cosmos, but by things interior [outward] to the exterior - such [things] as soul,
or spirit, or some such other thing incorporeal.
'Tis not the body that doth move the living thing in it; nay, not even the whole [body of the universe a
lesser] body e'en though there be no life in it.
9. A: What meanest thou by this, Thrice-greatest one? Is it not bodies, then, that move the stock and
stone and all the other things inanimate?
H: By no means, O Asclepius. The something-in-the-body, the that-which-moves the thing inanimate,
this surely's not a body, for that it moves the two of them - both body of the lifter and the lifted? So that
a thing that's lifeless will not move a lifeless thing. That which doth move [another thing] is animate, in
that it is the mover.
Thou seest, then, how heavy laden is the soul, for it alone doth lift two bodies. That things, moreover,
moved are moved in something as well as moved by something is clear.
10. A: Yea, O Thrice-greatest one, things moved must needs be moved in something void.
H: Thou sayest well, O [my] Asclepius! For naught of things that are is void. Alone the "is-not" is void
[and] stranger to subsistence. For that which is subsistent can never change to void.
A: Are there, then, O Thrice-greatest one, no such things as an empty cask, for instance, and an empty
jar, a cup and vat, and other things like unto them?
H: Alack, Asclepius, for thy far-wandering from the truth! Think'st thou that things most full and most
replete are void?
11. A: How meanest thou, Thrice-greatest one?
H: Is not air body?
A: It is.

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H: And doth this body not pervade all things, and so, pervading, fill them? And "body"; doth body not
consist from blending of the "four" <elements>? Full, then, of air are all thou callest void; and if of air,
then of the "four".
Further, of this the converse follows, that all thou callest full are void - of air; for that they have their
space filled out with other bodies, and, therefore, are not able to receive the air therein. These, then,
which thou dost say are void, they should be hollow named, not void; for they not only are, but they are
full of air and spirit.
12. A: Thy argument (logos), Thrice-greatest one, is not to be gainsaid; air is a body. Further, it is this
body which doth pervade all things, and so, pervading, fill them. What are we, then, to call that space in
which the all doth move?
H: The bodiless, Asclepius.
A: What, then, is Bodiless?
H: 'Tis Mind and Reason (logos), whole out of whole, all self-embracing, free from all body, from all
error free, unsensible to body and untouchable, self stayed in self, containing all, preserving those that
are, whose rays, to use a likeness, are Good, Truth, Light beyond light, the Archetype of soul.
A: What, then, is God?
13. H: Not any one of these is He; for He it is that causeth them to be, both all and each and every thing
of all that are. Nor hath He left a thing beside that is-not; but they are all from things-that-are and not
from things-that-are-not. For that the things-that-are-not have naturally no power of being anything, but
naturally have the power of the inability-to-be. And, conversely, the things-that-are have not the nature
of some time not-being.
14. A: What say'st thou ever, then, God is?
H: God, therefore, is not Mind, but Cause that the Mind is; God is not Spirit, but Cause that Spirit is;
God is not Light, but Cause that the Light is. Hence one should honor God with these two names [the
Good and Father] - names which pertain to Him alone and no one else.
For no one of the other so-called gods, no one of men, or daimones, can be in any measure Good, but
God alone; and He is Good alone and nothing else. The rest of things are separable all from the Good's
nature; for [all the rest] are soul and body, which have no place that can contain the Good.
15. For that as mighty is the Greatness of the Good as is the Being of all things that are - both bodies and
things bodiless, things sensible and intelligible things. Call thou not, therefore, aught else Good, for thou
would'st imious be; nor anything at all at any time call God but Good alone, for so thou would'st again
be impious.
16. Though, then, the Good is spoken of by all, it is not understood by all, what thing it is. Not only,
then, is God not understood by all, but both unto the gods and some of the men they out of ignorance do
give the name of Good, though they can never either be or become Good. For they are very different
from God, while Good can never be distinguished from Him, for that God is the same as Good.

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The rest of the immortal ones are nonetheless honored with the name of God, and spoken of as gods; but
God is Good not out of courtesy but out of nature. For that God's nature and the Good is one; one os the
kind of both, from which all other kinds [proceed].
The Good is he who gives all things and naught receives. God, then, doth give all things and receive
naught. God, then, is Good, and Good is God.
17. The other name of God is Father, again because He is the that-which-maketh-all. The part of father is
to make.
Wherefore child-making is a very great and a most pious thing in life for them who think aright, and to
leave life on earth without a child a very great misfortune and impiety; and he who hath no child is
punished by the daimones after death.
And this is the punishment: that that man's soul who hath no child, shall be condemned unto a body with
neither man's nor woman's nature, a thing accursed beneath the sun.
Wherefore, Asclepius, let not your sympathies be with the man who hath no child, but rather pity his
mishap, knowing what punishment abides for him.
Let all that has been said then, be to thee, Asclepius, an introduction to the gnosis of the nature of all
things.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

III. The Sacred Sermon


<This brief and apparently somewhat garbled text recounts the creation and nature of the world in terms
much like those of the Poemandres. The major theme is the renewal of all things in a cyclic universe,
with the seven planetary rulers again playing a major role. - JMG>
1. The Glory of all things is God, Godhead and Godly Nature. Source of the things that are is God, who
is both Mind and Nature - yea Matter, the Wisdom that reveals all things. Source [too] is Godhead - yea
Nature, Energy, Necessity, and End, and Making-new-again.
Darkness that knew no bounds was in Abyss, and Water [too] and subtle Breath intelligent; these were
by Power of God in Chaos.
Then Holy Light arose; and there collected 'neath Dry Space <literally: "sand"> from out Moist Essence
Elements; and all the Gods do separate things out from fecund Nature.
2. All things being undefined and yet unwrought, the light things were assigned unto the height, the
heavy ones had their foundations laid down underneath the moist part of Dry Space, the universal things
being bounded off by Fire and hanged in Breath to keep them up.

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And Heaven was seen in seven circles; its Gods were visible in forms of stars with all their signs; while
Nature had her members made articulate together with the Gods in her. And [Heaven's] periphery
revolved in cyclic course, borne on by Breath of God.
3. And every God by his own proper power brought forth what was appointed him. Thus there arose
four-footed beasts, and creeping things, and those that in the water dwell, and things with wings, and
everything that beareth seed, and grass, and shoot of every flower, all having in themselves seed of
again-becoming.
And they selected out the births of men for gnosis of the works of God and attestation of the energy of
Nature; the multitude of men for lordship over all beneath the heaven and gnosis of its blessings, that
they might increase in increasing and multiply in multitude, and every soul infleshed by revolution of the
Cyclic Gods, for observation of the marvels of Heaven and Heaven's Gods' revolution, and of the works
of God and energy of Nature, for tokens of its blessings, for gnosis of the power of God, that they might
know the fates that follow good and evil [deeds] and learn the cunning work of all good arts.
4. [Thus] there begins their living and their growing wise, according to the fate appointed by the
revolution of the Cyclic Gods, and their deceasing for this end.
And there shall be memorials mighty of their handiworks upon the earth, leaving dim trace behind when
cycles are renewed.
For every birth of flesh ensouled, and of the fruit of seed, and every handiwork, though it decay, shall of
necessity renew itself, both by the renovation of the Gods and by the turning-round of Nature's rhythmic
wheel.
For that whereas the Godhead is Nature's ever-making-new-again the cosmic mixture, Nature herself is
also co-established in that Godhead.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

IV. The Cup or Monad


<This short text gives an unusually lucid overview of the foundations of Hermetic thought. The stress on
rejection of the body and its pleasures, and on the division of humanity into those with Mind and those
without, are reminiscent of some of the so-called "Gnostic" writings of the same period. The idea that
the division is a matter of choice, on the other hand, is a pleasant variation on the almost Calvinist flavor
of writings such as the Apocalypse of Adam.
<Mead speculates that the imagery of the Cup in this text may have a distant connection, by way of
unorthodox ideas about Communion, with the legends of the Holy Grail. - JMG>
1. Hermes: With Reason (Logos), not with hands, did the World-maker make the universal World; so

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that thou shouldst think of him as everywhere and ever-being, the Author of all things, and One and
Only, who by His Will all beings hath created.
This Body of Him is a thing no man can touch, or see, or measure, a body inextensible, like to no other
frame. 'Tis neither Fire nor Water, Air nor Breath; yet all of them come from it. Now being Good he
willed to consecrate this [Body] to Himself alone, and set its Earth in order and adorn it.
2. So down [to Earth] He sent the Cosmos of this Frame Divine - man, a life that cannot die, and yet a
life that dies. And o'er [all other] lives and over Cosmos [too], did man excel by reason of the Reason
(Logos) and the Mind. For contemplator of God's works did man become; he marvelled and did strive to
know their Author.
3. Reason (Logos) indeed, O Tat, among all men hath He distributed, but Mind not yet; not that He
grudgeth any, for grudging cometh not from Him, but hath its place below, within the souls of men who
have no Mind.
Tat: Why then did God, O father, not on all bestow a share of Mind?
H: He willed, my son, to have it set up in the midst for souls, just as it were a prize.
4. T: And where hath He set it up?
H: He filled a mighty Cup with it, and sent it down, joining a Herald [to it], to whom He gave command
to make this proclamation to the hearts of men:
Baptize thyself with this Cup's baptism, what heart can do so, thou that hast faith thou canst ascend to
him that hath sent down the Cup, thou that dost know for what thoudidst come into being!
As many then as understood the Herald's tidings and doused themselves in Mind, became partakers in
the Gnosis; and when they had "received the Mind" they were made "perfect men".
But they who do not understand the tidings, these, since they possess the aid of Reason [only] and not
Mind, are ignorant wherefor they have come into being and whereby.
5. The senses of such men are like irrational creatures'; and as their [whole] make-up is in their feelings
and their impulses, they fail in all appreciation of <lit.: "they do not wonder at"> those things which
really are worth contemplation. These center all their thought upon the pleasures of the body and its
appetites, in the belief that for its sake man hath come into being.
But they who have received some portion of God's gift, these, Tat, if we judge by their deeds, have from
Death's bonds won their release; for they embrace in their own Mind all things, things on the earth,
things in the heaven, and things above the heaven - if there be aught. And having raised themselves so
far they sight the Good; and having sighted it, they look upon their sojourn here as a mischance; and in
disdain of all, both things in body and the bodiless, they speed their way unto that One and Only One.
6. This is, O Tat, the Gnosis of the Mind, Vision of things Divine; God-knowledge is it, for the Cup is
God's.
T: Father, I, too, would be baptized.

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H: Unless thou first shall hate thy Body, son, thou canst not love thy Self. But if thou lov'st thy Self thou
shalt have Mind, and having Mind thou shalt share in the Gnosis.
T: Father, what dost thou mean?
H: It is not possible, my son, to give thyself to both - I mean to things that perish and to things divine.
For seeing that existing things are twain, Body and Bodiless, in which the perishing and the divine are
understood, the man who hath the will to choose is left the choice of one or the other; for it can never be
the twain should meet. And in those souls to whom the choice is left, the waning of the one causes the
other's growth to show itself.
7. Now the choosing of the Better not only proves a lot most fair for him who makes the choice, seeing it
makes the man a God, but also shows his piety to God. Whereas the [choosing] of the Worse, although it
doth destroy the "man", it doth only disturb God's harmony to this extent, that as processions pass by in
the middle of the way, without being able to do anything but take the road from others, so do such men
move in procession through the world led by their bodies' pleasures.
8. This being so, O Tat, what comes from God hath been and will be ours; but that which is dependent
on ourselves, let this press onward and have no delay, for 'tis not God, 'tis we who are the cause of evil
things, preferring them to good.
Thou see'st, son, how many are the bodies through which we have to pass, how many are the choirs of
daimones, how vast the system of the star-courses [through which our Path doth lie], to hasten to the
One and Only God.
For to the Good there is no other shore; It hath no bounds; It is without an end; and for Itself It is without
beginning, too, though unto us it seemeth to have one - the Gnosis.
9. Therefore to It Gnosis is no beginning; rather is it [that Gnosis doth afford] to us the first beginning of
its being known.
Let us lay hold, therefore, of the beginning. and quickly speed through all [we have to pass].
`Tis very hard, to leave the things we have grown used to, which meet our gaze on every side, and turn
ourselves back to the Old Old [Path].
Appearances delight us, whereas things which appear not make their believing hard.
Now evils are the more apparent things, whereas the Good can never show Itself unto the eyes, for It
hath neither form nor figure.
Therefore the Good is like Itself alone, and unlike all things else; or `tis impossible that That which hath
no body should make Itself apparent to a body.
10. The "Like's" superiority to the "Unlike" and the "Unlike's" inferiority unto the "Like" consists in this:
The Oneness being Source and Root of all, is in all things as Root and Source. Without [this] Source is
naught; whereas the Source [Itself] is from naught but itself, since it is Source of all the rest. It is Itself

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Its Source, since It may have no other Source.


The Oneness then being Source, containeth every number, but is contained by none; engendereth every
number, but is engendered by no other one.
11. Now all that is engendered is imperfect, it is divisible, to increase subject and to decrease; but with
the Perfect [One] none of these things doth hold. Now that which is increasable increases from the
Oneness, but succumbs through its own feebleness when it no longer can contain the One.
And now, O Tat, God's Image hath been sketched for thee, as far as it can be; and if thou wilt attentively
dwell on it and observe it with thine heart's eyes, believe me, son, thou'lt find the Path that leads above;
nay, that Image shall become thy Guide itself, because the Sight [Divine] hath this peculiar [charm], it
holdeth fast and draweth unto it those who succeed in opening their eyes, just as, they say, the magnet
[draweth] iron.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

V. Though Unmanifest God Is Most Manifest


<This sermon is a fairly straightforward Hermetic version of the "argument by design", a standard
approach since ancient times to a proof of the existence of God. Typically, for a Hermetic tractate, its
choice of evidence includes a paean on the beauty and perfection of the human form. - JMG>
1. I will recount to thee this sermon (logos) too, O Tat, that thou may'st cease to be without the mysteries
of the God beyond all name. And mark thou well how that which to the many seems unmanifest, will
grow most manifest for thee.
Now were it manifest, it would not be. For all that is made manifest is subject to becoming, for it hath
been made manifest. But the Unmanifest for ever is, for It doth not desire to be made manifest. It ever is,
and maketh manifest all other things.
Being Himself unmanifest, as ever being and ever making-manifest, Himself is not made manifest. God
is not made Himself; by thinking-manifest <i.e., thinking into manifestation>, He thinketh all things
manifest.
Now "thinking-manifest" deals with things made alone, for thinking-manifest is nothing else than
making.
2. He, then, alone who is not made, 'tis clear, is both beyond all power of thinking-manifest, and is
unmanifest.
And as He thinketh all things manifest, He manifests through all things and in all, and most of all in
whatsoever things He wills to manifest.

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Do thou, then, Tat, my son, pray first unto our Lord and Father, the One-and-Only One, from whom the
One doth come, to show His mercy unto thee, in order that thou mayest have the power to catch a
thought of this so mighty God, one single beam of Him to shine into thy thinking. For thought alone
"sees" the Unmanifest, in that it is itself unmanifest.
If, then, thou hast the power, He will, Tat, manifest to thy mind's eyes. The Lord begrudgeth not Himself
to anything, but manifests Himself through the whole world.
Thou hast the power of taking thought, of seeing it and grasping it in thy own "hands", and gazing face
to face upon God's Image. But if what is within thee even is unmanifest to thee, how, then, shall He
Himself who is within thy self be manifest for thee by means of [outer] eyes?
3. But if thou wouldst "see" him, bethink thee of the sun, bethink thee of moon's course, bethink thee of
the order of the stars. Who is the One who watcheth o'er that order? For every order hath its boundaries
marked out by place and number.
The sun's the greatest god of gods in heaven; to whom all of the heavenly gods give place as unto king
and master. And he, this so-great one, he greater than the earth and sea, endures to have above him
circling smaller stars than him. Out of respect to Whom, or out of fear of Whom, my son, [doth he do
this]?
Nor like nor equal is the course each of these stars describes in heaven. Who [then] is He who marketh
out the manner of their course and its extent?
4. The Bear up there that turneth round itself, and carries round the whole cosmos with it - Who is the
owner of this instrument? Who He who hath set round the sea its bounds? Who He who hath set on its
seat the earth?
For, Tat, there is someone who is the Maker and the Lord of all these things. It cound not be that
number, place and measure could be kept without someone to make them. No order whatsoever could be
made by that which lacketh place and lacketh measure; nay, even this is not without a lord, my son. For
if the orderless lacks something, in that it is not lord of order's path, it also is beneath a lord - the one
who hath not yet ordained it order.
5. Would that it were possible for thee to get thee wings, and soar into the air, and, poised midway
'tween earth and heaven, behold the earth's solidity, the sea's fluidity (the flowings of its streams), the
spaciousness of air, fire's swiftness, [and] the coursing of the stars, the swiftness of heaven's circuit
round them [all]!
Most blessed sight were it, my son, to see all these beneath one sway - the motionless in motion, and the
unmanifest made manifest; whereby is made this order of the cosmos and the cosmos which we see of
order.
6. If thou would'st see Him too through things that suffer death, both on the earth and in the deep, think
of a man's being fashioned in the womb, my son, and strictly scrutinize the art of Him who fashions him,
and learn who fashioneth this fair and godly image of the Man.
Who [then] is He who traceth out the circles of the eyes; who He who boreth out the nostrils and the
ears; who He who openeth [the portal of] the mouth; who He who doth stretch out and tie the nerves;

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who He who channels out the veins; who He who hardeneth the bones; who He who covereth the flesh
with skin; who He who separates the fingers and the joints; who He who widens out a treading for the
feet; who He who diggeth out the ducts; who He who spreadeth out the spleen; who he who shapeth
heart like to a pyramid; who He who setteth ribs together; who He who wideneth the liver out; who He
who maketh lungs like to a sponge; who He who maketh belly stretch so much; who he who doth make
prominent the parts most honorable, so that they may be seen, while hiding out of sight those of least
honor?
7. Behold how many arts [employed] on one material, how many labors on one single sketch; and all
exceeding fair, and all in perfect measure, yet all diversified! Who made them all? What mother, or what
sire, save God alone, unmanifest, who hath made all things by His Will?
8. And no one saith a statue or a picture comes to be without a sculptor or [without] a painter; doth
[then] such workmanship as this exist without a Worker? What depth of blindness, what deep impiety,
what depth of ignorance! See, [then] thou ne'er, son Tat, deprivest works of Worker!
Nay, rather is He greater than all names, so great is He, the Father of them all. For verily He is the Only
One, and this is His work, to be a father.
9. So, if thou forcest me somewhat too bold, to speak, His being is conceiving of all things and making
[them].
And as without its maker its is impossible that anything should be, so ever is He not unless He ever
makes all things, in heaven, in air, in earth, in deep, in all of cosmos, in every part that is and that is not
of everything. For there is naught in all the world that is not He.
He is Himself, both things that are and things that are not. The things that are He hath made manifest, He
keepeth things that are not in Himself.
10. He is the God beyond all name; He the unmanifest, He the most manifest; He whom the mind
[alone] can contemplate, He visible to the eyes [as well]; He is the one of no body, the one of many
bodies, nay, rather He of every body.
Naught is there which he is not. For all are He and He is all. And for this cause hath He all names, in that
they are one Father's. And for this cause hath He Himself no nome, in that He's Father of [them] all.
Who, then, may sing Thee praise of Thee, or [praise] to Thee?
Whither, again, am I to turn my eyes to sing Thy praise; above, below, within, without?
There is no way, no place [is there] about Thee, nor any other thing of things that are.
All [are] in Thee; all [are] from Thee, O Thou who givest all and takest naught, for Thou hast all and
naught is there Thou hast not.
11. And when, O Father, shall I hymn Thee? For none can seize Thy hour or time.
For what, again, shall I sing hymn? For things that Thou hast made, or things Thou hast not? For things
Thou hast made manifest, or things Thou hast concealed?

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How, further, shall I hymn Thee? As being of myself? As having something of mine own? As being
other?
For that Thou art whatever I may be; Thou art whatever I may do; Thou art whatever I may speak.
For Thou art all, and there is nothing else which Thou art not. Thou art all that which doth exist, and
Thou art what doth not exist - Mind when Thou thinkest, and Father when Thou makest, and God when
Thou dost energize, and Good and Maker of all things.
For that the subtler part of matter is the air, of air the soul, of soul the mind, and of mind God.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

VI. In God Alone Is Good And Elsewhere Nowhere


<This sermon on the nature of the Good, like To Asclepius (CH II), relies heavily on the technical
language of classical Greek philosophy - a point which some of Mead's translations tend to obscure.
"The Good," in Greek thought, is also the self-caused and self-sufficient, and thus has little in common
with later conceptions of "goodness," just as the Latin word virtus and the modern Christian concept of
"virtue" are very nearly opposites despite their etymological connection. The word "passion" here also
needs to be understood in its older sense, as the opposite of "action" (cf. "active" and "passive").
<The negative attitude toward humanity and the cosmos which appears in this text contrasts sharply with
the more positive assessment found, for example, in the Poemandres (CH I) or in the Asclepius - a
reminder that these documents are relics of a diverse and not necessarily consistent school of thought. JMG>
1. Good, O Asclepius, is in none else save in God alone; nay, rather, Good is God Himself eternally.
If it be so, [Good] must be essence, from every kind of motion and becoming free (though naught is free
from It), possessed of stable energy around Itself, never too little, nor too much, an ever-full supply.
[Though] one, yet [is It] source of all; for what supplieth all is Good. When I, moreover, say [supplieth]
altogether [all], it is for ever Good. But this belongs to no one else save God alone.
For He stands not in need of any thing, so that desiring it He should be bad; nor can a single thing of
things that are be lost to him, on losing which He should be pained; for pain is part of bad.
Nor is there aught superior to Him, that He should be subdued by it; nor any peer to Him to do Him
wrong, or [so that] He should fall in love on its account; nor aught that gives no ear to Him, whereat He
should grow angry; nor wiser aught, for Him to envy.
2. Now as all these are non-existent in His being, what is there left but Good alone?

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For just as naught of bad is to be found in such transcendent Being, so too in no one of the rest will
Good be found.
For in them are all of the other things <i.e., those things which are not Good> - both in the little and the
great, both in each severally and in this living one that's greater than them all and the mightiest [of them]
<i.e., the cosmos>.
For things subject to birth abound in passions, birth in itself being passible. But where there's passion,
nowhere is there Good; and where is Good, nowhere a single passion. For where is day, nowhere is
night; and where is night, day is nowhere.
Wherefore in genesis the Good can never be, but only be in the ingenerate.
But seeing that the sharing in all things hath been bestowed on matter, so doth it share in Good.
In this way is the Cosmos Good; that, in so far as it doth make all things, as far as making goes it's Good,
but in all other things it is not Good. For it's both passible and subject unto motion, and maker of things
passible.
3. Whereas in man by greater or less of bad is good determined. For what is not too bad down here, is
good, and good down here is the least part of bad.
It cannot, therefore, be that good down here should be quite clean of bad, for down here good is fouled
with bad; and being fouled, it stays no longer good, and staying not it changes into bad.
In God alone, is, therefore, Good, or rather Good is God Himself.
So then, Asclepius, the name alone of Good is found in men, the thing itself nowhere [in them], for this
can never be.
For no material body doth contain It - a thing bound on all sides by bad, by labors, pains, desires and
passions, by error and by foolish thoughts.
And greatest ill of all, Asclepius, is that each of these things that have been said above, is thought down
here to be the greatest good.
And what is still an even greater ill, is belly-lust, the error that doth lead the band of all the other ills the thing that makes us turn down here from Good.
4. And I, for my part, give thanks to God, that He hath cast it in my mind about the Gnosis of the Good,
that it can never be It should be in the world. For that the world is "fullness" of the bad, but God of
Good, and Good of God.
The excellencies of the Beautiful are round the very essence [of the Good]; nay, they do seem too pure,
too unalloyed; perchance 'tis they that are themselves Its essences.
For one may dare to say, Asclepius - if essence, sooth, He have - God's essence is the Beautiful; the
Beautiful is further also Good.

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There is no Good that can be got from objects in the world. For all the things that fall beneath the eye are
image-things and pictures as it were; while those that do not meet [the eye are the realities], especially
the [essence] of the Beautiful and Good.
Just as the eye cannot see God, so can it not behold the Beautiful and Good. For that they are integral
parts of God, wedded to Him alone, inseparate familiars, most beloved, with whom God is Himself in
love, or they with God.
5. If thou canst God conceive, thou shalt conceive the Beautiful and Good, transcending Light, made
lighter than the Light by God. That Beauty is beyond compare, inimitate that Good, e'en as God is
Himself.
As, then, thou dost conceive of God, conceive the Beautiful and Good. For they cannot be joined with
aught of other things that live, since they can never be divorced from God.
Seek'st thou for God, thou seekest for the Beautiful. One is the Path that leadeth unto It - Devotion
joined with Gnosis.
6. And thus it is that they who do not know and do not tread Devotion's Path, do dare to call man
beautiful and good, though he have ne'er e'en in his visions seen a whit that's Good, but is enveloped
with every kind of bad, and thinks the bad is good, and thus doth make unceasing use of it, and even
feareth that it should be ta'en from him, so straining every nerve not only to preserve but even to increase
it.
Such are the things that men call good and beautiful, Asclepius - things which we cannot flee or hate; for
hardest thing of all is that we've need of them and cannot live without them.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

VII. The Greatest Ill Among Men is Ignorance of God


<A good solid diatribe in colorful language. One easily imagines it being delivered at the Hermetic
equivalent of a tent revival meeting. - JMG>
1. Whither stumble ye, sots, who have sopped up the wine of ignorance and can so far not carry it that ye
already even spew it forth?
Stay ye, be sober, gaze upwards with the [true] eyes of the heart! And if ye cannot all, yet ye at least who
can!
For that the ill of ignorance doth pour o`er all the earth and overwhelm the soul that's battened down
within the body, preventing it from fetching port within Salvation's harbors.
2. Be ye then not carried off by the fierce flood, but using the shore-current <lit., "back-current" or

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"up-current">, ye who can, make for Salvation's port, and, harboring there, seek ye for one to take you by
the hand and lead you unto Gnosis' gates.
Where shines clear Light, of every darkness clean; where not a single soul is drunk, but sober all they
gaze with their hearts' eyes on Him who willeth to be seen.
No ear can hear Him, nor can eye see Him, nor tongue speak of Him, but [only] mind and heart.
But first thou must tear off from thee the cloak which thou dost wear - the web of ignorance, the ground
of bad, corruption's chain, the carapace of darkness, the living death, sensation's corpse, the tomb thou
carriest with thee, the robber in thy house, who through the things he loveth, hateth thee, and through the
things he hateth, bears thee malice.
3. Such is the hateful cloak thou wearest - that throttles thee [and holds thee] down to it, in order that
thou may'st not gaze above, and having seen the Beauty of the Truth, and Good that dwells therein,
detest the bad of it; having found out the plot that it hath schemed against thee, by making void of sense
those seeming things which men think senses.
For that it hath with mass of matter blocked them up and crammed them full of loathsome lust, so that
thou may'st not hear about the things that thou should'st hear, nor see the things thou should'st see.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

VIII. That No One of Existing Things doth Perish, but Men in


Error Speak of Their Changes as Destructions and as Deaths
<The idea of cyclic change central to CH III, "The Sacred Sermon", also takes center stage here. A
current of ancient speculation grounded in astrology held that as the planets returned after vast cycles of
time to the same positions, so all events on earth would repeat themselves precisely into eternity in the
future - and had done so from eternity in the past. The technical term for this recurrence, apocatastasis,
is the word Mead translates as "restoration" in the beginning of section 4.
<Mead footnotes this tractate as "obscure" and "faulty" in places, and his translation of the beginning of
section 3 is conjectural. - JMG>
1. [Hermes:] Concerning Soul and Body, son, we now must speak; in what way Soul is deathless, and
whence comes the activity in composing and dissolving Body.
For there's no death for aught of things [that are]; the thought this word conveys, is either void of fact, or
[simply] by the knocking off a syllable what is called "death", doth stand for "deathless".
For death is of destruction, and nothing in the Cosmos is destroyed. For if Cosmos is second God, a life
<or living creature> that cannot die, it cannot be that any part of this immortal life should die. All things
in Cosmos are parts of Cosmos, and most of all is man, the rational animal.

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2. For truly first of all, eternal and transcending birth, is God the universals' Maker. Second is he "after
His image", Cosmos, brought into being by Him, sustained and fed by Him, made deathless, as by his
own Sire, living for aye, as ever free from death.
Now that which ever-liveth, differs from the Eternal; for He hath not been brought to being by another,
and even if He have been brought to being, He hath not been brought to being by Himself, but ever is
brought into being.
For the Eternal, in that It is eternal, is the all. The Father is Himself eternal of Himself, but Cosmos hath
become eternal and immortal by the Father.
3. And of the matter stored beneath it <i.e., beneath the cosmos>, the Father made of it a universal body,
and packing it together made it spherical - wrapping it round the life - [a sphere] which is immortal in
itself, and that doth make materiality eternal.
But He, the Father, full-filled with His ideas, did sow the lives <or living creatures> into the sphere, and
shut them in as in a cave, willing to order forth the life with every kind of living.
So He with deathlessness enclosed the universal body, that matter might not wish to separate itself from
body's composition, and so dissolve into its own [original] unorder.
For matter, son, when it was yet incorporate <i.e., not yet formed into bodies>, was in unorder. And it
doth still retain down here this [nature of unorder] enveloping the rest of the small lives <or living
creatures> - that increase-and-decrease which men call death.
4. It is round earthly lives that this unorder doth exist. For that the bodies of the heavenly ones preserve
one order allotted to them by the Father as their rule; and it is by the restoration of each one [of them]
this order is preserved indissolute.
The "restoration" of bodies on the earth is thus their composition, whereas their dissolution restores them
to those bodies which can never be dissolved, that is to say, which know no death. Privation, thus, of
sense is brought about, not loss of bodies.
5. Now the third life - Man, after the image of the Cosmos made, [and] having mind, after the Father's
will, beyond all earthly lives - not only doth have feeling with the second God <i.e., the Cosmos>, but
also hath conception of the first; for of the one 'tis sensible as of a body, while of the other it conceives
as bodiless and the Good Mind.
Tat: Doth then this life not perish?
Hermes: Hush, son! and understand what God, what Cosmos [is], what is a life that cannot die, and what
a life subject to dissolution.
Yea, understand the Cosmos is by God and in God; but Man by Cosmos and in Cosmos.
The source and limit and the constitution of all things is God.

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The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

IX. On Thought and Sense


<This somewhat diffuse essay covers a series of topics, starting with (and to some extent from) the
concept that the set of perceptions we call "thoughts" and the set we call "sensory perceptions" are not
significantly different from each other. The implications of this idea play a significant role in later
Hermetic thought, particularly in the areas of magic and the Art of Memory; in this tractate, though, the
issues involved are barely touched, and the argument wanders into moral dualisms and the equally
important, but distinct, idea that the Cosmos is itself a divine creative power.
<Section 10, in which understanding is held up as the source and precondition of belief, should probably
be seen as part of the same ancient debate on the roles of faith and reason that gave rise to Tertullian's
famous credo quia absurdum ("I believe because it is absurd"). - JMG>
1. I gave the Perfect Sermon (Logos) yesterday, Asclepius; today I think it right, as sequel thereunto, to
go through point by point the Sermon about Sense.
Now sense and thought do seem to differ, in that the former has to do with matter, the latter has to do
with substance. But unto me both seem to be at-one and not to differ - in men I mean. In other lives <or
living creatures> sense is at-oned with Nature, but in men thought.
Now mind doth differ just as much from thought as God doth from divinity. For that divinity by God
doth come to be, and by mind thought, the sister of the word (logos) and instruments of one another. For
neither doth the word (logos) find utterance without thought, nor is thought manifested without word.
2. So sense and thought both flow together into man, as though they were entwined with one another.
For neither without sensing can one think, nor without thinking sense.
But it is possible [they say] to think a thing apart from sense, as those who fancy sights in dreams. But
unto me it seems that both of these activities occur in dream-sight, and sense doth pass out of the
sleeping to the waking state.
For man is separated into soul and body, and only when the two sides of his sense agree together, does
utterance of its thought conceived by mind take place.
3. For it is mind that doth conceive all thoughts - good thoughts when it receives the seeds from God,
their contraries when [it receiveth them] from the daimonials; no part of Cosmos being free of daimon,
who stealthily doth creep into the daimon who's illumined by God's light <i.e., the human soul>, and
sow in him the seed of its own energy.
And mind conceives the seed thus sown, adultery, murder, parricide, [and] sacrilege, impiety, [and]
strangling, casting down precipices, and all such other deeds as are the work of evil daimons.
4. The seeds of God, 'tis true, are few, but vast and fair, and good - virtue and self-control, devotion.

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Devotion is God-gnosis; and he who knoweth God, being filled with all good things, thinks godly
thoughts and not thoughts like the many [think].
For this cause they who Gnostic are, please not the many, nor the many them. They are thought mad and
laughted at; they're hated and despised, and sometimes even put to death.
For we did say that bad must needs dwell on earth, where 'tis in its own place. Its place is earth, and not
Cosmos, as some will sometimes say with impious tongue.
But he who is a devotee of God, will bear with all - once he has sensed the Gnosis. For such an one all
things, e'en though they be for others bad, are for him good; deliberately he doth refer them all unto the
Gnosis. And, thing most marvelous, 'tis he alone who maketh bad things good.
5. But I return once more to the Discourse (Logos) on Sense. That sense doth share with thought in man,
doth constitute him man. But 'tis not [every] man, as I have said, who benefits by thought; for this man is
material, that other one substantial.
For the material man, as I have said, [consorting] with the bad, doth have his seed of thought from
daimons; while the substantial men [consorting] with the Good, are saved by God.
Now God is Maker of all things, and in His making, He maketh all [at last] like to Himself; but they,
while they're becoming good by exercise of their activity, are unproductive things.
It is the working of the Cosmic Course that maketh their becomings what they are, befouling some of
them with bad and others of them making clean with good.
For Cosmos, too, Asclepius, possesseth sense-and-thought peculiar to itself, not like that of man; 'tis not
so manifold, but as it were a better and a simpler one.
6. The single sense-and-thought of Cosmos is to make all things, and make them back into itself again,
as Organ of the Will of God, so organized that it, receiving all the seeds into itself from God, and
keeping them within itself, may make all manifest, and [then] dissolving them, make them all new again;
and thus, like a Good Gardener of Life, things that have been dissolved, it taketh to itself, and giveth
them renewal once again.
There is no thing to which it gives not life; but taking all unto itself it makes them live, and is at the
same time the Place of Life and its Creator.
7. Now bodies matter [-made] are in diversity. Some are of earth, of water some, some are of air, and
some of fire.
But they are all composed; some are more [composite], and some are simpler. The heavier ones are more
[composed], the lighter less so.
It is the speed of Cosmos' Course that works the manifoldness of the kinds of births. For being a most
swift Breath, it doth bestow their qualities on bodies together with the One Pleroma - that of Life.
8. God, then, is Sire of Cosmos; Cosmos, of all in Cosmos. And Cosmos is God's Son; but things in
Cosmos are by Cosmos.

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And properly hath it been called Cosmos [Order]; for that it orders all with their diversity of birth, with
its not leaving aught without its life, with the unweariedness of its activity, the speed of its necessity, the
composition of its elements, and order of its creatures.
The same, then, of necessity and propriety should have the name of Order.
The sense-and-thought, then, of all lives doth come into them from without, inbreathed by what contains
[them all]; whereas Cosmos receives them once for all together with its coming into being, and keeps
them as a gift from God.
9. But God is not, as some suppose, beyond the reach of sense-and-thought. It is through superstition
men thus impiously speak.
For all the things that are, Asclepius, all are in God, are brought by God to be, and do depend on Him both things that act through bodies, and things that through soul-substance make [other things] to move,
and things that make things live by means of spirit, and things that take unto themselves the things that
are worn out.
And rightly so; nay, I would rather say, He doth not have these things; but I speak forth the truth, He is
them all Himself. He doth not get them from without, but gives them out [from Him].
This is God's sense-and-thought, ever to move all things. And never time shall be when e'en a whit of
things that are shall cease; and when I say "a whit of things that are", I mean a whit of God. For thigs that
are, God hath; nor aught [is there] without Him, nor [is] He without aught.
10. These things should seem to thee, Asclepius, if thou dost understand them, true; but if thou dost not
understand, things not to be believed.
To understand is to believe, to not believe is not to understand.
My word (logos) doth go before [thee] to the truth. But mighty is the mind, and when it hath been led by
word up to a certain point, it hath the power to come before [thee] to the truth.
And having thought o'er all these things, and found them consonant with those which have already been
translated by the reason, it hath [e'en now] believed, and found its rest in that Fair Faith.
To those, then, who by God['s good aid] do understand the things that have been said [by us] above,
they're credible; but unto those who understand them not, incredible.
Let so much, then, suffice on thought-and-sense.

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X. The Key
<This longer tractate presents itself explicitly as a summary or abridgement of the General Sermons (CH
II-IX), and discusses the Hermetic view of knowledge and its role in the lives and afterlives of human
beings. The attentive reader will notice certain contradictions between the afterlife-teachings of this and
previous tractates.
<One of the central concepts of The Key, and of Hermetic thought generally, is the distinction between
ordinary discursive knowledge which can be expressed in words (in Greek, episteme, which Mead
translates somewhat clumsily as "science") and transcendent, unitive knowledge which cannot be
communicated (in Greek, gnosis, which Mead simply and sensibly leaves untranslated). The same
distinction can be found in many systems of mystical thought. Unlike most of these, though, the
Hermetic teachings place value on both.
<Readers without much experience in the jargon of Classical philosophy will want to remember that
"hylic" means "material", "passible" means "subject to outside forces or to suffering", and "intelligible"
means "belonging to the realm of the Mind", and "motion" includes all kinds of change. The special
implications of "good" in Greek thought - of self-sufficiency and desirability - should also be kept in
mind.
<The delightful irony of the Zen moment early in section 9, when Hermes - in the middle of this very
substantial lecture - defines the good and pious man as "he who doth not say much or lend his ear to
much" and thus rules out both himself and his audience, seems to have been lost on subsequent
commentators. - JMG>
1. Hermes: My yesterday's discourse (logos) I did devote to thee, Asclepius, and so 'tis [only] right I
should devote toafy's to Tat; and this the more because 'tis the abridgement of the General Sermons
(Logoi) which he has had addressed to him.
"God, Father and the Good", then, Tat, hath the same nature, or more exactly, energy.
For nature is a predicate of growth, and used of things that change, both mobile and immobile, that is to
say, both human and divine, each one of which He willeth into being.
But energy consists in something else, as we have shown in treating of the rest, both things divine and
human things; which thing we ought to have in mind when treating of the Good.
2. God's energy is then His Will; further His essence is to will the being of all things. For what is "God
and Father and the Good" but the "to be" of all that are not yet? Nay, subsistence self of everything that
is; this, then, is God, this Father, this the Good; to Him is added naught of all the rest.
And though the Cosmos, that is to say the Sun, is also sire himself to them that share in him; yet so far is
he not the cause of good unto the lives, he is not even of their living.
So that e'en if he be a sire, he is entirely so by compulsion of the Good's Good-will, apart from which
nor being nor becoming could e'er be.
3. Again, the parent is the children's cause, both on the father's and the mother's side, only by sharing in
the Good's desire [that doth pour] through the Sun. It is the Good which doeth the creating.

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And such a power can be possessed by no one else than Him alone who taketh naught, but wills all
things to be; I will not, Tat, say "makes".
For that the maker is defective for long periods (in which he sometimes makes, and sometimes doth not
make) both in the quality and in the quantity [of what he makes]; in that he sometimes maketh them so
many and such like, and sometimes the reverse.
But "God and Father and the Good" is [cause] for all to be. So are at least these things for those who can
see.
4. For It doth will to be, and It is both Itself and most of all by reason of Itself. Indeed, all other things
beside are just bacause of It; for the distinctive feature of the Good is "that it should be known". Such is
the Good, O Tat.
Tat: Thou hast, O father, filled us so full of this so good and fairest sight, that thereby my mind's eye
hath now become for me almost a thing to worship.
For that the vision of the Good doth not, like the sun's beam, firelike blaze on the eyes and make them
close; nay, on the contrary, it shineth forth and maketh to increase the seeing of the eye, as far as e'er a
man hath the capacity to hold the inflow of the radiance that the mind alone can see.
Not only does it come more swiftly down to us, but it does us no harm, and is instinct with all immortal
life.
5. They who are able to drink in a somewhat more than others of this Sight, ofttimes from out the body
fall asleep in this fairest Spectacle, as was the case with Uranus and Cronus, our forebears. may this be
out lot too, O father mine!
Hermes: Yea, may it be, my son! But as it is, we are not yet strung to the Vision, and not as yet have we
the power our mind's eye to unfold and gaze upon the Beauty of the Good - Beauty that naught can e'er
corrupt or any comprehend.
For only then wilt thou upon It gaze when thou canst say no word concerning It. For Gnosis of the Good
is holy silence and a giving holiday to every sense.
6. For neither can he who perceiveth It, perceive aught else; nor he who gazeth on It, gaze on aught else;
nor hear aught else, nor stir his body any way. Staying his body's every sense and every motion he
stayeth still.
And shining then all round his mond, It shines through his whole soul, and draws it out of body,
transforming all of him to essence.
For it is possible, my son, that a man's soul should be made like to God, e'en while it still is in a body, if
it doth contemplate the Beauty of the Good.
7. Tat: Made like to God? What dost thou, father, mean?
Hermes: Of every soul apart are transformations, son.

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Tat: What meanest thou? Apart?


Hermes: Didst thou not, in the General Sermons, hear that from one Soul - the All-soul - come all these
souls which are made to revovlve in all the cosmos, as though divided off?
Of these souls, then, it is that there are many changes, some to a happier lot and some to [just] the
contrary of this.
Thus some that were creeping things change into things that in the water dwell, the souls of water things
change to earth-dwellers, those that live on earth change to things with wings, and souls that live in air
change to men, while human souls reach the first step of deathlessness changed into daimones.
And so they circle to the choir of the Inerrant Gods; for of the Gods there are two choirs, the one
Inerrant, and the other Errant. And this is the most perfect glory of the soul.
8. But if a soul on entering the body of a man persisteth in its vice, it neither tasteth deathlessness nor
shareth in the Good; but speeding back again it turns into the path that leads to creeping things. This is
the sentence of the vicious soul.
And the soul's vice is ignorance. For that the soul who hath no knowledge of the things that are, or
knowledge of their nature, or of Good, is blinded by the body's passions and tossed about.
This wretched soul, not knowing what she is, becomes the slave of bodies of strange form in sorry
plight, bearing the body as a load; not as the ruler, but the ruled. This [ignorance] is the soul's vice.
9. But on the other hand the virtue of the soul is Gnosis. For he who knows, he good and pious is, and
still while on the earth divine.
Tat: But who is such an one, O father mine?
Hermes: He who doth not say much or lend his ear to much. For he who spendeth time in arguing and
hearing arguments, doth shadow-fight. For "God, the Father and the Good", is not to be obtained by
speech or hearing.
And yet though this is so, there are in all the beings senses, in that they cannot without senses be.
But Gnosis is far different from sense. For sense is brought about by that which hath the mastery o'er us,
while Gnosis is the end <i.e., goal> of science, and science is God's gift.
10. All science is incorporeal, the instrument it uses being the mind, just as the mind employs the body.
Both then come into bodies, [I mean] both things that are cognizable by mond alone and things material.
For all things must consist out of antithesis and contrariety; and this can otherwise not be.
Tat: Who then is this material God of whom thou speakest?
Hermes: Cosmos is beautiful, but is not good - for that it is material and freely passible; and though it is
the first of all things passible, yet is it in the second rank of being and wanting in itself.

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And though it never hath itself its birth in time, but ever is, yet is its being in becoming, becoming for all
time the genesis of qualities and quantities; for it is mobile and all material motion's genesis.
11. It is intelligible rest that moves material motion in this way, since Cosmos is a sphere - that is to say,
a head. And naught of head above's material, as naught of feet below's intelligible, but all material.
And head itself is moved in a sphere-like way - that is to say, as head should move, is mind.
All then that are united to the "tissue" of this "head" (in which is soul) are in their nature free from death
- just as when body hath been made in soul, are things that hath more soul than body.
Whereas those things which are at greater distance from this "tissue" - there, where are things which
have a greater share of body than of soul - are by their nature subject unto death.
The whole, however, is a life; so that the universe consists of both the hylic and of the intelligible.
12. Again, the Cosmos is the first of living things, while man is second after it, though first of things
subject to death.
Man hath the same ensouling power in him as all the rest of living things; yet is he not only not good,
but even evil, for that he's subject unto death.
For though the Cosmos also is not good in that it suffers motion, it is not evil, in that it is not subject to
death. But man, in that he's subject both to motion and to death, is evil.
13. Now then the principles of man are this-wise vehicled: mind in the reason (logos), the reason in the
soul, soul in the spirit <or, rather, vital spirits>, and spirit in the body.
Spirit pervading [body] by means of veins and arteries and blood, bestows upon the living creature
motion, and as it were doth bear it in a way.
For this cause some do think the soul is blood, in that they do mistake its nature, not knowing that [at
death] it is iteh spirit that must first withdraw into the soul, whereon the blood congeals and veins and
arteries are emptied, and then the living creature <or life> is withdrawn; and this is body's death.
14. Now from one Source all things depend; while Source [dependeth] from the One and Only [One].
Source is, moreover, moved to become Source again; whereas the One standeth perpetually and is not
moved.
Three then are they: "God, the Father and the Good", Cosmos and man.
God doth contain Cosmos; Cosmos [containeth] man. Cosmos is e'er God's Son, man as it were Cosmos'
child.
15. Not that, however, God ignoreth man; nay, right well doth He know him, and willeth to be known.
This is the sole salvation for a man - God's Gnosis. This is the Way Up to the Mount.

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By Him alone the soul becometh good, not whiles is good, whiles evil, but [good] out of necessity.
Tat: What dost thou mean, Thrice-greatest one?
Hermes: Behold an infant's soul, my son, that is not yet cut off, because its body is still small and not as
yet come unto its full bulk.
Tat: How?
Hermes: A thing of beauty altogether is [such a soul] to see, not yet befouled by body's passions, still all
but hanging from the Cosmic Soul!
But when the body grows in bulk and draweth down the soul into its mass, then doth the soul cut off
itself and bring upon itself forgetfulness, and no more shareth in the Beautiful and the Good. And this
forgetfulness becometh vice.
16. It is the same for them who go out from the body.
For when the soul withdraws into itself, the spirit doth contract itself within the blood, and the soul
within the spirit. And then the mind, stripped of its wrappings, and naturally divine, taking unto itself a
fiery body, doth traverse every space, after abandoning the soul unto its judgement and whatever
chastisement it hath deserved.
Tat: What dost thou, father, mean by this? The mind is parted from soul and soul from spirit? Whereas
thou said'st the soul was the mind's vesture, and the soul's the spirit.
17. Hermes: The hearer, son, should think with him who speaks and breathe with him; nay, he should
have a hearing subtler than the voice of him who speaks.
It is, son, in a body made of earth that this arrangement of the vestures comes to pass. For in a body
made of earth it is impossible the mind should take its seat itself by its own self in nakedness.
For neither is it possible on the one hand the earthly body should contain so much immortality, nor on
the other that so great a virtue should endure a body passible in such close contact with it. It taketh, then,
the soul for as it were an envelope.
And soul itself, being too and thing divine, doth use the spirit as its envelope, while spirit doth pervade
the living creature.
18. When then the mind doth free itself from the earth-body, it straightway putteth on its proper robe of
fire, with which it could not dwell in an earth-body.
For earth doth not bear fire; for it is all set in a blaze even by a small spark. And for this cause is water
poured around earth, to be a guard and wall, to keep the blazing of the fire away.
But mind, the swiftest thing of all divine outthinkings, and swifter than all elements, hath for its body
fire.
For mind being builder doth use the fire as tool for the construction of all things - the Mind of all [for the

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construction] of all things, but that of man only for things on earth.
Stript of its fire the mind on earth cannot make things divine, for it is human in its dispensation.
19. The soul in man, however - not every soul, but one that pious is - is a daimonic something and
divine.
And such a soul when from the body freed, if it have fought the fight of piety - the fight of piety is to
know God and to do wrong to no man - such a soul becomes entirely mind.
Whereas the impious soul remains in its own essence, chastised by its own self, and seeking for an
earthly body where to enter, if only it be human.
For that no other body can contain a human soul; nor is it right that any human soul should fall into the
body of a thing that doth possess no reason. For that the law of God is this: to guard the human soul from
such tremendous outrage.
20. Tat: How father, then, is a man's soul chastised?
Hermes: What greater chastisement of any human soul can there be, son, than lack of piety? What fire
has so fierce a flame as lack of piety? What ravenous beast so mauls the body as lack of piety the very
soul?
Dost thou not see what hosts of ills the impious soul doth bear?
It shrieks and screams: I burn; I am ablaze; I know not what to cry or do; ah, wretched me, I am
devoured by all the ills that compass me about; alack, poor me, I neither see nor hear!
Such are the cries wrung from a soul chastised; not, as the many think, and thou, son, dost suppose, that
a [man's] soul, passing from body, is changed into a beast.
Such is a very grave mistake, for that the way a soul doth suffer chastisement is this:
21. When mind becomes a daimon, the law requires that it should take a fiery body to execute the
services of God; and entering in the soul most impious it scourgeth it with whips made of its sins.
And then the impious soul, scourged with its sins, is plunged in murders, outrage, blasphemy, in
violence of all kinds, and all the other things whereby mankind is wronged.
But on the pious soul the mind doth mount and guide it to the Gnosis' Light. And such a soul doth never
tire in songs of praise [to God] and pouring blessing on all men, and doing good in word and deed to all,
in imitation of its Sire.
22. Wherefore, my son, thou shouldst give praise to God and pray that thou mayst have thy mind Good
Mind. It is, then, to a better state the soul doth pass; it cannot to a worse.
Further there is an intercourse of souls; those of the gods have intercourse with those of men, and those
of men with souls of creatures which possess no reason.

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The higher, further, have in charge the lower; the gods look after men, men after animals irrational,
while God hath charge of all; for He is higher than them all and all are less than He.
Cosmos is subject, then, to God, man to the Cosmos, and irrationals to man. But God is o'er them all,
and God contains them all.
God's rays, to use a figure, are His energies; the Cosmos's are natures, the arts and sciences are man's.
The energies act through the Cosmos, thence through the nature-rays of Cosmos upon man; the
nature-rays [act] through the elements, man [acteth] through the sciences and arts.
23. This is the dispensation of the universe, depending from the nature of the One, pervading [all things]
through the Mind, than which is naught diviner nor of greater energy; and naught a greater means for the
at-oning men to gods and gods to men.
He, [Mind,] is the Good Daimon. Blessed the soul that is most filled with Him, and wretched is the soul
that's empty of the Mind.
Tat: Father, what dost thou mean, again?
Hermes: Dost think then, son, that every soul hath the Good [Mind]? For 'tis of Him we speak, not of the
mind in service of which we were just speaking, the mind sent down for [the soul's] chastisement.
24. For soul without the mind "can neither speak nor act". For oftentimes the mind doth leave the soul,
and at that time the soul neither sees nor understands, but is just like a thing that hath no reason. Such is
the power of mind.
Yet doth it not endure a sluggish soul, but leaveth such a soul tied to the body and bound tight down by
it. Such soul, my son, doth not have Mind; and therefore such an one should not be called a man. For
that man is a thing-of-life <or animal> divine; man is not measured with the rest of lives of things upon
the earth, but with the lives above in heaven, who are called gods.
Nay more, if we must boldly speak the truth, the true "man" is e'en higher than the gods, or at the [very]
least the gods and men are very whit in power each with the other equal.
25. For no one of the gods in heaven shall come down to the earth, o'er-stepping heaven's limit; whereas
man doth mount up to heaven and measure it; he knows what things of it are high, what things are low,
and learns precisely all things else besides. And greater thing than all; without e'en quitting earth, he
doth ascend above. So vast a sweep doth he possess of ecstasy.
For this cause can a man dare say that man on earth is god subject to death, while god in heaven is man
from death immune.
Wherefore the dispensation of all things is brought about by means of there, the twain - Cosmos and
Man - but by the One.

The Corpus Hermeticum


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translated by G.R.S. Mead

XI. Mind Unto Hermes


<This complex text is written as a revelation from the divine Mind - the "Man-Shepherd" of CH I - to
Hermes, concerning the nature of God and the universe. Difficult enough in its own right, it has been
made rather more so by some of Mead's most opaque prose. I have tried to insert clarifications where
these are most needed.
<Some notes on terminology may also be useful. The term Aeon here, as in many of the so-called
"Gnostic" writings, refers to the timeless and spaceless realm of ideal being. The word cosmos means
both "order" and "beauty" - the same root appears in the word "cosmetic". Additionally, the words
genesis and becoming in the translation are the same word in the Greek original.
<Finally, the word "inactive" in square brackets near the beginning of section 13 is Mead's, intended to
fill a lacuna in the text. The more usual conjecture, as he comments, is "apart from God". - JMG>
1. Mind: Master this sermon (logos), then, Thrice-greatest Hermes, and bear in mind the spoken words;
and as it hath come unto Me to speak, I will no more delay.
Hermes: As many men say many things, and these diverse, about the All and Good, I have not learned
the truth. Make it, then, clear to me, O Master mine! For I can trust the explanation of these things,
which comes from Thee alone.
2. Mind: Hear [then], My son, how standeth God and All.
God; Aeon; Cosmos; Time; Becoming.
God maketh Aeon; Aeon, Cosmos; Cosmos, Time; and Time, Becoming <or Genesis>.
The Good - the Beautiful, Wisdom, Blessedness - is <the> essence, as it were, of God; of Aeon, <the
essence is> Sameness; of Cosmos, Order; of Time, Change; and of Becoming, Life and Death.
The energies of God are Mind and Soul; of Aeon, lastingness and deathlessness; of Cosmos, restoration
and the opposite thereof; of Time, increase and decrease; and of Becoming, quality.
Aeon is, then, in God; Cosmos, in Aeon; in Cosmos; Time; in Time, Becoming.
Aeon stands firm round God; Cosmos is moved in Aeon; Time hath its limits <or is accomplished> in
the Cosmos; Becoming doth become in Time.
3. The source, therfore, of all is God; their essence, Aeon; their matter, Cosmos.
God's power is Aeon; Aeon's work is Cosmos - which never hath become, yet ever doth become by
Aeon.
Therefore will Cosmos never be destroyed, for Aeon's indestructible; nor doth a whit of things in
Cosmos perish, for Cosmos is enwrapped by Aeon round on every side.

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Hermes: But God's Wisdom - what is that?


Mind: The Good and Beautiful, and Blessedness, and Virtue's all, and Aeon.
Aeon, then, ordereth [Cosmos], imparting deathlessness and lastingness to matter.
4. For its beginning doth depend on Aeon, as Aeon doth on God.
Now Genesis <or Becoming> and Time, in Heaven and upon the Earth, are of two natures.
In Heaven they are unchangeable and indestructible, but on the Earth they're subject unto change and to
destruction.
Further, the Aeon's soul is God; the Cosmos' soul is Aeon; the Earth's soul, Heaven.
And God <is> in Mind; and Mind, in Soul; and Soul, in Matter; and all of them through Aeon.
But all this Body, in which are all the bodies, is full of Soul; and Soul is full of Mind, and Mind of God.
It <i.e., Soul> fills it <i.e., the Body of the Cosmos> from within, and from without encircles it, making
the All to live.
Without, this vast and perfect Life [encircles] Cosmos; within, it fills [it with] all lives; above, in
Heaven, continuing in sameness; below, on Earth, changing becoming.
5. And Aeon doth preserve this [Cosmos], or by Necessity, or by Foreknowledge, or by Nature, or by
whatever else a man supposes or shall suppose. And all is this - God energizing.
The Energy of God is Power that naught can e'er surpass, a Power with which no one can make
comparison of any human thing at all, or any thing divine.
Wherefore, O Hermes, never think that aught of things above or things below is like to God, for thou
wilt fall from truth. For naught is like to That which hath no like, and is Alone and One.
And do not ever think that any other can possibly possess His power; for what apart from Him is there of
life, and deathlessness and change of quality? For what else should He make?
God's not inactive, since all things [then] would lack activity; for all are full of God.
But neither in the Cosmos anywhere, nor in aught else, is there inaction. For that "inaction" is a name
that cannot be applied to either what doth make or what is made.
6. But all things must be made; both ever made, and also in accordance with the influence of every
space.
For He who makes, is in them all; not stablished in some one of them, nor making one thing only, but
making all.

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For being Power, He energizeth in the things He makes and is not independent of them - although the
things He makes are subject to Him.
Now gaze through Me upon the Cosmos that's now subject to thy sight; regard its Beauty carefully Body in pure perfection, though one than which there's no more ancient one, ever in prime of life, and
ever-young, nay, rather, in even fuller and yet fuller prime!
7. Behold, again, the seven subject Worlds; ordered by Aeon's order, and with their varied course
full-filling Aeon!
[See how] all things [are] full of light, and nowhere [is there] fire; for 'tis the love and the blending of
the contraries and the dissimilars that doth give birth to light down shining by the energy of God, the
Father of all good, the Leader of all order, and Ruler of the seven world-orderings!
[Behold] the Moon, forerunner of them all, the instrument of nature, and the transmuter of its lower
matter!
[Look at] the Earth set in the midst of All, foundation of the Cosmos Beautiful, feeder and nurse of
things on Earth!
And contemplate the multitude of deathless lives, how great it is, and that of lives subject to death; and
midway, between both, immortal [lives] and mortal, [see thou] the circling Moon.
8. And all are full of soul, and all are moved by it, each in its proper way; some round the Heaven, others
around the Earth; [see] how the right [move] not unto the left, nor yet the left unto the right; nor the
above below, nor the below above.
And that all there are subject unto Genesis, My dearest Hermes, thou hast no longer need to learn of Me.
For that they bodies are, have souls, and they are moved.
But 'tis impossible for them to come together into one without some one to bring them [all] together. It
must, then, be that such a one as this must be some one who's wholly One.
9. For as the many motions of them [all] are different, and as their bodies are not like, yet has one speed
been ordered for them all, it is impossible that there should be two or more makers for them.
For that one single order is not kept among "the many"; but rivalry will follow of the weaker with the
stronger, and they will strive.
And if the maker of the lives that suffer change and death, should be another <from the maker of the
immortals>, he would desire to make the deathless ones as well; just as the maker of the deathless ones,
[to make the lives] that suffer death.
But come! if there be two - if matter's one, and Soul is one, in whose hands would there be the
distribution for the making? Again, if both of them have some of it, in whose hands may be the greater
part?
10. But thus conceive it, then; that every living body doth consist of soul and matter, whether [that body
be] of an immortal, or a mortal, or an irrational [life].

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For that all living bodies are ensouled; whereas, upon the other hand, those that live not, are matter by
itself.
And, in like fashion, Soul when in its self is, after its own maker, cause of life; but the cause of all life is
He who makes the things that cannot die.
Hermes: How, then, is it that, first, lives subject to death are other than the deathless ones? And, next,
how is it that Life which knows no death, and maketh deathlessness, doth not make animals immortal?
11. Mind: First, that there is some one who does these things, is clear; and, next, that He is also One, is
very manifest. For, also, Soul is one, and Life is one, and Matter one.
Hermes: But who is He?
Mind: Who may it other be than the One God? Whom else should it beseem to put Soul into lives but
God alone? One, then, is God.
It would indeed be most ridiculous, if when thou dost confess the Cosmos to be one, Sun one, Moon
one, and Godhead one, thou shouldst wish God Himself to be some one or other of a number!
12. All things, therefore, He makes, in many [ways]. And what great thing is it for God to make life,
soul, and deathlessness, and change, when thou [thyself] dost do so many things?
For thou dost see, and speak, and hear, and smell, and taste, and touch, and walk, and think, and breathe.
And it is not one man who smells, another one who walks, another one who thinks, and [yet] another one
who breathes. But one is he who doth all these.
And yet no one of these could be apart from God. For just as, should thou cease from these, thou wouldst
no longer be a living thing, so also, should God cease from them (a thing not law to say), no longer is He
God.
13. For if it hath been shown that no thing can [inactive] be, how much less God? For if there's aught he
doth not make (if it be law to say), He is imperfect. But if He is not only not inactive, but perfect [God],
then He doth make all things.
Give thou thyself to Me, My Hermes, for a little while, and thou shalt understand more easily how that
God's work is one, in order that all things may be - that are being made, or once have been, or that are
going to be made. And this is, My beloved, Life; this is the Beautiful; this is the Good; this, God.
14. And if thou wouldst in practice understand [this work], behold what taketh place with thee desiring
to beget. Yet this is not like unto that, for He doth not enjoy.
For that indeed He hath no other one to share in what He works, for working by Himself, He ever is at
work, Himself being what He doth. For did He separate Himself from it, all things would [then]
collapse, and all must die, Life ceasing.
But if all things are lives, and also Life is one; then, one is God. And, furthermore, if all are lives, both
those in Heaven and those on Earth, and One Life in them all is made to be by God, and God is it <i.e.,

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God is the One Life> - then, all are made by God.


Life is the making-one of Mind and Soul; accordingly Death is not the destruction of those that are
at-oned, but the dissolving of their union.
15. Aeon, moreover, is God's image; Cosmos [is] Aeon's; the Sun, of Cosmos; and Man, [the image] of
the Sun.
The people call change death, because the body is dissolved, and life, when it's dissolved, withdraws to
the unmanifest. But in this sermon (logos), Hermes, My beloved, as thou dost hear, I say the Cosmos
also suffers change - for that a part of it each day is made to be in the unmanifest - yet it is ne'er
dissolved.
These are the passions of the Cosmos - revolvings and concealments; revolving is conversion and
concealment renovation.
16. The Cosmos is all-formed - not having forms external to itself, but changing them itself within itself.
Since, then, Cosmos is made to be all-formed, what may its maker be? For that, on the one hand, He
should not be void of all form; and, on the other hand, if He's all-formed, He will be like the Cosmos.
Whereas, again, has He a single form, He will thereby be less than Cosmos.
What, then, say we He is? - that we may not bring round our sermon (logos) into doubt; for naught that
mind conceives of God is doubtful.
He, then, hath one idea, which is His own alone, which doth not fall beneath the sight, being bodiless,
and [yet] by means of bodies manifesteth all [ideas]. And marvel not that there's a bodiless idea.
17. For it is like the form of reason (logos) and mountain-tops in pictures. For they appear to stand out
strongly from the rest, but really are quite smooth and flat.
And now consider what is said more boldly, but more truly!
Just as man cannot live apart from Life, so neither can God live without [His] doing good. For this is as
it were the life and motion as it were of God - to move all things and make them live.
18. Now some of the things said should bear a sense peculiar to themselves. So understand, for instance,
what I'm going to say.
All are in God, [but] not as lying in a place. For place is both a body and immovable, and things that lie
do not have motion.
Now things lie one way in the bodiless, another way in being made manifest.
Think, [then,] of Him who doth contain them all; and think, that than the bodiless naught is more
comprehensive, or swifter, or more potent, but it is the most comprehensive, the swiftest, and most
potent of them all.
19. And, thus, think from thyself, and bid thy soul go unto any land, and there more quickly than thy
bidding will it be. And bid it journey oceanwards; and there, again, immediately 'twill be, not as if

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passing on from place to place, but as if being there.


And bid it also mount to heaven; and it will need no wings, not will aught hinder it, nor fire of sun, nor
auther, nor vortex-swirl, nor bodies of the other stars; but, cutting through them all, it will soar up to the
last Body [of them all]. And shouldst thou will to break through this as well, and contemplate what is
beyond - if there be aught beyond the Cosmos; it is permitted thee.
20. Behold what power, what swiftness, thou dost have! And canst thou do all of these things, and God
not [do them]?
Then, in this way know God; as having all things in Himself as thoughts, the whole Cosmos itself.
If, then, thou dost not make thyself like unto God, thou canst not know Him. For like is knowable unto
like [alone].
Make, [then,] thyself to grow to the same stature as the Greatness which transcends all measure; leap
forth from every body; transcend all time; become Eternity <literally, Aeon>; and [thus] shalt thou know
God.
Conceiving nothing is impossible unto thyself, think thyself deathless and able to know all - all arts, all
sciences, the way of every life.
Become more lofty than all height, and lower than all depth. Collect into thyself all senses of [all]
creatures - of fire, [and] water, dry and moist. Think that thou art at the same time in every place - in
earth, in sea, in sky; not yet begotten, in the womb, young, old, [and] dead, in after-death conditions.
And if thou knowest all these things at once - times, places, doings, qualities, and quantities; thou canst
know God.
21. But if thou lockest up thy soul within thy body, and dost debase it, saying: I nothing know; I nothing
can; I fear the sea; I cannot scale the sky; I know not who I was, who I shall be - what is there [then]
between [thy] God and thee?
For thou canst know naught of things beautiful and good so long as thou dost love thy body and art bad.
The greatest bad there is, is not to know God's Good; but to be able to know [Good], and will, and hope,
is a Straight Way, the Good's own [Path], both leading there and easy.
If thou but settest thy foot thereon, 'twill meet thee everywhere, 'twill everywhere be seen, both where
and when thou dost expect it not - waking, sleeping, sailing, journeying, by night, by day, speaking,
[and] saying naught. For there is naught that is not image of the Good.
22. Hermes: Is God unseen?
Mind: Hush! Who is more manifest than He? For this one reason hath He made all things, that through
them all thou mayest see Him.
This is the Good of God, this [is] His Virtue - that He may be manifest through all.

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For naught's unseen, even of things that are without a body. Mind sees itself in thinking, God in making.
So far these things have been made manifest to thee, Thrice-greatest one! Reflect on all the rest in the
same way with thyself, and thou shalt not be led astray.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

XII. About The Common Mind


<The "common mind" discussed in this dialogue is the same Mind which appears as a divine power in
other parts of the Hermetic literature. It is identical, as well, with the "Good Daimon" whose words are
quoted at several points here and elsewhere.
<The Greek word logos - which means both "word" and "reason", among other things - is central to
much of the argument, and it's unfortunate that English has no way to express the same complex of
meanings. The praise of reason in parts 13-14 is also, and equally, a praise of human language, and this
sort of double meaning plays a part elsewhere in this and other parts of the Hermetic literature. - JMG>
1. Hermes: The Mind, O Tat, is of God's very essence - (if such a thing as essence of God there be) - and
what that is, it and it only knows precisely.
The Mind, then, is not separated off from God's essentiality, but is united to it, as light to sun.
This Mind in men is God, and for this cause some of mankind are gods, and their humanity is nigh unto
divinity.
For the Good Daimon said: "Gods are immortal men, and men are mortal gods."
2. But in irrational lives Mind is their nature. For where is Soul, there too is Mind; just as where Life,
there is there also Soul.
But in irrational lives their soul is life devoid of mind; for Mind is the in-worker of the souls of men for
good - He works on them for their own good.
In lives irrational He doth co-operate with each one's nature; but in the souls of men He counteracteth
them.
For every soul, when it becomes embodied, is instantly depraved by pleasure and by pain.
For in a compound body, just like juices, pain and pleasure seethe, and into them the soul, on entering in,
is plunged.
3. O'er whatsoever souls the Mind doth, then, preside, to these it showeth its own light, by acting counter
to their prepossessions, just as a good physician doth upon the body prepossessed by sickness, pain
inflict, burning or lancing it for sake of health.
In just the selfsame way the Mind inflicteth pain on the soul, to rescue it from pleasure, whence comes
its every ill.
The great ill of the soul is godlessness; then followeth fancy for all evil things and nothing good.
So, then, Mind counteracting it doth work good on the soul, as the physician health upon the body.
4. But whatsoever human souls have not the Mind as pilot, they share in the same fate as souls of lives

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irrational.
For [Mind] becomes co-worker with them, giving full play to the desires toward which [such souls] are
borne - [desires] that from the rush of lust strain after the irrational; [so that such human souls,] just like
irrational animals, cease not irrationally to rage and lust, nor are they ever satiate of ills.
For passions and irrational desires are ills exceeding great; and over these God hath set up the Mind to
play the part of judge and executioner.
5. Tat: In that case, father mine, the teaching (logos) as to Fate, which previously thou didst explain to
me, risks to be overset.
For that if it be absolutely fated for a man to fornicate, or commit sacrilege, or do some other evil deed,
why is he punished - when he hath done the deed from Fate's necessity?
Hermes: All works, my son, are Fate's; and without Fate naught of things corporal - or <i.e., either>
good, or ill - can come to pass.
But it is fated, too, that he who doeth ill, shall suffer. And for this cause he doth it - that he may suffer
what he suffereth, because he did it.
6. But for the moment, [Tat,] let be the teaching as to vice and Fate, for we have spoken of these things
in other [of our sermons]; but now our teaching (logos) is about the Mind: - what Mind can do, and how
it is [so] different - in men being such and such, and in irrational lives [so] changed; and [then] again
that in irrational lives it is not of a beneficial nature, while that in men it quencheth out the wrathful and
the lustful elements.
Of men, again, we must class some as led by reason, and others as unreasoning.
7. But all men are subject to Fate, and genesis and change, for these are the beginning and the end of
Fate.
And though all men do suffer fated things, those led by reason (those whom we said Mind doth guide)
do not endure <a> like suffering with the rest; but, since they've freed themselves from viciousness, not
being bad, they do not suffer bad.
Tat: How meanest thou again, my father? Is not the fornicator bad; the murderer bad; and [so with] all
the rest?
Hermes: [I meant not that;] but that the Mind-led man, my son, though not a fornicator, will suffer just
as though he had committed fornication, and though he be no murderer, as though he had committed
murder.
The quality of change he can no more escape than that of genesis.
But it is possible for one who hath the Mind, to free himself from vice.
8. Wherefore I've ever heard, my son, Good Daimon also say - (and had He set it down in written words,
He would have greatly helped the race of men; for He alone, my son, doth truly, as the Firstborn God,
gazing on all things, give voice to words (logoi) divine) - yea, once I heard Him say:
"All things are one, and most of all the bodies which the mind alone perceives. Our life is owing to
[God's] Energy and Power and Aeon. His Mind is good, so is His Soul as well. And this being so,
intelligible things know naught of separation. So, then, Mind, being Ruler of all things, and being Soul
of God, can do whate'er it wills."
9. So do thou understand, and carry back this word (logos) unto the question thou didst ask before - I
mean about Mind's Fate.
For if thou dost with accuracy, son, eliminate [all] captious arguments (logoi), thou wilt discover that of
very truth the Mind, the Soul of God, doth rule o'er all - o'er Fate, and Law, and all things else; and
nothing is impossible to it - neither o'er Fate to set a human soul, nor under Fate to set [a soul] neglectful

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of what comes to pass. Let this so far suffice from the Good Daimon's most good [words].
Tat: Yea, [words] divinely spoken, father mine, truly and helpfully. But further still explain me this.
10. Thou said'st that Mind in lives irrational worked in them as [their] nature, co-working with their
impulses.
But impulses of lives irrational, as I do think, are passions.
Now if the Mind co-worketh with [these] impulses, and if the impulses of [lives] irrational be passions,
then is Mind also passion, taking its color from the passions.
Hermes: Well put, my son! Thou questionest right nobly, and it is just that I as well should answer
[nobly].
11. All things incorporeal when in a body are subject unto passion, and in the proper sense they are
[themselves] all passions.
For every thing that moves itself is incorporeal; while every thing that's moved is body.
Incorporeals are further moved by Mind, and movement's <i.e., movement is> passion.
Both, then, are subject unto passion - both mover and the moved, the former being ruler and the latter
ruled.
But when a man hath freed himself from body, then is he also freed from passion.
But, more precisely, son, naught is impassible, but all are passible.
Yet passion differeth from passibility; for that the one is active, while the other's passive.
Incorporeals moreover act upon themselves, for either they are motionless or they are moved; but
whichsoe'er it be, it's passion.
But bodies are invaribly acted on, and therefore they are passible.
Do not, then, let terms trouble thee; action and passion are both the selfsame thing. To use the fairer
sounding term, however, does no harm.
12. Tat: Most clearly hast thou, father mine, set forth the teaching (logos).
Hermes: Consider this as well, my son; that these two things God hath bestowed on man beyond all
mortal lives - both mind and speech (logos) equal to immortality. He hath the mind for knowing God and
uttered speech (logos) for eulogy of Him.
And if one useth these for what he ought, he'll differ not a whit from the immortals. Nay, rather, on
departing from the body, he will be guided by the twain unto the Choir of Gods and Blessed Ones.
13. Tat: Why, father mine! - do not the other lives make use of speech (logos)?
Hermes: Nay, son; but <i.e., only> use of voice; speech is far different from voice. For speech is general
among all men, while voice doth differ in each class of living thing.
Tat: But with men also, father mine, according to each race, speech differs.
Hermes: Yea, son, but man is one; so also speech is one and is interpreted, and it is found the same in
Egypt, and in Persia, and in Greece.
Thou seemest, son, to be in ignorance of Reason's (Logos) worth and greatness. For that the Blessed
God, Good Daimon, hath declared:
"Soul is in Body, Mind in Soul; but Reason (Logos) is in Mind, and Mind in God; and God is Father of
[all] these."
14. The Reason, then, is the Mind's image, and Mind God's [image]; while Body is [the image] of the
Form; and Form [the image] of the Soul.
The subtlest part of Matter is, then, Air <or vital spirit>; of Air, Soul; of Soul, Mind; and of Mind, God.
And God surroundeth all and permeateth all; while Mind Surroundeth Soul, Soul Air, Air Matter.
Necessity and Providence and Nature are instruments of Cosmos and of Matter's ordering; while of

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intelligible things each is Essence, and Sameness is their Essence.


But of the bodies of the Cosmos each is many; for through possessiong Sameness, [these] composed
bodies, though they do change from one into another of themselves, do natheless keep the incorruption
of their Sameness.
15. Whereas in all the rest of composed bodies, of each there is a certain number; for without number
structure cannot be, or composition, or decomposition. Now it is units that give birth to number and
increase it, and, being decomposed, are taken back again into themselves.
Matter is one; and this whole Cosmos - the mighty God and image of the mightier One, both with Him
unified, and the conserver of the Will and Order of the Father - is filled full of Life.
Naught is there in it throughout the whole of Aeon, the Father's [everlasting] Re-establishment - nor of
the whole, nor of the parts - which doth not live.
For not a single thing that's dead, hath been, or is, or shall be in [this] Cosmos.
For that the Father willed it should have Life as long as it should be. Wherefore it needs must be a God.
16. How then, O son, could there be in the God, the image of the Father, in the plenitude of Life - dead
things?
For that death is corruption, and corruption destruction.
How then could any part of that which knoweth no corruption be corrupted, or any whit of him the God
destroyed?
Tat: Do they not, then, my father, die - the lives in it, that are its parts?
Hermes: Hush, son! - led into error by the term in use for what takes place.
They do not die, my son, but are dissolved as compound bodies.
Now dissolution is not death, but dissolution of a compound; it is dissolved not so that it may be
destroyed, but that it may become renewed.
For what is the activity of life? Is it not motion? What then in Cosmos is there that hath no motion?
Naught is there, son!
17. Tat: Doth not Earth even, father, seem to thee to have no motion?
Hermes: Nay, son; but rather that she is the only thing which, though in very rapid motion, is also stable.
For how would it not be a thing to laugh at, that the Nurse of all should have no motion, when she
engenders and brings forth all things?
For 'tis impossible that without motion one who doth engender, should do so.
That thou should ask if the fourth part <or element> is not inert, is most ridiculous; for the body which
doth have no motion, gives sign of nothing but inertia.
18. Know, therefore, generally, my son, that all that is in Cosmos is being moved for increase or for
decrease.
Now that which is kept moving, also lives; but there is no necessity that that which lives, should be all
same.
For being simultaneous, the Cosmos, as a whole, is not subject to change, my son, but all its parts are
subject unto it; yet naught [of it] is subject to corruption, or destroyed.
It is the terms employed that confuse men. For 'tis not genesis that constituteth life, but 'tis sensation; it
is not change that constituteth death, but 'tis forgetfulness.
Since, then, these things are so, they are immortal all - Matter, [and] Life, [and] Spirit, Mind [and] Soul,
of which whatever liveth, is composed.
19. Whatever then doth live, oweth its immortality unto the Mind, and most of all doth man, he who is
both recipient of God, and co-essential with Him.

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For with this life alone doth God consort; by visions in the night, by tokens in the day, and by all things
doth He foretell the future unto him - by birds, by inward parts, by wind, by tree.
Wherefore doth man lay claim to know things past, things present and to come.
20. Observe this too, my son; that each one of the other lives inhabiteth one portion of the Cosmos aquatic creatures water, terrene earth, and aery creatures air; while man doth use all these - earth, water
air [and] fire; he seeth Heaven, too, and doth contact it with [his] sense.
But God surroundeth all, and permeateth all, for He is energy and power; and it is nothing difficult, my
son, to conceive God.
21. But if thou wouldst Him also contemplate, behold the ordering of the Cosmos, and [see] the orderly
behavior of its ordering <this is a play on the word "cosmos", which means "order, arrangement">;
behold thou the Necessity of things made manifest, and [see] the Providence of things become and
things becoming; behold how Matter is all-full of Life; [behold] this so great God in movement, with all
the good and noble [ones] - gods, daimones and men!
Tat: But these are purely energies, O father mine!
Hermes: If, then, they're purely energies, my son - by whom, then, are they energized except by God?
Or art thou ignorant, that just as Heaven, Earth, Water, Air, are parts of Cosmos, in just the selfsame way
God's parts are Life and Immortality, [and] Energy, and Spirit, and Necessity, and Providence, and
Nature, Soul, and Mind, and the Duration <that is, Aeon or Eternity> of all these that is called Good?
And there are naught of things that have become, or are becoming, in which God is not.
22. Tat: Is He in Matter, father, then?
Hermes: Matter, my son, is separate from God, in order that thou may'st attribute to it the quality of
space. But what thing else than mass think'st thou it is, if it's not energized? Whereas if it be energized,
by whom is it made so? For energies, we said, are parts of God.
By whom are, then, all lives enlivened? By whom are things immortal made immortal? By whom
changed things made changeable?
And whether thou dost speak of Matter, of Body, or of Essence, know that these too are energies of God;
and that materiality is Matter's energy, that corporeality is Bodies' energy, and that essentiality doth
constituteth the energy of Essence; and this is God - the All.
23. And in the All is naught that is not God. Wherefore nor <i.e., neither> size, nor space, nor quality,
nor form, nor time, surroundeth God; for He is All, and All surroundeth all, and permeateth all.
Unto this Reason (Logos), son, thy adoration and thy worship pay. There is one way alone to worship
God; [it is] not to be bad.

The Corpus Hermeticum


translated by G.R.S. Mead

XIII. The Secret Sermon on the Mountain


<This dialogue is in many ways the culmination of the whole Corpus, summing up the theory of the
Hermetic system at the same time as it provides an intriguing glimpse at the practice. The focus of the
dialogue is the experience of Rebirth, which involves the replacement of twelve Tormentors within the

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self by ten divine Powers, leading to the awakening of knowledge of the self and God.
<The "Secret Hymnody" (sections 17-20) is presented as a litany for worship, to be performed twice
each day, at sunrise and sunset. It's interesting to note that while the sunrise worship is performed facing
east, the sunset worship is done to the south; Egyptian tradition from Pharaonic times onward saw the
west as the direction of death.
<The usual difficulties with the multiple meanings of the Greek word logos appear in the translation,
compounded by Mead's awkward style. Additionally, one of Mead's few evasions can be found in
section 12, where he relates the twelve Tormentors to the "twelve types-of-life". This should more
simply, and more accurately, have been translated as "the twelve signs of the Zodiac". The Theosophical
distaste for astrology may well have been involved here. - JMG>
1. Tat: [Now] in the General Sermons, father, thou didst speak in riddles most unclear, conversing on
Divinity; and when thou saidst no man could e'er be saved before Rebirth, thy meaning thou didst hide.
Further, when I became thy Suppliant, in Wending up the Mount, after thou hadst conversed with me,
and when I longed to learn the Sermon (Logos) on Rebirth (for this beyond all other things is just the
thing I know not), thou saidst, that thou wouldst give it me - "when thou shalt have become a stranger to
the world".
Wherefore I got me ready and made the thought in me a stranger to the world-illusion.
And now do thou fill up the things that fall short in me with what thou saidst would give me the tradition
of Rebirth, setting it forth in speech or in the secret way.
I know not, O Thrice-greatest one, from out what matter and what womb Man comes to birth, or of what
seed.
2. Hermes: Wisdom that understands in silence [such is the matter and the womb from out which Man is
born], and the True Good the seed.
Tat: Who is the sower, father? For I am altogether at a loss.
Hermes: It is the Will of God, my son.
Tat: And of what kind is he that is begotten, father? For I have no share of that essence in me, which
doth transcend the senses. The one that is begot will be another one from God, God's Son?
Hermes: All in all, out of all powers composed.
Tat: Thou tellest me a riddle, father, and dost not speak as father unto son.
Hermes: This Race, my son, is never taught; but when He willeth it, its memory is restored by God.
3. Tat: Thou sayest things impossible, O father, things that are forced. Hence answers would I have
direct unto these things. Am I a son strange to my father's race?
Keep it not, father, back from me. I am a true-born son; explain to me the manner of Rebirth.

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Hermes: What may I say, my son? I can but tell thee this. Whene'er I see within myself the Simple
Vision brought to birth out of God's mercy, I have passed through myself into a Body that can never die.
And now i am not as I was before; but I am born in Mind.
The way to do this is not taught, and it cannot be seen by the compounded element by means of which
thou seest.
Yea, I have had my former composed form dismembered for me. I am no longer touched, but I have
touch; I have dimension too; and [yet] am I a stranger to them now.
Thou seest me with eyes, my son; but what I am thou dost not understand [even] with fullest strain of
body and of sight.
4. Tat: Into fierce frenzy and mind-fury hast thou plunged me, father, for now no longer do I see myself.
Hermes: I would, my son, that thou hadst e'en passed right through thyself, as they who dream in sleep
yet sleepless.
Tat: Tell me this too! Who is the author of Rebirth?
Hermes: The Son of God, the One Man, by God's Will.
5. Tat: Now hast thou brought me, father, unto pure stupefaction. Arrested from the senses which I had
before,...<lacuna in original text>; for [now] I see thy Greatness identical with thy distinctive form.
Hermes: Even in this thou art untrue; the mortal form doth change with every day. 'Tis turned by time to
growth and waning, as being an untrue thing.
6. Tat: What then is true, Thrice-greatest One?
Hermes: That which is never troubled, son, which cannot be defined; that which no color hath, nor any
figure, which is not turned, which hath no garment, which giveth light; that which is comprehensible
unto itself [alone], which doth not suffer change; that which no body can contain.
Tat: In very truth I lose my reason, father. Just when I thought to be made wise by thee, I find the senses
of this mind of mine blocked up.
Hermes: Thus is it, son: That which is upward borne like fire, yet is borne down like earth, that which is
moist like water, yet blows like air, how shalt thou this perceive with sense - the that which is not solid
nor yet moist, which naught can bind or loose, of which in power and energy alone can man have any
notion - and even then it wants a man who can perceive the Way of Birth in God?
7. Tat: I am incapable of this, O father, then?
Hermes: Nay, God forbid, my son! Withdraw into thyself, and it will come; will, and it comes to pass;
throw out of work the body's senses, and thy Divinity shall come to birth; purge from thyself the brutish
torments - things of matter.

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Tat: I have tormentors then in me, O father?


Hermes: Ay, no few, my son; nay, fearful ones and manifold.
Tat: I do not know them, father.
Hermes: Torment the first is this Not-knowing, son; the second one is Grief; the third, Intemperance; the
fourth, Concupiscence; the fifth, Unrighteousness; the sixth is Avarice; the seventh, Error; the eighth is
Envy; the ninth, Guile; the tenth is Anger; eleventh, Rashness; the twelfth is Malice.
These are in number twelve; but under them are many more, my son; and creeping through the prison of
the body they force the man that's placed therein to suffer in his senses. But they depart (though not all at
once) from him who hath been taken pity on by God; and this it is which constitutes the manner of
Rebirth. And... <lacuna in the original text> the Reason (Logos).
8. And now, my son, be still and solemn silence keep! Thus shall the mercy that flows on us from God
not cease.
Henceforth rejoice, O son, for by the Powers of God thou art being purified for the articulation of the
Reason (Logos).
Gnosis of God hath come to us, and when this comes, my son, Not-knowing is cast out.
Gnosis of Joy hath come to us, and on its coming, son, Sorrow will flee away to them who give it room.
The Power that follows Joy do I invoke, thy Self-control. O Power most sweet! Let us most gladly bid it
welcome, son! How with its coming doth it chase Intemperance away!
9. Now fourth, on Continence I call, the Power against Desire. <lacuna in the original text> This step,
my son, is Righteousness' firm seat. For without judgement <other translators read this "without effort">
see how she hath chased Unrighteousness away. We are made righteous, son, by the departure of
Unrighteousness.
Power sixth I call to us - that against Avarice, Sharing-with-all.
And now that Avarice is gone, I call on Truth. And Error flees, and Truth is with us.
See how [the measure of] the Good is full, my son, upon Truth's coming. For Envy is gone from us; and
unto Truth is joined the Good as well, with Life and Light.
And now no more doth any torment of the Darkness venture nigh, but vanquished [all] have fled with
whirring wings.
10. Thou knowest [now], my son, the manner of Rebirth. And when the Ten is come, my son, that
driveth out the Twelve, the Birth in understanding <literally "intellectual birth", noera genesis> is
complete, and by this birth we are made into Gods.
Who then doth by His mercy gain this Birth in God, abandoning the body's senses, knows himself [to be
of Light and Life] and that he doth consist of these, and [thus] is filled with bliss.

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11. Tat: By God made steadfast, father, no longer with the sight my eyes afford I look on things, but with
the energy the Mind doth give me through the Powers.
In Heaven am I, in earth, in water, air; I am in animals, in plants; I'm in the womb, before the womb,
after the womb; I'm everywhere!
But further tell me this: How are the torments of the Darkness, when they are twelve in number, driven
out by the ten Powers? What is the way of it, Thrice-greatest one?
12. Hermes: This dwelling-place through which we have just passed <i.e., the human body>, my son, is
constituted from the circle of the twelve types-of-life, this being composed of elements, twelve in
number, but of one nature, an omniform idea. For man's delusion there are disunions in them, son, while
in their action they are one. Not only can we never part Rashness from Wrath; they cannot even be
distinguished.
According to right reason (logos), then, they <the Twelve> naturally withdraw once and for all, in as
much as they are chased out by no less than ten powers, that is, the Ten.
For, son, the Ten is that which giveth birth to souls. And Life and Light are unified there, where the One
hath being from the Spirit. According then to reason (logos) the One contains the Ten, the Ten the One.
13. Tat: Father, I see the All, I see myself in Mind.
Hermes: This is, my son, Rebirth - no more to look on things from body's view-point (a thing three ways
in space extended)... <lacuna in text>, though this Sermon (Logos) on Rebirth, on which I did not
comment - in order that we may not be calumniators of the All unto the multitude, to whom indeed God
Himself doth will we should not.
14. Tat: Tell me, O father: This Body which is made up of the Powers, is it at any time dissolved?
Hermes: Hush, [son]! Speak not of things impossible, else wilt thou sin and thy Mind's eye be quenched.
The natural body which our sense perceives is far removed from this essential birth.
The first must be dissolved, the last can never be; the first must die, the last death cannot touch.
Dost thou not know thou hast been born a God, Son of the One, even as I myself?
15. Tat: I would, O father, hear the Praise-giving with hymn which thou didst say thou heardest then
when thou wert at the Eight [the Ogdoad] of Powers
Hermes: Just as the Shepherd did foretell [I should], my son, [when I came to] the Eight.
Well dost thou haste to "strike thy tent" <i.e., be free from the physical body>, for thou hast been made
pure.
The Shepherd, Mind of all masterhood, hath not passed on to me more than hath been written down, for
full well did he know that I should of myself be able to learn all, and hear what I should wish, and see all
things.

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He left to me the making of fair things; wherefore the Powers within me. e'en as they are in all, break
into song.
16. Tat: Father, I wish to hear; I long to know these things.
Hermes: Be still, my son; hear the Praise-giving now that keeps [the soul] in tune, Hymn of Re-birth - a
hymn I would not have thought fit so readily to tell, had'st thou not reached the end of all.
Wherefore this is not taught, but is kept hid in silence.
Thus then, my son, stand in a place uncovered to the sky, facing the southern wind, about the sinking of
the setting sun, and make thy worship; so in like manner too when he doth rise, with face to the east
wind.
Now, son, be still!
The Secret Hymnody
17. Let every nature of the World receive the utterance of my hymn!
Open thou Earth! Let every bolt of the Abyss be drawn for me. Stir not, ye Trees!
I am about to hymn creation's Lord, both All and One.
Ye Heavens open and ye Winds stay still; [and] let God's deathless Sphere receive my word (logos)!
For I will sing the praise of Him who founded all; who fixed the Earth, and hung up Heaven, and gave
command that Ocean should afford sweet water [to the Earth], to both those parts that are inhabited and
those that are not, for the support and use of every man; who made the Fire to shine for gods and men for
every act.
Let us together all give praise to Him, sublime above the Heavens, of every nature Lord!
'Tis He who is the Eye of Mind; may He accept the praise of these my Powers!
18. Ye powers that are within me, hymn the One and All; sing with my Will, Powers all that are within
me!
O blessed Gnosis, by thee illumined, hymning through thee the Light that mond alone can see, I joy in
Joy of Mind.
Sing with me praises all ye Powers!
Sing praise, my Self-control; sing thou through me, my Righteousness, the praises of the Righteous; sing
thou, my Sharing-all, the praises of the All; through me sing, Truth, Truth's praises!
Sing thou, O Good, the Good! O Life and Light, from us to you our praises flow!

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Father, I give Thee thanks, to Thee Thou Energy of all my Powers; I give Thee thanks, O God, Thou
Power of all my Energies!
19. Thy Reason (Logos) sings through me Thy praises. Take back through me the All into [Thy] Reason
- [my] reasonable oblation!
Thus cry the Powers in me. They sing Thy praise, Thou All; they do Thy Will.
From Thee Thy Will; to Thee the All. Receive from all their reasonable oblation. The All that is in us, O
Life, preserve; O Light<,> illumine it; O God<,> in-spirit it.
It it Thy Mind that plays the shepherd to Thy Word, O Thou Creator, Bestower of the Spirit [upon all].
20. [For] Thou art God, Thy Man thus cries to Thee through Fire, through Air, through Earth, through
Water, [and] through Spirit, through Thy creatures.
'Tis from Thy Aeon I have found praise-giving; and in thy Will, the object of my search, have I found
rest.
Tat: By thy good pleasure have I seen this praise-giving being sung, O father; I have set it in my Cosmos
too.
Hermes: Say in the Cosmos that thy mind alone can see, my son.
Tat: Yea, father, in the Cosmos that the mind alone can see; for I have been made able by thy Hymn, and
by thy Praise-giving my mind hath been illumined. But further I myself as well would from my natural
mind send praise-giving to God.
21. Hermes: But not unheedfully, my son.
Tat: Aye. What I behold in mind, that do I say.
To thee, thou Parent of my Bringing into Birth, as unto God I, Tat, send reasonable offerings. o God and
Father, thou art the Lord, thou art the Mind. Receive from me oblations reasonable as thou would'st
wish; for by thy Will all things have been perfected.
Hermes: Send thou oblation, son, acceptable to God, the Sire of all; but add, my son, too, "through the
Word" (Logos).
Tat: I give thee, father, thanks for showing me to sing such hymns.
22. Hermes: Happy am I, my son, that though hast brought the good fruits forth of Truth, products that
cannot die.
And now that thou hast learnt this lesson from me, make promise to keep silence on thy virtue, and to no
soul, my son, make known the handing on to thee the manner of Rebirth, that we may not be thought to
be calumniators.
And now we both of us have given heed sufficiently, both I the speaker and the hearer thou.

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In Mind hast thou become a Knower of thyself and our [common] Sire.

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