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I call upon you, the one in the empty spirit, the terrible, invisible,¹ almighty, God of gods, the bringer of destruction and the maker of desolation, you who hate a stable household, as you were cast out of Egypt and out of the land.
You were named the one who breaks all things and is never conquered.
I call upon you, Typhon Seth original: ΤΥΦΩΝ ΣΗΘ; Seth was the Egyptian god of chaos and storms, identified by the Greeks with the monster Typhon. I perform your divinations, because I call upon you by your own authentic name, by which you cannot refuse to hear: Ioerbeth, Iopakerbeth, Iobolchoseth, Iopatathnax, Iosoro, Ioneboutosotaleth, Aktiothi, Ereshkigal original: ΕΡΕΣΧΙΓΑΛ; the Sumerian goddess of the underworld, Nebopoualeth, Aberamenthoon, Lerthexanax, Ethrelytho, Nemareba, Aemina. Come to me in your entirety, and walk, and strike down the person original: ΔΕΙΝΟΝ; a placeholder used in magical spells where the practitioner would insert the specific name of their target Mathers. With cold and with fever—he himself has wronged the man, and he has poured out the blood of Typhon original: ΦΥΩΝΟΣ; likely a variant of Typhon beside himself.
For this reason, I perform these common rites.