254 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
254 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Principia Entropius Book Two >>The Principia EntroHocusPocus
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Part Nineteen of 15
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An Interlude. [Footnote: This chapter was dictated in answer to a casual
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remark by Soror Virakam. Fra. P. said jokingly that everything contained
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the Truth, if you knew how to find it; and, being challenged, proceeded to
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make good. It is here inserted, not for any value that it may have, but to
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test the reader. If it is thought to be a joke, the reader is one useless
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kind of fool; if it is thought that Fra. P. believes that the makers of the
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rimes had any occult intention, he is another useless kind of fool. Soror
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Virakam chose the rimes at hazard.]
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Every nursery rime contains profound magical secrets which are open
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to every one who has made a study of the correspondences of the Holy
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Qabalah. To puzzle out an imaginary meaning for this "nonsense" sets one
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thinking of the Mysteries; one enters into deep contemplation of holy
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things and God Himself leads the soul to a real illumination. Hence also
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the necessity of Incarnation; the soul must descend into all falsity in
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order to attain All-Truth.
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For instance:
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Old Mother Hubbard
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Went to her cupboard
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To get her poor dog a bone;
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When she got there,
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The cupboard was bare,
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And so the poor dog had none.
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Who is this ancient and venerable mother of whom it is spoken?
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Verily she is no other than Binah, as is evident in the use of the holy
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letter H with which her name begins.
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Nor is she the sterile Mother Ama -- but the fertile Aima; for
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within he she bears Vau, the son, for the second letter of her name, and R,
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the penultimate, is the Sun, Tiphareth, the Son.
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The other three letters of her name, B, A, and D, are the three
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paths which join the supernals.
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To what cupboard did she go? Even to the most secret caverns of the
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Universe. And who is this dog? Is it not the name of God spelt
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Qabalistically backwards? And what is this bone? The bone is the Wand, the
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holy Lingam!
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The complete interpretation of the rune is now open. This rime is
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the legend of the murder of Osiris by Typhon.
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The limbs of Osiris were scattered in the Nile.
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Isis sought them in every corner of the Universe, and she found all
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except his sacred lingam, which was not found until quite recently (vide
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Fuller, "The Star in the West").
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Let us take another example from this rich storehouse of magick
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lore.
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Little Bo Peep
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She lost her sheep
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And couldn't tell where to find them.
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Leave them alone!
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And they'll come home,
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Dragging their tails behind them.
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"Bo" is the root meaning Light, form which spring forth such words
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as Bo-Tree, Bodhisattva, and Buddha.
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And "Peep" is Apep, the serpent Apophis. THis poem therefore
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contains the same symbol as that in the Egyptian and Hebrew Bibles.
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The snake is the serpent of Initiation, as the Lamb is the Saviour.
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This ancient one, the Wisdom of Eternity, sits in its old anguish
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awaiting the Redeemer. And this holy verse triumphantly assures us that
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there is no need for anxiety. The Saviours will come after the other, at
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their own good pleasure, and as they may be needed, and drag their tails,
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that is to say those who follow out their holy commandment, to the ultimate
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goal.
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Again we read:
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Little Miss Muffet
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Sat on a tuffet,
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Eating of curds and whey,
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Up came a big spider,
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And sat down beside her,
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And frightened Miss Muffett away.
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Little Miss Muffett unquestionably represents Malkah, for she is
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unmarried. She is seated upon a "tuffet"; _id est_, she is the unregenerate
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soul upon Tophet, the pit of hell. And she eats curds and whey, that is,
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not the pure milk of the mother, but milk which has undergone
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decomposition.
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But who is this spider? Verily herein is a venerable arcanum
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connoted! Like all insects, the spider represents a demon. But why a
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spider? Who is this spider "who taketh hold with her hands, and is in the
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Kings Palaces"? The name of this spider is Death. It is the fear of death
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which first makes the soul aware of its forlorn condition.
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It would be interesting if tradition had preserved for us Miss
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Muffett's subsequent adventures.
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But we must proceed to consider the interpretation of the
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following rime:
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Little Jack Horner
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Sat in a corner,
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Eating a Christmas pie.
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He stuck in his thumb,
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And pulled out a plum,
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And said, "What a good boy am I!"
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In the interpretation of this remarkable poem there is a
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difference between two great schools of Adepts.
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One holds that Jack is merely a corruption of John, Ion, he who goes
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-- Hermes, the Messenger. The other prefers to take Jack simply and
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reverently as Iacchus, the spiritual form of Bacchus. But it does not
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matter very much whether we insist upon the swiftness or the rapture of the
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Holy Spirit of God; and that it is he of whom it is spoken here is evident,
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for the name Horner could be applied by none other than even the most
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casual reader of the Holy Gospel and the works of Congreve. And the context
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makes this even clearer, for he sits in a corner, that is the place of
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Christ, the Corner Stone, eating, that is, enjoying, that which the birth
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of Christ assures to us. He is the Comforter who replaces the absent
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Saviour. If there was still any doubt of His identity it would be cleared
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up by the fact that it is the thumb, which is attributed to the element of
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Spirit, and not one of the four fingers of the four lesser elements, which
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he sticks into the pie of the new dispensation. He plucks forth one who is
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ripe, no doubt to send him forth as a teacher into the world, and rejoices
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that he is so well carrying out the will of his Father.
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Let us pass from this most blessed subject to yet another.
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Tom, Tom, the piper's son,
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Stole a pig and away he run.
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The pig was eat,
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And Tom was beat,
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And Tom went roaring down the street.
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This is one of the more exoteric of these rimes. In fact, it is no
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much better than a sun-myth. Tom is Toum, the God of the Sunset (called the
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Son of Apollo, the Piper, the maker of music.) The only difficulty in the
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poem concerns the pig; for anyone who has watched an angry sunset in the
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Tropics upon the sea, will recognize how incomparable a description of that
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sunset is given in that wonderful last line. Some have thought that the pig
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refers to the evening sacrifice, others that she is Hathor, the Lady of the
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West, in her more sensual spect.
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But it is probable that this poem is only the first stanza of an
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epic. It has all the characteristic marks. Someone said of the Iliad that
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it did not finish, but merely stopped. This is the same. We may be sure
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that there is more of this poem. It tells us too much and too little. How
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came this tragedy of the eating of a merely stolen pig? Unveil this mystery
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of who "eat" it!
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It must be abandoned, then, as at least partially insoluble. Let us
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consider this poem:
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Hickory, dickory, dock!
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The mouse ran up the clock;
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The clock struck one,
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And the mouse ran down,
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Hickory, dickory, dock!
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Here we are on higher ground at once. The clock symbolizes the
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spinal column, or if you prefer it, Time, chosen as one of the conditions
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of normal consciousness. The mouse is the Ego; "Mus", a mouse, being only
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"Sum", "I am", spelt Qabalistically backwards.
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This Ego or Prana or Kundalini force being driven up the spine, the
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clock strikes one, that is, the duality of consciousness is abolished. And
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the force again subsides to its original level.
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"Hickory, dickory, dock!" is perhaps the mantra which was used by
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the adept who constructed this rime, thereby hoping to fix it in the minds
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of men; so that they might attain to Samadhi by the same method. Others
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attribute to it a more profound significance -- which is impossible to go
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into at this moment, for we must turn to: --
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Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall;
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Humpty Dumpty got a great fall;
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All the king's horses
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And all the king's men
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Couldn't set up Humpty Dumpty again.
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This is so simple as hardly to require explanation. Humpty Dumpty is
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of course the Egg of Spirit, and the wall is the Abyss -- his "fall" is
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therefore the descent of spirit into matter; and it is only too painfully
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familiar to us that all the king's horses and all his men cannot restore us
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to the height.
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Only the King Himself can do that!
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But one can hardly comment upon a theme which has been so fruitfully
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treated by Ludovicus Carolus, that most holy illuminated man of God. His
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masterly treatment of the identity of the three reciprocating paths of
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Daleth, Teth, and Pe, is one of the most wonderful passages in the Holy
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Qabalah. His resolution of what we take to be the bond of slavery into very
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love, the embroidered neckband of honour bestowed upon us by the King
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himself, is one of the most sublime passages in this class of literature.
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Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater,
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Had a wife and couldn't keep her.
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He put her in a peanut shell;
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Then he kept her very well.
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This early authentic text of the Hinayana School of Buddhism is much
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esteemed even to-day by the more cultured and devoted followers of that
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school.
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The pumpkin is of course the symbol of resurrection, as is familiar
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to all students of the story of Jonah and the gourd.
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Peter is therefore the Arahat, who has put an end to his series of
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resurrections. That he is called Peter is a reference to the symbolizing of
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Arahats as stones in the great wall of the guardians of mankind. His wife
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is of course (by the usual symbolism) his body, which he could not keep
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until he put her in a peanut shell, the yellow robe of a Bhikku.
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Buddha says that if any man became an Arahat he must either take the
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vows of a Bhikku that very day, or die, and it is this saying of Buddha's
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that the unknown poet wished to commemorate.
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Taffy was a Welshman
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Taffy was a thief;
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Taffy came to my house
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And stole a leg of beef.
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I went to Taffy's house;
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Taffy was in bed.
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I took a carving knife
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And cut off Taffy's head.
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Taffy is merely short for Taphtatharath, the Spirit of Mercury and
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the God of Welshmen or Theives. "My house" is of course equivalent to "my
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magick circle." Note that Beth, the letter of Mercury and "The Magus",
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means "a house."
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The beef is the symbol of the Bull, Apis the Redeemer. This is
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therefore that which is written, "Oh my God, disguise thy glory! Come as a
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thief, and let us steal away the sacraments!"
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In the following verse we find that Taffy is "in bed", owind to the
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operation of the sacrament. THe great task of the Alchemist has been
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accomplished; the mercury is fixed.
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One can then take the Holy Dagger, and separate the Caput Mortuum
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from the Elixer. Some Alchemists believe that the beef represents that
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dense physical substance which is imbibed by Mercury for his fixation; but
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here as always we should prefer the more spiritual interpretation.
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Bye, Baby Bunting!
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Daddy's gone a-hunting.
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He's gone to get a rabbit-skin
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To wrap my Baby Bunting in.
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This is mystical charge to the new-born soul to keep still, to
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remain steadfast in meditation; for, in _Bye_, Beth is the letter of
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thought, Yod that of the Hermit. It tells the soul that he Father of All
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will clothe him about with His own majestical silence. For is not the
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rabbit he "who lay low and said nuffin'"?
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Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man!
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Bake me a cake as fast as you can!
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Pat it and prick it and mark it with P!
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Bake it in the oven for baby and me!
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This rime is usually accompanied (even today in the nursery) with a
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ceremonial clapping of hands -- the symbol of Samadhi. Compare what is said
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on this subject in our famous "Advent" passage in Thessalonians.
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The cake is of course the bread of the sacrament, and it would ill
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become Frater P. to comment upon the third line -- though it may be
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remarked that even among the Catholics the wafer has always been marked with
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a phallus or a cross.
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[From BOOK 19, by Fra. Perdurabo and Sor. Virakam (Aleister Crowley and Mary
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d'Estes Sturges)]
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