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A Complete System of Magic; Four Volumes, Slipcased, with an Array of Magical Accoutrements

A Complete System of Magic; Four Volumes, Slipcased, with an Array of Magical Accoutrements

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A Complete System of Magic; Four Volumes, Slipcased, with an Array of Magical Accoutrements

by Bellhouse, William Dawson

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  • Fine
  • first
Condition
Fine/Fine Slipcase
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About This Item

United Kingdom: The Society of Esoteric Endeavour, 2018. First Edition, #127 of 224. slipcase, trapdoor for magical items noted in description, 200 pages. Fine/Fine Slipcase. William Dawson Bellhouse (Compiler and Scribe), A Complete System of Magic, hardback book 200pp, some diagrams, sigils etc. Conventional Victorian design decorated endpapers. Cloth is manufactured by a craftsman who has lectured both the Society of Bookbinders and the Society of Designer Bookbinders about Victorian bookcloth manufacture. This material is made with a traditional starch filling which is more pleasing to touch than modern cloths which are treated with plastic. As with any handmade product, the cloth may have minor irregularities. The text is a complete transcription of manuscript of a practitioner active in Liverpool, England in the late 1850s, his working magical book. He was part of a milieu who generally performed the same perilous ritual, often in the same location, to establish their communication with the spirits (including infernal beings) upon whom they would rely to perform their craft. However, the nature of their practices could vary greatly.



Someone seeking the services of the Professor (for that is what he called himself) Bellhouse could be in for an experience. On ringing the bell the front door, untouched by human hand, would immediately swing open to reveal the waiting room. There they must sit patiently, until the door of the inner sanctum is opened. They must not try to listen through the closed door or peep through the keyhole. To do so would risk being touched by the Devil! - experienced as a bolt of energy that would shake an eavesdropper to the core. For Professor Bellhouse was also a galvinist, who gave electric shocks as a medical curative. He attached wires to the door knob and a metal plate on the floor so that snoopers might receive a powerful electric shock, an utterly unfamiliar experience to most people at that time and, given the situation, they would likely attribute to a supernatural cause. The client, once summoned into the sanctum, would see strange instruments - such as a planisphere and a horologue, medical jars labelled in Latin, choice occult books and a skrying crystal set in the middle of a diagram inscribed with words of power. If seeking to have their fortune told they would be invited to touch the crystal whilst strange ritual invocations were performed by the practitioner. Unlike modern practitioner's who look into the crystal and then report the visions to the client, Professor Bellhouse's enpowered his clients to behold the vision in the crystal for themselves. Depending upon the purpose of the consultation they might see:- angels, or their ministers, who could be commanded; ghosts of the departed known to the client; a distant place and how a loved one fares there (useful to the people of Liverpool, a major port); past events from the client's life and, through symbols that the Professor could interpret, their future. Bellhouse developed his own system, by which the visions where summoned through the astrological house suitable to the question using particular names of powers attributed to each house. Different charts are given for men and women in which the names of power are juxtaposed across the horizon, indicating a system of sexual polarity.



But a dark shadow falls across the practice of Professor Bellhouse. He and his associates were the subject of prolonged study by an investigative journalist. Bellhouse was accused of taking advantage of women who came to him for readings so the question arises whether he was practising an idiosyncratic tantric xkrying technique or abuse, or both. All available information is provided so that the reader can decide for him or herself. The journalist rants against the sexual immorality of the seers generally, opening a window upon a curious occult sub-culture in Victorian England that presages the cultural shifts of the 20th Century.



A Complete System of Magic provide the magical procedures that clients might seek from a Cunning Man. These include charms for healing with spells to staunch bleeding and stop cramp and heal burns. There are charms for love, to cause an errant son or daughter to return and to protect a building from evil. Clearly fear of malefic witchcraft was an issue as there are various counter measures including two procedures for using witch bottles. Theft and crime were problems and there is an elaborate procedure for bringing miscreants to light. The involves the creation of wax images. Whilst clearly its own text it does relate to the procedure disclosed by Reginald Scot but Bellhouse gives the "certeine peculiar characters" referred to by Scot, but not given, and conjurations, which Scot deliberately omits. The words of power to be inscribed upon the waxen images that Bellhouse gives are quite different from Scot suggesting that this was, very much, a living, evolving tradition. There is a section on the magical properties of naturally shed snakeskin, another on the occult properties of vervain. There are illustrated instructions for the preparation of planetary talismans.



Bellhouse incorporates part of Agrippa's Fourth Book of Occult Philosophy into A Complete Magical System and as this transcript is complete this is included, though it presents the text and illustrations as given in the first English edition of 1655 rather than Bellhouse's rather error laden copy.



A Complete System of Magic concludes with Bellhouse's multiple indexes of the material, signalling which parts he utilised most and then some appendices:- The Magician's Blessing; Form of a Spell; Manner of Baptising in the Catholic Church, Table of Hebrew Letters; Signification of the [Astrological] Houses; Manner of Drawing Geomantic Figures; How to Compose an Oration to the Angel whose assistance you want; Platinumed Plate for Gavanic Operations.

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Details

Bookseller
Crossroads Books US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
5567111
Title
A Complete System of Magic; Four Volumes, Slipcased, with an Array of Magical Accoutrements
Author
Bellhouse, William Dawson
Format/Binding
Slipcase, trapdoor for magical items noted in description, 200 pages
Book Condition
Used - Fine
Jacket Condition
Fine Slipcase
Quantity Available
1
Edition
First Edition, #127 of 224
Publisher
The Society of Esoteric Endeavour
Place of Publication
United Kingdom
Date Published
2018
Keywords
Magic, Occult
Bookseller catalogs
Occult; Magick;
Note
May be a multi-volume set and require additional postage.

Terms of Sale

Crossroads Books

30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

About the Seller

Crossroads Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2016
Reno, Nevada

About Crossroads Books

eclectic inventory with antiquarian and modern, fiction and nonfiction

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