History of A Planet
History of A Planet
No star, among the countless myriads that twinkle over the sidereal fields of the night sky,
shines so dazzlingly as the planet Venus—not even Sirius-Sothis, the dog-star, beloved by Isis.
Venus is the queen among our planets, the crown jewel of our solar system. She is the inspirer
of the poet, the guardian and companion of the lonely shepherd, the lovely morning and the
evening star. For,
although their secrets are still untold and unrevealed to the majority of men, including
astronomers. They are “a beauty and a mystery,” verily. But “where there is a mystery, it is
generally supposed that there must also be evil,” says Byron. Evil, therefore, was detected by
Page 15
evilly-disposed human fancy, even in those bright luminous eyes peeping at our wicked world
through the veil of ether. Thus there came to exist slandered stars and planets as well as
slandered men and women. Too often are the reputation and fortune of one man or party
sacrificed for the benefit of another man or party. As on earth below, so in the heavens above,
and Venus, the sister planet of our Earth,* was sacrificed to the ambition of our little globe to
show the latter the “chosen” planet of the Lord. She became the scapegoat, the Azaziel of the
starry dome, for the sins of the Earth, or rather for those of a certain class in the human
family—the clergy—who slandered the bright orb, in order to prove what their ambition
suggested to them as the best means to reach power, and exercise it unswervingly over the
superstitious and ignorant masses.
This took place during the middle ages. And now the sin lies back at the door of Christians
and their scientific inspirers, though the error was successfully raised to the lofty position of a
religious dogma, as many other fictions and inventions have been.
Indeed, the whole sidereal world, planets and their regents—the ancient gods of poetical
paganism—the sun, the moon, the elements, and the entire host of incalculable worlds—those
1 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
at least which happened to be known to the Church Fathers—shared in the same fate. They
have all been slandered, all bedevilled by the insatiable desire of proving one little system of
theology—built on and constructed out of old pagan materials—the only right and holy one,
and all those which preceded or followed it utterly wrong. Sun and stars, the very air itself, we
are asked to believe, became pure and
––––––––––
* “Venus is a second Earth,” says Reynaud, in Terre et Ciel (p. 74), “so much so that were
there any communication possible between the two planets, their inhabitants might take their
respective earths for the two hemispheres of the same world. . . . They seem on the sky, like
two sisters. Similar in conformation, these two worlds are also similar in the character assigned
to them in the Universe.”
Page 16
“redeemed” from original sin and the Satanic element of heathenism, only after the year I A.D.
Scholastics and scholiasts, the spirit of whom “spurned laborious investigation and slow
induction,” had shown, to the satisfaction of infallible Church, the whole Kosmos in the power of
Satan—a poor compliment to God—before the year of the Nativity; and Christians had to
believe or be condemned. Never have subtle sophistry and casuistry shown themselves so
plainly in their true light, however, as in the questions of the ex-Satanism and later redemption
of various heavenly bodies. Poor beautiful Venus got worsted in that war of so-called divine
proofs to a greater degree than any of her sidereal colleagues. While the history of the other six
planets, and their gradual transformation from Greco-Aryan gods into Semitic devils, and finally
into “divine attributes of the seven eyes of the Lord,” is known but to the educated, that of
Venus-Lucifer has become a household story among even the most illiterate in Roman Catholic
countries.
This story shall now be told for the benefit of those who may have neglected their astral
mythology.
Venus, characterized by Pythagoras as the sol alter, a second Sun, on account of her
magnificent radiance—equalled by none other—was the first to draw the attention of ancient
2 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
Page 17
identical with Phosphoros or Lucifer (Griechische Mythologie, I, 365).* And on the authority of
Hesiod he also makes Phaëton the son of the latter two divinities—Kephalos and Eos.
Now Phaëton or Phosphoros, the “luminous morning orb,” is carried away in his early youth by
Aphrodite (Venus) who makes of him the night guardian of her sanctuary (Theog., 986-991). He
is the “beautiful morning star” (Vide St. John’s Revelation, xxii, 16) loved for its radiant light by
the Goddess of the Dawn, Aurora, who, while gradually eclipsing the light of her beloved, thus
seeming to carry off the star, makes it reappear on the evening horizon where it watches the
gates of heaven. In early morning, Phosphoros “issuing from the waters of the Ocean, raises in
3 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
heaven his sacred head to announce the approach of divine light.” (Iliad, XXIII, 226; Odyssey,
XIII, 93-94; Virgil, Aeneid, VIII, 589; Decharme, Mythologie de la Grèce Antique, p. 247.) He
holds a torch in his hand and flies through space as he precedes the car of Aurora. In the
evening he becomes Hesperos, “the most splendid of the stars that shine on the celestial vault”
(Iliad, XXII, 317-18). He is the father of the Hesperides, the guardians of the golden apples
together with the Dragon; the beautiful genius of the flowing golden curls, sung and glorified in
all the ancient epithalami (the bridal songs of the early Christians as of the pagan Greeks); he,
who at the fall of the night, leads
––––––––––
* [2 vols. Leipzig: Weidman, 1854; in the 2nd ed., of 1860-61, the passage can be found in
Vol. II, p. 335.—Compiler.]
Page 18
the nuptial cortège and delivers the bride into the arms of the bridegroom. (Decharme, op.
cit., p. 248.)
So far, there seems to be no possible rapprochement, no analogy to be discovered between
the poetical personification of a star, a purely astronomical myth, and the Satanism of Christian
theology. True, the close connection between the planet as Hesperos, the evening star, and
the Greek Garden of Eden with its Dragon and the golden apples may, with a certain stretch of
imagination, suggest some painful comparisons with the third chapter of Genesis. But this is
insufficient to justify the building of a theological wall of defence against paganism made up of
slander and misrepresentations.
But of all the Greek euhemerisations, Lucifer-Eosphoros is, perhaps, the most complicated.
The planet has become with the Latins, Venus, or Aphrodite-Anadyomene, the foam-born
Goddess, the “Divine Mother,” and one with the Phoenician Astarte, or the Jewish Astaroth.
They were all called “The Morning Star,” and the Virgins of the Sea, or Mar (whence Mary), the
Great Deep, titles now given by the Roman Church to their Virgin Mary. They were all
connected with the moon and the crescent, with the Dragon and the planet Venus, as the
mother of Christ has been made connected with all these attributes. If the Phoenician mariners
carried, fixed on the prow of their ships, the image of the goddess Astarte (or Aphrodite, Venus
4 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
Erycina) and looked upon the evening and the morning star as their guiding star, “the eye of
their Goddess mother,” so do the Roman Catholic sailors the same to this day. They fix a
Madonna on the prows of their vessels, and the blessed Virgin Mary is called the “ Virgin of the
Sea.” The accepted patroness of Christian sailors, their star, “Stella Del Mar,” etc., she stands
on the crescent moon. Like the old pagan Goddesses, she is the “Queen of Heaven,” and the
“Morning Star” just as they were.
Whether this can explain anything, is left to the reader’s sagacity. Meanwhile, Lucifer-Venus
has nought to do with darkness, and everything with light. When called Lucifer, it is the
“light-bringer,” the first radiant beam
Page 19
which destroys the lethal darkness of night. When named Venus, the planet-star becomes the
symbol of dawn, the chaste Aurora. Professor Max Müller rightly conjectures that Aphrodite,
born of the sea, is a personification of the Dawn of the Day, and the most lovely of all the
sights in Nature (Lectures on the Science of Language),* for, before her naturalisation by the
Greeks, Aphrodite was Nature personified, the life and light of the Pagan world, as proven in
the beautiful invocation to Venus by Lucretius, quoted by Decharme. She is divine Nature in
her entirety, Aditi-Prakriti before she becomes Lakshmi. She is that Nature before whose
majestic and fair face, “the winds fly away, the quieted sky pours torrents of light, and the
sea-waves smile” (Lucretius).† When referred to as the Syrian goddess Astarte, the Astaroth of
Hieropolis, the radiant planet was personified as a majestic woman, holding in one
out-stretched hand a torch, in the other, a crooked staff in the form of a cross. (Vide Lucian’s
De Dea Syria, and Cicero’s De Natura Deorum, lib. III, cap. xxiii.)‡ Finally, the planet is
represented astronomically, as a globe poised above the cross—a symbol no devil would like
to associate with—while the planet Earth is a globe with a cross over it.
––––––––––
* [II, pp. 408-09, in 6th ed., London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1871.]
† [This passage is from Lucretius’ De rerum natura, lib. I, 6-9, the Latin text of which is as
follows:
5 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
Page 20
But then, these crosses are not the symbols of Christianity, but the Egyptian crux ansata, the
attribute of Isis (who is Venus, and Aphrodite, Nature, also) or
the planet; the fact that the Earth has the crux ansata reversed
, having a great occult significance upon which there is no necessity of entering at present.
Now what says the Church and how does it explain the “ dreadful association”? The Church
believes in the devil, of course, and could not afford to lose him. “The Devil is one of the chief
pillars of the Faith” confesses unblushingly an advocate of the Ecclesia Militans.*
All the Alexandrian Gnostics speak to us of the fall of the Aeons and their Pleroma, and all
attribute that fall to the desire to know,
6 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
writes another volunteer in the same army, slandering the Gnostics as usual and identifying the
desire to know or occultism, magic, with Satanism.† And then, forthwith, he quotes from
Schlegel’s Philosophie de l’Histoire to show that the seven rectors (planets) of Pymander,
commissioned by God to contain the phenomenal world in their seven circles, lost in love with
their own beauty,‡ came to admire themselves with such intensity that owing to this proud
self-adulation they finally fell.§
––––––––––
* Thus saith Des Mousseaux, Mœurs et pratiques des démons, p. x—and he is corroborated
in this by Cardinal de Ventura. The Devil, he says, “ is one of the great personages whose life
is closely allied to that of the Church; and without him . . . . the fall of man could not have taken
place. If it were not for him [the Devil], the Victor over death, the Saviour, the Redeemer, the
Crucified would be but the most ridiculous of supernumeraries and the Cross a real insult to
good sense.” And if so, then we should feel thankful to the poor Devil.
† De Mirville. “No Devil, no Christ,” he exclaims.
‡ This is only another version of Narcissus, the Greek victim of his own fair looks.
§ [Schlegel’s work is probably some French translation of his German Philosophie der
Geschichte, Vienna, 1829.—Compiler.]
Page 21
Perversity having thus found its way amongst the angels, the most beautiful creature of God
“revolted against its Maker.” That creature is in theological fancy Venus-Lucifer, or rather the
informing Spirit or Regent of that planet. This teaching is based on the following speculation.
The three principal heroes of the great sidereal catastrophe mentioned in Revelation are,
according to the testimony of the Church fathers—”the Verbum, Lucifer his usurper [see
editorial] and the grand Archangel who conquered him,” and whose “palaces” (the “houses,”
astrology calls them) are in the Sun, Venus-Lucifer and Mercury. This is quite evident, since the
positions of these orbs in the Solar system correspond in their hierarchical order to that of the
7 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
“heroes” in Chapter xii of Revelation, “their names and destinies” (?) being closely connected in
the theological (exoteric) system “with these three great metaphysical names.” (De Mirville’s
Mémoire to the Academy of France, on the rapping Spirits and the Demons, Vol. IV, pp.
159-160.)
The outcome of this was, that theological legend made of Venus-Lucifer the sphere and
domain of the fallen Archangel, or Satan before his apostasy. Called upon to reconcile this
statement with that other fact, that the metaphor of “the morning star” is applied to both Jesus,
and his Virgin mother, and that the planet Venus-Lucifer is included, moreover, among the
“stars” of the seven planetary spirits worshipped by the Roman Catholics * under new names,
the defenders of the Latin dogmas and beliefs answer as follows:
Lucifer, the jealous neighbour of the Sun [Christ] said to himself in his great pride: “I will rise as
high as he!” He was thwarted in
––––––––––
* The famous temple dedicated to the Seven Angels at Rome, and built by Michael-Angelo in
1561, is still there, now called the “Church of St. Mary of the Angels.” In the old Roman Missals
printed in 1563—one or two of which may still be seen in Palazzo Barberini—one may find the
religious service (officio) of the seven angels, and their old and occult names. That the “angels”
are the pagan Rectors, under different names—the Jewish having replaced the Greek and
Latin names—of the seven planets is proven by what Pope Pius V said in his Bull to the
Spanish Clergy, permitting and
Page 22
his design by Mercury, though the brightness of the latter [who is St. Michael] was as much
lost in the blazing fires of the great Solar orb as his own was, and though, like Lucifer, Mercury
is only the assessor, and the guard of honour to the Sun.*
8 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
Guards of “dishonour” now rather, if the teachings of theological Christianity were true. But here
comes in the cloven foot of the Jesuit. The ardent defender of Roman Catholic Demonolatry
and of the worship of the seven planetary spirits, at the same time, pretends great wonder at
the coincidences between old Pagan and Christian legends, between the fable about Mercury
and Venus, and the historical truths told of St. Michael—the “angel of the face”—the terrestrial
double, or ferouer of Christ. He points them out saying:
. . . . like Mercury, the archangel Michael, is the friend of the Sun, his ferouer, his Mitra,
perhaps, for Michael is a psychopompic genius, one who leads the separated souls to their
appointed abodes, and like Mitra, he is the well-known adversary of the demons.†
This is demonstrated by the book of the Nabatheans recently discovered (by Chwolsohn), in
which the Zoroastrian Mitra is called the “grand enemy of the planet Venus.” ‡ (de Mirville, op.
cit., p. 160.)
––––––––––
encouraging the worship of the said seven spirits of the stars. “One cannot exalt too much
these seven rectors of the world, figured by the seven planets as it is consoling to our century
to witness by the grace of God the cult of these seven ardent lights, and of these seven stars
reassuming all its lustre in the Christian republic.” (De Mirville, Des Esprits, etc., 2nd Mémoire
addressed to the Academy; chapter “Les Sept Esprits et l’histoire de leur culte,” Vol. II, pp.
357-58.)
* De Mirville, op. cit., Vol. IV, p. 160.
† [de Mirville, op. cit., Vol. IV, p. 160.]
‡ Herodotus showing the identity of Mitra and Venus, the sentence in the Nabathean
Agriculture is evidently misunderstood.
[This refers to the researches of Dr. Daniel Avraamovich Chwolsohn, the Russian-Jewish
Orientalist and Semitolog, who translated into German three Arabic manuscripts which exist in
the library of the University of Leyden. They are: The Book of the Nabathean Agriculture; The
Book of Poisons; and The Book of the Babylonian Tenkelûschâ, with fragments of a fourth
work entitled, The Book of the Mysteries of the Sun and Moon. They were translated into Arabic
by Ibn-Wa’hschijjah, a descendant of the ancient Babylonians who determined to rescue from
oblivion those ancient works of his forefathers.
Page 23
9 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
There is something in this. A candid confession, for once, of perfect identity of celestial
personages and of borrowing from every pagan source. It is curious, if unblushing. While in the
oldest Mazdean allegories, Mitra conquers the planet Venus, in Christian tradition Michael
defeats Lucifer, and both receive, as war spoils, the planet of the vanquished deity.
Mitra [says Döllinger] possessed, in days of old, the star of Mercury, placed between the sun
and the moon, but he was given the planet of the conquered, and ever since his victory he is
identified with Venus. *
. . . . . St. Michael is apportioned in Heaven the throne and the palace of the foe he has
vanquished. Moreover, like Mercury, during the palmy
––––––––––
Dr. Chwolsohn published his researches under the title of: Über die Überreste der
Altbabylonischen Literatur in arabischen Übersetzungen (in Mémoires des savants étrangers.
Vol. VIII. St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1859; Russian transl. in the Russkiy
Vestnik of 1859).
The author of The Book of the Nabathean Agriculture is supposed to be Qûtâmî, possibly in
collaboration with others. It has been conservatively ascribed by various scholars to a period
antedating the eighth century B.C., and is in all likelihood based on traditions dating from a very
remote antiquity. Under the guise of agriculture, many occult beliefs are explained, and various
magical secrets of nature hinted at.
H. P. B. devotes several pages of The Secret Doctrine (Vol. II, 452-457) to various aspects of
Chwolsohn’s work, and the nature and contents of the Nabathean Agriculture. She speaks of it
as being “no apocrypha, but the repetition of the tenets of the Secret Doctrine under the
exoteric Chaldean form of national symbols, for the purpose of ‘cloaking’ the tenets. . .” She
plainly states that “the Doctrines of Qû-tâmy, the Chaldean, are, in short, the allegorical
rendering of the religion of the earliest nations of the Fifth Race.”—Compiler.]
10 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
[H. P. B. quotes this passage from de Mirville, Des Esprits, etc., Vol. IV, p. 160, where ref. is
given to a French translation of Döllinger’s original German work entitled Heidenthum und
Judenthum. In the latter, the subject of Mithra occurs on pp. 383-390 of Part I, and the above
quote seems to be only a paraphrase of various statements found therein.—Compiler.]
Page 24
days of paganism, which made sacred to this [demon-] god all the promontories of the earth,
the Archangel is the patron of the same in our religion.*
This means, if it does mean anything, that now, at any rate, Lucifer-Venus is a sacred planet,
and no synonym of Satan, since St. Michael has become his legal heir.
The above remarks conclude with this cool reflection:
It is evident that paganism has utilised [beforehand], and most marvellously, all the features
and characteristics of the prince of the face of the Lord [Michael] in applying them to that
Mercury, to the Egyptian Hermes-Anubis, and the Hermes-Christos of the Gnostics. Each of
these was represented as the first among the divine councillors, and the god nearest to the
sun, quis ut Deus.†
Which title, with all its attributes, became that of Michael. The good Fathers, the Master
Masons of the temple of Church Christianity, knew indeed how to utilize pagan material for their
new dogmas.
The fact is, that it is sufficient to examine certain Egyptian cartouches, pointed out by Rosellini
(Égypte, Vol. I, p. 283), ‡ to find Mercury (the double of Sirius in our solar system) as Sothis,
preceded by the words “sole” and “solis custode, o sostegno, dei dominanti . . . il forte, grande
dei vigilanti,” “watchman of the sun, sustainer of dominions, and the strongest of all the
vigilants.” All these titles and attributes are now those of the Archangel Michael, who has
inherited them from the demons of paganism.
Moreover, travellers in Rome may testify to the wonderful presence in the statue of Mitra, at
11 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
the Vatican, of the best known Christian symbols. Mystics boast of it. They find
. . . . in his lion’s head, and the eagle’s wings, those of the courageous Seraph, the master of
space [Michael]; in his caduceus, the spear,
––––––––––
* [De Mirville, op. cit., Vol. IV, pp. 160, 162, somewhat paraphrased.]
† [de Mirville, op. cit., Vol. IV, p. 160.]
‡ [ibid., p. 162, where reference is evidently to Ippolito Rosellini’s work entitled: I Monumenti
dell’ Egitto e della Nubia, disegnate della spedizione scientifico-litteraria toscana in Egitto.
Pisa: Presso N. Capurro e.c., 1832-44. 9 vols. 8-vo. (British Museum: 559.b.2.).—Compiler.]
Page 25
in the two serpents coiled round the body, the struggle of the good and bad principles, and
especially in the two keys which the said Mitra holds, like St. Peter, the keys with which this
Seraph-patron of the latter opens and shuts the gates of Heaven, astra cludid et recludit.*
To sum up, the aforesaid shows that the theological romance of Lucifer was built upon the
various myths and allegories of the pagan world, and that it is no revealed dogma, but simply
one invented to uphold superstition. Mercury being one of the Sun’s assessors, or the
cynocephali of the Egyptians and the watch-dogs of the Sun, literally, the other was Eosphoros,
the most brilliant of the planets, “qui mane oriebaris,” the early rising, or the Greek
. It was identical with the Amon-ra, the light-bearer of Egypt, and called by all nations “the
second born of light” (the first being Mercury), the beginning of his (the Sun’s) ways of wisdom,
12 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
the Archangel Michael being also referred to as the principium viarum Domini.
Thus a purely astronomical personification, built upon an occult meaning which no one has
hitherto seemed to unriddle outside the Eastern wisdom, has now become a dogma, part and
parcel of Christian revelation. A clumsy transference of characters is unequal to the task of
making thinking people accept in one and the same trinitarian group, the “Word” or Jesus, God
and Michael (with the Virgin occasionally to complete it) on the one hand, and Mitra, Satan and
Apollo-Abaddon on the other: the whole at the whim and pleasure of Roman Catholic
Scholiasts. If Mercury and Venus (Lucifer) are (astronomically in their revolution around the
Sun) the symbols of God the Father, the Son, and of their Vicar, Michael, the
“Dragon-Conqueror,” in Christian legend, why should they when called Apollo-Abaddon, the
“King of the Abyss,” Lucifer, Satan, or Venus—become forthwith devils and demons? If we are
told that the “conqueror,” or “Mercury-Sun,” or again St. Michael of the Revelation, was given
the spoils of the conquered
––––––––––
* De Mirville, op. cit., Vol. IV, p. 162.
Page 26
angel, namely, his planet, why should opprobrium be any longer attached to a constellation so
purified? Lucifer is now the “Angel of the Face of the Lord,” * because “that face is mirrored in
it.” We think rather, because the Sun is reflecting his beams in Mercury seven times more than
it does on our Earth, and twice more in Lucifer-Venus: the Christian symbol proving again its
astronomical origin. But whether from the astronomical, mystical or symbological aspect,
Lucifer is as good as any other planet. To advance as a proof of its demoniacal character, and
identity with Satan, the configuration of Venus, which gives to the crescent of this planet the
appearance of a cut-off horn, is rank nonsense. But to connect this with the horns of “The
Mystic Dragon” in Revelation—“one of which was broken” †—as the two French
Demonologists, the Marquis de Mirville and the Chevalier des Mousseaux, the champions of
the Church militant, would have their readers believe in the second half of our present
13 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
––––––––––
* “Both in Biblical and pagan theologies,” says de Mirville, “the Sun has its god, its defender,
and its sacrilegious usurper, in other words, its Ormuzd, its planet Mercury [Mitra], and its
Lucifer-Venus [or Ahriman], taken away from its ancient master, and now given to its
conqueror.” (op. cit., p. 164.) Therefore, Lucifer-Venus is quite holy now.
† In Revelation there is no “horn broken,” but it is simply said in Chapter xiii, 3, that John saw
“one of his heads, as it were, wounded to death.” John knew naught in his generation of “a
horned” devil.
Page 27
the cow’s horns of Isis and Diana, etc., etc., and of the Lord God of the Prophets of Israel
himself. For Habakkuk gives the evidence that this symbolism was accepted by the “chosen
people” as much as by the Gentiles. In Chapter iii, 3-4, that prophet speaks of the “Holy One
from Mount Paran,” of the Lord God who “came from Teman,” and whose “brightness was as
the light,” and who had “horns coming out of his hand.”
When one reads, moreover, the Hebrew text of Isaiah, and finds that no Lucifer is mentioned
at all in Chapter xiv, 12, but simply
Hillel, “a bright star,” one can hardly refrain from wondering that educated people should be
still ignorant enough at the close of our century to associate a radiant planet—or anything else
in nature for the matter of that—with the DEVIL! *
14 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
H. P.B.
––––––––––
* The literal words used, and their translation, are: “Aïk Naphalta Mi-Shamayim Hillel
Ben-Shahar Nigdata La-Aretz Cholesch Al-Goüm,” or, “How art thou fallen from the heavens,
Hillel, Son of the Morning, how art thou cast down unto the earth, thou who didst cast down the
nations.” Here the word, translated “Lucifer,” is
, Hillel, and its meaning is “shining brightly or gloriously.” It is very true also, that by a pun to
which Hebrew words lend themselves so easily, the verb hillel may be made to mean “to howl,”
hence by an easy derivation, hillel may be constructed into “howler,” or a devil, a creature,
however, one hears rarely, if ever, “howling.” In his Hebrew and English Lexicon, Art.
, John Parkhurst says: “The Syriac translation of this passage renders it
howl, and even Jerome on the place observes, that it literally means howl. . . . ‘Therefore,’
says Michaelis, ‘I translate, Howl, Son of the morning, i.e.; thou star of the first magnitude’.”
But at this rate, Hillel, the great Jewish-sage and reformer, might also be called “howler,” and
connected with the devil!
[There exist divergent views among scholars concerning the Hebrew term which is sometimes
spelt hillel, and sometimes hêlçl and even hailal, according to the interpretation of the
vowel-points. The Hebrew expression in Isaiah, xiv, 12, hêlel bên shâhar, appears in the Greek
Septuagint as
and in the Latin Vulgate as Lucifer qui mane oriebaris, conveying the idea of “early rising,”
both in Greek and in Latin. The Hebrew expression bên shâhar definitely means “son of the
dawn.” The Vulgate translates by the word Lucifer the Hebrew term bôqer, “light of dawn” (Job,
xi, 17), the expression mazzârôth, “the Signs of the Zodiac” (Job, xxxviii, 32), and even shâhar,
“the dawn” (Ps., cx, 3). Besides using the word Lucifer in connection with the King of Babylon,
in the above-mentioned passage from Isaiah, the same term is used by the Vulgate in
connection with the High-Priest Simon, son of Onias (Ecclesiasticus, 1, 6), and is applied to the
“glory of Heaven” (Apoc., ii, 28), and even to Jesus Christ himself (II Peter, i, 19; Apoc., xxii,
16). In the Exultet (liturgy of Holy Saturday), the Church uses the title of Lucifer in connection
with its Saviour, and expresses the hope that this “early morning Lucifer” will find the
Easter-candle burning bright, he who knows no decline and who, returning from Hell, sheds his
brilliant light upon mankind.
Hêlçl is derived from hâlal, “to shine” (Arab. halal; Assyrian, elêlu). The Syriac version of the
Old Testament and the version of Aquila derive it from yâlal, “to lament,” and St. Jerome agrees
with this derivation (Comm. in Is., v, 14, in Migne, Patrol. Lat., XXIV, 161), making of Lucifer
the principal fallen angel who is supposed “to lament” the loss of his original glory, bright as the
morning star. Other Fathers of the Church maintain that Lucifer is not the proper name of the
“devil,” but denotes only the state from which he has fallen (Petavius, De angelis, III, iii; 4).
Present-day scholars agree with H. P. B. that the supposed derivation from yâlal, “to wail,” “to
15 / 16
THE HISTORY OF A PLANET
Thursday, 13 November 2008 17:23
16 / 16