KABBALAH - Selected Writings. Bernhard Pick

KABBALAH - Selected Writings - Bernhard Pick


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shall no more pass the watery ways;

      In the dread lightning parching earth shall blaze,

      Ogygian rivers seek to flow in vain.

      Unutterable woe the trumpet blast,

      Re-echoing through the ether, shall forecast.

      "Then Tartarus shall wrap the world in gloom,

      High chiefs and princes shall receive their doom,

      Eternal fire and brimstone for their tomb.

      "Crown of the world, sweet wood, salvation's horn,

      Rearing its beauty, shall for man be born,

      O wood, that Saints adore, and sinners scorn!

      So from twelve fountains shall its light be poured;

      Staff of the Shepherd, and victorious sword."

      We may also state that words of those verses which are regarded as containing a peculiar recondite meaning are ranged in squares in such a manner as to be read either vertically or boustrophedonally beginning at the right or left hand. Again the words of several verses are placed over each other, and the letters which stand under each other are formed into new words. This is especially seen in the treatment of three verses in Exod. xiv. 19-21 (each containing 72 letters), which are believed to contain the three Pillars of the Sephiroth and the Divine Name of seventytwo words. Now, if these three verses be written out one above the other, the first from right to left, the second from left to right, and the third from right to left, they will give 12 columns of three letters each. Then each column will be a word of three letters, and as there are 72 columns, there will be 72 words of three letters, each of which will be the 72 names of the Deity. By writing the verses all from right to left, instead of boustrophedonally, there will be other sets of 72 names obtainable. The reader who is interested in these niceties will find ample information in Bartolocci, Bibliotheca Magna Rabbinicia, IV, pp. 230 ff.

      3. Temurah or permutation.—According to certain rules, one letter is substituted for another letter preceding or following it in the alphabet, and thus from one word another word of totally different orthography may be formed. Thus the alphabet is bent exactly in the middle, and one half is put over the other; and then by changing alternately the first letter or the first two letters at the beginning of the second line, twenty-two permutations are produced. These are called the "Table of the Combinations of Tziruph."

      For example's sake we give the method called Albath, thus:

      A B G D H V Z Ch T Y K L Th Sh R Q Tz P Ay S N M

      The method abgath is thus exemplified:

      A G D H V Z Ch T Y K L B Th Sh R Q Tz P Ay S N M

      The names of the twenty-two permutations are: Albath, Abgath, Agdath, Adbag, Ahbad, Avba, Azbav, Achbaz, Atbach, Aibat, Achbi, Albach, Ambal, Anbam, Asban, Aaybas, Afba, Azbaf, Akbaz, Arbak, Ashbar, Athbash. To these must be added as (23) Abgad; (24) Albam.

      Besides these canons the Cabala also sees a recondite sense in the form of the letters, as well as in the ornaments which adorn them. The more multifarious these trifles, the easier it is to arrive in every given case at a result, and the less wit or thought is required.


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