06 February 2026

Deciphering the Adamic, Angelic, Celestial, Demonic, Enochian, and Primordial Otherworldly Alphabets, Languages, Scripts, Symbols, Tongues, and Writings

Adamic, Angelic, Celestial, Demonic, Enochian, and Primordial Otherworldly Alphabets, Languages, Scripts, Symbols, Tongues, and Writings
1. Introduction: The Quest for the Adamic Tongue

The history of Western esotericism is intrinsically linked to the history of language. Since the early days of the Renaissance, philosophers, magicians, and theologians have sought to recover the lingua adamica—the primordial language spoken by Adam in the Garden of Eden. This search is not merely linguistic but ontological; the premise holds that the original language of humanity possessed an inherent power to define and control reality, a power lost during the confusion of tongues at the Tower of Babel. In this worldview, to speak the true name of a thing is to command it. This report provides an exhaustive examination of the three primary "spirit languages" that have emerged from this quest: the Enochian language of Dr. John Dee and Edward Kelley, the Celestial and Malachim scripts cataloged by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, and the modern Language of Enns utilized in Theistic Demonolatry.

Furthermore, this analysis explores the complex mythological substructures that support these linguistic systems. We investigate the cryptic narratives of Lilith and Naamah, who would have spoken the Adamic language and still would to this day, and the specific legends regarding their interactions with biblical patriarchs such as Solomon and Enoch. By synthesizing historical data, linguistic analysis, and esoteric folklore, we aim to disentangle the constructed from the received, and the ancient from the modern, providing a definitive account of how humanity has attempted to speak with the divine and the infernal.

22 January 2026

The Origin of "Do As Thou Wilt" from Saint Augustine to the Hell Fire Club to Crowley to Wicca to Led Zeppelin

Aleister Crowley
The aphorism "Do as thou wilt"—variously rendered as Fay ce que vouldras, Dilige et quod vis fac, or the Law of Thelema—represents one of the most enduring and protean concepts in Western intellectual history. While popularly associated with the 20th-century occultist Aleister Crowley and the countercultural movements of the 1960s, the phrases' lineage stretches back over a millennium and a half, traversing the theological disputes of late antiquity, the allegorical literature of the Italian Renaissance, the humanist utopias of early modern France, and the libertine political satires of Georgian England. This report provides a comprehensive, diachronic analysis of the mantra’s origins, tracing the evolution of "Will" (Voluntas, Thelema) from a faculty requiring divine subjugation to a concept of ultimate individual sovereignty. By synthesizing data from theological treatises, architectural allegories, and esoteric manuscripts, this analysis demonstrates that the mantra has never served as a simple license for hedonism; rather, it has historically functioned as a conditional imperative, where the liberty to "do as one wills" is predicated on a specific internal state—whether that be Divine Grace, Aristocratic Honor, or Magickal Alignment.

This Year's Most Popular Posts