542 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
542 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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The Cardinal Rites of Chaos
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by Paula Pagani
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1984
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Contents
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Background
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The Spring Equinox
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The Summer Solstice
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The Autumn Equinox
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The Winter Solstice
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The Whole interspersed with visual impressions of the rites. (in the
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original book)
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Acknowledgements are due to all the individuals who have worked within
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the Circle of Chaos over the years since it's formation. Without them
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this book would not have been possible.
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"Baphomet is wisdom; I am what he knows...."
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Thessalonius Loyola
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Background
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The Circle of Chaos was started in the mid 1960's by a group of people
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who had come together from various backgrounds. Among us there were witches,
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magicians, psychics, mystics and others all with one common ground. At that
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time occultism was enjoying one of it's periodic vogues with many young
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people involving themselves in at least one of it's many aspects. The
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bookshops were full of do-it-yourself witchcraft amd magick; rock bands were
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releasing albums of overtly occult material and the subject was
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sensationalized as a prelude to the grossed commercialism.
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In itself this was not a bad thing. The front-men, the 'Kings of
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Witches' and the 'Bishops of Satan', because they had no real knowledge of
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the subject in which they claimed to be expert, diverted the attention of
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dilettante and popular press alike, allowing people like us to get on in
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peace with what we wanted to do. Our main concern was that because a great
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deal of material had been rushed into print in a relatively short space of
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time, an occurance we could not see ever happening again, the magical current
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would become static as though nothing ever happened after the sixties and
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this is largely how things turned out. Not that nothing did happen after the
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boom of the sixties but little was ever heard of it. The bottom had dropped
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out of the market and what had previously been big business was now
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unprofitable and the publishers didn't want to know. The impetus had, by and
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large, been removed and occultists of all paths had settled into their ruts.
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What we had foreseen, not in the crystal ball but through common sense,
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eventually came about the Circle of Chaos was formed as an antidote to,
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or rather, a prophylactic against the stasis we knew to be just around the
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corner. We knew that when magick, witchcraft or any other form of occultism
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becomes static, never changing or amending it's philosophical basis and
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practical techniques, it eventually succumbs; when people feel no joy in what
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they are doing or the repetition of rites year after year is of no benefit
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to them they lose interest and drift away.
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We didn't want that to happen to us as individuals so a pact was made
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between followers of the various paths and the group was started. To our
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knowledge this has never happened at any other time, the lion laying down
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with the lamb.
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Several months were spent in discussion, in working a way through the
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snares of bias and prejudice and during the period several people, unable to
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align themselves with the concensus that was rapidly forming, were lost. We
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overcame our disappointment at the dwindling numbers (which have greatly
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increased since that time) and by the time we came to devision our rites
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there remained only eleven members of the group. Undaunted, we began to work
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the system we had devised and without exception everyone agreed that we had
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something worth continuing with.
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In the meantime the witchcraft which had been promulgated by the
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commercialities lost it's glamour. There was nothing new to say about it,
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nothing to do but repeat the same old things over and again and within a
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period of a few years all but the old stalwarts turned to the alehouse or the
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television as their sources of inspiration.
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Our policy was the change our method of operation as often as necessary.
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If an idea or a rite proved to be ineffective it was discarded. ABove all
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our magick had to be successful and invigourating because we knew that the
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instant the thrill was lost our group was finished. Eclecticism was the
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order of the day. We borrowed from every useful source and, at the same time
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as giving our philosophy and our rites a traditional flavour, we sought out
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new approaches in technique. Our current philosophy and rites are quite
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different from the ones formulated then and in ten years time they will
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probably be quite different again. This is the outer expression of our
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policy of change, the inner being the success of our magick. Our group
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started life not as the Circle of Chaos but as the Circle of the Weird, the
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weird being expressive of the malleability of mind and of it's darkest
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recesses in which psychic, mystical and magical processes occur and express
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themselves. In the course of time as a result of the magick we had been
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practicing the Greek work 'chaos' gradually began to take over since it
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encapsulates not only the concept of the weird but also the notion of the
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randomness of the universe. Implicit within this idea is it's own antithesis
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- cosmos, the imposition of order onto disorder. Whether this restructuring
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actually occurs or whether it takes place only in the mind is largely
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academic.
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Chaos is the raw material with which we work. Cosmos represents belief
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structures within that randomness and, as such, is constantly changing. This
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was the first thing that became clear when our group was started. A magician
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cannot afford to use only one model of his relationship with chaos; he needs
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different models for different functions and although it would be it is
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preferable to 'drying up'.
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There is not right or wrong in the performance of any magick. These
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celebrations are merely a tool and are changeable. Enthusiasm and genuine
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gladness are the only indispensable tools in their successful performance.
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The Summer Solstice - This rite is the most complicated of the four and needs
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careful preparation. It is a new version of the old pact idea but the
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covenant is essentially to the group rather than to such an abstract concept
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as a god/demon.
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The Autumn Equinox - A cautionary tale! Although she seems to favour
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feminism in subjugating the men of the group Eris, as participants in the
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rite come to realize, in fact shows no such base chauvinism and goes on to
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warn against magical prejudice and dogma.
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The Winter Solstice - The Christians borrowed this date for the celebration
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of their Christmas, the birth of the son. It was, however, at this time of
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the year that the pre-Christian celebrated the rebirth of the sun and this
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aspect of the season is referred to, in passing, by the priest.l
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Although 'harvest home' is usually celebrated in autumn, the fruits of
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the harvest, even today, are seldom used in excess until the Winter Solstice
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when estimates can be made as to how long existing stocks of food will hold
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our or, to put it another way, how much surplus there is. This rite
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celebrates 'harvest computed'.
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The Spring Equinox - Maypole time and the rite depends entirely on the humour
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and ingenuity of the participants.
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In addition to the Cardinal Rites and interspersed between them are the
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Cthonian Rites which are of a more exclusively magical nature and the
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Caltropic rites which include such activities as initiation and works of
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magick for specific reasons. It is possible that these will be made public
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in the near future.
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If you want to use our rites, by all means go ahead - there is not
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copyright on them unless you are using them for commercial gain. If you want
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to join us, get in touch - but you'll have to find us first.
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The Spring Equinox
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All are assembled in a clearing in the woods at about 11:30pm. The
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priestess administers a powerful sacrament to the celebrants who are deployed
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around the circle. Light is provided by torches at the cardinal points.
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Priestess: Ecstatic are the rites of Man
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And doubly so when horn<72>d Pan,
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Careering through the Wildwood's night,
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Puts Temperance and Shame to flight.
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Put off the black of robe and cowl
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And naked run and stalk and prowl.
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(The wildhunt seeketh not to kill
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Dumb beast or bird, rather to thrill
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Numb human sense, - to pinnacle
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The peak phantasmagorical).
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A human snake is formed of men and women alternately with the priestess
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at the head. She moves off into the darkness, slowly at first but gradually
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becoming faster, weaving between trees and bushes, through tall braken until,
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careless of direction, she leads the group pell mell until it fortuitously
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arrives back at the circle. A short time elapses for the recovery of breath.
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Priestess: Io Pan, raw power of Light and Lust,
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Io Pan, our strength derives from dust,
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But thine absorbs the power of spring
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Then spirals out in beat of wing,k
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In tear of talon, rending beak,
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Triumphant horn, astride the peak
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Of ecstacy withouth control
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As flutes shrill high and tabors roll.
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We ask for no embodiment
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For here we have a regiment
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Of men prepared to take thy form
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And ravish nature in a storm
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Of fervent, frenzied frolicking,
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All pleasure here encompassing.
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The priestess sets the wand of Pan in the ground at the centre of the
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circle. The men stand at equidistant points facing outwards while they are
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blindfolded by the women who then chant and beat drums. To this
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accompaniment the men whirl and spin in situ for as long as the priestess
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deems fit. The women, as they dance within the circle, ensure that they men
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do not enter it. At the command of the priestess there is silence and the
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men attempt to get to the wand. They are hindered in this by the women who
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misguide them in whatever way they choose.
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When the wand is eventually reached the man's blindfold is removed and
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the other men are led back to the circumference where they remain
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blindfolded.
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The priestess anoints the man's body with fragrant oil; he is now
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regarded as the regent of Pan. She makes obeisance to him as does each woman
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in her turn in her own way. A fire is lighted.
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At the command of the priestess the men, still hoodwinked, grope around
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the circle until each has found a woman. The women remove the men's
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blindfolds and the couples leap the fire (the size of which depends on the
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priestess's sense of humour) in the time honoured fashion.
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The rite is concluded in whatever way the priestess sees fit.
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The Summer Solstice
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All are assembled in a clearing in the woods. At 11:30pm the High
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Priestess casts a circle, either by scraping it into the ground with the
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sword or by sprinkling ashes. She uses words of her own choosing or may
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remain silent. Then, at the alter (which is outside the circle) she takes up
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the cup with contains the strongest potion she can devise. As she speaks she
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moves round the circle adminstering the sacrament to each member of the
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group. The members stand at equidistant points around the circle, robed and
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silent. A strong incense burns on the altar; torches flame at the cardinal
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points.
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Priestess The old and new gods intertwine
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Where self aborts to taste the wine
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Hard pressed from lusty freedom's vine
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To which we now ourselves resign.
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Drink deep that draught of liberty
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And think no more of 'thee' and 'me',
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For all are one and one is all,
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Assembled here to cry the call,
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The summon hence that dreadful god,
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(Not by the power of magick's rod
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Or futile weapon man contrived,
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But ecstacy, in us revived).
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As flute and tabor harmonise (Drum and flute begin)
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The incense adds it's own reprise.
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Then pure imagination flies
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Beyond the bounds of mindless lies,
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Where knowledge is irrelevance
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And blind faith flees intransigence,
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Raise voice on voice in one accord
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To Baphomet, our only lord.
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The flute stops. The drumming continues slow and sonorous. All join
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hands facing out of the circle and take steps in time to the drum chanting
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'Baphomet, Baphomet'. The speed gradually increases until it is too fast to
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maintain and the circle collapses, the participants falling, exhausted, to
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the ground. Baphomet appears to the left of the altar wearing a black robe
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and a white, faceless mask. The drumming stops.
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Baphomet: Dogon-Devil, harbinger
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Of fate's revenge, mortality,
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Come thou forth and dwell in me
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Children of Thanateros!
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Be bold and take the step across
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The Threshold dire and take thy fill
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Of wisdom's ecstacy, thy will.
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According to ability
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Shall each one sign and duly
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Make his promise unto me,
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Whereon shall I his task decree.
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Choronzon enters and stands to the right of the altar. In appearance he
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is identical to Baphomet.
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Choronzon I am he, the One Beyond!
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To truth and beauty now respond.
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O'erlook this carnate counterfeit,
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This demon of the vilest pit,
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Bequeathing now your oath to me.
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His foulness shall not set you free,
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But shackle up your soul in store,
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Incarcerated evermore.
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Your neither-neither I despise
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As indecision clothed in lies.
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'Thanateros'? - the poisoned soul,
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Makes blasphemy it's only goal,
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Obscenity it's only creed,
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Nocturnal spilth it's only seed.
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Dispel this beast of loathsome night
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And make your path the way of light.
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Baphomet Would that thou wert hot or cold
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But virtue hast not made thee bold
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Or brought thee nearer to the truth
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And so I spew thee from my mouth.
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There is now dark or light within
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The whirling vortex of the Djinn;
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Nor good nor bad expect to find
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(Except as excrement of mind),
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To know me is to know this right -
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That I am both black and white.
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Choronzon Your stinking vileness rends the air,
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Your equipoise is their despair,
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Your comfort, the eternal fire,
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Your gladness is their funeral pyre.
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Changeling demon now revealed!
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Your blasphemy is not concealed.
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Priestess In speaking plainly for themselves
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Each school into the mire delves,
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And so a simple question put
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To one protagonist shall foot
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Our choice. Of you (Choronzon) I now demand
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That you respond to my command
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And answer, if I asked your foe
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Would his reply by 'yes' or 'no':
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Unplainly stated thus I ask
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Him, 'Is our destiny your task?'
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Choronzon Responding to your plea my foe
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Undoubtedly would answer 'No'.
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Priestess
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(to Baphomet) Then lead us now our friend well met
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For you are surely Baphomet.
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(to all) Arise in strength and beat the knell
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To send this creature back to hell!
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All but Baphomet disrobe and, led by the priestess, produce a great
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noise with drums, pipes, bullroarers, rattles, shrieking and clapping. The
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participants wheel around the circle, jumping and spinning until none can
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continue. Cakes and wine are consumed and, as this is taking place, the
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priestess intervenes.
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Priestess Ho! Cease to rave and rape and rend.
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To Baphomet attention lend.
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Baphomet His words enabled you to see
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That life itself is blasphemy;
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That I am life and birth and death -
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In me you breathe your every breath.
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Thanateros! The masque is played,
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Now make your choice, be not afraid!
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Bring book and pen that they may sign
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(Or drink with him more bitter wine).
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Priestess brings book and, as each member signs, Baphomet gives him a
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task for the coming year. All take up their original positions around the
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circle.
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Baphomet Lord of Fire - Baphomet,
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Lord of Water - fish's net,
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Lord of Earth, the double wand
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Lord of Air, the dark beyond.
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Goat-foot, lanthorned Lucifer,
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Dogon-devil, harbinger
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Of fate's revenge, mortality,
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Come thou forth and dwell in me.
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NOTES: Implicit in this rite is the idea that Baphomet speaks only truth and
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Choronzon only lies. In framing her question as she does the Priestess
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solves the problem posed by their both looking alike and speaking in such a
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tangled way. The tasks given by Baphomet are decided beforehand by the
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leaders of the group in response to each member's needs.
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- Raexby Sytinwerth
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- Spincey C K Box
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The Autumn Equinox
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All are assembled in a clearing in the woods. At approximately 11:30pm
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the High Priest casts the circle in whatever manner he chooses. At the
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centre of the circle is an unlit bonfire.
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High Priest In spring the fruitful Earth rejoiced
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To hear the ecstacies we voiced
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And we were glad in mind and heart,
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Pierced by Pan's emboldening dart.
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But now, that optimism spent,
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We seek a new accomplishment,
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Using these barren months of need
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To nurture in ourselves the seed
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Of magick's strength. In thought and deed
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We now aspire to kindle well
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The purple Fire of Heaven and Hell:
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Through this Erisian rite we strive
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To bring the opposites alive.
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All chant 'ERIS'. The High Priest responds:
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Eris: Goddess of the Night
|
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Eris: Portal of the Light,
|
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Eris: Raving succubus
|
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Eris: Dea omnibus.
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Eris: Phoenix from the Fire,
|
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Eris: Icy heart for hire,
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Eris: Draught of languid Air
|
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Eris: Poison, liquid snare,
|
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Eris: Elemental shrine,
|
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Aweful demon half divine.
|
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Enter us strange concubine
|
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Of man and woman, as this wine
|
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Is consecrated in your name,
|
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Fufilling now our steadfast aim.
|
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|
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The priest takes up the cup and the priestess approaches him holding the
|
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|
daggar above her head. As she speaks she brings the dagger down, plunging it
|
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|
into the cup.
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Priestess Lover of Man and Woman both,
|
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With blade and wine we seal or troth,
|
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Transcending that foul chastity,
|
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That grey of mortal company,
|
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Absorbed awhile in thoughts of thee,
|
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Drunk in thy dearling harlotry.
|
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|
|||
|
The participants stand in an arc to the west of the circle and the
|
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|
priest light the fire at it's centre. He then administers the sacramental
|
|||
|
wine using (if he wishes) words of his own choosing. He sits looking through
|
|||
|
the flames and the others follow his example. After a period of silence Eris
|
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|
appears from the east. She is naked and her oiled body reflects the glow of
|
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|
the fire. She carries flail and wand.
|
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|
|||
|
Eris You sacrament is ill prepared
|
|||
|
For such a trifle's often shared
|
|||
|
By folk debased of majesty
|
|||
|
Unpassioned in their pageantry.
|
|||
|
And so another sacrament
|
|||
|
Do I suggest - a testament
|
|||
|
To Chaos - in that I shall choose
|
|||
|
At random several pairs to lose
|
|||
|
Themselves within the wildwood's dark,
|
|||
|
Impassioned with the lust of stark,
|
|||
|
Unbridled ecstacy of man
|
|||
|
And Goddess in the Night of Pan.
|
|||
|
Let each man be ambitionless,
|
|||
|
Each girl a mad devouress,
|
|||
|
That actions hitherto unplanned
|
|||
|
be realized at her command.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eris walks to the west of the circle and takes the hand of the nearest
|
|||
|
man. She kisses him on the lips and leads him to a woman at random. She
|
|||
|
kisses the woman, joins their hands, and they retire into the darkness. She
|
|||
|
does this until she is alone in the circle. The couples, in their chosen
|
|||
|
places of privacy, follow the command of the goddess. The woman need not
|
|||
|
'devour' the man in a sexual way. She may choose to 'devour' knowledge or
|
|||
|
some other well developed aspect of the man to whom she has been paired. The
|
|||
|
man, however, has no choice and must comply with her requests. Afterwards,
|
|||
|
no questions may be asked, no information volunteered concerning this part of
|
|||
|
the rite. After a suitable period has elapsed Eris rings the bell seven
|
|||
|
times and all return to the circle.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Eris The old school, claiming to their cost
|
|||
|
That knowledge shared is power lost
|
|||
|
Display their common ignorance,
|
|||
|
Decrying our Chaotic dance'
|
|||
|
Illogical. Yet our's is
|
|||
|
The choice of barrenness or bliss.
|
|||
|
Be prideless in your choice of path
|
|||
|
(The way is not the aftermath),
|
|||
|
And others in their choice are wise
|
|||
|
If they discover Dogma's lies
|
|||
|
And courage cries 'Examine all
|
|||
|
Of nature's gnoses - lest ye fall'.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The priest closes the circle in whatever manner he chooses and the rite
|
|||
|
is at an end.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Winter Solstice
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The rite takes place indoors, the temple being decked with flowers and
|
|||
|
greenery. Illumination is provided by a log fire or candles or both. There
|
|||
|
is a large quantity of food of all kinds and of wine. The participants,
|
|||
|
wearing light cotton robes of various colours, sit in a circle as large as is
|
|||
|
convenient.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Priest In these months past no food was grown,
|
|||
|
In months of spring the seed was sown,
|
|||
|
Through summer months is sprang abound,
|
|||
|
Then wrested was from autumn's ground.
|
|||
|
Our winter surplus now we pour
|
|||
|
On Babalon, the holy whore.
|
|||
|
No virgin do we honor here,
|
|||
|
No saintly celibate revere -
|
|||
|
The empty vessel serves no hand,
|
|||
|
The blunted blade no quick command;
|
|||
|
Our cup is filled with foaming wine,
|
|||
|
Our sword cerebral is the spine
|
|||
|
Or nature's ecstacy unfurled
|
|||
|
Upon this gnarled and naked world.
|
|||
|
Attend us here, dread Babalon,
|
|||
|
In celebration of the sun,
|
|||
|
Lie down upon this languid couch
|
|||
|
Of Earth which nature lends and touch
|
|||
|
With fire our stagnant continence,
|
|||
|
(Imposed and futile abstinence),
|
|||
|
That we see winter's hidden worth
|
|||
|
In purple passion bursting forth.
|
|||
|
Take up the rein, thou Scarlet Bride,
|
|||
|
And spur the beast whereon your ride
|
|||
|
To join the denizens of Earth
|
|||
|
In witnessing the sun's rebirth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The priest begins the spinning mantra by intoning the first line. The
|
|||
|
emphasis is on the second and fourth syllables of each line. One note only
|
|||
|
is used. The person to his left vibrates the second line and so on, the
|
|||
|
fifth giving the first line again. The rhythm speed and excitement of this
|
|||
|
kind of mantra have a direct effect on the thought processes. Each member of
|
|||
|
the group should have practiced the mantra by himself for several weeks
|
|||
|
before any attempt is made by the group.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All Ya Babalon
|
|||
|
Entee Mastoor
|
|||
|
Entee Sakran
|
|||
|
Ya Labwa loor
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After an hour of unbroken mantra spinning Babalon enters, naked but for
|
|||
|
a fur or skin draped about her. The mantra stops. Babalon is carrying an
|
|||
|
empty cup and she is not a little drunk. as she speaks she flirts with men
|
|||
|
and women alike.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Babalon Such sullen faces! Bring me wine! (priest fills cup)
|
|||
|
(What's mine is yours - what's yours is mine).
|
|||
|
At such a sombre, solemn feast
|
|||
|
I never chose to be the guest.
|
|||
|
(I voluntarily arrive
|
|||
|
At parties where the guests are 'live).
|
|||
|
Your dull, downtrodden apathy -
|
|||
|
Such as I never hoped to see -
|
|||
|
Breeds nothing more than wintry gloom
|
|||
|
To fructify a barren womb.
|
|||
|
Yet Nature's wholesome countenance
|
|||
|
Shall never cease her whirling dance
|
|||
|
In space and time. So brim the cup!
|
|||
|
And Babalon shall take the first sup!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
She drains her cup and it is refilled. All other cups are filled.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Babalon Lust after life and live each day
|
|||
|
As if there were no price to pay.
|
|||
|
Untwine the power of passion's strength
|
|||
|
To lead you through the labarynth.
|
|||
|
And now fall to, devour the feast
|
|||
|
Prepared by fruitful Earth of beast
|
|||
|
And bird. Then gorge your vacant minds
|
|||
|
For truth throughout my rambling winds.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Again she drains her cup and again it is refilled. She sits or, as
|
|||
|
sometimes happens, collapses at the centre of the circle. The feast proper
|
|||
|
begins around her and continues until daybreak.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|