1656 lines
82 KiB
Plaintext
1656 lines
82 KiB
Plaintext
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The Chalice of Ecstasy: Parzival by Frater Achad (Charles Stansfield Jones)
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Key entry by Fr. Nachash
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Ur‘us-Hadit Camp, OTO
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Completed 04-22-91 e.v.
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****************************************************************************
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THE
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CHALICE OF ECSTASY
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BEING
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A MAGICAL AND QABALISTIC
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INTERPRETATION OF
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THE DRAMA OF
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PARZIVAL
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BY
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A COMPANION OF THE HOLY GRAIL
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SOMETIMES CALLED
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FRATER ACHAD
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Dedicated to my Beloved Friend
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and Companion
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FRATER AD ALTA
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Who passed from our view into
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THE GREAT HERE AND NOW
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November 29th, 1918
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exactly four years prior to
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the completion of this essay.
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INTRODUCTION
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The collective tradition of mankind is endowed with a relative infallibil-
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ity, and when rightly interpreted, must represent the largest truth, the
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most perfect beauty and the purest goodness known on earth. This transcen-
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dental truth and goodness and beauty represents the divine substratum of
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human nature, the ideal humanity which lies above and behind the aberra-
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tions of individuals, races and periods. It is not subjected, as are the
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latter, to Time and Circumstance or to the limitations from which the
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appearance of error, evil and deformity seem to spring.
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The Legend of Parzival is not subject to Time or Circumstance; it repre-
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sents a glimpse of the Eternal Reality, the Everpresent Here and Now. The
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circumstances of its enactment and the place wherein the festival is
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beheld, need not be sought outside the Human Heart that has learned to
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beat in time and tune with the Soul of the World. All who are born of
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"Heart's Affliction" must eventually find their way to that spot where
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they "Scarcely move, yet swiftly seem to run" and having become one with
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"The Way, The Truth and The Life" they will discover that the shifting
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scenes of the world they had thought to be so real, will pass by them as a
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pageant until the Vision of the Grail Itself is presented to their pure
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Understanding.
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It is in the hope of awakening some spark of the smouldering fire of this
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inner consciousness in the hearts of those who may read these lines--not
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having previously understood the Legend--and from that spark enkindling
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a great fire that will burn up the veils which hide man from Himself--from
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God--that I have dared to add these fragments to the great mass of Grail
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Literature already given to the world.
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And to those who are slumbering contentedly, wrapped round with the
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delusion and dreams of this illusory like, I cry with Gurnemanz:
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Hey! Ho! Wood-keepers twain!
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Sleep-keepers I deem ye!
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At least be moving with the morning!
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Hear ye the call? Now thank the Lord
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That ye are called in time to hear it.
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Point I.
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THE COMING OF PARZIVAL
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"By pity 'lightened
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The guileless Fool--
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Wait for him,
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My chosen tool."
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It is not my intention to set forth the complete Argument of the Great
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Musical-Drama of "Parsifal" derived from the ancient legend of Parzival by
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Richard Wagner, to whom be all praise and honour.
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Those who have not had the privilege of witnessing this festival-play, or
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even of reading a good translation of the Libretto, should avail them-
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selves of the help that a study of the latter will give them before
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expecting to gain a thorough grasp of the interpretation herein set
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forth. [1]
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I shall also suppose that the student has some slight knowledge of The
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Mystic Path and of The Holy Qabalah,[2] although I shall endeavor to make
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the points dealt with as comprehensive as possible to the uninitiated
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enquirer who is prepared to "wake and hearken to the Call".
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The Music of Wagner I cannot give you, nor shall I even attempt an inter-
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pretation of that which, in the Opera, helps so much toward the opening of
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those channels of consciousness whereby we may eventually receive some
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comprehensive of the Music of the Spheres.
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Fortunately this is not entirely necessary, for the true Path leads to a
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point when each individual may feel himself to be a highly-strung musical
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instrument whose Will runs over the strings causing complete and har-
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monious vibrations in his own being, which will then seem to give forth an
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un-formulated but delightful melody.
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What is the Key-note of Parzival?
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ECSTASY!
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And what is Ecstasy? It has been well described by one known to us as
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Frater Perdurabo, and I shall quote his own words:
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``There is a land of pure delight,
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Where saints immortal reign.''
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"So used some of us to sing in childhood, and we used to think of
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that land as far away, farther even than death that in those days seemed
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so far.
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"But I know this now: that land is not so far as my flesh is from my
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bones! it is Here and Now.
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"If there is one cloud in this tranquil azure, it is this thought: that
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conscious beings exist who are not thus infinitely happy, masters of
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ecstasy.
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"What is the path to this immortal land? To the Oriental, meditation
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offers the best path. To the Western, there is no road better than
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ceremonial. For ecstasy is caused by the sudden combination of two ideas,
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just as oxygen and hydrogen unite explosively.
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"But this religious ecstasy takes place in the highest centres of the
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human organism; it is the soul itself that is united to its God; and for
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this reason the rapture is more overpowering, the joy more lasting, and
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the resultant energy more pure and splendid than in aught earthly.
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"In ritual therefore, we seek continually to unite the mind to some pure
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idea by an act of will. This we do again and again, more and more passion-
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ately, with more and more determination, until at last the mind accepts
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the domination of the will, and rushes of its own accord toward the
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desired object. This surrender of the mind to its Lord gives the holy
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ecstasy we seek."
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Here we have one of the most important keys to the interpretation of the
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Drama of Parzival, and also an indication of the result which Wagner
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desired to produce upon the minds of his audience.
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Unless the Play is properly staged, and the parts taken by those who them-
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selves understand at least something of the "Way of Holiness", this effect
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is not made upon the consciousness of the onlookers. This is doubtless one
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the reasons why Wagner made arrangements that this Work should only be
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produced at Bayreuth in a proper setting and under right conditions, for
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it represents the summit of his Magical Mountain of which the base was the
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Ring. He called it a Stage-Consecrating Festival, and its effects were
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intended to exert their influence upon the Drama of Life itself.
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We will pass over the early part of the opening Scene with its introduc-
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tion of Gurnemanz, Kundry, and Amfortas, and concentrate our attention on
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the entry of Parzival; heralded by the falling of a Swan brought down by
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his own weapon.
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What is this Swan?
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Ecstasy!
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How do I know? Never mind, let me quote once again from one who is the
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Master thereof:
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THE SWAN
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``There is a Swan whose name is Ecstasy;
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it wingeth from the deserts of the
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North; it wingeth through the blue; it
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wingeth over the fields of rice; at its
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coming they push forth the green.
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In all the Universe this Swan alone in
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motionless; it seems to move, as the Sun
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seems to move; such is the weakness of
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our sight.
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O fool! criest thou?
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Amen. Motion is relative: there is
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Nothing that is still.
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Against this Swan I shot an arrow; the
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white breast poured forth blood. Men
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smote me; then perceiving that I was a
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Pure Fool, they let me pass.
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Thus and not otherwise I came to the
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Temple of the Grail.''
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Thus did Parzival bring down Ecstasy to Earth, although the King-Amfortas-
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and his Knights had "esteemed it a happy token, when o'er the lake it
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circled aloft".
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What is this lake? When calm and unruffled, brooded over by the Swan of
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Ecstasy, it is the human mind trained by the proper methods to Right
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Contemplation. For only when the mind is still may the Sun of the true
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Self be seen reflected in its depths. From that it is but one step to the
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attainment of Right Ecstasy when the Sun plunges into the depths of
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the Mind and the whole being is aflame with the Sacred Fire of the Holy
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Spirit.
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Parzival had aimed high; he had hit the mark of his Aspiration, little
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though his action was at first understood. Yet his Folly saved him, as he
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in turn saved others.
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When questioned as to his action he answered "I knew not 'twas wrong"
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although he flung away weapon, having no further use for it in that form.
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What was his weapon? The Bow of Promise and the Arrow of Pure Aspiration.
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But he had aspired, he had hit the mark and the promise had been to a
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certain extent fulfilled.
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The Qabalist will at once recognise the "Path of Samech or Sagittarius the
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Archer on the `Tree of Life.'" This is the Path of the Arrow that cleaves
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the Rainbow, leading directly from Yesod--The Foundation--to Tiphareth the
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Sphere of the Sun, Beauty and Harmony, or the Human Heart wherein the
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Mysteries of the Rosy Cross and of the Holy Grail are first--if dimly--
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perceived.
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To what other use had Parzival--son of Herat's Affliction--previously put
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his weapon? He had shot at all that flies. He had shot at the Eagle, the
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bird that fears not to gaze upon the very Sun itself.
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What does this eagle mean and what does it foreshadow?
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ECSTASY!
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For it is written: "The Eagle is that Might of Love which is the Key of
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Magick, uplifting the Body and its appurtenance unto High Ecstasy upon his
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Wings."
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This Eagle is known to Occultists as one of the Four Cherubic Beasts and
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he represents one of the Four Powers of the Sphinx. Likewise he is attri-
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buted by Eliphas Levi to Azoth, the formula of the Alpha and Omega, the
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First and Last.
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It was by the right use of this Might of Love that Parzival succeeded
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where others had failed. For again it is written in Liber Aleph: "Consider
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Love. Here is a force destructive and corrupting whereby have many men
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been lost: witness all History. Yet without love man were not man.
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"We see Amfortas, who yielded himself to a seduction, wounded beyond
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healing; Klingsor, who withdrew himself from a like danger , cast out
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forever from the Mountain of Salvation, and Parzival who yielded not, able
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to exercise the true Power of Love and therby to perform the Miracle of
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Redemption."
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But though we are now nearing that realm wherein "Time and Space are One"
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we must not allow ourselves to be rushed forward too rapidly.
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There were many things that Parzival did not know, or which he professed
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not to know when questioned. He did now as yet know he True Name--the Word
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of His Being--though he had in the past been called by many names. Some
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things he knew and remembered clearly; there was one thing he desired to
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know and to understand.
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What is the Grail!
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To which Gurnemanz very properly replies:
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I may not say:
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But if to serve it thou be bidden,
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Knowledge of it will not be hidden.-
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And lo!-
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Methinks I know thee now indeed;
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No earthly road to it doth lead,
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By no one can it be detected
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Who by itself is not elected.
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To which Parzival, without further questioning, replies:
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I scarcely move,
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Yet I swiftly seem to run.
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And Gurnemanz:
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My son, thou seest
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Here SPACE and TIME are ONE.
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Now, in truth, have we come to the beginning of the True Path which in the
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clear Light is one with the end thereof.
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What says Blavatsky in "The Voice of the Silence"? "Bestride the Bird of
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Life if thou wouldst know!"
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And this Bird--this Swan--so seeming dead until its Powers be known? Some
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have compared it to the Sacred Word, the Great Word AUM. For it is
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written: "AUM is the hieroglyph of the Eternal. A the beginning sound, U
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its middle and M its end, together forming a single Word or Trinity,
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indicating that the Real must be regarded as of this three-fold nature.
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Birth, Life and Death, not successive, but one."
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The Illusory nature of Time and Space, which are but modes of our finite
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mind, has been made very clear by Sidney Klein in his excellent book
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"Science and the Infinite," but this is no new idea. The attainment of
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Ecstasy has proved to Initiates of every land that there is a state of
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consciousness wherein both time and space are blotted out--at least
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temporarily--and at the same moment the limitations of the "personal ego"
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no longer appress us. In that Holy Book known as Liber LXV--Chapter II,
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Verses 17-25, we read:
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``17. Also the Holy One came upon me, and I beheld a white swan
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floating in the blue.
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18. Between its wings I sate, and the aeons fled away.
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19. Then the swan flew and dived and soared, yet no
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whither we went.
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20. A little crazy boy that rode with me spake unto
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the swan and said:
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21. Who art thou that doth float and fly and dive and
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soar in the inane? Behold, these many aeons have passed;
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whence camest thou? Whither wilt thou go?
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22. And laughing I chid him saying: No whence! No
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wither!
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23. The swan being silent, he answered: Then if with
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no goal, why this eternal journey?
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24. And I laid my head against the Head of the Swan,
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and laughed, saying: Is there not joy ineffable in this
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aimless winging? Is there not weariness and impatience
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for who would attain to some goal?
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25. And the swan was ever silent. Ah, but we floated
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in the infinite Abyss. Joy! Joy!
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White swan bear thou ever me up between thy wings.''
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But there was much that Parzival must do before taking his ease thus: he
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had a mission to accomplish, on earth, though as yet he knew not.
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By the use of these examples, we may begin to comprehend what happens
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next. A new "movement without motion" on the part of Parzival and
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Gurnemanz is now symbolized by the SCENERY in the Drama shifting, at first
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almost imperceptibly, from Left to Right. The forest--in which the First
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Scene had taken place--disappears; a door opens in the rocky cliffs and
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conceals the two; they are then seen again in sloping passages which they
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appear to ascend. At last they arrive at a mighty hall, which loses itself
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overhead in a high vaulted dome, down from which the light streams in.
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From the heights above the dome comes the increasing sound of chimes.
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Again we may find a very direct correspondence in the Eastern Teachings as
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propounded by Madame Blatvatsky in "The Voice of Silence." She writes:
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"Thou canst travel on that Path until thou hast become the Path itself."
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Further in Liber CCCXXXIII by Frater Perdurabo we read:
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``O thou that settest out upon the Path, false is the Phantom
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that thou seekest. When thou hast it thou shalt know all
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bitterness, thy teeth fixed in the Sodom-Apple.
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Thus hast thou been lured along That Path, whose terror else
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had driven thee far away.
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O thou that stridest upon the middle of The Path, no phantoms
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mock thee. For the stride's sake thou stridest.
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Thus art thou lured along That Path whose fascination else
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had driven thee far away.
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``O thou that drawest toward the End of The Path, effort is no
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more. Faster and faster dost thou fall; thy weariness is
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changed into Ineffable Rest.
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For there is no Thou upon that Path: thou hast become The Way.''
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And each must learn to travel this Path, each must overcome his own
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obstacles, unmask his own illusions. Yet there is always the possibility
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that others may help us do this and, as in the case of Parzival led by
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Gurnemanz who travelled that Way before, we may be guided in the true Path
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and taught to avoid the many false byways that may tempt us in our search
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for the Temple of the Holy Grail. In fact, if our training has been right
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and our aspiration remains pure, we must inevitably arrive at the end of
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that Road; often we may seem to do so in the twinkling of an eye, and when
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we least expect it.
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We should remember that every point of this Drama is highly symbolic. The
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student may place his own interpretation on that passage which opens into
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the Temple of the Grail. On arrival therein we cannot do better than
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listen to the advice of Gurnemanz to Parzival, who meanwhile stands spell-
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bound with Wonder at what he beholds:
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Now give good head, and let me see,
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If thou'rt a Fool and pure,
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What wisdom thou presently canst secure.
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And this WISDOM Parzival does in due course secure, but not until he has
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undergone many trials. For WISDOM is the HOLY SPEAR itself, long lost to
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the Knights of the Grail but eventually recovered by The Pure Fool.
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Meanwhile, during the Feast of the Grail, Parzival stands still and spell-
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bound like a rude clod. He sees the CUP of the Grail uncovered, he
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witnesses the ceremony of the Companions of the Grail, and he attains a
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certain interior UNDERSTANDING which transcends knowledge. For the CUP is
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the UNDERSTANDING, though in this instance it was divorced from the WILL
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or WISDOM, the Holy Spear which alone is capable of enlightening it
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perfectly.
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A word may now be said regarding the nature of "The Pure Fool"; and since
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this Ritual is one for all time, we shall go back before the Christian Era
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(to which the Grail Mystery is usually particularly attributed) back to
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Ancient China where the testimony of that Holy Sage Lao Tze gives us no
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uncertain clue. The Way of the Tao--Wu Wei--the accomplishment of all
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things by doing Nothing, is precisely similar to the "Path" we have been
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describing. Lao Tze says:
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``The multitude of men look satisfied and pleased as if
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enjoying a full banquet, as if mounted on a tower in
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spring. I alone seem listless and still, my desires
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having as yet given no indication of their presence.
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I am like an infant which has not yet smiled. I look
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dejected and forlorn, as I I had no home to go to. The
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multitude of men all have enough and to spare. I alone
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seem to have lost everything. My mind is that of a
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stupid man; I am in a state of chaos.
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Ordinary men look bright and intelligent, while I
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alone seem to be benighted. They look full of discrim-
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ination, while I alone am dull and confused. I seem to
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becarried about as on a sea, drifting as if I had
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nowhere to rest. All men have their spheres of action,
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while I alone seem dull and incapable, like a rude
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borderer.
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Thus I ALONE AM DIFFERENT from other men, but I value
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the Nursing-Mother (The Great Tao).''
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So we see this Fool is not the ordinary sort of foolish and besotted
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person to which the form is usually applied. In his Foolishness we find
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his difference from his fellows; for in sooth it is the Divine Madness of
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Ecstasy which redeems from all pain. It is "That which remains" after the
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sorrows and shadows that pass and are done, have left our being. Then
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Existence is recognized to be Pure Joy. But Understanding without Wisdom
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is Pure Darkness, and in this state is Parzival discovered by Guernemanz
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at the end of the Ceremony. This is a darkness even Guernemanz is unable
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to comprehend, for he says:
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Why standest thou there?
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Wist thou what thou sawest?
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And Parzival, shaking his head slightly, he continues:
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Thou art then nothing but a Fool!
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And pushing Parzival through a small door he cries angrily:
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Come away, on thy road the gone
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And put my rede to use:
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Leave all our swans for the future alone
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And seek thyself a gander, a goose.
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And so it came about that Parzival set out alone upon his Holy Quest.
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-oOo-
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Point II
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THE TEMPTING OF PARZIVAL
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``For pure will, unassuaged of purpose,
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delivered from the lust of result, is every
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way perfect.'' Liber Al. vel. Legis
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The last Scene of the First Act of this Drama will have enabled us to see
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something of the nature of the "Heart" or Temple of the Knights of the
|
||
Grail. We are next transported to the "Keep" of Klingsor's Castle, there
|
||
to obtain a glimpse of the Heart of a Black Magician. Klingsor represents
|
||
one who has "shut himsel f up", who desires to keep his personality and
|
||
while retaining possession of the SPEAR or Divine Will to make use of it,
|
||
if possible for his own personal ends.
|
||
|
||
Man is given a certain freedom of will in order that he may thereby
|
||
develop the sense of Freedom and so willingly ally himself with the Divine
|
||
Will or True Purpose of his Being. Should he make the mistake of
|
||
attempting to reverse the process, turning the Divine Will to merely
|
||
personal ends, he must inevitably fall. He thereby cuts himself off from
|
||
the Universal Current and is slowly but surely disintegrated until he is
|
||
finally lost in the Abyss.
|
||
|
||
For a time, however, as in the case of Klingsor, he may seem to exercise
|
||
an illusionary power by taking advantage of the delusions of others. For
|
||
he plays upon their emotional natures, which tend if uncontrolled to befog
|
||
the mind thus preventing the True Sun of Being from illuminating their
|
||
Path.
|
||
|
||
Self-damned, the one desire of such a being is to cause the utter ruin and
|
||
downfall of others in order that the terrible loneliness which he--if
|
||
dimly--realizes to be his fate, may be assuaged by the presence of his
|
||
victims.
|
||
|
||
Klingsor, however, still hopes to capture the Holy CUP itself--which has
|
||
remained in the possession of the Knights of the Grail--for this is the
|
||
Cup of UNDERSTANDING whereby he may discover a way to reverse this fate
|
||
and to make use of its contents, the Divine Substance which is capable of
|
||
infinite transformation when united with the Spear or WILL.
|
||
|
||
Even without this perfect means of transmutation, he has still obtained a
|
||
certain power over Astral Matter, which being of a very plastic nature is
|
||
capable of transformation into images alluring or terrible according to
|
||
the effect to be produced upon his victims.
|
||
|
||
The Aspirant has been warned of the illusory nature of the Astral Plane in
|
||
"The Voice of Silence" which contains instructions for those ignorant of
|
||
the dangers of the lower Iddhi (magical powers). We shall refer to these
|
||
instructions again in the proper place.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, as the Act opens, we discover Klingsor seated before his magic
|
||
mirror in the Keep of his Castle. He is surrounded with the instruments of
|
||
his art, which are as complex as the true weapons are simple.
|
||
|
||
He is evidently aware of the coming of Parzival--the Guileless Fool--and
|
||
he realizes that here is a menace to his power, since that power depends
|
||
upon beguilement. The question before him is whether this Fool is really
|
||
too Pure to be tempted by the subtle blandishments of his magic art.
|
||
|
||
Kundry--Woman--capable alike of raising man to the heights or dragging him
|
||
to the very depths, is the best instrument to his hand. She--the Animal
|
||
Soul of the World--while directed by the lower will or intellect--has
|
||
within her not alone the possibilities of redemption, but of taking her
|
||
rightful place upon the Throne of the Mother if brought to Understanding
|
||
the Higher Will and Wisdom of the Father of All.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand if under the influence of the lower will she is allowed
|
||
to seduce man from his aspiration, do that he fails to discover his True
|
||
Will (which is one with Destiny and the Will of God and which alone can
|
||
direct him in his proper course) she ruins him and at the same time loses
|
||
her own chance of redemption. He is then doomed to wander in paths of
|
||
illusion having no comprehension of the true Purpose of his Being or hers.
|
||
|
||
Klingsor exercises a mighty power over Kundry whenever she allows herself
|
||
to fall asleep, though much of her time during waking hours is devoted to
|
||
the service of the Knights of the Grail. Many of these she has injured
|
||
while under the spell of Klingsor. She often desires to make amends but
|
||
her heart is torn between this form of activity and desire for case.
|
||
|
||
Whenever she sinks back into the sloth of Ignorance, or what the Hindus
|
||
term the Tamas Guna, she is subject to the art of Klingsor for he is the
|
||
maker of Illusion through Learning or the Powers of the mind, the
|
||
principle known as Rajas. By means of this mental power many false uses
|
||
may be devised for the Love nature, which when wrongly used becomes
|
||
destructive instead of Creative and constructive.
|
||
|
||
Parzival--The Pure Fool--is in that condition mentioned by Lao Tze "His
|
||
desires having as yet given no indication of their presence." The crucial
|
||
test is whether when they are aroused for the first time he will use them
|
||
rightly or wrongly. Therein both Amfortas and Klingsor had failed, though
|
||
in different ways. Now comes a third candidate in the form of Parzival and
|
||
Klingsor fears greatly for the continuance of his own power.
|
||
|
||
He knows that even Kundry will be redeemed should Parzival, by rejecting
|
||
her advances, and refusing to accept aught but the highest, cause her at
|
||
last to Understand and so become released from Klingsor's illusory powers.
|
||
|
||
Klingsor first lights incense, which in true magick is a symbol of the
|
||
aspiration of the lower towards the higher. But there is no Lamp above the
|
||
altar, and the Lamp symbolizes the Higher Aspiration to draw up and unite
|
||
the lower with itself. The incense alone produces nothing but the smoky
|
||
clouds which represent the Astral Plane, and this plane being particularly
|
||
attributed to the Desires and Emotions is the one most suited to the work
|
||
Klingsor wishes Kundry to perform. It is her Astral body over which he has
|
||
the most influence.
|
||
|
||
His call to her is worthy of notice:
|
||
|
||
Arise! Draw near me!
|
||
The Master calls thee, nameless woman:
|
||
She-Lucifer! Rose of Hades!
|
||
Herodias wert thou. And what else?
|
||
Gundryggia there, Kundry here!
|
||
Approach! Approach then, Kundry!
|
||
Unto thy Master appear!
|
||
|
||
And in the incense smoke now appears the figure of Kundry--her Astral
|
||
form--half-obedient, half rebellious to the will of Klingsor.
|
||
|
||
The term "Rose of Hades" should be noticed here, for in a certain sense
|
||
Kundry is that same Rose which is to be found in connection with the Cross
|
||
in the Rosy Cross Ceremonies. The Cross of Suffering may be looked upon as
|
||
represented by Amfortas--as can be shown Qabalistically--and the wound at
|
||
his breast is caused by the Rose, Kundry. The Spear and Cup convey the
|
||
same Symbolism but on a Higher Plane.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile Kundry gradually comes under the spell of Klingsor, who orders
|
||
her to use all her wiles to ensnare the approaching and victorious
|
||
Parzival; "Whom sheerest Folly shields."
|
||
|
||
Klingsor, while admitting that he cannot hold Kundry, claims that he can
|
||
force her to his will:
|
||
|
||
``Because against me
|
||
Thine own power cannot move''
|
||
|
||
Kundry, laughing harshly, makes this strange reply:
|
||
|
||
Ha Ha! Art thou chaste!
|
||
|
||
This remark causes Klingsor to sink into gloomy brooding. He recalls how
|
||
he, too, had once sought the holier life and the service of the Grail.
|
||
But, unlike Amfortas who had succumbed to seduction, he, thinking to avoid
|
||
a like fate had used his will to attempt something against Nature and God;
|
||
the total suppression of his Love nature. This had resulted in an enforced
|
||
chastity, giving him power to avoid seduction--'tis true--but likewise
|
||
cutting him off from the possibility of redemption. For hear his words:
|
||
|
||
Awfulest strait!
|
||
Irrepressible yearning woe!
|
||
Terrible lust in me once rife,
|
||
Which I had quenched with devilish strife;
|
||
Mocks and laughs it at me,
|
||
Thou devil's bride, through thee?
|
||
Have a care!
|
||
|
||
In spite of further threats, we find Kundry still affirming that she will
|
||
not conform to Klingsor's demands, yet, such is woman-kind, she quietly
|
||
disappears to make ready for the reception and tempting of Parzival; who
|
||
is at least a live and vigorous human being.
|
||
|
||
Klingsor has been watching Parzival's approach to his magic castle,
|
||
armed--'tis said--with the Sword of Innocence and protected by the Shield
|
||
of Folly. Rather I should interpret this Sword as that of Reason, for
|
||
Parzival has learned in his Folly to disarm and defeat the defenders of
|
||
Klingsor's Castle with their own weapons.
|
||
|
||
There is no deeper wound that that inflicted by our own weapons turned
|
||
against us; as Amfortas had found to his lasting pain and anguish.
|
||
|
||
The opportunities we have missed but had the power to take and might have
|
||
taken, rankle more deeply than all the vain regrets for those things which
|
||
were impossible of attainment.
|
||
|
||
But the mere possession of the most sacred weapon--as in the case of
|
||
Klingsor and the Holy Spear--without further possibility of its right use,
|
||
is bitterest of all.
|
||
|
||
And so we find, when Kundry has `gone to work', Klingsor's Tower slowly
|
||
sinks and disappears from sight. At the same time his "Garden of Desire"
|
||
rises and his beautiful but illusory creations "The Flower Maidens" appear
|
||
before our astonished eyes.
|
||
|
||
Parzival, whose desires have as yet given no indication of their presence,
|
||
has by this time arrived at the wall of the garden. What he beholds is but
|
||
subsidiary to his main Purpose to retrieve the Holy Spear, yet he, too,
|
||
stands amazed.
|
||
|
||
This may be deemed as Parzival's introduction to "The Hall of Learning" as
|
||
it is called by Madame Blavatsky in "The Voice of the Silence." Let us
|
||
turn aside for a moment in order to obtain a clearer idea of just what
|
||
that term implies. We read in Chapter I, Verses 22-29 as follows:
|
||
|
||
22. Three Halls, O weary Pilgrim, lead to the end of toils.
|
||
Three halls, O conqueror of Mara, will bring thee through
|
||
three states into the fourth, and thence into the Seven Worlds,
|
||
the Worlds of Rest Eternal.
|
||
23. If thou would'st learn their names, then hearken, and
|
||
remember. The name of the first hall is IGNORANCE--Avidya. It
|
||
is the Hall in which thou saw'st the light, in which thou
|
||
livest and shalt die.
|
||
|
||
Ignorance corresponds to Malkuth and Nepesh (the animal soul), Learning to
|
||
Tiphareth and Ruach (the Mind), and Wisdom to Binah and Neshamah (the
|
||
aspiration or Divine Mind).--Fra. O.M.
|
||
|
||
24. The name of Hall the second is the Hall of LEARNING. In
|
||
it thy soul will find the blossoms of life, but under every
|
||
flower is a serpent coiled.
|
||
25. The name of the third Hall is WISDOM, beyond which
|
||
stretch the shoreless waters of AKSHARA, the indestructible
|
||
Fount of Omniscence.
|
||
|
||
(Akshara is the same as the Great Sea of the Qabalah. It is also the CUP
|
||
of the GRAIL, as WISDOM is the SPEAR.)
|
||
|
||
26. If thou wouldst cross the first Hall safely, let not thy
|
||
mind mistake the fires of lust that burn therein for the sun-
|
||
light of life.
|
||
27. If thou would'st cross the second safely, stop not the
|
||
fragrance of its stupefying blossoms inhale. * * *
|
||
28. The WISE ONES tarry not in the pleasure grounds of the
|
||
senses.
|
||
29. The WISE ONES heed not the sweet-tongued voices of
|
||
illusion.
|
||
|
||
Enough has been quoted to show the extraordinary correspondences between
|
||
the "Garden Scene" of the Drama of Parzival with both the Eastern
|
||
Teachings and those of the Holy Qabalah. But this Drama is not subject to
|
||
Time or Circumstance.
|
||
|
||
We left Parzival in a state of wonder upon the wall of Klingsor's Garden.
|
||
We next find the "Flower Maidens" bemoaning the loss of their lovers
|
||
--their pleasures--slain by Parzival upon his approach to the Castle and
|
||
entry to the Garden.
|
||
|
||
Thye Flower Maidens are easily solaced, however, by the hope that here is
|
||
a freash pleasure, stronger and more potent than those lost to them. One
|
||
that will more than take the place of all the others.
|
||
|
||
In this hope they are deceived for--as in real life--pleasures in time
|
||
lose their hold (especially if abused) and though we may seek a stronger
|
||
and more intense form of amusement, our power to enjoy may become dulled
|
||
and lost to us.
|
||
|
||
The case in point is somewhat different, however, for the Flower Maidens
|
||
find that the power to enjoy does not lie with them, for Parzival--with
|
||
his One Purpose--is not to be turned aside for the sake of lesser
|
||
pleasures.
|
||
|
||
Why should he, when by waiting he may gain All instead of a mere partial
|
||
rapture? Has he not already experienced the Higher form of Ecstasy? The
|
||
question now arises whether he had realised that this Higher Ecstasy with
|
||
its Purity and STILLNESS is more to be esteemed than the APPARENT ACTIVITY
|
||
of the lesser order.
|
||
|
||
In the Higher forms of Ecstasy characterized by this quality of STILLNESS,
|
||
the ACTIVITY is in reality SO INTENSE that it appears to CEASE. But the
|
||
resultant Rapture is in that case more refined and consequently more
|
||
Powerful than in the Peace which passeth all understanding. Kundry may be
|
||
said to have so far sought Rest below the Vibration of the RED RAY, while
|
||
Parzival has found it beyond that of the ULTRA-VIOLET.
|
||
|
||
And so, when later, Kundry uses all her charms to tempt Parzival, she
|
||
fails. Her embrace awakens the vibration of the RED RAY in the heart of
|
||
Parzival and in this he recognizes, sympathetically, the cause of the
|
||
wound of Amfortas and wherein the latter had failed. For Amfortas had been
|
||
content to accept LESS than was his DUE, a vibration lower than the one to
|
||
which his being was capable of responding.
|
||
|
||
Once the string of the Instrument or of the Bow has been slackened, its
|
||
power is reduced; once the WILL has become the `will' it needs re-tuning
|
||
to the Divine or Higher Vibration, but it cannot thus re-tune itself once
|
||
self-will has usurped the place of SELF-WILL.
|
||
|
||
In that case the Holy Spear of Will and Wisdom has been replaced by the
|
||
Sword of Reason. This Sword is both useful and necessary until man has
|
||
obtained possession of the Holy Spear or become conscious of his true
|
||
Purpose, (Just as Reason is necessary until we attain to Wisdom and
|
||
Understanding whereby the Truth is directly perceived without the
|
||
necessity of inference and deduction) but once the higher faculties have
|
||
been acquired and the Higher Will recognized as the true guiding Power of
|
||
our lives, our Purpose must be kept pure and unsullied.
|
||
|
||
This Mystery is made clear in Liber Al vel Legis:
|
||
|
||
``Let it be that state of manyhood
|
||
bound and loathing. So with thy all;
|
||
though hast no right but to do thy will.
|
||
Do that, and no other shall say nay.
|
||
For pure will, unassuaged of purpose,
|
||
delivered from the lust of result, is
|
||
every way perfect.
|
||
The Perfect and the Perfect are one
|
||
Perfect and not two; nay, are none!''
|
||
|
||
So we come to understand how the Perfect Cup and the Perfect Spear--Pure
|
||
Understanding and Wisdom--are one; nay, are none since all `knowledge' is
|
||
cancelled out in Perfect Ecstasy.
|
||
|
||
Parzival yields not the the glamour of time and circumstance for he seeks
|
||
the Eternal Reality, the everpresent Here and Now. The chance of a brief
|
||
reflection of ecstasy on the physical plane does not deter him from his
|
||
Quest for that which is CONTINUOUS as the Body of Our Lady Nuit or the
|
||
Stars of Heaven. But, meanwhile, since he has left behind him--in the
|
||
Temple of the Grail--the true Chalice of Ecstasy, his first duty is to
|
||
seek the Holy Spear, the means whereby alone it may be vivified and
|
||
enlightened.
|
||
|
||
Under the influence of Kundry he obtains a glimpse of his true purpose,
|
||
the mission of Redeemer. Having realized the cause of the wound of
|
||
Amfortas he determines to seek and obtain the means whereby it may be
|
||
cured. Nor is he to be turned aside from this deed of compassion for in
|
||
vain does Kundry question:
|
||
|
||
And was it my kiss
|
||
This great knowledge conveyed thee?
|
||
If in my arms I might take thee,
|
||
'T would then a god surely make thee.
|
||
Redeem the world then, if 'tis thy aim:
|
||
Stand as a god revealed;
|
||
For this hour let me perish in flame,
|
||
Leave aye the wound unhealed.
|
||
|
||
But Parzival is determined that he will first heal the wound of Amfortas
|
||
--King of the Grail--and he offers Kundry redemption at the price of her
|
||
showing him the way back to the Castle of the Grail.
|
||
|
||
This would perhaps have seemed the reasonable course for Kundry to persue.
|
||
But the Task of Parzival, by the proper performance of which he may become
|
||
MASTER OF THE TEMPLE, is not thus easy of accomplishment.
|
||
|
||
He must, in fact, on his return to the Temple bring with him the NEOPHYTE
|
||
in his hand. He must have proved his power to raise the Fallen Duaghter
|
||
--or Animal Soul--to the Throne of the Mother--Understanding. It is his
|
||
task to lead Kundry to the Mountain of Salvation, not hers to show him the
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
Besides, he has not yet obtained the means of curing the wound of
|
||
Amfortas. Mere compassion for his anguish, mere realization of the
|
||
cause of the trouble is not enough. Had he returned at this juncture his
|
||
mission would have been a failure.
|
||
|
||
But Kundy--womanlike--does not pursue the reasonable course, and in the
|
||
end her intuition produces the finer flowering. Yet she is not conscious
|
||
of this for the intuition is clouded in her mind by her emotional nature.
|
||
She is aware that she has been flouted, that her charms have failed to
|
||
seduce Parzival from the sacred mysteries, as she has seduced Amfortas.
|
||
For Parzival has told her:
|
||
|
||
Eternally
|
||
Should I be damned with thee,
|
||
If for one hour
|
||
I forget my holy mission,
|
||
Within thine arm's embracing!
|
||
|
||
And this is no pleasant pill for any pretty woman to swallow.
|
||
|
||
Nor could her appeal to his pity (though in truth washe "By Pity
|
||
'lightened") turn him aside from his larger purpose; even when this appeal
|
||
was coupled with the promise that he should straightway see the Path to
|
||
the Grail if he lingered but an hour.
|
||
|
||
Desperate, Kundy cries:
|
||
|
||
``Begone, detestable wretch''
|
||
|
||
and calling upon Klingsor (the only Master Will she knows) to avenge her
|
||
wrong, she at the same time curses Parzival and all the Paths wherein he
|
||
might travel, should they lead away from her.
|
||
|
||
And here the intuition that she is really necessary to his Attainment
|
||
actually brings about the next step towards that end, by strange means.
|
||
Parzival needs above all to realize the Nature of his True Will. And
|
||
Klingsor has at this moment appeared upon the Castle wall; the Damsels
|
||
rushing out of the Castle hasten towards Kundry, while Klingsor--poising a
|
||
lance--cries:
|
||
|
||
Halt there! I'll ban thee with befitting
|
||
gear:
|
||
The Fool shall perish by his Master's
|
||
spear!
|
||
|
||
All else having failed, Klingsor make use of the Sacred Spear Itself. He
|
||
hurls his WILL at Parzival, who, being perfectly receptive to the Higher
|
||
Power (no matter what the agency used to bring it to him) receives the
|
||
Spear, not in his heart, but in his hand. For--as in the case of the
|
||
Higher WILL at the time of the opening of the 1001 petalled Lotus, the
|
||
Real Flower of the Garden--it is seen gently floating above his head,
|
||
within his reach and power to grasp.
|
||
|
||
And so Parzival grasps his True Purpose and brandishing the Holy Spear
|
||
with a gesture of exhalted rapture, he makes the Sign of the Cross
|
||
therewith. Now the Sign of the Cross is symbolical of that "Cross of the
|
||
Elements" from which the Creative Word issued at the birth of the dawning
|
||
Universe.
|
||
|
||
A New Word is, as it were, uttered by Parzival and once again the Holy
|
||
Spirit may be said to brood upon the Waters of Chaos. For at this moment,
|
||
as with an earthquake, the Castle falls to ruins; the false Garden
|
||
withers, and the damsels lie like shrivelled flowers strewn around on the
|
||
ground. Kundry sinks down with a cry, and to her turns once more--from the
|
||
summit of the ruined wall--the departing Parzival:
|
||
|
||
Thou knowst--
|
||
Where only we shall meet again.
|
||
|
||
And, having uttered these prophetic words, he disappears among the shadows.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Point III
|
||
|
||
THE REDEMPTION OF THE
|
||
|
||
REDEEMER
|
||
|
||
``H”chsten Heiles Wunder!
|
||
Erl”sung dem Erl”ser!''
|
||
|
||
|
||
Before passing on to the final scenes of this Drama, it is necessary that
|
||
we should know something of the Great Ceremony of Initiation into the
|
||
Grade of Master of the Temple which Parzival was undergoing. This
|
||
knowledge may best be obtained from the Records of the Great Brotherhood
|
||
itself, and from the actual examples of those Who have undergone the
|
||
Ordeals leading thereto.
|
||
|
||
The serious Student will be greatly interested in observing how closely
|
||
some of the passages we have already quoted, and those we are about to
|
||
quote, parallel the events in the Drama as compiled by Richard Wagner. But
|
||
it must be remembered that Wagner himself received Instructions in the
|
||
great Principles of the Holy Order from certain of the Secret Chiefs and
|
||
this accounts for the great harmony between his Work and that of other
|
||
members of the Great Brotherhood.
|
||
|
||
We find in Liver IV these words: "The Master of the Temple has crossed the
|
||
Abyss, has entered the Palace of the King's Daughter; he has only to utter
|
||
one word, and all is dissolved. But, instead of that, he is found hidden
|
||
in the earth, tending a garden. This mystery is all too complex to be
|
||
elucidated in these fragments of impure thought; it is a suitable subject
|
||
for meditation."
|
||
|
||
Parzival enters the Abyss when, casting aside every personal consideration
|
||
and actuated by Pure Will delivered from the lust of result, he destroys
|
||
Klingsor's Garden and Keep.
|
||
|
||
All that structure, built upon Reason, is shattered, and nothing but a
|
||
rubbish-heap remains. For Parzival had discovered the Power of the Word
|
||
whereby the Universe vanishes in Fire and Flame. This may therefore be
|
||
looked upon as the supreme Banishing Ritual.
|
||
|
||
But the process of Creation, Preservation and Destruction is continuous;
|
||
things must be destroyed on order that they may be renewed. It is from the
|
||
rubbish-heap of Chronozon (Klingsor) that one selects the materials for a
|
||
god, or for a New Aeon. Understanding is the structuralization of
|
||
knowledge, and implies coordination.
|
||
|
||
But, in the meanwhile Parzival must tend a Garden of his own, for, having
|
||
looked upon the "Face of the Father" he has become NEMO--No-man. (It is
|
||
interesting to note that Klingsor termed Kundry "Nameless woman", for she,
|
||
too, must attain to Understanding in the end.)
|
||
|
||
A study of Liber CCCXVIII, 13th Aethyr, will give us a fuller comprehen-
|
||
sion of this Mystery. Therein we read:
|
||
|
||
``No man hath beheld the face of my Father. Therefore he
|
||
that hath beheld it is called NEMO. And know thou that
|
||
every man that is called NEMO hath a garden that he
|
||
tendeth. And every garden that is and flourisheth hath
|
||
hath been prepared from the desert by NEMO, watered with
|
||
the waters that were called death.
|
||
And I say unto him: To what end is the garden prepared?
|
||
And he saith: First for the beauty and delight thereof;
|
||
and next because it is written "And Tetragrammaton Elohim
|
||
planted a garden eastward in Eden." And lastly, because
|
||
though every flower bringeth forth a maiden, yet there is
|
||
one flower that shall bring forth a man-child. And his
|
||
name shall be called NEMO, when he beholdeth the face of
|
||
my Father. And he that tendeth the garden seeketh not to
|
||
single out the flower that shall be NEMO. He doeth naught
|
||
but tend the garden.
|
||
And I said: Pleasant indeed is the garden, and light is
|
||
the toil of tending it, and great is the reward.
|
||
And he said: Bethink thee that NEMO hath beheld the
|
||
face of my Father. In his is only Peace.
|
||
And I said: Are all gardens like unto this garden?
|
||
And he waved his hand, and in the Aire across the
|
||
valley appeared an island of coral, rosy, with green
|
||
palms and fruit trees, in the midst of the bluest of the
|
||
seas.
|
||
And he waved his hand again, and there appeared a
|
||
valley shut in by mighty snow mountains, and in it were
|
||
pleasant streams of water, rushing through, and broad
|
||
rivers, and lakes covered with lillies.
|
||
And he waved his hand again, and there was a vision, as
|
||
it were an oasis in the desert.
|
||
And again he waved his hand, and there was a dim
|
||
country with grey rocks, and heather, and gorse, and
|
||
bracken. * * *
|
||
And he seems to read my thought, which is, that I
|
||
should love to stay in this garden forever: for he sayeth
|
||
to me: Come with me, and behold how NEMO tendeth his
|
||
garden.
|
||
So we enter the earth, and there is a veiled figure, in
|
||
absolute darkness. Yet it is perfectly possible to see in
|
||
it, so that the minutest details do not escape us. And
|
||
upon the root of one flower he pours acid so that root
|
||
writhes as if in a torture. And another he cuts, and the
|
||
shriek is like the shriek of a mandrake, torn up by the
|
||
roots. And another he chars with fire, and yet another he
|
||
annoints with oil.
|
||
And I said: Heavy is the labour, but great is the
|
||
reward.
|
||
And the young man answered me: He shall not see the
|
||
reward; he tendeth the garden.
|
||
And I said: What shall come unto him?
|
||
And he said: This thou canst not know, nor is it
|
||
revealed by the letters that are the totems of the stars,
|
||
but only by the stars.''
|
||
|
||
We find in the above an exact parallel to the case of Parzival, for he
|
||
finds that "The Beatific Vision is no more, and the glory of the Most High
|
||
is no more. There is no more knowledge. There is no more beauty. For this
|
||
is the Palace of Understanding; and he is one with the Primeval things."
|
||
|
||
He must wander about in the earth, tending the ROOTS of the flowers;
|
||
unconscious of the results of his labours, until the time is ripe for
|
||
another to take his place.
|
||
|
||
The Third Act opens in the Grail's Domain. We perceive a pleasant spring
|
||
landscape and flowery meadows towards the back. In the foreground is a
|
||
wood which extends away towards the right, and a spring of clear water.
|
||
Opposite, and higher up, is a narrow hermitage built against a rock. It is
|
||
Daybreak.
|
||
|
||
All this brilliant spring scenery symbolises some of the work of Parzival
|
||
who has laboured in darkness for many years. But the Night is nearly
|
||
passed.
|
||
|
||
Gurnemanz, now old and in the garment of a simple hermit, yet still
|
||
protected by the Mantle of the Grail, is now discovered. He hears a low
|
||
moaning which he recognizes as that of Kundry, who--half dead, but now
|
||
faithful in service--has found found her way back to the Mountain of
|
||
Salvation. Intuitively she had been led to keep her tryst with Parzival
|
||
whose last words to he had been: Thou knowest, where only we shall meet
|
||
again. She is discovered by Gurnemanz concealed in a small thicket near
|
||
the stream. How long she has waited there, who can tell, but the thicket
|
||
is now overgrown with thorns.
|
||
|
||
Upon spying her, Gurnemanz cries:
|
||
|
||
Up!--Kundry--Up!
|
||
The winter's fled, and Spring is here!
|
||
Awake, awake to the Spring!
|
||
|
||
The results of the unseen work of Parzival upon the "roots" of her being
|
||
soon become apparaent to Gurnemanz. Her first cry, on being aroused from
|
||
her deadly stupor, is: Service!
|
||
|
||
But Gurnemanz--shaking his head--replies:
|
||
|
||
Now will thy work be light!
|
||
We send no errands out long since:
|
||
Simples and herbs
|
||
Must ev'ry one find for himself:
|
||
'Tis learnt in the woods from the beasts.
|
||
|
||
But Kundry, having in the meanwhile looked about her, perceives the
|
||
hermit's hut, and goes in. Gurnemanz, in surprise, remarks how different
|
||
is her step, and thanks Heaven that he has been the means of reviving this
|
||
"flower" that had formerly seemed so poisonous.
|
||
|
||
Kundry quitely returns with a water-pot which she takes to the spring, and
|
||
while waiting for it to fill, she looks toward the wood and perceives a
|
||
strange Knight approaching in the distance. She turns to Gurnemanz, who
|
||
seeing the same figure, remarks:
|
||
|
||
Who comes toward the sanctified stream?
|
||
In gloomy war apparel.
|
||
None of our brethren is he.
|
||
|
||
For in his shroud of darkness Parzival--for it is he--is not recognized
|
||
even by Gurnemanz, a Companion of the Grail. It is not surprising that
|
||
during his wanderings those less enlightened should have failed to
|
||
perceive his identity.
|
||
|
||
He slowly enters, clad from head to foot in pure black armour; carrying,
|
||
upright, the Sacred Spear, equipped with sword and shield. He seems dreamy
|
||
and vacillating, but seats himself on the little knoll beside the stream.
|
||
|
||
Gurnemanz, after observing him for some time, finding him silent,
|
||
approaches somewhat, and remarks:
|
||
|
||
Greet thee, my friend!
|
||
Art thou astray, and shall I direct thee?
|
||
|
||
In reply to which Parzival gently shakes his head, but remains silent.
|
||
Further questioning only elicits from him the same silent response, for is
|
||
it not written that UNDERSTANDING is pure Silence and Pure Darkness.
|
||
|
||
But the end of this period of silence and darkness is approaching. The
|
||
NEMO stage of the "City of the Pyramids" soon gives place to another.
|
||
|
||
Parzival rises and thrusts his Spear upright in the ground, thus, as it
|
||
were, linking Heaven and Earth. He then slowly divests himself of the
|
||
black armour. First he lays down his Sword (The power of Reason and of
|
||
analysis), and his Shield (The heavy Karma of the World--his Pantacle).
|
||
Opening his Helmet (which, being but a symbol of the Cup, has kept him in
|
||
a darkness) he removes it; thus allowing the Wine of Sunlight to descend
|
||
upon his head.
|
||
|
||
He then kneels in silent prayer before the Spear, seeking conscious and
|
||
enlightened union with the Will of the Universe. Hitherto he has been
|
||
guided by that Will, but has remained the while unconscious of Its
|
||
direction, he now seeks to participate more fully in the Great Purpose.
|
||
|
||
While thus engaged in holy meditation, he is recognised by both Gurnemanz
|
||
and Kundry. They also realize that he has obtained possession of the
|
||
Sacred Spear, so long lost to the Knights of the Grail. Kundry turns away
|
||
her face, while Gurnemanz, in great emotion, cries:
|
||
|
||
Oh!--holiest day.
|
||
To which my happy soul awakes!
|
||
|
||
Then, having arisen, Parzival recognises them in turn and greetings are
|
||
exchanged. He can hardly believe that at last his path through error and
|
||
suffering has led him once again to that holy spot. For all seems changed.
|
||
|
||
His one desire is to find Armfortas, whose wound had so long aroused his
|
||
Compassion and Pity, and which he feels it to be his mission to heal. This
|
||
may be accomplished by one means alone, the Sacred Spear by which the
|
||
wound was made.
|
||
|
||
And all that while that Parzival--even with this high purpose in view--had
|
||
consciously sought to return to The Mountain of Salvation, the path
|
||
thereto had been denied him and he had wandered at random, as if:
|
||
|
||
Driven ever by a curse:
|
||
Countless distresses
|
||
Battles and conflicts
|
||
Drove me far from the pathway;
|
||
Well though I knew it, methought.
|
||
|
||
For the Road to Ecstasy is one above thought, and when Ecstasy returns it
|
||
is as a Grace rather than as the result of our conscious efforts. Yet it
|
||
is the reward of our "wanderings" if our Aspiration has been kept
|
||
perfectly pure meanwhile.
|
||
|
||
The Sacred Spear--The True Will--must not be used save for the highest
|
||
ends; and those ends do not become apparent to the conscious mind, till
|
||
many a day after it has first been grasped and wielded to destroy illusion.
|
||
|
||
Parzival
|
||
|
||
Then hopeless despair overtook me,
|
||
To hold the holy Thing safely.
|
||
In its behalf, in its safe warding
|
||
I won from ev'ry weapon a wound;
|
||
For 'twas forbidden
|
||
That in battle I bore it: Undefiled
|
||
E'er at my side I wore it,
|
||
And now I home restore it.
|
||
'Tis this that gleaming hails thee here,--
|
||
The Grail's most holy spear.
|
||
|
||
And then Parzival learns from Gurnemanz that he at last nears the end of
|
||
his Quest, for he is already within the Grail's Domain. He learns, too, of
|
||
the anguish that has been suffered by Amfortas during his absence, and how
|
||
the Knights had been disbanded because Amfortas no longer dared to unveil
|
||
the Holy Cup. How Titurel, Father and Founder of the Order, had died--as
|
||
other men--when he no longer received the Grail's enlivening beams.
|
||
|
||
So Parzival, in intense grief, bemoans his foolish wanderings that seem to
|
||
have caused such disastrous results through his delay in returning to
|
||
Monsalvat on his mission of mercy.
|
||
|
||
But things could have not been otherwise. We should remember how NEMO
|
||
tended his garden and how some of the roots writhed in anguish under the
|
||
acid or the knife, while others flourished by means of the oil.
|
||
|
||
Had his Understanding not been Pure Darkness, his conscious mind would
|
||
never have allowed him to complete his Work. But such is the Mystery of
|
||
Redemption that these things must be in order that the final outcome may
|
||
be perfect.
|
||
|
||
Sorrow and suffering are great teachers, and the Masters, having no
|
||
personal ends to accomplish, are often the Instruments whereby our Karma
|
||
comes upon us. As pointed out in Liber IV.:
|
||
|
||
``The contemplation of the Universe must be at
|
||
first almost pure anguish. It is this fact
|
||
which is responsible for most of the specula-
|
||
tion of philosophy.
|
||
Mediaeval philosophers went hopelessly astray
|
||
because of their theology neccessitated the
|
||
reference of all things to the standard of
|
||
man's welfare. * * *
|
||
The Ego-Idea must be ruthlessly rooted out
|
||
before Understanding can be attained.
|
||
There is an apparent contradiction between
|
||
this attitude and that of the Master of the
|
||
Temple. What can possibly be more selfish than
|
||
this interpretation of everything as a dealing
|
||
of God with the soul?
|
||
But it is God who is all and not any part;
|
||
and every "dealing" must thus be an expansion
|
||
of the soul, a destruction of its seperateness.
|
||
Every ray of the sun expands the flower.
|
||
The surface of the water in the Magick Cup is
|
||
infinite; there is no point different from any
|
||
other point.
|
||
Thus, ultimately, as the wand (spear) is a
|
||
binding and a limitation, so is the Cup an ex-
|
||
pansion--into the Infinite.
|
||
And this is the danger of the Cup; it must
|
||
necessarily be open to all, and yet if anything
|
||
is put into it which is out of proportion, un-
|
||
balanced, or impure, it takes hurt.''
|
||
But--``Ultimately the Magical Will so identi-
|
||
fies itself with the man's whole being that it
|
||
becomes unconscious, and is as constant a force
|
||
as gravitation.''
|
||
|
||
Thus had the Spear--The Magical Will--led Parzival back to the Grail.
|
||
|
||
But, after his long Quest, Parzival is weak and fainting, and this final
|
||
temptation--the idea that after all he has FAILED in the Quest--causes him
|
||
to sink down helplessly upon the grassy knoll.
|
||
|
||
Kundry has brought a basin of Water with which to sprinkle Parzival, but
|
||
Gurnemanz, waving her off, says:
|
||
|
||
Not so!
|
||
The holy fount itself
|
||
Befitteth more our pilgrim's bath.
|
||
|
||
And so, by the side of the Holy Spring (The Waters of the Great Sea
|
||
--AKSHARA) they remove the greaves from his legs (giving him further
|
||
freedom of action) and bathe his feet (Symbol of Understanding). They then
|
||
remove his corslet (thus disclosing his Heart) and sprinkle him with the
|
||
holy water.
|
||
|
||
For there are Three that bear witness on Earth--The Water, the Blood and
|
||
the Holy Ghost (the Dove) and he that overcometh shall partake of the
|
||
Waters of Life freely.
|
||
|
||
Upon the contemplation of Kundry's self-imposed task of bathing the feet
|
||
of Parzival, he asks gently but wearily: "Shall I straight be guided unto
|
||
Amfortas?" To which question Gurnemanz, whilst busying himself, replies:
|
||
|
||
Most surely; there the Court our
|
||
coming waits.
|
||
|
||
He explains further that even he has been summoned to this Reception
|
||
since, upon the death of Titurel, the long neglected office of the
|
||
uncovering of the Grail is, by the will of Amfortas, once more to be
|
||
performed.
|
||
|
||
We should notice how, apparently by chance--for so seems the Design of the
|
||
Universal Initiation of Humanity--all things have been prepared and are
|
||
seen to lead up to the Crowning point of the Ceremony.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, Parzival sits wondering at the marked change in Kundry, at her
|
||
now humble attitude, so different from her former perversity; while
|
||
Gurnemanz performs a further office in the ceremony of Purification by
|
||
sprinkling the head of Parzival with the water from the Holy Spring.
|
||
|
||
Purification being complete, is followed by Consecration, the second step
|
||
towards Initiation. Kundry is seen to take a golden flask from her bosom
|
||
and to pour some of its contents upon Parzival's feet. Taking the flask
|
||
from her, Parzival then invites Gurnemanz to annoint his head with the
|
||
same Holy Oil; his now clear vision causing him to remark:
|
||
|
||
``For I to-day as king shall be
|
||
appointed.''
|
||
|
||
He makes this statement, which is no less than a prophesy of his complete
|
||
attainment, as simply and naturally as a child.
|
||
|
||
A few remarks should now be made on the nature of this Holy Oil and in
|
||
regard to the source from whence it came. Liber IV will again supply the
|
||
key, for therein we read: "The Holy Oil is the Aspiration of the Magician,
|
||
it is that which consecrates him to the performance of the Great Work.
|
||
* * * It is not the will of the magician, the desire of the lower to reach
|
||
the higher; but is that spark of the higher in the Magician which wishes
|
||
to unite the lower with itself."
|
||
|
||
The Oil, in this instance performs a double purpose, for it represents
|
||
both the awakening of the True Self of Kundry, and the desire for
|
||
redemption. This Higher Self is represented by Parzival, and Kundry's
|
||
Consecration of Parzival is the act which makes her redemption, by him,
|
||
possible.
|
||
|
||
Again: "This oil is compounded of four substances. The basis of all is the
|
||
oil of the olive, The Olive is, traditionally, the gift of Minerva, the
|
||
wisdom of God, the Logos. It is dissolved in three other oils; oil of
|
||
myrrh, oil of cinnamon, oil of galangal. The Myrrh is attributed to Binah,
|
||
the Great Mother, who is both the understanding of the Magician and that
|
||
sorrow and compassion that results from the contemplation of the Universe.
|
||
The Cinnamon represents Tiphareth, the Sun--the Son, in whom Glory and
|
||
Suffering are identical. The Galangal represents both Kether and Malkuth,
|
||
the First and the Last, the One and the Many, since in this Oil they are
|
||
One." "These oils taken together represent the whole Tree of Life. The ten
|
||
Sephiroth are blended into the perfect gold." This will become clearer
|
||
when the whole Drama has been treated from the Qabalistic viewpoint in the
|
||
next Chapter. Again: "This perfect Oil is most penetrating and subtle.
|
||
Gradually it will spread itself, a glistening film, over every object in
|
||
the Temple."
|
||
|
||
In regard to this latter point we should observe what actually happens a
|
||
little further on in the Drama, but first notice one further quotation
|
||
which has a very direct bearing on the subject in hand. "The phial which
|
||
contains the Oil should be of clear rock crystal (Rock Crystal is
|
||
attributed to Malkuth--the Fallen Daughter, but in this case the flask is
|
||
of Gold which represents the Breast, Sun or Tiphareth Sphere of the Son or
|
||
Higher Self whose influence has been felt by Kundry) and some magicians
|
||
have fashioned it in the shape of the female breast, for that is the true
|
||
nourishment of all that lives. For this reason also it has been made of
|
||
mother-of-pearl and stoppered with a ruby." In this connection we should
|
||
note that Kundry produced the golden flask from her bosom, for every
|
||
detail of this Drama is symbolical.
|
||
|
||
Next, Parzival very quitely scoops up some of the Holy Water from the
|
||
Spring and sprinkles it upon Kundry's head while she kneels at his feet
|
||
--saying:
|
||
|
||
I first fulfil my duty thus:--
|
||
Be thou baptized,
|
||
And trust in the Redeemer!
|
||
|
||
At which Kundry bows her head and appears to weep bitterly.
|
||
|
||
This is the first time that Kundry has been truly willing to receive the
|
||
higher help. She has done much, according to her own notions of service,
|
||
but now she is about to be led to Understand how best she may Serve; for
|
||
true Mastery implies true Service.
|
||
|
||
We should notice, too, the effects of the Holy Oil on Parzival. He turns
|
||
round and gazes with gentle rapture on the woods and meadows; which
|
||
represent his Garden, as we explained before. Gradually, he realizes the
|
||
results of the Work he had carried on in silence and darkness. His memory
|
||
awakens and he murmurs:
|
||
|
||
How fair the fields and meadows seem today!
|
||
Many a magic flower I've seen,
|
||
Which sought to clasp me in its baneful twinings;
|
||
But none I've seen so sweet as here,
|
||
These tendrils bursting with blossom,
|
||
Whose scent recalls my childhood's days,
|
||
And soeaks of loving trust to me.
|
||
|
||
Gurnemanz attempts to explain this, saying: "That is Good-Friday's spell,
|
||
my lord!" Whereas Parzival, reminded of the darkness of his self-
|
||
crucifixion and hardly yet realizing its full significance, replies:
|
||
|
||
``Alas, that day of agony!
|
||
Now surely everything that thrives,
|
||
That breathes and lives and lives again
|
||
Should only mourn and sorrow?''
|
||
|
||
But Gurnemanz continues:
|
||
|
||
``Thou seest it is not so.
|
||
|
||
For: "The sad repentant tears of sinners have here with holy rain
|
||
besprinkled field and plain, and made them glow with beauty. All earthly
|
||
creatures in delight at the Redeemer's trace so bright, uplift their
|
||
prayers of duty. To see Him on the Cross they have no power; and so they
|
||
smile upon redeemed man, who, feeling freed, with dread no more doth
|
||
cower, through God's love-sacrifice made clean and pure. And now each
|
||
meadow flower and blade perceives that mortal foot to-day it need not
|
||
dread; for as the Lord in pity man did spare, and in His mercy for him
|
||
bled, all men will keep with pious care, to-day a tender tread. So
|
||
Tresspass-pardoned Nature wakes now to her day of Innocence."
|
||
|
||
During this speech, Kundry has been watching Parzival with moist eyes and
|
||
a look of beseeching, and he, now fully realizing the results of his work
|
||
(for it is High Noon) remarks:
|
||
|
||
I saw my scornful mockers wither:
|
||
Now look they for forgiveness hither?
|
||
Like blessed sweet dew a tear from thee
|
||
too floweth?
|
||
Thou weepest--see! the landscape
|
||
gloweth.
|
||
|
||
And he kisses her softly upon the brow. Here the "dew of pure love" begins
|
||
its wondrous action which brings all to perfection. Of this it is written
|
||
in Liber IV. "There is, however, a universal solvent and harmonizer, a
|
||
certain dew which is so pure that a single drop of it cast into the water
|
||
of the Cup will for the time being bring all perfection.
|
||
|
||
"This dew is called Love. Even in the case of human love, the whole
|
||
Universe appears perfect to the man who is under its control, so it is,
|
||
and much more, with the Divine Love of which it is now spoken.
|
||
|
||
"For human love is an excitement, and not a stilling of the mind; and as
|
||
it is bound to the individual, only leads to greater trouble in the end.
|
||
|
||
"This Divine Love, on the contrary, is attached to no sumbol. It abhors
|
||
limitation, either in its intensity or in its scope."
|
||
|
||
Here we obtain the key to the errors of both Klingsor and Amfortas;
|
||
together with the true solution of the problem, as obtained by Parzival.
|
||
For this Love leads on to ECSTASY, as the drama itself now shows us.
|
||
|
||
It is MIDDAY, and just as the Sun is then at its height and full beauty,
|
||
so we find that Parzival's travels have led him to complete the circle of
|
||
his wanderings, and in another moment, The Mountain of Salvation, like a
|
||
great Ruby Jewel set in a Golden Ring, will shine out once more. Mean-
|
||
while, Gurnemanz and Kundry are seen to cover Parzival with the Mantle of
|
||
the Grail, and he, solemnly grasping the Holy Spear and with Kundry at his
|
||
side, prepares to follow Gurnemanz.
|
||
|
||
Now, as if to prove out theory that Parzival had completed the Circle, we
|
||
find the scenery once again automatically changing, but this time from
|
||
right to left. It will be remembered that on the previous occasion, when
|
||
for the first time Parzival entered the Temple of the Grail, this charge
|
||
took place in the opposite direction. The passages through which they pass
|
||
are similar, but as if reversed. And this time all three traverse them
|
||
together as if to symbolise the Sacred Triad, the completion of which is
|
||
about to take place.
|
||
|
||
As before, there are chimes of bells. (The aspirant will notice similar
|
||
sounds when entering the Higher Consciousness. They are sometimes called
|
||
"The Voice of the Nada.")
|
||
|
||
Once more Time and Space are One, and the Tableau of the Everpresent Here
|
||
and Now appears.
|
||
|
||
Here we find Birth, Death, Life, Sorrow, Age and Youth mingled together in
|
||
Harmony, Joy and Beauty. The vast Temple of the Holy Ghost--the length of
|
||
which is from North to South, its breadth from East to West, and its
|
||
height from Abyss to Abyss, yet which is also the BODY OF MAN--is open to
|
||
our view.
|
||
|
||
There is but a faint light at first. The doors open on either side and
|
||
Knights bring Titurel's corpse in a Coffin and Amfortas' wounded body on a
|
||
litter. The bier is erected in the middle of the Hall, and behind it is
|
||
the throne with canopy, where Amfortas is set down.
|
||
|
||
Then comes a train of Knights bearing the Holy Grail towards the
|
||
sheltering Shrine, where it is placed as before.
|
||
|
||
Unaware of the approach of the Victorious Parzival, the Knights now
|
||
murmur at the death of Titurel the honoured founder of the Order. For this
|
||
death, Amfortas appears to have been at least partially responsible,
|
||
having failed for so long a time in his office to unveil the Grail. Yet
|
||
he, having lost the Sacred Spear--the Higher Will--entrusted to him by his
|
||
Father, and having found the human will quite unable to take Its place,
|
||
has in the meanwhile suffered awful tortures through this failure to
|
||
fulfil his true Purpose.
|
||
|
||
The Knights, in despair, press towards Amfortas and demand that he--this
|
||
once--unveil the shrine and do his office. Whereat, Amfortas in an ECSTASY
|
||
OF FEAR, springs up and throws himself among the Knights--who draw back--
|
||
while he cries:
|
||
|
||
No!--No more!--Ha!
|
||
Already is death glooming round me,
|
||
And shall I yet again return to life?
|
||
Insanity!
|
||
What one in life can yet stay me?
|
||
Rather I bid ye slay me!
|
||
|
||
For such is the Ecstasy of the Touch of Death the Twin of Love.
|
||
|
||
(He tears open his dress.)
|
||
|
||
Behold me!--the open wound behold!
|
||
Here is my poison--my streaming blood.
|
||
Take up your weapons! Bury your
|
||
sword-blades
|
||
Deep--deep in me, to the hilts! Ye
|
||
heroes, up!
|
||
Kill both the sinner and all his pain:
|
||
The Grail's delight will ye then regain!
|
||
|
||
But there is no DEATH in the Hall of Ecstasy. Birth, Life, Death are not
|
||
successive but One, for Time and Space are One.
|
||
|
||
And so, at the moment of Amfortas' greatest agony Parzival, the Redeeming
|
||
Power, enters unperceived and unexpected.
|
||
|
||
There is much truth in the old saying, "The unexpected is sure to happen"
|
||
and this is more and more clearly realized as we tread the true Path. True
|
||
Ecstasy comes at the moment when all seems lost, for the partial and
|
||
transient must disappear and become lost, e'er the Real appears. "For to
|
||
each individual thing, attainment means first and foremost the destruction
|
||
of the individuality."
|
||
|
||
"Each of our ideas must be made to give up the self to the Beloved, so
|
||
that we may eventually give up the Self to the Beloved in our turn."
|
||
--Liber IV.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly the voise of Parzival is heard:
|
||
|
||
One weapon only serves:
|
||
The one that struck
|
||
Can staunch thy wounded side.
|
||
|
||
The countenance of Amfortas, upon his hearing these words, now displays
|
||
HOLY RAPTURE. He totters in ecstasy, while Gurnemanz supports him tenderly.
|
||
|
||
Parzival
|
||
|
||
Be whole, unsullied and absolved!
|
||
For now I govern in thy place.
|
||
|
||
The True Will unhesitatingly takes its rightful place, and since that Will
|
||
is one with THE WILL OF THE UNIVERSE, Amfortas without hesitation accepts
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
Parzival
|
||
|
||
Oh blessed be thy sorrows,
|
||
For Pity's potent might
|
||
And Knowledge' purest Power
|
||
They taught a timid Fool.
|
||
The Holy Spear
|
||
Once more behold in this.
|
||
|
||
And as all gaze in rapture on the Spear held aloft by Parzival, he
|
||
continues, in inspiration, as he gazes at its Point:
|
||
|
||
O mighty miracle of bliss!
|
||
This that through me thy wound restoreth.
|
||
With holy blood behold it poureth,
|
||
Which yearns to to join the fountain glowing,
|
||
Whose pure tide in the Grail is flowing!
|
||
Hid be no more that shape divine;
|
||
Uncover the Grail! Open the Shrine!
|
||
|
||
Thus, and not otherwise, came Parzival into his own. The Temple of the
|
||
Chalice of Ecstasy is now, for him, The Palace of the King's Daughter. For
|
||
thus is it written: "When these shall have destroyed the Universe, then
|
||
mayest thou enter the Palace of the Queen, my Daughter." Then only shall
|
||
we understand the nature of The Bride's Reception. For:
|
||
|
||
``The Spirit and the bride say, Come.
|
||
And let him that heareth say, Come.
|
||
And let him that is athirst come.
|
||
And whosoever will, let him take of the
|
||
water of life freely.''
|
||
|
||
Thus, and thus alone; amid Radiant Light, the Glowing of the Chalice of
|
||
Ecstasy, the Rising of Titurel from the Tomb, the Death struggle of
|
||
Kundry, the Homage of the Redeemed, the Praise of the Knights of the
|
||
Grail, and above all the Benediction of the Dove of the Holy Spirit; is
|
||
the final Work accomplished--
|
||
|
||
THE REDEMPTION OF THE REDEEMER.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
QABALISTIC CONCLUSION
|
||
|
||
|
||
Nothing now remains but for the scribe to bear witness to the strange
|
||
Qabalistic "coincidences" connected with this Drama.
|
||
|
||
Was Wagner a great Qabalist? Were those from whom he obtained the sources
|
||
of his information such? Who can tell?
|
||
|
||
Rather I would suggest that, being inspired, this Drama must of necessity
|
||
conform to all truth, on all planes. For there are certain Numerical
|
||
Emanations, called the Ten Sephiroth, and there are certain Vibrations of
|
||
a numerical nature connected with Words.
|
||
|
||
It is not my intention to write a treatise on the Holy Qabalah (those who
|
||
wish to study this interesting subject may do so in "Q.B.L. or The Bride's
|
||
Reception"), nor to describe fully the "Tree of Life", nor the methods of
|
||
drawing numerical meanings from words. The accompanying plate shows the
|
||
structure of "The Tree of Life", and the Frontispiece indicates how the
|
||
"Chalice of Ecstasy" may be drawn therefrom.
|
||
|
||
The Qabalistic teaching is that Malkuth--The Kingdom--The Animal Soul--THE
|
||
FALLEN DAUGHTER must be RAISED through the Office of the SON--Tiphereth
|
||
--The Sun--Harmony and Beauty, to the Throne of the MOTHER--Binah--Under-
|
||
standing--THE CUP, when she is again united to the FATHER--Chokmah--Wisdom
|
||
--Will--THE SPEAR, thus absorbing all into THE CROWN--Kether--The Pure
|
||
Light of the DOVE which descends upon their Union.
|
||
|
||
Thsi is the Mystery of Redemption and of the Great Work, the Uniting of
|
||
the Microcosm and the Macrocosm--Man with God.
|
||
|
||
The main Formula of the Great Work, that of the Rose and Cross, is
|
||
symbolised in the Great Order as 5ø=6ø. This refers to the Microcosm and
|
||
the Macrocosm as the Pentagram or Fivefold Star on Unconquered Will and
|
||
the Hexagram or Six-fold Star. The Work is to discover their equivalence,
|
||
and to unite them.
|
||
|
||
The first stage of this Union occurs in TIPHERETH, and is accompanied with
|
||
the feeling of Ecstasy. This Sephira is that of the SUN, and is
|
||
necessarily connected with the Solar Numbers of which 6, 66, and 666 are
|
||
the Scale. This is the Sphere of the Crowned King--The Son who unites in
|
||
himself both Glory and Suffering.
|
||
|
||
But since there has been, what we may term, a change of Office in the
|
||
Great Hierarchy in this New Aeon, we find that the Number 418 which is the
|
||
numeration of "ABRAHADABRA" the Word of the Aeon is also particularly
|
||
attributed to this Sphere, since it represents perfectly the formula of
|
||
5ø=6ø. (See Sepher Sephiroth, Equinox Vol. I. Number VIII.)
|
||
|
||
Again 777 is a number representing alike "The Flaming Sword" and the Unity
|
||
of all things including the World of Shells. In Greek Qabalah it
|
||
corresponds to the word STAUROS--The Cross.
|
||
|
||
It is worthy of notice, and most careful consideration, therefore, that
|
||
with slight adjustment of spelling, the Names of the principle characters
|
||
in the Drama have an extraordinary significance.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TITUREL, Founder of the Grail Order, adds to 666.
|
||
|
||
MONSALVAT, the Mountain of Salvation, adds to 666.
|
||
|
||
GAMURET, the Father of Parzival, adds to 666.
|
||
|
||
AMFORTAS, with his Cross of Suffering, adds to 777.
|
||
|
||
KLINGSOR, who represents Choronozon (333) adds to 333.
|
||
|
||
GURNEMANZ, Conductor of the New King, adds to 418.
|
||
|
||
PARZIVAL, The Pure Fool, adds to 418.
|
||
|
||
KUNDRY and GUNDRYGGIA, alike add to 290.
|
||
|
||
In the above the Hebrew equivalents of the letters and the old spellings
|
||
of the names are used. With small study of the Qabalistic System and the
|
||
Grades of the Order based on the Tree of Life, the significance of the
|
||
above will become more and more apparent to the Student. An extended
|
||
treatise might be written on the subject, but that is not the intention
|
||
of the author at this time.
|
||
|
||
Now, there are several spellings of the name Parzival; the one I have
|
||
adopted being that of Wolfram von Eschenbach, from whom Wagner derived the
|
||
Drama. The usual spelling--Parsifal--is interesting since it adds to 388,
|
||
which, with the addition of 500 (Final Mem. The Water of the Great Sea of
|
||
Understanding), becomes 888. By Greek Numeration 888 is the number of
|
||
Jesus the Christ.
|
||
|
||
But there is another spelling, much more significant, and probably the
|
||
oldest of them all. PARCHVAL, the numeration of which adds to 326.
|
||
|
||
It will have been noticed that the most important Points of the Drama are
|
||
connected with THE CUP--Understanding--Binah the THIRD Sephira; The SPEAR
|
||
--Will--Wisdom--Chokamh the SECOND Sephira, and THE HEART--The Castle of
|
||
the Grail--Tiphereth the SIXTH Sephira. If we examine these Spheres on the
|
||
Tree of Life we find they form a Descending Triad representing the Bowl of
|
||
The Chalice of Ecstasy, the points of which are 326.
|
||
|
||
Now 326 is the Numeration of IHShVH--The Hebrew Jeheshuah--Jesus--The God-
|
||
Man or Redeemer. This Word also symbolises the descent of "Shin" the
|
||
letter of the Holy Spirit into the Four Lettered Word IHVH--Jehovah--The
|
||
Ineffable Name and the Formula of the Four Elements. Thus PARChVAL
|
||
symbolises the whole process perfectly; the Descent of Spirit into Matter
|
||
and also of the Redemption.
|
||
|
||
It also shows the transition to the New Aeon, there being a connection
|
||
between this old spelling and that of Parzival the formula of the present
|
||
time. For the central letter of the word PARChVAL is "Ch" in Hebrew Cheth,
|
||
which spelt in full is 418 the numeration of Parzival, and of the Word of
|
||
the Aeon, his Magick Formula.
|
||
|
||
I need only add that The DOVE--Kether--The Crown--when shown above the
|
||
bowl of the CHALICE (in its natural position on The Tree of Life) together
|
||
with Yesod--the Foundation and Malkuth--The Kingdom, as the stem and base
|
||
of the Cup; completes the Qabalistic Design. This arrangement clearly
|
||
shows how the Chalice is one with the Tree of Life and filled by the Holy
|
||
Spirit.
|
||
|
||
The numerical proof is not, however, quite complete--indeed it could never
|
||
be completed--but let me draw your attention to the word Grail. The old
|
||
spelling is GRAL and here we find G--the letter of The Moon--and R--the
|
||
letter of the Sun, coupled with AL, the Great Name of God.
|
||
|
||
Turning once more to our Qabalistic Design of the Cup drawn on the Tree of
|
||
Life, let us examine the Numbers of the Sephiroth involved. We shall
|
||
indeed discover the "Chalice of Ecstasy" for we obtain 1 + 2 + 3 + 6 + 9 +
|
||
10 = 31, which is the numeration of both AL and LA--God and Not--Key to
|
||
the Mysteries both of the Old Aeon and the New and when properly
|
||
understood the
|
||
|
||
Final Formula of
|
||
|
||
ECSTASY.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-oOo-
|
||
|
||
|