Signs and planets, in aspects sextile,
quartile, trine, conjoined, or opposite; houses
of heaven, with their cusps, hours, and minutes;
Almuten, Almochoden, Anahibazon, Catahibazon; a thousand
terms of equal sound and significance. Guy
Mannering.
... Come and see! trust thine own
eyes. A fearful sign stands in the house of
life, An enemy: a fiend lurks close behind
The radiance of thy planet oh! be warned! Coleridge.
Astrology possesses a real interest
even in these days. It is true that no importance
attaches now even to the discussion of the considerations
which led to the rejection of judicial astrology.
None but the most ignorant, and therefore superstitious,
believe at present in divination of any sort or kind
whatsoever. Divination by the stars holds no higher
position than palmistry, fortune-telling by cards,
or the indications of the future which foolish persons
find in dreams, tea-dregs, salt-spilling, and other
absurdities. But there are two reasons which
render the history of astrology interesting. In
the first place, faith in stellar influences was once
so widespread that astrological terminology came to
form a part of ordinary language, insomuch that it
is impossible rightly to understand many passages of
ancient and mediaeval literature, or rightly to apprehend
the force of many allusions and expressions, unless
the significance of astrological teachings to the
men of those times be recognised. In the second
place, it is interesting to examine how the erroneous
teachings of astrology were gradually abandoned, to
note the way in which various orders of mind rejected
these false doctrines or struggled to retain them,
and to perceive how, with a large proportion of even
the most civilised races, the superstitions of judicial
astrology were long retained, or are retained even
to this very day. The world has still to see some
superstitions destroyed which are as widely received
as astrology ever was, and which will probably retain
their influence over many minds long after the reasoning
portion of the community have rejected them.
Even so far back as the time of Eudoxus
the pretensions of astrologers were rejected, as Cicero
informs us (’De Div.’ i. And
though the Romans were strangely superstitious in
such matters, Cicero reasons with excellent judgment
against the belief in astrology. Gassendi quotes
the argument drawn by Cicero against astrology, from
the predictions of the Chaldaeans that Cæsar, Crassus,
and Pompey would die ’in a full old age, in
their own houses, in peace and honour,’ whose
deaths, nevertheless, were ‘violent, immature,
and tragical.’ Cicero also used an argument
whose full force has only been recognised in modern
times. ’What contagion,’ he asked,
’can reach us from the planets, whose distance
is almost infinite?’ It is singular that Seneca,
who was well acquainted with the uniform character
of the planetary motions, seems to have entertained
no doubt respecting their influence. Tacitus expresses
some doubts, but was on the whole inclined to believe
in astrology. ‘Certainly,’ he says,
’the majority of mankind cannot be weaned from
the opinion that at the birth of each man his future
destiny is fixed; though some things may fall out
differently from the predictions, by the ignorance
of those who profess the art; and thus the art is unjustly
blamed, confirmed as it is by noted examples in all
ages.’
Probably, the doubt suggested by the
different fortunes and characters of men born at the
same time must have occurred to many before Cicero
dwelt upon it. Pliny, who followed Cicero in this,
does not employ the argument quite correctly, for
he says that, ’in every hour, in every part
of the world, are born lords and slaves, kings and
beggars.’ But of course, according to astrological
principles, it would be necessary that two persons,
whose fortunes were to be alike, should be born, not
only in the same hour, but in the same place.
The fortunes and character of Jacob and Esau, however,
should manifestly have been similar, which was certainly
not the case, if their history has been correctly handed
down to us. An astrologer of the time of Julius
Cæsar, named Publius Nigidius Figulus,
used a singular argument against such reasoning.
When an opponent urged the different fortunes of men
born nearly at the same instant, Nigidius asked him
to make two contiguous marks on a potter’s wheel
which was revolving rapidly. When the wheel was
stopped, the two marks were found to be far apart.
Nigidius is said to have received the name of Figulus
(the potter), in remembrance of the story; but more
probably he was a potter by trade, and an astrologer
only during those leisure hours which he could devote
to charlatanry. St. Augustine, who relates the
story (which I borrow from Whewell’s ’History
of the Inductive Sciences’), says, justly, that
the argument of Nigidius was as fragile as the ware
made on the potter’s wheel.
The belief must have been all but
universal in those days that at the birth of any person
who was to hold an important place in the world’s
history the stars would either be ominously conjoined,
or else some blazing comet or new star would make
its appearance. For we know that some such object
having appeared, or some unusual conjunction of planets
having occurred, near enough to the time of Christ’s
birth to be associated in men’s minds with that
event, it came eventually to be regarded as belonging
to his horoscope, and as actually indicating to the
Wise Men of the East (Chaldaean astrologers, doubtless)
the future greatness of the child then born.
It is certain that that is what the story of the Star
in the East means as it stands. Theologians differ
as to its interpretation in points of detail.
Some think the phenomenon was meteoric, others that
a comet then made its appearance, others that a new
star shone out, and others that the account referred
to a conjunction of Jupiter, Saturn, and Mars, which
occurred at about that time. As a matter of detail
it may be mentioned, that none of these explanations
in the slightest degree corresponds with the account,
for neither meteor, nor comet, nor new star, nor conjoined
planets, would go before travellers from the east,
to show them their way to any place. Yet the
ancients sometimes regarded comets as guides.
Whichever view we accept, it is abundantly clear that
an astrological significance was attached by the narrator
to the event. And not so very long ago, when
astrologers first began to see that their occupation
was passing from them, the Wise Men of the East were
appealed to against the enemies of astrology, very
much as Moses was appealed to against Copernicus and
Galileo, and more recently to protect us against certain
relationships which Darwin, Wallace, and Huxley unkindly
indicate for the human race divine.
Although astronomers now reject altogether
the doctrines of judicial astrology, it is impossible
for the true lover of that science to regard astrology
altogether with contempt. Astronomy, indeed, owes
much more to the notions of believers in astrology
than is commonly supposed. Astrology bears the
same relation to modern astronomy that alchemy bears
to modern chemistry. As it is probable that nothing
but the hope of gain, literally in this case auri
sacra fames, would have led to those laborious
researches of the alchemists which first taught men
how to analyse matter into its elementary constituents,
and afterwards to combine these constituents afresh
into new forms, so the belief that, by carefully studying
the stars, men might acquire the power of predicting
future events, first directed attention to the movements
of the celestial bodies. Kepler’s saying,
that astrology, though a fool, was the daughter of
a wise mother, does not by any means present truly
the relationship between astrology and astronomy.
Rather we may say that astrology and alchemy, though
foolish mothers, gave birth to those wise daughters,
astronomy and chemistry. Even this way of speaking
scarcely does justice to the astrologers and alchemists
of old times. Their views appear foolish in the
light of modern scientific knowledge, but they were
not foolish in relation to what was known when they
were entertained. Modern analysis goes far to
demonstrate the immutability, and, consequently, the
non-transmutability of the metals, though it is by
no means so certain as many suppose that the present
position of the metals in the list of elements
is really correct. Certainly a chemist of our
day would be thought very unwise who should undertake
a series of researches with the object of discovering
a mineral having such qualities as the alchemists
attributed to the philosopher’s stone. But
when as yet the facts on which the science of chemistry
is based were unknown, there was nothing unreasonable
in supposing that such a mineral might exist, or the
means of compounding it be discovered. Nay, many
arguments from analogy might be urged to show that
the supposition was altogether probable. In like
manner, though the known facts of astronomy oppose
themselves irresistibly to any belief in planetary
influences upon the fates of men and nations, yet
before those facts were discovered it was not only
not unreasonable, but was in fact, highly reasonable
to believe in such influences, or at least that the
sun, and moon, and stars moved in the heavens in such
sort as to indicate what would happen. If the
wise men of old times rejected the belief that ’the
stars in their courses fought’ for or against
men, they yet could not very readily abandon the belief
that the stars were for signs in the heavens of what
was to befall mankind.
If we consider the reasoning now commonly
thought valid in favour of the doctrine that other
orbs besides our earth are inhabited, and compare it
with the reasoning on which judicial astrology was
based, we shall not find much to choose between the
two, so far as logical weight is concerned. Because
the only member of the solar system which we can examine
closely is inhabited, astronomers infer a certain degree
of probability for the belief that the other planets
of the system are also inhabited. And because
the only sun we know much about is the centre of a
system of planets, astronomers infer that probably
the stars, those other suns which people space, are
also the centres of systems; although no telescope
which man can make would show the members of a system
like ours, attending on even the nearest of all the
stars. The astrologer had a similar argument
for his belief. The moon, as she circles around
the earth, exerts a manifest influence upon terrestrial
matter the tidal wave rising and sinking
synchronously with the movements of the moon, and
other consequences depending directly or indirectly
upon her revolution around the earth. The sun’s
influence is still more manifest; and, though it may
have required the genius of a Herschel or of a Stephenson
to perceive that almost every form of terrestrial energy
is derived from the sun, yet it must have been manifest
from the very earliest times that the greater light
which rules the day rules the seasons also, and, in
ruling them, provides the annual supplies of vegetable
food, on which the very existence of men and animals
depends. If these two bodies, the sun and moon,
are thus potent, must it not be supposed, reasoned
the astronomers of old, that the other celestial bodies
exert corresponding influences? We know, but
they did not know, that the moon rules the tides effectually
because she is near to us, and that the sun is second
only to the moon in tidal influence because of his
enormous mass and attractive energy. We know also
that his position as fire, light, and life of the
earth and its inhabitants, is due directly to the
tremendous heat with which the whole of his mighty
frame is instinct. Not knowing this, the astronomers
of old times had no sufficient reason for distinguishing
the sun and moon from the other celestial bodies,
so far at least as the general question of celestial
influences was concerned.
So far as particulars were concerned,
it was not altogether so clear to them as it is to
us, that the influence of the sun must be paramount
in all respects save tidal action, and that of the
moon second only to the sun’s in other respects,
and superior to his in tidal sway alone. Many
writers on the subject of life in other worlds are
prepared to show (as Brewster attempts to do, for
example) that Jupiter and Saturn are far nobler worlds
than the earth, because superior in this or that circumstance.
So the ancient astronomers, in their ignorance of the
actual conditions on which celestial influences depend,
found abundant reasons for regarding the feeble influences
exerted by Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars, as really more
potent than those exerted by the sun himself upon
the earth. They reasoned, as Milton afterwards
made Raphael reason, that ‘great or bright infers
not excellence,’ that Saturn or Jupiter, though
‘in comparison so small, nor glist’ring’
to like degree, may yet ‘of solid good contain
more plenty than the sun.’ Supposing the
influence of a celestial body to depend on the magnitude
of its sphere, in the sense of the old astronomy (according
to which each planet had its proper sphere, around
the earth as centre), then the influence of the sun
would be judged to be inferior to that of either Saturn,
Jupiter, or Mars; while the influences of Venus and
Mercury, though inferior to the influence of the sun,
would still be held superior to that of the moon.
For the ancients measured the spheres of the seven
planets of their system by the periods of the apparent
revolution of those bodies around the celestial dome,
and so set the sphere of the moon innermost, enclosed
by the sphere of Mercury, around which in turn was
the sphere of Venus, next the sun’s, then, in
order, those of Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. We
can readily understand how they might come to regard
the slow motions of the sphere of Saturn and Jupiter,
taking respectively some thirty and twelve years to
complete a revolution, as indicating power superior
to the sun’s, whose sphere seemed to revolve
once in a single year. Many other considerations
might have been urged, before the Copernican theory
was established, to show that, possibly, some of the
planets exert influences more effective than those
of the sun and moon.
It is, indeed, clear that the first
real shock sustained by astrology came from the arguments
of Copernicus. So long as the earth was regarded
as the centre round which all the celestial bodies
move, it was hopeless to attempt to shake men’s
faith in the influences of the stars. So far
as I know, there is not a single instance of a believer
in the old Ptolemaic system who rejected astrology
absolutely. The views of Bacon the
last of any note who opposed the system of Copernicus indicate
the extreme limits to which a Ptolemaist could go
in opposition to astrology. It may be worth while
to quote Bacon’s opinion in this place, because
it indicates at once very accurately the position
held by believers in astrology in his day, and the
influence which the belief in a central fixed earth
could not fail to exert on the minds of even the most
philosophical reasoners.
‘Astrology,’ he begins,
’is so full of superstition that scarce anything
sound can be discovered in it; though we judge it should
rather be purged than absolutely rejected. Yet
if any one shall pretend that this science is founded
not in reason and physical contemplations, but in the
direct experience and observation of past ages, and
therefore not to be examined by physical reasons,
as the Chaldaeans boasted, he may at the same time
bring back divination, auguries, soothsaying, and give
in to all kinds of fables; for these also were said
to descend from long experience. But we receive
astrology as a part of physics, without attributing
more to it than reason and the evidence of things allow,
and strip it of its superstition and conceits.
Thus we banish that empty notion about the horary
reign of the planets, as if each resumed the throne
thrice in twenty-four hours, so as to leave three hours
supernumerary; and yet this fiction produced the division
of the week, a thing so ancient and so universally
received. Thus likewise we reject as an idle
figment the doctrine of horoscopes, and the distribution
of the houses, though these are the darling inventions
of astrology, which have kept revel, as it were, in
the heavens. And lastly, for the calculation
of nativities, fortunes, good or bad hours of business,
and the like fatalities, they are mere levities, that
have little in them of certainty and solidity, and
may be plainly confuted by physical reasons.
But here we judge it proper to lay down some rules
for the examination of astrological matters, in order
to retain what is useful therein, and reject what
is insignificant. Thus, 1. Let the greater
revolutions be retained, but the lesser, of horoscopes
and houses, be rejected the former being
like ordnance which shoot to a great distance, whilst
the other are but like small bows, that do no executio. The celestial operations affect not all kinds
of bodies, but only the more sensible, as humours,
air, and spirit. All the celestial operations
rather extend to masses of things than to individuals,
though they may obliquely reach some individuals also
which are more sensible than the rest, as a pestilent
constitution of the air affects those bodies which
are least able to resist i. All the celestial
operations produce not their effects instantaneously,
and in a narrow compass, but exert them in large portions
of time and space. Thus predictions as to the
temperature of a year may hold good, but not with
regard to single day. There is no fatal necessity
in the stars; and this the more prudent astrologers
have constantly allowe. We will add one thing
more, which, if amended and improved, might make for
astrology viz. that we are certain the celestial
bodies have other influences besides heat and light,
but these influences act not otherwise than by the
foregoing rules, though they lie so deep in physics
as to require a fuller explanation. So that, upon
the whole, we must register as needed, an astrology
written in conformity with these principles, under
the name of Astrologia Sana.’
He then proceeds to show what this
just astrology should comprehend as, 1,
the doctrine of the commixture of rays; 2, the effect
of nearest approaches and farthest removes of planets
to and from the point overhead (the planets, like
the sun, having their summer and winter); 3, the effects
of distance, ’with a proper enquiry into what
the vigour of the planets may perform of itself, and
what through their nearness to us; for,’ he
adds, but unfortunately without assigning any reason
for the statement, ’a planet is more brisk when
most remote, but more communicative when nearest;’
4, the other accidents of the planet’s motions
as they pursue
Their wand’ring course, now high,
now low, then hid,
Progressive, retrograde, or standing still;
5, all that can be discovered of the
general nature of the planets and fixed stars, considered
in their own essence and activity; 6, lastly, let
this just astrology, he says, ’contain, from
tradition, the particular natures and alterations
of the planets and fixed stars; for’ (here is
a reason indeed) ’as these are delivered with
general consent, they are not lightly to be rejected,
unless they directly contradict physical considerations.
Of such observations let a just astrology be formed;
and according to these alone should schemes of the
heavens be made and interpreted.’
The astrology thus regarded by Bacon
as sane and just did not differ, as to its primary
object, from the false systems which now seem to us
so absurd. ’Let this astrology be used
with greater confidence in prediction,’ says
Bacon, ’but more cautiously in election, and
in both cases with due moderation. Thus predictions
may be made of comets, and all kinds of meteors, inundations,
droughts, heats, frosts, earthquakes, fiery eruptions,
winds, great rains, the seasons of the year, plagues,
epidemic diseases, plenty, famine, wars, séditions,
sects, transmigrations of people, and all commotions,
or great innovations of things, natural and civil.
Predictions may possibly be made more particular,
though with less certainty, if, when the general tendencies
of the times are found, a good philosophical or political
judgment applies them to such things as are most liable
to accidents of this kind. For example, from
a foreknowledge of the seasons of any year, they might
be apprehended more destructive to olives than grapes,
more hurtful in distempers of the lungs than the liver,
more pernicious to the inhabitants of hills than valleys,
and, for want of provisions, to monks than courtiers,
etc. Or if any one, from a knowledge of the
influence which the celestial bodies have upon the
spirits of mankind, should find it would affect the
people more than their rulers, learned and inquisitive
men more than the military, etc. For there
are innumerable things of this kind that require not
only a general knowledge gained from the stars which
are the agents, but also a particular one of the passive
subjects. Nor are elections to be wholly rejected,
though not so much to be trusted as predictions; for
we find in planting, sowing, and grafting, observations
of the moon are not absolutely trifling, and there
are many particulars of this kind. But elections
are more to be curbed by our rules than predictions;
and this must always be remembered, that election
only holds in such cases where the virtue of the heavenly
bodies, and the action of the inferior bodies also,
is not transient, as in the examples just mentioned;
for the increases of the moon and planets are not
sudden things. But punctuality of time should
here be absolutely rejected. And perhaps there
are more of these instances to be found in civil matters
than some would imagine.’
The method of inquiry suggested by
Bacon as proper for determining the just rules of
the astrology he advocated, was, as might be expected,
chiefly inductive. There are, said he, ’but
four ways of arriving at this science, vi,
by future experiments; 2, past experiments; 3, traditions;
4, physical reasons.’ But he was not very
hopeful as to the progress of the suggested researches.
It is vain, he said, to think at present of future
experiments, because many ages are required to procure
a competent stock of them. As for the past, it
is true that past experiments are within our reach,
’but it is a work of labour and much time to
procure them. Thus astrologers may, if they please,
draw from real history all greater accidents, as inundations,
plagues, wars, séditions, deaths of kings, etc.,
as also the positions of the celestial bodies, not
according to fictitious horoscopes, but the above-mentioned
rules of their revolutions, or such as they really
were at the time, and, when the event conspires, erect
a probable rule of prediction.’ Traditions
would require to be carefully sifted, and those thrown
out which manifestly clashed with physical considerations,
leaving those in full force which complied with such
considerations. Lastly, the physical reasons
worthiest of being enquired into are those, said Bacon,
’which search into the universal appetites and
passions of matter, and the simple genuine motions
of the heavenly bodies.’
It is evident there was much which,
in our time at least, would be regarded as wild and
fanciful in the ‘sound and just astrology’
advocated by Bacon. Yet, in passing, it may be
noticed that even in our own time we have seen similar
ideas promulgated, not by common astrologers and fortune-tellers
(who, indeed, know nothing about such matters), but
by persons supposed to be well-informed in matters
scientific. In a roundabout way, a new astrology
has been suggested, which is not at all unlike Bacon’s
‘astrologia sana,’ though not
based, as he proposed that astrology should be, on
experiment, or tradition, or physical reasons.
It has been suggested, first, that the seasons of our
earth are affected by the condition of the sun in the
matter of spots, and very striking evidence has been
collected to show that this must be the case.
For instance, it has been found that years when the
sun has been free from spots have been warmer than
the average; and it has also been found that such
years have been cooler than the average: a double-shotted
argument wholly irresistible, especially when it is
also found that when the sun has many spots the weather
has sometimes been exceptionally warm and sometimes
exceptionally cold. If this be not considered
sufficient, then note that in one country or continent
or hemisphere the weather, when the sun is most spotted
(or least, as the case may be), may be singularly
hot, while in another country, continent, or hemisphere,
the weather may be as singularly cold. So with
wind and calm, rain and drought, and so forth.
Always, whether the sun is very much spotted or quite
free from spots, something unusual in the way of weather
must be going on somewhere, demonstrating in the most
significant way the influence of sun-spots or the want
of sun-spots on the weather. It is true that
captious minds might say that this method of reasoning
proved too much in many ways, as, for example, thus always,
whether the sun is very much spotted or quite free
from spots, some remarkable event, as a battle, massacre,
domestic tragedy on a large scale, or the like, may
be going on, demonstrating in the most significant
way the influence of sun-spots or the want of sun-spots
on the passions of men which sounds absurd.
But the answer is twofold. First, such reasoning
is captious, and secondly, it is not certain that
sun-spots, or the want of them, may not influence human
passions; it may be worth while to enquire into this
possible solar influence as well as the other, which
can be done by crossing the hands of the new fortune-tellers
with a sufficient amount of that precious metal which
astrologers have in all ages dedicated to the sun.
That the new system of divination
is not solely solar, but partly planetary also, is
seen when we remember that the sun-spots wax and wane
in periods of time which are manifestly referable to
the planetary motions. Thus, the great solar
spot-period lasts about eleven years, the successive
spotless epochs being separated on the average by about
that time; and so nearly does this period agree with
the period of the planet Jupiter’s revolution
around the sun, that during eight consecutive spot-periods
the spots were most numerous when Jupiter was farthest
from the sun, and it is only by going back to the
periods preceding these eight that we find a time
when the reverse happened, the spots being most numerous
when Jupiter was nearest to the sun. So with various
other periods which the ingenuity of Messrs. De la
Rue and Balfour Stewart has detected, and which, under
the closest scrutiny, exhibit almost exact agreement
for many successive periods, preceded and followed
by almost exact disagreement. Here, again, the
captious may argue that such alternate agreements
and disagreements may be noted in every case where
two periods are not very unequal, whether there be
any connection between them or not; but much more
frequently when there is no connection: and that
the only evidence really proving a connection between
planetary motions and the solar spots would be constant
agreement between solar spot periods and particular
planetary periods. But the progress of science,
and especially the possible erection of a new observatory
for finding out (’for a consideration’)
how sun-spots affect the weather, etc., ought
not to be interfered with by captious reasoners in
this objectionable manner. Nor need any other
answer be given them. Seeing, then, that sun-spots
manifestly affect the weather and the seasons, while
the planets rule the sun-spots, it is clear that the
planets really rule the seasons. And again, seeing
that the planets rule the seasons, while the seasons
largely affect the well-being of men and nations (to
say nothing of animals), it follows that the planets
influence the fates of men and nations (and animals).
Quod erat demonstrandum.
Let us return, however, to the more
reasonable astrology of the ancients, and enquire
into some of the traditions which Bacon considered
worthy of attention in framing the precepts of a sound
and just astrology.
It was natural that the astrologers
of old should regard the planetary influences as depending
in the main on the position of the celestial bodies
on the sky above the person or place whose fortunes
were in question. Thus two men at the same moment
in Rome and in Persia would by no means have the same
horoscope cast for their nativities, so that their
fortunes, according to the principles of judicial astrology,
would be quite different. In fact it might happen
that two men, born at the same instant of time, would
have all the principal circumstances of their lives
contrasted planets riding high in the heavens
of one being below the horizon of the other, and vice
versa.
The celestial sphere placed as at
the moment of the native’s birth was divided
into twelve parts by great circles supposed to pass
through the point overhead, and its opposite, the
point vertically beneath the feet. These twelve
divisions were called ‘houses.’
Their position is illustrated in the
following figure, taken from Raphael’s Astrology.
The first, called the Ascendant House,
was the portion rising above the horizon at the east.
It was regarded as the House of Life, the planets
located therein at the moment of birth having most
potent influence on the life and destiny of the native.
Such planets were said to rule the ascendant, being
in the ascending house; and it is from this usage that
our familiar expression that such and such an influence
is ’in the ascendant’ is derived.
The next house was the House of Riches, and was one-third
of the way from the east below the horizon towards
the place of the sun at midnight. The third was
the House of Kindred, short journeys, letters, messages,
etc. It was two-thirds of the way towards
the place of the midnight sun. The fourth was
the House of Parents, and was the house which the
sun reached at midnight. The fifth was the House
of Children and Women, also of all sorts of amusements,
theatres, banquets, and merry-making. The sixth
was the House of Sickness. The seventh was the
House of Love and Marriage. These three houses
(the fifth, sixth, and seventh) followed in order
from the fourth, so as to correspond to the part of
the sun’s path below the horizon, between his
place at midnight and his place when descending in
the west. The seventh, opposite to the first,
was the Descendant. The eighth house was the
first house above the horizon, lying to the west, and
was the House of Death. The ninth house, next
to the mid-heaven on the west, was the House of Religion,
science, learning, books, and long voyages. The
tenth, which was in the mid-heaven, or region occupied
by the sun at midday, was the House of Honour, denoting
credit, renown, profession or calling, trade, preferment,
etc. The eleventh house, next to the mid-heaven
on the east, was the House of Friends. Lastly,
the twelfth house was the House of Enemies.
The houses were not all of equal potency.
The angular houses, which are the first, the
fourth, the seventh, and the tenth lying
east, north, west, and south were first
in power, whether for good or evil. The second,
fifth, eighth, and eleventh houses were called succedents,
as following the angular houses, and next to them in
power. The remaining four houses viz.
the third, sixth, ninth, and twelfth houses were
called cadents, and were regarded as weakest
in influence. The houses were regarded as alternately
masculine and feminine: the first, third, fifth,
etc., being masculine; while the second, fourth,
sixth, etc., were feminine.
The more particular significations
of the various houses are shown in the accompanying
figure from the same book.
It will be easily understood how these
houses were dealt with in erecting a scheme of nativity.
The position of the planets at the moment of the native’s
birth, in the several houses, determined his fortunes
with regard to the various matters associated with
these houses. Thus planets of good influence
in the native’s ascendant, or first house, signified
generally a prosperous life; but if at the same epoch
a planet of malefic influence was in the seventh house,
then the native, though on the whole prosperous, would
be unfortunate in marriage. A good planet in
the tenth house signified good fortune and honour in
office or business, and generally a prosperous career
as distinguished from a happy life; but evil planets
in the ninth house would suggest to the native caution
in undertaking long voyages, or entering upon religious
or scientific controversies.
Similar considerations applied to
questions relating to horary astronomy, in which the
position of the planets in the various houses at some
epoch guided the astrologer’s opinion as to the
fortune of that hour, either in the life of a man
or the career of a State. In such inquiries,
however, not only the position of the planets, etc.,
at the time had to be considered, but also the original
horoscope of the person, or the special planets and
signs associated with particular States. Thus
if Jupiter, the most fortunate of all the planets,
was in the ascendant, or in the House of Honour, at
the time of the native’s birth, and at some
epoch this planet was ill-aspected or afflicted by
other planets potent for evil in the native’s
horoscope, then that epoch would be a threatening
one in the native’s career.
The sign Gemini was regarded by astrologers
as especially associated with the fortunes of London,
and accordingly they tell us that the great fire of
London, the plague, the building of London Bridge,
and other events interesting to London, all occurred
when this sign was in the ascendant, or when special
planets were in this sign.
The signs of the zodiac in the various
houses were in the first place to be noted, because
not only had these signs special powers in special
houses, but the effects of the planets in particular
houses varied according to the signs in which the
planets were situated. If we were to follow the
description given by the astrologers themselves, not
much insight would be thrown upon the meaning of the
zodiacal signs. For instance, astrologers say
that Aries is a vernal, dry, fiery, masculine, cardinal,
equinoctial, diurnal, movable, commanding, eastern,
choleric, violent, and quadrupedalian sign. We
may, however, infer generally from their accounts
the influences which they assigned to the zodiacal
signs.
Aries is the house and joy of Mars,
signifies a dry constitution, long face and neck,
thick shoulders, swarthy complexion, and a hasty,
passionate temper. It governs the head and face,
and all diseases relating thereto. It reigns
over England, France, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark,
Lesser Poland, Syria, Naples, Capua, Verona, etc.
It is a masculine sign, and is regarded as fortunate.
Taurus gives to the native born under
his auspices a stout athletic frame, broad bull-like
forehead, dark curly hair, short neck, and so forth,
and a dull apathetic temper, exceedingly cruel and
malicious if once aroused. It governs the neck
and throat, and reigns over Ireland, Great Poland,
part of Russia, Holland, Persia, Asia Minor, the Archipelago,
Mantua, Leipsic, etc. It is a feminine sign,
and unfortunate.
Gemini is the house of Mercury.
The native of Gemini will have a sanguine complexion
and tall, straight figure, dark eyes quick and piercing,
brown hair, active ways, and will be of exceedingly
ingenious intellect. It governs the arms and
shoulders, and rules over the south-west parts of
England, America, Flanders, Lombardy, Sardinia, Armenia,
Lower Egypt, London, Versailles, Brabant, etc.
It is a masculine sign, and fortunate.
Cancer is the house of the Moon and
exaltation of Jupiter, and its native will be of fair
but pale complexion, round face, grey or mild blue
eyes, weak voice, the upper part of the body large,
slender arms, small feet, and an effeminate constitution.
It governs the breast and the stomach, and reigns
over Scotland, Holland, Zealand, Burgundy, Africa,
Algiers, Tunis, Tripoli, Constantinople, New York,
etc. It is a feminine sign, and unfortunate.
The native born under Leo will be
of large body, broad shoulders, austere countenance,
with dark eyes and tawny hair, strong voice, and leonine
character, resolute and ambitious, but generous, free,
and courteous. Leo governs the heart and back,
and reigns over Italy, Bohemia, France, Sicily, Rome,
Bristol, Bath, Taunton, Philadelphia, etc.
It is a masculine sign, and fortunate.
Virgo is the joy of Mercury.
Its natives are of moderate stature, seldom handsome,
slender but compact, thrifty and ingenious. It
governs the abdomen, and reigns over Turkey both in
Europe and Asia, Greece, and Mesopotamia, Crete, Jerusalem,
Paris, Lyons, etc. It is a feminine sign,
and generally unfortunate.
Libra is the house of Venus.
The natives of Libra are tall and well made, elegant
in person, round-faced and ruddy, but plain-featured
and ‘inclined to eruptions that disfigure the
face when old; they’ (the natives) ‘are
of sweet disposition, just and upright in dealing.’
It governs the lumbar regions, and reigns over Austria,
Alsace, Savoy, Portugal, Livonia, India, Ethiopia,
Lisbon, Vienna, Frankfort, Antwerp, Charleston, etc.
It is a masculine sign, and fortunate.
Scorpio is, like Aries, the house
of Mars, ‘and also his joy.’ Its
natives are strong, corpulent, and robust, with large
bones, ’dark curly hair and eyes’ (presumably
the eyes dark only, not curly), middle stature, dusky
complexion, active bodies; they are usually reserved
in speech. It governs the region of the groin,
and reigns over Judaea, Mauritania, Catalonia, Norway,
West Silesia, Upper Batavia, Barbary, Morocco, Valentia,
Messina, etc. It is feminine, and unfortunate.
(It would appear likely, by the way, that astrology
was a purely masculine science.)
Sagittarius is the house and joy of
Jupiter. Its natives are well formed and tall,
ruddy, handsome, and jovial, with fine clear eyes,
chestnut hair, and oval fleshy face. They are
’generally jolly fellows at either bin or board,’
active, intrepid, generous, and obliging. It governs
the legs and thighs, and reigns over Arabia Felix,
Spain, Hungary, Moravia, Liguria, Narbonne, Cologne,
Avignon, etc. It is masculine, and of course
fortunate.
Capricorn is the house of Saturn and
exaltation of Mars. This sign gives to its natives
a dry constitution and slender make, with a long thin
visage, thin beard (a generally goaty aspect, in fact),
dark hair, long neck, narrow chin, and weak knees.
It governs, nevertheless, the knees and hams, and
reigns over India, Macedonia, Thrace and Greece, Mexico,
Saxony, Wilna, Mecklenburgh, Brandenburg, and Oxford.
It is feminine, and unfortunate.
Aquarius also is the house of Saturn.
Its natives are robust, steady, strong, healthy, and
of middle stature; delicate complexion, clear but
not pale, sandy hair, hazel eyes, and generally an
honest disposition. It governs the legs and ankles,
and reigns over Arabia, Petraea, Tartary, Russia,
Denmark, Lower Sweden, Westphalia, Hamburg, and Bremen.
It is masculine, and fortunate.
Pisces is the house of Jupiter and
exaltation of Venus. Its natives are short, pale,
thick-set, and round-shouldered (like fish), its character
phlegmatic and effeminate. It governs the feet
and toes, and reigns over Portugal, Spain, Egypt,
Normandy, Galicia, Ratisbon, Calabria, etc.
It is feminine, and therefore, naturally, unfortunate.
Let us next consider the influences
assigned to the various planets and constellations.
Though we can understand that in old
times the planets and stars were regarded as exercising
very potent influences upon the fates of men and nations,
it is by no means easy to understand how astrologers
came to assign to each planet its special influence.
That is, it is not easy to understand how they could
have been led to such a result by actual reasoning,
still less by any process of observation. There
was a certain scientific basis for the belief in the
possibility of determining the special influences
of the stars; and we should have expected to find
some scientific process adopted for the purpose.
Yet, so far as can be judged, the influences assigned
to the planets depended on entirely fanciful considerations.
In some cases we seem almost to see the line along
which the fancies of the old astrologers led them,
just as in some cases we can perceive how mythological
superstitions (which are closely related to astrological
ideas) had their origin; though it is not quite clear
whether the planets were first regarded as deities
with special qualities, and these qualities afterwards
assigned to the planetary influences, or whether the
planetary influences were first assigned, and came
eventually to be regarded as the qualities of the
deities associated with the several planets.
It is easy, for instance, to understand
why astrologers should have regarded the sun as the
emblem of kingly power and dignity, and equally easy
to understand why, to the sun regarded as a deity,
corresponding qualities should have been ascribed;
but it is not easy to determine whether the astrological
or the Sabaistic superstitions were the earlier.
And in like manner of the moon and planets. There
seems to me no sufficient evidence in favour of Whewell’s
opinion, that ’in whatever manner the sun, moon,
and planets came to be identified with gods and goddesses,
the characters ascribed to these gods and goddesses,
regulated the virtues and powers of the stars which
bear their names.’ As he himself very justly
remarks, ’We do not possess any of the speculations
of the earlier astrologers; and we cannot, therefore,
be certain that the notions which operated in men’s
minds when the art had its birth, agreed with the
views on which it was afterwards defended.’
He does not say why he infers that, though at later
periods supported by physical analogies, it was originally
suggested by mythological beliefs. Quite as probably
mythological beliefs were suggested by astrological
notions. Some of these beliefs, indeed, seem manifestly
to have been so suggested; as the character of the
deity Mercury, from the rapid motions of the planet
Mercury, and the difficulty of detecting it; the character
of Mars from the blood-red hue of the planet when close
to the horizon, and so forth.
Let us examine, however, the characteristics
ascribed by astrologers to various planets.
It is unfortunate for astrology that,
despite the asserted careful comparison of events
with the planetary positions preceding and indicating
them, nothing was ever observed which seemed to suggest
the possibility that there may be an unknown planet
ruling very strongly the affairs of men. Astrologers
tell us now that Uranus is a very potent planet; yet
the old astrologers seem to have got on very well without
him. By the way, one of the moderns, the grave
Raphael, gives a very singular account of the discovery
of Uranus, in a book published sixteen years before
Neptune was discovered by just such a process as Raphael
imagined in the case of Uranus. He says that Drs.
Halley, Bradley, and others, having frequently observed
that Saturn was disturbed in his motion by some force
exerted from beyond his orbit, and being unable to
account for the disturbance on the known principles
of gravitation, pursued their enquiry into the matter,
’till at length the discovery of this hitherto
unknown planet covered their labours with success,
and has enabled us to enlarge our present solar system
to nearly double its bounds.’ Of course
there is not a word of truth in this; Uranus having
been discovered by accident long after Halley and Bradley
were in the grave. But the account suggests what
might have been, and curiously anticipates the actual
manner in which Neptune was discovered.
Astrologers agree in attributing evil
effects to Uranus. But the evil he does is always
peculiarly strange, unaccountable, and totally unexpected.
He causes the native born under his influence to be
of a very eccentric and original disposition, romantic,
unsettled, addicted to change, a seeker after novelty;
though, if the moon or Mercury have a good aspect
towards Uranus, the native will be profound in the
secret sciences, magnanimous, and lofty of mind.
But let all beware of marriage when Uranus is in the
seventh house, or afflicting the moon. And in
general, let the fair sex remember that Uranus is peculiarly
hostile to them, and very evil in love.
Saturn is the Greater Infortune
of the old system of astrology, and is by universal
experience acknowledged to be the most potent, evil,
and malignant of all the planets. Those born
under him are of dark and pale complexion, with small,
black, leering eyes, thick lips and nostrils, large
ears, thin face, lowering looks, cloudy aspect, and
seemingly melancholy and unhappy; and though they
have broad shoulders, they have but short lips and
a thin beard, They are in character austere and reserved,
covetous, laborious, and revengeful; constant in friendship,
and good haters. The most remarkable and certain
characteristic of the Saturnine man is that, as an
old author observes ’he will never look thee
in the face.’ ‘If they have to love
any one, these Saturnines,’ says another old
author, ’they love most constantly; and if they
hate, they hate to the death.’ The persons
signified symbolically by Saturn are grandparents,
and other old persons, day labourers, paupers, beggars,
clowns, husbandmen of the meaner sort, and especially
undertakers, sextons, and gravediggers. Chaucer
thus presents the chief effects which Saturn produces
in the fortunes of men and nations Saturn
himself being the speaker:
...
quod Saturne
My cours, that hath so wide for to
turne,
Hath more power than wot any man.
Min is the drenching in the sea so wan,
Min is the prison in the derke cote,
Min is the strangel and hanging by the
throte,
The murmure and the cherles rebelling,
The groyning, and the prive empoysoning,
I do vengaunce and pleine correction,
While I dwell in the signe of the
león;
Min is the ruine of the high halles,
The falling of the toures and of the walles
Upon the minour or the carpenter:
I slew Sampson in shaking the piler.
Min ben also the maladies colde,
The derke tresons, and the castes olde:
My loking is the fader of pestilence.
Jupiter, on the contrary, though Saturn’s
next neighbour in the solar system, produces effects
of an entirely contrary kind. He is, in fact,
the most propitious of all the planets, and the native
born under his influence has every reason to be jovial
in fact as he is by nature. Such a native will
be tall and fair, handsome and erect, robust, ruddy,
and altogether a good-looking person, whether male
or female. The native will also be religious,
or at least a good moral honest man, unless Jupiter
be afflicted by the aspects of Saturn, Mars, or Uranus;
in which case he may still be a jolly fellow, no man’s
enemy but his own only he will probably
be his own enemy to a very considerable extent, squandering
his means and ruining his health by gluttony and intoxication.
The persons represented by Jupiter (when he is not
afflicted) are judges, counsellors, church dignitaries,
from cardinals to curates, scholars, chancellors,
barristers, and the highest orders of lawyers, woollendrapers
(possibly there may be some astral significance in
the woolsack), and clothiers. When Jupiter is
afflicted, however, he denotes quacks and mountebanks,
knaves, cheats, and drunkards. The influence
of the planet on the fortunes is nearly always good.
Astrologers, who to a man reverence dignities, consider
Great Britain fortunate in that the lady whom, with
customary effusion, they term ’Our Most Gracious
Queen,’ was born when Jupiter was riding high
in the heavens near his culmination, this position
promising a most fortunate and happy career.
The time has passed when the fortunes of this country
were likely to be affected by such things; but we may
hope, for the lady’s own sake, that this prediction
has been fulfilled. Astrologers assert the same
about the Duke of Wellington, assigning midnight, May
1, 1769, as the hour of his birth. There is some
doubt both as to the date and place of the great soldier’s
birth; but the astrologer finds in the facts of his
life the means of removing all such doubts.
Next in order comes Mars, inferior
only in malefic influence to Saturn, and called by
the old astrologers the Lesser Infortune.
The native born under the influence of Mars is usually
of fierce countenance, his eyes sparkling, or sharp
and darting, his complexion fiery or yellowish, and
his countenance scarred or furrowed. His hair
is reddish or sandy, unless Mars chances to be in
a watery sign, in which case the hair will be flaxen;
or in an earthly sign, in which case the hair will
be chestnut. The Martialist is broad-shouldered,
steady, and strong, but short, and often bony
and lean. In character the Martialist is fiery
and choleric, naturally delighting in war and contention,
but generous and magnanimous. This when Mars
is well aspected; should the planet be evil aspected,
then will the native be treacherous, thievish, treasonable,
cruel, and wicked. The persons signified by Mars
are generals, soldiers, sailors (if he is in a watery
sign), surgeons, chemists, doctors, armourers, barbers,
curriers, smiths, carpenters, bricklayers, sculptors,
cooks, and tailors. When afflicted with Mercury
or the moon, he denotes thieves, hangmen, and ‘all
cut throat people.’ In fact, except the
ploughboy, who belongs to Saturn, all the members of
the old septet, ’tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor,
apothecary, ploughboy, thief,’ are favourites
with Mars. The planet’s influence is not
quite so evil as Saturn’s, nor are the effects
produced by it so long-lasting. ‘The influence
of Saturn,’ says an astrologer, ’may be
compared to a lingering but fatal consumption; that
of Mars to a burning fever.’ He is the
cause of anger, quarrels, violence, war, and slaughter.
The sun comes next; for it must be
remembered that, according to the old system of astronomy,
the sun was a planet. Persons born under the sun
as the planet ruling their ascendant, would be more
apt to be aware of the fact than Saturnine, Jovial,
Martial, or any other folk, because the hour of birth,
if remembered, at once determines whether the native
is a solar subject or not. The solar native has
generally a round face (like pictures of the sun in
old books of astronomy), with a short chin; his complexion
somewhat sanguine; curling sandy hair, and a white
tender skin. As to character, he is bold and
resolute, desirous of praise, of slow speech and composed
judgment; outwardly decorous, but privately not altogether
virtuous. The sun, in fact, according to astrologers,
is the natural significator of respectability; for
which I can discover no reason, unless it be that
the sun travelling always in the ecliptic has no latitude,
and so solar folk are allowed none. When the sun
is ill aspected, the native is both proud and mean,
tyrannical and sycophantic, exceedingly unamiable,
and generally disliked because of his arrogance and
ignorant pomposity. The persons signified by the
sun are emperors, kings, and titled folk generally,
goldsmiths, jewellers, and coiners. When ‘afflicted,’
the sun signifies pretenders either to power or knowledge.
The sun’s influence is not in itself either good
or evil, but is most powerful for good when he is
favourably aspected, and for evil when he is afflicted
by other planets.
Venus, the next in order, bore the
same relation to the Greater Fortune Jupiter which
Mars bore to Saturn the Greater Ill-fortune. She
was the Lesser Fortune, and her influence was in nearly
all respects benevolent. The persons born under
the influence of this planet are handsome, with beautiful
sparkling hazel or black eyes (but another authority
assigns the subject of Venus, ‘a full eye, usually
we say goggle-eyed,’ by which we do not usually
imply beauty), ruddy lips, the upper lip short, soft
smooth hair, dimples in the cheek and chin, an amorous
look and a sweet voice. One old astrologer puts
the matter thus pleasantly: ’The native
of Venus hath,’ quoth he, ’a love-dimple
in the chin, a lovely mouth, cherry lips, and a right
merry countenance.’ In character the native
of Venus is merry ‘to a fault,’ but of
temper engaging, sweet and cheerful, unless she be
ill aspected, when her native is apt to be too fond
of pleasure and amusement. That her influence
is good is shown (in the opinion of Raphael, writing
in 1828) by the character of George IV., ’our
present beloved monarch and most gracious majesty,
who was born just as this benevolent star’ was
in the ascendant; ’for it is well known to all
Europe what a refined and polished genius, and what
exquisite taste, the King of England possesses, which
therefore may be cited as a most illustrious proof
of the celestial science; a proof likewise which is
palpably demonstrable, even to the most casual observer,
since the time of his nativity is taken from the public
journals of the period, and cannot be gainsaid.’
’This illustrious and regal horoscope is replete
with wonderful verifications of planetary influence,
and England cannot but prosper while she is blessed
with the mild and beneficent sway of this potent monarch.’
Strengthened in faith by this convincing proof of
the celestial science, we proceed to notice that Venus
is the protectrice of musicians, embroiderers,
perfumers, classic modellers, and all who work in
elegant attire or administer to the luxuries of the
great; but when she is afflicted, she represents ‘the
lower orders of the votaries of voluptuousness.’
Mercury is considered by astrologers
‘a cold, dry, melancholy star.’ The
Mercurial is neither dark nor fair, but between both,
long-faced, with high forehead and thin sharp nose,
’thin beard (many times none at all), slender
of body, and with small weak eyes;’ long slender
hands and fingers are ‘especial marks of Mercury,’
says Raphael. In character the Mercurial is busy
and prattling. But when well affected, Mercury
gives his subjects a strong, vigorous, active mind,
searching and exhaustive, a retentive memory, a natural
thirst for knowledge. The persons signified by
Mercury are astrologers, philosophers, mathematicians,
politicians, merchants, travellers, teachers, poets,
artificers, men of science, and all ingenious, clever
men. When he is ill affected, however, he represents
pettifoggers, cunning vile persons, thieves, messengers,
footmen, and servants, etc.
The moon comes last in planetary sequence,
as nearest to the earth. She is regarded by astrologers
as a cold, moist, watery, phlegmatic planet, variable
to an extreme, and, like the sun, partaking of good
or evil according as she is aspected favourably or
the reverse. Her natives are of good stature,
fair, and pale, moon-faced, with grey eyes, short arms,
thick hands and feet, smooth, corpulent and phlegmatic
body. When she is in watery signs, the native
has freckles on the face, or, says Lilly, ’he
or she is blub-cheeked, not a handsome body, but a
muddling creature.’ Unless the moon is
very well aspected, she ever signifies an ordinary
vulgar person. She signifies sailors (not as Mars
does, the fighting-men of war-ships, but nautical
folk generally) and all persons connected with water
or any kind of fluid; also all who are engaged in
inferior and common offices.
We may note, in passing, that to each
planet a special metal is assigned, as also particular
colours. Chaucer, in the Chanones Yemannes’
Tale, succinctly describes the distribution of the
metals among the planets:
Sol gold is, and Luna silver we threpe;
Mars iren, Mercurie silver we clepe:
Saturnus led, and Jupiter is tin,
And Venus coper, by my [the Chanones Yemannes’]
faderkin.
The colours are thus assigned: to
Saturn, black; to Jupiter, mixed red and green; to
Mars, red; to the sun, yellow or yellow-purple; to
Venus, white or purple; to Mercury, azure blue; to
the moon, a colour spotted with white and other mixed
colours.
Again, the planets were supposed to
have special influence on the seven ages of human
life. The infant, ’mewling and puking in
the nurse’s arms,’ was very appropriately
dedicated to the moist moon; the whining schoolboy
(did schoolboys whine in the days of good Queen Bess?)
was less appropriately assigned to Mercury, the patron
of those who eagerly seek after knowledge: then
very naturally, the lover sighing like furnace was
regarded as the special favourite of Venus. Thus
far the order has been that of the seven planets of
the ancient astrology, in supposed distance.
Now, however, we have to pass over the sun, finding
Mars the patron of mid life, appropriately (in this
respect) presiding over the soldier full of strange
oaths, and so forth; the ’justice in fair round
belly with good capon lined’ is watched over
by the respectable sun; maturer age by Jupiter; and,
lastly, old age by Saturn.
Colours were also assigned to the
twelve zodiacal signs to Aries, white and
red; to Taurus, white and lemon; to Gemini, white and
red (the same as Aries); to Cancer, green or russet;
to Leo, red or green; to Virgo, black speckled with
blue; to Libra, black, or dark crimson, or tawny colour;
to Scorpio, brown; to Sagittarius, yellow, or a green
sanguine (this is as strange a colour as the gris
rouge of Moliere’s L’Avare);
Capricorn, black or russet, or a swarthy brown; to
Aquarius, a sky-coloured blue; to Pisces, white glistening
colour (like a fish just taken out of the water).
The chief fixed stars had various
influences assigned to them by astrologers. These
influences were mostly associated with the imaginary
figures of the constellations. Thus the bright
star in the head of Aries, called by some the Ram’s
Horn, was regarded as dangerous and evil, denoting
bodily hurts. The star Menkar in the Whale’s
jaw denoted sickness, disgrace, and ill-fortune, with
danger from great beasts. Betelgeux, the bright
star on Orion’s right shoulder, denoted martial
honours or wealth; Bellatrix, the star on Orion’s
left shoulder, denoted military or civic honours;
Rigel, on Orion’s left foot, denoted honours;
Sirius and Procyon, the greater and lesser Dog Stars,
both implied wealth and renown. Star clusters
seem to have portended loss of sight; at least we
learn that the Pleiades were ‘eminent stars,’
but denoting accidents to the sight or blindness,
while the cluster Praesepe or the Beehive in like
manner threatened blindness. The cluster in Perseus
does not seem to have been noticed by astrologers.
The variable star Algol or Caput Medusae, which marks
the head of Gorgon, was accounted ’the most
unfortunate, violent, and dangerous star in the heavens.’
It is tolerably clear that the variable character
of this star had been detected long before Montanari
(to whom the discovery is commonly attributed) noticed
the phenomenon. The name Algol is only a variation
of Al-ghul, the monster or demon, and it cannot be
doubted that the demoniac, Gorgonian character assigned
to this star was suggested by its ominous change,
as though it were the eye of some fierce monster slowly
winking amid the gloom of space. The two stars
called the Aselli, which lie on either side of
the cluster Praesepe, ‘are said’ (by astrologers)
’to be of a burning nature, and to give great
indications of a violent death, or of violent and
severe accidents by fire.’ The star called
Cor Hydrae, or the serpent’s heart,
denotes trouble through women (said I not rightly
that Astrology was a masculine science?); the Lion’s
heart, Regulus, implied glory and riches; Deneb, the
Lion’s tail, misfortune and disgrace. The
southern scale of Libra meant bad fortune, while the
northern was eminently fortunate.
Astrology was divided into three distinct
branches the doctrine of nativities, horary
astrology, and state astrology. The first assigned
the rules for determining the general fortunes of the
native, by drawing up his scheme of nativity or casting
his horoscope. It took into account the positions
of the various planets, signs, stars, etc., at
the time of the native’s birth; and as the astrologer
could calculate the movements of the planets thereafter,
he could find when those planets which were observed
by the horoscope to be most closely associated with
the native’s fortunes would be well aspected
or the reverse. Thus the auspicious and unlucky
epochs of the native’s life could be predetermined.
The astrologer also claimed some degree of power to
rule the planets, not by modifying their movements
in any way, but by indicating in what way the ill
effects portended by their positions could be prevented.
The Arabian and Persian astrologers, having less skill
than the followers of Ptolemy, made use of a different
method of determining the fortunes of men, not calculating
the positions of the planets for many years following
the birth of the native, but assigning to every day
after his birth a whole year of his life and for every
two hours’ motion of the moon one month.
Thus the positions of the stars and planets, twenty-one
days after the birth of the native, would indicate
the events corresponding to the time when he would
have completed his twenty-first year. There was
another system called the Placidian, in which the
effects of the positions of the planets were judged
with sole reference to the motion of the earth upon
her axis. It is satisfactory to find astrologers
in harmony amongst each other as to these various
methods, which one would have supposed likely to give
entirely different results. ‘Each of them,’
says a modern astrologer, ’is not only correct
and approved by long-tried practice, but may be said
to defy the least contradiction from those who will
but take the pains to examine them (and no one else
should deliver an opinion upon the subject). Although
each of the above methods are different, yet they by
no means contradict each other, but each leads to
true results, and in many instances they each
lead to the foreknowledge of the same event; in which
respect they may be compared to the ascent of a mountain
by different paths, where, although some paths are
longer and more difficult than others, they notwithstanding
all lead to the same object.’ All which,
though plausible in tone labours under the disadvantage
of being untrue.
Ptolemy is careful to point out, in
his celebrated work the ‘Tetrabiblos,’
that, of all events whatsoever which take place after
birth, the most essential is the continuance of life.
‘It is useless,’ he says, ’to consider
what events might happen to the native in later years
if his life does not extend, for instance, beyond one
year. So that the enquiry into the duration of
life takes precedence of all others.’ In
order to deal properly with this question, it is necessary
to determine what planet shall be regarded as the Hyleg,
Apheta, or Lord of Life, for the native. Next
the Anareta, or Destroyer of Life, must be ascertained.
The Anaretic planets are, by nature, Saturn, Mars,
and Uranus, though the sun, moon, and Mercury may
be endowed with the same fatal influence, if suitably
afflicted. The various ways in which the Hyleg,
or Giver of Life, may be afflicted by the Anareta,
correspond to the various modes of death. But
astrologers have always been singularly careful, in
casting horoscopes, to avoid definite reference to
the native’s death. There are but few cases
where the actual day of death is said to have been
assigned. One is related in Clarendon’s
’History of the Rebellion.’ He tells
us that William Earl of Pembroke died at the age of
fifty, on the day upon which his tutor Sandford had
predicted his decease. Burton, the author of
the ‘Anatomy of Melancholy,’ having cast
his own horoscope, and ascertained that he was to die
on January 23, 1639, is said to have committed suicide
in order that the accuracy of his calculations might
not be called in question. A similar story is
related of Cardan by Dr. Young (Sidrophel Vapulans),
on the authority of Gassendi, who, however, says only
that either Cardan starved himself, or, being
confident in his art, took the predicted day for a
fatal one, and by his fears made it so. Gassendi
adds that while Cardan pretended to describe
the fates of his children in his voluminous commentaries,
he all the while never suspected, from the rules of
his great art, that his dearest son would be condemned
in the flower of his youth to be beheaded on a scaffold,
by an executioner of justice, for destroying his own
wife by poison.
Horary astrology relates to particular
questions, and is a comparatively easy branch of the
science. The art of casting nativities requires
many years of study; but horary astrology ‘may
be well understood,’ says Lilly, ‘in less
than a quarter of a year.’ ’If a proposition
of any nature,’ he adds, ’be made to any
individual, about the result of which he is anxious,
and therefore uncertain whether to accede to it or
not, let him but note the hour and minute when it
was first made, and erect a figure of the heavens,
and his doubts will be instantly resolved. He
may thus in five minutes learn whether the affair will
succeed or not: and consequently whether it is
prudent to accept the offer made or not. If he
examine the sign on the first house of the figure,
the planet therein, or the planet ruling the sign,
will exactly describe the party making the offer,
both in person and character, and this may at once
convince the enquirer for truth of the reality of the
principles of the science. Moreover, the descending
sign, etc., will describe his own person and
character a farther proof of the truth
of the science.’
There is one feature of horary astrology
which is probably almost as ancient as any portion
of the science, yet which remains even to the present
day, and will probably remain for many years to come.
I refer to the influence which the planets were supposed
to exert on the successive hours of every day a
belief from which the division of time into weeks
of seven days unquestionably had its origin though
we may concede that the subdivision of the lunar month
into four equal parts was also considered in selecting
this convenient measure of time. Every hour had
its planet. Now dividing twenty-four by seven,
we get three and three over; whence, each day containing
twenty-four hours, it follows that in each day the
complete series of seven planets was run through three
times, and three planets of the next series were used.
The order of the planets was that of their distances,
as indicated above. Saturn came first, then Jupiter,
Mars, the Sun, Venus, Mercury, and the Moon.
Beginning with Saturn, as ruling the first hour of
Saturn’s day (Saturday), we get through the
above series three times, and have for the last three
hours of the day, Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars. Thus
the next hour, the first hour of the next day, belongs
to the sun Sunday follows Saturday.
We again run three times through the series, and the
three remaining hours are governed by the sun, Venus,
and Mercury, giving the moon as the first
planet for the next day. Monday thus follows
Sunday. The last three hours of Monday are ruled
by the moon, Saturn, and Jupiter; leaving Mars to
govern the next day Martis dies, Mardi,
Tuesday or Tuisco’s day. Proceeding in the
same way, we get Mercury for the next day, Mercurii
dies, Mercredi, Wednesday or Woden’s day;
Jupiter for the next day, Jovis dies, Jeudi,
Thursday or Thor’s day; Venus for the next day,
Veneris dies, Vendredi, Friday or Freya’s
day; and so we come to Saturday again.
The period of seven days, which had
its origin in, and derived its nomenclature from astrological
ideas, shows by its wide prevalence how widely astrological
superstitions were once spread among the nations.
As Whewell remarks (though, for reasons which will
readily be understood he was by no means anxious to
dwell upon the true origin of the Sabbatical week),
’the usage is found over all the East; it existed
among the Arabians, Assyrians, and Egyptians.
The same week is found in India, among the Brahmíns;
it has there also its days marked by the names of
the heavenly bodies; and it has been ascertained that
the same day has, in that country, the name corresponding
with its designation in other nations.... The
period has gone on without interruption or irregularity
from the earliest recorded times to our own days, traversing
the extent of ages and the revolutions of empires;
the names of ancient deities, which were associated
with the stars, were replaced by those of the objects
of the worship of our Teutonic ancestors, according
to their views of the correspondence of the two mythologies;
and the Quakers, in rejecting these names of days,
have cast aside the most ancient existing relic of
astrological as well as idolatrous superstition.
Not only do the names remain, but
some of the observances connected with the old astrological
systems remain even to this day. As ceremonies
derived from Pagan worship are still continued, though
modified in form, and with a different interpretation,
in Christian and especially Roman Catholic observances,
so among the Jews and among Christians the rites and
ceremonies of the old Egyptian and Chaldaean astrology
are still continued, though no longer interpreted
as of yore. The great Jewish Lawgiver and those
who follow him seem, for example, to have recognised
the value of regular periods of rest (whether really
required by man or become a necessity through long
habit), but to have been somewhat in doubt how best
to continue the practice without sanctioning the superstitions
with which it had been connected. At any rate
two different and inconsistent interpretations were
given in the earlier and later codes of law.
But whether the Jews accepted the Sabbath because
they believed that an All-powerful Being, having created
the world in six days, required and took rest (’and
was refreshed’) on the seventh, as stated in
Exodus (x and xxx, or whether they did so
in remembrance of their departure from Egypt, as stated
in Deuteronomy , there can be no question that
among the Egyptians the Sabbath or Saturn’s
day was a day of rest because of the malignant nature
of the powerful planet-deity who presided over that
day. Nor can it be seriously doubted that the
Jews descended from the old Chaldaeans, among whom
(as appears from stone inscriptions recently discovered)
the very word Sabbath was in use for a seventh day
of rest connected with astrological observances, were
familiar with the practice even before their sojourn
in Egypt. They had then probably regarded it as
a superstitious practice to be eschewed like those
idolatrous observances which had caused Terah to remove
with Abraham and Lot from Ur of the Chaldees.
At any rate, we find no mention of the seventh day
of rest as a religious observance until after the
Exodus. It was not their only religious observance
having in reality an astrological origin. Indeed,
if we examine the Jewish sacrificial system as described
in Numbers xxviii. and elsewhere, we shall find throughout
a tacit reference to the motions or influences of
the celestial bodies. There was the morning and
evening sacrifice guided by the movements of the sun;
the Sabbath offering, determined by the predominance
of Saturn; the offering of the new moon, depending
on the motions of the moon; and lastly, the Paschal
sacrifice, depending on the combined movements of the
sun and moon made, in fact, during the
lunation following the sun’s ascending passage
of the equator at the sign of Aries.
Let us return, however, after this
somewhat long digression, to astrological matters.
Horary astrology is manifestly much
better fitted than the casting of nativities for filling
the pocket of the astrologer himself; because only
one nativity can be cast, but any number of horary
questions can be asked. It is on account of their
skill in horary astrology that the Zadkiels of our
own time have occasionally found their way into the
twelfth house, or House of Enemies. Even Lilly
himself, not devoting, it would seem, five minutes
to inquire into the probable success of the affair,
was indicted in 1655 by a half-witted young woman,
because he had given judgment respecting stolen goods,
receiving two shillings and sixpence, contrary to
an Act made under and provided by the wise and virtuous
King James, First of England and Sixth of Scotland.
State astrology relates to the destinies
of kingdoms, thrones, empires, and may be regarded
as a branch of horary science relating to subjects
(and rulers) of more than ordinary importance.
In former ages all persons likely
to occupy an important position in the history of
the world had their horoscopes erected; but in these
degenerate days neither the casting of nativities nor
the art of ruling the planets flourishes as it should
do. Our Zadkiels and Raphaels publish, indeed,
the horoscopes of kings and emperors, princes and
princesses, and so forth; but their fate is as that
of Benedict (according to Beatrice) men
’wonder they will still be talking, for nobody
marks them.’ Even those whose horoscopes
have been erected show no proper respect for the predictions
made in their behalf. Thus the Prince of Wales
being born when Sagittarius was in the ascendant should
have been, according to Zadkiel, a tall man, with oval
face, ruddy complexion, somewhat dusky, and so forth;
but I understand he has by no means followed these
directions as to his appearance. The sun, being
well aspected, prognosticated honours a
most remarkable and unlooked-for circumstance, strangely
fulfilled by the event; but then being in Cancer,
in sextile with Mars, the Prince of Wales was to be
partial to maritime affairs and attain naval glory,
whereas as a field-marshal he can only win military
glory. (I would not be understood to say that he is
not quite as competent to lead our fleets as our battalions
into action.) The House of Wealth was occupied by Jupiter,
aspected by Saturn, which betokened great wealth through
inheritance a prognostication, says Professor
Miller, which is not unlikely to come true. The
House of Marriage was unsettled by the conflicting
influences of Venus, Mars, and Saturn; but the first
predominating, the Prince, after some trouble in his
matrimonial speculations, was to marry a Princess
of high birth, and one not undeserving of his kindest
and most affectionate attention, probably in 1862.
As to the date, an almanack informs me that the Prince
married a Danish Princess in March 1863, which looks
like a most culpable neglect of the predictions of
our national astrologer. Again, in May 1870,
when Saturn was stationary in the ascending degree,
the Prince ought to have been injured by a horse,
and also to have received a blow on the left side of
the head, near the ear; but reprehensibly omitted
both these ceremonies. A predisposition to fever
and epileptic attacks was indicated by the condition
of the House of Sickness. The newspapers described,
a few years since, a serious attack of fever; but
as most persons have some experience of the kind,
the fulfilment of the prediction can hardly be regarded
as very wonderful. Epileptic attacks, which,
as less common, might have saved the credit of the
astrologers, have not visited ‘this royal native.’
The position of Saturn in Capricorn betokened loss
or disaster in one or other of the places ruled over
by Capricorn which, as we have seen, are
India, Macedonia, Thrace, Greece, Mexico, Saxony, Wilna,
Mecklenburgh, Brandenburgh, and Oxford. Professor
Miller expresses the hope that Oxford was the place
indicated, and the disaster nothing more serious than
some slight scrape with the authorities of Christchurch.
But princes never get into scrapes with college dons.
Probably some one or other of the ’hair-breadth
‘scapes’ chronicled by the reporters of
his travels in India was the event indicated by the
ominous position of Saturn in Capricorn.
A remarkable list of characteristics
were derived by Zadkiel from the positions of the
various planets and signs in the twelve houses of the
‘royal native.’ Some, of course, were
indicated in more ways than one, which will explain
the parenthetical notes in the following alphabetical
table which Professor Miller has been at the pains
to draw up from Zadkiel’s predictions.
The prince was to be ’acute, affectionate, amiable,
amorous, austere, avaricious, beneficent, benevolent,
brave, brilliant, calculated for government’
(a quality which may be understood two ways), ’candid,
careful of his person, careless, compassionate, courteous
(twice over), delighting in eloquence, discreet, envious,
fond of glory, fond of learning, fond of music, fond
of poetry, fond of sports, fond of the arts and sciences,
frank, full of expedients, generous (three times),
gracious, honourable, hostile to crime, impervious,
ingenious, inoffensive, joyous, just (twice), laborious,
liberal, lofty, magnanimous, modest, noble, not easy
to be understood (!), parsimonious, pious (twice),
profound in opinion, prone to regret his acts, prudent,
rash, religious, reverent, self-confident, sincere,
singular in mode of thinking, strong, temperate, unreserved,
unsteady, valuable in friendship, variable, versatile,
violent, volatile, wily, and worthy.’ Zadkiel
concludes thus: ’The square of Saturn
to the moon will add to the gloomy side of the picture,
and give a tinge of melancholy at times to the native’s
character, and also a disposition to look at the dark
side of things, and lead him to despondency; nor will
he be at all of a sanguine character, but cool and
calculating, though occasionally rash. Yet, all
things considered, though firm and sometimes positive
in opinion, this royal native, if he live to mount
the throne, will sway the sceptre of these realms
in moderation and justice, and be a pious and benevolent
man, and a merciful sovereign.’ Fortunately,
the time has long since passed when swaying the sceptre
of these realms had any but a figurative meaning,
or when Englishmen who obeyed their country’s
laws depended on the mercy of any man, or when even
bad citizens were judged by princes. But we still
prefer that princes should be well-mannered gentlemen,
and therefore it is sincerely to be hoped that Zadkiel’s
prediction, so far as it relates to piety and benevolence,
may be fulfilled, should this ‘royal native’
live to mount the throne. As for mercy, it is
a goodly quality even in these days and in this country;
for if the law no longer tolerates cruelty to men,
even on the part of princes, who once had prescribed
rights in that direction, there are still some cruel,
nay brutal sports in which ’royal natives’
might sometimes be tempted to take part. Wherefore
let us hope that, even in regard to mercy, the predictions
of astrologers respecting this ‘royal native’
may be fulfilled.
Passing however, from trivialities,
let us consider the lessons which the history of astrology
teaches us respecting the human mind, its powers and
weaknesses. It has been well remarked by Whewell
that for many ages ’mysticism in its various
forms was a leading character both of the common mind
and the speculations of the most intelligent and profound
reasoners.’ Thus mysticism was the opposite
of that habit of thought which science requires, ’namely,
clear ideas, distinctly employed to connect well-ascertained
facts; inasmuch as the ideas in which it dealt were
vague and unstable, and the temper in which they were
contemplated was an urgent and aspiring enthusiasm,
which could not submit to a calm conference with experience
upon even terms.’ We have seen what has
been the history of one particular form of the mysticism
of ancient and mediaeval ages. If we had followed
the history of alchemy, magic, and other forms of
mysticism, we should have seen similar results.
True science has gradually dispossessed science falsely
so called, until now none but the weaker minds hold
by the tenets formerly almost universally adopted.
In mere numbers, believers in the ancient superstitions
may be by no means insignificant; but they no longer
have any influence. It has become a matter of
shame to pay any attention to what those few say or
do who not merely hold but proclaim the ancient faith
in these matters. We can also see why this has
been. In old times enthusiasm usurped the place
of reason in these cases; but opinions so formed and
so retained could not maintain their ground in the
presence of reasoning and experience. So soon
as intelligent and thoughtful men perceived that facts
were against the supposed mysterious influences of
the stars, the asserted powers of magicians, the pretended
knowledge of alchemists, the false teachings of magic,
alchemy, and astrology, were rejected. The lesson
thus learned respecting erroneous doctrines which
were once widely prevalent has its application in our
time, when, though the influence of those teachings
has passed away, other doctrines formerly associated
with them still hold their ground. Men in old
times, influenced by erroneous teachings, wasted their
time and energies in idle questionings of the stars,
vain efforts to find Arcana of mysterious power, and
to acquire magical authority over the elements.
Is it altogether clear that in these our times men
are not hampered, prevented to some degree from doing
all the good they might do in the short life-time
allotted to them, by doctrines of another kind?
Is there in our day no undue sacrifice of present
good in idle questionings? is there no tendency to
trust in a vain fetishism to prevent or remove evils
which energy could avert or remedy? The time will
come, in my belief, when the waste of those energies
which in these days are devoted (not merely with the
sanction, but the high approval, of some of the best
among us) to idle aims, will be deplored as regretfully but,
alas, as idly as the wasted speculations
and labours of those whom Whewell has justly called
the most intelligent and profound reasoners of the
‘stationary age’ of science. The words
with which Whewell closes his chapter on the ‘Mysticism
of the Middle Ages’ have their application to
the mysticism of the nineteenth century: ’Experience
collects her stores in vain, or ceases to collect
them, when she can only pour them into the flimsy
folds of the lap of Mysticism, who is, in truth, so
much absorbed in looking for the treasures which are
to fall from the skies, that she heeds little how
scantily she obtains, or how loosely she holds, such
riches as she might find beside her.’