How one visionary inspired 200 years of art, poetry, and protest.
Weaving between the historical, cultural and personal, award-winning author Philip Hoare reveals a web of creative minds and artistic iconoclasts fired with the wild and revolutionary genius of William Blake.
In 1973, Derek Jarman set off from London to film the stones of Avebury. He was following in the footsteps of Paul Nash, who had photographed the ancient megaliths a generation before. Standing in that muddy field, by those stones, both artists had felt a direct connection to their hero – a man who had died a long, long time ago, yet who remained electrically alive to them.
In this alluring and poetic odyssey, Philip Hoare traces the enduring legacy of William Blake and how he came to inspire so many creative lives. Reaching out of his past and into our future, Blake draws together the natural world and metaphysical realms, merging the human and the animal and the spiritual, firing up twentieth-century artists, filmmakers, poets, writers and musicians with his radical promise of absolute freedom. This stirring, deeply felt book brings us back to Blake and shows that art still has the power to create positive change.
‘A book that is neither Blake biography nor critical analysis nor legacy-tracing nor personal odyssey but a capacious mixing of them all … a joyful and dizzying romp’ Philip Marsden, Spectator
‘This love letter to William Blake couldn’t be more eccentric … Philip Hoare’s weird and wonderful style soars in this study of the poet and his disciples’ Ian Sansom, Telegraph
‘Hoare’s impassioned style, alive with metaphor and wordplay, has often been called “dreamlike”. This is apt, given his total immersion in his subject … Nothing will be as audacious or intriguing as William Blake and the Sea Monsters of Love’ Jenny Uglow, Times Literary Supplement.
Hardback.
£50.00
Deluxe hardback edition, limited to 500 copies only.
Discover the esoteric writings of occultist and poet William Butler Yeats, in a new collection of his lesser-known magical essays W. B. Yeats is celebrated globally for his contributions to poetry and Irish nationalism. However, his engagement with the occult circles of
the late 19th and early 20th centuries have passed largely unappreciated. A member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, and later drafting his own system for a Celtic magical order, Yeats wrote prolifically on magical philosophy, mystical symbolism, and the
occult experience.
In this new anthology, John Michael Greer presents six of Yeats’ occult writings that have the most to offer the operative mage. From an analysis of the Golden Dawn System, to an investigation of the relationship between folklore and the paranormal experience to occult
philosophy, to an outline of Yeats’ own proposed magical order (The Castle of Heroes) that draws on the symbolism of nature, this collection is a much-needed addition to the occult canon. It concludes with Yeats’ most famous work of esoteric writing, the complete text of the original 1925 edition of A Vision. Written in a series of automatic writing sessions with his wife, Georgie Hyde-Lees, this revolutionary essay delves into innovative system that explores human personality, occult philosophy, cycles of history, the afterlife, and the symbolic structures from which all four arise and interleaf.
Other essays included are Magic; Witches and Wizards and Irish Folk- Lore; Swedenborg, Mediums, and the Desolate Places; Per Amica Silenta Lunae; and Hodos Camelionis.
Edited and annotated, and complete with a new introduction by John Michael Greer, The Magical Writings of W.B. Yeats preserves vital knowledge from the esoteric tradition, and offers the modern magician fresh guidance and perspective from one of the most important occultists of the last century.
£17.99
Author's edition, limited to 100 copies.
24 page large format pamphlet printed on 160 gsm paper, with a full-colour cover on 350 gsm card stock. Each copy is hand-sewn with traditional thread binding. The interior design is by Ouroboros Press, while the cover was designed by Frater Acher himself. Every copy is individually hand-numbered and signed. Originally published as a hardback through Ouroboros press.
There is no better time than now to acknowledge the challenge we have been thrown into — and the elders who mastered it before us. No ancestor better embodies lifelong resistance to despair and numbness, to cynicism and fear in the face of terror, war, and loss than John Amos Comenius: Moravian bishop, pansophic visionary, and spiritual heir to both Paracelsus and the Rosicrucian manifestos. This man was not only an example for his own age. Modern Western magic would look very different without him. His influence shaped not only education, politics, and early modern science, but also applied magic and the great Rosicrucian project of world reform. In a media landscape that monetizes outrage and rewards fragmentation and polemics, Comenius’ idea that wonder begins in direct sensory encounter with the world — inside the magical circle and beyond — reads less like 17th-century mysticism and more like a practical instruction for how to remain human. I hope this small text can be a calm hand on your shoulder, an old presence at your back, or a lantern at your side.
£69.99
The Black Pilgrimage by David Beth offers a comprehensive, inside view into the Primordial Way of the Kosmic Gnosis—its mysteries, cosmology, and operative art: a living initiatic tradition aimed at the re-calibration of mortal life into Kosmic allegiance, where the world meets the practitioner as a revelatory, answering reality and the human stands as a contested hearth for living powers. At its core is a rigorous pandaemonism / animism: the Kosmos as a communion of presences and currents, with hosts, daemons, gods, and the Dead.
From this foundation, Part One presents six pylons—and an addendum on Fate and Destiny—as a coherent architecture of initiation: abyssal cosmology and daemonology, the human as hearth and threshold, and disciplines that re-forge vision, dream, and world-experience until the Living All is encountered as immediate and ecstatic. Central to this trajectory is the awakening of the Self-as-Daemon: the practitioner’s daemonic core kindled into sovereignty and magical relationality.
This pilgrimage does not proceed unopposed. David Beth names the counter-forces that work against Kosmic contact: currents that lure the soul toward division, sedation, false light, and spiritual captivity—shackles that sever attention from the world’s deeper strata and transmute communion into dissolution. The path breaks these bindings through ordeal, devotion, and an esoteric armory required to enflesh the Current.
The pylons range across the decisive stations of the Work: initiatic katabasis and the rekindling of inner fire; necropolitan service and the cult of the Dead; grave-arts and bone-wisdom; vows and thresholds; erotic covenant and sorcerous bond—a singular, intense system with no close analogue, articulated in powerfully evocative language that draws the reader relentlessly into deeper experience.
Hardback Edition, Theion Publishing 2026.