Eve and Adam Perfume Oil
Faces of the Lovers

EVE AND ADAM

In the book of Book of Genesis, the first pair stand in untested unity, formed of earth and breath, innocence and possibility. “And the Lord God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him” (Genesis 2:18), and from that declaration arises polarity as gift rather than fracture, difference as the condition of communion. Bone of bone and flesh of flesh, they are not rivals but reflections, two aspects of one living mystery: the soul and the spirit of humankind.

Yet the drama of the Lovers is not stasis but choice. When the fruit is taken and shared, consciousness deepens and the seamlessness of Eden gives way to the currents of history. “Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taken” (Genesis 3:23). Through Eve’s invitation and Adam’s consent, spirit and soul descend into the rivers of Time, entering the full measure of embodied existence with its labor and ecstasy, its birth pangs and graves. Mortality becomes their teacher, and the dust from which Adam was shaped becomes the destiny to which he must return, “for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return” (Genesis 3:19).

Esoterically, she may be seen as the animating impulse, the quickening spirit that urges experience, while he embodies the ensouled humanity that must walk the path she opens. Their so-called fall is also initiation, the necessary passage from unconscious unity into lived duality, where joy and sorrow are known rather than merely imagined. The Lovers here are not simply the bliss of Eden but the courage to enter time together, to face consequence side by side, and to seek, through exile and return, the restoration of a higher garden not of innocence but of awakened wholeness.

In the first dawn of consciousness, before history clothed itself in shame, stand Adam and Eve as archetypes of a polarity not yet divided against itself. She is the descending brilliance, arching her consciousness towards the world itself, the soul drawn upward toward gnosis. He turns toward her, embodied will answering its own reflection. Above them burns the stark, pure radiance of unity and within them sleeps the yet-unforged Stone.

The serpent coils at the axis of the Tree. It is the mercurial spirit, subtle and ascending, the luminous volatility of both knowledge and growth that refuses stasis. Through its whisper the fruit becomes the tincture that awakens innocence into awareness.

Sulfur awakens in desire, Mercury stirs in receptivity, salt forms in the tears of exile. The expulsion is the separation required for conjunction, solve preceding coagula. What was unconsciously whole must become consciously divided so it may one day reunite in wisdom. In these Lovers, unity dissolves into duality, and in that darkening begins the opus. This is not the loss of Eden; it is the ignition of the Great Work.

Skin musk, fig sap, pomegranate, apple skin, and the smoke and warmth of humankind’s newly-kindled fire.


5ml Perfume Oil
Price
Regular price $34.00
Regular price Sale price $34.00
/
The Fool's Journey: The Lovers

If one wants to form a picture of the symbolic process, the series of pictures found in alchemy are good examples, though the symbols they contain are for the most part traditional despite their often obscure origin and significance… It also seems as if the set of pictures in the Tarot cards were distantly descended from the archetypes of transformation…
“The symbolic process is an experience in images and of images. Its development usually shows an enantiodromian structure like the text of the I Ching, and so presents a rhythm of negative and positive, loss and gain, dark and light. Its beginning is almost invariably characterized by one’s getting stuck in a blind alley or in some impossible situation; and its goal is, broadly speaking, illumination or higher consciousness, by means of which the initial situation is overcome on a higher level. As regards the time factor, the process may be compressed into a single dream or into a short moment of experience, or it may extend over months and years, depending on the nature of the initial situation, the person involved in the process, and the goal to be reached. The wealth of symbols naturally varies enormously from case to case. Although everything is experienced in image form, i.e., symbolically, it is by no means a question of fictitious dangers but of very real risks upon which the fate of a whole life may depend.”

– Carl Jung, Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious

The Lovers card first appears in recognizable form in the 15th-century Italian tarot, such as the Visconti-Sforza Tarot. In its earliest versions, the image does not always depict a single romantic couple, but rather a scene of choice: a young man between two women, sometimes with Cupid above. This iconography aligns closely with medieval moral allegory. A particularly relevant source is Psychomachia, in which virtues and vices are personified as figures competing for the soul. Likewise, in De remediis utriusque fortunae, Francesco Petrarch stages dialogues between personified Reason and the Passions, framing love as a moral and philosophical test rather than mere sentiment. In this context, the Lovers card represents not only erotic attachment but the ethical tension between higher and lower forms of desire.

By the Renaissance, Neoplatonic currents shaped the interpretation of love as a ladder between earthly and divine realities. In De amore, Ficino describes love as a force that draws the soul upward toward divine beauty. This idea resonates strongly with later tarot imagery in which an angel presides above the couple, suggesting that true union is sanctioned or guided by celestial harmony. The Lovers thus becomes an emblem of concordia, or harmony between opposites: reason and desire, body and spirit.

Alchemical literature deepens this symbolism. In Rosarium Philosophorum, one of the most famous woodcuts depicts a crowned king and queen standing together beneath a descending dove, imagery strikingly parallel to later tarot depictions. The accompanying Latin text reads: “Hic est coniunctio maris et foeminae” (“Here is the conjunction of the male and the female”), describing the coniunctio, the sacred union of opposites necessary for the Philosopher’s Stone. Similarly, Theatrum Chemicum collects texts emphasizing that the opus begins with the reconciliation of dual principles: Sol and Luna, sulfur and mercury. The Lovers card, read through this lens, is not simply about romance but about integration; it is the alchemical marriage that produces wholeness.

Thus, grounded in medieval moral allegory and Renaissance alchemical symbolism, the Lovers card signifies choice, union, and transformation. It is the tension before synthesis and the blessing upon right alignment: the moment when opposites recognize each other as necessary halves of a greater unity.

You may also like
Recently viewed