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dew

Alexander Roob
"This dew is the manna on which the souls of the just nourish themselves. The chosen hunger for it and collect it with full hands in the fields of heaven." [Zohar by Alexander Roob]


Rosicrucians
"To our eyes appears this mineral-dew in white, yellow, green, red and black colors, these being the only colors visible to our outer eyes. For it appears corporeally to the outer eyes, at times seen by miners in the mountains, appearing to the outer eye, heavy, watery, and dripping. Neither the miners nor artists know to what use to put it, since they do not know for what purpose Nature placed it there, nor of what sex it is, nor whether it be mineral or metal; all this is incomprehensible and unrecognisable.
The best dew is that which in color looks like coagulated electrum or transparent amber. What the world uses it for I do not know, yet it is with all its power in all things.
The dew itself is always rejected and despised; it separates into two branches, white and red, from a single-rooted Y, and stands upon this single root, growing like a white and red Rose of Jericho and blossoms like a lily in the valley of Josaphat, oft-times broken off untimely by miners and is tortured by ignorant workmen.
The true artist knows its influence, and plucks it in full bloom, with blossom, seed, root, stem and branches, namely: in full bloom, through the faith of the inner opened eyes. This is enough said of its bodily form: It is neither metal nor mineral, but nevertheless first mother and materia of all metals and minerals." [Secret Symbols of the Rosicrucians, of the 16th & 17th Centuries]


Manly Palmer Hall
"In early anatomical treatises, it is even mentioned that the brain moves in the skull according to the phases of the moon. So the word can be interpreted as the "dew or moisture from the brain" or, as the Rosicrucians themselves called it, "the dew in the brain." This is the "dew" from heaven described by the sages as "descending upon the tops of the mountains."
In their letter to Eugenius Philalethes, the Brothers of R. C. hint at this mystery in these words: "Near the daybreak there shall be a great calm and you shall see the Day-Star arise and the dawning will appear, and you shall perceive a great treasure. The chief thing in it, and the most perfect, is a certain exalted tincture, with which the world (if it served God and were worthy of such gifts) might be tinged and turned into pure gold." (See Lumen de Lumine.)
Is not this exalted tincture covering the mountains at dawn "the dew of the sages," which contains captured within itself the shadow of the whole world and the virtues of the stars? Did not the wise Paracelsus go forth just preceding dawn to gather the heavenly moisture which falls more thickly on the mountains about Hohenheim than any other part of the world?
This "dew" lost all its virtues unless it was gathered by certain means in especially purified vessels. One ancient alchemist recommended four glass plates, another linen cloths that had been made absolutely clean. The purified vessels, the clean glass plates, and the linen cloths refer, of course, to the regenerated body of the alchemist, who has gained the right to discover the Universal Solvent by cleansing, as it were, the inside of his own cup. The philosophers also revealed that this mysterious "dew" drips down into the heart of the redeemed (baptism), by which such a man is empowered to understand all mysteries. Therefore, the "dew" is also called truth. Hence, Emanuel Swedenborg, the uninitiated seer, refers to "dew" in one place as the truth of good, which is derived from a state of innocence and peace, and in another place as the multiplication of good from truth and the fructification of good by truth. By the term multiplication, it is indicated that Swedenborg sensed the alchemical significance of that heavenly moisture which is both physical and spiritual in its esoteric interpretation.
It has already been hinted that the "dew" was to be found only in the most mountainous parts. This, of course, intimates the brain, which is the high place so often referred to in the sacred writings. Lest this analogy be regarded as far-fetched, let us turn to the Siphra Dtzenioutha —"The Book, of the Concealed Mystery"—wherein it is said of the head of the great Universal Man that it has been formed in the likeness of the cranium, or skull (the monad) and "is filled with the crystalline dew." (See The Zohar.) This "dew" is called the second confirmation or aspect of the Great Face.
Is not this "dew" the lux or light fluid, the pure akasa, the fiery mist, the heavenly luminous water, the Schamayim, or the fiery water, the sea of crystalline before the throne of God, the fountain from which flows the four ethereal rivers that water the whole earth? Philo even suggests that the cherub which guards Eden is, in reality, a cloud of divine humidity that conceals the paradisiacal garden from the relapsed mankind, even as the Rosicrucians were declared to have concealed their sanctum—the House of the Holy Spirit—from the profane by surrounding it with what one of their writers called "clouds" or "mists."
A few quotations from the Ha Idra Rabba Qadisha —"The Greater Holy Assembly" —will give further hints. "And from that skull distilleth a dew upon him which is external, and filleth his head daily." It may be well to mention here that the word cranium, or skull, is used in The Zohar to signify what the Pythagoreans would call the monad (or wholeness). It is, so to speak, the seed of the world and is referred to as a skull to symbolize its spherical shape. In the quotation just given this monad is depicted as causing its spiritual emanations to flow into the lesser cranium —the inferior universe—for it is also written, "and by that dew are sustained the holy supernal ones."
If we desire to discover the nature of the supernal ones mentioned in The Zohar, it is only necessary to read on a little and learn that the "dew" dripping down waters the field in which grow "the holy apple trees." It is also written that the "dew of the lights is thy dew." Are not these lights identical with the stars of Paracelsus, which must never be considered as heavenly bodies but powers or centers of intellection? "All that intellect can conceive of," writes the Swiss Hermes, "comes from the stars." And he adds: "The activity of the organism of man is the result of the actions of the interior constellations of stars existing in his inferior world." When the Cabalists maintain that these stars are contained within the skull of Macroprosophus, the secret is out.
The holy apple trees which are nourished by the heavenly "dew" cannot but be identical in significance with the golden apple trees of the Hesperides. Apollodorus assures us that the golden apples carried away by Hercules grew in the Hyperborean Atlantis. Hyperboreas was the Northern Paradise of the Greeks, the sub-polar continent, the terrestrial Eden, where also grew the symbolic apple tree of the Chaldo-Hebraic Mysteries. The importance of the golden apples which grew on Mount Atlas—the North Pole of the human body—can be more fully understood when we realize that they signify the spiritual monads, atoms or stars which abide in the superior worlds and which are the origins of the terrestrial natures suspended from them. (See Orpheus, by G. R. S. Mead.) These apples are the effulgent blossoms of Proclus, "the golden atoms" in the hearts of living things, whose reflections are set up in the ether of the brain. Here also is the mystery of the Golden Fleece guarded by the Polar Constellation of the mystic Dragon.
We have already learned that the Seven Builders seated upon their akasic thrones in the vast cranium of the Universal Man have their microcosmic correspondences in the human brain.
These are the Seven Stars—the supernal ones—whose essences are carried by the "dew," even as the sidereal "humidity" carries the seven aspects of the astral light. There can be no doubt that the seven Dhyana Buddhas (two unnamed) which are described as abiding within the aura of the heart have their correspondences in the seven cavities of the brain, wherein their essences are enthroned by reflection.
Thus, Mars corresponds with the cerebellum, Saturn with the corpora quadrigemina, Venus with the pineal gland, Mercury with the same gland after it has been tinctured with Kundalini, Jupiter with the whole cavity of the skull filled with akasa, the moon with the fornix, and the sun with the prana in the third ventricle. Some modern writers assign Uranus to the pituitary body and Neptune to the pineal gland, or vice versa.
The crystalline "dew" described by St. John and the oceans above the heavens indicated in the opening verses of Genesis are not without their physiological correspondences in the human body. The Ocean of Eternity and the Milky Way—are these not again hints as to the crystalline "dew" of the adepts? There is confirmation again in the Oriental philosophies. The seventh chakra—the sahasrara, or highest brain chakra —is frequently spoken of as a lotus tank in Hindu mystical books. (See T. Subba Row.) "The 'sweet-sounding water' of this tank," continues the eminent scholar, "is described as amrita, or nectar."
An entirely new line of research is opened up. The amrita, or the "water of immortality," was obtained, according to the Vedas, from the churning of the great ocean. The word means literally, "deathless." Here is the elixir of life of the alchemists. It was also called the sacred soma juice, the drink of initiation, the true formula of which, like the prescriptions of the alchemists, is supposed to have been lost. "Plainly speaking," writes H. P. Blavatsky, "soma is the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge."
Soma is also a symbol of the moon, and esoterically the moon is the ruler of the mind even as the sun is the ruler of the spirit. To return to the sahasrara chakra, it is written in the Arunopanishad that in this chakra "is a golden cup surrounded by bright rays, the abode of happiness." Here, then, is the Sangraal, the sacred chalice guarded by the knights in the domed castle on the heights of Christian Spain. Here is the esoteric significance of the communion cup, for does not even Max Muller say that the soma juice "has the same significance in Veda and Avasta sacrifices as the juice of the grape had in the worship of Bacchus"?
The wine of Bacchus became the wine of Christ, the blood of the Logos, which is pictured flowing from the Paschal Lamb in seven streams. Ambrosia was the drink of the gods on high Olympus. It was the all-sustaining beverage of the immortals, and as the cup of Ganymede is now perpetuated in the water vessel of the constellation of Aquarius. Like the waters of life referred to by the Holy Nazarene, those who drank thereof thirsted no more. Can we doubt that all these mysterious hints point to some occult truth of profound significance which, for the most part, has escaped the attention of modern symbolists?
In the Gothic rites before mentioned, the neophyte consummated his initiation by drinking the heavenly mead from a bowl fashioned out of a human skull. Similar skull bowls are among the sacred paraphernalia of the Tibetan Mysteries. Does not this ritual possess a significance more profound than merely the outer ceremony? The Rosicrucian rose rising out of the skull restates the formula once more—the "dew" and the brain. We move gradually amidst the mass of symbols, and one of the most convincing links in the chain of analogies comes from an unexpected source—the Eddas.
In describing the World Tree—Yggdrasil—as explained in a later chapter of this work, it is clearly revealed that the entire symbol was devised to interpret not only the universe but also the human body. In the upper branches of the tree, at a point analogous to the brain, are depicted five animals—heidrun, Odin's goat, which supplies the heavenly mead, and four stags, dean, dvalin, duneyr, and durathor, from whose horns, according to the legend, honey "dew" drops down upon the earth. The branches of the tree are the same as those referred to in The Zohar, in which the birds (angels) have their nests (plexuses).
Denuded of its symbolism and applied to the microcosm, all these allegories point to a secret in occult anatomy. The activity of the human brain, which we have already seen to be filled and surrounded by a subtle humidity, causes an akasic precipitation, a brain "dew," which is more of a luminous ether than a liquid. This "dew," however, is more tangible than a gas, and as the manna is said to have fallen from heaven, so this "dew" of thought trickles down between the two hemispheres of the cerebrum and finally fills the third ventricle, which is the reservoir, so to speak, of this heavenly water.
This "dew" carries in suspension, or as the alchemists might say, is "tinctured" by the mental activity of the seven brain stars which form the northern constellation of man. It is this water which is contained within the celestial microcosmic "Dipper," which is called by the Hindus the constellation of the Seven Rishis of the Pole.
We have another clue in the practice of primitive peoples of anointing the head with oil and fat and allowing it to run down over the body. Sir E. A. Wallis-Budge, in his Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, describes how certain natives tie to their heads lumps of fat or substances saturated with oil or filled with grease, "which melted down through the hair of his head and ran down over his hair or wig, and penetrated to his shoulders and body."
Having reached the third ventricle and being caught therein, the "dew" must act in conformity with the symbolism involved. It must be caught by the wise man in the cup of the Mysteries. We must, therefore, search for the sacred vessel, the lachrimatory, which is to hold the tears of the brain, produced as is told in the Mahabharata by the churning of the Suras and Asuras. The search is not an extended one. We have already learned that among the symbolic names for the pituitary body is the Holy Grail.
Thus, the brain "dew" is collected, for it flows or seeps from the third ventricle into the pituitary body through a tiny tube, the infundibulum. In his description of the posterior lobe of this gland, Gray writes that it "is developed by an outgrowth from the embryonic brain and during foetal life contains a cavity which communicates through the infundibulum with the cavity of the third ventricle." It is believed that this channel is closed in the adult, but occultism knows this to be erroneous.
After this point, the distribution of the "dew" through the body is made possible by the fact that the pituitary gland is, so to speak, the key of the bodily harmony. Of the secretions of the pituitary body, Dr. Herman H. Rubin writes: "From the anterior portion of the gland a secretion passes directly into the blood stream—from the posterior a fluid called pituitrin joins the spinal fluid that bathes the nervous system. Pituitrin is a complex and most marvellous substance." (Italics mine, M.P.H.) Thus it seems that through the brain "dew" the Governors of the body convey their will and purpose to the several departments thereof.
There can be no direct connection between spirit and matter. The former must work upon the latter through an intermediary, a fact well established through the philosophy of Emanationism. Water—either the physical fluid or its occult analogue, ether—must always be the medium through which the impulses of the superphysical life centers communicate with the lower personality and distribute their energies throughout the corporeal body. Paracelsus thus sums up the mystery: "The whole of the Microcosm is potentially contained in the Liquor Vitae, a nerve fluid—in which is contained the nature, quality, character and essence of beings." [Man: Grand Symbol of the Mysteries: Thoughts In Occult Anatomy, by Manly Palmer Hall]

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Tuesday January 23, 2024 22:01:49 MST by Dale Pond.