891 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
891 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
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Liber CL
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{Book 150}
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De Lege Libellum
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L-n-L-n-L-n-L-n-L
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This Epistle first appeared in The Equinox III(1) (Detroit: Universal,
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1919). The quotations are from Liber Legis--The Book of the Law.--H.B.
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Preface
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THE LAW
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Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
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IN RIGHTEOUSNESS OF HEART come hither, and listen: for it is I, TO
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MEGA VHRION, who gave this Law unto everyone that holdeth himself
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holy. It is I, not another, that willeth your whole Freedom, and the
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arising within you of full Knowledge and Power.
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Behold! the Kingdom of God is within you, even as the Sun standeth
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eternal in the heavens, equal at midnight and at noon. He riseth not:
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he setteth not: it is but the shadow of the earth which concealeth
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him, or the clouds upon her face.
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Let me then declare unto you this Mystery of the Law, as it hath been
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made known unto me in divers places, upon the mountains and in the
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deserts, but also in great cities, which thing I speak for your
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comfort and good courage. And so be it unto all of you.
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Know first, that from the Law spring four Rays or Emanations: so that
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if the Law be the centre of your own being, they must needs fill you
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with their secret goodness. And these four are Light, Life, Love, and
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Liberty.
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By Light shall ye look upon yourselves, and behold All Things that are
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in Truth One Thing only, whose name hath been called No Thing for a
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cause which later shall be declared unto you. But the substance of
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Light is Life, since without Existence and Energy it were naught. By
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Life therefore are you made yourselves, eternal and incorruptible,
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flaming forth as suns, self-created and self-supported, each the sole
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centre of the Universe.
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Now by the Light ye beheld, by Love ye feel. There is an ecstacy of
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pure Knowledge, and another of pure Love. And this Love is the force
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that uniteth things diverse, for the contemplation in Light of their
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Oneness. Know that the Universe is not at rest, but in extreme motion
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whose sum is Rest. And this understanding that Stability is Change,
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and Change Stability, that Being is Becoming, and Becoming Being, is
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the Key to the Golden Palace of this Law.
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Lastly, by Liberty is the power to direct your course according to
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your Will. For the extent of the Universe is without bounds, and ye
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are free to make your pleasure as ye will, seeing that the diversity
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of being is infinite also. For this also is the Joy of the Law, that
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no two stars are alike, and ye must understand also that this
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Multiplicity is itself Unity, and without it Unity could not be. And
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this is an hard saying against Reason: ye shall comprehend, when,
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rising above Reason, which is but a manipulation of the Mind, ye come
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to pure Knowledge by direct perception of the Truth.
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Know also that these four Emanations of the Law flame forth upon all
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paths: ye shall use them not only in these Highways of the Universe
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whereof I have written, but in every By-path of your daily life.
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Love is the law, love under will.
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I
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OF LIBERTY
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IT IS OF LIBERTY that I would first write unto you, for except ye be
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free to act, ye cannot act. Yet all four gifts of the Law must in some
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degree be exercised, seeing that these four are one. But for the
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Aspirant that cometh unto the Master, the first need is freedom.
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The great bond of all bonds is ignorance. How shall a man be free to
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act if he know not his own purpose? You must therefore first of all
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discover which star of all the stars you are, your relation to the
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other stars about you, and your relation to, and identity with, the
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Whole.
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In our Holy Books are given sundry means of making this discovery, and
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each must make it for himself, attaining absolute conviction by direct
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experience, not merely reasoning and calculating what is probable. And
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to each will come the knowledge of his finite will, whereby one is a
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poet, one prophet, one worker in steel, another in jade. But also to
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each be the knowledge of his infinite Will, his destiny to perform the
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Great Work, the realization of his True Self. Of this Will let me
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therefore speak clearly unto all, since it pertaineth unto all.
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Understand now that in yourselves is a certain discontent. Analyse
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well its nature: at the end is in every case one conclusion. The ill
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springs from the belief in two things, the Self and the Not-Self, and
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the conflict between them. This also is a restriction of the Will. He
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who is sick is in conflict with his own body: he who is poor is at
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odds with society: and so for the rest. Ultimately, therefore, the
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problem is how to destroy this perception of duality, to attain to the
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apprehension of unity.
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Now then let us suppose that you have come to the Master, and that He
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has declared to you the Way of this attainment. What hindereth you?
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Alas! there is yet much Freedom afar off.
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Understand clearly this: that if you are sure of your Will, and sure
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of your means, then any thoughts or actions which are contrary to
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those means are contrary also to that Will.
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If therefore the Master should enjoin upon you a Vow of Holy
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Obedience, compliance is not a surrender of the Will, but a fulfilment
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thereof.
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For see, what hindereth you? It is either from without or from within,
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or both. It may be easy for the strong-minded seeker to put his heel
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upon public opinion, or to tear from his heart the objects which he
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loves, in a sense: but there will always remain in himself many
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discordant affections, as also the bond of habit, and these also must
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he conquer.
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In our holiest Book it is written: ``Thou hast no right but to do thy
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will. Do that, and no other shall say nay.'' Write it also in your
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heart and in your brain: for this is the key of the whole matter.
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Here Nature herself be your preacher: for in every phenomenon of force
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and motion doth she proclaim aloud this truth. Even in so small a
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matter as driving a nail into a plank, hear this same sermon. Your
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nail must be hard, smooth, fine-pointed, or it will not move swiftly
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in the direction willed. Imagine then a nail of tinder-wood with
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twenty points--it is verily no longer a nail. Yet nigh all mankind are
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like unto this. They wish a dozen different careers; and the force
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which might have been sufficient to attain eminence in one is wasted
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on the others: they are null.
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Here then let me make open confession, and say thus: though I pledged
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myself almost in boyhood to the Great Work, though to my aid came the
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most puissant forces in the whole Universe to hold me to it, though
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habit itself now constraineth me in the right direction, yet I have
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not fulfilled my Will: I turn aside daily from the appointed task. I
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waver. I falter. I lag.
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Let this then be of great comfort to you all, that if I be so
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imperfect--and for very shame I have not emphasized that
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imperfection--if I, the chosen one, still fail, then how easy for
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yourselves to surpass me! Or, should you only equal me, then even so
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how great attainment should be yours!
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Be of good cheer, therefore, since both my failure and my success are
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arguments of courage for yourselves.
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Search yourselves cunningly, I pray you, analysing your inmost
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thoughts. And first you shall discard all those gross obvious
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hindrances to your Will: idleness, foolish friendships, waste
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employments or enjoyments, I will not enumerate the conspirators
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against the welfare of your State.
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Next, find the minimum of daily time which is in good sooth necessary
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to your natural life. The rest you shall devote to the True Means of
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your Attainment. And even these necessary hours you shall consecrate
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to the Great Work, saying consciously always while at these Tasks that
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you perform them only in order to preserve your body and mind in
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health for the right application to that sublime and single Object.
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It shall not be very long before you come to understand that such a
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life is the true Liberty. You will feel distractions from your Will as
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being what they are. They will no longer appear pleasant and
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attractive, but as bonds, as shames. And when you have attained this
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point, know that you have passed the Middle Gate of this Path. For you
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will have unified your Will.
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Even thus, were a man sitting in a theatre where the play wearies him,
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he would welcome every distraction, and find amusement in any
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accident: but if he were intent upon the play, every such incident
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would annoy him. His attitude to these is then an indication of his
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attitude towards the play itself.
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At first the habit of attention is hard to acquire. Persevere, and you
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will have spasms of revulsion periodically. Reason itself will attack
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you, saying: how can so strict a bondage be the Path of Freedom?
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Persevere. You have never yet known Liberty. When the temptations are
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overcome, the voice of Reason silenced, then will your soul bound
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forward unhampered upon its chosen course, and for the first time will
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you experience the extreme delight of being Master of Yourself, and
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therefore of the Universe.
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When this is fully attained, when you sit securely in the saddle, then
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you may enjoy also all those distractions which first pleased you and
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then angered you. Now then will do neither any more: for they are your
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slaves and toys.
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Until you have reached this point, you are not wholly free. You must
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kill out desire, and kill out fear. The end of all is the power to
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live according to your own nature, without danger that one part may
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develop to the detriment of the whole, or concern lest that danger
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should arise.
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The sot drinks, and is drunken: the coward drinks not, and shivers:
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the wise man, brave and free, drinks, and gives glory to the Most High
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God.
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This then is the Law of Liberty: you possess all Liberty in your own
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right, but you must buttress Right with Might: you must win Freedom
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for yourself in many a war. Woe unto the children who sleep in the
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Freedom that their forefathers won for them!
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``There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt:'' but it is only the
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greatest of the race who have the strength and courage to obey it.
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O man! behold thyself! With what pains wast thou fashioned! What ages
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have gone to thy shaping! The history of the planet is woven into the
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very substance of thy brain! Was all this for naught? Is there no
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purpose in thee? Wast thou made thus that thou shouldst eat, and
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breed, and die? Think it not so! Thou dost incorporate so many
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elements, thou art the fruit of so many aeons of labour, thou art
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fashioned thus as thou art, and not otherwise, for some colossal End.
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Nerve thyself, then, to seek it and to do it. Naught can satisfy thee
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but the fulfilment of thy transcendent Will, that is hidden within
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thee. For this, then, up to arms! Win thine own Freedom for thyself!
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Strike hard!
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II
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OF LOVE
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IT IS WRITTEN that ``Love is the law, love under will.'' Herein is an
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Arcanum concealed, for in the Greek Language Agaph, Love, is of the
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same numerical value as Velhma, Will. By this we understand that the
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Universal Will is of the nature of Love.
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Now Love is the enkindling in ecstacy of Two that will to become One.
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It is thus an Universal formula of High Magick. For see now how all
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things, being in sorrow caused by dividuality, must of necessity will
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Oneness as their medicine.
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Here also is Nature monitor to them that seek Wisdom at her breast:
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for in the uniting of elements of opposite polarities is there a glory
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of heat, of light, and of electricity. Thus also in mankind do we
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behold the spiritual fruit of poetry and all genius, arising from the
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seed of what is but an animal gesture, in the estimation of such as
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are schooled in Philosophy. And it is to be noted strongly that the
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most violent and divine passions are those between people of utterly
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unharmonious natures.
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But now I would have you to know that in the mind are no such
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limitations in respect of species as prevent a man falling in love
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with an inanimate object, or an idea. For to him that is in any wise
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advanced upon the Way of Meditation it appears that all objects save
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the One Object are distasteful, even as appeared formerly in respect
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of his chance wishes to the Will. So therefore all objects must be
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grasped by the mind, and heated in the sevenfold furnace of Love,
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until with explosion of ecstacy they unite, and disappear, for they,
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being imperfect, are destroyed utterly in the creation of the
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Perfection of Union, even as the persons of the Lover and the Beloved
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are fused into the spiritual gold of Love, which knoweth no person,
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but comprehendeth all.
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Yet since each star is but one star, and the coming together of any
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two is but one partial rapture, so must the aspirant to our holy
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Science and Art increase constantly by this method of assimilating
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ideas, that in the end, become capable of apprehending the Universe in
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one thought, he may leap forth upon It with the massed violence of his
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Self, and destroying both these, become that Unity whose name is No
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Thing. Seek ye all therefore constantly to unite yourselves in rapture
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with each and every thing that is, and that by utmost passion and lust
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of Union. To this end take chiefly all such things as are naturally
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repulsive. For what is pleasant is assimilated easily and without
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ecstacy: it is in the transfiguration of the loathsome and abhorred
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into The Beloved that the Self is shaken to the root in Love.
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Thus in human love also we see that mediocrities among men mate with
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null women: but History teacheth us that the supreme masters of the
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world seek ever the vilest and most horrible creatures for their
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concubines, overstepping even the limiting laws of sex and species in
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their necessity to transcend normality. It is not enough in such
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natures to excite lust or passion: the imagination itself must be
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enflamed by every means.
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For us, then, emancipated from all base law, what shall we do to
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satisfy our Will to Unity? No less a mistress than the Universe: no
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lupanar more cramped than Infinite Space: no night of rape that is not
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co-eval with Eternity!
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Consider that as Love is mighty to bring forth all Ecstacy, so absence
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of Love is the greatest craving. Whoso is balked in Love suffereth
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indeed, but he that hath not actively that passion in his heart
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towards some object is weary with the ache of craving. And this state
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is called mystically ``Dryness.'' For this there is, as I believe, no
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cure but patient persistence in a Rule of life.
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But this Dryness hath its virtue, in that thereby the soul is purged
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of those things that impeach the Will: for when the drouth is
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altogether perfect, then is it certain that by no means can the Soul
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be satisfied, save by the Accomplishment of the Great Work. And this
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is in strong souls a stimulus to the Will. It is the Furnace of Thirst
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that burneth up all dross within us.
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But to each act of Will is a particular Dryness corresponding: and as
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Love increaseth within you, so doth the torment of His absence. Be
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this also unto you for a consolation in the ordeal! Moreover, the more
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fierce the plague of impotence, the more swiftly and suddenly is it
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wont to abate.
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Here is the method of Love in Meditation. Let the Aspirant first
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practice and then discipline himself in the Art of fixing the
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attention upon any thing whatsoever at will, without permitting the
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least imaginable distraction.
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Let him also practice the art of the Analysis of Ideas, and that of
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refusing to allow the mind its natural reaction to them, pleasant or
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unpleasant, thus fixing himself in Simplicity and Indifference. These
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things being achieved in their ripe season, be it known to you that
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all ideas will have become equal to your apprehension, since each is
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simple and each indifferent: any one of them remaining in the mind at
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Will without stirring or striving, or tending to pass on to any other.
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But each idea will possess one special quality common to all: this,
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that no one of any of them is The Self, inasmuch as it is perceived by
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The Self as Something Opposite.
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When this is thorough and profound in the impact of its realization,
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then is the moment for the aspirant to direct his Will to Love upon
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it, so that his whole consciousness findeth focus upon that One Idea.
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And at the first it may be fixed and dead, or lightly held. This may
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then pass into dryness, or into repulsion. Then at last by pure
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persistence in that Act of Will to Love, shall Love himself arise, as
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a bird, as a flame, as a song, and the whole Soul shall wing a fiery
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path of music unto the Ultimate Heaven of Possession.
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Now in this method there are many roads and ways, some simple and
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direct, some hidden and mysterious, even as it is with human love
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|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
whereof no man hath made so much as the first sketches for a Map: for
|
|||
|
Love is infinite in diversity even as are the Stars. For this cause do
|
|||
|
I leave Love himself master in the heart of every one of you: for he
|
|||
|
shall teach you rightly if you but serve him with diligence and
|
|||
|
devotion even to abandonment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nor shall you take umbrage or surprise at the strange pranks that he
|
|||
|
shall play: for He is a wayward boy and wanton, wise in the Wiles of
|
|||
|
Aphrodite Our Lady His sweet Mother: and all His jests and cruelties
|
|||
|
are spices in a confection cunning as no art may match.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rejoice therefore in all His play, not remitting in any wise your own
|
|||
|
ardour, but glowing with the sting of His whips, and making of
|
|||
|
Laughter itself a sacrament adjuvant to Love, even as in the Wine of
|
|||
|
Rheims is sparkle and bite, like as they were ministers to the High
|
|||
|
Priest of its Intoxication.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is also fit that I write to you of the importance of Purity in
|
|||
|
Love. Now this matter concerneth not in any wise the object or the
|
|||
|
method of the practice: the one thing essential is that no alien
|
|||
|
element should intrude. And this is of most particular pertinence to
|
|||
|
the aspirant in that primary and mundane aspect of his work wherein he
|
|||
|
establisheth himself in the method through his natural affections.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For know, that all things are masks or symbols of the One Truth, and
|
|||
|
nature serveth alway to point out the higher perfection under the veil
|
|||
|
of the lower perfection. So then all the Art and Craft of human love
|
|||
|
shall serve you as an hieroglyphic: for it is written that That which
|
|||
|
is above is like that which is below: and That which is below is like
|
|||
|
that which is above.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Therefore also doth it behoove you to take well heed lest in any
|
|||
|
manner you fail in this business of purity. For though each act is to
|
|||
|
be complete on its own plane, and no influence of any other plane is
|
|||
|
to be brought in for interference or admixture, for that such is all
|
|||
|
impurity, yet each act should in itself be so complete and perfect
|
|||
|
that it is a mirror of the perfection of every other plane, and
|
|||
|
thereby becometh partaker of the pure Light of the highest. Also,
|
|||
|
since all acts are to be acts of Will in Freedom on every plane, all
|
|||
|
planes are in reality but one: and thus the lowest expression of any
|
|||
|
function of that Will is to be at the same time an expression of the
|
|||
|
highest Will, or only true Will, which is that already implied in the
|
|||
|
acceptance of the Law.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Be it also well understood of you that it is not necessary or right to
|
|||
|
shut off natural activity of any kind, as certain false folk, eunuchs
|
|||
|
of the spirit, most foully teach, to the destruction of many. For in
|
|||
|
every thing soever inhereth its own perfection proper to it, and to
|
|||
|
neglect the full operation and function of any one part bringeth
|
|||
|
distortion and degeneration to the whole. Act therefore in all ways,
|
|||
|
but transforming the effect of all these ways to the One Way of the
|
|||
|
Will. And this is possible, because all ways are in actual Truth One
|
|||
|
Way, the Universe being itself One and One Only, and its appearance as
|
|||
|
Multiplicity that cardinal illusion which it is the very object of
|
|||
|
Love to dissipate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the achievement of Love are two principles, that of mastering and
|
|||
|
that of yielding. But the nature of these is hard to explain, for they
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
are subtle, and are best taught by Love Himself in the course of the
|
|||
|
Operations. But it is to be said generally that the choice of one
|
|||
|
formula or the other is automatic, being the work of that inmost Will
|
|||
|
which is alive within you. Seek not then to determine consciously this
|
|||
|
decision, for herein true instinct is not liable to err.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But now I end, without further words: for in our Holy Books are
|
|||
|
written many details of the actual practices of Love. And those are
|
|||
|
the best and truest which are most subtly written in symbol and image,
|
|||
|
especially in Tragedy and Comedy, for the whole nature of these things
|
|||
|
is in this kind, Life itself being but the fruit of the flower of
|
|||
|
Love.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is then of Life that I must needs now write to you, seeing that by
|
|||
|
every act of Will in Love you are creating it, a quintessence more
|
|||
|
mysterious and joyous than you deem, for this which men call life is
|
|||
|
but a shadow of that true Life, your birthright, and the gift of the
|
|||
|
Law of Thelema.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OF LIFE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SYSTOLE AND DIASTOLE: these are the phases of all component things. Of
|
|||
|
such also is the life of man. Its curve arises from the latency of the
|
|||
|
fertilized ovum, say you, to a zenith whence it declines to the
|
|||
|
nullity of death? Rightly considered, this is not wholly truth. The
|
|||
|
life of man is but one segment of a serpentine curve which reaches out
|
|||
|
to infinity, and its zeros but mark the changes from the plus to
|
|||
|
minus, and minus to plus, coefficients of its equation. It is for this
|
|||
|
cause, among many others, that wise men in old time chose the Serpent
|
|||
|
as the Hieroglyph of Life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Life then is indestructible as all else is. All destruction and
|
|||
|
construction are changes in the nature of Love, as I have written to
|
|||
|
you in the former chapter proximate. Yet even as the blood in one
|
|||
|
pulse-throb of the wrist is not the same blood as that in the next, so
|
|||
|
individuality is in part destroyed as each life passeth; nay, even
|
|||
|
with each thought.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What then maketh man, if he dieth and is reborn a changeling with each
|
|||
|
breath? This: the consciousness of continuity given by memory, the
|
|||
|
conception of his Self as something whose existence, far from being
|
|||
|
threatened by these changes, is in verity assured by them. Let then
|
|||
|
the aspirant to the sacred Wisdom consider his Self no more as one
|
|||
|
segment of the Serpent, but as the whole. Let him extend his
|
|||
|
consciousness to regard both birth and death as incidents trivial as
|
|||
|
systole and diastole of the heart itself, and necessary as they to its
|
|||
|
function.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To fix the mind in this apprehension of Life, two modes are preferred,
|
|||
|
as preliminary to the greater realizations to be discussed in their
|
|||
|
proper order, experiences which transcend even those attainments of
|
|||
|
Liberty and Love of which I have hitherto written, and this of Life
|
|||
|
which I now inscribe in this my little book which I am making for you
|
|||
|
so that you may come unto the Great Fulfilment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first mode is the acquisition of the Magical Memory so-called, and
|
|||
|
the means is described with accuracy and clearness in certain of our
|
|||
|
Holy Books. But for nearly all men this is found to be a practice of
|
|||
|
exceeding difficulty. Let then the aspirant follow the impulse of his
|
|||
|
own Will in the decision to choose this or no.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The second mode is easy, agreeable, not tedious, and in the end as
|
|||
|
certain as the other. But as the way of error in the former lieth in
|
|||
|
Discouragement, so in the latter are you to be ware of False Paths. I
|
|||
|
may say indeed generally of all Works, that there are two dangers, the
|
|||
|
obstacle of Failure, and the snare of Success.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now this second mode is to dissociate the beings which make up your
|
|||
|
life. Firstly, because it is easiest, you should segregate that Form
|
|||
|
which is called the Body of Light (and also by many other names) and
|
|||
|
set yourself to travel in this Form, making systematic exploration of
|
|||
|
those worlds which are to other material things what your own Body of
|
|||
|
Light is to your own material form.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now it will occur to you in these travels that you come to many Gates
|
|||
|
which you are not able to pass. This is because your Body of Light is
|
|||
|
itself as yet not strong enough, or subtle enough, or pure enough: and
|
|||
|
you must then learn to dissociate the elements of that Body by a
|
|||
|
process similar to the first, your consciousness remaining in the
|
|||
|
higher and leaving the lower. In this practice do you continue,
|
|||
|
bending your Will like a great Bow to drive the Arrow of your
|
|||
|
consciousness through heavens ever higher and holier. But the
|
|||
|
continuance in this Way is itself of vital value: for it shall be that
|
|||
|
presently habit herself shall persuade you that the body which is born
|
|||
|
and dieth within so little a space as one cycle of Neptune in the
|
|||
|
Zodiac is no essential of your Self, that the Life of which you are
|
|||
|
become partaker, while itself subject to the Law of action and
|
|||
|
reaction, ebb and flow, systole and diastole, is yet insensible to the
|
|||
|
afflictions of that life which you formerly held to be your sole bond
|
|||
|
with Existence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And here must you resolve your Self to make the mightiest endeavours:
|
|||
|
for so flowered are the meadows of this Eden, and so sweet the fruit
|
|||
|
of its orchards, that you will love to linger among them, and to take
|
|||
|
delight in sloth and dalliance therein. Therefore I write to you with
|
|||
|
energy that you should not do thus to the hindrance of your true
|
|||
|
progress, because all these enjoyments are dependent upon duality, so
|
|||
|
that their true name is Sorrow of Illusion, like that of the normal
|
|||
|
life of man, which you have set out to transcend.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Be it according to your Will, but learn this, that (as it is written)
|
|||
|
they only are happy who have desired the unattainable. It is then
|
|||
|
best, ultimately, if it be your Will to find alway your chiefest
|
|||
|
pleasure in Love, that is, in Conquest, and in Death, that is, in
|
|||
|
Surrender, as I have written to you already. Thus then you shall
|
|||
|
delight in these delights aforesaid, but only as toys, holding your
|
|||
|
manhood firm and keen to pierce to deeper and holier ecstacies without
|
|||
|
arrest of Will.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Furthermore, I would have you to know that in this practice, pursued
|
|||
|
with ardour unquenchable, is this especial grace, that you will come
|
|||
|
as it were by fortune into states which transcend the practice itself,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
being of the nature of those Works of Pure Light of which I will to
|
|||
|
write to you in the chapter following after this. For there be certain
|
|||
|
Gates which no being who is still conscious of dividuality, that is,
|
|||
|
of the Self and not-Self as opposites, may pass through: and in the
|
|||
|
storming of those Gates by fiery assault of lust celestial, your flame
|
|||
|
will burn vehemently against your gross Self, though it be already
|
|||
|
divine beyond your present imagining, and devour it in a mystical
|
|||
|
death, so that in the Passing of the Gate all is dissolved in formless
|
|||
|
Light of Unity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now then, returning from these states of being, and in the return also
|
|||
|
there is a Mystery of Joy, you will be weaned from the Milk of
|
|||
|
Darkness of the Moon, and made partaker of the Sacrament of Wine that
|
|||
|
is the blood of the Sun. Yet at the first there may be shock and
|
|||
|
conflict, for the old thought persists by force of its habit: it is
|
|||
|
for you to create by repeated act the true right habit of this
|
|||
|
consciousness of the Life which abideth in Light. And this is easy, if
|
|||
|
your will be strong: for the true Life is so much more vivid and
|
|||
|
quintessential than the false that (as I rudely estimate) one hour of
|
|||
|
the former makes an impression on the memory equal to one year of the
|
|||
|
latter. One single experience, in duration it may be but a few seconds
|
|||
|
of terrestrial time, is sufficient to destroy the belief in the
|
|||
|
reality of our vain life on earth: but this wears gradually away if
|
|||
|
the consciousness, through shock or fear, adhere not to it, and the
|
|||
|
Will strive not continually to repetition of that bliss, more
|
|||
|
beautiful and terrible than death, which it hath won by virtue of
|
|||
|
Love.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There be moreover many other modes of attaining the apprehension of
|
|||
|
true Life, and these two following are of much value in breaking up
|
|||
|
the ice of your mortal error in the vision of your being. And of these
|
|||
|
the first is the constant contemplation of the Identity of Love and
|
|||
|
Death, and the understanding of the dissolution of the body as an Act
|
|||
|
of Love done upon the Body of the Universe, as also it is written at
|
|||
|
length in our Holy Books. And with this goeth, as it were sister with
|
|||
|
twin brother, the practice of mortal love as a sacrament symbolical of
|
|||
|
that great Death: as it is written ``Kill thyself'': and again ``Die
|
|||
|
daily.''
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And the second of these lesser modes is the practice of the mental
|
|||
|
apprehension and analysis of ideas, mainly as I have already taught
|
|||
|
you, but with especial emphasis in choice of things naturally
|
|||
|
repulsive, in particular, death itself, and its phenomena ancillary.
|
|||
|
Thus the Buddha bade his disciples to meditate upon Ten Impurities,
|
|||
|
that is, upon ten cases of death of decomposition, so that the
|
|||
|
Aspirant, identifying himself with his own corpse in all these
|
|||
|
imagined forms, might lose the natural horror, loathing, fear or
|
|||
|
disgust which he might have had for them. Know this, that every idea
|
|||
|
of every sort becomes unreal, phantastic, and most manifest illusion,
|
|||
|
if it be subjected to persistent investigation, with concentration.
|
|||
|
And this is particularly easy to attain in the case of all bodily
|
|||
|
impressions, because all material things, and especially those of
|
|||
|
which we are first conscious, namely, our own bodies, are the grossest
|
|||
|
and most unnatural of all falsities. For there is in us all, latent,
|
|||
|
that Light wherein no error may endure, and It already teaches our
|
|||
|
instinct to reject first of all those veils which are most closely
|
|||
|
wrapt about It. Thus also in meditation it is (for many men) most
|
|||
|
profitable to concentrate the Will to Love upon the sacred centres of
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
nervous force: for they, like all things, are apt images or true
|
|||
|
reflexions of their semblables in finer spheres: so that, their gross
|
|||
|
natures being dissipated by the dissolving acid of the Meditation,
|
|||
|
their finer souls appear (so to speak) naked, and display their force
|
|||
|
and glory in the consciousness of the aspirant.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yea, verily, let your Will to Love burn eagerly toward this creation
|
|||
|
in yourselves of the true Life that rolls its waves across the
|
|||
|
shoreless sea of Time! Live not your petty lives in fear of the hours!
|
|||
|
The Moon and Sun and Stars by which ye measure Time are themselves but
|
|||
|
servants of that Life which pulses in you, joyous drum-beat as you
|
|||
|
march triumphant through the Avenue of the Ages. Then, when each birth
|
|||
|
and death of yours are recognized in this perception as mere
|
|||
|
milestones on your ever-living Road, what of the foolish incidents of
|
|||
|
your mean lives? Are they not grains of sand blown by the desert wind,
|
|||
|
or pebbles that you spurn with your winged feet, or grassy hollows
|
|||
|
were you press the yielding and elastic turf and moss with lyrical
|
|||
|
dances? To him who lives in Life naught matters: his is eternal
|
|||
|
motion, energy, delight of never-failing Change: unwearied, you pass
|
|||
|
on from aeon to aeon, from star to star, the Universe your playground,
|
|||
|
its infinite variety of sport ever old and ever new. All those ideas
|
|||
|
which bred sorrow and fear are known in their truth, and thus become
|
|||
|
the seed of joy: for you are certain beyond all proof that you can
|
|||
|
never die; that, though you change, change is part of your own nature:
|
|||
|
the Great Enemy is become the Great Ally.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And now, rooted in this perfection, your Self become the very Tree of
|
|||
|
Life, you have a fulcrum for your lever: you are ready to understand
|
|||
|
that this pulsation of Unity is itself Duality, and therefore, in the
|
|||
|
highest and most sacred sense, still Sorrow and Illusion; which having
|
|||
|
comprehended, aspire yet again, even unto the Fourth of the Gifts of
|
|||
|
the Law, unto the End of the Path, even unto Light.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OF LIGHT
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I PRAY YOU, be patient with me in that which I shall write concerning
|
|||
|
Light: for here is a difficulty, ever increasing, in the use of words.
|
|||
|
Moreover, I am myself carried away constantly and overwhelmed by the
|
|||
|
sublimity of this matter, so that plain speech may whirl into lyric,
|
|||
|
when I would plod peaceably with didactic, expression. My best hope is
|
|||
|
that you may understand by virtue of the sympathy of your intuition,
|
|||
|
even as two lovers may converse in language as unintelligible to
|
|||
|
others as it seemeth silly, wanton, and dull, or as in that other
|
|||
|
intoxication given by Ether the partakers commune with infinite wit,
|
|||
|
or wisdom, as the mood taketh them, by means of a word or a gesture,
|
|||
|
being initiated to apprehension by the subtlety of the drug. So may I
|
|||
|
that am inflamed with love of this Light, and drunken on the wine
|
|||
|
Ethereal of this Light, communicate not so much with your reason and
|
|||
|
intelligence, but with that principle hidden in yourself which is
|
|||
|
ready to partake with me. Even so may man and woman become mad with
|
|||
|
love, no word being spoken between them, because of the induction (as
|
|||
|
it were) of their souls. And your understanding will depend upon your
|
|||
|
ripeness for perception of my Truth. Moreover, if so be that Light in
|
|||
|
you be ready to break forth, then Light will interpret to you these
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
dark words in the language of Light, even as a string inanimate, duly
|
|||
|
adjusted, will vibrate to its peculiar tone, struck on another cord.
|
|||
|
Read, therefore, not only with the eye and brain, but with the rhythm
|
|||
|
of the Life which you have attained by your Will to Love quickened to
|
|||
|
dancing measure by these words, which are the movements of the wand of
|
|||
|
my Will to Love, and so to enkindle your Life to Light.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In this mood did I interrupt myself in the writing of this my little
|
|||
|
book, and for two days and nights sleeplessly have I made
|
|||
|
consideration, wrestling vehemently with my spirit, lest by haste or
|
|||
|
carelessness I might fail toward you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In exercise of Will and of Love are implied motion and change, but in
|
|||
|
Life is gained an Unity which moveth and changeth only in pulse or in
|
|||
|
phase, and is even as music. Yet in the attainment of this Life you
|
|||
|
will already have experienced that the Quintessence thereof is pure
|
|||
|
Light, an ecstacy formless, and without bound or mark. In this Light
|
|||
|
naught exists, for It is homogeneous: and therefore have men called it
|
|||
|
Silence, and Darkness, and Nothing. But in this, as in all other
|
|||
|
effort to name it, is the root of every falsity and misapprehension,
|
|||
|
since all words imply some duality. Therefore, though I call it Light,
|
|||
|
it is not Light, nor absence of Light. Many also have sought to
|
|||
|
describe it by contradictions, since through transcendent negation of
|
|||
|
all speech it may by some natures be attained. Also by images and
|
|||
|
symbols have men striven to express it: but always in vain. Yet those
|
|||
|
that were ready to apprehend the nature of this Light have understood
|
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|
by sympathy: and so shall it be with you who read this little book,
|
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|
loving it. However, be it known unto you that the best of all
|
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|
instruction on this matter, and the Word best suited to the Aeon of
|
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|
Horus, is written in The Book of the Law. Yet also the Book Ararita is
|
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|
right worthy in the Work of the Light, as Trigrammaton in that of
|
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|
Will, Cordis Cincti Serpente in the Way of Love, and Liberi in that of
|
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|
Life. All these Books also concern all these Four Gifts, for in the
|
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|
end you will see that every one is inseparable from every other.
|
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|
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|
I wish to write to you with regard to the number 93, the number of
|
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|
Velhma. For it is not only the number of its interpretation Agaph, but
|
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|
also that of a Word unknown to you unless you be Neophyte of our Holy
|
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|
Order of the A...A... which word representeth in itself the arising of
|
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|
the Speech from the Silence, and the return thereunto in the End. Now
|
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|
this number 93 is thrice 31, which is in Hebrew LA, that is to say
|
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|
NOT, and so it denieth extension in the three dimensions of Space.
|
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|
Also I would have you to meditate most closely upon the name NU that
|
|||
|
is 56, which we are told to divide, add, multiply, and understand. By
|
|||
|
division cometh forth 0.12, as if it were written Nuith! Hadith! Ra-
|
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|
Hoor-Khuith! before the Dyad. By addition ariseth Eleven, the number
|
|||
|
of True Magick: and by multiplication Three Hundred, the Number of the
|
|||
|
Holy Spirit or Fire, the letter Shin, wherein all things are consumed
|
|||
|
utterly. With these considerations, and a full understanding of the
|
|||
|
mysteries of the Numbers 666 and 418, you will be armed mightily in
|
|||
|
this Way of far flight. But you should also consider all numbers in
|
|||
|
their scales. For there is no means of resolution better than this of
|
|||
|
pure mathematics, since already therein are gross ideas made fine, and
|
|||
|
all is ordered and ready for the Alchemy of the Great Work.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have already written to you of how, in the Will of Love, Light
|
|||
|
ariseth as the secret part of Life. And in the first, the little,
|
|||
|
Loves, the attained Life is still personal: later, it becometh
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
impersonal and universal. Now then is Will arrived, may I say so, at
|
|||
|
its magnetic pole, whence the lines of force point alike every way and
|
|||
|
no way: and Love also is no more a work, but a state. These qualities
|
|||
|
are become part of the Universal Life, which proceedeth infinitely
|
|||
|
with the enjoyment of the Will, and of Love as inherent therein. These
|
|||
|
things therefore, in their perfection, have lost their names, and
|
|||
|
their natures. Yet these were the Substance of Life, its Father and
|
|||
|
Mother: and without their operation and impact Life itself will
|
|||
|
gradually cease its pulsations. But since the infinite energy of the
|
|||
|
whole Universe is therein, what then is possible but that it return to
|
|||
|
its own First Intention, dissolving itself little by little into that
|
|||
|
Light which is its most secret and most subtle Nature?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For this Universe is in Truth Zero, being an equation whereof Zero is
|
|||
|
the sum. Whereof this is the proof, that if not, it would be
|
|||
|
unbalanced, and something would have come from Nothing, which is
|
|||
|
absurd. This Light or Nothing is then the Resultant or Totality
|
|||
|
thereof in pure Perfection; and all other states, positive or
|
|||
|
negative, are imperfect, since they omit their opposites.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yet, I would have you consider that this equality or identity of
|
|||
|
equation between all things and No thing is most absolute, so that you
|
|||
|
will remain no more in the one than you did in the other. And you will
|
|||
|
understand this greatest Mystery very easily in the light of those
|
|||
|
other experiences which you will have enjoyed, wherein motion and
|
|||
|
rest, change and stability, and many other subtle opposites, have been
|
|||
|
redeemed to identity by the force of your holy meditation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The greatest gift of the Law, then, cometh forth by the most perfect
|
|||
|
practice of the Three Lesser Gifts. And so thoroughly must you travail
|
|||
|
in this Work that you are able to pass from one side of the equation
|
|||
|
to the other at will: nay, to comprehend the whole at once, and for
|
|||
|
ever. This then your time-and-space-bound soul shall travel according
|
|||
|
to its nature in its orbit, revealing the Law to them that walk in
|
|||
|
chains, for that this is your particular function.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now here is the Mystery of the Origin of Evil. Firstly, by Evil we
|
|||
|
mean that which is in opposition to our own wills: it is therefore a
|
|||
|
relative, and not an absolute, term. For everything which is the
|
|||
|
greatest evil of some one is the greatest good of some other, just as
|
|||
|
the hardness of the wood which wearieth the axeman is the safety of
|
|||
|
him that ventureth himself upon the sea in a ship built of that wood.
|
|||
|
And this is a truth easy to apprehend, being superficial, and
|
|||
|
intelligible to the common mind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All evil is thus relative, or apparent, or illusory: but, returning to
|
|||
|
philosophy, I will repeat that its root is always in duality.
|
|||
|
Therefore the escape from this apparent evil is to seek the Unity,
|
|||
|
which you shall do as I have already shewn you. But I will now make
|
|||
|
mention of that which is written concerning this in The Book of the
|
|||
|
Law.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first step being Will, Evil appears as by this definition, ``all
|
|||
|
that hinders the execution of the Will.'' Therefore is it written:
|
|||
|
``The word of Sin is Restriction.'' It should also be noted that in
|
|||
|
The Book of the Thirty Aethyrs {Book 418} Evil appears as Choronzon
|
|||
|
whose number is 333, which in Greek importeth Impotence and Idleness:
|
|||
|
and the nature of Choronzon is Dispersion and Incoherence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then in the Way of Love Evil appears as ``all that which tends to
|
|||
|
prevent the Union of any two things.'' Thus The Book of the Law
|
|||
|
sayeth, under the figure of the Voice of Nuit: ``take your fill and
|
|||
|
will of love as ye will, when, where and with whom ye will! But always
|
|||
|
unto me.'' For every act of Love must be ``under will,'' that is, in
|
|||
|
accordance with the True Will, which is not to rest content with
|
|||
|
things partial and transitory, but to proceed firmly to the End. So
|
|||
|
also, in The Book of the Thirty Aethyrs, the Black Brothers are those
|
|||
|
who shut themselves up, unwilling to destroy themselves by Love.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thirdly, in the Way of Life Evil appears under a subtler form as ``all
|
|||
|
that which is not impersonal and universal.'' Here The Book of the
|
|||
|
Law, by the Voice of Hadit, informeth us: ``In the sphere I am
|
|||
|
everywhere the centre''. And again: ``I am Life and the giver of
|
|||
|
Life'' {....} `` `Come unto me' is a foolish word: for it is I that
|
|||
|
go.'' ``For I am perfect, being Not''. For this Life is in every place
|
|||
|
and time at once, so that in It these limitations no longer exist. And
|
|||
|
you will have seen this for yourself, that in every act of Love time
|
|||
|
and space disappear with the creation of the Life by its virtue, as
|
|||
|
also doth personality itself. For the third time, then, in even
|
|||
|
subtler sense, ``The word of Sin is Restriction.''
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Lastly, in the Way of Light this same versicle is the key to the
|
|||
|
conception of Evil. But here Restriction is in the failure to solve
|
|||
|
the Great Equation, and, later, to prefer one expression or phase of
|
|||
|
the Universe to the other. Against this we are warned in The Book of
|
|||
|
the Law by the Word of Nuit, saying: ``None'' {....} ``and two. For I
|
|||
|
am divided for love's sake, for the chance of union'', and therefore,
|
|||
|
``If this be not aright: if ye confound the space marks, saying: They
|
|||
|
are one: or saying, They are many;'' {....} ``then expect the direful
|
|||
|
judgments'' {....}
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now therefore by the favour of Thoth am I come to the end of this my
|
|||
|
book: and do you arm yourselves accordingly with the Four Weapons: the
|
|||
|
Wand for Liberty, the Cup for Love, the Sword for Life, the Disk for
|
|||
|
Light: and with these work all wonders by the Art of High Magick under
|
|||
|
the Law of the New Aeon, whose Word is Velhma.
|
|||
|
|