708 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
708 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
Original key entry by Bill Heidrick, GTG O.T.O.
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Extracted from EQ-I-9.AS1 by Fr. NChSh, Uraeus-Hadit Camp O.T.O.
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Copyright (c) O.T.O.
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O.T.O.
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P.O.Box 430
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Fairfax, CA 94930
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USA
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(415) 454-5176 ---- Messages only.
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***********************************************************************
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ENERGIZED ENTHUSIASM
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A NOTE ON THEURGY
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I
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I A O the supreme One of the Gnostics, the true God, is the Lord of this
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work. Let us therefore invoke Him by that name which the Companions of the
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royal Arch blaspheme to aid us in the essay to declare the means which He has
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bestowed upon us!
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II
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The divine consciousness which is reflected and refracted in the works of
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Genius feeds upon a certain secretion, as I believe. This secretion is
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analogous to semen, but not identical with it. There are but few men and
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fewer women, those women being invariably androgyne, who possess it at any
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time in any quantity.
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So closely is this secretion connected with the sexual economy that it
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appears to me at times as if it might be a by-product of that process which
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generates semen. That some form of this doctrine has been generally accepted
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is shown in the prohibitions of all religions. Sanctity has been assumed to
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depend on chastity, and chastity has nearly always been interpreted as
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abstinence. But I doubt whether the relation is so simple as this would
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imply; for example, I find in myself that manifestations of mental
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creative force always concur with some abnormal condition of the physical
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powers of generation. But it is not the case that long periods of chastity,
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on the one hand, or excess of orgies, on the other, are favourable to its
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manifestation or even to its formation.
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I know myself, and in me it is extremely strong; its results are
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astounding.
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For example, I wrote "Tannhauser," complete from conception to execution,
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in sixty-seven consecutive hours. I was unconscious of the fall of nights and
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days, even after stopping; nor was there any reaction of fatigue. This work
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was written when I was twenty-four years old, immediately on the completion of
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an orgie which would normally have tired me out.
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Often and often have I noticed that sexual satisfaction so-called has left
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me dissatisfied and unfatigued, and let loose the floods of verse which have
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disgraced my career.
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Yet, on the contrary, a period of chastity has sometimes fortified me for a
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great outburst. This is far from being invariably the case. At the
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conclusion of the K 2 expedition, after five months of chastity, I did no work
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whatever, barring very few odd lyrics, for months afterwards.
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I may mention the year 1911. At this time I was living, in excellent good
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health, with the woman whom I loved. Her health was, however, variable, and
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we were both constantly worried.
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The weather was continuously fine and hot. For a period of about three
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months I hardly missed a morning; always on waking I burst out with a new idea
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which had to be written down.
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The total energy of my being was very high. My weight was 10 stone 8 lb.,
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which had been my fighting weight when I was ten years younger. We walked
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some twenty miles daily through hilly forest.
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The actual amount of MSS. written at this time is astounding; their variety
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is even more so; of their excellence I will not speak.
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Here is a rough list from memory; it is far from exhaustive:
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(1) Some dozen books of A.'. A.'. instruction, including liber Astarte,
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and the Temple of Solomon the King for "Equinox VII."
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(2) Short Stories: The Woodcutter.
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His Secret Sin.
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(3) Plays: His Majesty's Fiddler
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Elder Eel
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Adonis . written straight off, one
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The Ghouls. after the other
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Mortadello.
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(4) Poems: The Sevenfold Sacrament
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A Birthday.
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(5) Fundamentals of the Greek Qabalah (involving the collection and
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analysis of several thousand words).
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I think this phenomenon is unique in the history of literature.
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I may further refer to my second journey to Algeria, where my sexual life,
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though fairly full, had been unsatisfactory.
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On quitting Biskra, I was so full of ideas that I had to get off the train
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at El-Kantara, where I wrote "The Scorpion." Five or six poems were written
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on the way to Paris; "The Ordeal of Ida Pendragon" during my twenty-four
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hours' stay in Paris, and "Snowstorm" and "The Electric Silence" immediately
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on my return to England.
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To sum up, I can always trace a connection between my sexual condition and
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the condition of artistic creation, which is so close as to approach identity,
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and yet so loose that I cannot predicate a single important proposition.
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It is these considerations which give me pain when I am reproached by the
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ignorant with wishing to produce genius mechanically. I may fail, but my
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failure is a thousand times greater than their utmost success.
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I shall therefore base my remarks not so much on the observations which I
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have myself made, and the experiments which I have tried, as on the accepted
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classical methods of producing that energized enthusiasm which is the lever
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that moves God.
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III
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The Greeks say that there are three methods of discharging the genial
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secretion of which I have spoken. They thought perhaps that their methods
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tended to secrete it, but this I do not believe altogether, or without a
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qualm. For the manifestation of force implies force, and this force must have
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come from somewhere. Easier I find it to say "subconsciousness" and
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"secretion" than to postulate an external reservoir, to extend my connotation
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of "man" than to invent "God."
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However, parsimony apart, I find it in my experience that it is useless to
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flog a tired horse. There are times when I am absolutely bereft of even one
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drop of this elixir. Nothing will restore it, neither rest in bed, nor
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drugs, nor exercise. On the other hand, sometimes when after a severe spell
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of work I have been dropping with physical fatigue, perhaps sprawling on the
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floor, too tired to move hand or foot, the occurrence of an idea has restored
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me to perfect intensity of energy, and the working out of the idea has
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actually got rid of the aforesaid physical fatigue, although it involved a
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great additional labour.
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Exactly parallel (nowhere meeting) is the case of mania. A madman may
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struggle against six trained athletes for hours, and show no sign of fatigue.
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Then he will suddenly collapse, but at a second's notice from the irritable
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idea will resume the struggle as fresh as ever. Until we discovered
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"unconscious muscular action" and its effects, it was rational to suppose such
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a man "possessed of a devil"; and the difference between the madman and the
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genius is not in the quantity but in the quality of their work. Genius is
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organized, madness chaotic. Often the organization of genius is on original
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lines, and ill-balanced and ignorant medicine-men mistake it for disorder.
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Time has shown that Whistler and Gauguin "kept rules" as well as the masters
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whom they were supposed to be upsetting.
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IV
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The Greeks say that there are three methods of discharging the Lyden Jar of
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Genius. These three methods they assign to three Gods.
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These three Gods are Dionysus, Apollo, Aphrodite. In English: wine, woman
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and song.
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Now it would be a great mistake to imagine that the Greeks were
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recommending a visit to a brothel. As well condemn the High Mass at St.
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Peter's on the strength of having witnessed a Protestant revival meeting.
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Disorder is always a parody of order, because there is no archetypal disorder
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that it might resemble. Owen Seaman can parody a poet; nobody can parody Owen
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Seaman. A critic is a bundle of impressions; there is no ego behind it. All
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photographs are essentially alike; the works of all good painters essentially
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differ.
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Some writers suppose that in the ancient rites of Eleusis the High Priest
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publicly copulated with the High Priestess. Were this so, it would be no more
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"indecent" than it is "blasphemous" for the priest to make bread and wine into
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the body and blood of God.
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True, the Protestants say that it is blasphemous; but a Protestant is one
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to whom all things sacred are profane, whose mind being all filth can see
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nothing in the sexual act but a crime or a jest, whose only facial gestures
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are the sneer and the leer.
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Protestantism is the excrement of human thought, and accordingly in
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Protestant countries art, if it exist at all, only exists to revolt. Let us
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return from this unsavoury allusion to our consideration of the methods of the
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Greeks.
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V
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Agree then that it does not follow from the fact that wine, woman and song
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make the sailor's tavern that these ingredients must necessarily concoct a
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hell-broth.
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There are some people so simple as to think that, when they have proved
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the religious instinct to be a mere efflorescence of the sex-instinct, they
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have destroyed religion.
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We should rather consider that the sailor's tavern gives him his only
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glimpse of heaven, just as the destructive criticism of the phallicists has
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only proved sex to be a sacrament. Consciousness, says the materialist, axe
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in hand, is a function of the brain. He has only re-formulated the old
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saying, "Your bodies are the temples of the Holy Ghost."!
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Now sex is justly hallowed in this sense, that it is the eternal fire of
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the race. Huxley admitted that "some of the lower animalculae are in a sense
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immortal," because they go on reproducing eternally by fission, and however
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often you divide "x" by 2 there is always something left. But he never seems
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to have seen that mankind is immortal in exactly the same sense, and goes on
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reproducing itself with similar characteristics through the ages, changed by
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circumstance indeed, but always identical in itself. But the spiritual flower
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of this process is that at the moment of discharge a physical ecstasy occurs,
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a spasm analogous to the mental spasm which meditation gives. And further, in
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the sacramental and ceremonial use of the sexual act, the divine consciousness
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may be attained.
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VI
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The sexual act being then a sacrament, it remains to consider in what
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respect this limits the employment of the organs.
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First, it is obviously legitimate to employ them for their natural physical
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purpose. But if it be allowable to use them ceremonially for a religious
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purpose, we shall find the act hedged about with many restrictions.
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For in this case the organs become holy. It matters little to mere
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propagation that men should be vicious; the most debauched roue might and
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almost certainly would beget more healthy children than a semi-sexed prude.
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So the so-called "moral" restraints are not based on reason; thus they are
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neglected.
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But admit its religious function, and one may at once lay down that the act
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must not be profaned. It must not be undertaken lightly and foolishly without
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excuse.
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It may be undertaken for the direct object of continuing the race.
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It may be undertaken in obedience to real passion; for passion, as the name
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implies, is rather inspired by a force of divine strength and beauty without
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the will of the individual, often even against it.
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It is the casual or habitual --- what Christ called "idle" --- use or
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rather abuse of these forces which constitutes their profanation. It will
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further be obvious that, if the act in itself is to be the sacrament in a
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religious ceremony, this act must be accomplished solely for the love of God.
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All personal considerations must be banished utterly. Just as any priest can
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perform the miracle of transubstantiation, so can any man, possessing the
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necessary qualifications, perform this other miracle, whose nature must form
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the subject of a subsequent discussion.
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Personal aims being destroyed, it is "a fortiori" necessary to neglect
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social and other similar considerations.
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Physical strength and beauty are necessary and desirable for aesthetic
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reasons, the attention of the worshippers being liable to distraction if the
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celebrants are ugly, deformed, or incompetent. I need hardly emphasize the
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necessity for the strictest self-control and concentration on their part. As
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it would be blasphemy to enjoy the gross taste of the wine of the sacrament,
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so must the celebrant suppress even the minutest manifestation of animal
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pleasure.
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Of the qualifying tests there is no necessity to speak; it is sufficient to
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say that the adepts have always known how to secure efficiency.
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Needless also to insist on a similar quality in the assistants; the sexual
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excitement must be suppressed and transformed into its religious equivalent.
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VII
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With these preliminaries settle in order to guard against foreseen
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criticisms of those Protestants who, God having made them a little lower than
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the Angels, have made themselves a great deal lower than the beasts by their
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consistently bestial interpretation of all things human and divine, we may
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consider first the triune nature of these ancient methods of energizing
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enthusiasm.
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Music has two parts; tone or pitch, and rhythm. The latter quality
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associates it with the dance, and that part of dancing which is not rhythm is
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sex. Now that part of sex which is not a form of the dance, animal movement,
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is intoxication of the soul, which connects it with wine. Further identities
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will suggest themselves to the student.
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By the use of the three methods in one the whole being of man may thus be
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stimulated.
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The music will create a general harmony of the brain, leading it in its own
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paths; the wine affords a general stimulus of the animal nature; and the sex-
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excitement elevates the moral nature of the man by its close analogy with the
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highest ecstasy. It remains, however, always for him to make the final
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transmutation. Unless he have the special secretion which I have postulated,
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the result will be commonplace.
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So consonant is this system with the nature of man that it is exactly
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parodied and profaned not only in the sailor's tavern, but in the society
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ball. Here, for the lowest natures the result is drunkenness, disease and
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death; for the middle natures a gradual blunting of the finer feelings; for
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the higher, an exhilaration amounting at the best to the foundation of a life-
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long love.
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If these Society "rites" are properly performed, there should be no
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exhaustion. After a ball, one should feel the need of a long walk in the
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young morning air. The weariness or boredom, the headache or somnolence, are
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Nature's warnings.
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VIII
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Now the purpose of such a ball, the moral attitude on entering, seems to
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me to be of supreme importance. If you go with the idea of killing time, you
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are rather killing yourself. Baudelaire speaks of the first period of love
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when the boy kisses the trees of the wood, rather than kiss nothing. At the
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age of thirty-six I found myself at Pompeii, passionately kissing that
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great grave statue of a woman that stands in the avenue of the tombs. Even
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now, as I wake in the morning, I sometimes fall to kissing my own arms.
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It is with such a feeling that one should go to a ball, and with such a
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feeling intensified, purified and exalted, that one should leave it.
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If this be so, how much more if one go with the direct religious purpose
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burning in one's whole being! Beethoven roaring at the sunrise is no strange
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spectacle to me, who shout with joy and wonder, when I understand (without
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which one cannot really be said ever to see) a blade of grass. I fall upon my
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knees in speechless adoration at the moon; I hide my eyes in holy awe from a
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good Van Gogh.
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Imagine then a ball in which the music is the choir celestial, the wine
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the wine of the Graal, or that of the Sabbath of the Adepts, and one's partner
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the Infinite and Eternal One, the True and Living God Most High!
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Go even to a common ball --- the Moulin de la Galette will serve even the
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least of my magicians --- with your whole soul aflame within you, and your
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whole will concentrated on these transubstantiations, and tell me what miracle
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takes place!
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It is the hate of, the distaste for, life that sends one to the ball when
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one is old; when one is young one is on springs until the hour falls; but the
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love of God, which is the only true love, diminishes not with age; it grows
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deeper and intenser with every satisfaction. It seems as if in the noblest
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men this secretion constantly increases --- which certainly suggests an
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external reservoir --- so that age loses all its bitterness. We find "Brother
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Lawrence," Nicholas Herman of Lorraine, at the age of eighty in continuous
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enjoyment of union with God. Buddha at an equal age would run up and
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down the Eight High Trances like an acrobat on a ladder; stories not too
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dissimilar are told of Bishop Berkeley. Many persons have not attained union
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at all until middle age, and then have rarely lost it.
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It is true that genius in the ordinary sense of the word has nearly always
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showed itself in the young. Perhaps we should regard such cases as Nicholas
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Herman as cases of acquired genius.
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Now I am certainly of opinion that genius can be acquired, or, in the
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alternative, that it is an almost universal possession. Its rarity may be
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attributed to the crushing influence of a corrupted society. It is rare to
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meet a youth without high ideals, generous thoughts, a sense of holiness, of
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his own importance, which, being interpreted, is, of his own identity with
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God. Three years in the world, and he is a bank clerk or even a government
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official. Only those who intuitively understand from early boyhood that they
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must stand out, and who have the incredible courage and endurance to do so in
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the face of all that tyranny, callousness, and the scorn of inferiors can do;
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only these arrive at manhood uncontaminated.
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Every serious or spiritual thought is made a jest; poets are thought "soft"
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and "cowardly," apparently because they are the only boys with a will of their
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own and courage to hold out against the whole school, boys and masters in
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league as once were Pilate and Herod; honour is replaced by expediency,
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holiness by hypocrisy.
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Even where we find thoroughly good seed sprouting in favourable ground, too
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often is there a frittering away of the forces. Facile encouragement of a
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poet or painter is far worse for him than any amount of opposition. Here
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again the sex question (S.Q. so-called by Tolstoyans, chastity-mongers, nut-
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fooders, and such who talk and think of nothing else) intrudes its horrid
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head. I believe that every boy is originally conscious of sex as sacred. But
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he does not know what it is. With infinite diffidence he asks. The master
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replies with holy horror; the boy with a low leer, a furtive laugh, perhaps
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worse.
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I am inclined to agree with the Head Master of Eton that paederastic
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passions among schoolboys "do no harm"; further, I think them the only
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redeeming feature of sexual life at public schools.
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The Hindoos are wiser. At the well-watched hour of puberty the boy is
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prepared as for a sacrament; he is led to a duly consecrated temple, and there
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by a wise and holy woman, skilled in the art, and devoted to this end, he is
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initiated with all solemnity into the mystery of life.
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The act is thus declared religious, sacred, impersonal, utterly apart from
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amorism and eroticism and animalism and sentimentalism and all the other
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vilenesses that Protestantism has made of it.
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The Catholic Church did, I believe, to some extent preserve the Pagan
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tradition. Marriage is a sacrament.<<Of course there has been a school of
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devilish ananders that has held the act in itself to be "Wicked." Of such
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blasphemers of Nature let no further word be said.>> But in the attempt to
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deprive the act of all accretions which would profane it, the Fathers of the
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Church added in spite of themselves other accretions which profaned it more.
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They tied it to property and inheritance. They wished it to serve both God
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and Mammon.
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Rightly restraining the priest, who should employ his whole energy in the
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miracle of the Mass, they found their counsel a counsel of perfection. The
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magical tradition was in part lost; the priest could not do what was expected
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of him, and the unexpended portion of his energy turned sour.
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Hence the thoughts of priests, like the thoughts of modern faddists,
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revolved eternally around the S.Q.
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A special and Secret Mass, a Mass of the Holy Ghost, a Mass of the Mystery
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of the Incarnation, to be performed at stated intervals, might have saved both
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monks and nuns, and given the Church eternal dominion of the world.
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IX
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To return. The rarity of genius is in great part due to the destruction
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of its young. Even as in physical life that is a favoured plant one of whose
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thousand seeds ever shoots forth a blade, so do conditions kill all but the
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strongest sons of genius.
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But just as rabbits increased apace in Australia, where even a missionary
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has been known to beget ninety children in two years, so shall we be able to
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breed genius if we can find the conditions which hamper it, and remove them.
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The obvious practical step to take is to restore the rites of Bacchus,
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Aphrodite and Apollo to their proper place. They should not be open to every
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one, and manhood should be the reward of ordeal and initiation.
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The physical tests should be severe, and weaklings should be killed out
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rather than artificially preserved. The same remark applies to intellectual
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tests. But such tests should be as wide as possible. I was an absolute
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duffer at school in all forms of athletics and games, because I despised
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them. I held, and still hold, numerous mountaineering world's records.
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Similarly, examinations fail to test intelligence. Cecil Rhodes refused to
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employ any man with a University degree. That such degrees lead to honour in
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England is a sign of England's decay, though even in England they are usually
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the stepping-stones to clerical idleness or pedagogic slavery.
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Such is a dotted outline of the picture that I wish to draw. If the power
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to possess property depended on a man's competence, and his perception of real
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values, a new aristocracy would at once be created, and the deadly fact that
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social consideration varies with the power of purchasing champagne would cease
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to be a fact. Our pluto-hetairo-politicocracy would fall in a day.
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But I am only too well aware that such a picture is not likely to be
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painted. We can then only work patiently and in secret. We must select
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suitable material and train it in utmost reverence to these three master-
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methods, or aiding the soul in its genial orgasm.
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X
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This reverent attitude is of an importance which I cannot over-rate.
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Normal people find normal relief from any general or special excitement in the
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sexual act.
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Commander Marston, R.N., whose experiments in the effect of the tom-tom on
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the married Englishwoman are classical and conclusive, has admirably described
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how the vague unrest which she at first shows gradually assumes the sexual
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form, and culminates, if allowed to do so, in shameless masturbation or
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indecent advances. But this is a natural corollary of the proposition
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that married Englishwomen are usually unacquainted with sexual satisfaction.
|
||
Their desires are constantly stimulated by brutal and ignorant husbands, and
|
||
never gratified. This fact again accounts for the amazing prevalence of
|
||
Sapphism in London Society.
|
||
The Hindus warn their pupils against the dangers of breathing exercises.
|
||
Indeed the slightest laxness in moral or physical tissues may cause the energy
|
||
accumulated by the practice to discharge itself by involuntary emission. I
|
||
have known this happen in my own experience.
|
||
It is then of the utmost importance to realize that the relief of the
|
||
tension is to be found in what the Hebrews and the Greeks called prophesying,
|
||
and which is better when organized into art. The disorderly discharge is mere
|
||
waste, a wilderness of howlings; the orderly discharge is a "Prometheus
|
||
unbound," or a L'age d'airain," according to the special aptitudes of the
|
||
enthused person. But it must be remembered that special aptitudes are very
|
||
easy to acquire if the driving force of enthusiasm be great. If you cannot
|
||
keep the rules of others, you make rules of your own. One set turns out in
|
||
the long run to be just as good as another.
|
||
Henry Rousseau, the duanier, was laughed at all his life. I laughed as
|
||
heartily as the rest; though, almost despite myself, I kept on saying (as the
|
||
phrase goes) "that I felt something; couldn't say what."
|
||
The moment it occurred to somebody to put up all his paintings in one room
|
||
by themselves, it was instantly apparent that his "naivete" was the simplicity
|
||
of a Master.
|
||
Let no one then imagine that I fail to perceive or underestimate the
|
||
dangers of employing these methods. The occurrence even of so simple a
|
||
matter as fatigue might change a LasMeninas into a stupid sexual crisis.
|
||
It will be necessary for most Englishmen to emulate the self-control of the
|
||
Arabs and Hindus, whose ideal is to deflower the greatest possible number of
|
||
virgins --- eighty is considered a fairly good performance --- without
|
||
completing the act.
|
||
It is, indeed, of the first importance for the celebrant in any phallic
|
||
rite to be able to complete the act without even once allowing a sexual or
|
||
sensual thought to invade his mind. The mind must be as absolutely detached
|
||
from one's own body as it is from another person's.
|
||
|
||
XI
|
||
|
||
Of musical instruments few are suitable. The human voice is the best, and
|
||
the only one which can be usefully employed in chorus. Anything like an
|
||
orchestra implies infinite rehearsal, and introduces an atmosphere of
|
||
artificiality. The organ is a worthy solo instrument, and is an orchestra in
|
||
itself, while its tone and associations favour the religious idea.
|
||
The violin is the most useful of all, for its every mood expresses the
|
||
hunger for the infinite, and yet it is so mobile that it has a greater
|
||
emotional range than any of its competitors. Accompaniment must be dispensed
|
||
with, unless a harpist be available.
|
||
The harmonium is a horrible instrument, if only because of its
|
||
associations; and the piano is like unto it, although, if unseen and played by
|
||
a Paderewski, it would serve.
|
||
The trumpet and the bell are excellent, to startle, at the crisis of a
|
||
ceremony.
|
||
Hot, drubbing, passionate, in a different class of ceremony, a class more
|
||
intense and direct, but on the whole less exalted, the tom-tom stands alone.
|
||
It combines well with the practice of mantra, and is the best accompaniment
|
||
for any sacred dance.
|
||
|
||
XII
|
||
|
||
Of sacred dances the most practical for a gathering is the seated dance.
|
||
One sits cross-legged on the floor, and sways to and fro from the hips in time
|
||
with the mantra. A solo or duet of dancers as a spectacle rather distracts
|
||
from this exercise. I would suggest a very small and very brilliant light on
|
||
the floor in the middle of the room. Such a room is best floored with mosaic
|
||
marble; an ordinary Freemason's Lodge carpet is not a bad thing.
|
||
The eyes, if they see anything at all, see then only the rhythmical or
|
||
mechanical squares leading in perspective to the simple unwinking light.
|
||
The swinging of the body with the mantra (which has a habit of rising and
|
||
falling as if of its own accord in a very weird way) becomes more accentuated;
|
||
ultimately a curiously spasmodic stage occurs, and then the consciousness
|
||
flickers and goes out; perhaps breaks through into the divine consciousness,
|
||
perhaps is merely recalled to itself by some variable in external impression.
|
||
The above is a very simple description of a very simple and earnest form of
|
||
ceremony, based entirely upon rhythm.
|
||
It is very easy to prepare, and its results are usually very encouraging
|
||
for the beginner.
|
||
|
||
XIII
|
||
|
||
Wine being a mocker and strong drink raging, its use is more likely to
|
||
lead to trouble than mere music.
|
||
One essential difficulty is dosage. One needs exactly enough; and, as
|
||
Blake points out, one can only tell what is enough by taking too much. For
|
||
each man the dose varies enormously; so does it for the same man at different
|
||
times.
|
||
The ceremonial escape from this is to have a noiseless attendant to bear
|
||
the bowl of libation, and present it to each in turn, at frequent intervals.
|
||
Small doses should be drunk, and the bowl passed on, taken as the worshipper
|
||
deems advisable. Yet the cup-bearer should be an initiate, and use his own
|
||
discretion before presenting the bowl. The slightest sign that intoxication
|
||
is mastering the man should be a sign to him to pass that man. This practice
|
||
can be easily fitted to the ceremony previously described.
|
||
If desired, instead of wine, the elixir introduced by me to Europe may be
|
||
employed. But its results, if used in this way, have not as yet been
|
||
thoroughly studied. It is my immediate purpose to repair this neglect.
|
||
|
||
XIV
|
||
|
||
The sexual excitement, which must complete the harmony of method, offers a
|
||
more difficult problem.
|
||
It is exceptionally desirable that the actual bodily movements involved
|
||
should be decorous in the highest sense, and many people are so ill-trained
|
||
that they will be unable to regard such a ceremony with any but critical or
|
||
lascivious eyes; either would be fatal to all the good already done. It
|
||
is presumably better to wait until all present are greatly exalted before
|
||
risking a profanation.
|
||
It is not desirable, in my opinion, that the ordinary worshippers should
|
||
celebrate in public.
|
||
The sacrifice should be single.
|
||
Whether or no ...
|
||
|
||
XV
|
||
|
||
Thus far had I written when the distinguished poet, whose conversation with
|
||
me upon the Mysteries had incited me to jot down these few rough notes,
|
||
knocked at my door. I told him that I was at work on the ideas suggested by
|
||
him, and that --- well, I was rather stuck. He asked permission to glance at
|
||
the MS. (for he reads English fluently, though speaking but a few words), and
|
||
having done so, kindled and said: "If you come with me now, we will finish
|
||
your essay." Glad enough of any excuse to stop working, the more plausible
|
||
the better, I hastened to take down my coat and hat.
|
||
"By the way," he remarked in the automobile, "I take it that you do not
|
||
mind giving me the Word of Rose Croix." Surprised, I exchanged the secrets of
|
||
I.N.R.I. with him. "And now, very excellent and perfect Prince," he said,
|
||
"what follows is under this seal." And he gave me the most solemn of all
|
||
Masonic tokens. "You are about," said he, "to compare your ideal with our
|
||
real."
|
||
He touched a bell. The automobile stopped, and we got out. He dismissed
|
||
the chauffeur. "Come," he said, "we have a brisk half-mile." We walked
|
||
through thick woods to an old house, where we were greeted in silence by
|
||
a gentleman who, though in court dress, wore a very "practicable" sword. On
|
||
satisfying him, we were passed through a corridor to an anteroom, where
|
||
another armed guardian awaited us. He, after a further examination, proceeded
|
||
to offer me a court dress, the insignia of a Sovereign Prince of Rose Croix,
|
||
and a garter and mantle, the former of green silk, the latter of green velvet,
|
||
and lined with cerise silk. "It is a low mass," whispered the guardian. In
|
||
this anteroom were three or four others, both ladies and gentlemen, busily
|
||
robing.
|
||
In a third room we found a procession formed, and joined it. There were
|
||
twenty-six of us in all. Passing a final guardian we reached the chapel
|
||
itself, at whose entrance stood a young man and a young woman, both dressed in
|
||
simple robes of white silk embroidered with gold, red and blue. The former
|
||
bore a torch of resinous wood, the latter sprayed us as we passed with attar
|
||
of roses from a cup.
|
||
The room in which we now were had at one time been a chapel; so much its
|
||
shape declared. But the high altar was covered with a cloth that displayed
|
||
the Rose and Cross, while above it were ranged seven candelabra, each of seven
|
||
branches.
|
||
The stalls had been retained; and at each knight's hand burned a taper of
|
||
rose-coloured wax, and a bouquet of roses was before him.
|
||
In the centre of the nave was a great cross --- a "calvary cross of ten
|
||
squares," measuring, say, six feet by five --- painted in red upon a white
|
||
board, at whose edge were rings through which passed gilt staves. At each
|
||
corner was a banner, bearing lion, bull, eagle and man, and from the top of
|
||
their staves sprang a canopy of blue, wherein were figured in gold the
|
||
twelve emblems of the Zodiac.
|
||
Knights and Dames being installed, suddenly a bell tinkled in the
|
||
architrave. Instantly all rose. The doors opened at a trumpet peal from
|
||
without, and a herald advanced, followed by the High Priest and Priestess.
|
||
The High Priest was a man of nearly sixty years, if I may judge by the
|
||
white beard; but he walked with the springy yet assured step of the thirties.
|
||
The High Priestess, a proud, tall sombre woman of perhaps thirty summers,
|
||
walked by his side, their hands raised and touching as in the minuet. Their
|
||
trains were borne by the two youths who had admitted us.
|
||
All this while an unseen organ played an Introit.
|
||
This ceased as they took their places at the altar. They faced West,
|
||
waiting.
|
||
On the closing of the doors the armed guard, who was clothed in a scarlet
|
||
robe instead of green, drew his sword, and went up and down the aisle,
|
||
chanting exorcisms and swinging the great sword. All present drew their
|
||
swords and faced outward, holding the points in front of them. This part of
|
||
the ceremony appeared interminable. When it was over the girl and boy
|
||
reappeared; bearing, the one a bowl, the other a censer. Singing some litany
|
||
or other, apparently in Greek, though I could not catch the words, they
|
||
purified and consecrated the chapel.
|
||
Now the High Priest and High Priestess began a litany in rhythmic lines of
|
||
equal length. At each third response they touched hands in a peculiar manner;
|
||
at each seventh they kissed. The twenty-first was a complete embrace. The
|
||
bell tinkled in the architrave; and they parted. The High Priest then
|
||
took from the altar a flask curiously shaped to imitate a phallus. The High
|
||
Priestess knelt and presented a boat-shaped cup of gold. He knelt opposite
|
||
her, and did not pour from the flask.
|
||
Now the Knights and Dames began a long litany; first a Dame in treble, then
|
||
a Knight in bass, then a response in chorus of all present with the organ.
|
||
This Chorus was:
|
||
EVOE HO, IACCHE! EPELTHON, EPELTHON, EVOE, IAO! Again and again it rose
|
||
and fell. Towards its close, whether by "stage effect" or no I could not
|
||
swear, the light over the altar grew rosy, then purple. The High Priest
|
||
sharply and suddenly threw up his hand; instant silence.
|
||
He now poured out the wine from the flask. The High Priestess gave it to
|
||
the girl attendant, who bore it to all present.
|
||
This was no ordinary wine. It has been said of vodki that it looks like
|
||
water and tastes like fire. With this wine the reverse is the case. It was
|
||
of a rich fiery gold in which flames of light danced and shook, but its taste
|
||
was limpid and pure like fresh spring water. No sooner had I drunk of it,
|
||
however, that I began to tremble. It was a most astonishing sensation; I can
|
||
imagine a man feel thus as he awaits his executioner, when he has passed
|
||
through fear, and is all excitement.
|
||
I looked down my stall, and saw that each was similarly affected. During
|
||
the libation the High Priestess sang a hymn, again in Greek. This time I
|
||
recognized the words; they were those of an ancient Ode to Aphrodite.
|
||
The boy attendant now descended to the red cross, stooped and kissed it;
|
||
then he danced upon it in such a way that he seemed to be tracing the
|
||
patterns of a marvellous rose of gold, for the percussion caused a shower of
|
||
bright dust to fall from the canopy. Meanwhile the litany (different words,
|
||
but the same chorus) began again. This time it was a duet between the High
|
||
Priest and Priestess. At each chorus Knights and Dames bowed low. The girl
|
||
moved round continuously, and the bowl passed.
|
||
This ended in the exhaustion of the boy, who fell fainting on the cross.
|
||
The girl immediately took the bowl and put it to his lips. Then she raised
|
||
him, and, with the assistance of the Guardian of the Sanctuary, led him out of
|
||
the chapel.
|
||
The bell again tinkled in the architrave.
|
||
The herald blew a fanfare.
|
||
The High Priest and High Priestess moved stately to each other and
|
||
embraced, in the act unloosing the heavy golden robes which they wore. These
|
||
fell, twin lakes of gold. I now saw her dressed in a garment of white watered
|
||
silk, lined throughout (as it appeared later) with ermine.
|
||
The High Priest's vestment was an elaborate embroidery of every colour,
|
||
harmonized by exquisite yet robust art. He wore also a breastplate
|
||
corresponding to the canopy; a sculptured "beast" at each corner in gold,
|
||
while the twelve signs of the Zodiac were symbolized by the stones of the
|
||
breastplace.
|
||
The bell tinkled yet again, and the herald again sounded his trumpet. The
|
||
celebrants moved hand in hand down the nave while the organ thundered forth
|
||
its solemn harmonies.
|
||
All the knights and Dames rose and gave the secret sign of the Rose Croix.
|
||
It was at this part of the ceremony that things began to happen to me.
|
||
I became suddenly aware that my body had lost both weight and tactile
|
||
sensibility. My consciousness seemed to be situated no longer in my body. I
|
||
"mistook myself," if I may use the phrase, for one of the stars in the canopy.
|
||
In this way I missed seeing the celebrants actually approach the cross.
|
||
The bell tinkled again; I came back to myself, and then I saw that the High
|
||
Priestess, standing at the foot of the cross, had thrown her robe over it, so
|
||
that the cross was no longer visible. There was only a board covered with
|
||
ermine. She was now naked but for her coloured and jewelled head-dress and
|
||
the heavy torque of gold about her neck, and the armlets and anklets that
|
||
matched it. She began to sing in a soft strange tongue, so low and smoothly
|
||
that in my partial bewilderment I could not hear all; but I caught a few
|
||
words, Io Paian! Io Pan! and a phrase in which the words Iao Sabao ended
|
||
emphatically a sentence in which I caught the words Eros, Thelema and Sebazo.
|
||
While she did this she unloosed the breastplate and gave it to the girl
|
||
attendant. The robe followed; I saw that they were naked and unashamed. For
|
||
the first time there was absolute silence.
|
||
Now, from an hundred jets surrounding the board poured forth a perfumed
|
||
purple smoke. The world was wrapt in a fond gauze of mist, sacred as the
|
||
clouds upon the mountains.
|
||
Then at a signal given by the High Priest, the bell tinkled once more. The
|
||
celebrants stretched out their arms in the form of a cross, interlacing their
|
||
fingers. Slowly they revolved through three circles and a half. She then
|
||
laid him down upon the cross, and took her own appointed place.
|
||
The organ now again rolled forth its solemn music.
|
||
I was lost to everything. Only this I saw, that the celebrants made no
|
||
expected motion. The movements were extremely small and yet extremely strong.
|
||
This must have continued for a great length of time. To me it seemed as if
|
||
eternity itself could not contain the variety and depth of my experiences.
|
||
Tongue nor pen could record them; and yet I am fain to attempt the impossible.
|
||
1. I was, certainly and undoubtedly, the star in the canopy. This star was
|
||
an incomprehensibly enormous world of pure flame.
|
||
2. I suddenly realized that the star was of no size whatever. It was not
|
||
that the star shrank, but that it (= I) became suddenly conscious of infinite
|
||
space.
|
||
3. An explosion took place. I was in consequence a point of light,
|
||
infinitely small, yet infinitely bright, and this point was "without
|
||
position."
|
||
4. Consequently this point was ubiquitous, and there was a feeling of
|
||
infinite bewilderment, blinded after a very long time by a gush of infinite
|
||
rapture (I use the word "blinded" as if under constraint; I should have
|
||
preferred to use the words "blotted out" or "overwhelmed" or "illuminated").
|
||
5. This infinite fullness --- I have not described it as such, but it was
|
||
that --- was suddenly changed into a feeling of infinite emptiness, which
|
||
became conscious as a yearning.
|
||
6. These two feelings began to alternate, always with suddenness, and
|
||
without in any way overlapping, with great rapidity.
|
||
7. This alternation must have occurred fifty times --- I had rather have
|
||
said an hundred.
|
||
8. The two feelings suddenly became one. Again the word explosion is the
|
||
only one that gives any idea of it.
|
||
9. I now seemed to be conscious of everything at once, that it was at the
|
||
same time "one" and "many." I say "at once," that is, I was not successively
|
||
all things, but instantaneously.
|
||
10. This being, if I may call it being, seemed to drop into an infinite
|
||
abyss of Nothing.
|
||
11. While this "falling" lasted, the bell suddenly tinkled three times. I
|
||
instantly became my normal self, yet with a constant awareness, which has
|
||
never left me to this hour, that the truth of the matter is not this normal
|
||
"I" but "That" which is still dropping into Nothing. I am assured by those
|
||
who know that I may be able to take up the thread if I attend another
|
||
ceremony.
|
||
The tinkle died away. The girl attendant ran quickly forward and folded
|
||
the ermine over the celebrants. The herald blew a fanfare, and the Knights
|
||
and Dames left their stalls. Advancing to the board, we took hold of the
|
||
gilded carrying poles, and followed the herald in procession out of the
|
||
chapel, bearing the litter to a small side-chapel leading out of the middle
|
||
anteroom, where we left it, the guard closing the doors.
|
||
In silence we disrobed, and left the house. About a mile through the woods
|
||
we found my friend's automobile waiting.
|
||
I asked him, if that was a low mass, might I not be permitted to witness a
|
||
High Mass?
|
||
"Perhaps," he answered with a curious smile, "if all they tell of you is
|
||
true."
|
||
In the meanwhile he permitted me to describe the ceremony and its results
|
||
as faithfully as I was able, charging me only to give no indication of the
|
||
city near which it took place.
|
||
I am willing to indicate to initiates of the Rose Croix degree of Masonry
|
||
under proper charter from the genuine authorities (for there are spurious
|
||
Masons working under a forged charter) the address of a person willing to
|
||
consider their fitness to affiliate to a Chapter practising similar rites.
|
||
|
||
XVI
|
||
|
||
I consider it supererogatory to continue my essay on the Mysteries and my
|
||
analysis of "Energized Enthusiasm."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|