244 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
244 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Something I Eight?
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by Bernard King
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CHAOS KAOS KAYOS CHAYOS KAIOS QUAIOS QUAYOS KAIYOS
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...to name but a few. Eight is the number of my true love's name in the
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morning (7), when I rise (4). This is naturally a sexist riddle, the answer
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being ERECTION (8), and may or may not be perceived to have much to do with
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the matter that follows! Yet hard facts persist, even through anarchy, and
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some of them are pertinent to the discussion which follows.
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That the number EIGHT and Chaos are inextricably entwined is, by any
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standards, irrefutable. Yet eight goes back so much further, into the very
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roots of occultism, and is a number worthy of at least a passing glance.
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Eight. The Ogdoad. Westcott has this as the first cube of energy
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(2*2*2) and adds that it is "the only evenly even number within the decad".
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In greek times it was an omnipotent number, referred to the proverb: "All
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things are eight." The Greek connection is at least valid in a passing
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context, with Hesiod being the first known writer to name Chaos and the Mass
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of Eris in CI 8 (KALLISTI!) could hardly have existed without his significant
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(if minimal) input.
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It was also called the Universal Harmony because of its relationship to
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the musical scale (DOH, a deer, a female...), which both Mozart and Sol
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Invictus in their separate ways relied upon. There were eight Cabiri. St
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Matthew (cap. V) has eight Christian beatitudes, for those who don't object
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to a B-attitude. One of the oldest companies of Egyptian Gods, that of Thoth
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of Hermopolis, consisted of four gods and four goddesses, with the gods being
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batrachiocephalic and the goddesses being serpent-headed.
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The pentateuch laid down that a male child should be circumcised (i.e.
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circumscribed for life) when it was eight days old. Stones of eight cubits
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were to be used for the foundations of Solomon's temple. Eight tables were
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provided for the Hebrew slaughter of sacrificial animals. Eight was sacred
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to Dionysos, who was born in the eighth month. Eight prophet-persons were
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descended from Rahab the harlot: Seraiah, Jeremiah, Hannemeel, Shallum,
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Neraiah, Massaiah, Hilkaiah and the prophetess Huldah. The irreverent might
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be tempted to remark that all these end in a very satisfying AH! Eight souls
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were saved in Noah's Ark, and Noah was the eighth in descent.
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Kabbalistically his name adds to eight times eight.
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Theories about numbers can be taken to any lengths, depending upon who's
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doing the taking and the bluntness of the axe they intend to grind. The
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eightfold path of Buddhism is ennobling and uplifting, and it's only another
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of the many sets of eight the dedicated occultist will have already
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discovered.
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In the Northern Tradition (my own particular and under-ground axe)
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Thor's hall, Bilskirnir, is a prototype skyscraper with 640 (80*8) floors.
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Valhalla has 640 doors and 960 (8*12) warriors can emerge from each door at
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once. In the poem Grimnismal Odin doesn't move for eight nights. When
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Thor's hammer is stolen it is hidden eight miles down. To get it back Thor
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disguises himself as Freya. At the 'wedding-feast' which follows, Loki
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claims Thor hasn't eaten for eight nights, as Odin's largest son polishes off
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eight salmon at a sitting. Eight furnishings and servants are noted in Hel's
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palace in the underworld. Odin's grey mount, Sleipnir, has eight legs. In
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Lokasenna it is claimed that Loki lived under the earth for eight winters.
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The three gods which made the first men and woman bestowed eight abilities
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and faculties upon them.
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There are eight runes to an aett in the Common Germanic Futhard, giving
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eight the strength implied by a full set of anything. In Norse tradition
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eight is a potent invocatory number, especially for Odin, representing a
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massive increase of potency over the lesser invocatory number of three.
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Another correspondence which must be examined, if we are to do justice
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to the eight points of the Chaosphere, is the eightfold wheel of Wicca. Now,
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Wicca is a one of those subjects which immediately raises hands, eyebrows and
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other parts' of the anatomy whenever it is mentioned, and a brief examination
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won't go entirely amiss.
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Witchcraft, unlike Chaos but very like Norse paganism, is a religion
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which has been principally recorded by christian commentators with their own
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bias and ideology to impose. Because off this a great deal of the historical
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material must be regarded as iffy by anyone seeking to establish the actual
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truth behind it. One factor which immediately links the topics is the
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respect offered woman. Woman in the north, as far back as Tacitus writing in
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the first century AD, was venerated and regarded as having a special gift of
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wisdom and prophecy. The same is true of the witch cult if we read between
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the lines. But Christianity, with its attitude that man comes into the world
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between urine and faeces, took every opportunity to deny and denigrate the
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role of woman, even within its own ranks. This practice continues today,
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with the nonconformist sects showing a much greater readiness to contemplate
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woman's ordination than the established CofE and RC diehards. Thus any cult
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which acknowledged woman as an equal and legitimate creature was
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automatically doomed to censure, if not to rabid shrieks of 'Heresy!'.
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The most telling evidence for associating witchcraft with the Northern
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Tradition comes from the trials and legislation which led to the persecution.
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Transvection (flying through the air) for witches goes at least as far back
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as the Norse poem Havamal in around 950. Use of herbs and salves, not to
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mention inscribed charms, takes us back into runic times. The archetypal
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familiar, the cat, is sacred to Freya. A dozen or more similarities could be
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established with ease, possibly boring you rigid and over-killing the point.
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Much of the so-called witch knowledge was already established and accepted in
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Anglo-Saxon times, showing up in manuscripts of the period such as the
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Lacnunga.
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The Alexandrian and Gardnerian movements represent the bulk of more
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obvious witchcraft activity, and are twentieth century offshoots of an
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ancient tradition going back much further and represented by heredity and
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traditional schools, both of which are realities in England today. Unlike
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the latter two they are visible and (heresy coming up) virtually
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interchangeable, the main differences being:
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1. Alex Sanders was photographed wearing a gold lame posing pouch and Gerald
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Gardner wasn't (at least, the piccie hasn't surfaced yet).
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2. The Alexandrian version of The Law doesn't prohibit man teaching man,
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despite the fact that this may cause a fondness between aspirants, and better
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if it be so. They can, after all, if they want to, make it clear from the
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outset that they will behave like father and son, or two brothers.
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Which hasn't taken us too far from the point. Both the Allies and the
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Gardies have been keen in recent years to establish their
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respectability/credentials, even permitting a degree of cooperation and
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interpenetration in order to do so, and a variety of eight-spoked wheel
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diagrams are to be found in the plethora of works about either or both. They
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typically contain:
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FESTIVALS METHODOLOGY WEAPONRY
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~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
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Candlemas Drugs & Wine Bread
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Vern. Equinox Dance Wand/Staff
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Beltane Great Rite Incense
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Sum. Solstice Spells & Rites Athame/Knife
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Lammas Scourge Wine
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Aut. Equinox Cords Chalice/Cup
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Samhain Meditation Oil
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Win. Solstice Trance Pentacle/Plate
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Naturally this is a synthesis and includes (!) omissions. But it serves
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to give the ignorant and prurient some idea, as well as serving as a mnemonic
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for the cognoscenti. It's fascinating to see that some of the entries are
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currently being played down by the let's-be-respectable element (Drugs &
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Wine, Great Rite, Scourge) in contrast to the SExual and Chemognosis of
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Chaos, almost as if when the torch begins to dim in one set of hands it gets
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passed along to the people with the bottle of lighter fluid (yum yum).
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All this is by way of a preamble to the main reason for this turgid
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discourse, which is an examination of the number Eight as it pertains to
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Chaos Magic. Apart from making a pretty natty design to wear on our rings
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and robes does it have any actual validity or relevance?
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Let's turn our attention to the most important Chaos Magic text to date,
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Liber Kaos, the Psychonomicon by Peter J. Carroll. We are unable to doubt
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the authority of the author or his massive contribution to both the foundation
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of The Pact and the formulation and elucidation of our chosen path of
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working. Yet on page 38, as a part of the Appendix (I) to Principia Magica,
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we discover a diagram of the eight-rayed star of Chaos which is actually a
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representation of five dimensions (I quote "(3 of space)(1 of Ordinary Psuedo
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Time)(1 of Shadow Time)".
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Now, let's hold it there for a minute, pard'ner. Is we a-sayin' that
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there eight-pointy star's jus' some ol' Pentygram requantumated?
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The Urban Cowboy goes off to eat his beans unanswered for the time being
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enabling us to progress a little further. To page 85, to be precise, where
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we discover Rituals and Spell Objectives and Designs in Eight Magics, with a
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Chaos star firmly planted in the centre of the page. This comes (as admitted
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on page 86) from Terry Pratchett, caught-jester of the Occult fiction world.
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Y'see? Y'jus' can't take it seriously, pard.
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Rather like most Americans, wouldn't you say? So was it accident that
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Eight came to be the primary (though not the prime) number of Chaos Magic?
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Mere whim? After all, the Pentagram (the Witch's Foot, Goblin's Cross et
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al)has, on the surface, a much greater precedent for power than an
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eight-rayed star, doesn't it?
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Yew bet yore cute li'l pink ass it do.
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That's why it was utilised in the seminal Liber Null in Liber Lux, Liber
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Nox and Liber AOM, wasn't it? So what exactly is the rationale behind the
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Chaos star and the Chaosphere, if the Pentagram would have done just as well?
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Is it simply an overstated Pentagram, or is there something more?
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The question naturally, is rhetorical. Back to Liber AOM for another
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look at the Chaosphere: "it may be said to variously represent a perspective
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sculpture of the 4 axes of the geometrically impossible hypercube or the two
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interpenetrant tetrahedra of the light and dark forces. Such twists of
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illogic..."
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Hit 'em up, moove 'em...
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Shut up, Rowdy. go back to the gas pump or on into superstardom.
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...out...
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You're quite right. It was usually Eric Fleming, playing trail-boss Gil
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Favor, who uttered that line to usher in the closing credits.
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Which isn't quite where we came in, but will serve to introduce a person
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reminiscence. When it comes to Chaos I am something of a March Violet. (Ah,
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the Strangemess of juxtaposed metaphors...) For those who don't know it the
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majority of those who actually joined the National Sozialistische Deutsche
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Arbeiter Partei (Nazis for short, for which we're all grateful) did so after
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Hitler became Chancellor of Germany early in 1933. They were known as March
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Violets because they'd waited to see which way the wind of politics was
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blowing before committing themselves. My first involvement with Chaos cam
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in the mid-1980's, once the movement has begun to become established. I read
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Liber Null, The Book of Results, The Cardinal Rites of Chaos and various
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other texts, including Julian Wilde's Grimoires of Chaos Magic. All of these
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were new, alien, foreign to me, and served to reinforce a concept that I'd
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discovered for myself some years before, that of STRANGENESS.
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Strangeness is what, for the vast majority, gives the occult its initial
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appeal. It has the potency of a thousand pentagrams and an insidious draw
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for the individual. Many drug habits have grown out of the desire to explore
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Strangeness, and the call of the Otherness is what opened up the west for
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Rowdy and his chums, and the Raj for Major Callaghan, don't y'know. True,
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in the last two examples there were also political and financial
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considerations, but it was the Strangeness which won through for the pioneers
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and the thin red line.
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Today we are bombarded by Strangeness. Those who have yet to enter the
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electronic age (doubtless reading this by the light of a paraffin lamp) find
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computers unutterably alien, and discover Strangeness in the way the new
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technology (sorry, rather passe phrase, that) is chipping away at their
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privacy. We see strange icons in the street, be they ads and posters or
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Gothic individuals (OK Justin - Byronic Romanticks!) walking by.
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Let's face it, to a newcomer Chaos Magic is strange. It is as strange
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as the first time you open a book by Terry Pratchett. It is as strange as
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that first discovery of the clap one grey and dismal, even if bright and
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sunny, morning. It is as strange as the pacing of a Stanley Kubrick file or
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a normal performance by the late Klaus Kindky. But strangeness, which I
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discovered in my youth, can contain a latent trap which middle age reveals.
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Once the strange, which is potent, becomes familiar (and familiarity, we are
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told, breeds contempt) its potency evaporates like surplus fluid in a can of
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Carnation, leaving you with a sticky, stodgy, unappealing goo.
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This again, is a personally-proven discovery. When first strangeness
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came to me I worked out a full system of magic based on information culled
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from the works of Clark Ashton Smith. By the time I'd finished I had
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something workable, but its strangeness and appeal were gone, rendering it
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not so much useless as indigestible, like certain fungi found on this planet
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and possibly on Yuggoth as well.
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Maybe it was something I ate.
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Yet there are systems around which maintain their strangeness, even when
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it becomes familiar. The dear old runes are one, and Chaos is another, as
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anyone who's ever set foot in a Chaos temple and worked a Mass of Chaos
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A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,Iy ay ay will attest. The paradox of Strangeness is that in
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order to be effective it must be both overcome and perpetuated. The sexy
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schoolgirl remains a potent male fantasy because it can only stand still as a
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generality, passing down through new generations of young flesh. If applied
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to an actual individual it cannot persist, because they grow up into ex-wives
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demanding alimony payments.
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Take the work of A.O.Spare, without which Liber Null and The Book of
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Results might have been much longer in the writing. The sigil techniques,
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and the entire and manifestly personal corpus of Spare's extant work, rely
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upon Strangeness, whatever it is actually designated within his own or his
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commentators' pages.
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And this is where I begin to come to the culmination of my ramblings,
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with a series of statements that will remain open to discussion (I hope):
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1. Chaos is strange.
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2. This strangeness is an important part of its appeal.
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3. Strangeness normally yields and becomes familiar.
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4. Chaos doesn't.
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5. Pete Carroll borrowing from Terry Pratchett is as valid as me borrowing
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from Clark Ashton Smith.
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6. He did it better.
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7. What's strange about a five-pointed octagram?
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8. Just try constructing an eight-pointed octagram!
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Funny, there seem to be eight statements there. It's never been my
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favourite number, but it seems to keep obtrucing, no matter how much I
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dislike it.
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In fact, it's something I hate.
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However, we all have to come to terms with things we hate.
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Don't we?
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