The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence

Read Online and Download Ebook The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence

PDF Download The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence

Obviously, The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence ends up being additionally an excellent factor of you to invest your spare time for reading. It is various with other publication that could need ore times to read. If you have actually been falling in love with this publication, you can precisely get it as one of the reading products as well as friends to go along with investing the moment. Then, you could also get it as various other excellent people find and read this publication. From this circumstance, it is so clear that this book is really had to obtain as the referred book since it appears to be improving publication.

The Obeah Bible
 By L. W. de Laurence

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence


The Obeah Bible
 By L. W. de Laurence


PDF Download The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence

The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence. Let's read! We will certainly frequently discover this sentence everywhere. When still being a children, mommy made use of to buy us to always check out, so did the educator. Some e-books The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence are completely checked out in a week and we require the responsibility to support reading The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence Just what around now? Do you still like reading? Is checking out only for you who have obligation? Not! We below provide you a brand-new e-book qualified The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence to review.

In this instance, The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence is liked for being the most effective analysis product. This publication has some variables and reasons that you must read it. Initially, it will have to do with the material that is written. This is not about the really stationary reading material. This has to do with just how this book will influence you to have analysis practice. This is really fascinating subject publication that has actually been renowned in this recent time.

Get the perks of checking out practice for your life style. Reserve The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence message will certainly consistently associate with the life. The reality, understanding, science, health, religious beliefs, enjoyment, and much more can be discovered in created publications. Many writers supply their experience, scientific research, study, and also all things to show you. One of them is with this The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence This e-book The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence will certainly offer the required of message and also statement of the life. Life will be finished if you understand a lot more things via reading e-books.

It is not take in when you should do something with your necessity. If you really need sources and ideas associated with this inspiring subject, you can do it. It can be done by you to find with us and locate the link. While The Obeah Bible By L. W. De Laurence makes you really feel curious, it will finish the inquisitiveness and finish it up after completing analysis this publication.

The Obeah Bible
 By L. W. de Laurence

  • Sales Rank: #980383 in Books
  • Published on: 2010-12-28
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 10.00" h x 1.38" w x 7.00" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 610 pages

Review
I'd written once before, just a little, on De Laurence and his influential Great Book of Magical Art and Hindu Magic (aka The Obeah Bible.) It's interesting to see early uses of common hoodoo ingredients, like when I found 17th century references to lodestone and swallow's heart love spells in Wecker. De Laurence -- plagiarizing from The Magus, which was itself plagiarizing from earlier sources -- brings up the first mention I've seen of black cat and black dog hair for a breakup spell, in the following:

"...for divorce and separation of the man from the woman, make a seal of red copper, being the image of a dog biting his tail; and then perfume it [id est, smoke it in an incense] with the hair of a black dog and a black cat."

Interestingly, some of these "seals" that De Laurence/Barret describes in the Great Book, I've seen described elsewhere as being more like poppets or voodoo dolls (in this case, a copper state of a dog biting its tail.) I'm unsure which method is more correct; though for this case it's probably easier to engrave a copper seal than to cast a statue.

Additionally, it is mentioned elsewhere in the book that one should write out (for that particular spell above) the symbols and names of the spirits of the moon, which it includes on graphs elsewhere.

De Laurence and his books were so influential that in some regions, casting a magic spell on a person is called 'De Laurencing.' In fact, the association with Obeah and Voodoo practice has fixed it so that to this day, De Laurence's books are banned in Jamaica.

Despite a negative review left for the facsimile edition of the Great Book (note that I prefer the Obeah Bible printing, because it was actually retyped and some of the images redrawn for better clarity), the book actually is more than just a ripoff reprinting of The Magus. Somewhere around halfway in, Book Two of "Hindoo Magic" (which unlike part one does occasionally have something legitimate to do with Hindu practices, like its section on yoga, prana and breathing techniques) does appear to be legitimately written by De Laurence. He gives tons of magic spells using some kind of Temple Incense that he used to sell (Rev. Jim at COGL tells me it was made from patchouli and sandalwood) -- henbane and Temple incense produces visions of apparitions, sulfur and Temple Incense drives away evil spirits, burning Temple Incense every Tuesday in your rooms keeps you holy and powerful, so on and so on.

It's got lots of other things that were probably new information at the time (or at least the first widely distributed printing) like guides to color therapy and use of colors in magic, a guide to how to tell if your dreams are ominous or not, and the said breathing methods, a lot of which is a part of modern magical practices. Sometimes things said by Hyatt's informants make more sense in light of reading De Laurence's book.

While the writing can be a little dull -- since it's quite old-fashioned -- it's definitely a worthwhile thing to check out if you're interested in "old style conjure" or voodoo. --The Spellcaster's Source, December 30, 2010

From the Publisher
The Obeah Bible was originally published as The Great Book of Magical Art, Hindu Magic and East Indian Occultism in 1898 by L.W. De Laurence. This text is taken from the 1915 edition.

Despite the title, the text has little to do with Hinduism -- many of the "Hindu" words were fabricated and pasted into the text, of which much is an adapted version of Francis Barrett's 1801 occult work The Magus (which was itself a compilation of earlier European occult works, including those by Cornelius Agrippa and Pietro d'Abano.)

The Great Book became an influential text in the practice of certain African-derived magic systems, including Hoodoo, Voodoo and Obeah. Some have even gone so far as to call Obeah "a form of magic based on a mail-order catalogue" (referring to De Laurence's primary sales technique.)

The Great Book, along with all other books published by the De Laurence Company, remained banned in Jamaica due to strong associations with Obeah practice. This has earned The Great Book its nickname The Obeah Bible.

In this edition, original spelling has generally been preserved, and corrections have been made to the text only in cases of obvious error. Most footnotes have been retained except for those which directed the reader to purchase goods and services which are no longer available. There have been minimal additions. Several of the illustrations have been re-drawn or scanned from original sources in order to achieve utmost clarity.

About the Author
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

L. W. de Laurence (full name Lauron William de Laurence) was an American author and publisher on occult and spiritual topics. He was born in 1868 and died on 11 September 1936 in Chicago, Illinois, USA at the age of 68. His publishing company (De Laurence, Scott & Co.) and spiritual supply mail order house was located in Chicago, Illinois. Although he is mocked and reviled among modern occultists for his plagiarism (or, more properly, book-pirating) of the Pictorial Key to the Tarot by Arthur Edward Waite, he also wrote his own works, including The Master Key, and The Great Book of Hindu Magic. In addition, he is believed to have co-written some books with his fellow Chicago resident, the prolific New Thought and yoga author William Walker Atkinson. De Laurence was a pioneer in the business of supplying magical and occult goods by mail order, and his distribution of public domain books, such as Secrets of the Psalms by Godfrey Selig and Pow Wows or the Long-Lost Friend by John George Hohman had a great and lasting effect on the African American urban hoodoo community in the southern United States as well as on the development of Obeah in Jamaica. In early 1930 he was consecrated a bishop by the Spiritualist Arthur Edward Leighton (1890 to 1963), a bishop of the American Catholic Church (a church body founded by Joseph René Vilatte). One surprising result of de Laurence's consecration was that it helped influence the move of some black spiritualist churches towards a more traditional view of Christianity and in the year of his death, 1936, he may have consecrated the first bishops for these churches, e.g. Thomas B Watson (1898 to 1985) of New Orleans.

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence PDF
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence EPub
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence Doc
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence iBooks
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence rtf
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence Mobipocket
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence Kindle

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence PDF

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence PDF

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence PDF
The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence PDF

The Obeah Bible By L. W. de Laurence


Home