246 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
246 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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ALEISTER CROWLEY
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Concerning ``Blasphemy''
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in General
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& the
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Rites of Eleusis
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in Particular
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This essay by Crowley first appeared in The Bystander during his
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staging of the Rites of Eleusis at Caxton Hall, London in 1910 E.V.
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This republication is dedicated to Senator Jesse Helms of North
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Carolina.--H.B.
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PIONEERS, O PIONEERS!
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WHENEVER it occurs to anyone to cut a new canal of any kind, he will
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be well advised to look out for trouble. If it be the ishthmus of
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Suez, the simple-minded engineer is apt to imagine that it is only a
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question of shifting so much sand; but before he can as much as strike
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the first pickaxe into the earth he finds that he is up against all
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kinds of interests, social, political, financial, and what-not. The
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same applies to the digging of canals in the human brain. When Simpson
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introduced chloroform, he thought it a matter for the physician; and
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found himself attacked from the pulpit. All his arguments proved
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useless; and we should probably be without chloroform to-day if some
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genius had not befriended him by discovering that God caused Adam to
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fall into a deep sleep before He removed the rib of which Eve was
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made.
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THE ABUSE OF THE GUTTER
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NOWADAYS a movement has to be very well on the way to success before
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it is attacked by any responsible people. The first trouble comes from
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the gutter. Now the language of the gutter consists chiefly of
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meaningless abuse, and the principal catch-words, coming as they do
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from the mouths of men who never open them without a profane oath or a
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foul allusion, are those of blasphemy and immorality. The charge of
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insanity is frequently added when the new idea is just sufficiently
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easy to understand a little. There is another reason, too, for these
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three particular cries; these are the charges which, if proved, can
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get the person into trouble, and at the same time which are in a sense
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true of everybody; for they all refer to a more or less arbitrary
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standard of normality. The old cry of ``heresy'' has naturally lost
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much of its force in a country nine-tenths of whose population are
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admittedly heretics; but immorality and insanity are to-day almost
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equally meaningless terms. The Censor permits musical comedy and
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forbids Oedipus Rex; and Mr. Bernard Shaw brands the Censor as immoral
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for doing so. Most people of the educated classes will probably agree
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with him.
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INSANITY AND BLASPHEMY
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AS FOR INSANITY, it is simply a question of finding a Greek or Latin
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name for any given act. If I open the window, it is on account of
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claustrophobia; when I shut it again, it is an attack of agarophobia.
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All the professors tell me that every form of emotion has its root in
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sex, and describe my fondness for pictures as if it were a peculiarly
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unnatural type of vice. It is even impossible for an architect to
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build a church spire without being told that he is reviving the
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worship of Priapus. Now, the only result of all this is that all these
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terms of abuse have become entirely meaningless, save as defined by
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law. There is still some meaning in the term ``Forger,'' as used in
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general speech; but only because it has not yet occurred to any
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wiseacre to prove that all his political and religious opponents are
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forgers. This seems to me a pity. There is, undoubtedly, a forged
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passage in Tacitus and another in Petronius. Everyone who studies the
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classics is, therefore, a kind of accomplice in forgery. The charge of
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blasphemy is in all cases a particularly senseless one. It has been
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hurled in turn at Socrates, Euripides, Christ, El-Mansur, the Baab,
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and the Rev. R. J. Campbell.
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THE MORALITY RED HERRING
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LEGAL BLASPHEMY is, of course, an entirely different thing. In the
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recent notorious case where an agent of the Rationalist Press
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Association, Harry Boulter by name, was prosecuted, the question
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proved to be not a theological one at all. It was really this, ``were
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the neighbours being annoyed?'' ``was the man's language coarse?'' and
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the Judge and Joseph McCabe agreed that it was. But in modern times no
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one has ever been prosecuted in any civilised country for stating
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philosophic propositions, whatever may be their theological
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implicatons. We have no longer the Casuists of the Inquisition, who
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would take the trouble to argue from Bruno's propositions of the
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immanence of God that, if that were so, the doctrine of the
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Incarnation was untenable (and therefore he shall be burned). It is
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only the very narrowest religious sects that trouble to call Herbert
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Spencer an Atheist. What the man in the street means by Atheist is the
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militant Atheist, Bradlaugh or Foote; and it is a singular
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characteristic of the Odium Theologicum that, instead of arguing
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soberly concerning the proposition, which those worthies put forward,
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they always try to drag the red herring of morality across the track.
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Of all the stupid lies that men have ever invented, nothing is much
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sillier than the lie that one who does not believe in God must be
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equally a disbeliever in morality. As a matter of fact, in a country
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which pretends so hard to appear theistic as England, it requires the
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most astounding moral courage, a positive galaxy of virtues, for a man
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to stand up and say that he does not believe in God; as Dr. Wace
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historically remarked, ``it ought to be unpleasant for a man to say
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that he does not believe in Jesus''; and my dislike to Atheism is
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principally founded on the fact that so many of its exponents are
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always boring me about ethics. Some priceless idiot, who, I hope, will
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finish in the British Museum, remarked in a free-thinking paper the
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other day, that they need not trouble to pull down the churches,
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``because they will always be so useful for sane and serious
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discussion of important ethical problems.'' Personally, I would rather
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go back to the times when the preacher preached by the hour-glass.
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THE POT AND THE KETTLE
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I HAVE ALWAYS been very amused, too, in this connection of blasphemy
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by the perusal of Christian Missionary journals, on which I was
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largely brought up. They are full from cover to cover of the most
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scandalous falsehoods about heathen gods, and the most senseless
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insults to them, insults penned by the grossly ignorant of our
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religious population. It is only in quite recent years that the
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English public have discovered that Buddha was not a God, and it was
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not the missionaries that found this out, but scholars of secular
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attainment. In America, particularly, the most incredible falsehoods
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are constantly circulated by the Missionary Societies even about the
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customs of the Hindoos. To read them, one would suppose that every
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crocodile in India was fed with babies as the first religious duty of
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every Indian mother; but, of course, it is most terribly wicked for
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the Hindoo to make fun of the deities of the American. For my part,
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who have lived half my life in ``Christian'' countries and half my
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life in ``heathen'' countries, I cannot see much to choose between the
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different religions. Their arguments consist, in the end, of
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passionate assertion, which is no argument at all.
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RELIGION AND DRAW-POKER
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THERE IS an excellent story--much better known in India than in
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England--of a missionary, who was explaining to the poor heathen how
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useless were his gods. ``See!'' said he, ``I insult your idol, he is
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but of dead stone; he does not avenge himself, or punish me.'' ``I
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insult your God,'' replied the Hindoo, ``he is invisible; he does not
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avenge himself, or punish me.'' ``Ah!'' said the missionary, ``my God
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will punish you when you die''; and the poor Hindoo could only find
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the following pitiable answer: ``So, when you die, will my idol punish
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you.'' It was from America, too, that I obtained the first principle
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of religion; which is that four to a flush are not as good as one
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small pair.
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ORGIES!
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STILL, I SUPPOSE it is useless to contest the popular view that anyone
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whom any fool chooses to call an Atheist is liable to conduct
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``orgies.'' Now, can anyone tell me what orgies are? No? Then I must
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reach down the Lexicon. Orgia, only used in the plural and connected
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with Ergon (work), means sacred rites, sacred worship practised by the
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initiated at the sacred worship of Demeter at Eleusis, and also the
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rites of Bacchus. It also means any rites, or worship, or sacrifice,
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of any mysteries without any reference to religion; and Orgazio means,
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therefore, to celebrate Orgies, or ceremonies, or to celebrate any
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sacred rites. It is really a poor comment upon the celebration of
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sacred rites that the word should have come to mean something entirely
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different, as it does to-day. For the man in the street Orgie means a
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wild revel usually accompanied by drunkenness. I think it is almost
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time that someone took the word Orgie as a Battle Cry, and, having
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shown that the Eucharist is only one kind of orgie to restore the true
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enthusiasm (which is not of an alcoholic or sexual nature) among the
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laity; for it is no secret that the falling away of all nations from
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religion, which only a few blind-worms are fatuous enough to deny, is
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due to the fact that the fire no longer burns in the sacred lamp.
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Outside a few monasteries there is hardly any church of any sect whose
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members really expect anything to happen to them from attending public
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worship. It a new Saint Paul were to journey to Damascus, the doctor
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would be called in and his heavenly vision diagnosed as epilepsy. If a
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new Mahomed came from his cave and announced himself a messenger of
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God, he would be thought a harmless lunatic. And that is the first
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stage of a religious propaganda.
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THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS
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NOW THE REAL MESSENGER of God can always be distinguished in a very
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simple way. He possesses a mysterious force which enables him to
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persist, heedless of the sneers and laughter of the populace. It then
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strikes the wiser people that he is dangerous; and they begin on the
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blasphemy and immorality tack. In the life of our Lord, this will be
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noticed. In the first place, there was just the contemptuous ``he hath
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a devil,'' which was the equivalent of our ``he's just a crank,'' but
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when it was found that this crank had adherents, men of force and
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eloquence like Peter, to say nothing of financial genius like Judas
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Iscariot, the cry was quickly changed into wild accusations of
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blasphemy and allegations of immorality. ``He is a friend of publicans
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and sinners.'' A sane Government only laughs at these ebullitions; and
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it is then the task of the Pharisees to prove to the Government that
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it is to its interest to suppress this dangerous upstart. They may
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succeed; and though the Government is never for a moment blind to the
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fact that it is doing an injustice, the new Saviour is crucified. It
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is this final publicity of crucifixion (for advertisement is just as
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necessary in one age as another) that secures the full triumph to him
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whom his enemies fondly suppose to be their victim. Such is human
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blindness, that the messenger himself, his enemies, and the civil
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power, all of them do exactly the one thing which will defeat their
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ends. The messenger would never succeed at all if it were not that he
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is The Messenger, and it really matters very little what steps he may
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take to get the message delivered. For all concerned are but pawns in
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the great game played by infinite wisdom and infinite power.
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ORDERLY, DECOROUS CEREMONIES
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IT IS, therefore, a negligible matter, this abuse, from whatever
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source it comes. It should waste my time if I were to prove that the
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rites of Eleusis, as now being performed at Caxton Hall, are orderly,
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decorous ceremonies. It is true that at times darkness prevails; so it
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does in some of Wagner's operas and in certain ceremonies of a
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mystical character which will occur to the minds of a large section of
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my male readers. There are, moreover, periods of profound silence, and
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I can quite understand that in such an age of talk as this, that seems
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a very suspicious circumstance!
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