Читать книгу How To Judge A Nativity - Alan Leo - Страница 51

THE MOON’S APPLICATIONS

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FROM
to Exceptional experiences, a remarkable life.
to Unfavourable environment, repression and serious obstacles.
to Rising fortune, social aid, powerful friends.
to Chequered career, misfortunes, failing fortune.
to Success and fame, honours and growing fortune.
to Helpful friends, prosperity and a happy life.
to A changeful life, fluctuating fortune, many struggles.
to Many enemies, deprivations, sorrowful experiences.
to Loss of liberty, danger of poverty, many disappointments
to Success in foreign lands, sudden good fortune.
to A disturbed life, misfortunes through misconduct or fateful tendencies.
to Separations, estrangements, romantic attachments.
to Strange pleasures, unexpected success, good abilities.
to Diplomatic, adventurous, liable to pass through a remarkable career.
to Danger of imprisonment, deserved or otherwise, uncertain character.
to Sudden reversals, intrigues, liaisons and many dangers.
to Good fortune, health and position.
to Accidents, disasters, ill-luck.
to Improving fortune through perseverance.
to A jealous partner, disappointments.
to Losses through deceit and treachery.
to Declining fame and fortune, many reversals.
to Romance and sudden fortune.
to Misfortunes, sickness and sorrow,
to Gain by adventure and brave deeds.
to Success, health and fortune.
to Gain and honour by marriage.
to Gain through literature, travel, the law, church, and the young.
to An uneven career, suffering through impulsive acts.
to Violent temper, grave dangers through rash and thoughtless conduct.
to Misfortune, disease and misery.
to Gain through favours and powerful friends.
to Gain through enterprise and courage.
to Dangers from the opposite sex and passion.
to Loss through fraud, deceit and bad temper.
to Forlorn hopes, sorrow through superiors, peculiar experiences.
to Peculiar episodes, sudden adventures, flashes of intuition.
to Falls, collapses, chronic complaints.
to A fortune by speculation or investment.
to Sudden disasters, strange misfortunes.
to Successful love affairs, gain through art or music.
to Gain through intellect, science and invention.
to Loss of friendships, disappointments, dual experiences.
to Extremes of fortune, remarkable experiences.
to Disappointments, disgrace, scandal.
to Noble and lofty aspirations, a peaceful life.
to Dangerous attachments, misfortunes.
to Good health, success and prosperity.
to Spiritual progress, a useful life.
to Mental disabilities, degenerating tendencies, sadness.
to Latent genius, a clever mind, some original talent.
to Cynical tendencies, pessimistic views, hard nature.
to Intuitive, gain through application and honest endeavours.
to Self-important, conceited, selfish, and too assertive.
to Expanding mind, high aspirations, full nature.
to Musical, artistic, cheerful, good nature, successful.

If the Moon separates from no planets but applies first to any aspect, the following is the general influence.

to Psychic and weird experiences.
to Sudden gain and loss through adventure.
to Misfortune, sorrow and depression.
to Prosperity, wealth and happiness, kind and good.
to Indiscretion, loss through impulse and rash acts.
to Gain from superiors, noble disposition.
to Good fortune, social gain, nice disposition.
to Clever, intellectual, but not over fortunate.

The above can be considerably expanded by a knowledge of the sign, house, and nature of the aspect.


Those who have realised how essential it is that any hints as to the nature of planetary influences, aspects, etc., should not be accepted too matter-of-fact and literal a sense, will, it is hoped, forgive a further insistence on this point for the sake of their fellows who have not.

It cannot be too strongly impressed upon the student that the planetary influences, aspects, etc., are primarily of a super-material nature; so that a description of their true influence could not be accurately expressed in words, which are material things. And although in the progress of his study the difference between the influence of one planet and another, one aspect and another, and so on, will gradually take definite shape in the student’s mind, yet he will never be able adequately to portray his idea in words.—however much he may try to do so.—any more than the effect a beautiful sunset has upon a sensitive mind can be fully expressed even in the most poetic language: for thought and feeling are always in advance of, and transcend, language. This difficulty of description, then, is more or less inevitable, but the intuitive mind will be able to grasp much of what is meant by the aid of the hints that have been given, and they will therefore serve their purpose well enough, no doubt. It is only because the author has found by experience that beginners are too apt to take what is said as a hard and fast rule, invariable in all cases, that he has felt this caution to be necessary.

How To Judge A Nativity

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