The spring of becoming that was Aries-Gemini now heralds in the summer of being - of life itself - via the Gate of Cancer.
CANCER - the crab
Argo – The Ship
For the ancients it was through the gate of Cancer that the soul, now fully formed as a human child, formally re-entered the earthy world from the divine realm, (and later on in the cycle, exits through the opposite gate in Capricorn to re-join the heavenly union).
The Greeks tell how the crab was dispatched by Hera to bite hold of and grip the foot of Hercules as he struggled with the many-headed Hydra (note how this echoes the vulnerable “heel of immortal Achilles”.) In early Mesopotamian myth, Ninurta – the prototype of Hercules – battles with a turtle and falls into a pit where it kept gnawing at his feet with its claws. It is thus via the grip of the crab that the hero is rooted into matter and thus becomes vulnerable to its sway over him, symbolizing the limitation applied by all physical incarnation.
For Cancer opens the door into the mass form of humanity at large.
The crab lives half on the earth, and half in the water. It the sign, therefore, of the soul dwelling in the physical body but predominantly living in the water, which here is symbolic of emotional, feeling nature.
Cancer is ruled by the moon, which is always the mother of form, controlling the waters and the tides. Therefore, in this sign form is dominant, and constitutes a considerable handicap. The crab builds its house or shell and carries it upon its back; this is a sign of the emotions, of vulnerability to others opinions, of over sensitivity and a desire to hide away, of retreat behind that which has been constructed as being certain and safe.
In the mass, instinct rules; therefore, Cancer is also the sign of instinct, of herd life, of mass reaction with its watery state representing the subconscious mind, hereditary instinct, and the collective imagination.
It stands, individually, for the totality of the life and the consciousness of the cells in the body, and of that instinctive, collective life, which is largely subconscious in man, but which always influences his physical body and, subjectively, his lower mind and emotional being.
This sign is known as “the womb” but is also sometimes referred to as “the coffin”. It is associated with hidden life, of a veiling form, and of a potent struggle with material reality.
The symbolism of Cancer, immersed in the mass, leads to the prevalence of unconscious behaviour in sway to the greater whole, and therein lies the danger for the aspirant.
In a single word – control. Food for the moon…
For if one traces Cancer back to its most ancient roots we find it had close associations with death, the underworld, and the Snake, the bašmu-serpent – which literally means ‘the serpent with a womb’…
I think that is why the designer of this zodiac arch, Nicholas, deliberately designed his image of Cancer to reflect a double image of a Bishop’s mitre with a malevolent and cunning face:
I don’t think this heretical message could be much clearer: the church itself, organised mass Christianity, is nothing but a crab waiting to grip the seeker of truth by his ankles from birth (baptism) and control his life by immersing him thereafter in watery lies. I have reversed this picture so as to see the human figure more clearly, but in the original the face/mouth is pointing upwards as if to say from here on in, I control the destiny of mankind – like a serpent hidden inside the womb of Christ.
ARGO
For some particular reason Nicholas calls Argo, the ship, Pistrix, a name normally reserved for Cetus, the sea monster. However, the word can also mean ‘a light oared vessel’ – hence the likely use here to denote Argo, the ship. Yet it is equally likely that Nicholas wanted to reiterate the warning of Cancer – that the ship of being that carries you through the waters of life can also become a monster….
Of course Argo was the ship that in Greek mythology bore Jason and his 50 Argonauts off on their great quest in search of the Golden Fleece…
Argus was selected to build the ship, and he was said to have constructed the ship under Athena's guidance. Athena (wisdom) with the help of Argus put a piece of a sacred oak on the prow of the ship that was taken from the sacred grove of Zeus at Dodona. This sacred piece of wood has the ability to speak in times of danger and advise Jason on what to do. Argus did such an excellent job constructing this ship that at the time it was referred to as the most seaworthy ship ever seen.
The constellation Argo Navis originally stretched all the way from Cancer to Capricorn and was one of the largest of the ancient constellations (but now dismantled… how interesting!) The brightest of its 64 stars was given the name of a ship's pilot from another Greek legend: Canopus, pilot of Menelaus' ship on his quest to retrieve Helen of Troy. Sound navigation becomes clear as a central message. The importance of its symbolism covers the entire life of the aspirant from the time he takes incarnation until he has reached his living end.
The word “ship” is quite frequently used in a symbolic sense, speaking of the “ship of state”, the “ship of salvation”, and was regularly used to denote the church on earth as “God’s ship”. Again the designer appears to planting an esoteric warning here…
For any idea of security, of progress, and of the achieving of a way out, and of the carrying of a vast crowd of pilgrims in search of golden treasure or a new and freer home, is subtly undermined by the thought that in the wrong hands the ship itself could well become a sea monster…
Hints here of the vital importance of the aspirant being able to sail through life with ‘a clean machine’, fit for the purposes of the storms and tribulations that await its passenger in life. Without this solid foundation and not mistaking a sea monster for a ship, the journey cannot in the end be successful. The incorporation of the sacred oak of Dodona hints at the importance of raising one’s consciousness so as to receive the intuitive messages from the higher realm which serve to guide one from the prow of one’s ship (the higher awareness).
As with Taurus, Argo was often presented as being only seen via its front half – that is half in and half out of the ‘waters’…
There is a deep mystery in this which may have connections to precession and the ‘emergence’ into our realm of other realities at certain specific times when the stars ‘align’… but this isn’t the space to explore this further… but here this can be said to reiterate the challenge and gift of our being half out and half in nature…
As long that is we do not end up fully submerged by the keen grip of Cancer….
CANCER - the crab
Argo – The Ship
For the ancients it was through the gate of Cancer that the soul, now fully formed as a human child, formally re-entered the earthy world from the divine realm, (and later on in the cycle, exits through the opposite gate in Capricorn to re-join the heavenly union).
The Greeks tell how the crab was dispatched by Hera to bite hold of and grip the foot of Hercules as he struggled with the many-headed Hydra (note how this echoes the vulnerable “heel of immortal Achilles”.) In early Mesopotamian myth, Ninurta – the prototype of Hercules – battles with a turtle and falls into a pit where it kept gnawing at his feet with its claws. It is thus via the grip of the crab that the hero is rooted into matter and thus becomes vulnerable to its sway over him, symbolizing the limitation applied by all physical incarnation.
For Cancer opens the door into the mass form of humanity at large.
The crab lives half on the earth, and half in the water. It the sign, therefore, of the soul dwelling in the physical body but predominantly living in the water, which here is symbolic of emotional, feeling nature.
Cancer is ruled by the moon, which is always the mother of form, controlling the waters and the tides. Therefore, in this sign form is dominant, and constitutes a considerable handicap. The crab builds its house or shell and carries it upon its back; this is a sign of the emotions, of vulnerability to others opinions, of over sensitivity and a desire to hide away, of retreat behind that which has been constructed as being certain and safe.
In the mass, instinct rules; therefore, Cancer is also the sign of instinct, of herd life, of mass reaction with its watery state representing the subconscious mind, hereditary instinct, and the collective imagination.
It stands, individually, for the totality of the life and the consciousness of the cells in the body, and of that instinctive, collective life, which is largely subconscious in man, but which always influences his physical body and, subjectively, his lower mind and emotional being.
This sign is known as “the womb” but is also sometimes referred to as “the coffin”. It is associated with hidden life, of a veiling form, and of a potent struggle with material reality.
The symbolism of Cancer, immersed in the mass, leads to the prevalence of unconscious behaviour in sway to the greater whole, and therein lies the danger for the aspirant.
In a single word – control. Food for the moon…
For if one traces Cancer back to its most ancient roots we find it had close associations with death, the underworld, and the Snake, the bašmu-serpent – which literally means ‘the serpent with a womb’…
I think that is why the designer of this zodiac arch, Nicholas, deliberately designed his image of Cancer to reflect a double image of a Bishop’s mitre with a malevolent and cunning face:
I don’t think this heretical message could be much clearer: the church itself, organised mass Christianity, is nothing but a crab waiting to grip the seeker of truth by his ankles from birth (baptism) and control his life by immersing him thereafter in watery lies. I have reversed this picture so as to see the human figure more clearly, but in the original the face/mouth is pointing upwards as if to say from here on in, I control the destiny of mankind – like a serpent hidden inside the womb of Christ.
ARGO
For some particular reason Nicholas calls Argo, the ship, Pistrix, a name normally reserved for Cetus, the sea monster. However, the word can also mean ‘a light oared vessel’ – hence the likely use here to denote Argo, the ship. Yet it is equally likely that Nicholas wanted to reiterate the warning of Cancer – that the ship of being that carries you through the waters of life can also become a monster….
Of course Argo was the ship that in Greek mythology bore Jason and his 50 Argonauts off on their great quest in search of the Golden Fleece…
Argus was selected to build the ship, and he was said to have constructed the ship under Athena's guidance. Athena (wisdom) with the help of Argus put a piece of a sacred oak on the prow of the ship that was taken from the sacred grove of Zeus at Dodona. This sacred piece of wood has the ability to speak in times of danger and advise Jason on what to do. Argus did such an excellent job constructing this ship that at the time it was referred to as the most seaworthy ship ever seen.
The constellation Argo Navis originally stretched all the way from Cancer to Capricorn and was one of the largest of the ancient constellations (but now dismantled… how interesting!) The brightest of its 64 stars was given the name of a ship's pilot from another Greek legend: Canopus, pilot of Menelaus' ship on his quest to retrieve Helen of Troy. Sound navigation becomes clear as a central message. The importance of its symbolism covers the entire life of the aspirant from the time he takes incarnation until he has reached his living end.
The word “ship” is quite frequently used in a symbolic sense, speaking of the “ship of state”, the “ship of salvation”, and was regularly used to denote the church on earth as “God’s ship”. Again the designer appears to planting an esoteric warning here…
For any idea of security, of progress, and of the achieving of a way out, and of the carrying of a vast crowd of pilgrims in search of golden treasure or a new and freer home, is subtly undermined by the thought that in the wrong hands the ship itself could well become a sea monster…
Hints here of the vital importance of the aspirant being able to sail through life with ‘a clean machine’, fit for the purposes of the storms and tribulations that await its passenger in life. Without this solid foundation and not mistaking a sea monster for a ship, the journey cannot in the end be successful. The incorporation of the sacred oak of Dodona hints at the importance of raising one’s consciousness so as to receive the intuitive messages from the higher realm which serve to guide one from the prow of one’s ship (the higher awareness).
As with Taurus, Argo was often presented as being only seen via its front half – that is half in and half out of the ‘waters’…
There is a deep mystery in this which may have connections to precession and the ‘emergence’ into our realm of other realities at certain specific times when the stars ‘align’… but this isn’t the space to explore this further… but here this can be said to reiterate the challenge and gift of our being half out and half in nature…
As long that is we do not end up fully submerged by the keen grip of Cancer….