174 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
174 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
"The Mind of the Father riding on the subtle guiders which glitter with the
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inflexible tracings of relentless fire." ®MDRV¯ZOROASTER.®MDNM¯
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MAN.
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"What is man, that thou art mindful of him?"
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Man being the subject of these Essays, it is first proper to explain
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what will be meant therein by the word.
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Man is a microcosm: that is, an image (concentrated around the point of
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consciousness) of the macrocosm, or Universe. This Theorem is guaranteed by
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the hylo-idealistic demonstration that the perceptible Universe is an
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extension, or phantasm, of the nervous system.
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It follows that all phenomena, internal and external, may be classified
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for the purpose of discussing their observed relations, in any manner which
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experience may show to be the most convenient. (Examples: the elaborate
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classifications of science, chemical, physical, etc., etc. There is no
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essential truth in any of these aids to thinking: convenience is the sole
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measure.) Now for the purposes of analysing the spiritual nature of man, of
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recording and measuring his experiences in this kind, of planning his
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progress to loftier heights of attainment, several systems have been
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devised. That of the Abhidhamma is on the surface alike the most practical,
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the most scientific, and the most real; but for European students it is
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certainly far too unwieldly, to say nothing of other lines of criticism.
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Therefore, despite the danger of vagueness involved in the use of a
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system whose terms are largely symbolic, I have, for many reasons,
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preferred to present to the world as an international basis for
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classification, the classico-mathematical system which is vulgarly and
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erroneously (though conveniently) called the Qabalah.
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The Qabalah, that is, the Jewish Tradition concerning the initiated
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interpretation of their Scriptures, is mostly either unintelligible or
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nonsense. But it contains as it ground-plan the most precious jewel of
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human thought, that geometrical arrangement of names and numbers which is
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called the Tree of Life. I call it the most precious, because I have found
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it the most convenient method hitherto discovered of classifying the
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phenomena of the Universe, and recording their relations. Whereof the proof
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is the amazing fertility of thought which has followed my adoption of this
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scheme.
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Since all phenomena soever may be referred to the Tree of Life (which
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may be multiplied or subdivided at will for convenience' sake) it is
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evidently useless to attempt any complete account of it. The
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correspondences of each unit -- the Ten Sephiroth and the Two-and-Twenty
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Paths -- are infinite. The art of using it consists principally in
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referring all our ideas to it, discovering thus the common nature of
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certain things and the essential differences between others, so that
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ultimately one obtains a simple view of the incalculably vast complexity of
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the Universe.
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The whole subject must be studied in the Book 777, and the main
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attributions committed to memory: then when by constant use the system is
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at last understood -- as opposed to being merely memorised -- the student
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will find fresh light break in on him at every turn as he continues to
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measure every item of new knowledge that he attains by this Standard. For
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to him the Universe will then begin to appear as a coherent and a necessary
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Whole.
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For the purpose of studying these Little Essays, it will be sufficient
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if a bare outline of the Cosmic Theory which they imply be given: but it
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may be added that, the fuller the comprehension of the Tree of Life which
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the reader brings to them, the clearer will their thought appear, and the
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more cogent their conclusions.
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(1) ®MDUL¯Jechidah®MDNM¯
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This is the quintessential principle of the Soul, that which makes man
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at the same time identical with every other spark of Godhead, and different
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(as regards his point-of-view, and the Universe of which it is the centre)
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from all others. It is a Point, possessing only position; and that position
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is only definable by reference to co-ordinate exes, to secondary
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principles, which only pertain to it ®MDUL¯per accidents,®MDNM¯ and must be
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postulated as our conception grows.
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(2) ®MDUL¯Chiah.®MDNM¯
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This is the Creative Impulse or Will of Jechidah, the energy which
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demands the formulation of the co-ordinate axes aforesaid, so that Jechidah
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may obtain self-realisation, a formal understanding of what is implicit in
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its nature, of its possible qualities.
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(3) ®MDUL¯Neschamah.®MDNM¯
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This is the faculty of understanding the Word of Chiah. It is the
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intelligence or intuition of what Jechidah wishes to discover about itself.
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These three principles constitute a Trinity; they are ®MDUL¯one,®MDNM¯
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because they represent the being, and apparatus which will make the
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manifestation possible, of a God, in manhood. But they are only, so to
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speak, the mathematical structure of man's nature. One might compare them
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with the laws of physics as they are before they are discovered. There are
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as yet no data by whose examination they may be discerned.
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A conscious man, according, cannot possibly know anything of these three
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principles, although they constitute his essence. It is the work of
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Initiation to ®MDUL¯journey inwards®MDNM¯ to them. See, in the Oath of a
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Probationer of A.'.A.'. "I pledge myself to discover the nature and powers
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of my own Being."
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this triune principle being wholly spiritual, all that can be said about
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it is really negative. And it is complete in itself. Beyond it stretches
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what is called The Abyss. This doctrine is extremely difficult to explain;
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but it corresponds more or less to the gap in thought between the Real,
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which is ideal, and the Unreal, which is actual. In the Abyss all things
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exist, indeed, at least ®MDUL¯in posse,®MDNM¯ but are without any possible
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meaning; for they lack the substratum of spiritual Reality. They are
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appearances without Law. They are thus ®MDUL¯Insane Delusions.®MDNM¯
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Now the Abyss being thus the great storehouse of Phenomena, it is the
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source of all impressions. And the Triune Principle has intended a
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®MDUL¯machine®MDNM¯ for investigating the Universe; and this machine is the
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fourth Principle of Man.
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(4) ®MDUL¯Ruach®MDNM¯
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This may be translated Mind, Spirit, or Intellect: none of these is
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satisfactory, the connotation varying with every writer. The Ruach is a
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closely-knitted group of Five Moral and Intellectual principles,
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concentrated on their core, Tiphareth, the Principle of Harmony, the Human
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Consciousness and Will of which the four other Sephiroth are (so to speak)
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the feelers. And these five principles culminate in a sixth, Da(acu)ath,
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Knowledge. But this is not really a principle; it contains in itself the
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germ of self-contradiction and so of self-destruction. It is a false
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principle: for. as soon as Knowledge is analysed, it breaks up into the
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irrational dust of the Abyss.
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Man's aspiration to Knowledge is thus simply a false road: it is to spin
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ropes of sand.
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We cannot here enter into the doctrine of the "Fall of Adam," invented
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to explain in parable how it is that the Universe is so unfortunately
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constituted. We are concerned only with the observed facts.
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All these mental and moral faculties of the Ruach, while not purely
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spiritual like the Supernal Triad, are still, as it were, "in the air." To
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be of use, they need a basis through which to receive impressions, much as
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a machine requires fuel and fodder before it can manufacture the article
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which it is designed to produce.
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(5) ®MDUL¯Nephesch.®MDNM¯
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This is usually translated the "Animal Soul." It is the vehicle of the
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Ruach, the instrument by which the Mind is brought into contact with the
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dust of Matter in the Abyss, that it may feel it, judge it, and react to
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it. This is itself a principle still spiritual, in a sense; the actual body
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of man os composed of the dust of Matter, temporarily held together by the
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Principles which inform it, for their own purposes, and ultimately for the
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supreme purposes of self-realisation of Jechidah.
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But Nephesch, devised as it is with no other object that the direct
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traffic with Matter, tends to partake of its incoherence. Its faculties of
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perceiving pain and pleasure lure it into paying undue attention to one set
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of phenomena, into shunning another. Hence, for the Nephesch to do its work
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as it should, it requires to be dominated by the severest discipline. Nor
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is the Ruach itself to be trusted in this matter. It has its own tendencies
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to weakness and injustice. It tries every trick -- and it is diabolically
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clever -- to arrange its business with Matter in the sense most convenient
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to its inertia, without the smallest consideration of its duty to the
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Supernal Triad, cut off as that is from its comprehension; indeed,
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unsuspecting as it normally is of its existence.
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What then determines Tiphareth, the Human Will, to aspire to comprehend
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Neschamah, to submit itself to the divine Will of Chiah?
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Nothing but the realisation, born sooner or later of agonising
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experience, that its whole relation through Ruach and Nephesch with Matter,
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®MDUL¯i.e.,®MDNM¯ with the Universe, is, and must be, only painful. The
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senselessness of the whole procedure sickens it. It begins to seek for some
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menstruum in which the Universe may become intelligible, useful and
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enjoyable. In Qabalistic language, it aspires to Neschamah.
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This is what we mean in saying that the Trance of Sorrow is the motive
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of the Great Work.
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This "Trance of Sorrow" (which must be well-distinguished from any petty
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personal despair, and "conviction of sin," or other black magical
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imitations) being cosmic in scope, comprehending all phenomena actual or
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potential, is then already an Opening of the Sphere of Neschamah. The
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awareness of one's misfortune is itself an indication of the remedy. It
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sets the seeker on the right road, and as he develops his Neschamah he soon
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attains other Experiences of this high order. Her learns the meaning of his
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own true Will, to pronounce his own Word, to identify himself with Chiah.
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Finally, realising Chiah as the dynamic aspect of Jechidah, he becomes
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that pure Being, at once universal and individual, equally nothing, One,
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and All.
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It is of the essence of the Ideas of the Supernal Triad that the Laws of
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Reason which apply to intellectual functions are no longer operative. Hence
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it is impossible to convey the nature of these Experiences in rational
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language. Further, their scope is infinite in every direction, so that it
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would be futile to attempt to enumerate or to describe them in detail. All
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that one can do is to note the common types in very general language, and
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to indicate what experience has shown to be the most useful main lines of
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research.
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The Quest of the Holy Grail, the Search for the Stone of the
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Philosophers -- by whatever name we choose to call the Great Work -- is
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therefore endless. Success only opens up new avenues of brilliant
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possibility. Yea, verily, and Amen! the task is tireless and its joys
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without bounds; for the whole Universe, and all that in it is, what is it
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but the infinite playground of the Crowned and Conquering Child, of the
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insatiable, the innocent, the ever-rejoicing Heir of Space and Eternity,
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whose name is MAN?
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