3493 lines
211 KiB
Plaintext
3493 lines
211 KiB
Plaintext
Magick in Theory and Practice by Aleister Crowley
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December 22, 1988 e.v. key entry and proof reading with re-format 10/31/90 e.v.
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done by Bill Heidrick, T.G. of O.T.O. (further proof reading desirable)
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disk 3 of 4
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Copyright (c) O.T.O.
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O.T.O. P.O.Box 430
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(415) 454-5176 ---- Messages only.
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Note: This file may benefit from further proofreading, but care should be taken
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with citations of Liber AL --- most of Crowley's errors have been corrected.
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LIMITED LICENSE
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Except for notations added to the history of modification, the text on this
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Pages in the original are marked thus at the bottom: {page number} Comments and
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notes not in the original are identified with the initials of the source: AC
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note = Crowley note. WEH note = Bill Heidrick note, etc.
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All footnotes have been moved up to the place in text indexed and set off in
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double wedge brackets, viz. <<note...>>
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APPENDIX III
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Notes on the nature of the "Astral Plane"<<On consideration these notes have
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been left as they were originally written. In An XVII, Sol in Virgo, Soror
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Rhodon, a probationer of A.'. A.'., at that time in enjoyment of the privilege
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of sojourning in a certain secret Abbey of Thelema, asked Him to add to this
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book an outline of the uranography of the Astral Planes, in less technical
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language than that of Liber 777. These notes were accordingly jotted down by
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Him. To elaborate them further would have been to make them disproportionate
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to the rest of this treatise.>>.
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1) What are "Astral" and "Spiritual Beings?
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Man is one: it is a case of any consciousness assuming a sensible form.
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Microcosms and elementals. Maybe an elemental (e.g. a dog) has a cosmic
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conception in which he is a microcosm and man incomplete. No means of deciding
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same, as in case of kinds of space.<<See Poincare, passages quoted infra.>>
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Similarly, our gross matter may appear unreal to Beings clad in fine matter.
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Thus, science thinks vulgar perceptions "error". We cannot perceive at all
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except within our gamut; as, concentrated perfumes, which seem malodorous, and
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time-hidden facts, such as the vanes of a revolving fan, which flies can
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distinguish.
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"Hence:" no "a priori" reason to deny the existence of conscious
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intelligences with insensible bodies. Indeed we know of other "orders" of mind
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(flies, etc., possibly vegetables) thinking by means of non-human
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brain-structures.
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But the fundamental problem of Religion is this: Is there any praeter-human
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Intelligence, of the same order as our own, {245} which is not dependent on
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cerebral structures consisting of matter in the vulgar sense of the word?
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2) "Matter" includes all that is movable. Thus, electric waves are "matter".
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There is no reason to deny the existence of Beings who perceive by other means
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those subtle forces which we only perceive by our instruments.
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3) We can influence other Beings, conscious or no, as lion-tamers, gardeners,
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etc., and are influenced by them, as by storms, bacilli, etc.
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4) There is an apparent gap between our senses and their correspondences in
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consciousness. Theory needs a medium to join matter and spirit, just as physics
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once needed an "ether" to transmit and transmute vibrations.
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5) We may consider all beings as parts of ourselves, but it is more
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convenient to regard them as independent. Maximum Convenience is our cannon of
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"Truth".<<The passages referred to are as follows:
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"Les axiomes geometriques ne sont donc ni des jugements synthetiques a priori
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ni des faits experimentaux. Ce sont des conventions ...
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Des lors, que doit-on penser de cette question: La geometrie Euclidienne
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est-elle vraie?
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Elle n'a aucun sens. Autant demander si le systeme metrique est vrai et les
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anciennes mesures fausses; si les coordonnees cartesiennes sont vraies et les
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coordonnees polaires fausses. Une geometrie ne peut pas etre plus vraie qu'une
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autre; elle peut seulement etre "plus commode."
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On veut dire que par selection naturelle notre esprit s'est adapte aux
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conditions du monde exterieur, qu'il a adopte la geometrie la plus avantageuse
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a l'espece; ou en d'autres termes la plus commode. Cela est conforme tout a
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fait a nos conclusions; la geometrie n'est pas vraie: elle est avantageuse."
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Poincare, "La Science et l'Hypothese."
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"Nous choisirons donc ces regles non parce qu'elles sont vraies, mais parce
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qu'elles sont les plus commodes, et nous pourrions les resumer ainsi en disant:
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"La simultaneite de dex evenements, ou l'ordre de leur succession, l'egalite
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de deux durees, doivent etre definies de telle sorte que l'enonce des lois
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naturelles soit aussi simple que possible. En d'autres termes, toutes ces
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regles, toutes ces definitions ne sont pas que le fruit d'un opportunisme
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inconscient." Poincare "La Valeur de la Science."
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The Student may consult H. H. Joachim's "The Nature of Truth", in rebuttal.
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But most of these subtleties miss the point. Truth must be defined. It is a
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name, being a noun (nomen); and all names are human symbols of things. Now
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Truth is the power to arouse a certain reaction ("assent") in a man, under
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certain conditions: ("greenness", weight, all other qualities, are also powers).
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It exists in the object, whether latent or manifest; so experiencing both does
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and does not alter the facts. This is Solipsism, because we can only be
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conscious of our own consciousness; yet it is not Solipsism, because our
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consciousness tells us that its changes are due to the impact of an external
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force. Newton's First Law makes this a matter of definition.
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"What is truth?", beyond this, inquires into the nature of this power. It
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is inherent in all things, since all possible propositions, or their
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contradictories, can be affirmed as true. Its condition is identity of form (or
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structure) of the Monads involved.
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It requires a quality of mind beyond the "normal" to appreciate 0 Degree =
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X, etc., directly, just as H. H. Joachim's reasoning demands a point-of-view
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beyond that of the Bushman.>> We may thus refer {246} psychical phenomena to
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the intention of "Astral" Beings, without committing ourselves to any theory.
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Coherence is the sole quality demanded of us.
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6) Magick enables us to receive sensible impressions of worlds other than
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the "physical" universe (as generally understood by profane science). These
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worlds have their own laws; their inhabitants are often of quasi-human
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intelligence; there is a definite set of relations between certain "ideas" of
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ours, and their expressions, and certain types of phenomena. (Thus symbols, the
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Qabalah, etc. enable us to communicate with whom we choose.)
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7) "Astral" Beings possess knowledge and power of a different kind from our
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own; their "universe" is presumably of a different kind from ours, in some
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respects. (Our idea "bone" is not the same as a dog's; a short-sighted man sees
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things differently to one of normal vision.) It is more convenient to assume
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the objective existence of an "Angel" who gives us new knowledge than to allege
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that our invocation has awakened a supernormal power in ourselves. Such
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incidents as "Calderazzo"<<See the story, infra, about the origin of Book 4.>>
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and "Jacob"<<See the story, infra, about Amalantra.>> make this more cogent.
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{247}
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8) The Qabalah maps ourselves by means of a convention. Every aspect of
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every object may thus be referred to the Tree of Life, and evoked by using the
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proper keys.
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9) Time and Space are forms by which we obtain (distorted) images of Ideas.
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Our measures of Time and Space<<See Poincare's essay on the Nature of Space, as
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an idea invented by ourselves to measure the result of, and explain, our
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muscular movements.>> are crude conventions, and differ widely for different
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Beings. (Hashish shows how the same mind may vary.)
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10) We may admit that any aspect of any object or idea may be presented to
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us in a symbolic form, whose relation to its Being is irrational. (Thus, there
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is no rational link between seeing a bell struck and hearing its chime. Our
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notion of "bell" is no more than a personification of its impressions on our
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senses. And our wit and power to make a bell "to order" imply a series of
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correspondences between various orders of nature precisely analogous to Magick,
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when we obtain a Vision of Beauty by the use of certain colours, forms, sounds,
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etc.)
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11) "Astral" Beings may thus be defined in the same way as "material
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objects"; they are the Unknown Causes of various observed effects. They may be
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of any order of existence. We give a physical form and name to a bell but not
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to its tone, though in each case we know nothing but our own impressions. But
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we record musical sounds by a special convention. We may therefore call a
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certain set of qualities "Ratziel", or describe an impression as "Saturnian"
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without pretending to know what anything is in itself. All we need is to know
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how to cast a bell that will please our ears, or how to evoke a "spirit" that
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will tell us things that are hidden from our intellectual faculties.
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12) (a) Every object soever may be considered as possessed of an "Astral
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shape", sensible to our subtle perceptions. This "astral shape" is to its
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material basis as our human character is to our physical appearance. We may
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imagine this astral shape: e.g. we may "see" a jar of opium as a soft seductive
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woman with a cruel smile, just as we see in the face of a cunning and dishonest
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man the features of some animal, such as a fox. {248}
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(b) We may select any particular property of any object, and give it an astral
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shape. Thus, we may take the tricky perils of a mountain, and personify them
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as "trolls", or the destructive energies of the simoom, as "Jinn".
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(c) We may analyse any of these symbols, obtaining a finer form; thus the
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"spirit" contains an "angel", the angel an "archangel", etc.
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(d) We may synthesize any set of symbols, obtaining a more general form. Thus
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we may group various types of earth-spirit as gnomes.
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(e) All these may be attributed to the Tree of Life, and dealt with
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accordingly.
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(f) The Magician may prepare a sensible body for any of these symbols, and
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evoke them by the proper rites.
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13) The "reality" or "objectivity" of these symbols is not pertinent to the
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discussion. The ideas of X to the 4 power and Sq.Rt.of subscript -1 have
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proved useful to the progress of mathematical advance toward Truth; it is no
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odds whether a Fourth Dimension "exists", or whether Sq.Rt.of subscript -1 has
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"meaning" in the sense that Sq.Rt.of subscript 4 has, the number of units in
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the side of a square of 4 units.
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The Astral Plane --- real or imaginary --- is a danger to anybody who takes
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it without the grain of salt contained in the Wisdom of the above point of view;
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who violates its laws either wilfully, carelessly, ignorantly, or by presuming
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that their psychological character differentiates them from physical laws in the
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narrower sense; or who abdicates his autonomy, on the ground that the subtler
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nature of astral phenomena guarantees their authority and integrity.
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(14) The variety of the general character of the "planes" of being is
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indefinitely large. But there are several main types of symbolism corresponding
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to the forms of plastic presentation established by the minds of Mankind. Each
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such "plane" has its special appearances, inhabitants, and laws --- special
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cases of the general proposition. Notable among these are the "Egyptian" plane,
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which conforms with the ideas and methods of magick once in vogue in the Nile
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valley; the "Celtic" plane, close akin to {249} "Fairyland", with a Pagan
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Pantheism as its keynote, sometimes concealed by Christian nomenclature: the
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"Alchemical" plane, where the Great Work is often presented under the form of
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symbolically constructed landscapes occupied by quasi-heraldic animals and human
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types hieroglyphically distinguished, who carry on the mysterious operations of
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the Hermetic Art.
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There are also "planes" of Parable, of Fable, and of Folk-lore; in short,
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every country, creed, and literature has given its characteristic mode of
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presentation to some "plane" or other.
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But there are "planes" proper to every clairvoyant who explores the Astral
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Light without prejudice; in such case, things assume the form of his own mind,
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and his perception will be clear in proportion to his personal purity.
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On the higher planes, the diversity of form, due to grossness, tends to
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disappear. Thus, the Astral Vision of "Isis" is utterly unlike that of "Kali".
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The one is of Motherhood and Wisdom, ineffably candid, clear, and loving; the
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other of Murder and madness, blood-intoxicated, lust-befogged, and cruel. The
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sole link is the Woman-symbol. But whoso makes Samadhi on Kali obtains the
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self-same Illumination as if it had been Isis; for in both cases he attains
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identity with the Quintessence of the Woman-Idea, untrammelled by the qualities
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with which the dwellers by the Nile and the Ganges respectively disguised it.
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Thus, in low grades of initiation, dogmatic quarrels are inflamed by astral
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experience; as when Saint John distinguishes between the Whore BABALON and the
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Woman clothed with the Sun, between the Lamb that was slain and the Beast 666
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whose deadly wound was healed; nor understands that Satan, the Old Serpent, in
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the Abyss, the Lake of Fire and Sulphur, is the Sun-Father, the vibration of
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Life, Lord of Infinite Space that flames with His Consuming Energy, and is also
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that throned Light whose Spirit is suffused throughout the City of Jewels.
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Each "plane" is a veil of the one above it; the original individual Ideas
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become diversified as they express their elements. Two men with almost
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identical ideas on a subject would write two totally different treatises upon
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it.
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15) The general control of the Astral Plane, the ability to find {250} one's
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way about it, to penetrate such sanctuaries as are guarded from the profane, to
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make such relations with its inhabitants as may avail to acquire knowledge and
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power, or to command service; all this is a question of the general Magical
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attainment of the student.
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He must be absolutely at ease in his Body of Light, and have made it
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invulnerable. He must be adept in assuming all God-forms, in using all weapons,
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sigils, gestures, words, and signs. He must be familiar with the names and
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numbers pertinent to the work in hand. He must be alert, sensitive, and ready
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to exert his authority; yet courteous, gracious, patient, and sympathetic.
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16) There are two opposite methods of exploring the Astral Plane.
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(a). One may take some actual object in Nature, and analyse it by evoking its
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astral form, thus bringing it into knowledge and under control by applying the
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keys of the Qabalah and of Magick.
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(b). One may proceed by invoking the required idea, and giving body to the
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same by attracting to it the corresponding elements in Nature.
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17) Every Magician possesses an Astral Universe peculiar to himself, just as
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no man's experience of the world is coterminous with that of another. There
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will be a general agreement on the main points, of course; and so the Master
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Therion is able to describe the principal properties of these "planes", and
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their laws, just as he might write a geography giving an account of the Five
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Continents, the Oceans and Seas, the most notable mountains and rivers; he could
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not pretend to put forth the whole knowledge that any one peasant possesses in
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respect of his district. But, to the peasant, these petty details are precisely
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the most important items in his daily life. Likewise, the Magician will be
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grateful to the Master Therion for the Compass that guides him at night, the Map
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that extends his comprehension of his country, and shows him how best he may
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travel afield, the advice as to Sandals and Staff that make surer his feet, and
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the Book that tells him how, splitting open his rocks with an Hammer, he may be
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master of their Virgin Gold. But he will understand that his own {251} career
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on earth is his kingdom, that even the Master Therion is no more than a fellow
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man in another valley, and that he must explore and exploit his own inheritance
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with his own eyes and hands.
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The Magician must not accept the Master Therion's account of the Astral
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Plane, His Qabalistic discoveries, His instructions in Magick. They may be
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correct in the main for most men; yet they cannot be wholly true for any save
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Him, even as no two artists can make identical pictures of the same subject.
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More, even in fundamentals, though these things be Truth for all Mankind, as
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we carelessly say, any one particular Magician may be the one man for whom they
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are false. May not the flag that seems red to ten thousand seem green to some
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one other? Then, every man and every woman being a Star, that which is green
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to him is verily green; if he consent to the crowd and call it red, hath he not
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broken the Staff of Truth that he leaneth upon?
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Each and every man therefore that will be a Magician must explore the
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Universe for himself. This is pre-eminently the case in the matter of the
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Astral Plane, because the symbols are so sensitive. Nothing is easier than to
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suggest visions, or to fashion phantasms to suit one's ideas. It is obviously
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impossible to communicate with an independent intelligence --- the one real
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object of astral research --- if one allows one's imagination to surround one
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with courtiers of one's own creation. If one expects one's visions to resemble
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those of the Master Therion, they are only too likely to do so; and if one's
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respect for Him induces one to accept such visions as authentic, one is being
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false to one's soul; the visions themselves will avenge it. The true Guide
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being gone, the seer will stray into a wilderness of terror where he is tricked
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and tortured; he will invoke his idol the Master Therion, and fashion in His
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image a frightful phantasm who will mock him in his misery, until his mind
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stagger and fall; and, Madness swooping upon his carrion, blast his eyes with
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the horror of seeing his Master dissolve into that appalling hallucination, the
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"Vision of THE DEMON CROWLEY!"
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Remember, then, always, but especially when dealing with the Astral Plane,
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that man's breath stirs the Feather of Truth. What {252} one sees and hears is
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"real" in its way, whether it be itself, or distorted by one's desires, or
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created by one's personality. There is no touchstone of truth: the authentic
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Nakhiel is indistinguishable from the image of the Magician's private idea of
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Nakhiel, so far as he is concerned. The stronger one is to create, the more
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readily the Astral Light responds, and coagulates creatures of this kind. Not
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that such creation is necessarily an error; but it is another branch of one's
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Work. One cannot obtain outside help from inside sources. One must use
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precautions similar to those recommended in the chapter of Divination.
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The Magician may go on for a long time being fooled and flattered by the
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Astrals that he has himself modified or manufactured. Their natural
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subservience to himself will please him, poor ape!
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They will pretend to show him marvellous mysteries, pageants of beauty and
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wonder unspeakably splendid; he will incline to accept them as true, for the
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very reason that they are images of himself idealized by the imagination.
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But his real progress will stop dead. These phantasms will prevent him from
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coming into contact with independent intelligences, from whom alone he can learn
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anything new.
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He will become increasingly interested in himself, imagine himself to be
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attaining one initiation after another. His Ego will expand unchecked, till he
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seem to himself to have heaven at his feet. Yet all this will be nothing but
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his fool's face of Narcissus smirking up from the pool that will drown him.
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Error of this kind on the Astral Plane --- in quite ordinary visions with no
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apparent moral import --- may lead to the most serious mischief. Firstly,
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mistakes mislead; to pollute one's view of Jupiter by permitting the influence
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of Venus to distort it may end in finding oneself at odds with Jupiter, later
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on, in some crisis of one's work.
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Secondly, the habit of making mistakes and leaving them uncorrected grows
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upon one. He who begins by "spelling Jeheshua with a 'Resh'" may end by writing
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the name of the Dweller on the Threshold by mistake for that of his Angel.
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{253}
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Lastly, Magick is a Pyramid, built layer by layer. The work of the Body of
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Light --- with the technique of Yoga --- is the foundation of the whole. One's
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apprehension of the Astral Plane must be accurate, for Angels, Archangels, and
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Gods are derived therefrom by analysis. One must have pure materials if one
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wishes to brew pure beer.
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If one have an incomplete and incorrect view of the universe, how can one
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find out its laws?
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Thus, original omission or error tends to extend to the higher planes.
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Suppose a Magician, invoking Sol, were persuaded by a plausible spirit of Saturn
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that he was the Solar Intelligence required, and bade him eschew human love if
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he would attain to the Knowledge and Conversation of his Holy Guardian Angel;
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and suppose that his will, and that Angel's nature, were such that the Crux of
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their Formula was Lyrical Exaltation!
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Apart from the regular tests --- made at the time --- of the integrity of any
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spirit, the Magician must make a careful record of every vision, omitting no
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detail; he must then make sure that it tallies in every point with the
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correspondences in Book 777 and in Liber D. Should he find (for instance) that,
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having invoked Mercury, his vision contains names whose numbers are Martial, or
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elements proper to Pisces, let him set himself most earnestly to discover the
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source of error, to correct it, and to prevent its recurrence.
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But these tests, as implied above, will not serve to detect personation by
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self-suggested phantasms. Unless one's aura be a welter of muddled symbols
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beyond recognition, the more autohypnotic the vision is, the more smoothly it
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satisfies the seer's standards. There is nothing to puzzle him or oppose him;
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so he spins out his story with careless contempt of criticism. He can always
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prove himself right; the Qabalah can always be stretched; and Red being so
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nearly Orange, which is really a shade of Yellow, and Yellow a component of
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Green which merges into Blue, what harm if a Fiend in Vermilion appears instead
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of an Angel in Azure?
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The true, the final test, of the Truth of one's visions is their Value. The
|
||
most glorious experience on the Astral plane, let it dazzle and thrill as it
|
||
may, is not necessarily in accordance with {254} the True Will of the seer; if
|
||
not, though it be never so true objectively, it is not true for him, because not
|
||
useful for him. (Said we not a while ago that Truth was no more than the Most
|
||
Convenient Manner of Statement?)
|
||
It may intoxicate and exalt the Seer, it may inspire and fortify him in every
|
||
way, it may throw light upon most holy mysteries, yet withal be no more than an
|
||
interpretation of the individual to himself, the formula not of Abraham but of
|
||
Onan.
|
||
These plastic "Portraits of the Artist as a Young Man" are well enough for
|
||
those who have heard "Know Thyself". They are necessary, even, to assist that
|
||
analysis of one's nature which the Probationer of A.'. A.'. is sworn to
|
||
accomplish. But "Love is the law, love under will." And Our Lady Nuit is "...
|
||
divided for love's sake, for the chance of union." These mirror-mirages are
|
||
therefore not Works of Magick, according to the Law of Thelema: the true Magick
|
||
of Horus requires the passionate union of opposites.
|
||
Now the proof that one is in contact with an independent entity depends on
|
||
a sensation which ought to be unmistakeable if one is in good health. One ought
|
||
not to be liable to mistake one's own sensible impressions for somebody else's!
|
||
It is only Man's incurable vanity that makes the Astral "Strayed Reveller" or
|
||
the mystic confuse his own drunken babble with the voice of the Most High.
|
||
The essence of the right sensation consists in recognition of the reality of
|
||
the other Being. There will be as a rule some element of hostility, even when
|
||
the reaction is sympathetic. One's "soul-mate" (even) is not thought of as
|
||
oneself, at first contact.
|
||
One must therefore insist that any real appearance of the Astral Plane gives
|
||
the sensation of meeting a stranger. One must accept it as independent, be it
|
||
Archangel or Elf, and measure one's own reaction to it. One must learn from it,
|
||
though one despise it; and love it, however one loathe it.
|
||
One must realize, on writing up the record, that the meeting has effected a
|
||
definite change in oneself. One must have known and felt something alien, and
|
||
not merely tried on a new dress. {255}
|
||
There must always be some slight pang of pain in a true Astral Vision; it
|
||
hurts the Self to have to admit the existence of a not-Self; and it taxes the
|
||
brain to register a new thought. This is true at the first touch, even when
|
||
exaltation and stimulation result from the joy of making an agreeable contact.
|
||
There is a deeper effect of right reaction to a strange Self: the impact
|
||
invariable tends to break up some complex in the Seer. The class of ideas
|
||
concerned has always been tied up, labelled, and put away. It is now necessary
|
||
to unpack it, and rearrange its contents. At least, the annoyance is like that
|
||
of a man who has locked and strapped his bag for a journey, and then finds that
|
||
he has forgotten his pyjamas. At most, it may revolutionise his ideas of the
|
||
business, like an old bachelor with settled plans of life who meets a girl once
|
||
too often.
|
||
Any really first-class Astral Vision, even on low planes, should therefore
|
||
both instruct the Seer, and prepare him for Initiation. Those failing to pass
|
||
this test are to be classed as "practice".
|
||
One last observation seems fit. We must not assert the "reality" or
|
||
"objectivity" of an Astral Being on no better evidence than the subjective
|
||
sensation of its independent existence. We must insist on proof patient to all
|
||
qualified observers if we are to establish the major premiss of Religion: that
|
||
there exists a Conscious Intelligence independent of brain and nerve as we know
|
||
them. If it have also Power, so much the better. But we already know of
|
||
inorganic forces; we have no evidence of inorganic conscious Mind.
|
||
How can the Astral Plane help us here? It is not enough to prove, as we
|
||
easily do, the correspondences between Invocation and Apparition<<The Master
|
||
Therion's regular test is to write the name of a Force on a card, and conceal
|
||
it; invoke that Force secretly, send His pupil on the Astral Plane, and make him
|
||
attribute his vision to some Force. The pupil then looks at the card; the Force
|
||
he has named is that written upon it.>>. We must exclude concidence<<The most
|
||
famous novel of Fielding is called "Tom Jones". It happened that FRATER
|
||
PERDURABO was staying in an hotel in London. He telephoned a friend named
|
||
Fielding at the latter's house, and was answered by Mr. Fielding's secretary,
|
||
who said that his employer had left the house a few minutes previously, and
|
||
could only be reached by telephoning a certain office in the City at between 11
|
||
o'clock and a quarter past. FRATER PERDURABO had an appointment at 11 o'clock
|
||
with a music-hall star, the place being the entrance to a theatre. In order to
|
||
remind himself, he made a mental note that as soon as he saw the lady, he would
|
||
raise his hand and say, before greeting her: "Remind me that I must telephone
|
||
at once to Fielding", when he met her. He did this, and she advanced toward Him
|
||
with the same gesture, and said in the same breath, "Remind me that I have to
|
||
telephone to Tom Jones" --- the name of a music-hall agent employed by her.
|
||
It will be seen that there is here no question of any connection between the
|
||
elements of the coincidence. If a similar occurrence had taken place in the
|
||
course of communication with an alleged spirit, it would have been regarded as
|
||
furnishing a very high degree of proof of the existence of an independent
|
||
intelligence.
|
||
To make this clear, let me substitute the terms of the equation. Suppose two
|
||
independent mediums, A and B, were to receive respectively at the same moment
|
||
two messages, the first; "Ask B who wrote Hamlet", the second: "Ask A the name
|
||
of Shakespeare's most famous tragedy." The coincidence is here much simpler and
|
||
less striking than the one recorded above, for there is no question of arriving
|
||
at the identity by way of accidental synonyms concealing their rational
|
||
connection. Yet most students of Occult phenomena would admit that there was
|
||
a strong presumption that a single intelligence had deliberately devised the two
|
||
messages as a means of proving his existence.>>, telepathy<<In "The
|
||
International" of November, 1918, was published the conconclusion of an article
|
||
called "The Revival of Magick" by the Master Therion. The last sentence reads:
|
||
"Herein is Wisdom; let him that hath understanding count the number of the
|
||
Beast; for it is the number of a man; and his number is six hundred and three
|
||
score and six. GR:Tau-Omicron GR:Mu-Epsilon-Gamma-Alpha
|
||
GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu the Great Wild Beast, has the value, according
|
||
to the Greek system, of 666. It is, of course, the title of the Master Therion.
|
||
The Master Therion was, about this time, in communication with an
|
||
intelligence who gave the name of Amalantrah. On Sunday, February 24, 1918, at
|
||
9.30 p. m., The Master Therion asked Amalantrah if he could use the word
|
||
GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu as if it were Hebrew, with the idea of getting
|
||
further information as to the mystic meaning of the Word. The answer was "Yes".
|
||
He then asked: "Am I to take the word
|
||
GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu alone, or the three words GR:Tau-Omicron
|
||
GR:Mu-Epsilon-Gamma-Alpha GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu?" The answer was
|
||
to take the word GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu alone. The Master Therion
|
||
then asked what Hebrew letters should be used to transliterate the Greek. The
|
||
answer was: "Tau, Yod, Resh, Yod, Ayin, Nun", which adds to 740 or 1390,
|
||
according as Nun is given its ordinary value of 50, or its value as the final
|
||
letter of a word, 700. Neither of these numbers possessed any special
|
||
significance to The Master Therion. He became very annoyed at Amalantrah's
|
||
failure to be of use; so much so that the communications became confused, and
|
||
the work had to be abandoned for that evening. He tried various other Hebrew
|
||
spellings for the word GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu, but was unable to
|
||
obtain anything of interest. This is rather remarkable, as it is nearly always
|
||
possible to get more or less good results by trying various possibilities. For
|
||
example, the O might be equally well Ayin, Vau or Aleph.
|
||
On Monday morning, The Master Therion went to the office of "The
|
||
International," of which he was editor. At this period there was a coal famine
|
||
in New York, and it was forbidden to heat office buildings on Mondays. He
|
||
merely took away his mail and went home. On Tuesday morning He found on his
|
||
desk a letter which had arrived on Monday for the general editor, who had sent
|
||
it across to Him for reply, as it concerned The Master Therion rather than
|
||
himself. This letter had been written and posted on Sunday evening, at about
|
||
the same time as the communication from Amalantrah. The letter ends as follows:
|
||
"Please inform your readers that I, Samuel bar Aiwaz bie Yackou de Sherabad,
|
||
have counted the number of the Beast, and it is the number of a man.
|
||
HB:Nunfinal HB:Vau HB:Yod HB:Resh HB:Taw
|
||
N O I R Th
|
||
(Read from right to left) 50 6 10 200 400
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
666
|
||
|
||
Here, then, we see the most striking solution possible of the problem
|
||
presented to Amalantrah. Observe that Amalantrah had refused to give the
|
||
correct solution directly; as it would seem, in order to emphasize the
|
||
remarkable character of the intervention of this Assyrian correspondent.
|
||
Observe, too, that the latter was totally ignorant of the ordinary Qabalah, it
|
||
being quite generally known that GR:Tau-Omicron
|
||
GR:Mu-Epsilon-Gamma-Alpha-Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu adds up to 666 in Greek.
|
||
Observe, moreover, that nearly four months had passed since the problem was
|
||
propounded in "The International?" The Assyrian lived some distance outside New
|
||
York, and was an entire stranger to any of the staff of "The International."
|
||
The evidence appears overwhelming for the existence of Amalantrah, that he was
|
||
more expert in the Qabalah than The Master Therion himself, and that he was
|
||
(further) possessed with the power to recall this four-months-old problem to the
|
||
mind of an entirely unconnected stranger, causing him to communicate the correct
|
||
answer at the same moment as the question was being asked many miles away.
|
||
Coincidence, so completely adequate to explain the Fielding-Tom Jones
|
||
incident, is utterly incompetent as an alternative theory. The directly
|
||
purposeful character of the circumstances is undeniable; but if we are
|
||
resolutely determined to deny the possibility of the existence of Amalantrah,
|
||
which explains the whole affair so simply, we have still one resource. It
|
||
involves difficulties which The Master Therion cannot conceive as less than
|
||
those which encumber the other, but it is, at least, not entirely beyond
|
||
possibility. This theory is telepathy. One may postulate that the solution of
|
||
his problem existed in the subconscious mind of the Master Therion or in that
|
||
of His seer, and that this solution was telepathically impressed upon the
|
||
consciousness of the Assyrian so forcibly as to impel him to communicate it to
|
||
the Master Therion's colleague on "The International." Apart from the general
|
||
improbability of this hypothesis, it is strange that if "Amalantrah" were really
|
||
the subconscious mind of the seer, he should have given a wrong orthography.
|
||
His doing so (if he knew the correct spelling) is only explicable by his wish
|
||
not to take the edge off his plan for making the Assyrian's letter a fulminating
|
||
revelation of his existence, as would have happened if the secret had been
|
||
prematurely disclosed.
|
||
The case is here cited in order to illustrate the extreme care which ought
|
||
to be taken in excluding all alternative hypotheses before admitting the
|
||
existence of disembodied intelligences. It may be mentioned, however, that in
|
||
this particular case there are numerous other incidents which make the
|
||
telepathic theory untenable.>>, and subconscious knowledge.<<There is a
|
||
well-known story quoted in several treatises of psychology in which the heroine
|
||
is an ignorant English servant girl of quite inferior intelligence, and
|
||
unacquainted with any language, even her own. In the course of a fever, she
|
||
became delirious, and proceeded to reel off long passages of scholarly Hebrew.
|
||
Investigations showed that in her first youth she had been for a time in the
|
||
service of a Jewish Rabbi who had been accustomed to declaim his sermons in the
|
||
hearing of the girl. Although attaching no meaning to the words, she had stored
|
||
them mechanically in her subconscious memory, to be reproduced when the action
|
||
of the fever excited the group of cells where they were recorded.>> Our
|
||
praeter-human Intelligence {256} must convey a Truth not known to any human
|
||
mind, past or present. Yet this Truth must be verifiable.
|
||
There is but one document in the world which presents evidence that fully
|
||
satisfies these conditions. This is
|
||
|
||
LIBER AL vel LEGIS
|
||
|
||
the Book of the Law.
|
||
|
||
of this New Aeon of Horus, the Crowned and Conquering Child, the Aeon whose
|
||
Logos is THE BEAST 666, whose name in the Outer Order was FRATER PERDURABO.
|
||
The nature of the proof of the separate existence of praeterhuman
|
||
Intelligence, independent of bodily form, is extremely complicated. Its main
|
||
divisions may be briefly enumerated. {257}
|
||
AIWAZ, the name of the Intelligence in question, proves:
|
||
(a) His power to pre-arrange events unconnected with His scribe so that they
|
||
should fit in with that scribe's private calculations.
|
||
E.g. The Stele which reveals the Theogony of the Book was officially
|
||
numbered 666, in the Boulak Museum. The scribe had adopted 666 as His magical
|
||
number, many years previously. Again, the scribe's magical House, bought years
|
||
earlier, had a name whose value was 418. The scribe had calculated 418 as the
|
||
{258} number of the Great Work, in 1901 e.v. He only discovered that 418 was
|
||
the number of his house in consequence of AIWAZ mentioning the fact.
|
||
(b) His power to conceal a coherent system of numbers and letters in the text
|
||
of a rapidly-written document, containing riddles and ciphers opening to a
|
||
Master-Key unknown to the scribe, yet linked with his own system; this Key and
|
||
its subordinates being moreover a comment on the text. {259}
|
||
E.g. "The word of the Law is GR:Theta-Epsilon-Lambda-Eta-Mu-Alpha." (Will);
|
||
this word has the value of 93.
|
||
"Love is the law, love under will." Love, GR:Alpha-gamma-alpha-pi-eta, like
|
||
GR:Theta-epsilon-lambda-eta-mu-alpha, adds to 93.
|
||
AIWAZ itself adds to 93.<<This numeration was discovered years later. The
|
||
question then arose out of consideration of this discovery through S. Jacobs:
|
||
"Why is Aiwaz spelt Aiwass, not Aiwaz, in the Book of the Law?" In Greek
|
||
GR:Alpha-iota-digamma-alpha-sigma-sigma = 418. The author of the Book had
|
||
concealed in His own name not one only but two numbers, those of supreme
|
||
importance in the Book.>>
|
||
This was all strange to the scribe; yet years later he discovered the "Lost
|
||
Word" of one of his own Orders: it was 93 also.<<[WEH Note: This refers to the
|
||
word of the IIIrd Degree of O.T.O., readers who may wish to acquire it may apply
|
||
for initiation and work their way up through the Degrees. Ordo Templi Orientis,
|
||
JAF Box 7666, New York, NY 10116, USA.]>>
|
||
The Word of His most holy Order proved equally to count up {260} to 93.<<This
|
||
list by no means exhausts the series. In particular, Frater Perdurabo
|
||
discovered in 1923 that the Hebrew word for "to will" is also of the value of
|
||
93: and its special technical meanings throw yet further light on the meaning
|
||
of GR:Theta-epsilon-lambda-eta-mu-alpha as used by Aiwaz.
|
||
{WEH NOTE: In this instance, Crowley refers not to the word of III Degree
|
||
O.T.O., but to the Neophyte word of A.'. A.'..>> Now 93 is thrice 31; 31 is LA,
|
||
"Not" and AL, "The" or "God"; these words run throughout the Book, giving a
|
||
double meaning to many passages. A third 31 is the compound letter ShT, the two
|
||
hieroglyphs of Sh and T (many centuries old) being pictures of the "Dramatis
|
||
Personae" of the Book; and ShT being a haphazard line scrawled on the MS. touch
|
||
letters which added to 418, valuing "this circle squared in its failure" as
|
||
GR:pi correct to six places of decimals, etc.
|
||
Again: "thou shalt know not"<<[WEH Note: It is remarkable that Crowley
|
||
succeeds in blowing every quotation of "Liber AL" on this page. This despite
|
||
the injunction of the Book itself: AL I,54: "Change not as much as the style
|
||
of a letter; for behold! thou, o prophet, shalt not behold all these mysteries
|
||
hidden therein." Crowley strongly resisted the idea that he could not
|
||
understand all of the Book. In later life, he came to grudgingly accept this
|
||
limitation. Also, Achad did not work out as his successor. Several of these
|
||
mis-quotes relate to that belief. This particular mis-quote could come from as
|
||
many as six points in the text, but here is no part of the text in which this
|
||
quote appears exactly.]>>, meaning "thou shalt know LA"; and "he shall discover
|
||
the Key of it all"<<[WEH Note: This misquote could be from AL III,47: "... Let
|
||
him not seek to try: but one cometh after him, whence I say not, who shall
|
||
discover the Key of it all....".]>>, "id est," the Key AL.
|
||
|
||
(c) His power to combine subsequent events beyond the control of the scribe
|
||
or his associates, so that they confirmed statements in the Book. Or, per
|
||
contra, to predict such events.
|
||
E.g. The first Scarlet Woman proved unworthy, and suffered the exact
|
||
penalties predicted.
|
||
Again, "one cometh after thee; he shall discover the key."<<[WEH Note:
|
||
misquoted from AL II,76: "...There cometh one to follow thee: he shall expound
|
||
it. ..."]>> This one was to be the "child" of the scribe, "and that
|
||
strangely"<<[WEH Note: This time the misquote is in the style of the letters:
|
||
AL III,47: "This book shall be translated into all tongues: but always with the
|
||
original in the writing of the Beast; for in the chance shape of the letters and
|
||
their position to one another: in these are mysteries that no Beast shall
|
||
divine. Let him not seek to try: but one cometh after him, whence I say not,
|
||
who shall discover the Key of it all. Then this line drawn is a key: then this
|
||
circle squared in its failure is a key also. And Abrahadabra. It shall be his
|
||
child & that strangely. Let him not seek after this; for thereby alone can he
|
||
fall from it." --- interesting that these misquotes seem to hit verses that
|
||
either appear to warn Crowley against misquoting or of his limits.]>>.
|
||
Nine months after THE BEAST 666 had gotten a Magical "child" upon His
|
||
concubine Jane Foster, a "Babe of the Abyss" was born, Frater Achad asserting
|
||
his right to that grade, and thus "coming after" THE BEAST 666, who had been the
|
||
last Adept to do so. And this "child" was definitely "one", since "one" is the
|
||
meaning of his motto Achad. Finally, he did in fact "discover the key of it
|
||
all"<<[WEH Note: see the citation in an earlier note of mine. This time Crowley
|
||
missed the "style of the letter" again.]>> after THE BEAST Himself had failed
|
||
to do so in 14 years of study.
|
||
|
||
(d) His power to conceive and express in concise terms true solutions of the
|
||
main problems of the Universe.
|
||
E.g. The formula of Nuith and Hadith explain Existence in the terms of
|
||
Mathematical-Logical Philosophy, so as to satisfy the difficulties of
|
||
reconciling Dualism, Monism and Nihilism; all {261} antinomies in all spheres;
|
||
and the Original Perfection with the Manifest Imperfection of Things.
|
||
Again "Do that thou wilt...", the most sublimely austere ethical precept ever
|
||
uttered, despite its apparent licence, is seen on analysis to be indeed "...the
|
||
whole of the Law.", the sole and sufficient warrant for human action, the
|
||
self-evident Code of Righteousness, the identification of Fate with Freewill,
|
||
and the end of the Civil War in Man's nature by appointing the Canon of Truth,
|
||
the conformity of things with themselves, to determine his every act. "Do what
|
||
thou wilt..." is to bid Stars to shine, Vines to bear grapes, Water to seek its
|
||
level; man is the only being in Nature that has striven to set himself at odds
|
||
with himself.
|
||
|
||
(e) His power to interpret the Spirit of the New Aeon, the relapse into
|
||
ruthless savagery of the most civilized races, at a time when war was
|
||
discredited by most responsible men.
|
||
|
||
(f) His power to comprehend and control these various orders of ideas and
|
||
events, demonstrating thereby a mind and a means of action intelligible to, yet
|
||
immensely above, all human capacity; to bind the whole into a compact
|
||
cryptograph displaying mastery of English, of mathematical and philosophical
|
||
conceptions, of poetic splendour and intense passion, while concealing in the
|
||
letters and words a complex cipher involving the knowledge of facts never till
|
||
than existing in any human mind, and depending on the control of the arm of the
|
||
scribe, though He thought He was writing consciously from dictation; and to
|
||
weave into a single pattern so many threads of proof of different orders that
|
||
every type of mind, so it be but open and just, may be sure of the existence of
|
||
AIWAZ as a being independent of body, conscious and individual, with a mind
|
||
mightier than man's, and a power beyond man's set in motion by will.
|
||
In a word, the Book of the Law proves the prime postulate of Religion.
|
||
The Magician may therefore be confident that Spiritual Beings exist, and seek
|
||
the Knowledge and conversation of His own Holy Guardian Angel with the same
|
||
ardour as that of FRATER PERDURABO when He abandoned all: love, wealth, rank,
|
||
fame, to seek Him. Nay, this he must do or condemn himself to be {262} torn
|
||
asunder by the Maenads of his insensate impulses; he hath no safety save he
|
||
himself be Bacchus! Bacchus, divine and human! Bacchus, begotten on Semele of
|
||
Zeus, the adulterous Lord of Thunder ravishing, brutally, his virginal victim!
|
||
Bacchus, babe hidden from hate in the most holy of holies, the secret of thy
|
||
sire, in the Channel of the Star-Spate, Whereof one Serpent is thy soul!
|
||
Bacchus, twy-formed, man-woman, Bacchus, whose innocence tames the Tiger, while
|
||
yet thy horns drip blood upon thy mouth, and sharpen the merriment of wine to
|
||
the madness of murder! Bacchus, Thy thyrsus oozes sap; thine ivy clings to it;
|
||
thy Lion-skin slips from thy sleek shoulders, slips from thy lissome loins;
|
||
drunk on delight of the godly grape, thou knowest no more the burden of the body
|
||
and the vexation of the spirit.
|
||
|
||
Come, Bacchus, come thou hither, come out of the East; come out of the East,
|
||
astride the Ass of Priapus! Come with thy revel of dancers and singers! Who
|
||
followeth thee, forbearing to laugh and to leap? Come, in thy name Dionysus,
|
||
that maidens be mated to God-head! Come, in thy name Iacchus, with thy mystical
|
||
fan to winnow the air, each gust of thy Spirit inspiring our Soul, that we bear
|
||
to thee Sons in Thine Image!
|
||
|
||
Verily and Amen! Let not the Magician forget for a single second what is his
|
||
one sole business. His uninitiated "self" (as he absurdly thinks it) is a mob
|
||
of wild women, hysterical from uncomprehended and unstated animal instinct; they
|
||
will tear Pentheus, the merely human king who presumes to repress them, into
|
||
mere shreds of flesh; his own mother, Nature, the first to claw at his windpipe!
|
||
None but Bacchus, the Holy Guardian Angel, hath grace to be God to this riot of
|
||
maniacs; he alone can transform the disorderly rabble into a pageant of
|
||
harmonious movements, tune their hyaena howls to the symphony of a paean, and
|
||
their reasonless rage to self-controlled rapture. It is this Angel whose nature
|
||
is doubly double, that He may partake of every sacrament. He is at once a God
|
||
who is drunken with the wine of earth, and the mammal who quaffs the Blood of
|
||
God to purge him of mortality. He is a woman as he accepts all impulses, are
|
||
they not His? He is a man to stamp Himself upon whatever would hallow itself
|
||
to Him. He wields the Wand, {263} with cone of pine and ivy tendrils; the Angel
|
||
creates continually, wreathing His Will in clinging beauty, imperishably green.
|
||
The Tiger, the symbol of the brutal passions of man, gambols about its
|
||
master's heels; and He bestrides the Ass of Priapus; he makes his sexual force
|
||
carry him whither He wills to go.
|
||
Let the Magician therefore adventure himself upon the Astral Plane with the
|
||
declared design to penetrate to a sanctuary of discarnate Beings such as are
|
||
able to instruct and fortify him, also to prove their identity by testimony
|
||
beyond rebuttal. All explanations other than these are of value only as
|
||
extending and equilibrating Knowledge, or possibly as supplying Energy to such
|
||
Magicians as may have found their way to the Sources of Strength. In all cases,
|
||
naught is worth an obol save as it serve to help the One Great Work.
|
||
He who would reach Intelligences of the type under discussion may expect
|
||
extreme difficulty. The paths are guarded; there is a lion in the way.
|
||
Technical expertness will not serve here; it is necessary to satisfy the Warders
|
||
of one's right to enter the presence of the Master. Particular pledges may be
|
||
demanded, ordeals imposed, and initiations conferred. These are most serious
|
||
matters; the Body of Light must be fully adult, irrevocably fixed, or it will
|
||
be disintegrated at the outset. But, being fit to pass through such
|
||
experiences, it is bound utterly to its words and acts. It cannot even appear
|
||
to break an oath, as its fleshly fellow may do.
|
||
Such, then is a general description of the Astral Plane, and of the proper
|
||
conduct of the Magician in his dealings therewith.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
{264}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX IV
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIBER SAMEKH
|
||
|
||
Theurgia Goetia Summa
|
||
|
||
(CONGRESSUS CUM DAEMONE)
|
||
|
||
sub figura DCCC
|
||
|
||
being the Ritual employed by the Beast 666 for the Attainment of the Knowledge
|
||
and Conversation of his Holy Guardian Angel during the Semester of His
|
||
performance of the Operation of the Sacred Magick of ABRAMELIN THE MAGE.
|
||
(Prepared An XVII Sun in Virgo at the Abbey of Thelema in Cephalaedium by the
|
||
Beast 666 in service to FRATER PROGRADIOR.)
|
||
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION of A.'. A.'. Class D for the Grade of Adeptus Minor.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
{265}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
POINT
|
||
|
||
I
|
||
|
||
EVANGELII TEXTUS REDACTUS
|
||
|
||
"The Invocation."
|
||
|
||
Magically restored, with the significance of the
|
||
|
||
BARBAROUS NAMES
|
||
|
||
Etymologically or Qabalistically determined and paraphrased in English.
|
||
|
||
Section A. The Oath.
|
||
|
||
1. Thee I invoke, the Bornless One.
|
||
2. Thee, that didst create the Earth and the Heavens.
|
||
3. Thee, that didst create the Night and the Day.
|
||
4. Thee, that didst create the darkness and the Light.
|
||
5. Thou art ASAR UN-NEFER ("Myself made Perfect"):
|
||
Whom no man hath seen at any time.
|
||
6. Thou art IA-BESZ ("the Truth in Matter").
|
||
7. Thou art IA-APOPHRASZ ("the Truth in Motion").
|
||
8. Thou hast distinguished between the Just and the Unjust.
|
||
9. Thou didst make the Female and the Male.
|
||
10. Thou didst produce the Seeds and the Fruit.
|
||
11. Thou didst form Men to love one another, and to hate one
|
||
another.
|
||
|
||
Section Aa.
|
||
|
||
1. I am ANKH - F - N - KHONSU thy Prophet, unto Whom
|
||
Thou didst commit Thy Mysteries, the Ceremonies of
|
||
KHEM.
|
||
2. Thou didst produce the moist and the dry, and that which
|
||
nourisheth all created Life.
|
||
3. Hear Thou Me, for I am the Angel of PTAH - APO -
|
||
PHRASZ - RA (vide the Rubric): this is Thy True Name,
|
||
handed down to the Prophets of KHEM. {266}
|
||
|
||
Section B. Air.
|
||
Hear Me: ---
|
||
|
||
AR "O breathing, flowing Sun!" ThIAF<<The letter F is used
|
||
to represent the Hebrew Vau and the Greek Digamma; its sound lies between those
|
||
of the English long o and long oo, as in Rope and Tooth.>>
|
||
"O Sun IAF! O Lion-Serpent Sun, The
|
||
Beast that whirlest forth, a thunder-
|
||
bolt, begetter of Life!"
|
||
RhEIBET "Thou that flowest! Thou that goest!"
|
||
A-ThELE-BER-SET "Thou Satan-Sun Hadith that goest
|
||
without Will!"
|
||
A "Thou Air! Breath! Spirit! Thou
|
||
without bound or bond!"
|
||
BELAThA "Thou Essence, Air Swift-streaming,
|
||
Elasticity!"
|
||
ABEU "Thou Wanderer, Father of All!"
|
||
EBEU "Thou Wanderer, Spirit of All!"
|
||
PhI-ThETA-SOE "Thou Shining Force of Breath! Thou
|
||
Lion-Serpent Sun! Thou Saviour,
|
||
save!"
|
||
IB "Thou Ibis, secret solitary Bird, inviolate
|
||
Wisdom, whose Word in Truth,
|
||
creating the World by its Magick!"
|
||
ThIAF "O Sun IAF! O Lion-Serpent Sun, The
|
||
Beas that whirlest forth, a thunder-
|
||
bolt, begetter of Life!"
|
||
(The conception is of Air, glowing, inhabited by a Solar-Phallic Bird, "the Holy
|
||
Ghost", of a Mercurial Nature.)
|
||
Hear me, and make all Spirits subject unto Me; so that every Spirit of the
|
||
Firmament and of the Ether: upon the Earth and under the Earth, on dry land and
|
||
in the water; of Whirling Air, and of rushing Fire, and every Spell and Scourge
|
||
of God may be obedient unto Me. {267}
|
||
|
||
Section C. Fire.
|
||
|
||
I invoke Thee, the Terrible and Invisible God: Who dwellest in the Void Place
|
||
of the Spirit: ---
|
||
|
||
AR-O-GO-GO-RU-ABRAO "Thou spiritual Sun! Satan, Thou
|
||
Eye, Thou Lust! Cry aloud! Cry
|
||
aloud! Whirl the Wheel, O my
|
||
Father, O Satan, O Sun!"
|
||
SOTOU "Thou, the Saviour!"
|
||
MUDORIO "Silence! Give me Thy Secret!"
|
||
PhALARThAO "Give me suck, Thou Phallus, Thou
|
||
Sun!"
|
||
OOO "Satan, thou Eye, thou Lust!"
|
||
"Satan, thou Eye, thou Lust!"
|
||
"Satan, thou Eye, thou Lust!"
|
||
AEPE "Thou self-caused, self-determined,
|
||
exalted, Most High!"
|
||
|
||
The Bornless One. (Vide supra).
|
||
(The conception is of Fire, glowing, inhabited by a Solar-Phallic Lion of a
|
||
Uranian nature.)
|
||
Hear Me, and make all Spirits subject unto Me: so that every Spirit of the
|
||
Firmament and of the Ether: upon the Earth and under the Earth: on dry Land and
|
||
in the Water: of Whirling Air, and of rushing Fire, and every Spell and Scourge
|
||
of God may be obedient unto Me.
|
||
|
||
Section D. Water.
|
||
|
||
Hear Me: ---
|
||
|
||
RU-ABRA-IAF<<See, for the formula of IAF, or rather FIAOF, Book 4 Part III,
|
||
Chapter V. The form FIAOF will be found preferable in practice.>>
|
||
"Thou the Wheel, thou the Womb,
|
||
that containeth the Father IAF!"
|
||
MRIODOM "Thou the Sea, the Abode!"
|
||
BABALON-BAL-BIN-ABAFT "Babalon! Thou Woman of Whoredom" {268}
|
||
"Thou, Gate of the Great God ON!
|
||
Thou Lady of the Understanding of
|
||
the Ways!"
|
||
ASAL-ON-AI "Hail Thou, the unstirred! Hail,
|
||
sister and bride of ON, of the God
|
||
that is all and is none, by the Power
|
||
of Eleven!"
|
||
APhEN-IAF "Thou Treasure of IAO!"
|
||
I "Thou Virgin twin-sexed! Thou Secret
|
||
Seed! Thou inviolate Wisdom!"
|
||
PhOTETh "Abode of the Light .................
|
||
ABRASAX "......of the Father, the Sun, of
|
||
Hadith, of the spell of the Aeon
|
||
of Horus!"
|
||
AEOOU "Our Lady of the Western Gate of
|
||
Heaven!"
|
||
ISChURE "Mighty art Thou!"
|
||
|
||
Mighty and Bornless One! (Vide Supra)
|
||
(The conception is of Water, glowing, inhabited by a Solar-Phallic
|
||
Dragon-Serpent, of a Neptunian nature.)
|
||
Hear Me: and make all Spirits subject unto Me: so that every Spirit of the
|
||
Firmament and of the Ether: upon the Earth and under the Earth: on dry Land and
|
||
in the Water: of Whirling Air, and of rushing Fire: and every Spell and Scourge
|
||
of God may be obedient unto Me.
|
||
|
||
Section E. Earth.
|
||
|
||
I invoke Thee: ---
|
||
|
||
MA "O Mother! O Truth!"
|
||
BARRAIO "Thou Mass!"<<"Mass", in the sense of the word which is
|
||
used by physicists. The impossibility of defining it will not deter the
|
||
intrepid initiate (in view of the fact that the fundamental conception is beyond
|
||
the normal categories of reason.)>>
|
||
IOEL "Hail, Thou that art!"
|
||
KOThA "Thou hollow one!" {269}
|
||
AThOR-e-BAL-O "Thou Goddess of Beauty and Love,
|
||
whom Satan, beholding, desireth!"
|
||
ABRAFT "The Fathers, male-female, desire
|
||
Thee!"
|
||
|
||
(The conception is of Earth, glowing, inhabited by a Solar-Phallic
|
||
Hippopotamus<<Sacred to AHAThOOR. The idea is that of the Female conceived as
|
||
invulnerable, reposeful, of enormous swallowing capacity etc.>> of a Venereal
|
||
nature.)
|
||
Hear Me: and make all Spirits subject unto Me: so that every Spirit of the
|
||
Firmament, and of the Ether: upon The Earth and under the Earth: on dry land and
|
||
in the Water: of Whirling Air, and of rushing Fire: and every Spell and Scourge
|
||
of God may be obedient unto Me.
|
||
|
||
Section F. Spirit.
|
||
|
||
Hear Me:
|
||
|
||
AFT "Male-Female Spirits!"
|
||
ABAFT "Male-Female Sires!"
|
||
BAS-AUMGN "Ye that are Gods, going forth, uttering
|
||
AUMGN. (The Word that goeth
|
||
from
|
||
(A) Free Breath.
|
||
(U) through Willed Breath.
|
||
(M) and stopped Breath.
|
||
(GN) to Continuous Breath.
|
||
thus symbolizing the whole course of
|
||
spiritual life. A is the formless Hero;
|
||
U is the six-fold solar sound of physical
|
||
life, the triangle of Soul being
|
||
entwined with that of Body; M is the
|
||
silence of "death"; GN is the nasal
|
||
sound of generation & knowledge.
|
||
ISAK "Identical Point!"
|
||
SA-BA-FT "Nuith! Hadith! Ra-Hoor-Khuit!"
|
||
"Hail, Great Wild Beast!"
|
||
"Hail, IAO!" {270}
|
||
|
||
Section Ff.
|
||
|
||
1. This is the Lord of the Gods:
|
||
2. This is the Lord of the Universe:
|
||
3. This is He whom the Winds fear.
|
||
4. This is He, Who having made Voice by His commandment is Lord of all
|
||
Things; King, Ruler and Helper. Hear Me, and make all Spirits subject unto Me:
|
||
so that every Spirit of the Firmament and of the Ether: upon the Earth and under
|
||
the Earth: on dry Land and in the Water: of Whirling Air, and of rushing Fire:
|
||
and every Spell and Scourge of God may be obedient unto Me.
|
||
|
||
Section G. Spirit.
|
||
|
||
Hear Me:
|
||
|
||
IEOU "Indwelling Sun of Myself"
|
||
PUR "Thou Fire! Thou Sixfold Star initiator
|
||
compassed about with Force and Fire!"
|
||
IOU "Indwelling Soul of Myself"
|
||
PUR (Vide Supra)
|
||
IAFTh "Sun-lion Serpent, hail! All Hail, thou
|
||
Great Wild Beast, thou I A O!"
|
||
IAEO "Breaths of my soul, breaths of mine
|
||
Angel."
|
||
IOOU "Lust of my soul, lust of mine Angel!"
|
||
ABRASAX (Vide Supra).
|
||
SABRIAM "Ho for the Sangraal! Ho for the Cup
|
||
of Babalon! Ho for mine Angel
|
||
pouring Himself forth within my
|
||
Soul!"
|
||
OO "The Eye! Satan, my Lord! The Lust
|
||
of the goat!"
|
||
FF "Mine Angel! Mine initiator! Thou
|
||
one with me --- the Sixfold Star!" {271}
|
||
AD-ON-A-I<<In Hebrew, ADNI, 65. The Gnostic Initiates transliterated it to
|
||
imply their own secret formulae; we follow so excellent an example. ON is an
|
||
Arcanum of Arcana; its significance is taught, gradually, in the O.T.O. Also
|
||
AD is the paternal formula, Hadit; ON is its complement NUIT; the final Yod
|
||
signifies "mine" etymologically and essentially the Mercurial (transmitted)
|
||
hermaphroditic virginal seed --- The Hermit of the Taro --- The use of the name
|
||
is therefore to invoke one's own inmost secrecy, considered as the result of the
|
||
conjunction of Nuit and Hadit. If the second A is included, its import is to
|
||
affirm the operation of the Holy Ghost and the formulation of the Babe in the
|
||
Egg, which precedes the appearance of the Hermit.>>
|
||
"My Lord! My secret self beyond self,
|
||
Hadith, All Father! Hail, ON, thou
|
||
Sun, thou Life of Man, thou Fivefold
|
||
Sword of Flame! Thou Goat exalted
|
||
upon Earth in Lust, thou Snake
|
||
extended upon Earth in Life! Spirit
|
||
most holy! Seed most Wise! Innocent
|
||
Babe. Inviolate Maid! Begetter
|
||
of Being! Soul of all Souls! Word
|
||
of all Words, Come forth, most
|
||
hidden Light!"
|
||
EDE "Devour thou me!"
|
||
EDU "Thou dost devour Me!"
|
||
ANGELOS TON ThEON "Thou Angel of the Gods!"
|
||
ANLALA "Arise thou in Me, free flowing, Thou
|
||
who art Naught, who art Naught, and
|
||
utter thy Word!"
|
||
LAI "I also am Naught! I Will Thee! I
|
||
behold Thee! My nothingness!"
|
||
GAIA "Leap up, thou Earth!"
|
||
(This is also an agonising appeal to the
|
||
Earth, the Mother; for at this point
|
||
of the ceremony the Adept should be
|
||
torn from his mortal attachments, and {272}
|
||
die to himself in the orgasm of his
|
||
operation.<<A thorough comprehension of
|
||
Psycho-analysis will contribute notably to the proper appreciation of this
|
||
Ritual.>>)
|
||
AEPE "Thou Exalted One! It (i.e. the spritual
|
||
'semen', the Adept's secret ideas,
|
||
drawn irresistibly from their "Hell"<<It is said
|
||
among men that the word Hell deriveth from the word "helan", to hele or conceal,
|
||
in the tongue of the Anglo-Saxons. That is, it is the concealed place, which
|
||
since all things are in thine own self, is the unconscious. Liber CXI (Aleph)
|
||
cap GR:Delta-sigma>>
|
||
by the love of his Angel) leaps up; it
|
||
leaps forth!<<But compare the use of the same word in
|
||
section C.>>
|
||
DIATHARNA THORON "Lo! the out-splashing of the seeds of
|
||
Immortality"
|
||
|
||
Section Gg. The Attainment.
|
||
|
||
1. I am He! the Bornless Spirit! having sight in the feet:
|
||
Strong, and the Immortal Fire!
|
||
2. I am He! the Truth!
|
||
3. I am He! Who hate that evil should be wrought in the World!
|
||
4. I am He, that lighteneth and thundereth!
|
||
5. I am He, from whom is the Shower of the Life of Earth!
|
||
6. I am He, whose mouth ever flameth!
|
||
7. I am He, the Begetter and Manifester unto the Light!
|
||
8. I am He, The Grace of the Worlds!
|
||
9. "The Heart Girt with a Serpent" is my name!
|
||
|
||
Section H. The "Charge to the Spirit".
|
||
|
||
Come thou forth, and follow me: and make all Spirits subject unto Me so that
|
||
every Spirit of the Firmament, and of the Ether, upon the Earth and under the
|
||
Earth: on dry Land, or in the Water: of Whirling Air or of rushing Fire, and
|
||
every Spell and scourge of God, may be obedient unto me!
|
||
|
||
Section J. The Proclamation of the Beast 666.
|
||
|
||
IAF: SABAF<<See explanation in Point II.>>
|
||
Such are the Words! {273}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
POINT
|
||
|
||
II
|
||
|
||
ARS CONGRESSUS CUM DAEMONE.
|
||
|
||
SECTION A Let the Adeptus Minor be standing in this circle on the
|
||
square of Tiphereth, armed with his Wand and Cup; but let him
|
||
perform the Ritual throughout in his Body of Light. He may
|
||
burn the Cakes of Light, or the Incense of Abramelin; he may
|
||
be prepared by Liber CLXXV, the reading of Liber LXV, and by
|
||
the practices of Yoga. He may invoke Hadit by "... wine and
|
||
strange drugs" if he so will.<<Any such formula should be used only
|
||
when the adept has full knowledge based on experience of the management of such
|
||
matters.>> He prepares
|
||
the circle by the usual formulae of Banishing and
|
||
Consecration, etc.
|
||
He recites Section A as a rehearsal before His Holy
|
||
Guardian Angel of the attributes of that Angel. Each phrase
|
||
must be realized with full concentration of force, so as to
|
||
make Samadhi as perfectly as possible upon the truth
|
||
proclaimed.
|
||
"Line 1" He identifies his Angel with the Ain Soph, and the Kether
|
||
thereof; one formulation of Hadit in the boundless Body of
|
||
Nuith.
|
||
"Line 2,3,4" He asserts that His Angel has created (for the purpose of
|
||
self-realization through projection in conditioned Form) three
|
||
pairs of opposites: (a) The Fixed and the Volatile; (b) The
|
||
Unmanifested and the Manifest; and (c) the Unmoved and the
|
||
Moved. Otherwise, the Negative and the Positive in respect of
|
||
Matter, Mind and Motion.
|
||
"Line 5" He acclaims his Angel as "Himself Made Perfect"; adding
|
||
that this Individuality is inscrutable in inviolable. In the
|
||
Neophyte Ritual of {274} G.'. D.'. (As it is printed in Equinox
|
||
I, II, for the old aeon) the Hierophant is the perfected
|
||
Osiris, who brings the candidate, the natural Osiris, to
|
||
identity with himself. But in the new Aeon the Hierophant is
|
||
Horus (Liber CCXX, I, 49) therefore the Candidate will be
|
||
Horus too. What then is the formula of the initiation of
|
||
Horus? It will no longer be that of the Man, through Death.
|
||
It will be the natural growth of the Child. His experiences
|
||
will no more be regarded as catastrophic. Their hieroglyph is
|
||
the Fool: the innocent and impotent Harpocrates Babe becomes
|
||
the Horus Adult by obtaining the Wand. "Der reine Thor"
|
||
seizes the Sacred Lance. Bacchus becomes Pan. The Holy
|
||
Guardian Angel is the Unconscious Creature Self --- the
|
||
Spiritual Phallus. His knowledge and conversation contributes
|
||
occult puberty. It is therefore advisable to replace the name
|
||
Asar Un-nefer by that of Ra-Hoor-Khuit at the outset, and by
|
||
that of one's own Holy Guardian Angel when it has been
|
||
communicated.
|
||
|
||
"Line 6" He hails Him as BESZ, the Matter that destroys and devours
|
||
Godhead, for the purpose of the Incarnation of any God.
|
||
|
||
"Line 7" He hails Him as APOPHRASZ, the Motion that destroys and
|
||
devours Godhead, for the purpose of the Incarnation of any
|
||
God. The combined action of these two DEVILS is to allow the
|
||
God upon whom they prey to enter into enjoyment of existence
|
||
through the Sacrament of dividual "Life" (Bread --- the flesh
|
||
of BESZ) and "Love" (Wine --- the blood or venom of AOPHRASZ).
|
||
|
||
"Line 8" He acclaims His Angel as having "eaten of the Fruit of the
|
||
Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil"; otherwise, having become
|
||
wise (in the {275} Dyad, Chokmah) to apprehend the formula of
|
||
Equilibrium which is now His own, being able to apply Himself
|
||
accurately to His self-appointed environment.
|
||
|
||
"Line 9" He acclaims His Angel as having laid down the Law of Love
|
||
as the Magical formula of the Universe, that He may resolve
|
||
the phenomenal again into its noumenal phase by uniting any
|
||
two opposites in ecstasic passion.
|
||
|
||
"Line 10" He acclaims His Angel as having appointed that this formula
|
||
of Love should effect not only the dissolution of the
|
||
separateness of the Lovers into His own impersonal Godhead,
|
||
but their co-ordination in a "Child" quintessentialized from
|
||
its parents to constitute a higher order of Being than theirs,
|
||
so that each generation is an alchemical progress towards
|
||
perfection in the direction of successive complexities. As
|
||
Line 9 asserts Involution, Line 10 asserts Evolution.
|
||
|
||
"Line 11" He acclaims His Angel as having devised this method of
|
||
self-realization; the object of Incarnation is to obtain its
|
||
reactions to its relations with other incarnated Beings and to
|
||
observe theirs with each other.
|
||
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
Section Aa.
|
||
|
||
"Line 1" The Adept asserts his right to enter into conscious
|
||
communication with His Angel, on the ground that that Angel
|
||
has Himself taught him the Secret Magick by which he may make
|
||
the proper link. "Mosheh" is M H, the formation in Jechidah,
|
||
Chiah, Neshamah, Ruach, --- The Sephiroth from Kether to Yesod
|
||
--- since 45 is GR:Sigma{=summation} 1-9 while Sh, 300, is
|
||
GR:Sigma{=summation} 1-24, which superadds to these Nine an extra
|
||
Fifteen numbers. (See in Liber D {276} the meanings an
|
||
correspondences of 9, 15, 24, 45, 300, 345.)
|
||
45 is moreover A D M, man. "Mosheh" is thus the name of
|
||
man as a God-concealing form. But in the Ritual let the Adept
|
||
replace this "Mosheh" by his own motto as Adeptus Minor. For
|
||
"Ishrael" let him prefer his own Magical Race, according to
|
||
the obligations of his Oaths to Our Holy Order! (The Beast
|
||
666 Himself used "Ankh-f-n-Khonsu" and "Khem" in this
|
||
section.)
|
||
"Line 2" The Adept reminds his Angel that He has created That One
|
||
Substance of which Hermes hath written in the Table of
|
||
Emerald, whose virtue is to unite in itself all opposite modes
|
||
of Being, thereby to serve as a Talisman charged with the
|
||
Spiritual Energy of Existence, an Elixir or Stone composed of
|
||
the physical basis of Life. This Commemoration is placed
|
||
between the two personal appeals to the Angel, as if to claim
|
||
privilege to partake of this Eucharist which createth,
|
||
sustaineth and redeemeth all things.
|
||
"Line 3" He now asserts that he is himself the "Angel" or messenger
|
||
of his Angel; that is, that he is a mind and body whose office
|
||
is to receive and transmit the Word of his Angel. He hails
|
||
his Angel not only as "un-nefer" the Perfection of "Asar"
|
||
himself as a man, but as Ptah-Apophrasz-Ra, the identity
|
||
(Hadit) wrapped in the Dragon (Nuit) and thereby manifested as
|
||
a Sun (Ra-Hoor-Khuit). The "Egg" (or Heart) "girt with a
|
||
Serpent" is a cognate symbol; the idea is thus expressed later
|
||
in the ritual. (See Liber LXV. which expands this to the
|
||
uttermost.)
|
||
|
||
Section B The Adept passes from contemplation to action in the
|
||
sections now following B to Gg. He is to travel astrally
|
||
around the circle, making the appropriate pentagrams, sigils,
|
||
and signs. His direction {277} is widdershins. He thus makes
|
||
three curves, each covering three-fourths of the circle. He
|
||
should give the sign of the Enterer on passing the Kiblah, or
|
||
Direction of Boleskine. This picks up the force naturally
|
||
radiating from that point<<This is an assumption based on Liber
|
||
Legis II, 78 and III, 34.>> and projects it in the direction of
|
||
the path of the Magician. The sigils are those given
|
||
in the Equinox Vol. I, No. 7, Plate X outside the
|
||
square; the signs those shewn in Vol. I, No. 2, Plate "The
|
||
Signs of the Grades". In these invocations he should expand
|
||
his girth and his stature to the utmost<<Having experience of
|
||
success in the practices of Liber 536,
|
||
GR:beta-alpha-tau-rho-alpha-chi-omicron-phi-rho-epsilon-nu-omicron-beta-omicr
|
||
on-omicron-kappa-omicron-sigma-mu-omicron-mu-alpha-chi-iota-alpha.>>, assuming
|
||
the form and the consciousness of the Elemental
|
||
God of the quarter. After this, he begins to vibrate the
|
||
"Barbarous Names" of the Ritual.
|
||
Now let him not only fill his whole being to the uttermost
|
||
with the force of the Names; but let him formulate his Will,
|
||
understood thoroughly as the dynamic aspect of his Creative
|
||
Self, in an appearance symbolically apt, I say not in the form
|
||
of a Ray of Light, of a Fiery Sword, or of aught save that
|
||
bodily Vehicle of the Holy Ghost which is sacred to BAPHOMET,
|
||
by its virtue that concealeth the Lion and the Serpent that
|
||
His Image may appear adorably upon the Earth for ever.
|
||
Let then the Adept extend his Will beyond the Circle in
|
||
this imagined Shape and let it radiate with the Light proper
|
||
to the element invoked, and let each Word issue along the
|
||
Shaft with passionate impulse, as if its voice gave command
|
||
thereto that it should thrust itself leapingly forward. Let
|
||
also each Word accumulate authority, so that the Head of the
|
||
Shaft may plunge twice as far for the Second Word as for the
|
||
First, and Four Times for {278} the Third as the Second, and
|
||
thus to the end. Moreover, let the Adept fling forth his
|
||
whole consciousness thither. Then at the final Word, let him
|
||
bring rushing back his Will within himself, steadily
|
||
streaming, and let him offer himself to its point, as Artemis
|
||
to PAN, that this perfectly pure concentration of the Element
|
||
purge him thoroughly, and possess him with its passion.
|
||
In this Sacrament being wholly at one with that Element,
|
||
let the Adept utter the Charge "Hear me, and make", etc. with
|
||
strong sense that this unity with that quarter of the Universe
|
||
confers upon him the fullest freedom and privilege appurtenant
|
||
thereto.
|
||
Let the Adept take note of the wording of the Charge. The
|
||
"Firmament" is the Ruach, the "mental plane"; it is the realm
|
||
of Shu, or Zeus, where revolves the Wheel of the Gunas, the
|
||
Three forms<<They correspond to the Sulphur, Mercury, and Salt of
|
||
Alchemy; to Sattvas, Rajas, and Tamas in the Hindu system; and are rather modes
|
||
of action than actual qualities even when conceived as latent. They are the
|
||
apparatus of communication between the planes; as such, they are conventions.
|
||
There is no absolute validity in any means of mental apprehension; but unless
|
||
we make these spirits of the Firmament subject unto us by establishing right
|
||
relation (within the possible limits) with the Universe, we shall fall into
|
||
error when we develop our new instrument of direct understanding. It is vital
|
||
that the Adept should train his intellectual faculties to tell him the truth,
|
||
in the measure of their capacity. To despise the mind on account of its
|
||
limitations is the most disastrous blunder; it is the common cause of the
|
||
calamities which strew so many shores with the wreckage of the Mystic Armada.
|
||
Bigotry, Arrogance, Bewilderment, all forms of mental and moral disorder, so
|
||
often observed in people of great spiritual attainment, have brought the Path
|
||
itself into discredit; almost all such catastrophes are due to trying to build
|
||
the Temple of the Spirit without proper attention to the mental laws of
|
||
structure and the physical necessities of foundation. The mind must be brought
|
||
to its utmost pitch of perfection, but according to its own internal properties;
|
||
one cannot feed a microscope on mutton chops. It must be regarded as a
|
||
mechanical instrument of knowledge, independent of the personality of its
|
||
possessor. One must treat it exactly as one treats one's electroscope or one's
|
||
eyes; one influence of one's wishes. A physician calls in a colleague to attend
|
||
to his own family, knowing that personal anxiety may derange his judgment. A
|
||
microscopist who trusts his eyes when his pet theory is at stake may falsify the
|
||
facts, and find too late that he has made a fool of himself.
|
||
In the case of initiations itself, history is scarred with the wounds
|
||
inflicted by this Dagger. It reminds us constantly of the danger of relying
|
||
upon the intellectual faculties. A judge must know the law in every point, and
|
||
be detached from personal prejudices, and incorruptible, or iniquity will
|
||
triumph. Dogma, with persecution, delusion, paralysis of progress, and many
|
||
another evil, as its satraps, has always established a tyranny when Genius has
|
||
proclaimed it. Islam making a bonfire of written Wisdom, and Haeckel forging
|
||
biological evidence; physicists ignorant of radioactivity disputing the
|
||
conclusions of geology, and theologians impatient of truth struggling against
|
||
the tide of thought; all such must perish at the hands of their own error in
|
||
making their minds, internally defective or externally deflected, the measure
|
||
of the Universe.>> of Being. The Aethyr is the {279}
|
||
"akasha", the "Spirit", the Aethyr or physics, which is the
|
||
framework on which all forms are founded; it receives, records
|
||
and transmits all impulses without itself suffering mutation
|
||
thereby. The "Earth" is the sphere wherein the operation of
|
||
these "fundamental" and aethyric forces appears to perception.
|
||
"Under the Earth" is the world of those phenomena which inform
|
||
those perceived projections, and determine their particular
|
||
character. "Dry land" is the place of dead "material things",
|
||
dry (i.e. unknowable) because unable to act on our minds.
|
||
"Water" is the vehicle whereby we feel such things; "air"
|
||
their menstruum wherein these feelings are mentally
|
||
apprehended. It is called "whirling" because of the
|
||
instability of thought, and the fatuity of reason, on which we
|
||
are yet dependent for what we call "life". "Rushing Fire" is
|
||
the world in which wandering thought burns up to swift-darting
|
||
Will. These four stages explain how the non-Ego is transmuted
|
||
into the {280} Ego. A "Spell" of God is any form of
|
||
consciousness, and a "Scourge" any form of action.
|
||
The Charge, as a whole, demands for the Adept the control
|
||
of every detail of the Universe which His Angel has created as
|
||
a means of manifesting Himself to Himself. It covers command
|
||
of the primary projection of the Possible in individuality, in
|
||
the antithetical artifice which is the device of Mind, and in
|
||
a balanced triplicity of modes or states of being whose
|
||
combinations constitute the characteristics of Cosmos. It
|
||
includes also a standard of structure, a rigidity to make
|
||
reference possible. Upon these foundations of condition which
|
||
are not things in themselves, but the canon to which things
|
||
conform, is builded the Temple of Being, whose materials are
|
||
themselves perfectly mysterious, inscrutable as the Soul, and
|
||
like the Soul imagining themselves by symbols which we may
|
||
feel, perceive, and adapt to our use without ever knowing the
|
||
whole Truth about them. The Adept sums up all these items by
|
||
claiming authority over every form of expression possible to
|
||
Existence, whether it be a "spell" (idea) or a "scourge" (act)
|
||
of "God", that is, of himself. The Adept must accept every
|
||
"spirit", every "spell", every "scourge", as part of his
|
||
environment, and make them all "subject to" himself; that is,
|
||
consider them as contributory causes of himself. They have
|
||
made him what he is. They correspond exactly to his own
|
||
faculties. They are all --- ultimately --- of equal
|
||
importance. The fact that he is what he is proves that each
|
||
item is equilibrated. The impact of each new impression
|
||
affects the entire system in due measure. He must therefore
|
||
realize that every event is subject to him. It occurs because
|
||
he had need of it. Iron rusts because the molecules demand
|
||
oxygen for the satisfaction of {281} their tendencies. They
|
||
do not crave hydrogen; therefore combination with that gas is
|
||
an event which does not happen. All experiences contribute to
|
||
make us complete in ourselves. We feel ourselves subject to
|
||
them so long as we fail to recognise this; when we do, we
|
||
perceive that they are subject to us. And whenever we strive
|
||
to evade an experience, whatever it may be, we thereby do
|
||
wrong to ourselves. We thwart our own tendencies. To live is
|
||
to change; and to oppose change is to revolt against the law
|
||
which we have enacted to govern our lives. To resent destiny
|
||
is thus to abdicate our sovereignty, and to invoke death.
|
||
Indeed, we have decreed the doom of death for every breach of
|
||
the law of Life. And every failure to incorporate any
|
||
impression starves the particular faculty which stood in need
|
||
of it.
|
||
This Section B invokes Air in the East, with a shaft of
|
||
golden glory.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section C. The adept now invokes Fire in the South; flame red are the
|
||
rays that burst from his Verendum.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section D. He invokes Water in the West, his Wand billowing forth blue
|
||
radiance.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section E. He goes to the North to invoke Earth; flowers of green
|
||
flame flash from his weapon. As practice makes the Adept
|
||
perfect in this Work, it becomes automatic to attach all these
|
||
complicated ideas and intentions to their correlated words and
|
||
acts. When this is attained he may go deeper into the formula
|
||
by amplifying its correspondences. Thus, he may invoke water
|
||
in the manner of water, extending {282} his will with majestic
|
||
and irresistible motion, mindful of its impulse gravitation,
|
||
yet with a suave and tranquil appearance of weakness. Again,
|
||
he may apply the formula of water to its peculiar purpose as
|
||
it surges back into his sphere, using it with conscious skill
|
||
for the cleansing and calming of the receptive and emotional
|
||
elements in his character, and for the solution or sweeping
|
||
away of those tangled weeds of prejudice which hamper him from
|
||
freedom to act as he will. Similar applications of the
|
||
remaining invocations will occur to the Adept who is ready to
|
||
use them.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section F. The Adept now returns to the Tiphereth square of his Tau,
|
||
and invokes spirit, facing toward Boleskine, by the active
|
||
Pentagrams, the sigil called the Mark of the Beast, and the
|
||
Signs of L.V.X. (See plate as before). He then vibrates the
|
||
Names extending his will in the same way as before, but
|
||
vertically upward. At the same time he expands the Source of
|
||
that Will --- the secret symbol of Self --- both about him and
|
||
below, as if to affirm that Self, duplex as is its form,
|
||
reluctant to acquiesce in its failure to coincide with the
|
||
Sphere of Nuith. Let him now imagine, at the last Word, that
|
||
the Head of his will, where his consciousness is fixed, opens
|
||
its fissure (the Brahmarandra-Cakkra, at the junction of the
|
||
cranial sutures) and exudes a drop of clear crystalline dew,
|
||
and that this pearl is his Soul, a virgin offering to his
|
||
Angel, pressed forth from his being by the intensity of his
|
||
Aspiration.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section Ff. With these words the Adept does not withdraw his will
|
||
within him as in the previous Sections. He thinks of them as
|
||
a reflection of Truth on the {283} surface of the dew, where
|
||
his Soul hides trembling. He takes them to be the first
|
||
formulation in his consciousness of the nature of His Holy
|
||
Guardian Angel.
|
||
"Line 1." The "Gods" include all the conscious elements of his
|
||
nature.
|
||
"Line 2." The "Universe" includes all possible phenomena of which he
|
||
can be aware.
|
||
"Line 3." The "Winds" are his thoughts, which have prevented him from
|
||
attaining to his Angel.
|
||
"Line 4." His Angel has made "Voice", the magical weapon which
|
||
produces "Words", and these words have been the wisdom by
|
||
which He hath created all things. The "Voice" is necessary as
|
||
the link between the Adept and his Angel. The Angel is
|
||
"King", the One who "can", the "source of authority and the
|
||
fount of honour"; also the King (or King's Son) who delivers
|
||
the Enchanted Princess, and makes her his Queen. He is
|
||
"Ruler", the "unconscious Will"; to be thwarted no more by the
|
||
ignorant and capricious false will of the conscious man. And
|
||
He is "Helper", the author of the infallible impulse that
|
||
sends the Soul sweeping along the skies on its proper path
|
||
with such impetus that the attraction of alien orbs is no
|
||
longer sufficient to swerve it. The "Hear me" clause is now
|
||
uttered by the normal human consciousness, withdrawn to the
|
||
physical body; the Adept must deliberately abandon his
|
||
attainment, because it is not yet his whole being which burns
|
||
up before the Beloved.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section G. The Adept, though withdrawn, shall have maintained the
|
||
Extension of his Symbol. He now repeats the signs as before,
|
||
save that he makes the Passive Invoking Pentagram of Spirit.
|
||
He concentrates {284} his consciousness within his Twin-Symbol
|
||
of Self, and endeavours to send it to sleep. But if the
|
||
operation be performed properly, his Angel shall have accepted
|
||
the offering of Dew, and seized with fervour upon the extended
|
||
symbol of Will towards Himself. This then shall He shake
|
||
vehemently with vibrations of love reverberating with the
|
||
Words of the Section. Even in the physical ears of the adept
|
||
there shall resound an echo thereof, yet he shall not be able
|
||
to describe it. It shall seem both louder than thunder, and
|
||
softer than the whisper of the night-wind. It shall at once
|
||
be inarticulate, and mean more than he hath ever heard.
|
||
Now let him strive with all the strength of his Soul to
|
||
withstand the Will of his Angel, concealing himself in the
|
||
closest cell of the citadel of consciousness. Let him
|
||
consecrate himself to resist the assault of the Voice and the
|
||
Vibration until his consciousness faint away into Nothing.
|
||
For if there abide unabsorbed even one single atom of the
|
||
false Ego, that atom should stain the virginity of the True
|
||
Self and profane the Oath; then that atom should be so
|
||
inflamed by the approach of the Angel that it should overwhelm
|
||
the rest of the mind, tyrannize over it, and become an insane
|
||
despot to the total ruin of the realm.
|
||
But, all being dead to sense, who then is able to strive
|
||
against the Angel? He shall intensify the stress of His
|
||
Spirit so that His loyal legions of Lion-Serpents leap from
|
||
the ambush, awakening the adept to witness their Will and
|
||
sweep him with them in their enthusiasm, so that he
|
||
consciously partakes their purpose, and sees in its simplicity
|
||
the solution of all his perplexities. Thus then shall the
|
||
Adept be aware that he is being swept away through the column
|
||
of his Will Symbol, {285} and that His Angel is indeed
|
||
himself, with intimacy so intense as to become identity, and
|
||
that not in a single Ego, but in every unconscious element
|
||
that shares in that manifold uprush.
|
||
This rapture is accompanied by a tempest of brilliant
|
||
light, almost always, and also in many cases by an outburst of
|
||
sound, stupendous and sublime in all cases, though its
|
||
character may vary within wide limits.<<These phenomena are not
|
||
wholly subjective; they may be perceived, though often under other forms, by
|
||
even the ordinary man.>>
|
||
The spate of stars shoots from the head of the Will-Symbol,
|
||
and is scattered over the sky in glittering galaxies. This
|
||
dispersion destroys the concentration of the adept, whose mind
|
||
cannot master such multiplicity of majesty; as a rule, he
|
||
simply sinks stunned into normality, to recall nothing of his
|
||
experience but a vague though vivid impression of complete
|
||
release and ineffable rapture. Repetition fortifies him to
|
||
realise the nature of his attainment; and his Angel, the link
|
||
once made, frequents him, and trains him subtly to be
|
||
sensitive to his Holy presence, and persuasion. But it may
|
||
occur, especially after repeated success, that the Adept is
|
||
not flung back into his mortality by the explosion of the
|
||
Star-spate, but identified with one particular "Lion-Serpent",
|
||
continuing conscious thereof until it finds its proper place
|
||
in Space, when its secret self flowers forth as a truth, which
|
||
the Adept may then take back to earth with him.
|
||
This is but a side issue. The main purpose of the Ritual
|
||
is to establish the relation of the subconscious self with the
|
||
Angel in such a way that the Adept is aware that his Angel is
|
||
the Unity which expresses the sum of the Elements of that
|
||
Self, that his normal consciousness contains alien enemies
|
||
286} introduced by the accidents of environment, and that his
|
||
Knowledge and Conversation of His Holy Guardian Angel destroys
|
||
all doubts and delusions, confers all blessings, teaches all
|
||
truth, and contains all delights. But it is important that
|
||
the Adept should not rest in mere inexpressible realization of
|
||
his rapture, but rouse himself to make the relation submit to
|
||
analysis, to render it in rational terms, and thereby
|
||
enlighten his mind and heart in a sense as superior to
|
||
fanatical enthusiasm as Beethoven's music is to West African
|
||
war-drums.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Section Gg. The adept should have realised that his Act of Union with
|
||
the angel implies (1) the death of his old mind save in so far
|
||
as his unconscious elements preserve its memory when they
|
||
absorb it, and (2) the death of his unconscious elements
|
||
themselves. But their death is rather a going forth to renew
|
||
their life through love. He then, by conscious comprehension
|
||
of them separately and together, becomes the "Angel" of his
|
||
Angel, as Hermes is the Word of Zeus, whose own voice is
|
||
Thunder. Thus in this section the adept utters articulately
|
||
so far as words may, what his Angel is to Himself. He says
|
||
this, with his Scin-Laeca wholly withdrawn into his physical
|
||
body, constraining His Angel to indwell his heart.
|
||
"Line 1." "I am He" asserts the destruction of the sense of
|
||
separateness between self and Self. It affirms existence, but
|
||
of the third person only. "The Bornless Spirit" is free of
|
||
all space, "having sight in the feet", that they may choose
|
||
their own path. "Strong" is G B R, The Magician escorted by
|
||
the Sun and the Moon (See Liber D and Liber 777). The
|
||
"Immortal Fire" is the creative Self; impersonal energy cannot
|
||
perish, no matter what forms it assumes. Combustion is Love.
|
||
287
|
||
"Line 2." "Truth" is the necessary relation of any two things;
|
||
therefore, although it implies duality, it enables us to
|
||
conceive of two things as being one thing such that it demands
|
||
to be defined by complementals. Thus, an hyperbola is a
|
||
simple idea, but its construction exacts two curves.
|
||
"Line 3." The Angel, as the adept knows him, is a being Tiphereth,
|
||
which obscures Kether. The Adept is not officially aware of
|
||
the higher Sephiroth. He cannot perceive, like the
|
||
Ipsissimus, that all things soever are equally illusion and
|
||
equally Absolute. He is in Tiphereth, whose office is
|
||
Redemption, and he deplores the events which have caused the
|
||
apparent Sorrow from which he has just escaped. He is also
|
||
aware, even in the height of his ecstasy, of the limits and
|
||
defects of his Attainment.
|
||
"Line 4." This refers to the phenomena which accompany his
|
||
Attainment.
|
||
"Line 5." This means the recognition of the Angel as the True Self of
|
||
his subconscious self, the hidden Life of his physical life.
|
||
"Line 6." The Adept realises every breath, every word of his Angel as
|
||
charged with creative fire. Tiphereth is the Sun, and the
|
||
Angel is the spiritual Sun of the Soul of the Adept.
|
||
"Line 7." Here is summed the entire process of bringing the
|
||
conditioned Universe to knowledge of itself through the
|
||
formula of generation<<That is, Yod He, realizing Themselves, Will
|
||
and Understanding in the twins Vau He, Mind and body.>>;
|
||
a soul implants itself in sense-hoodwinked body and reason-
|
||
fettered mind, makes them aware of their Inmate, and thus to
|
||
partake of its own consciousness of the Light.
|
||
"Line 8." "Grace" has here its proper sense of "Pleasantness". {288}
|
||
The existence of the Angel is the justification of the device
|
||
of creation.<<But see also the general solution of the Riddle of
|
||
Existence in the Book of the Law and its Comment --- Part IV of Book 4.>>
|
||
"Line 9." This line must be studied in the light of Liber LXV
|
||
(Equinox XI. p. 65).
|
||
|
||
Section H. This recapitulation demands the going forth together of the
|
||
Adept and his Angel "to do their pleasure on the Earth among
|
||
the living."
|
||
Section J. The Beast 666 having devised the present method of using
|
||
this Ritual, having proved it by his own practice to be of
|
||
infallible puissance when properly performed, and now having
|
||
written it down for the world, it shall be an ornament for the
|
||
Adept who adopts it to cry Hail to His name at the end of his
|
||
work. This shall moreover encourage him in Magick, to recall
|
||
that indeed there was One who attained by its use to the
|
||
Knowledge and Conversation of His Holy Guardian Angel, the
|
||
which forsook him no more, but made Him a Magus, the Word of
|
||
the Aeon of Horus!
|
||
For know this, that the Name IAF in its most secret and
|
||
mighty sense declareth the Formula of the Magick of the BEAST
|
||
whereby he wrought many wonders. And because he doth will
|
||
that the whole world shall attain to this Art, He now hideth
|
||
it herein so that the worthy may win to His Wisdom.
|
||
Let I and F face all;<<If we adopt the new orthography VIAOV
|
||
(Book 4 Part III Chap. V.) we must read "The Sun-6-the Son" etc. for "all"; and
|
||
elaborate this interpretation here given in other ways, accordingly. Thus O (or
|
||
F) will not be "The Fifteen by function" instead of "Five" etc., and "in act
|
||
free, firm, aspiring, ecstatic", rather than "gentle" etc. as in the present
|
||
text.>> yet ward their A from attack. The
|
||
Hermit to himself, the Fool to foes, {289} The Hierophant to
|
||
friends, Nine by nature, Naught by attainment, Five by
|
||
function. In speech swift, subtle and secret; in thought
|
||
creative, unbiassed, unbounded; in act gentle, patient and
|
||
persistent. Hermes to hear, Dionysus to touch, Pan to behold.
|
||
A Virgin, A Babe, and a Beast!
|
||
A Liar, an Idiot, and a Master of Men!
|
||
A kiss, a guffaw, and a bellow; he that hath ears to hear,
|
||
let him hear!
|
||
Take ten that be one, and one that is one in three, to
|
||
conceal them in six!
|
||
Thy wand to all Cups, and thy Disk to all Swords, but
|
||
betray not thine Egg!
|
||
Moreover also is IAF verily 666 by virtue of Number; and
|
||
this is a Mystery of Mysteries; Who knoweth it, he is adept of
|
||
adepts, and Mighty among Magicians!
|
||
Now this word SABAF, being by number Three score and Ten,<<There
|
||
is an alternative spelling TzBA-F Where the Root, "an Host", has the value of
|
||
93. The Practicus should revive this Ritual throughout in the Light of his
|
||
personal researches in the Qabalah, and thus make it his own peculiar property.
|
||
The spelling here suggested implies that he who utters the Word affirms his
|
||
allegiance to the symbols 93 and 6; that he is a warrior in the army of Will and
|
||
of the Sun. 93 is also the number of AIWAZ and 6 of The Beast.>> is a name of
|
||
Ayin, the
|
||
Eye, and the Devil our Lord, and the Goat of Mendes. He is
|
||
the Lord of the Sabbath of the Adepts, and is Satan, therefore
|
||
also the Sun, whose number of Magick is 666, the seal of His
|
||
servant the BEAST.
|
||
But again SA is 61, AIN, the Naught of Nuith; BA means go,
|
||
for Hadit; and F is their Son the Sun who is Ra-Hoor-Khuit.
|
||
So then let the Adept set his sigil upon all the words he
|
||
hath writ in the Book of the Works of his Will. {290}
|
||
And let him then end all, saying, Such are the Words!<<The
|
||
consonants of LOGOS, "Word", add (Hebrew values) to 93. and GR:Epsilon-Pi-Eta,
|
||
"Words", (whence "Epic") has also that value: GR:Epsilon-Iota-Delta-Epsilon
|
||
GR:Tau-Alpha GR:Epsilon-Pi-Eta might be the phrase here intended: its number
|
||
is 418. This would then assert the accomplishment of the Great Work; this is
|
||
the natural conclusion of the Ritual. Cf. CCXX. III. 75.>> For by this he
|
||
maketh proclamation
|
||
before all them that be about his Circle that these
|
||
Words are true and puissant, binding what he
|
||
would bind, and loosing what he would loose.
|
||
Let the Adept perform this Ritual aright, perfect in every
|
||
part thereof, once daily for one moon, then twice, at dawn and
|
||
dusk, for two moons, next, thrice, noon added, for three
|
||
moons, afterwards, midnight making up his course, for four
|
||
moons four times every day. Then let the Eleventh Moon be
|
||
consecrated wholly to this Work; let him be instant in
|
||
continual ardour, dismissing all but his sheer needs to eat
|
||
and sleep.<<These needs are modified during the process of
|
||
Initiation both as to quantity and quality. One should not become anxious about
|
||
one's physical or mental health on a priori grounds, but pay attention only to
|
||
indubitable symptoms of distress should such arise.>> For know that the true
|
||
Formula<<See Note page following.>> whose virtue sufficed the
|
||
Beast in this Attainment, was thus:
|
||
|
||
INVOKE OFTEN<<See Equinox I, VIII, 22.>>
|
||
|
||
So may all men come at last to the Knowledge and
|
||
Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel: thus sayeth the
|
||
Beast, and prayeth His own Angel that this book be as a
|
||
burning Lamp, and as a living Spring, for Light and Life to
|
||
them that read therein.
|
||
|
||
666
|
||
{291}
|
||
|
||
(Note to page 291)
|
||
The Oracles of Zoroaster utter this:
|
||
"And when, by often invoking, all the phantasms are vanished, thou shalt see
|
||
that Holy and Formless Fire, that Fire which darts and flashes through all the
|
||
Depths of the Universe; hear thou the Voice of the Fire!
|
||
"A similar Fire flashingly extending through the rushings of Air, or a Fire
|
||
formless whence cometh the Image of a voice, or even a flashing Light abounding,
|
||
revolving, whirling forth, crying aloud. Also there is the vision of the
|
||
fire-flashing Courser of Light, or also a Child, borne aloft on the shoulders
|
||
of the Celestial Steed, fiery, or clothed with gold, or naked, or shooting with
|
||
the bow shafts or light, and standing on the shoulders of the horse, then if thy
|
||
meditation prolongeth itself, thou shalt unite all these symbols into the form
|
||
of a Lion."
|
||
This passage --- combined with several others --- is paraphased in poetry by
|
||
Aleister Crowley in his "Tannhauser".
|
||
|
||
"And when, "invoking often," thou shalt see
|
||
That formless Fire; when all the earth is shaken,
|
||
The stars abide not, and the moon is gone,
|
||
All Time crushed back into Eternity,
|
||
The Universe by earthquake overtaken;
|
||
Light is not, and the thunders roll,
|
||
The World is done:
|
||
When in the darkness Chaos rolls again
|
||
In the excited brain:
|
||
Then, O then call not to thy view that visible
|
||
Image of Nature; fatal is her name!
|
||
It fitteth not thy Body to behold
|
||
That living light of Hell,
|
||
The unluminous, dead flame,
|
||
Until that body from the crucible
|
||
Hath passed, pure gold!
|
||
For, from the confines of material space,
|
||
The twilight-moving place,
|
||
The gates of matter, and the dark threshold,
|
||
Before the faces of the Things that dwell
|
||
In the Abodes of Night,
|
||
Spring into sight
|
||
Demons, dog-faced, that show no mortal sign
|
||
Of Truth, but desecrate the Light Divine,
|
||
Seducing from the sacred mysteries.
|
||
But, after all these Folk of Fear are driven
|
||
Before the avenging levin
|
||
That rives the opening skies,
|
||
Behold that formless and that Holy Flame {292}
|
||
That hath no name;
|
||
The Fire that darts and flashes, writhes and creeps
|
||
Snake-wise in royal robe
|
||
Wound round that vanished glory of the globe,
|
||
Unto that sky beyond the starry deeps,
|
||
Beyond the Toils of Time, --- then formulate
|
||
In thine own mind, luminous, concentrate,
|
||
The Lion of the Light, a child that stands
|
||
On the vast shoulders of the Steed of God:
|
||
Or winged, or shooting flying shafts, or shod
|
||
With the flame-sandals.
|
||
Then, lift up thine hands!
|
||
Centre thee in thine heart one scarlet thought
|
||
Limpid with brilliance of the Light above!
|
||
Drawn into naught
|
||
All life, death, hatred, love:
|
||
All self concentred in the sole desire ---
|
||
Hear thou the Voice of Fire!"
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
{293}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
POINT
|
||
|
||
III
|
||
|
||
|
||
SCHOLION ON SECTIONS G & Gg.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Adept who has mastered this Ritual, successfully realising the full
|
||
import of this controlled rapture, ought not to allow his mind to loosen its
|
||
grip on the astral imagery of the Star-spate, Will-Symbol, or Soul-symbol, or
|
||
even to forget its duty to the body and the sensible surroundings. Nor should
|
||
he omit to keep his Body of Light in close touch with the phenomena of its own
|
||
plane, so that its privy consciousness may fulfil its proper functions of
|
||
protecting his scattered ideals from obsession.
|
||
But he should have acquired, by previous practice, the faculty of detaching
|
||
these elements of his consciousness from their articulate centre, so that they
|
||
become (temporarily) independent responsible units, capable of receiving
|
||
communications from headquarters at will, but perfectly able (1) to take care
|
||
of themselves without troubling their chief, and (2) to report to him at the
|
||
proper time. In a figure, they must be like subordinate officers, expected to
|
||
display self-reliance, initiative, and integrity in the execution of the Orders
|
||
of the Day.
|
||
The Adept should therefore be able to rely on these individual minds of his
|
||
to control their own conditions without interference from himself for the time
|
||
required, and to recall them in due course, receiving an accurate report of
|
||
their adventures.
|
||
This being so, the Adept will be free to concentrate his deepest self, that
|
||
part of him which unconsciously orders his true Will, upon the realization of
|
||
his Holy Guardian Angel. The absence of his bodily, mental and astral
|
||
consciousness is indeed cardinal to success, for it is their usurpation of his
|
||
attention which has made him deaf to his Soul, and his preoccupation with their
|
||
affairs that has prevented him from perceiving that Soul. {294}
|
||
The effect of the Ritual has been
|
||
(a) to keep them so busy with their own work that they cease to distract him;
|
||
(b) to separate them so completely that his soul is stripped of its sheaths;
|
||
(c) to arouse in him an enthusiasm so intense as to intoxicate and
|
||
anaesthetize him, that he may not feel and resent the agony of this spiritual
|
||
vivisection, just as bashful lovers get drunk on the wedding night, in order to
|
||
brazen out the intensity of shame which so mysteriously coexists with their
|
||
desire;
|
||
(d) to concentrate the necessary spiritual forces from every element, and
|
||
fling them simultaneously into the aspiration towards the Holy Guardian Angel;
|
||
and
|
||
(e) to attract the Angel by the vibration of the magical voice which invokes
|
||
Him.
|
||
The method of the Ritual is thus manifold.
|
||
There is firstly an analysis of the Adept, which enables him to calculate his
|
||
course of action. He can decide what must be banished, what purified, what
|
||
concentrated. He can then concentrate his will upon its one essential element,
|
||
over-coming its resistance --- which is automatic, like a physiological reflex
|
||
--- by destroying inhibitions through his ego-overwhelming enthusiasm.<<A high
|
||
degree of initiation is required. This means that the process of analysis must
|
||
have been carried out very thoroughly. The Adept must have become aware of his
|
||
deepest impulses, and understood their true significance. The "resistance" here
|
||
mentioned is automatic; it increases indefinitely against direct pressure. It
|
||
is useless to try to force oneself in these matters; the uninitiated Aspirant,
|
||
however eager he may be, is sure to fail. One must know how to deal with each
|
||
internal idea as it arises. It is impossible to overcome one's inhibitions
|
||
by conscious effort; their existence justifies them. God is on their side, as
|
||
on that of the victim in Browning's "Instans Tyrannus." A man cannot compel
|
||
himself to love, however much he may want to, on various rational grounds. But
|
||
on the other hand, when the true impulse comes, it overwhelms all its critics;
|
||
they are powerless either to make or break a genius; it can only testify to the
|
||
fact that it has met its master.>> The other half of the work needs no such
|
||
complex effort; for his Angel is simple and unperplexed, ready at all times to
|
||
respond to rightly ordered approach. {295}
|
||
But the results of the Ritual are too various to permit of rigid description.
|
||
One may say that, presuming the union to be perfect, the Adept need not retain
|
||
any memory soever of what has occurred. He may be merely aware of a gap in his
|
||
conscious life, and judge of its contents by observing that his nature has been
|
||
subtly transfigured. Such an experience might indeed be the proof of
|
||
perfection.
|
||
If the Adept is to be any wise conscious of his Angel it must be that some
|
||
part of his mind is prepared to realise the rapture, and to express it to itself
|
||
in one way or another. This involves the perfection of that part, its freedom
|
||
from prejudice and the limitations of rationality so-called. For instance: one
|
||
could not receive the illumination as to the nature of life which the doctrine
|
||
of evolution should shed, if one is passionately persuaded that humanity is
|
||
essentially not animal, or convinced that causality is repugnant to reason. The
|
||
Adept must be ready for the utter destruction of his point of view on any
|
||
subject, and even that of his innate conception of the forms and laws of
|
||
thought.<<Of course, even false tenets and modes of the mind are in one sense
|
||
true. It is only their appearance which alters. Copernicus did not destroy the
|
||
facts of nature, or change the instruments of observation. He merely effected
|
||
a radical simplification of science. Error is really a "fool's knot".
|
||
Moreover, the very tendency responsible for the entanglement is one of the
|
||
necessary elements of the situation. Nothing is "wrong" in the end; and one
|
||
cannot reach the "right" point of view without the aid of one's particular
|
||
"wrong" point. If we reject or alter the negative of a photograph we shall not
|
||
get a perfect positive.>> Thus he may find that his Angel consider his
|
||
"business" or his "love" to be absurd trifles; also that human ideas of "time"
|
||
are invalid, and human "laws" of logic applicable only to the relations between
|
||
illusions.
|
||
Now the Angel will make contact with the Adept at any point that is sensitive
|
||
to His influence. Such a point will naturally be one that is salient in the
|
||
Adept's character, and also one that is, in the proper sense of the word,
|
||
pure<<This means, free from ideas, however excellent in themselves, which are
|
||
foreign to it. For instance, literary interest has no proper place in a
|
||
picture.>>.
|
||
Thus an artist, attuned to appreciate plastic beauty is likely to {296}
|
||
receive a visual impression of his Angel in a physical form which is sublimely
|
||
quintessential of his ideal. A musician may be rapt away by majestic melodies
|
||
such as he never hoped to hear. A philosopher may attain apprehension of
|
||
tremendous truths, the solution of problems that had baffled him all his life.
|
||
Conformably with this doctrine, we read of illuminations experienced by
|
||
simple-minded men, such as a workman who "saw God" and likened Him to "a
|
||
quantity of little pears". Again, we know that ecstasy, impinging upon
|
||
unbalanced minds, inflames the idolised idea, and produces fanatical faith
|
||
fierce even to frenzy, with intolerance and insanely disordered energy which is
|
||
yet so powerful as to effect the destinies of empires.
|
||
But the phenomena of the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian
|
||
Angel are a side issue; the essence of the Union is the intimacy. Their
|
||
intimacy (or rather identity) is independent of all partial forms of expression;
|
||
at its best it is therefore as inarticulate as Love.
|
||
The intensity of the consummation will more probably compel a sob or a cry,
|
||
some natural physical gesture of animal sympathy with the spiritual spasm. This
|
||
is to be criticised as incomplete self-control. Silence is nobler.
|
||
In any case the Adept must be in communion with his Angel, so that his Soul
|
||
is suffused with sublimity, whether intelligible or not in terms of intellect.
|
||
It is evident that the stress of such spiritual possession must tend to
|
||
overwhelm the soul, especially at first. It actually suffers from the excess
|
||
of its ecstasy, just as extreme love produces vertigo. The soul sinks and
|
||
swoons. Such weakness is fatal alike to its enjoyment and its apprehension.
|
||
"Be strong! then canst thou bear more rapture!" sayeth the Book of the
|
||
Law.<<Liber Al vel Legis, II, 61-68, where the details of the proper technique
|
||
are discussed. {WEH Note extension: The passage in quotations in this sentence
|
||
nowhere appears in "The Book of the Law". Crowley is evidently recapitulating
|
||
several passages in a paraphrase. AL II, 22 starts this, and the verses cited
|
||
in this note conclude it.}>>
|
||
The Adept must therefore play the man, arousing himself to harden his soul.
|
||
To this end, I, the Beast, have made trial and proof of divers devices. Of
|
||
these the most potent is to set the body to strive with {297} the soul. Let the
|
||
muscles take grip on themselves as if one were wrestling. Let the jaw and
|
||
mouth, in particular, be tightened to the utmost. Breathe deeply, slowly, yet
|
||
strongly. Keep mastery over the mind by muttering forcibly and audibly. But
|
||
lest such muttering tend to disturb communion with the Angel, speak only His
|
||
Name. Until the Adept have heard that Name, therefore, he may not abide in the
|
||
perfect possession of his Beloved. His most important task is thus to open his
|
||
ears to the voice of his Angel, that he may know him, how he is called. For
|
||
hearken! this Name, understood rightly and fully, declareth the nature of the
|
||
Angel in every point, wherefore also that Name is the formula of the perfection
|
||
to which the Adept must aspire, and also of the power of Magick by virtue
|
||
whereof he must work.
|
||
He then that is as yet ignorant of that Name, let him repeat a word worthy
|
||
of this particular Ritual. Such are Abrahadabra, the Word of the Aeon, which
|
||
signifieth "The Great Work accomplished"; and Aumgn interpreted in Part III of
|
||
Book 4<<The essence of this matter is that the word AUM, which expresses the
|
||
course of Breath (spiritual life) from free utterance through controlled
|
||
concentration to Silence, is transmuted by the creation of the compound letter
|
||
GR:Mu-Gamma-Nu to replace M: that is, Silence is realized as passing into
|
||
continuous ecstatic vibration, of the nature of "Love" under "Will" as shewn by
|
||
GR:Mu-Gamma-Nu = 40 + 3 + 50 = 93 GR:Alpha-Gamma-Alpha-Pi-Eta,
|
||
GR:Theta-Epsilon-Lambda-Eta-Mu-Alpha etc., and the whole word has the value of
|
||
100, Perfection Perfected, the Unity in completion, and equivalent to
|
||
GR:Kappa-Rho the conjunction of the essential male and female principles.>>; and
|
||
the name of THE BEAST, for that His number showeth forth this Union with the
|
||
Angel, and His Work is no other than to make all men partakers of this Mystery
|
||
of the Mysteries of Magick.
|
||
So then saying this word or that, let the Adept wrestle with his Angel and
|
||
withstand Him, that he may constrain Him to consent to continue in communion
|
||
until the consciousness becomes capable of clear comprehension, and of accurate
|
||
transmission<<The "normal" intellect is incapable of these functions; a superior
|
||
faculty must have been developed. As Zoroaster says: "Extend the void mind of
|
||
thy soul to that Intelligible that thou mayst learn the Intelligible, because
|
||
it subsisteth beyond Mind. Thou wilt not understand It as when understanding
|
||
some common thing.">> of the {298} transcendent Truth of the Beloved to the
|
||
heart that holds him.
|
||
The firm repetition of one of these Words ought to enable the Adept to
|
||
maintain the state of Union for several minutes, even at first.
|
||
In any case he must rekindle his ardour, esteeming his success rather as an
|
||
encouragement to more ardent aspiration than as a triumph. He should increase
|
||
his efforts.
|
||
Let him beware of the "lust of result", of expecting too much, of losing
|
||
courage if his first success is followed by a series of failures.
|
||
For success makes success seem so incredible that one is apt to create an
|
||
inhibition fatal to subsequent attempts. One fears to fail; the fear intrudes
|
||
upon the concentration and so fulfils its own prophecy. We know how too much
|
||
pleasure in a love affair makes one afraid to disgrace oneself on the next few
|
||
occasions; indeed, until familiarity has accustomed one to the idea that one's
|
||
lover has never supposed one to be more than human. Confidence returns
|
||
gradually. Inarticulate ecstasy is replaced by a more sober enjoyment of the
|
||
elements of the fascination.
|
||
Just so one's first dazzled delight in a new landscape turns, as one
|
||
continues to gaze, to the appreciation of exquisite details of the view. At
|
||
first they were blurred by the blinding rush of general beauty; they emerge one
|
||
by one as the shock subsides, and passionate rapture yields to intelligent
|
||
interest.
|
||
In the same way the Adept almost always begins by torrential lyrics painting
|
||
out mystical extravagances about "ineffable love", "unimaginable bliss",
|
||
"inexpressible infinities of illimitable utterness".<<This corresponds to the
|
||
emotional and metaphysical fog which is characteristic of the emergence of
|
||
thought from homogeneity. The clear and concise differentiation of ideas marks
|
||
the adult mind.>> He usually loses his sense of proportion, of humour, of
|
||
reality, and of sound judgment. His ego is often inflated to the bursting
|
||
point, till he would be abjectly ridiculous if he were not so pitifully
|
||
dangerous to himself and others. He also tends to take his new-found "truths
|
||
of illumination" for the entire body of truth, and insists that they must be as
|
||
valid an vital for all men as they happen to be for himself. {299}
|
||
It is wise to keep silence about those things "unlawful to utter" which one
|
||
may have heard "in the seventh heaven". This may not apply to the sixth.
|
||
The Adept must keep himself in hand, however tempted to make a new heaven and
|
||
a new earth in the next few days by trumpeting his triumphs. He must give time
|
||
a chance to redress his balance, sore shaken by the impact of the Infinite.
|
||
As he becomes adjusted to intercourse with his Angel, he will find his
|
||
passionate ecstasy develop a quality of peace and intelligibility which adds
|
||
power, while it informs and fortifies his mental and moral qualities instead of
|
||
obscuring and upsetting them. He will by now have become able to converse with
|
||
his Angel, impossible as it once seemed; for he now knows that the storm of
|
||
sound which he supposed to be the Voice was only the clamour of his own
|
||
confusions. The "infinity" nonsense was born of his own inability to think
|
||
clearly beyond his limits, just as a Bushman, confronted by numbers above five,
|
||
can only call them "many".
|
||
The truth told by the Angel, immensely as it extends the horizon of the
|
||
Adept, is perfectly definite and precise. It does not deal in ambiguities and
|
||
abstractions. It possesses form, and confesses law, in exactly the same way and
|
||
degree as any other body of truth. It is to the truth of the material and
|
||
intellectual spheres of man very much what the Mathematics of Philosophy with
|
||
its "infinite series" and "Cantorian continuity" is to schoolboy arithmetic.
|
||
Each implies the other, though by that one may explore the essential nature of
|
||
existence, and by this a pawnbroker's profits.
|
||
This then is the true aim of the Adept in this whole operation, to assimilate
|
||
himself to his Angel by continual conscious communion. For his Angel is an
|
||
intelligible image of his own true Will, to do which is the whole of the law of
|
||
his Being.
|
||
Also the Angel appeareth in Tiphereth, which is the heart of the Ruach, and
|
||
thus the Centre of Gravity of the Mind. It is also directly inspired from
|
||
Kether, the ultimate Self, through the Path of the High Priestess, or initiated
|
||
intuition. Hence the Angel is in truth the Logos or articulate expression of
|
||
the whole Being of the Adept, so that as he increases in the perfect
|
||
understanding of {300} His name, he approaches the solution of the ultimate
|
||
problem, Who he himself truly is.
|
||
Unto this final statement the Adept may trust his Angel to lead him; for the
|
||
Tiphereth-consciousness alone is connected by paths with the various parts of
|
||
his mind.<<See the maps "Minutum Mundum" in the Equinox 1, 2, & 3 and the
|
||
general relations detailed in Liber 777, of which the most important columns are
|
||
reprinted in Appendix V.>> None therefore save He hath the knowledge requisite
|
||
for calculating the combinations of conduct which will organise and equilibrate
|
||
the forces of the Adept, against the moment when it becomes necessary to
|
||
confront the Abyss. The Adept must control a compact and coherent mass if he
|
||
is to make sure of hurling it from him with a clean-cut gesture.
|
||
I, The Beast 666, lift up my voice and swear that I myself have been brought
|
||
hither by mine Angel. After that I had attained unto the Knowledge and
|
||
Conversation of Him by virtue of mine ardour towards Him, and of this Ritual
|
||
that I bestow upon men my fellows, and most of His great Love that He beareth
|
||
to me, yea, verily, He led me to the Abyss; He bade me fling away all that I had
|
||
and all that I was; and He forsook me in that Hour. But when I came beyond the
|
||
Abyss, to be reborn within the womb of BABALON, then came he unto me abiding in
|
||
my virgin heart, its Lord and Lover!
|
||
Also He made me a Magus, speaking through His Law, the Word of the new Aeon,
|
||
the Aeon of the Crowned and Conquering Child.<<For the account of these matters
|
||
see The Equinox, Vol. I, "The Temple of Solomon the King", Liber 418, Liber
|
||
Aleph, John St. John, The Urn, and Book 4, Part IV.>> Thus he fulfilled my will
|
||
to bring full freedom to the race of Men.
|
||
Yea, he wrought also in me a Work of wonder beyond this, but in this matter
|
||
I am sworn to hold my peace.
|
||
|
||
{301}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX V
|
||
|
||
A FEW OF THE PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENCES
|
||
|
||
OF THE QABALAH.
|
||
|
||
REPRINTED WITH ADDITIONS FROM
|
||
|
||
777
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
{303}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.===========.=========================.======================.
|
||
: I : II : III :
|
||
: KEY SCALE : HEBREW NAMES OF NUMBERS : ENGLISH OF COLUMN II :
|
||
: : & LETTERS : :
|
||
:-----------+-------------------------+----------------------:
|
||
: :Aleph-Yod-Nunfinal : Nothing. :
|
||
: 0 :Aleph-Yod-Nunfinal : No Limit. :
|
||
: :Samekh-Vau-Pehfinal : :
|
||
: :Aleph-Yod-Nunfinal : Limitless L.V.X. :
|
||
: :Samekh-Vau-Pehfinal : :
|
||
: :Aleph-Vau-Resh : :
|
||
: 1 :Koph-Taw-Resh : Crown. :
|
||
: 2 :Chet-Koph-Mem-Heh : Wisdom. :
|
||
: 3 :Bet-Yod-Nun-Heh : Understanding. :
|
||
: 4 :Chet-Samekh-Dalet : Mercy. :
|
||
: 5 :Gemel-Bet-Vau-Resh-Heh : Strength. :
|
||
: 6 :Taw-Peh-Aleph-Resh-Taw : Beauty. :
|
||
: 7 :Nun-Tzaddi-Chet : Victory. :
|
||
: 8 :Heh-Vau-Dalet : Splendour. :
|
||
: 9 :Yod-Samekh-Vau-Dalet : Foundation. :
|
||
: 10 :Mem-Lamed-Koph-Vau-Taw : Kingdom. :
|
||
: 11 :Aleph-Lamed-Pehfinal : Ox. :
|
||
: 12 :Bet-Yod-Taw : House. :
|
||
: 13 :Gemel-Mem-Lamed : Camel. :
|
||
: 14 :Dalet-Lamed-Taw : Door. :
|
||
: 15 :Heh-Heh : Window. :
|
||
: 16 :Vau-Vau : Nail. :
|
||
: 17 :Zain-Yod-Nunfinal : Sword. :
|
||
: 18 :Chet-Yod-Taw : Fence. :
|
||
: 19 :Tet-Yod-Taw : Serpent. :
|
||
: 20 :Yod-Vau-Dalet : Hand. :
|
||
: 21 :Koph-Pehfinal : Palm. :
|
||
: 22 :Lamed-Mem-Dalet : Ox Goad. :
|
||
: 23 :Mem-Yod-Memfinal : Water. :
|
||
: 24 :Nun-Vau-Nunfinal : Fish. :
|
||
: 25 :Samekh-Mem-Kophfinal : Prop. :
|
||
: 26 :Ayin-Yod-Nunfinal : Eye. :
|
||
: 27 :Peh-Heh : Mouth. :
|
||
: 28 :Tzaddi-Dalet-Yod : Fish-hook. :
|
||
: 29 :Qof-Vau-Pehfinal : Back of Head. :
|
||
: 30 :Resh-Yod-Shin : Head. :
|
||
: 31 :Shin-Yod-Nunfinal : Tooth. :
|
||
: 32 :Taw-Vau : Tau (as Egyptian). :
|
||
: 32 "bis" :Taw-Vau : --- :
|
||
: 31 "bis" :Shin-Yod-Nunfinal : --- :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
|
||
|
||
{304 & 305}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.===========.=========================.===============================.
|
||
: I : VI : VII :
|
||
: KEY SCALE : THE HEAVENS OF ASSIAH : ENGLISH OF COLUMN VI :
|
||
:-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------:
|
||
: 1 :Resh-Aleph-Shin-Yod-Taw : Sphere of the Primum Mobile :
|
||
: :Heh-Gemel-Lamed-Gemel- : :
|
||
: Lamed-Yod-Memfinal : :
|
||
: 2 :Mem-Samekh-Lamed-Vau-Taw : Sphere of the Zodiac :
|
||
: : : Fixed Stars :
|
||
: 3 :Shin-Bet-Taw-Aleph-Yod : Sphere of Saturn :
|
||
: 4 :Tzaddi-Dalet-Qof : Sphere of Jupiter :
|
||
: 5 :Mem-Aleph-Dalet-Yod- : Sphere of Mars :
|
||
: : Memfinal : :
|
||
: 6 :Shin-Mem-Shin : Sphere of Sol :
|
||
: 7 :Nun-Vau-Gemel-Heh : Sphere of Venus :
|
||
: 8 :Koph-Vau-Koph-Bet : Sphere of Mercury :
|
||
: 9 :Lamed-Bet-Nun-Heh : Sphere of Luna :
|
||
: 10 :Chet-Lamed-Memfinal : Sphere of the Elements :
|
||
: :Yod-Samekh-Vau-Dalet- : :
|
||
: : Vau-Taw : :
|
||
: 11 :Resh-Vau-Chet : Air :
|
||
: 12 : (Planets following : MERCURY :
|
||
: : Sephiroth corresponding): :
|
||
: 13 : : Luna :
|
||
: 14 : : Venus :
|
||
: 15 :Tet-Lamed-Heh : Aries Fire :
|
||
: 16 :Shin-Vau-Resh : Taurus Earth :
|
||
: 17 :Taw-Aleph-Vau-Mem-Yod- : Gemini Air :
|
||
: : Memfinal : :
|
||
: 18 :Samekh-Resh-Tet-Nunfinal : Cancer Water :
|
||
: 19 :Aleph-Resh-Yod-Heh : Leo Fire :
|
||
: 20 :Bet-Taw-Vau-Lamed-Heh : Virgo Earth :
|
||
: 21 : : Jupiter :
|
||
: 22 :Mem-Aleph-Zain-Nun-Yod- : Libra Air :
|
||
: : Memfinal : :
|
||
: 23 :Mem-Yod-Memfinal : Water :
|
||
: 24 :Ayin-Qof-Resh-Bet : Scorpio Water :
|
||
: 25 :Qof-Shin-Taw : Sagittarius Fire :
|
||
: 26 :Gemel-Dalet-Yod : Capricornus Earth :
|
||
: 27 : : Mars :
|
||
: 28 :Dalet-Lamed-Yod : Aquarius Air :
|
||
: 29 :Dalet-Gemel-Yod-Memfinal : Pisces Water :
|
||
: 30 : : Sol :
|
||
: 31 :Aleph-Shin : Fire :
|
||
: 32 : : Saturn :
|
||
: 32 "bis" :Aleph-Resh-Tzaddifinal : Earth :
|
||
: 31 "bis" :Aleph-Taw : Spirit :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
|
||
|
||
{306 & 307}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.================.===================.=======================.
|
||
: : IX : XI : XII :
|
||
: : THE SWORD : ELEMENTS : :
|
||
: : AND :(WITH THEIR PLANE- : THE TREE OF LIFE :
|
||
: : THE SERPENT : TARY RULERS) : :
|
||
: : :Do not confuse with: :
|
||
: : :rulers of Zodiac. : :
|
||
:---------+----------------+-------------------+-----------------------:
|
||
: 0 :................:...................:.......................:
|
||
: 1 : The Flaming : Root of Air :1st Plane Middle Pillar:
|
||
: 2 : Sword follows : " " Fire :2nd " Right " :
|
||
: 3 : the downward : " " Water :2nd " Left " :
|
||
: 4 : course of the : " " Water :3rd " Right " :
|
||
: 5 : Sephiroth, and : " " Fire :3rd " Left " :
|
||
: 6 : is compared : " " Air :4th " Middle " :
|
||
: 7 : to the Light- : " " Fire :5th " Right " :
|
||
: 8 : ning Flash. : " " Water :5th " Left " :
|
||
: 9 : Its hilt is : " " Air :6th " Middle " :
|
||
: 10 : in Kether and : " " Earth :7th " " " :
|
||
: : its point in : : :
|
||
: : Malkuth. : : :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
:11 :The Serpent of : Hot and Moist Air :Path joins 1-2 :
|
||
: 12 :Wisdom follows :...................: " " 1-3 :
|
||
: 13 :the course of :...................: " " 1-6 :
|
||
: 14 :the paths or :...................: " " 2-3 :
|
||
: 15 :letters upward, : Sun Fire Jupiter : " " 2-6 :
|
||
: 16 :its head being : Venus Earth Moon : " " 2-4 :
|
||
: 17 :thus in Aleph, : Saturn Air Mercury: " " 3-6 :
|
||
: 18 :its tail in Taw.: Mars Water : " " 3-5 :
|
||
: 19 :Aleph, Mem, & : Sun Fire Jupiter : " " 4-5 :
|
||
: :Shin are : : :
|
||
: 20 :the Mother : Venus Earth Moon : " " 4-6 :
|
||
: 21 :letters, re- :...................: " " 4-7 :
|
||
: 22 :ferring to the : Saturn Air Mercury: " " 5-6 :
|
||
:23 :Elements; Bet, : Cold & Moist Water: " " 5-8 :
|
||
: 24 :Gemel, Dalet, : Mars Water : " " 6-7 :
|
||
: :Koph, Peh, Resh : : :
|
||
: 25 :and Taw, the : Sun Fire Jupiter : " " 6-9 :
|
||
: 26 :Double letters, : Venus Earth Moon : " " 6-8 :
|
||
: 27 :to the Planets; :...................: " " 7-8 :
|
||
: 28 :the rest, : Saturn Air Mercury: " " 7-9 :
|
||
: 29 :Single letters, : Mars Water : " " 7-10 :
|
||
: 30 :to the Zodiac. :...................: " " 8-9 :
|
||
:31 : : Hot and Dry Fire : " " 8-10 :
|
||
: 32 :................:...................: " " 9-10 :
|
||
:32 "bis" : : Cold and Dry Earth:.......................:
|
||
:31 "bis" :................:...................:.......................:
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: Row 29 has been corrected, original had a typo of Mars Fire}
|
||
|
||
{308}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.====================================.=======================.
|
||
: : XIV : XV :
|
||
: : GENERAL ATTRIBUTION : THE KING SCALE :
|
||
: : OF TAROT : OF COLOUR :
|
||
:---------+------------------------------------+-----------------------:
|
||
: 1 :The 4 Aces :Brilliance :
|
||
: 2 :The 4 Twos --- Kings or Knights :Pure Soft Blue :
|
||
: 3 :The 4 Threes --- Queens :Crimson :
|
||
: 4 :The 4 Fours :Deep violet :
|
||
: 5 :The 4 Fives :Orange :
|
||
: 6 :The 4 Sixes --- Emperors or Princes :Clear pink rose :
|
||
: 7 :The 4 Sevens :Amber :
|
||
: 8 :The 4 Eights :Violet purple :
|
||
: 9 :The 4 Nines :Indigo :
|
||
: 10 :The 4 Tens --- Empresses or :Yellow :
|
||
: : Princesses : :
|
||
:11 :The Fool --- (Swords) Emperors or :Bright pale yellow :
|
||
: : Princes : :
|
||
: 12 :The Juggler :Yellow :
|
||
: 13 :The High Priestess :Blue :
|
||
: 14 :The Empress :Emerald Green :
|
||
: 15 :The Emperor :Scarlet :
|
||
: 16 :The Hierophant :Red Orange :
|
||
: 17 :The Lovers :Orange :
|
||
: 18 :The Chariot :Amber :
|
||
: 19 :Strength :Yellow, greenish :
|
||
: 20 :Hermit :Green yellowish :
|
||
: 21 :Wheel of Fortune :Violet :
|
||
: 22 :Justice :Emerald Green :
|
||
:23 :The Hanged Man --- (Cups) Queens :Deep blue :
|
||
: 24 :Death :Green blue :
|
||
: 25 :Temperance :Blue :
|
||
: 26 :The Devil :Indigo :
|
||
: 27 :The House of God :Scarlet :
|
||
: 28 :The Star :Violet :
|
||
: 29 :The Moon :Crimson (ultra violet) :
|
||
: 30 :The Sun :Orange :
|
||
:31 :The Angel or Last Judgment --- :Glowing orange scarlet :
|
||
: : (Wands) Kings or Knights : :
|
||
: 32 :The Universe :Indigo :
|
||
:32 "bis" :Empresses (Coins) :Citrine, olive, russet :
|
||
: : : and black(1) :
|
||
:31 "bis" :All 22 trumps :White merging into grey:
|
||
:----------------------------------------------------------------------:
|
||
: (1) The Pure Earth known to the Ancient Egyptians, during that :
|
||
: Equinox of the Gods over which Isis presided (i.e. The Pagan Era) was:
|
||
: taken as Green. :
|
||
|
||
{309}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=============================.==============================.
|
||
: : XIX : XXII :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: SELECTION OF EGYPTIAN GODS : SMALL SELECTION OF :
|
||
: : : HINDU DEITIES :
|
||
:---------+-----------------------------+------------------------------:
|
||
: 0 :Harpocrates, Amoun, Nuith. :AUM. :
|
||
: 1 :Ptah, Asar un Nefer, Hadith. :Parabrahm (or any other whom :
|
||
: : : one wishes to please). :
|
||
: 2 :Amoun, Thoth, Nuith (Zodiac).:Shiva, Vishnu (as Buddha ava- :
|
||
: : : tara).Akasa(as matter).Lingam:
|
||
: 3 :Maut, Isis, Nephthys. :Bhavani (all forms of Sakti), :
|
||
: : : Prana (as Force), Yoni. :
|
||
: 4 :Amoun, Isis. :Indra, Brahma. :
|
||
: 5 :Horus, Nephthys. :Vishnu, Varruna-Avatar. :
|
||
: 6 :Asar, Ra. :Vishnu-Hari-Krishna-Rama. :
|
||
: 7 :Hathoor. :Bhavani (all forms of Sakti). :
|
||
: : : Prana (as Force), Yoni. :
|
||
: 8 :Anubis. :Hanuman. :
|
||
: 9 :Shu. :Ganesha Vishnu (Kurm Avatar). :
|
||
: 10 :Seb. Lower (i.e. unwedded), :Lakshmi, etc. (Kundalini) :
|
||
: : Isis and Nephthys. : :
|
||
:11 :Nu. :The Maruts (Vayu). :
|
||
: 12 :Thoth and Cynocephalus. :Hanuman, Vishnu (as Parasa- :
|
||
: : : Rama). :
|
||
: 13 :Chomse. :Chandra (as Moon). :
|
||
: 14 :Hathoor. :Lalita(sexual aspect of Sakti):
|
||
: 15 :Men Thu. :Shiva. :
|
||
: 16 :Asar Ameshet Apis. :Shiva (Sacred Bull). :
|
||
: 17 :Various twin dieties, Rehkt :Various twin and hybrid :
|
||
: : Merti, etc. : Deities. :
|
||
: 18 :Kephra. :..............................:
|
||
: 19 :Ra-Hoor-Khuit, Pasht, Sekhet,:Vishnu (Nara-Singh Avatar). :
|
||
: : Mau, Sekhmet. : :
|
||
: 20 :Isis (as Virgin). :The Gopi Girls, the Lord of :
|
||
: : : Yoga. :
|
||
: 21 :Amoun-Ra. :Brahma, Indra. :
|
||
: 22 :Ma. :Yama. :
|
||
:23 :Tum Athph Auramoth (as Water):Soma (apas). :
|
||
: : Asar (as Hanged Man), : :
|
||
: : Hekar, Isis. : :
|
||
: 24 :Merti goddesses, Typhon, :Kundalini. :
|
||
: : Apep, Khephra. : :
|
||
: 25 :.............................:Vishnu (Horse-Avatar). :
|
||
: 26 :Khem (Set). :Lingam, Yoni. :
|
||
: 27 :Horus. :..............................:
|
||
: 28 :Ahephi, Aroueris. :..............................:
|
||
: 29 :Khephra (as Scarab in Tarot :Vishnu (Matsya Avatar). :
|
||
: : Trump). : :
|
||
: 30 :Ra and many others. :Surya (as Sun). :
|
||
:31 :Thoum-aesh-neith, Mau, Ka- :Agni (Tejas) Yama, (as God of :
|
||
: : beshunt, Horus, Tarpesheth.: last Judgment). :
|
||
: 32 :Sebek, Mako. :Brahama. :
|
||
:32 "bis" :Satem, Ahapshi, Nephthys, :(Prithivi). :
|
||
: : Ameshet. : :
|
||
:31 "bis" :Asar. :(Akasa). :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
|
||
{310 & 311}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=============================.==============================.
|
||
: : XXXIV : XXXV :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: SOME GREEK GODS : SOME ROMAN GODS :
|
||
:---------+-----------------------------+------------------------------:
|
||
: 0 :Pan..........................:..............................:
|
||
: 1 :Zeus, Iacchus :Jupiter :
|
||
: 2 :Athena, Uranus :Janus :
|
||
: 3 :Cybele, Demeter, Rhea, Here :Juno, Cybele, Saturn, Hecate :
|
||
: 4 :Poseidon :Jupiter :
|
||
: 5 :Ares, Hades :Mars :
|
||
: 6 :Iacchus, Apollo, Adonis :Apollo :
|
||
: 7 :Aphrodite, Nike :Venus :
|
||
: 8 :Hermes :Mercury :
|
||
: 9 :Zeus (as Air), Diana of :Diana (as Moon) :
|
||
: : Ephesus (as phallic stone) : :
|
||
: 10 :Persephone (Adonis), Psyche :Ceres :
|
||
:11 :Zeus :Jupiter :
|
||
: 12 :Hermes :Mercury :
|
||
: 13 :Artemis, Hecate :Diana :
|
||
: 14 :Aphrodite :Venus :
|
||
: 15 :Athena :Mars, Minerva :
|
||
: 16 :(Here) :Venus :
|
||
: 17 :Castor & Pollux, Apollo the :Casto & Pollux (Janus) :
|
||
: : Diviner : :
|
||
: 18 :Apollo the Charioteer :Mercury :
|
||
: 19 :Demeter (borne by lions) :Venus (repressing the fire of :
|
||
: : : Vulcan) :
|
||
: 20 :(Attis) :(Attis) Ceres, Adonis :
|
||
: 21 :Zeus :Jupiter (Pluto) :
|
||
: 22 :Themis, Minos, AEacus, and :Vulcan :
|
||
: : Rhadamanthus : :
|
||
:23 :Poseidon :Neptune :
|
||
: 24 :Ares :Mars :
|
||
: 25 :Apollo, Artemis (hunters) :Diana (as Archer) :
|
||
: 26 :Pan, Priapus (Erect Hermes :Pan, Vesta, Bacchus, Priapus :
|
||
: : and Bacchus) : :
|
||
: 27 :Ares :Mars :
|
||
: 28 :(Athena), Ganymede :Juno :
|
||
: 29 :Poseidon :Neptune :
|
||
: 30 :Helios, Apollo :Apollo :
|
||
:31 :Hades :Vulcan, Pluto :
|
||
: 32 :(Athena) :Saturn :
|
||
:32 "bis" :(Demeter) :Ceres :
|
||
:31 "bis" :Iacchus :(Liber) :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
|
||
{312}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=============================.==============================.
|
||
: : XXXVIII : XXXIX :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: ANIMALS, REAL AND : PLANTS, REAL AND :
|
||
: : IMAGINARY : IMAGINARY :
|
||
:---------+-----------------------------+------------------------------:
|
||
: 0 :.............................:..............................:
|
||
: 1 :God. :Almond in flower. :
|
||
: 2 :Man. :Amaranth. :
|
||
: 3 :Woman. :Cypress, Opium Poppy. :
|
||
: 4 :Unicorn. :Olive, Shamrock. :
|
||
: 5 :Basilisk. :Oak, Nux Vomica, Nettle. :
|
||
: 6 :Phoenix, Lion, Child. :Acacia, Bay, Laurel, Vine. :
|
||
: 7 :Lynx. :Rose. :
|
||
: 8 :Hermaphrodite, Jackal, Twin :Moly, Anhalonium Lewinii. :
|
||
: : Serpents. : :
|
||
: 9 :Elephant. :(Banyan) Mandrake, Damiana, :
|
||
: : : Yohimba. :
|
||
: 10 :Sphinx. :Willow, Lily, Ivy. :
|
||
:11 :Eagle or Man (Cherub of Air).:Aspen. :
|
||
: 12 :Swallow, Ibis, Ape, Twin :Vervain, Herb Mercury, :
|
||
: : Serpents. : Marjolane, Palm. :
|
||
: 13 :Dog. :Almond, Mugwort, Hazel, :
|
||
: : : (as Moon). Moonworth, :
|
||
: : : Ranunculus. :
|
||
: 14 :Sparrow, Dove, Swan. :Myrtle, Rose, Clover. :
|
||
: 15 :Ram, Owl. :Tiger Lily, Geranium. :
|
||
: 16 :Bull (Cherub of Earth). :Mallow. :
|
||
: 17 :Magpie, Hybrids. :Hybrids, Orchids. :
|
||
: 18 :Crab, Turtle, Sphinx. :Lotus. :
|
||
: 19 :Lion (Cherub of Fire). :Sunflower. :
|
||
: 20 :Virgin, Anchorite, any :Snowdrop, Lily, Narcissus. :
|
||
: : solitary person or animal. : :
|
||
: 21 :Eagle. :Hyssop, Oak, Poplar, Fig. :
|
||
: 22 :Elephant. :Aloe. :
|
||
:23 :Eagle-snake-scorpion :Lotus, all Water Plants. :
|
||
: : (Cherub of Water). : :
|
||
: 24 :Scorpion, Beetle, Lobster or :Cactus. :
|
||
: : Crayfish, Wolf. : :
|
||
: 25 :Centaur, Horse, Hyppogriff, :Rush. :
|
||
: : Dog. : :
|
||
: 26 :Goat, Ass. :Indian Hemp, Orchis Root, :
|
||
: : : Thistle. :
|
||
: 27 :Horse, Bear, Wolf. :Absinthe, Rue. :
|
||
: 28 :Man or Eagle (Cherub of Air).:(Olive) Cocoanut. :
|
||
: : Peacock. : :
|
||
: 29 :Fish, Dolphin, Crayfish, :Unicellular Organisms, Opium. :
|
||
: : Beetle. : :
|
||
: 30 :Lion, Sparrowhawk. :Sunflower, Laurel, Heliotrope.:
|
||
:31 :Lion (Cherub of Fire). :Red Poppy, Hibiscus, Nettle. :
|
||
: 32 :Crocodile. :Ash, Cypress, Hellebore, Yew, :
|
||
: : : Nightshade. :
|
||
:32 bis :Bull (Cherub of Earth). :Oak, Ivy. :
|
||
:31 bis :Sphinx (if Sworded and :Almond in flower. :
|
||
: : Crowned). : :
|
||
: : : :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: lines 11, 16, 28 & 32 bis corrected as to element; original had typos
|
||
of Fire, Air, Fire and Water respectively.}
|
||
{313 & 314}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=============================.================================.
|
||
: : XL : XLI :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: PRECIOUS STONES : MAGICAL WEAPONS :
|
||
:---------+-----------------------------+--------------------------------:
|
||
: 0 :.............................:................................:
|
||
: 1 :Diamond. :Swastika or Fylfat Cross, :
|
||
: : : Crown. :
|
||
: 2 :Star Ruby, Turquoise. :Lingam, the Inner Robe of :
|
||
: : : Glory. :
|
||
: 3 :Star Sapphire, Pearl. :Yoni, the Outer Robe of :
|
||
: : : Concealment. :
|
||
: 4 :Amethyst, Sapphire. :The Wand, Sceptre, or Crook. :
|
||
: 5 :Ruby. :The Sword, Spear, Scourge or :
|
||
: : : Chain. :
|
||
: 6 :Topaz, Yellow Diamond. :The Lamen or Rosy Cross. :
|
||
: 7 :Emerald. :The Lamp and Girdle. :
|
||
: 8 :Opal, especially Fire Opal. :The Names and Versicles, :
|
||
: : : the Apron. :
|
||
: 9 :Quartz. :The Perfumes and Sandals. :
|
||
: 10 :Rock Crystal. :The Magical Circle & Triangle .:
|
||
:11 :Topaz, Chalcedony. :The Dagger or Fan. :
|
||
: 12 :Opal, Agate. :The Wand or Caducesus. :
|
||
: 13 :Moonstone, Pearl, Crystal. :Bow and Arrow. :
|
||
: 14 :Emerald, Turquoise. :The Girdle. :
|
||
: 15 :Ruby. :The Horns, Energy, the Burin. :
|
||
: 16 :Topaz. :The Labour of Preparation. :
|
||
: 17 :Alexandrite, Tourmaline, :The Tripod. :
|
||
: : Iceland Spar. : :
|
||
: 18 :Amber. :The Furnace. :
|
||
: 19 :Cat's Eye. :The Discipline (Preliminary). :
|
||
: 20 :Peridot. :The Lamp and Wand (Virile :
|
||
: : : Force reserved), the Bread. :
|
||
: 21 :Amethyst, Lapis Lazuli. :The Sceptre. :
|
||
: 22 :Emerald. :The Cross of Equilibrium. :
|
||
:23 :Beryl or Aquamarine. :The Cup and Cross of Suffer- :
|
||
: : : ing, the Wine. :
|
||
: 24 :Snakestone. :The Pain of the Obligation. :
|
||
: 25 :Jacinth. :The Arrow (swift and straight :
|
||
: : : application of Force). :
|
||
: 26 :Black Diamond. :The Secret Force, Lamp. :
|
||
: 27 :Ruby, any red stone. :The Sword. :
|
||
: 28 :Artificial Glass. :The Censer or Aspergillus. :
|
||
: 29 :Pearl. :The Twilight of the Place, :
|
||
: : : Magic Mirror. :
|
||
: 30 :Crysoleth. :The Lamen or Bow and Arrow. :
|
||
:31 :Fire Opal. :The Wand, Lamp, Pyramid of Fire.:
|
||
: 32 :Onyx. :The Sickle. :
|
||
:32 "bis" :Salt. :The Pantacle, the Salt. :
|
||
:31 "bis" :.............................:................................:
|
||
: : : :
|
||
|
||
{315 & 316}
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
.=========.===================.==========.==============================.
|
||
: : XLII : LIII : XLIX :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: PERFUMES :THE GREEK : LINEAL FIGURES OF THE :
|
||
: : :ALPHABET : PLANETS AND GEOMANCY :
|
||
:---------+-------------------+----------+------------------------------:
|
||
: 0 :...................: :The Circle. :
|
||
: 1 :Ambergris. : :The Point. :
|
||
: 2 :Musk : (sigma) :The Line, also the Cross. :
|
||
: 3 :Myrrh, Civet : :The Plane, also the Diamond, :
|
||
: : : : Oval, Circle and other Yoni :
|
||
: : : : Symbols. :
|
||
: 4 :Cedar : (iota) :The Solid Figure. :
|
||
: 5 :Tobacco : (phi) :The Tessaract. :
|
||
: 6 :Olibanum : omega : Sephirotic Geomantic Fi- :
|
||
: 7 :Benzoin, Rose, : epsilon : gures follow the Planets. :
|
||
: : Red Sandal : : Caput and Cauda Draconis :
|
||
: 8 :Storax : : are the Nodes of the Moon, :
|
||
: 9 :Jasmine, Jinseng, : chi : nearly = Herschel and :
|
||
: : all Odoriferous : : Neptune respectively. :
|
||
: : Roots : : They belong to Malkuth. :
|
||
: 10 :Dittany of Crete : Sampi : :
|
||
:11 :Galbanum : alpha :Those of Airy Triplicity. :
|
||
: 12 :Mastic, White : beta :Octagram. :
|
||
: : Sandal, Mace, : : :
|
||
: : Storax, all Fu- : : :
|
||
: : gitive Odours. : : :
|
||
: 13 :Menstrual Blood, : gamma :Enneagram. :
|
||
: : Camphor, Aloes, : : :
|
||
: : all Sweet : : :
|
||
: : Virginal Odours. : : :
|
||
: 14 :Sandalwood, Myrtle : delta :Heptagram. :
|
||
: : all Soft Volup- : : :
|
||
: : tuous Odours. : : :
|
||
: 15 :Dragon's Blood. : epsilon :Puer. :
|
||
: 16 :Storax. : digamma :Amissio. :
|
||
: 17 :Wormwood. : zeta :Albus. :
|
||
: 18 :Onycha. : eta :Populus and Via. :
|
||
: 19 :Olibanum. : theta :Fortuna Major & Fortuna Minor.:
|
||
: 20 :White Sandal, : iota :Conjunctio. :
|
||
: : Narcissus. : : :
|
||
: 21 :Saffron, all : kappa :Square and Rhombus. :
|
||
: : Generous Odours. : : :
|
||
: 22 :Galbanum. : lambda :Puella. :
|
||
:23 :Onycha, Myrrh. : mu :Those of Watery Triplicity. :
|
||
: 24 :Siamese Benzoin, : nu :Rubeus. :
|
||
: : Opoponax. : : :
|
||
: 25 :Lign-aloes. :xi (sigma):Acquisitio. :
|
||
: 26 :Musk, Civet (also : omicron :Carcer. :
|
||
: :Saturnian perfumes): : :
|
||
: 27 :Pepper, Dragon's : pi :Pentagram. :
|
||
: : Blood, all Hot : : :
|
||
: : Pungent Odours. : : :
|
||
: 28 :Galbanum. : psi :Tristitia. :
|
||
: 29 :Ambergris. : koppa :Laetitia. :
|
||
: 30 :Olibanum, Cinamon, : rho :Hexagram. :
|
||
: :all Glorious Odours: : :
|
||
:31 :Olibanum, all : sampi :Those of Firey Triplicity. :
|
||
: : Fiery Odours. : : :
|
||
: 32 :Assafoetida, : tau :Triangle. :
|
||
: : Scammony, Indigo, : : :
|
||
: : Sulphur, all Evil : : :
|
||
: : Odours. : : :
|
||
:32 bis :Storax, all Dull : upsilon :Those of Earthy Triplicity. :
|
||
: : Heavy Odours. : : :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: on line 9, Chi was omitted; lines 21 & 32 bis, Chi and Tau there by
|
||
error. These have been restored from Liber 777} {317 & 318}
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE II
|
||
|
||
.=========.==========.===============.====================.============.
|
||
: : LIV : LV : LXIII : LXIV :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: THE :THE ELEMENTS : :SECRET NAMES:
|
||
: :LETTERS OF: AND : THE FOUR WORLDS : OF THE FOUR:
|
||
: : THE NAME : SENSES : : WORLDS :
|
||
:---------+----------+---------------+--------------------+------------:
|
||
: 11 : Vau : Air, Smell. :Yetzirah, Formative :Mem-Heh Mah:
|
||
: : : : World. : :
|
||
: 23 : Heh : Water, Taste. :Briah, Creative :Samekh-Gemel:
|
||
: : : : World. : Seg:
|
||
: 31 : Yod : Fire, Sight. :Atziluth, Archetypal:Ayin-Bet Ob:
|
||
: : : : World. : :
|
||
:32 "bis" : Heh : Earth, Touch. :Assiah, Material :Bet-Nunfinal:
|
||
: : : : World. : Ben:
|
||
:31 "bis" : Shin : Spirit, :....................:............:
|
||
: : : Hearing. : : :
|
||
: : : : : :
|
||
:=========+========.=.========.======.====.===============.===.========:
|
||
: : LXVIII : LXIX : LXX : LXXV : LXXVI :
|
||
: :THE PART: THE :ATTRIBUTION:THE FIVE ELEMENTS :THE FIVE:
|
||
: : OF :ALCHEMICAL: OF : (TATWAS) :SKANDHAS:
|
||
: :THE SOUL: ELEMENTS : PENTAGRAM : : :
|
||
:---------+--------+----------+-----------+-------------------+--------:
|
||
: 11 :HB:RVCh : Mercury :Left Upper :Vayu - The Blue :Sankhara:
|
||
: :Ruach : : Point. : Circle. : :
|
||
: 23 :HB:NShMH: Salt :Right Upper:Aupas - The Silver :Vedana. :
|
||
: :Neshamah: : Point. : Crescent : :
|
||
: 31 :HB:ChYH : Sulphur :Right Lower:Agni or Tejas - :San~~n~~a. :
|
||
: :Chiah : : Point. : The Red Triangle.: :
|
||
:32 "bis" :HB:NPSh : Salt :Left Lower :Prithivi - The :Rupa :
|
||
: :Nephesh : : Point. : Yellow Square. : :
|
||
:31 "bis" :H:YChYDH: :Topmost :Akasa - The Black :Vin~~nanam:
|
||
: :Iechidah: : Point. : Egg. : :
|
||
:---------.--------.----------.-----------.-------------------.--------:
|
||
: :
|
||
: TABLE III :
|
||
:=========.===================.=============.==========================:
|
||
: : LXXVII : LXXXI : LXXXIII :
|
||
: : THE PLANETS : : THE ATTRIBUTION OF :
|
||
: : AND THEIR NUMBERS : METALS : THE HEXAGRAM :
|
||
:---------+-------------------+-------------+--------------------------:
|
||
: 12 : Mercury 8 : Mercury. : Left Lower Point. :
|
||
: 13 : Moon 9 : Silver. : Bottom Point. :
|
||
: 14 : Venus 7 : Copper. : Right Lower Point. :
|
||
: 21 : Jupiter 4 : Tin. : Right Upper Point. :
|
||
: 27 : Mars 5 : Iron. : Left Upper Point. :
|
||
: 30 : Sun 6 : Gold. : Centre Point. :
|
||
: 31 : Saturn 3 : Lead. : Top Point. :
|
||
|
||
{319}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE IV
|
||
|
||
.=========.======.=======.=================.=========.===================.
|
||
: :XCVII : CXVII : CXVIII : CXXIV : CXXXIII :
|
||
:KEY SCALE:PARTS : THE : THE CHAKKRAS OR : THE : TITLES AND :
|
||
: : OF : SOUL : CENTRES OF :HEAVENLY : ATTRIBUTIONS OF :
|
||
: : THE :(HINDU): PRANA :HEXAGRAM : THE WAND SUIT :
|
||
: : SOUL : : (HINDUISM) : : (CLUBS) :
|
||
:---------+------+-------+-----------------+---------+-------------------:
|
||
: 0 :......:.......:.................:.........:...................:
|
||
: 1 :YChYDH:Atma :Sahasrara (above : Jupiter :The Root of the :
|
||
: : : : Head). : : Powers of Fire. :
|
||
: 2 :ChYH :Buddhi :Ajna (Pineal : Mercury :Mars in Aries :
|
||
: : : : Gland). : : Dominion. :
|
||
: 3 :NShMH :Higher :Visuddhi : Moon :Sun in Aries Esta- :
|
||
: : : Manas : (Larynx). :[Saturn : blished Strength. :
|
||
: : : : : Daath] : :
|
||
: -. .- .- : : :
|
||
: 4 : :.......:.................: Venus :Venus in Aries :
|
||
: : : : : : Perfected Work. :
|
||
: 5 : :Lower -:Anahata (Heart) : Mars :Saturn in Leo :
|
||
: : : : : : Strife. :
|
||
: : : Manas : : : :
|
||
: 6 : :.......:.................: Sun :Jupiter in Leo :
|
||
: : : : : : Victory. :
|
||
: : : .- : : :
|
||
: 7 :-RVCh :Kama :Manipura (Solar : :Mars in Leo Valour.:
|
||
: : : : Plexus). : : :
|
||
: 8 : :Prana :Svadistthana : :Mercury in Sagit- :
|
||
: : : : : : tarius Swiftness.:
|
||
: : : : (Navel). : : :
|
||
: 9 : :Linga .- -. :Moon in Sagittarius:
|
||
: -. .Sharira: : : Great Strength. :
|
||
: : : -:Muladhara (Lingam: : :
|
||
: 10 :NPSh :Sthula : and Anus). : :Saturn in Sagit- :
|
||
: : : : : : tarius Oppression.:
|
||
: : :Sharira: : : :
|
||
: : : .- -. : :
|
||
:---------.------.-----------------------------------.-------------------:
|
||
: XCVIII --- English of Col. XCVII :
|
||
: The Self........... 1 The Intellect. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. :
|
||
: The Life Force..... 2 The Animal soul which :
|
||
: The Intuition...... 3 perceives and feels.. 10 :
|
||
|
||
{320}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE IV
|
||
|
||
.=========.====================.===================.===================.
|
||
: : CXXXIV : CXXXV : CXXXVI :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: TITLES AND : TITLES AND : TITLES AND :
|
||
: :ATTRIBUTIONS OF THE : ATTRIBUTIONS OF : ATTRIBUTIONS OF :
|
||
: :CUP OR CHALICE SUIT : THE SWORD SUIT :THE COIN, DISC OR :
|
||
: : (HEARTS) : (SPADES) : PANTACLE SUIT :
|
||
: : : : (DIAMONDS) :
|
||
:---------+----------------------+---------------------+---------------------:
|
||
: 0 :......................:.....................:.....................:
|
||
: 1 :The Root of the :The Root of the :The Root of the :
|
||
: : Powers of Water. : Powers of Air. : Powers of Earth. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 2 :Venus in Cancer Love. :Moon in Libra :Jupiter in Capricorn :
|
||
: : : The Lord of : The Lord of :
|
||
: : : Peace restored. : Harmonious Change :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 3 :Mercury in Cancer :Saturn in Libra :Mars in Capricorn :
|
||
: : Abundance. : Sorrow. : Material Works. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 4 :Moon in Cancer :Jupiter in Libra :Sun in Capricorn :
|
||
: : Blended Pleasure. : Rest from Strife. : Earthly Power. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 5 :Mars in Scorpio :Venus in Aquarius :Mercury in Taurus :
|
||
: : Loss in Pleasure. : Defeat. : Material Trouble. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 6 :Sun in Scorpio :Mercury in Aquarius :Moon in Taurus :
|
||
: : Pleasure. : Earned Success. : Material Success. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 7 :Venus in Scorpio :Moon in Aquarius :Saturn in Taurus :
|
||
: : Illusionary Success.: Unstable Effort. : Success Unfulfilled.:
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 8 :Saturn in Pisces :Jupiter in Gemini :Sun in Virgo :
|
||
: : Abandoned Success. : Shortened Force. : Prudence. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 9 :Jupiter in Pisces :Mars in Gemini :Venus in Virgo :
|
||
: : Material Happiness. : Despair & Cruelty. : Material Gain. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 10 :Mars in Pisces :Sun in Gemini :Mercury in Virgo :
|
||
: : Perfected Success. : Ruin. : Wealth. :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: Two typos have been corrected in column CXXXIV by Liber 777: 4, Moon
|
||
in place of Sun and 6, Sun in place of Moon.}
|
||
{321}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE V
|
||
|
||
.=========.====================.===================.===================.
|
||
: : CXXXVII : CXXXVIII : CXXXIX :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: SIGNS OF THE : PLANETS RULING IN : PLANETS EXALTED IN:
|
||
: : ZODIAC : COLUMN CCXXXVII : COLUMN CXXXVII :
|
||
:---------+--------------------+-------------------+-------------------:
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 15 : Aries : Mars : P. M. (Sun) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 16 : Taurus : Venus : Uranus (Moon) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 17 : Gemini : Mercury : Neptune :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 18 : Cancer : Moon : P. M. (Jupiter) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 19 : Leo : Sun : Uranus :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 20 : Virgo : Mercury : Neptune (Mercury):
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 22 : Libra : Venus : P. M. (Saturn) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 24 : Scorpio : Mars : Uranus :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 25 : Sagittarius : Jupiter : Neptune :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 26 : Capricorn : Saturn : P. M. (Mars) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 28 : Aquarius : Saturn : Uranus :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: 29 : Pisces : Jupiter : Neptune (Venus) :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
: : : : :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: Liber 777 gives different entries for column CXXXIX, and these have
|
||
been added in parenthesis without deletion of original.}
|
||
{322}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=======.=============.=========.============.========.
|
||
: : CLXXV : : CLXXVI : CLXXVII : CLXXIX :
|
||
:KEY SCALE:HEBREW : ENGLISH :NUMERICAL: YETZIRATIC :NUMBERS :
|
||
: :LETTERS: VALUES OF : VALUE :ATTRIBUTION :PRINTED :
|
||
: : : HEBREW :OF COLUMN: OF COLUMN :ON TAROT:
|
||
: : : LETTERS : CLXXV : CLXXV : :
|
||
:---------+-------+-------------+---------+------------+--------:
|
||
:11 :Aleph :A Aleph : 1 : Air : 0 :
|
||
: 12 :Bet :B Beth : 2 : Mercury : 1 :
|
||
: 13 :Gemel :G Gimel : 3 : Moon : 2 :
|
||
: 14 :Dalet :D Daleth : 4 : Venus : 3 :
|
||
: 15 :Heh :H He : 5 : Aries : 4 :
|
||
: 16 :Vau :V or W Vau : 6 : Taurus : 5 :
|
||
: 17 :Zain :Z Zain : 7 : Gemini : 6 :
|
||
: 18 :Chet :Ch Cheth : 8 : Cancer : 7 :
|
||
: 19 :Tet :T Teth : 9 : Leo : 11 :
|
||
: 20 :Yod :Y Yod : 10 : Virgo : 9 :
|
||
: 21 :Koph,Kf:K Kaph : 20, 500 : Jupiter : 10 :
|
||
: 22 :Lamed :L Lamed : 30 : Libra : 8 :
|
||
:23 :Mem,M-f:M Mem : 40, 600 : Water : 12 :
|
||
: 24 :Nun,N-f:N Nun : 50, 700 : Scorpio : 13 :
|
||
: 25 :Samekh :S Samekh : 60 : Sagittarius: 14 :
|
||
: 26 :Ayin :O Ayin : 70 : Capricorn : 15 :
|
||
: 27 :Peh,P-f:P Pe : 80, 800 : Mars : 16 :
|
||
: 28 :Tzaddi,:Tz Tzaddi : 90, 900 : Aquarius : 17 :
|
||
: : Tz-f : : : : :
|
||
: 29 :Qof :(K soft) Qoph: 100 : Pisces : 18 :
|
||
: 30 :Resh :R Resh : 200 : Sun : 19 :
|
||
:31 :Shin :Sh Shin : 300 : Fire : 20 :
|
||
: 32 :Taw :(T soft) Tau : 400 : Saturn : 21 :
|
||
:32 "bis" :Taw :.............: 400 : Earth : -- :
|
||
:31 "bis" :Shin :.............: 300 : Spirit : -- :
|
||
:---------.-------.-------------.---------.------------.--------:
|
||
: NOTE. "Ch" like "ch" in "loch". :
|
||
: :
|
||
{WEH NOTE: The English value in row 27 has been corrected, original had O.}
|
||
-323-
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE I
|
||
|
||
.=========.=========================================================.
|
||
: : CLXXX :
|
||
:KEY SCALE: :
|
||
: : TITLES OF TAROT TRUMPS :
|
||
:---------+---------------------------------------------------------:
|
||
:11 :The Spirit of 'GR:Alpha-iota-theta-eta-rho :
|
||
: 12 :The Magus of Power. :
|
||
: 13 :The Priestess of the Silver Star. :
|
||
: 14 :The Daughter of the Mighty Ones. :
|
||
: 15:Sun of the Morning, Chief among the Mighty. :
|
||
: 16:The Magus of the Eternal. :
|
||
: 17:The Children of the voice: the Oracle of the Mighty Gods.:
|
||
: 18:The Child of the Powers of the Waters: the Lord of the :
|
||
: : Triumph of Light. :
|
||
: 19:The Daughter of the Flaming Sword. :
|
||
: 20:The Prophet of the Eternal, the Magus of the Voice of :
|
||
: : Power. :
|
||
: 21 :The Lord of the Forces of Life. :
|
||
: 22:The Daughter of the Lords of Truth; The Ruler of the :
|
||
: : Balance. :
|
||
:23 :The Spirit of the Mighty Waters. :
|
||
: 24:The Child of the Great Transformers. The Lord of the :
|
||
: : Gate of Death. :
|
||
: 25:The Daughter of the Reconcilers, the Bringer-forth of :
|
||
: : Life. :
|
||
: 26:The Lord of the Gates of Matter. The Child of the :
|
||
: : forces of Time. :
|
||
: 27 :The Lord of the Hosts of the Mighty. :
|
||
: 28:The Daughter of the Firmament; the Dweller between the :
|
||
: : Waters. :
|
||
: 29:The Ruler of Flux & Reflux. The Child of the Sons of :
|
||
: : the Mighty. :
|
||
: 30 :The Lord of the Fire of the World. :
|
||
:31 :The Spirit of the Primal Fire. :
|
||
: 32 :The Great One of the Night of Time. :
|
||
:31 "bis" :.........................................................:
|
||
:32 "bis" :.........................................................:
|
||
: : :
|
||
|
||
|
||
{324}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
APPENDIX VI
|
||
|
||
A FEW PRINCIPAL RITUALS
|
||
|
||
Grimorium Sanctissimum.
|
||
|
||
Arcanum Arcanorum Quod Continet Nondum Revelandum ipsis Regibus supremis
|
||
O.T.O. Grimorium Quod Baphomet X Degree M... suo fecit.
|
||
De Templo.
|
||
1. Oriente ............... Altare
|
||
2. Occidente ............. Tabula dei invocandi
|
||
3. Septentrione .......... Sacerdos
|
||
4. Meridione ............. Ignis cum thuribulo, GR:chi. GR:tau. GR:lambda.
|
||
5. Centro ................ Lapis quadratus cum
|
||
Imagine Dei
|
||
Maximi Igentis Nefandi Ineffabilis Sanctissimi
|
||
et cum ferro, tintinnabulo, oleo.
|
||
Virgo. Stet imago juxta librum GR:Theta-Epsilon-Lambda-Eta-Mu-Alpha.
|
||
|
||
De ceremonio Principii.
|
||
|
||
Fiat ut in Libro DCLXXI dicitur, sed antea virgo lavata sit cum verbis "Asperge
|
||
me..." GR:chi. GR:tau. GR:lambda., et habilimenta ponat cum verbis "Per sanctum
|
||
Mysterium," GR:chi. GR:tau. GR:lambda.
|
||
Ita Pyramis fiat. Tunc virgo lavabit sacerdotem et vestimenta ponat ut supra
|
||
ordinatur.
|
||
(Hic dicat virgo orationes dei operis).
|
||
De ceremonio Thuribuli.
|
||
|
||
Manibus accedat et ignem et sacerdotem virgo, dicens: {325}
|
||
"Accendat in nobis Dominus ignem sui amoris et flamman aeternae caritatis.
|
||
|
||
De ceremonio Dedicationis.
|
||
|
||
Invocet virgo Imaginem Dei. M.I.N.I.S. his verbis. --- Tu qui es prater
|
||
omnia... GR:chi. GR:tau. GR:lambda."
|
||
Nec relinquet alteram Imaginem.
|
||
|
||
De Sacrificio Summo.
|
||
|
||
Deinde silentium frangat sacerdos cum verbis versiculi sancti dei
|
||
particularitur invocandi.
|
||
Ineat ad Sanctum Sanctorum.
|
||
Caveat; caveat, caveat.
|
||
Duo qui fiunt UNUS sine intermissione verba versiculi sancti alta voce
|
||
cantent.
|
||
|
||
De Benedictione Benedicti.
|
||
|
||
Missa rore, dicat mulier haec verba "Quia patris et filii s.s." GR:chi. GR:tau.
|
||
GR:lambda.
|
||
|
||
De Ceremonio Finis
|
||
|
||
Fiat ut in Libro DCLXXI dicitur. GR:Alpha-Upsilon-Mu-Gamma-Nu.
|
||
|
||
|
||
{326}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIBER XXV
|
||
|
||
THE STAR RUBY.
|
||
|
||
Facing East, in the centre, draw deep deep deep thy breath closing thy mouth
|
||
with thy right forefinger prest against thy lower lip. Then dashing down the
|
||
hand with a great sweep back and out, expelling forcibly thy breath, cry
|
||
GR:Alpha-Pi-Omicron GR:Pi-Alpha-Nu-Tau-Omicron-Sigma
|
||
GR:Kappa-Alpha-Kappa-Omicron-Delta-Alpha-Iota-Mu-Omicron-Nu-Omicron-Sigma.
|
||
With the same forefinger touch thy forehead, and say GR:Sigma-Omicron-Iota,
|
||
thy member, and say GR:Omega GR:Phi-Alpha-Lambda-Lambda-Epsilon<<The secret
|
||
sense of these words is to be sought in the numeration thereof.>>, thy right
|
||
shoulder, and say GR:Iota-Sigma-Chi-Upsilon-Rho-Omicron-Sigma, thy left
|
||
shoulder, and say
|
||
GR:Epsilon-Upsilon-Chi-Alpha-Rho-Iota-Sigma-Tau-Omicron-Sigma; then clasp thine
|
||
hands, locking the fingers, and cry GR:Iota-Alpha-Omega. Advance to the East.
|
||
Imagine strongly a Pentagram, aright, in thy forehead. Drawing the hands to the
|
||
eyes, fling it forth, making the sign of Horus and roar
|
||
GR:Theta-Eta-Rho-Iota-Omicron-Nu. Retire thine hand in the sign of
|
||
Hoor-paar-Kraat.
|
||
Go round to the North and repeat; but say NUIT.
|
||
Go round to the West and repeat; but whisper BABALON.
|
||
Go round to the South and repeat; but bellow HADIT.
|
||
Completing the circle widdershins, retire to the centre and raise thy voice
|
||
in the Paian, with these words GR:Iota-Omega GR:Pi-Alpha-Nu, with the signs
|
||
of N.O.X.
|
||
Extend the arms in the form of a Tau and say low but clear:
|
||
GR:Pi-Rho-Omicron GR:Mu-Omicron-Upsilon
|
||
GR:Iota-Upsilon-Gamma-Gamma-Epsilon-Sigma GR:Omicron-Pi-Iota-Chi-Omega
|
||
GR:Mu-Omicron-Upsilon
|
||
GR:Tau-Epsilon-Lambda-Epsilon-Tau-Alpha-Rho-Chi-Alpha-Iota GR:Epsilon-Pi-Iota
|
||
GR:Delta-Epsilon-Xi-Iota-Alpha GR:Chi-Upsilon-Nu-Omicron-Chi-Epsilon-Sigma
|
||
GR:Epsilon-Pi-Alpha-Rho-Iota-Sigma-Tau-Epsilon-Rho-Alpha
|
||
GR:Delta-Alpha-Iota-Mu-Omicron-Nu-Omicron-Sigma GR:Phi-Epsilon-Gamma
|
||
GR:Epsilon-Iota GR:Gamma-Alpha-Rho GR:Pi-Epsilon-Rho-Iota
|
||
GR:Mu-Omicron-Upsilon GR:Omicron GR:Alpha-Sigma-Tau-Eta-Rho GR:Tau-Omega-Nu
|
||
GR:Pi-Epsilon-Nu-Tau-Epsilon GR:Kappa-Alpha-Iota GR:Epsilon-Nu GR:Tau-Eta-Iota
|
||
GR:Sigma-Tau-Eta-Lambda-Eta-Iota GR:Omega GR:Alpha-Sigma-Tau-Eta-Rho
|
||
GR:Tau-Omega-Nu GR:Epsilon-Xi GR:Epsilon-Sigma-Tau-Eta-Chi-Epsilon.
|
||
Repeat the Cross Qabalistic, as above, and end as thou didst begin.
|
||
|
||
{327}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIBER XXXVI
|
||
|
||
THE STAR SAPPHIRE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Let the Adept be armed with his Magick Rood [and provided with his mystic
|
||
Rose].
|
||
In the centre, let him give the L.V.X. signs; or if he know them, if he will
|
||
and dare do them, and can keep silent about them, the signs of N.O.X. being the
|
||
signs of Puer, Vir, Puella, Mulier. Omit the sign. I.R.
|
||
Then let him advance to the East and make the Holy Hexagram, saying: "Pater
|
||
et Mater unus deus Ararita."
|
||
Let him go round to the South, make the Holy Hexagram and say: "Mater et
|
||
Filius unus deus Ararita."
|
||
Let him go round to the North, make the Holy Hexagram and then say: "Filia
|
||
et Pater unus deus Ararita."
|
||
Let him then return to the Centre, and so to The Centre of All (making the
|
||
"Rosy Cross" as he may know how) saying "Ararita Ararita Ararita". (In this the
|
||
Signs shall be those of Set Triumphant and of Baphomet. Also shall Set appear
|
||
in the Circle. Let him drink of the Sacrament and let him communicate the
|
||
same.) Then let him say: "Omnia in Duos: Duo in Unum: Unus in Nihil: Haec nec
|
||
Quatuor nec Omnia nec Duo nec Unus nec Nihil Sunt.
|
||
Gloria Patri et Matri et Filio et Filiae et Spiritui Sancto externo et
|
||
Spiritui Sancto interno ut erat est erit in saecula Saeculorum sex in uno per
|
||
nomen Septem in uno Ararita."
|
||
Let him then repeat the signs of L.V.X. but not the signs of N.O.X.: for it
|
||
is not he that shall arise in the Sign of Isis Rejoicing.
|
||
|
||
{328}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIBER XLIV
|
||
|
||
THE MASS OF THE PHOENIX
|
||
|
||
"The Magician, his breast bare, stands before an altar on which are his Burin,
|
||
Bell, Thurible, and two of the Cakes of Light. In the Sign of the Enterer he
|
||
reaches West across the Altar, and cries:"
|
||
Hail Ra, that goest in thy bark
|
||
Into the caverns of the Dark! "He gives the sign of Silence, and takes the
|
||
Bell, and Fire, in his hands."
|
||
East of the Altar see me stand
|
||
With light and musick in my hand! "He strikes Eleven times upon the Bell" 333
|
||
- 55555 - 333 "and places the Fire in the Thurible."
|
||
I strike the Bell: I light the Flame;
|
||
I utter the mysterious Name.
|
||
ABRAHADABRA "He strikes eleven times upon the Bell."
|
||
Now I begin to pray: Thou Child,
|
||
Holy Thy name and undefiled!
|
||
Thy reign is come; Thy will is done.
|
||
Here is the Bread; here is the Blood.
|
||
Bring me through midnight to the Sun!
|
||
Save me from Evil and from Good!
|
||
That Thy one crown of all the Ten
|
||
Even now and here be mine. AMEN. "He puts the first Cake on the Fire of the
|
||
Thurible."
|
||
I burn the Incense-cake, proclaim
|
||
These adorations of Thy name. "He makes them as in Liber Legis, and strikes
|
||
again Eleven times upon the Bell. With the Burin he then makes upon his breast
|
||
the proper sign." {329}
|
||
|
||
Behold this bleeding breast of mine
|
||
Gashed with the sacramental sign!
|
||
|
||
"He puts the second Cake to the wound."
|
||
|
||
I stanch the Blood; the wafer soaks
|
||
It up, and the high priest invokes!
|
||
|
||
"He eats the second Cake."
|
||
|
||
This Bread I eat. This Oath I swear
|
||
As I enflame myself with prayer:
|
||
"There is no grace: there is no guilt:
|
||
This is the Law: DO WHAT THOU WILT!"
|
||
|
||
"He strikes Eleven times upon the Bell, and cries"
|
||
|
||
ABRAHADABRA.
|
||
|
||
I entered in with woe; with mirth
|
||
I now go forth, and with thanksgiving,
|
||
To do my pleasure on the earth
|
||
Among the legions of the living.
|
||
|
||
"He goeth forth."
|
||
|
||
|
||
{330}
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
LIBER V
|
||
|
||
vel
|
||
|
||
REGULI.
|
||
|
||
A.'. A.'. publication in Class D. Being the Ritual of the Mark of the Beast:
|
||
an incantation proper to invoke the Energies of the Aeon of Horus, adapted for
|
||
the daily use of the Magician of whatever grade.
|
||
|
||
THE FIRST GESTURE.
|
||
|
||
The Oath of the Enchantment, which is called The Elevenfold Seal.
|
||
|
||
"The Animadversion towards the Aeon."
|
||
1. Let the Magician, robed and armed as he may deem to be
|
||
fit, turn his face towards Boleskine,<<Boleskine House is on Loch Ness, 17
|
||
miles from Inverness, Latitude 57.14 N. Longitude 4.28 W.>> that is the House
|
||
of
|
||
The Beast 666.
|
||
2. Let him strike the battery 1-3-3-3-1.
|
||
3. Let him put the Thumb of his right hand between its index
|
||
and medius, and make the gestures hereafter following.
|
||
|
||
"The Vertical Component of the Enchantment."
|
||
1. Let him describe a circle about his head, crying NUIT!
|
||
2. Let him draw the Thumb vertically downward and touch
|
||
the Muladhara Cakkra, crying, HADIT!
|
||
3. Let him, retracing the line, touch the centre of his breast
|
||
an cry RA-HOOR-KHUIT!
|
||
|
||
"The Horizontal Components of the Enchantment."
|
||
1. Let him touch the Centre of his Forehead, his mouth, and
|
||
his larynx, crying AIWAZ!
|
||
2. Let him draw his thumb from right to left across his face
|
||
at the level of the nostrils.
|
||
3. Let him touch the centre of his breast, and his solar plexus,
|
||
crying, THERION!
|
||
4. Let him draw his thumb from left to right across his breast,
|
||
at the level of the sternum. {331}
|
||
5. Let him touch the Svadistthana, and the Muladhara Chakkra,
|
||
crying, BABALON!
|
||
6. Let him draw his thumb from right to left across his
|
||
abdomen, at the level of the hips. (Thus shall he formulate the Sigil of
|
||
the Grand Hierophant, but dependent from the Circle.)
|
||
|
||
"The Asseveration of the Spells."
|
||
1. Let the Magician clasp his hands upon his Wand, his fingers
|
||
and thumbs interlaced, crying LAShTAL!
|
||
GR:Theta-Epsilon-Lambda-Eta-Mu-Alpha!
|
||
GR:Digamma-Iota-Alpha-Omicron-Digamma! GR:Alpha-Gamma-Alpha-Pi-Eta!
|
||
GR:Alpha-Upsilon-Mu-Gamma-Nu!
|
||
(Thus shall be declared the Words of Power whereby the
|
||
Energies of the Aeon of Horus work his will in the World.)
|
||
|
||
"The Proclamation of the Accomplishment."
|
||
1. Let the Magician strike the Battery: 3-5-3, crying
|
||
ABRAHADABRA.
|
||
|
||
The SECOND GESTURE.
|
||
|
||
"The Enchantment."
|
||
1. Let the Magician, still facing Boleskine, advance to the
|
||
circumference of his circle.
|
||
2. Let him turn himself towards the left, and pace with the
|
||
stealth and swiftness of a tiger the precincts of his circle,
|
||
until he complete one revolution thereof.
|
||
3. Let him give the Sign of Horus (or The Enterer) as he
|
||
passeth, so to project the force that radiateth from Boleskine
|
||
before him.
|
||
4. Let him pace his path until he comes to the North; there
|
||
let him halt, and turn his face to the North.
|
||
5. Let him trace with his wand the Averse Pentagram proper
|
||
to invoke Air (Aquarius).
|
||
6. Let him bring the wand to the centre of the Pentagram and
|
||
call upon NUIT!
|
||
7. Let him make the sign called Puella, standing with his
|
||
feet together, head bowed, his left hand shielding the {332}
|
||
Muladhara Cakkra, and his right hand shielding his
|
||
breast (attitude of the Venus de Medici).
|
||
8. Let him turn again to the left, and pursue his Path as
|
||
before, projecting the force from Boleskine as he passeth;
|
||
let him halt when he next cometh to the South and face
|
||
outward.
|
||
9. Let him trace the Averse Pentagram that invoketh Fire
|
||
(Leo).
|
||
10. Let him point his wand to the centre of the Pentagram,
|
||
and cry, HADIT!
|
||
11. Let him give the sign Puer, standing with feet together,
|
||
and head erect. Let his right hand (the thumb extended
|
||
at right angles to the fingers) be raised, the forearm
|
||
vertical at a right angle with the upper arm, which is
|
||
horizontally extended in the line joining the shoulders.
|
||
Let his left hand, the thumb extended forwards and the
|
||
fingers clenched, rest at the junction of the thighs (Attitude
|
||
of the gods Mentu, Khem, etc.).
|
||
12. Let him proceed as before; then in the East, let him make
|
||
the Averse Pentagram that invoketh Earth (Taurus).
|
||
13. Let him point his wand to the centre of the pentagram,
|
||
and cry, THERION!
|
||
14. Let him give the sign called Vir, the feet being together.
|
||
The hands, with clenched finger and thumbs thrust out
|
||
forwards, are held to the temples; the head is then bowed
|
||
and pushed out, as if to symbolize the butting of an horned
|
||
beast (attitude of Pan, Bacchus, etc.). (Frontispiece,
|
||
Equinox I, III).
|
||
15. Proceeding as before, let him make in the West the
|
||
Averse Pentagram whereby Water is invoked.
|
||
16. Pointing the wand to the centre of the Pentagram, let him
|
||
call upon BABALON!!
|
||
17. Let him give the sign Mulier. The feet are widely
|
||
separated, and the arms raised so as to suggest a crescent.
|
||
The head is thrown back (attitude of Baphomet, Isis in
|
||
Welcome, the Microcosm of Vitruvius). (See Book 4,
|
||
Part II). {333}
|
||
18. Let him break into the dance, tracing a centripetal spiral
|
||
widdershins, enriched by revolutions upon his axis as he
|
||
passeth each quarter, until he come to the centre of the
|
||
circle. There let him halt, facing Boleskine.
|
||
19. Let him raise the wand, trace the Mark of the Beast, and
|
||
cry AIWAZ!
|
||
20. Let him trace the invoking Hexagram of The Beast.
|
||
21. Let him lower the wand, striking the Earth therewith.
|
||
22. Let him give the sign of Mater Triumphans (The feet are
|
||
together; the left arm is curved as if it supported a child;
|
||
the thumb and index finger of the right hand pinch the
|
||
nipple of the left breast, as if offering it to that child).
|
||
Let him utter the word GR:Theta-Epsilon-Lambda-Eta-Mu-Alpha!
|
||
23. Perform the spiral dance, moving deosil and whirling
|
||
widdershins.
|
||
Each time on passing the West extend the wand to the
|
||
Quarter in question, and bow:
|
||
a. "Before me the powers of LA!" (to West.)
|
||
b. "Behind me the powers of AL!" (to East.)
|
||
c. "On my right hand the powers of LA!" (to North.)
|
||
d. "On my left hand the powers of AL!" (to South.)
|
||
e. "Above me the powers of ShT!" (leaping in the air.)
|
||
f. "Beneath me the powers of ShT!" (striking the ground.)
|
||
g. "Within me the Powers!" (in the attitude of Phthah erect, the
|
||
feet together, the hands clasped upon the vertical wand.)
|
||
h. "About me flames my Father's face, the Star of Force and
|
||
Fire."
|
||
i. "And in the Column stands His six-rayed Splendour!"
|
||
(This dance may be omitted, and the whole utterance chanted in the attitude
|
||
of Phthah.)
|
||
|
||
The FINAL GESTURE.
|
||
|
||
This is identical with the First Gesture.
|
||
(Here followeth an impression of the ideas implied in this Paean.) {334}
|
||
|
||
I also am a Star in Space, unique and self-existent, an individual essence
|
||
incorruptible; I also am one Soul; I am identical with All and None. I am in
|
||
All and all in Me; I am, apart from all and lord of all, and one with all.
|
||
I am a God, I very God of very God; I go upon my way to work my will; I have
|
||
made matter and motion for my mirror; I have decreed for my delight that
|
||
Nothingness should figure itself as twain, that I might dream a dance of names
|
||
and natures, and enjoy the substance of simplicity by watching the wanderings
|
||
of my shadows. I am not that which is not; I know not that which knows not; I
|
||
love not that which loves not. For I am Love, whereby division dies in delight;
|
||
I am Knowledge, whereby all parts, plunged in the whole, perish and pass into
|
||
perfection; and I am that I am, the being wherein Being is lost in Nothing, nor
|
||
deigns to be but by its Will to unfold its nature, its need to express its
|
||
perfection in all possibilities, each phase a partial phantasm, and yet
|
||
inevitable and absolute.
|
||
I am Omniscient, for naught exists for me unless I know it. I am Omnipotent,
|
||
for naught occurs save by Necessity my soul's expression through my will to be,
|
||
to do, to suffer the symbols of itself. I am Omnipresent, for naught exists
|
||
where I am not, who fashioned space as a condition of my consciousness of
|
||
myself, who am the centre of all, and my circumference the frame of mine own
|
||
fancy.
|
||
I am the All, for all that exists for me is a necessary expression in thought
|
||
of some tendency of my nature, and all my thoughts are only the letters of my
|
||
Name.
|
||
I am the One, for all that I am is not the absolute all, and all my all is
|
||
mine and not another's; mine, who conceive of others like myself in essence and
|
||
truth, yet unlike in expression and illusion.
|
||
I am the None, for all that I am is the imperfect image of the perfect; each
|
||
partial phantom must perish in the clasp of its counterpart; each form fulfil
|
||
itself by finding its equated opposite, and satisfying its need to be the
|
||
Absolute by the attainment of annihilation.
|
||
The word, LAShTAL includes all this.
|
||
"LA" --- Naught. {335}
|
||
"AL" --- Two.
|
||
"L" is "Justice", the Kteis fulfilled by the Phallus, "Naught and Two"
|
||
because the plus and the minus have united in "love under will."
|
||
"A" is "the Fool", Naught in Thought (Parzival), Word (Harpocrates), and
|
||
Action (Bacchus). He is the boundless air, the wandering Ghost, but with
|
||
"possibilities". He is the Naught that the Two have made by "love under will".
|
||
"LA" thus represents the Ecstasy of Nuit and Hadit conjoined, lost in love,
|
||
and making themselves Naught thereby. Their child is begotten and conceived,
|
||
but is in the phase of Naught also, as yet. "LA" is thus the Universe in that
|
||
phase, with its potentialities of manifestation.
|
||
"AL" on the contarary, though it is essentially identical with "LA", shows
|
||
the Fool manifested through the Equilibrium of Contraries. The weight is still
|
||
nothing, but it is expressed as if it were two equal weights in opposite scales.
|
||
The indicator still points to zero.
|
||
"ShT" is equally 31 with "LA" and "AL", but it expresses the secret nature
|
||
which operates the Magick or the transmutations.
|
||
"ShT" is the formula of this particular aeon; another aeon might have another
|
||
way of saying 31.
|
||
"Sh" is Fire as T is Force; conjoined they express Ra-Hoor-Khuit.
|
||
"The Angel" represents the Stele 666, showing the Gods of the Aeon, while
|
||
"Strength" is a picture of Babalon and The Beast, the earthly emissaries of
|
||
those Gods.
|
||
"ShT" is the dynamic equivalent of "LA" and "AL". "Sh" shows the Word of the
|
||
Law, being triple, as 93 is thrice 31. "T" shows the formula of Magick declared
|
||
in that Word; the Lion, the Serpent, the Sun, Courage and Sexual Love are all
|
||
indicated by the card.
|
||
In "LA" note that Saturn or Satan is exalted in the House of Venus or
|
||
Astarte, and it is an airy sign. Thus "L" is Father-Mother, Two and Naught, and
|
||
the Spirit (Holy Ghost) of their Love is also Naught. Love is AHBH, 13, which
|
||
is AChD, Unity, I, Aleph, who is The Fool who is Naught, but none the less an
|
||
Individual One, who (as such) is not another, yet unconscious of himself until
|
||
his Oneness expresses itself as a duality.
|
||
Any impression or idea is unknowable in itself. It can mean {336} nothing
|
||
until brought into relation with other things. The first step is to distinguish
|
||
one thought from another; this is the condition of recognizing it. To define
|
||
it, we must perceive its orientation to all our other ideas. The extent of our
|
||
knowledge of any one thing varies therefore with the number of ideas with which
|
||
we can compare it. Every new fact not only adds itself to our universe, but
|
||
increases the value of what we already possess.
|
||
In "AL" this "The" or "God" arranges for "Contenance to behold contenance",
|
||
by establishing itself as an equilibrium, "A" the One-Naught conceived as "L"
|
||
the Two-Naught. This "L" is the Son-Daughter Horus-Harpocrates just as the
|
||
other "L" was the Father-Mother Set-Isis. Here then is Tetragrammaton once
|
||
more, but expressed in identical equations in which every term is perfect in
|
||
itself as a mode of Naught.
|
||
"ShT" supplies the last element; making the Word of either five or six
|
||
letters, according as we regard "ShT" as one letter or two. Thus the Word
|
||
affirms the Great Work accomplished: 5 Degree = 6Square.
|
||
"ShT", is moreover a necessary resolution of the apparent opposition of "LA"
|
||
and "AL"; for one could hardly pass to the other without the catalytic action
|
||
of a third identical expression whose function should be to transmute them.
|
||
Such a term must be in itself a mode of Naught, and its nature cannot encroach
|
||
on the perfections of Not-Being, "LA" or of Being, "AL". It must be purely
|
||
Nothing-Matter, so as to create a Matter-in-Motion which is a function of
|
||
"Something".
|
||
Thus "ShT" is Motion in its double phase, an inertia composed of two opposite
|
||
currents, and each current is also thus polarized. "Sh" is Heaven and Earth,
|
||
"T" Male and Female; "ShT" is Spirit and Matter; one is the word of Liberty and
|
||
Love flashing its Light to restore Life to Earth; the other is the act by which
|
||
Life claims that Love is Light and Liberty. And these are Two-in-One, the
|
||
divine letter of Silence-in-Speech whose symbol is the Sun in the arms of the
|
||
Moon.
|
||
But "Sh" and "T" are alike formulae of force in action as opposed to
|
||
entities; they are not states of existence, but modes of motion. They are
|
||
verbs, not nouns.
|
||
"Sh" is the Holy Spirit as a "tongue of fire" manifest in triplicity, {337}
|
||
and is the child of Set-Isis as their Logos or Word uttered by their "Angel".
|
||
The card is XX, and 20 is the value of Yod (the Angel or Herald) expressed in
|
||
full as IVD. "Sh" is the Spiritual congress of Heaven and Earth.
|
||
But "T" is the Holy Spirit in action as a "roaring lion" or as the "old
|
||
Serpent" instead of as an "Angel of Light". The twins of Set-Isis, harlot and
|
||
beast, are busy with that sodomitic and incestuous lust which is the traditional
|
||
formula for producing demi-gods, as in the cases of Mary and the Dove; Leda and
|
||
the Swan, etc. The card is XI, the number of Magick AVD: Aleph the Fool
|
||
impregnating the woman according to the word of Yod, the Angel of the Lord! His
|
||
sister has seduced her brother Beast, shaming the Sun with her sin; she has
|
||
mastered the Lion and enchanted the Serpent. Nature is outraged by Magick; man
|
||
is bestialized and woman defiled. The conjunction produces a monster; it
|
||
affirms regression of types. Instead of a man-God conceived of the Spirit of
|
||
God by a virgin in innocence, we are asked to adore the bastard of a whore and
|
||
a brute, begotten in shamefullest sin and born in most blasphemous bliss.
|
||
This is in fact the formula of our Magick; we insist that all acts must be
|
||
equal; that existence asserts the right to exist; that unless evil is a mere
|
||
term expressing some relation of haphazard hostility between forces equally
|
||
self-justified, the universe is as inexplicable and impossible as uncompensated
|
||
action: that the orgies of Bacchus and Pan are no less sacremental than the
|
||
Masses of Jesus; that the scars of syphilis are sacred and worthy of honour as
|
||
such.
|
||
It should be unnecessary to insist that the above ideas apply only to the
|
||
Absolute. Toothache is still painful, and deceit degrading, to a man,
|
||
relatively to his situation in the world of illusion; he does his Will by
|
||
avoiding them. But the existence of "Evil" is fatal to philosophy so long as
|
||
it is supposed to be independent of conditions; and to accustom the mind "to
|
||
make no difference" between any two ideas as such is to emancipate it from the
|
||
thralldom of terror.
|
||
We affirm on our altars our faith in ourselves and our wills, our love of all
|
||
aspects of the Absolute All. {338}
|
||
And we make the Spirit Shin combine with the Flesh Teth into a single letter,
|
||
whose value is 31 even as those of "LA" the Naught, and "AL" the All, to
|
||
complete their Not-Being and Being with its Becoming, to mediate between
|
||
identical extremes as their mean --- the secret that sunders and seals them.
|
||
It declares that all somethings are equally shadows of Nothing, and justifies
|
||
Nothing in its futile folly of pretending that something is stable, by making
|
||
us aware of a method of Magick through the practice of which we may partake in
|
||
the pleasure of the process.
|
||
The Magician should devise for himself a definite technique for destroying
|
||
"evil". The essence of such a practice will consist in training the mind and
|
||
the body to confront things which cause fear, pain, disgust,<<The People of
|
||
England have made two revolutions to free themselves from Popish fraud and
|
||
tyranny. They are at their tricks again; and if we have to make a Third
|
||
Revolution, let us destroy the germ itself!>> shame and the like. He must learn
|
||
to endure them, then to become indifferent to them, then to analyse them until
|
||
they give pleasure and instruction, and finally to appreciate them for their own
|
||
sake, as aspects of Truth. When this has been done, he should abandon them if
|
||
they are really harmful in relation to health or comfort. Also, our selection
|
||
of "evils" is limited to those that cannot damage us irreparably. E.g., one
|
||
ought to practise smellying assafoetida until one likes it; but not arsine or
|
||
hydrocyanic acid. Again, one might have a liaison with an ugly old woman until
|
||
one beheld and loved the star which she is; it would be too dangerous to
|
||
overcome the distaste for dishonesty by forcing oneself to pick pockets. Acts
|
||
which are essentially dishonourable must not be done; they should be justified
|
||
only by calm contemplation of their correctness in abstract cases.
|
||
Love is a virtue; it grows stronger and purer and less selfish by applying
|
||
it to what it loathes; but theft is a vice involving the slave-idea that one's
|
||
neighbour is superior to oneself. It is admirable only for its power to develop
|
||
certain moral and mental qualities in primitive types, to prevent the atrophy
|
||
of such faculties as our own vigilance, and for the interest which it adds to
|
||
the "tragedy, Man." {339}
|
||
Crime, folly, sickness and all such phenomena must be contemplated with
|
||
complete freedom from fear, aversion, or shame. Otherwise we shall fail to see
|
||
accurately, and interpret intelligently; in which case we shall be unable to
|
||
outwit and outfight them. Anatomists and physiologists, grappling in the dark
|
||
with death, have won hygiene, surgery, prophylaxis and the rest for mankind.
|
||
Anthropologists, archaeologists, physicists and other men of science, risking
|
||
thumbscrew, stake, infamy and ostracism, have torn the spider-snare of
|
||
superstition to shreds and broken in pieces the monstrous idol of Morality, the
|
||
murderous Moloch which has made mankind its meat throughout history. Each
|
||
fragment of that coprolite is manifest as an image of some brute lust, some
|
||
torpid dullness, some ignorant instinct, or some furtive fear shapen in his own
|
||
savage mind.
|
||
Man is indeed not wholly freed, even now. He is still trampled under the
|
||
hoofs of the stampeding mules that nightmare bore to his wild ass, his creative
|
||
forces that he had not mastered, the sterile ghosts that he called gods. Their
|
||
mystery cows men still; they fear, they flinch, they dare not face the phantoms.
|
||
Still, too, the fallen fetich seems awful; it is frightful to them that there
|
||
is no longer an idol to adore with anthems, and to appease with the flesh of
|
||
their firstborn. Each scrambles in the bloody mire of the floor to snatch some
|
||
scrap for a relic, that he may bow down to it and serve it.
|
||
So, even to-day, a mass of maggots swarm heaving over the carrion earth, a
|
||
brotherhood bound by blind greed for rottenness. Science still hesitates to
|
||
raze the temple of Rimmon, though every year finds more of her sons impatient
|
||
of Naaman's prudence. The Privy Council of the Kingdom of Mansoul sits in
|
||
permanent secret session; it dares not declare what must follow its deed in
|
||
shattering the monarch morality into scraps of crumbling conglomerate of
|
||
climatic, tribal, and personal prejudices, corrupted yet more by the action of
|
||
crafty ambition, insane impulse, ignorant arrogance, superstitious hysteria,
|
||
fear fashioning falsehoods on the stone that it sets on the grave of Truth whom
|
||
it has murdered and buried in the black earth Oblivion. Moral philosophy,
|
||
psychology, sociology, anthropology, mental pathology, physiology, and many
|
||
another of {340} the children of wisdom, of whom she is justified, well know
|
||
that the laws of Ethics are a chaos of confused conventions, based at best on
|
||
customs convenient in certain conditions, more often on the craft or caprice of
|
||
the biggest, the most savage, heartless, cunning and blood-thirsty brutes of the
|
||
pack, to secure their power or pander to their pleasure in cruelty. There is
|
||
no principle, even a false one, to give coherence to the clamour of ethical
|
||
propositions. Yet the very men that have smashed Moloch, and strewn the earth
|
||
with shapeless rubble, grow pale when they so much as whisper among themselves,
|
||
"While Moloch ruled all men were bound by the one law, and by the oracles of
|
||
them that, knowing the fraud, feared not, but were his priests and wardens of
|
||
his mystery. What now? How can any of us, though wise and strong as never was
|
||
known, prevail on men to act in concert, now that each prays to his own chip of
|
||
God, and yet knows every other chip to be a worthless ort, dream-dust, ape-dung,
|
||
tradition-bone, or --- what not else?"
|
||
So science begins to see that the Initiates were maybe not merely silly and
|
||
selfish in making their rule of silence, and in protecting philosophy from the
|
||
profane. Yet still she hopes that the mischief may not prove mortal, and begs
|
||
that things may go on much as usual until that secret session decide on some
|
||
plan of action.
|
||
It has always been fatal when somebody finds out too much too suddenly. If
|
||
John Huss had cackled more like a hen, he might have survived Michaelmas, and
|
||
been esteemed for his eggs. The last fifty years have laid the axe of analysis
|
||
to the root of every axiom; they are triflers who content themselves with
|
||
lopping the blossoming twigs of our beliefs, or the boughs of our intellectual
|
||
instruments. We can no longer assert any single proposition, unless we guard
|
||
ourselves by enumerating countless conditions which must be assumed.
|
||
This digression has outstayed its welcome; it was only invited by Wisdom that
|
||
it might warn Rashness of the dangers that encompass even Sincerity, Energy and
|
||
Intelligence when they happen not to contribute to Fitness-in-their-environment.
|
||
The Magician must be wary in his use of his powers; he must make every act
|
||
not only accord with his Will, but with the proprieties of his position at the
|
||
time. It might be my will to reach {341} the foot of a cliff; but the easiest
|
||
way --- also the speediest, most direct, least obstructed, the way of minimum
|
||
effort --- would be simply to jump. I should have destroyed my will in the act
|
||
of fulfilling it, or what I mistook for it; for the true will has no goal; its
|
||
nature being to Go. Similarly a parabola is bound by one law which fixes its
|
||
relations with two straight lines at every point; yet it has no end short of
|
||
infinity, and it continually changes its direction. The initiate who is aware
|
||
Who he is can always check his conduct by reference to the determinants of his
|
||
curve, and calculate his past, his future, his bearings and his proper course
|
||
at any assigned moment; he can even comprehend himself as a simple idea. He may
|
||
attain to measure fellow-parabolas, ellipses that cross his path, hyperbolas
|
||
that span all space with their twin wings. Perhaps he may come at long last,
|
||
leaping beyond the limits of his own law, to conceive that sublimely stupendous
|
||
outrage to Reason, the Cone! Utterly inscrutable to him, he is yet well aware
|
||
that he exists in the nature thereof, that he is necessary thereto, that he is
|
||
ordered thereby, and that therefrom he is sprung, from the loins of so fearful
|
||
a Father! His own infinity becomes zero in relation to that of the least
|
||
fragment of the solid. He hardly exists at all. Trillions multiplied by
|
||
trillions of trillions of such as he could not cross the frontier even of
|
||
breadth, the idea which he came to guess at only because he felt himself bound
|
||
by some mysterious power. Yet breadth is equally a nothing in the presence of
|
||
the Cone. His first conception must evidently be a frantic spasm, formless,
|
||
insane, not to be classed as articulate thought. Yet, if he develops the
|
||
faculties of his mind, the more he knows of it the more he sees that its nature
|
||
is identical with his own whenever comparison is possible.
|
||
The True Will is thus both determined by its equations, and free because
|
||
those equations are simply its own name, spelt out fully. His sense of being
|
||
under bondage comes from his inability to read it; his sense that evil exists
|
||
to thwart him arises when he begins to learn to read, reads wrong, and is
|
||
obstinate that his error is an improvement.
|
||
We know one thing only. Absolute existence, absolute motion, absolute
|
||
direction, absolute simultaneity, absolute truth, all such {342} ideas; they
|
||
have not, and never can have, any real meaning. If a man in delirium tremens
|
||
fell into the Hudson River, he might remember the proverb and clutch at an
|
||
imaginary straw. Words such as "truth" are like that straw. Confusion of
|
||
thought is concealed, and its impotence denied, by the invention. This
|
||
paragraph opened with, "We know"; yet, questioned, "we" make haste to deny the
|
||
possibility of possessing, or even of defining, knowledge. What could be more
|
||
certain to a parabola-philolsopher than that he could be approached in two ways,
|
||
and two only? It would be indeed little less than the whole body of his
|
||
knowledge, implied in the theory of his definition of himself, and confirmed by
|
||
every single experience. He could receive impressions only by meeting A, or
|
||
being caught up by B. Yet he would be wrong in an infinite number of ways.
|
||
There are therefore Aleph-Zero possibilities that at any moment a man may find
|
||
himself totally transformed. And it may be that our present dazzled
|
||
bewilderment is due to our recognition of the existence of a new dimension of
|
||
thought, which seems so "inscrutably infinite" and "absurd" and "immoral", etc.
|
||
--- because we have not studied it long enough to appreciate that its laws are
|
||
identical with our own, though extended to new conceptions. The discovery of
|
||
radioactivity created a momentary chaos in chemistry and physics; but it soon
|
||
led to a fuller interpretation of the old ideas. It dispersed many
|
||
difficulties, harmonized many discords, and --- yea, more! It shewed the
|
||
substance of the Universe as a simplicity of Light and Life, possessed of
|
||
limitless liberty to enjoy Love by combining its units in various manners to
|
||
compose atoms, themselves capable of deeper self-realization through fresh
|
||
complexities and organizations, each with its own peculiar powers and pleasures,
|
||
each pursuing its path through the world where all things are possible. It
|
||
revealed the omnipresence of Hadit identical with Himself, yet fulfilling
|
||
Himself by dividing his interplay with Nuit into episodes, each form of his
|
||
energy isolated with each aspect of Her receptivity, delight developing delight
|
||
continuous from complex to complex. It was the voice of Nature awakening at the
|
||
dawn of the Aeon, as Aiwaz uttered the Word of the Law of Thelema. {343}
|
||
So also shall he who invoketh often behold the Formless Fire, with trembling
|
||
and bewilderment; but if he prolong his meditation, he shall resolve it into
|
||
coherent and intelligible symbols, and he shall hear the articulate utterance
|
||
of that Fire, interpret the thunder thereof as a still small voice in his heart.
|
||
And the Fire shall reveal to his eyes his own image in its own true glory; and
|
||
it shall speak in his ears the Mystery that is his own right Name.
|
||
This then is the virtue of the Magick of The Beast 666, and the canon of its
|
||
proper usage: to destroy the tendency to discriminate between any two things in
|
||
theory, and in practice to pierce the veils of every sanctuary, pressing forward
|
||
to embrace every image; for there is none that is not very Isis. The Inmost is
|
||
one with the Inmost; yet the form of the One is not the form of the other;
|
||
intimacy exacts fitness. He therefore who liveth by air, let him not be bold
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to breathe water. But mastery cometh by measure: to him who with labour,
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courage, and caution giveth his life to understand all that doth encompass him,
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and to prevail against it, shall be increase. "The word of Sin is Restriction";
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seek therefore Righteousness, enquiring into Iniquity, and fortify thyself to
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overcome it.
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{344}
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