Philosophy notes, literary notes numenical writings, or to write with gods
a little bit of numen adds some ceremonial flair,
a little eastern incense, some bubbly Green Greek or White Roman incantations, and wine in the not altogether holy English bread-chalice,
doesn't hurt.
no one charges you royalty fees for the apperances of dead star-turned royalties in your story that are called divines and gods.
but if the bubbling bubbles you would babble mad, and speak saintly saint words sacrosanct.
dragging too many dead body parts around, trying to make a Frankensteinish poetic monstrosity without craft and temperance, lead only to confusion of names, numens, and actions or words.
What are holy and above us must be caught with a web, slaughtered, chopped up with cake and wine, served with the right spices and fuzzy drinks in the right portions.
Good examples, Poe, Robert E howard, Lovecraft is ok in his dreamland cycles, Ashton ok in general. King in Yellow exquisite. Blake. Keats. never7, ever17.
Arthur Machen is always good. But I lament his literary style is a bit too Heavy for my antiquated taste.
Crowleys poems are adequate but he uses too many numens in one poem.
Bad example, that visual novel called I/O.