370 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
370 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Liber CCC
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{Book 300}
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Khabs am Pekht
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This Epistle is important in that it helps place the work of the
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O.T.O. as a temporal organization in perspective. Addressed by The
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Master Therion to his magical Son Frater V.I.O. 8ø=3 (Parzival Xø
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O.T.O.), it has a special relevance to modern times. It first appeared
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in The Equinox I(3) (Detroit: Universal, 1919). Most of the quotations
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are from Liber Legis--The Book of the Law.--H.B.
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AN EPISTLE OF THERION 9ø=2, A MAGUS OF A...A... TO HIS SON, BEING AN
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INSTRUCTION IN A MATTER OF ALL IMPORTANCE, TO WIT, THE MEANS
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TO BE TAKEN TO EXTEND THE DOMINION OF THE LAW OF THELEMA THROUGHOUT
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THE WHOLE WORLD.
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Son,
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Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
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FIRSTLY, let thine attention be directed to this planet, how the Aeon
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of Horus is made manifest by the Universal War. This is the first
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great and direct result of the Equinox of the Gods, and is the
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preparation of the hearts of men for the reception of the Law.
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Let Us remind you that this is a magical formula of cosmic scope, and
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that it is given in exact detail in the legend of the Golden Fleece.
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Jason, who in this story represents the Beast, first fits out a ship
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guided by Wisdom or Athena, and this is his aspiration to the Great
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Work. Accompanied by many heroes, he comes to the place of the Fleece,
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but they can do nothing until Medea, the Scarlet Woman, puts into his
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hands a posset ``drugged with somnolence, Sleepy with poppy and white
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hellebore'' for the dragon. Then Jason is able to subdue the bulls,
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sacred to Osiris, and symbolical of his Aeon and of the Magical
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Formula of Self-Sacrifice. With these he plows the field of the world,
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and sows therein ``the dreadful teeth of woe, Cadmean Stock of Thebes'
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old misery,'' which refers to a certain magical formula announced by
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The Beast that is familiar unto thee, but unsuited to the profane, and
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therefore not further in this place indicated. From this seed armed
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men sprung to life; but instead of attacking Him, ``mutual madness
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strikes The warriors witless, and fierce wrath invades Their hearts of
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fury, and with arms engaged, They fell upon each other silently, And
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slew, and slew.'' Now then, the Dragon being asleep, we may step
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quietly past him, and ``rending the branches of that wizard Oak, With
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a strong grasp tear down the Fleece of Gold.''
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Let us only remember not to repeat the error of Jason, and defy Ares,
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who is Horus in his warrior mood, that guardeth it, lest He strike us
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also with madness. Nay! but to the glory of Ra-Hoor-Khuit and the
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establishment of His perfect kingdom let all be done!
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Now, O my son, thou knowest that it is Our will to establish this
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Work, accomplishing fully that which We are commanded in The Book of
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the Law, ``Help me, O warrior lord of Thebes, in my unveiling before
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the children of men!''--and it is Thy will, manifesting as thou hast
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done in the Sphere of Malkuth the material world, to do this same
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thing in an even more immediate and practical way than would naturally
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appeal to one whose manifestation is in the Heaven of Jupiter. So
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therefore We now answer Thy filial petition that asketh good counsel
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of Us as to the means to be taken to extend the Law of Thelema
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throughout the whole world.
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Direct therefore now most closely thine attention to The Book of the
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Law itself. In It we find an absolute rule of life, and clear
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instruction in every emergency that may befall. What then are Its own
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directions for the fructification of That Ineffable Seed? Note, pray
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thee, the confidence with which we may proceed. ``They shall gather my
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children into their fold; they shall bring the glory of the stars into
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the hearts of men.'' They `shall'; there is no doubt. Therefore doubt
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not, but strike with all thy strength. Note also, pray thee, this
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word: ``The Law is for all.'' Do not therefore `select suitable
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persons' in thy worldly wisdom; preach openly the Law to all men. In
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Our experience We have found that the most unlikely means have
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produced the best results; and indeed it is almost the definition of a
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true Magical Formula that the means should be unsuited, rationally
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speaking, to the end proposed. Note, pray thee, that We are bound to
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teach. ``He must teach; but he may make severe the ordeals.'' This
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refers, however, as is evident from the context, to the technique of
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the new Magick, ``the mantras and spells; the obeah and the wanga; the
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work of the wand and the work of the sword.''
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Note, pray thee, the instruction in CCXX I:41-n-44, 51, 61, 63 k.t.l.
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on which We have enlarged in Our tract The Law of Liberty, and in
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private letters to thee and to others. The open preaching of this Law,
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and the practice of these precepts, will arouse discussion and
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animosity, and thus place thee upon a rostrum whence thou mayst speak
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unto the people.
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Note, pray thee, this mentor: ``Remember ye that existence is pure
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joy; that all the sorrows are but shadows; they pass and are done; but
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there is that which remains.'' For this doctrine shall comfort many.
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Also there is this word: ``They shall rejoice, our chosen; who
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sorroweth is not of us. Beauty and strength, leaping laughter and
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delicious languor, force and fire, are of us.'' Indeed in all ways
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thou mayest expound the joy of our Law; nay, for thou shalt overflow
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with the joy thereof, and have no need of words. It would moreover be
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impertinent and tedious to call again thine attention to all those
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passages that thou knowest so well. Note, pray thee, that in the
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matter of direct instruction there is enough. Consider the passage
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``Choose ye an island! Fortify it! Dung it about with enginery of war!
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I will give you a war-engine. With it ye shall smite the peoples; and
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none shall stand before you. Lurk! Withdraw! Upon them! This is the
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Law of the Battle of Conquest: thus shall my worship be about my
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secret house.'' The last phrase suggests that the island may be Great
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Britain, with its Mines and Tanks; and it is notable that a certain
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brother obligated to A...A... is in the most secret of England's War
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Councils at this hour. But it is possible that all this instruction
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refers to some later time when our Law, administered by some such
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Order as the O.T.O. which concerns itself with temporal affairs, is of
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weight in the councils of the world, and is challenged by the heathen,
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and by the followers of the fallen gods and demigods.
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Note, pray thee, the practical method of overcoming opposition given
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in CCXX III:23-n-26. But this is not to Our immediate purpose in this
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epistle. Note, pray thee, the instruction in the 38th and 39th verses
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of the Third Chapter of The Book of the Law. It must be quoted in
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full.
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``So that thy light is in me; and its red flame is as a sword in my
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hand to push thy order.''
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That is, the God himself is aflame with the Light of The Beast, and
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will himself push the order, through the fire (perhaps meaning the
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genius) of The Beast.
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``There is a secret door that I shall make to establish thy way in all
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the quarters (these are the adorations, as thou hast written) as it is
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said:
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The Light is mine; its rays consume
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Me: I have made a secret door
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Into the House of Ra and Tum,
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Of Khephra, and of Ahathoor.
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I am thy Theban, O Mentu,
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The prophet Ankh-f-na-khonsu!
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By Bes-na-Maut my breast I beat;
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By wise Ta-Nech I weave my spell.
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Show thy star-splendour, O Nuit!
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Bid me within thine House to dwell,
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O winged snake of light, Hadit!
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Abide with me, Ra-Hoor-Khuit!''
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In the comment in Equinox I(7) this passage is virtually ignored. It
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is possible that this ``secret door'' refers to the four men and four
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women spoken of later in The Paris Working, or it may mean the child
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elsewhere predicted, or some secret preparation of the hearts of men.
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It is difficult to decide on such a point, but we may be sure that the
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Event will show that the exact wording was so shaded as to prove to us
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absolute foreknowledge on the part of That Most Holy Angel who uttered
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the Book.
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Note, pray thee, further, in verse 39, how the matter proceeds:
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``All this''--i.e. The Book of the Law itself.
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``and a book to say how didst come hither'' i.e. some record such as
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that in The Temple of Solomon the King.
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``And a reproduction of this ink and paper for ever'' i.e. by some
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mechanical process, with possibly a sample of paper similar to that
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employed.
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``--for in it is the word secret and not only in the English--''
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Compare CCXX III:47, 73. The secret is still a secret to Us.
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``And thy comment upon this the Book of the Law shall be printed
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beautifully in red ink and black upon beautiful paper made by hand;''
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i.e. explain the text ``lest there be folly'' as it says above, CCXX
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I:36.
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``And to each man and woman that thou meetest, were it but to dine or
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to drink at them, it is the Law to give. Then they shall chance to
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abide in this bliss or no; it is no odds. Do this quickly!''
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From this it is evident that a volume must be prepared as signified--
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Part IV of Book 4 was intended to fulfil this purpose--and that this
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book must be distributed widely, in fact to every one with whom one
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comes into social relations.
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We are not to add to this gift by preaching and the like. They can
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take it or leave it.
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Note, pray thee, verse 41 of this chapter:
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``Establish at thy Kaaba a clerk-house; all must be done well and with
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business way.''
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This is very clear instruction indeed. There is to be a modern
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centralized business organization at the Kaaba--which, We think, does
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not mean Boleskine, but any convenient headquarters.
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Note, pray thee, in verse 42 of this chapter the injunction: ``Success
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is thy proof: argue not; convert not; talk not overmuch.'' This is not
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any bar to an explanation of the Law. We may aid men to strike off
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their own fetters; but those who prefer slavery must be allowed to do
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so. ``The slaves shall serve.'' The excellence of the Law must be
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showed by its results upon those who accept it. When men see us as the
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hermits of Hadit described in CCXX II:24, they will determine to
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emulate our joy.
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Note, pray thee, the whole implication of the chapter that sooner or
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later we are to break the power of the slaves of the slave-gods by
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actual fighting. Ultimately, Freedom must rely upon the sword. It is
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impossible to treat in this epistle of the vast problems involved in
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this question; and they must be decided in accordance with the Law by
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those in authority in the Order when the time comes. Thou wilt note
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that We have written unto thee more as a member of the O.T.O., than in
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thy capacity as of the A...A..., for the former organization is co-
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ordinate and practical, and concerns itself with material things. But
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remember this clearly, that the Law cometh from the A...A..., not from
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the O.T.O. This Order is but the first of the great religious bodies
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to accept this Law officially, and its whole Ritual has been revised
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and reconstituted in accordance with this decision. Now then, leaving
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The Book of the Law, note, pray thee, the following additional
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suggestions for extending the Dominion of the Law of Thelema
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throughout the whole world.
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1. All those who have accepted the Law should announce the same in
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daily intercourse. ``Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law''
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shall be the invariable form of greeting. These words, especially in
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the case of strangers, should be pronounced in a clear, firm, and
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articulate voice, with the eyes frankly fixed upon the bearer. If the
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other be of us, let him reply ``Love is the law, love under will.''
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The latter sentence shall also be used as the greeting of farewell. In
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writing, wherever greeting is usual, it should be as above, opening
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``Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.'', and closing
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``Love is the law, love under will.''
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2. Social gatherings should be held as often as is convenient, and
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there the Law should be read and explained.
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3. The special tracts written by Us, or authorized by Us, should be
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distributed to all persons with whom those who have accepted the Law
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may be in contact.
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4. Pending the establishment of other Universities and Schools of
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Thelema, scholarships and readerships and such should be provided in
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existing Schools and Universities, so as to secure the general study
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of Our writings, and those authorized by Us as pertaining to the New
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Aeon.
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5. All children and young people, although they may not be able to
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understand the more exalted heavens of our horoscope, may always be
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taught to rule their lives in accordance with the Law. No efforts
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should be spared to bring them to this emancipation. The misery caused
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to children by the operation of the law of the slave-gods was, one may
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say, the primum mobile of Our first aspiration to overthrow the Old
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Law.
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6. By all manner of means shall all strive constantly to increase the
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power and freedom of the Headquarters of the O.T.O.; for thereby will
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come efficiency in the promulgation of the Law. Specific instructions
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for the extension of the O.T.O. are given in another epistle.
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Constant practice of these recommendations will develop skill in him
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or her that practiseth, so that new ideas and plans will be evolved
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continually.
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Furthermore, it is right that each and every one bind himself with an
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Oath Magical that he may thus make Freedom perfect, even by a bond, as
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in Liber III it is duly written. Amen.
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Now, son, note, pray thee, in what house We write these words. For it
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is a little cottage of red and green, by the western side of a great
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lake, and it is hidden in the woods. Man, therefore, is at odds with
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Wood and Water; and being a magician bethinketh Himself to take one of
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these enemies, Wood, which is both the effect and the cause of that
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excess of Water, and compel it to fight for Him against the other.
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What then maketh He? Why, He taketh unto himself Iron of Mars, an Axe
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and a Saw and a Wedge and a Knife, and He divideth Wood therewith
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against himself, hewing him into many small pieces, so that he hath no
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longer any strength against His will. Good; then taketh He the Fire of
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our Father the Sun, and setteth it directly in battle array against
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that Water by His army of Wood that he hath conquered and drilled,
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building it up into a phalanx like unto a Cone, that is the noblest of
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all solid figures, being the Image of the Holy Phallus Itself, and
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combined in himself the Right Line and the Circle. Thus, son, dealeth
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He; and the Fire kindleth the Wood, and the heat thereof driveth the
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Water afar off. Yet this Water is a cunning adversary, and He
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strengthened Wood against Fire by impregnating him with much of his
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own substance, as it were by spies in the citadel of any ally that is
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not wholly trusted. Now then therefore what must the Magician do? He
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must first expel utterly Water from Wood by an invocation of the Fire
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of the Sun our Father. That is to say, without the inspiration of the
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Most High and Holy One even We ourselves could do nothing at all.
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Then, son, beginneth the Magician to set His Fire to the little dry
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Wood, and that enkindleth the Wood of middle size, and when that
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blazeth brightly, at the last the great logs, through they be utterly
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green, are nevertheless enkindled.
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Now, son, hearken unto this Our reproof, and lend the ear of thine
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understanding unto the parable of this Magick.
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We have for the whole Beginning of Our Work, praise be eternally unto
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His Holy Name, the Fire of our Father the Sun. The inspiration is
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ours, and ours is the Law of Thelema that shall set the world ablaze.
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And We have many small dry sticks, that kindle quickly and burn
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through quickly, leaving the larger Wood unlit. And the great logs,
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the masses of humanity, are always with us. But our edged need is of
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those middle fagots that on the one hand are readily kindled by the
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small Wood, and on the other endure until the great logs blaze.
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(Behold how sad a thing it is, quoth the Ape of Thoth, for one to be
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so holy that he cannot chop a tree and cook his food without preparing
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upon it a long and tedious Morality!)
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Let this epistle be copied and circulated among all those that have
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accepted the Law of Thelema.
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Receive now Our paternal benediction: the Benediction of the All-
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Begetter be upon thee.
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Love is the law, love under will.
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VHRION 9ø=2 A...A...
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Given under Our hand and seal this day of An XII, the Sun our Father
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being in 12ø 42{'} 2" of the sign Leo, and the Moon in 25ø 39{'} 11"
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of the sign Libra, from the House of the Juggler, that is by Lake
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Pasquaney in the State of New Hampshire.
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