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Initiatory Path In Fairy Tales : The Alchemical Secrets of Mother Goose

Kategorier: Alternativa trossystem Ande, kropp och själ Biografier och litteraturvetenskap Filosofi och religion Folkliga föreställningar och kontroversiell kunskap Folktro, myter och legender Hälsa, relationer och personlig utveckling Litteraturvetenskap och litteraturkritik Mystik, magi och det ockulta Ockulta studier Religion och tro Samhälle och kultur: allmänt Samhälle och samhällsvetenskap Sociala grupper Sociala grupper: hemliga sällskap
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Initiatory Path In Fairy Tales : The Alchemical Secrets of Mother Goose

Kategorier: Alternativa trossystem Ande, kropp och själ Biografier och litteraturvetenskap Filosofi och religion Folkliga föreställningar och kontroversiell kunskap Folktro, myter och legender Hälsa, relationer och personlig utveckling Litteraturvetenskap och litteraturkritik Mystik, magi och det ockulta Ockulta studier Religion och tro Samhälle och kultur: allmänt Samhälle och samhällsvetenskap Sociala grupper Sociala grupper: hemliga sällskap
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In his Mystery of the Cathedrals, the great alchemist, Fulcanelli, revealed the teachings of the hermetic art encoded in the sculpture and stained glass of the great cathedrals of Europe. What he did for churches, his disciple, Bernard Roger, does here for fairy tales. Through exhaustive analysis of the stories collected by the Brothers Grimm, Perrault and others, Roger demonstrates how hermetic ideas, especially those embodied in alchemy and Freemasonry, can be found in fairy tales, including such popular stories as Cinderella, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty and Little Red Riding Hood as well as the tales attributed to "Mother Goose." The goose has long been an important esoteric symbol in the Western Mystery tradition. The stories told under the aegis of Mother Goose carry these symbols and secrets, concealed in what hermetic adepts have long called "the language of the birds." Drawing upon the original versions of fairy tales, not the sanitised accounts made into children's movies, the author reveals how the tales illustrate each stage of the Great Work and the alchemical iterations required to achieve them. He shows how the common motif of a hero or heroine sent in search of a rare object by a sovereign before their wishes can be granted is analogous to the Masonic quest for the lost tomb of Hiram or the alchemist's search for the fire needed to perform the Great Work. He, also, reveals how the hero is always aided by a green bird, which embodies the hermetic understanding of the seed and the fruit. Roger demonstrates the truly ancient lineage of these initiatory stories and how they originated as the trigger to push humanity toward higher levels of consciousness.