The Notory Art of Solomon

The Ars Notoria

The art Solomon received from an Angel — and which was hunted, suppressed, and concealed for thirteen centuries. Knowledge not learned but infused: the seeker contemplates the sacred figure (the nota) while intoning its oration at the determinate hour of the Moon, and the Art is poured into a prepared vessel. This chamber returns the formulae intact — the barbarous Names as Solomon received them, the Latin prayers as the manuscripts preserved them, the lunar formulae as the Angels commanded. Begin in fasting. Speak in low voice. Hold the Names whole.

The Clock of the Art

The Lunation

Solomon bound the orations to the Moon — spoken only on the determinate days, at the four canonical hours. The Moon's day is one for all the earth; the hours are yours, drawn from your own sunrise. Choose your meridian below.

The Sacred Figures

The Notae

Each art has its own figure and its own oration. The figure is gazed upon while the oration is spoken; each nota serves only its own art. Touch one to enter its inspection.

The Triumphal Orations

The Orations

The principal orations of the Art, with their authentic opening Names. Intone them whole and undivided, with a low voice, alone. The full historical orations continue in the Turner text.

The Conditions of the Work

The Rite

The Art does not work without the rite. These are not suggestions — the text is emphatic.

The Operation, Across a Term

1. On a determinate day of the Moon, at the dawn hour, fasting and undefiled, open with the foundational oration Hely.

2. Recite the general orations at the four canonical hours through the day.

3. Choose an art. Gaze upon its nota while you recite that art's oration — whole, undivided, with faith.

4. Repeat upon the appointed days, lunation by lunation, until the science is infused — roughly one lunar month per faculty.

    The Working, Step by Step

    The Liturgy

    Turner's formulae distilled into a single working flow — the precise daily order, from the night before to the sealing of the work. Nothing improvised; everything as the manuscript prescribes.

    On the Notory Art

    The Library

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