Horoscope Guide – October 2019

(WallPaper) #1

OCTOBER 2019 9


for simplifying, organizing, and


condensing that greatly clarified


his explanations of technical facts


without trivializing them. His


section on delineation made it seem


quite natural, which is a major feat


in a book of this type. Of course, as


a professional astrologer he knew all


those little details I was still trying


to grasp, so it wasn’t quite as easy


as he made it look. Some years later,


and attending my first astrology


conference, I had the pleasure of


meeting him at what turned out to be


his last attendance at an American


conference, as while sipping on his


Harvey Wallbanger he announced to


the conference organizers and a few


others sitting around the table that


he couldn’t take the travel anymore.


I came to Marc Edmund Jones’


work in those early years as well, and


in contrast to Davison and others,


his work took time and patience to


read, as you might guess from what


was laid out in the Saturn-Neptune


article. Where Davison would write


a few well-chosen paragraphs and


accompany them with a diagram


or two, Jones would write a long


chapter with maybe a few list-like


tables, with all of it wrapped around


carefully crafted terminology in


search of a theory. He was intent


on finding a way to reorganize and


update astrology as a whole, and


perhaps this was what was required


to do it, but I’m not sure what I


carried away from it.


As an example of how far off


track I might have been, in the first


year that I began actually working in


astrology for an actual paycheck, my


younger brother was visiting me, and
as we were talking in the kitchen, he
noticed a copy of Stephen Erlewine’s
The Circle Book of Charts lying
open on the table. After looking
intently at several of the charts for
three or four minutes, he asked,
“Do the shapes mean something?”
He didn’t know much of anything
about astrology, but in his first
close glance at a few horoscopes he
had immediately picked up on the
principle underlying Jones’ chart
patterns. Despite my reading on the
subject, I suspected at that point that
he understood it better than I did.



My main thought behind the
meanderings above is that even
though the astrology of today is
generally much better, much more
advanced, than it was many decades
ago when writers like these were
working with clients, teaching, and
writing on the subject, there is still
much to be learned from astrologers
like Ronald Davison, Marc Edmund
Jones, and their contemporaries.
How to read their work? My best
advice at this point is to search out
their works at abebooks.com, which
at this point is my go-to for used
books – better selection, and very
clear pricing and shipping terms.
Accompanying this column you’ll
see the cover of Jones’ book The
Guide to Horoscope Interpretation,
in which he covers those chart
patterns, and I think that I am
now going to put that one on my
nightstand, so I can begin reading it
again after all these years. P
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