767 lines
39 KiB
Plaintext
767 lines
39 KiB
Plaintext
February 1992 Thelema Lodge Calendar/Newsletter (February & March events)
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Mailed free within 100 miles of San Francisco California
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Copyright (c) O.T.O. and the Individual Authors, 1992 e.v.
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Limited license is hereby granted to reproduce this file without fee, with
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this message intact. This license expires February 1993 e.v. unless renewed
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in writing. No charge other than reproduction costs is permitted under this
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license to the receivers of copies of this file without O.T.O. written
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permission.
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Ordo Templi Orientis
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P.O. Box 2303
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Berkeley, CA 94702 USA
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Temple Location: 588 63rd St.
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Oakland, California
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(Entrance in back, downstairs)
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Phones: TEMPLE PHONE: (415) 654-3580
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LODGE MASTER: (415) 658-3280
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Messages Only: (415) 454-5176
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Compuserve: 72105,1351
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Calendar events in the San Francisco Bay Area for February 1992 to March
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1992 e.v., in brief. Always call the contact phone number before
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attending. Some are limited in size, change location and may be subject to
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other adjustments.
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When you call, you don't get lost or disappointed. Initiations are private.
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Donations at all OTO events are welcome.
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***********************************************************************
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2/1/92 Cthulhu Culture Club 6:30 PM w/Jerry (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/1/92 Council/LOP 3:33 PM LOP
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2/2/92 Brigit Ritual 4:18 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/2/92 Gnostic Mass 7:30 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/3/92 Thelema Lodge Meeting 8PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/3/92 New Moon ritual
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2/4/92 Chinese New Year (Monkey, Anno 4690)
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2/9/92 Gnostic Mass 7:30 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/10/92 Ladies' T 5:30PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/12/92 "Magick without Aleister" with (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Fr. Majnun 8 PM
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2/13/92 Magick in Theory and Practice (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Study Circle with Marlene 7PM
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2/14/92 Valentine's Day
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2/15/92 Initiations (call to attend) (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/16/92 E.G.C. meeting & mass wkshp 4:18PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/16/92 Gnostic Mass 7:30 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/17/92 Greaer Feast of St. Giordano Bruno (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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party & reading at Lola's 8PM
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2/18/92 "Mars, Plenet of Hours" 8PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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class with Drax
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2/19/92 "Liber Samekh" class with Bill 8PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/23/92 Lodge Clean-up 1:11 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/23/92 Pisces Birthday 4:18 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/23/92 Gnostic Mass 7:30 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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2/26/92 Magick Theater reads Crowley: (510) 654-3580 Magick Thea.
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"The Scorpion" 7:30 PM
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2/27/92 Magick in Theory and Practice (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Study Circle with Marlene 7PM
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2/29/91 "Jerry's Leap-Year Logorrhea" 6:30PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Call to attend.
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3/1/92 Gnostic Mass 8:00 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/2/92 Thelema Lodge Meeting 8PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/8/92 Gnostic Mass 8:00 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/9/92 Ladies' T 5:30PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/12/92 Magick in Theory and Practice (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Study Circle with Marlene 7PM
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3/14/92 Jerry's Logorrhea. Call to attend. (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/15/92 E.G.C. Meeting & Mass Wkshop 4:18PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/15/92 Gnostic Mass 8:00 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/18/92 Class of Liber Reguli with Bill 8PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/20/91 Bernal Equinox Ritual 8 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/21/92 Initiations (call to attend) (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/22/92 Gnostic Mass 8:00 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/24/92 "Magick without Aleister" with (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Fr. Majnun 8 PM & Guests from
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Rasheeta Subod
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3/25/92 Magick Theater reads Crowley: (510) 654-3580 Magick Thea.
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"The Gouls" 7:30 PM
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3/26/92 Magick in Theory and Practice (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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Study Circle with Marlene 7PM
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3/27/92 Planetary Ritual Class 7:30 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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on SOL, ritual next Sunday w/Mark S.
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3/28/92 Jerry's Logorrhea. Call to attend. (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/29/92 Lodge Clean-up 1:11 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/29/92 Aries Birthday 4:18 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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3/29/92 Gnostic Mass 8:00 PM (510) 654-3580 Thelema Ldg
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*************************************************************************
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THELEMA LODGE CALENDAR FEBRUARY 1992 e.v.
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Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
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FESTA BRIGITAE
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Our winter half-holiday, the Feast of Brigit and celebration of the
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flowing of the well, will be observed at Thelema Lodge with the traditional
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Celtic ritual on Sunday afternoon 2 February, underway by 4:18. (The
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astrological calculation of this feast, Sol fifteen degrees Aquarius, occurs
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on Tuesday 4 February, so our observation is somewhat early; purists will need
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no encouragement to repeat the ritual in its essential form in their own pairs
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at the exact moment.)
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Chinese New Year (anno 4690) on Tuesday 4 February ushers in the Year of
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the Monkey.
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Terri will be doing Moon rituals on New and Full Moons continually this
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year. Contact her at the Lodge for exact time and place. Many will probably
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be late at night, some outdoors. Collaborations in these rituals is
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encouraged. This month New Moon falls on Monday 3 February, and the ritual
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for Full Moon on Monday evening 19 February.
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Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica
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Gnostic Masses are celebrated in Horus Temple at Thelema Lodge every
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Sunday evening. Newcomers are welcome at mass, and should call ahead to (510)
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654-3580. Participants should arrive in the evening by 7:30 for the ritual,
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which is usually underway a little after 8:00. All masses this month are
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scheduled to observe Crowley's ritual according to Liber XV.
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The E.G.C. Business and Scheduling Meeting will be held at the lodge on
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Sunday afternoon 16 February at 4:18, conducted by Bishop T. Suleiman.
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Prospective mass teams should attend or be represented on this occasion to be
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scheduled; masses for April are to be finalized this month. In conjunction
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with this meeting, a workshop on the Gnostic Mass has been offered by Bishop
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Sappho (if requested from her) after our business is complete.
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Mysteria Mystica Maxima
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The lodge will be performing O.T.O. initiations on Saturday 15 February,
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through the afternoon and evening; members please make advance arrangements to
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attend these private events. Advancement through the Man of Earth degrees at
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Thelema Lodge is being coordinated by four of our senior members, and anyone
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contemplating further initiation is urged to contact the coordinator for your
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present grade:
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Minerval . . . . . . . . . . . Lola - (510) 525-2205
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First Degree . . . . . . . . . Jerry - (510) 658-3280
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Second Degree . . . . . . . Marlene - (510) 654-5801
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Third Degree . . . . . . . . . Ebony - (510) 547-3903
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To schedule an initiation, the candidate should make informal arrangements for
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sponsorship, request an application form, and contact the Lodgemaster in the
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course of completing it. Once finally submitted, the application will remain
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on file with the Order for a minimum of forty days before initiation is
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performed.
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Collegium Fraternitatis
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Members of Thelema Lodge organize classes, lectures, and study groups in
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a mutual education effort for the greater Thelemic community. To propose or
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request such an offering, speak at lodge meeting, or contact one of the
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officers.
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Bill Heidrick offers an examination of the Ritual of the Bornless One,
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and of Crowley's version of it in Liber Samekh ("Theurgia Goetia Summa", sub
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figura DCCC), in Horus Temple on Wednesday evening 19 February, beginning at
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8:00. The historical context of this ancient invocation, as well as technical
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instruction in the vibration of the Barbarous Names, and the Qabalah of
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Crowley's elaborate Scholion on the text, will be among the evening's topics.
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"The Horror Continues . . . Cthulu Culture Club II" re-awakens from the
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deep on Saturday evening 1 February at 6:30. Those attending are invited to
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select passages to read from the works of Lovecraft and his followers, as we
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explore close up the flavor and texture of this hideous Mythos. Games,
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graphics, and Cthulu Culture of all kinds will be on display. Call Jerry to
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attend.
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"Mars, Planet of Horus" will be the subject for wide-ranging discussion
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at the lodge with Drax on Tuesday evening 18 February at 8:00. The Politics
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of Outer Space, Planetary History, the Search for Life, Terraforming, Tesla,
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the Pyramid Complex, NASA, the Phobos Mystery and the ill-fated mission of
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Phobos II, UFOs, the Mars Mission, and the Object orbiting Mars; all these
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will be among the aspects explored.
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The Thelema Lodge Magick in Theory and Practice Study Circle meets twice
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monthly on Thursday evenings 13 February and 27 February, beginning at 7:00.
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To inquire regarding the chapters to be covered on a particular evening,
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contact Marlene, who is the facilitator for this group. Sometimes the Study
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Circle will double as a work-crew when the "Lodge Calendar" is assembled and
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mailed, so late-comers especially should please call the lodge before setting
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forth to attend.
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The Magick Theater reads Crowley's drama "The Scorpion" on Wednesday 26
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February at 7:30 at Thelema Lodge. This three-act prose tragedy was written
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in a sudden fit of inspiration in a hotel at El Kantara, near the end of
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Crowley's stay in Algeria with Victor Neuburg, about January 1911 e.v.
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Occultly based upon the 30 Degree of freemasonry, the plot turns upon the relations
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between the Knights Templar and the Saracens, and the birth of the O.T.O.
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tradition in Jerusalem during the crusades. "What's your great name, urchin
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. . . ?"
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The 392nd anniversary of the Greater Feast of Giordano Bruno will be the
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occasion of a small gathering on Monday evening 17 February at 8:00 at Lola's,
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with a commemorative reading and hot dog roast. Bruno included an early
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version of the unicursal hexagram in his "Figura Amoris", one of a series of
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allegorized geometrical constructions presented in woodcuts (said to have been
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prepared by the author's own hands) for" Articuli Centum et Sexaginta Adversus
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huius Tempestatis Mathematicos atque Philosophos [Essays upon the Mathematics
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of Mordente: One Hundred and Sixty Articles against the Mathematicians and
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Philosophers of this Age . . . "(Prague: 1588), a treatise on techniques of
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geometrical draftsmanship.
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"Jerry's Leap-Year Logorrhea" falls on Saturday evening 29 February,
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beginning at 6:30; call to attend, or for advance information on this month's
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secret topic.
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Magik Without Aleister hosts the Gorilla Choir on Wednesday evening 12
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February at 8:00 at the lodge for an evening of love, harmony, song, and
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celebration of the Universal Rhythm. This wide-ranging discussion group has
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arranged a series of uniquely enjoyable evenings, inviting local adepts from
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alternative magical traditions to visit the lodge.
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Conventi Thelemicorum
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Thelema Lodge Meeting is Monday evening 3 February 8:00; all members
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welcome to help with planning the schedule of events, solving problems, and
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sharing ideas.
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Lodge Council & L.O.P., please check in by telephone to Jerry's early on
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Saturday afternoon 1 February for fraternal greetings, and then plan to attend
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at the next regular meeting, on Sunday afternoon 1 March at 3:33-call for
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details.
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The Thelema Lodge Ladies' T-s will continue, Monday afternoon 10 February
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at 5:30. Thelemic women have a unique and powerful position in our community;
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our sisterly connection is encouraged to strengthen our bonds, our knowledge,
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and our heart. Tea and crumpets are served. For details ask Soror Terri Sal.
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Lodge Clean-Up beginning at 1:11 on Sunday afternoon 23 February, with
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cake afterwards at the Pisces Birthday splash around 4:18.
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Love is the law, love under will.
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*************************************************************************
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*The Naked Splendour of Nuit
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Lesson Number One for Northern Hemisphere Star Watchers:
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Polaris-the North Star
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This is the one star to know for its unique and groovy position, being in
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the place in the heavens near where our earth's axis points. Therefore all
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the other stars appear to be circling around Polaris, which remains fixed,
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always in the north (most helpful for navigation). Because of the "wobble" of
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the earth, the Pole Star was once Thuban, in Draco, and in 5000 years our axis
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will point to Alderamin, in Cepheus. But for now Polaris is getting closer to
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the exact north celestial pole; it will be closest in 2100 e.v. There is no
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star near to the exact southern axis pole.
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The best way to locate the North Star is to find the bright Big Dipper.
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This star-grouping is so near the north celestial pivot that it is visible all
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year long (during some part of the night) in these latitudes. One should find
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the two stars that make up the side of the dipper, or cup, that the handle is
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not attached to, and follow the straight line through them out of the dipper,
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until you come to the first and only reasonably bright star. This is Polaris,
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at the beginning of the handle of the Little Dipper, or the Lesser Bear, "Ursa
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Minor." With the exception of Polaris, the seven stars making up "Ursa Minor"
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are quite dim and difficult to make out at all in the city limits.
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The big dipper is actually part of the constellation "Ursa Major", or
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Great Bear. It sits like a saddle on the bear's back, with the handle of the
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dipper becoming the unrealistically long tail of the bear. In ancient England
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"Ursa Major" was known as the Chariot of King Arthur; in France it was the
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Great Chariot. It has also been thought of as a wagon, a plough, a coffin,
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and a reindeer.
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"Onward the kindred Bears, with footsteps rude,
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Dance round the Pole, pursuing and pursued."
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-Erasmus Darwin
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*************************************************************************
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from the Grady Project:
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Alchemy
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Fierce Virgin of the Sacred Source
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Attracting all the world to Thee
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We pray the Knowledge of Thy Force:
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Thine aching Negativity!
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Thou Vacuum at the heart of All
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Thou Purity without remorse
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That pulls All, Belle Dame, to Thy Call:
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Thy Knowledge and Thy Intercourse!
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Thou Nothingness Personified
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Renewed Perfection without end
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Thou Voice of Silence that has cried
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"The Arrow!"-and it rides the wind!
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Thou Eros poised one point above
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The Pyramid; Thou Virgin kiss!
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Thy Crescent Moon; Thy Star of Love
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Thy fearful Angst in The Abyss!
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-Grady L. McMurtry
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March 1961 e.v.
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[This poem is the second in Hymenaeus Alpha's cycle "The Angel and the Abyss",
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corresponding to the Atu of Art in the Tarot. The entire cycle has been
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previously published in "Grady McMurtry: Poems" (London & Bergen, Norway:
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O.T.O., 1986 e.v.) and in "The Grady Project" #5 (December 1988 e.v.).]
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*************************************************************************
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CROWLEY CLASSICS
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After the Fall
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A Page from the Book of the Recording Angel
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by Aleister Crowley
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[Originally collected among Crowley's "Juvenalia" and published in" Snowdrops
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from a Curate's Garden" (privately printed, 1904 e.v.).]
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Adam had gone down to the Euphrates for a morning's sport with the
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Icthyosaurus. The day before he had no luck at all with a rather big fly
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(pterodactyl-wing and angel-hackle) and meant to spin with the artificial dodo
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for a bit before giving up the water as hopelessly over-fished. He had better
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have stayed home, though, and kept a sharp look-out with the gaff for the
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serpent. This is what happened in his absence.
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Eve had done her day's work, and was sprawling in the sun with her
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tailor-made fur-lined dress within easy reach (fig-leaves, in the daytime, had
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entirely gone out, and were now only worn for evening dress), and meditating
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on the curious events of the past evening. "Silly thing that of Adam's," she
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soliloquized, "just when I was feeling nice, it turned sick and collapsed, and
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took ten minutes to get well again. Why, I could have gone on all night
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without those silly intervals! And the old fool says it tires him and he
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can't dig today because his back aches, so he's gone fishing. Fishing! I'll
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fish him when he comes home. I believe he's gone to see that lioness he was
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so fond of in the old days. She was rude enough to both of us yesterday
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though-so are all the beasts since we ate that apple Lord God made all the
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fuss about. The serpent's as much a gentleman as ever, of course. He was at
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the same public school as Lord God, he says. I'm sure he's got better
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manners, though! The old wretch! To tell me about travail and labour and
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that rubbish-besides, a really nice God would keep his smoking-room jokes to
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himself another time. And the brute never made love either. I'll be even
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with him one day. I do wish this hole wouldn't itch. Rubbing's no good-oh!
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it's better when I rub hard. There! It's started again now I've left off.
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I'll rub harder this time. Ah! Adam! Adam!-Ha! I thought I was with
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Adam-Oh, how lovely!" And she gave a delicious little sigh.
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"Pardon this intrusion, Duchess, pray" said a new voice, in the well-bred
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deferential manner that is so characteristic of diplomats. "But is it the
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third Wednesday, is it not?"
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"My dear Prince, how good of you to come. I was just hoping some one
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would drop in and cheer me up. This move has left me quite a wreck."
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"Ah! Duchess, you are more beautiful than ever."
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"Bad man-"
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"Yes, and deserve a better husband."
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"Adam is as good as-"
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"But his poor health. He's had a cold ever since he left Eden, this
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climate is so terribly uncertain."
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"Yes, he's not very strong, poor man."
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"He gets tired easily."
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"Yes" with a sigh.
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"I see you have been doing your best to supply his place." For Eve had
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not changed her position during this interview, and her moist fingers still
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played among the golden hair.
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"Oh! I didn't mean to."
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"Ah! Duchess, what a pity-and what a surprise!"
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"Yes, it did feel like it. But really, Prince, you're as inquisitive as
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that rude old Lord God."
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"You are not offended with me?"
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"How could I be? How ever shall I repay you for giving me that wrinkle
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about the apple?"
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"I must really apologise for being indirectly the cause of that old
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curmudgeon's insolence."
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"Not a word. I am all gratitude."
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"Only half gratitude, Duchess."
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"?"
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"Because you have only half the secret."
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"And the other half is?"
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"Naughty."
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"You darling, tell me at once."
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"Will you kiss me?"
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"Kiss you-come here-Satan!"
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"Eve!"
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And his lithe coils rolled over her naked body, his forked tongue slipped
|
||
beneath the white teeth and its delicate foam maddened her tongue. It touched
|
||
her tender palate, and withdrew to penetrate her dainty nostrils. All round
|
||
her he wrapped his soft green folds and their gentle pressure warmed her
|
||
blood, that shuddered with love to feel him, cold and slimy, embrace her bosom
|
||
and her lissome thighs. Always his tail penetrated her half-opened fountain
|
||
and gently tickled the rosy tongue of love, that now grew swollen and stiff
|
||
with excitement. Eve broke into a hot, foul sweat. "Satan! I love you!
|
||
When Adam kisses me he is so hot and heavy; he chokes me! You lift me, you
|
||
hold me, you-Ah!" The tail gave a determined push, and the perspiring woman
|
||
gasped with pleasure. "My Queen!" "Satan!" The amorous snake withdrew his
|
||
coils from her breast. "Don't you love me?" "I will teach you a love your
|
||
Adam does not dream of!" And his head sought the dark home of her desire,
|
||
while he pressed in her red lips the most tender part of his eager body. She
|
||
entered into his desires and abandoned herself to the new vice with rapture.
|
||
Again and again she deluged him with love-drops, and the warm odour of their
|
||
bodies went up, a delicious steam, till his head withdrew, foaming, and fell
|
||
upon her reeking lips again to lick salacious kisses and gently chew her
|
||
gentle eyelids when she turned her mouth again to an even dearer object.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly a shout was heard far off, and, rising up, Satan saw Adam
|
||
returning with the spoil. He was now too near for him to escape. Eve with
|
||
quick woman's wit gathered her furs to her and squatting in front of the wood
|
||
fire forced herself to appear nonchalant, while Satan gathered his coils
|
||
together under her skirts. The fire blazed up as she tended it, and Adam
|
||
joyfully saluted his mate with the patronizing air a man always thinks it
|
||
proper to adopt with a social, physical and intellectual inferior. She
|
||
received it with all the docility which an unfaithful woman is careful to
|
||
assume. But she was by no means as easy as her countenance would have
|
||
indicated. Her serpent-lover was taking a mean advantage of her confusion to
|
||
attack her in two places at once-her worn-out passions were being frightfully
|
||
stimulated, and she did not think she could possibly maintain her balance at
|
||
the supreme moment. And Satan was really venturing terribly far. Up and up
|
||
he writhed, and the mouth of her womb spasmodically closed and re-opened in
|
||
vain. He penetrated more and more deeply, and at last, with a convulsive
|
||
wriggle, disappeared entirely into the temple of love at the very moment Eve,
|
||
in a strong shudder, consummated her suppressed desire and fell to the ground
|
||
in a swoon. Adam was alarmed. Some burnt clippings of mastodon-hoof were
|
||
effectual in restoring her, but Eve's furs had fallen off again, and Adam
|
||
divined the nature of his good lady's excitement. "To think now," he
|
||
observed, with pardonable pride, "that the mere sight of me-or would it be the
|
||
smell? I'll write a book about it and try to make up my mind that way. Poor
|
||
girl! I know it won't be fit for work tonight. The lioness used to lick it
|
||
with some effect, I remember. Couldn't ask Eve to do that, though. It would
|
||
degrade her, I'm sure. I must try and raise her to my level rather than-Damn
|
||
that potato patch! It must be dug over tomorrow, and only the old flint spade
|
||
still. A man in Lord God's position-House of Lords, stake in the country, and
|
||
all that-ought to provide iron spades-this is the only country planet for
|
||
billions of miles where science hasn't penetrated, so that young prince
|
||
says-don't believe he's a real prince, though-took all that cursing from a
|
||
simple Lord like a lamb-says it's beneath his dignity to swear back. "I'd"
|
||
have had the bugger up for criminal libel. Threatened him, too, about Eve's
|
||
baby smashing his head." But at this point a prowling megatherium wailed and
|
||
Adam snatched up a sling and started off to drive him away. Eve lost no time
|
||
in knocking violently on her belly. "Time to get up, sir. I'll bring your
|
||
hot water in a minute!" Satan awoke, and not being fond of water, hot or
|
||
otherwise, unless with a considerable portion of Mammon's old Highland Hell-
|
||
fire, climbed down, put his head out, and asked what the devil the knocking
|
||
was about. "Get away, dear, Adam's gone out for an hour, quick, and don't
|
||
hurt me." "No, Eve, I will spend the night with you." "But Adam?" "Let him
|
||
come in too." "No, he'll discover everything. I'd rather any other plan."
|
||
"My plan is necessary-you don't know all the secret yet." And with an
|
||
affectionate little snap at the clitoris as he passed, Satan again withdrew
|
||
into his cosy hiding-place.
|
||
|
||
Adam soon returned victorious from his raid, and was very glad to lay his
|
||
fur aside, and seek the embraces of his consort. Any doubts he might have had
|
||
were soon removed by Eve whose mass of tawny hair soon hung over his thighs,
|
||
while her little red mouth proceeded to excite him to the proper degree of
|
||
rigidity. It was soon obtained, and she quickly changed her position to
|
||
bestride him, while her hand guided him to the proper orifice. The dance
|
||
began. Eve wriggled her fat bottom about as hard as she could, and Adam
|
||
assisted as far as his constrained position would allow. The critical moment
|
||
arrived and a deluge of warm liquids mingled to flood the surrounding parts.
|
||
But Eve would not let him withdraw as yet. And at this moment Adam gave vent
|
||
to a cry of pain. "I'm bitten," he said. "That horrible Palaeopulex," said
|
||
Eve. "No, it's in you! It's pushing me out! Get up!" And Eve jumped up
|
||
alarmed to find Satan quietly emerging from his citadel. Adam jumped for a
|
||
club. But by the time he arrived a change had arisen. The old snake-skin
|
||
dropped and Satan stood in his own shape, a radiant spirit. "You bit me,"
|
||
said Adam, embarrassed. "For your own good! God doomed you to death. My
|
||
bite has filled your blood with a poison that will take away Death's terrors,
|
||
that will make him welcome even!" "What is this poison called?" said Eve.
|
||
And Satan replied "Syphilis!" As he went away he laughed. God did not like
|
||
to hear him.
|
||
|
||
finis
|
||
|
||
|
||
*************************************************************************
|
||
FROM THE OUT BASKET
|
||
|
||
In reading Crowley, the question often arises: Where is he getting this
|
||
stuff? Whether the work is noir humor like that above or a deeply insightful
|
||
and rather opaque religious writing, Crowley's sources and influences are
|
||
often a mystery. The A.'.A.'. reading list in "Magick in Theory and Practice"
|
||
is a logical place to start, but no distinction is made there between works
|
||
that influenced Crowley and works he recommended as also embodying a view he
|
||
had held for some time. In this short space, or in a major book for that
|
||
matter, it is impossible to cover many of Crowley's sources. Some often
|
||
overlooked sources will be noted.
|
||
Before going further, an important point needs to be made. Thelema is not
|
||
Crowley. Crowley is not Thelema. Some of our readers may have a sole
|
||
interest in the purely literary side of Crowley's writings, but many share the
|
||
Thelemic Religion. For the latter, some of what follows may seem to skirt
|
||
blasphemy. I offer the following contention: Whatever is sacred in "Liber
|
||
AL" specifically or in Thelema generally is independent of Crowley the man.
|
||
The earlier influences on Crowley or earlier appearances of the same words and
|
||
ideas elsewhere are not in any way relevant to the sacredness of the text.
|
||
Why was Crowley chosen to be the prophet of Thelema? A simple answer, he was
|
||
prepared. Crowley was prepared by exposure to the words, ideas and language
|
||
necessary to receive "Liber AL," just as were the prophets of past time
|
||
prepared to receive their messages. It doesn't matter that Crowley probably
|
||
picked up "Aiwass" from unconscious integration of the shapes of the letters
|
||
of a Greek word in Eliphas Levi's "Key of the Mysteries" (plate called "Great
|
||
Pentacle from the Vision of St. John", Eq, I, 10, Sup. p. 74) or that
|
||
Thelema as a religion and an Abbey comes from Rablais' 16th century satire on
|
||
monasticism. Neither does it matter that most of Crowley's ideas about
|
||
society, morals and the nature of such beings as the "Secret Chiefs" stem
|
||
first from his Quaker childhood and later from similar views encountered in
|
||
his youth. Anyone who has experienced the Knowledge and Conversation of the
|
||
Holy Guardian Angel knows that the experience avails itself of the states of
|
||
mind and circumstance present in the person at the time. If whole passages
|
||
in "Liber AL" can be found to be paraphrases or quotations from other sources,
|
||
what does it matter? It is the melody that makes the music, and the
|
||
instrument will always dominate on one level. Crowley, his antecedents and
|
||
his experiences formed the instrument for the manifestation and revelation of
|
||
Thelema. If we can separate the harmonics from the notes, we can but better
|
||
approach the essence of the song. Enough, here are a few notes on Crowley's
|
||
sources:
|
||
|
||
Childhood -- see Confessions, Gospel according to St. Bernard Shaw, World's
|
||
Tragedy & High History of Sir Palamedes For a model on his father and the
|
||
early influence of education and Plymouth Brethren. Also for the source of
|
||
his social errors and business incompetence. Later childhood and adolescence
|
||
provided his sexual orientation and literary bent at Cambridge. Frazier's
|
||
Golden Bough merely fleshed out ideas from Levi.
|
||
|
||
Alan Bennett -- introduced Crowley to the ideas of eastern philosophy. These
|
||
furnished Crowley with his mystical training, terminology, and mental
|
||
techniques. The Golden Dawn provided Crowley with the model of his
|
||
organization of attainment. Masonry the model of society and the forms of
|
||
ceremonial for groups. Theosophy furnished idealism and melded with the
|
||
Quaker ideas of masters and elect. Reuss gave the justification for magical
|
||
sexuality. Eckenstein taught the concept of discipline. Von Eckartshausen
|
||
gave Crowley the idea of an invisible order, while Waite introduced Things
|
||
that go BUMP in the Night.
|
||
|
||
Music Halls & the Ingoldsby Legends -- Crowley's humor and satire, also his
|
||
negligent racism.
|
||
|
||
Tao Teh King -- source of many of Crowley's social theories and higher
|
||
philosophy.
|
||
|
||
What single book influenced Crowley the most? As far as his mystical
|
||
writings, magical theories, health ideas and political dreams, the answer can
|
||
only be Eliphas Levi's "The Key of the Mysteries". Many of Crowley's ideas in
|
||
these areas can be found in seed at least in Levi. Here are a few examples.
|
||
The page citations are from Crowley's translation in the supplement to EQUINOX
|
||
I, 10 -- by the way, all the Equinox volume I is now available in ASCII format
|
||
on diskette from OTO, P.O.Box 430, Fairfax, CA 94978 USA.
|
||
Liber OZ is developed from p.35 in EQ-I-10.
|
||
Page 234 "HUMAN life and its innumerable difficulties have for object, in
|
||
the ordination of eternal wisdom, the education of the will of man."
|
||
"The dignity of man consists in doing what he will, and in willing the
|
||
good, in conformity with the knowledge of truth."
|
||
Page 213: "...one of those traditional secrets with regard to which silence
|
||
is necessary, and which it is sufficient to indicate to those who know,
|
||
leaving always a veil upon the truth for the ignorant."
|
||
An appropriate exercise would be to seek a passage in Levi for every idea
|
||
in LIBER AL, viz: "Nothing resists the will of man, when he knows the truth,
|
||
and wills the good." KM, p. 235 for "... do thy will. Do that, and no other
|
||
shall say nay." AL I,42-43
|
||
A quote to take for Crowley's Opus: Levi KM p. 241: "When a new word comes
|
||
into the world, it needs swaddling clothes and bandages; genius brought it
|
||
forth, but it is for experience to nourish it. Do not fear that it will die
|
||
of neglect! Oblivion is for it a favorable time of rest, and contradictions
|
||
help it to grow."
|
||
Crowley's unexamined belief in Natural Law has its origin in his times, but
|
||
it also can be drawn from Levi: "Q. What is infinite reason?" "A. It is
|
||
that supreme reason of being that faith calls God." (p. 102) -- This is the
|
||
characteristic phrase of the philosophy of 18th century enlightenment: "God is
|
||
Reason" -- also the characteristic error. 19th century philosophy continued
|
||
this into Determinism and the now discredited concept of "Natural Law".
|
||
Levi's idea of the "magnetic fluid" derived from the efforts of Newton,
|
||
Mesmer and others to quantify the astral body. 18th and 19th century efforts
|
||
to measure ectoplasm, oddic force, etc. and to physically measure an essence
|
||
of life have persisted to the verge of the 21st century in a strange pseudo-
|
||
science. At least in the 18th and 19th centuries there was the idea of the
|
||
luminous Aethyer as a partial justification for this sort of thing. Now it is
|
||
generally considered a curiosity dependent on subjective measurement without
|
||
the objective external instrumentation required by hard science. This concept
|
||
has led to a vast array of quack medical theories and the loss of otherwise
|
||
promising philosophies. Bulwar Lytton used the idea; W. Reich was imprisoned
|
||
for trying to cure with it. Crowley lost much time over it in his later years
|
||
in trying to market his Amrita derivations. The future may disclose some
|
||
substance here, but it tends to "confusion of the planes" more often than not.
|
||
Page 105: "Q. Are these experiences articles of faith?" "A. No, they
|
||
pertain to science." -- Although this is not essential to Thelema, Crowley's
|
||
dependence on it is interesting. "The Method of Science. The Aim of
|
||
Religion." -- A valid perspective, but not without potential for
|
||
misapplication. This, more than anything else, is the influence of Levi on
|
||
Crowley's philosophy. Accidents of emphasis in Levi's works often became
|
||
seeds for avenues of research in Crowley's effort.
|
||
Levi gives many anecdotes in this work. p. 119: "...an Englishman otherwise
|
||
quite sane, who thought that he had met a stranger and made his acquaintance,
|
||
who took him to lunch at his tavern, and then having asked him to visit St.
|
||
Paul's in his company, had tried to throw him from the top of the tower which
|
||
they had climbed together." Crowley elaborated quite a few of these into
|
||
short stories.
|
||
P. 257: "To brave God and to insult Him, is a final act of faith." -- See
|
||
Crowley's "John St. John".
|
||
P. 260: "While love is nothing but a desire and an enjoyment, it is
|
||
mortal. In order to make itself eternal it must become a sacrifice, for then
|
||
it becomes a power and a virtue." -- See Crowley in "Magick in Theory and
|
||
Practice", chapter 12.
|
||
|
||
Levi appears to have turned Crowley's interest toward Poe and Wm. Blake, as
|
||
well as many other authors.
|
||
Even the Golden Dawn seems to have taken more from Levi than a twist to his
|
||
Tarot attributions and the sketch for the Lesser Pentagram Ritual. Consider
|
||
KM p. 195: "In old times, chess-players sought upon their chess-board the
|
||
solution of philosophical and religious problems, and argued silently with
|
||
each other in manovuering the hieroglyphic characters across the numbers." --
|
||
can this be the remark that sparked creation of Enochian Chess?
|
||
A word of caution. In reading Levi, a strong stomach is one of the
|
||
requisites. The book is filled with Christian remarks. It is not always
|
||
possible to get through this veil on a first or even a third reading.
|
||
Persist. Write in the margin. The hard part is getting past the pseudo-logic
|
||
and Christian propaganda.
|
||
|
||
-- TSG
|
||
*************************************************************************
|
||
FROM THE HISTORY HEAP
|
||
|
||
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
|
||
Liber AL vel Legis I:40
|
||
|
||
February 2, 1913 He used the imperfect translation made by John Dee of the
|
||
Necronomicon bequeathed to him by his grandfather to call down the
|
||
'Old Ones', he was Wilbur Whateley, born on this date in Dunwich.
|
||
|
||
February 8, 1810 The man born on this date once wrote, 'that if a man
|
||
breathes in a certain way upon the back of a woman she will
|
||
automatically surrender to his will.' He is also reported as being
|
||
one of Aleister Crowley's previous incarnations. His name, Eliphas
|
||
Levi.
|
||
|
||
February 8, 1855 Snow had blanketed the ground during the night around the
|
||
peaceful village of Topsham, England, but when the town awoke they
|
||
found themselves confronted by a strange visitor. During the night
|
||
something walked for miles around the village and although it walked
|
||
upright like a man, left hoof prints in snow! Rumors spread that
|
||
the devil had visited Devonshire!
|
||
|
||
February 11, 1891 The woman born on this date, Sascha Germer was responsible
|
||
for strewing Aleister Crowley's ashes into the mud at the base of a
|
||
tree in Hampton, New Jersey.
|
||
|
||
February 12, 1964 It is said that Aleister Crowley had been paid a suitably
|
||
large fee from Gerald Gardner who died on this date, to compose
|
||
rituals that could be used in his new Gardnerian witchcraft.
|
||
|
||
February 14, 1856 Frank Harris who was born on this date, wrote that Aleister
|
||
Crowley upon leaving America bound for England in 1919 'left a
|
||
string of worthless cheques' behind, although he should have written
|
||
that the way of a mystic is often hard to understand.
|
||
|
||
February 16, 1923 Raoul Loveday, Frater AUD, aka ADONIS dies at the Abbey of
|
||
Cefalu. Three days earlier Crowley recorded in his Magical Record
|
||
that he felt a current of magical force, 'heavy black and silent'
|
||
threatening the Abbey.
|
||
|
||
February 17, 1600 Giordano Bruno refusing to retract any of his philosophical
|
||
opinions before the Inquisition of Rome was finally condemned as 'an
|
||
impenitent and pertinacious heretic' and was publicly burned at the
|
||
stake on this date in a place called Campo dei Fiori (Square of
|
||
Flowers), Rome.
|
||
|
||
February 23, 1680 La Voisin the 'Satanic High Priestess' is burned at the
|
||
stake after confessing that she obtained over 2500 children during
|
||
her life to be used as human sacrifices to 'satan'.
|
||
|
||
February 27, 1784 Although many of his followers claim this man to be still
|
||
alive since he knew the secrets of the Elixir of Life, the truth is
|
||
that Comte de St. Germain died in Hesse, Germany on this date.
|
||
|
||
February 27, 1861 Rudolf Steiner was born on this date in Kralijevec, Hungary.
|
||
|
||
February 28, 1946 On this date a great goddess appeared to Jack Parsons
|
||
claiming, "yea, it is I Babalon, and this is my book..." of which
|
||
she began dictating. Thus cam forth 'The Book of Babalon'.
|
||
|
||
February 29, 1880 Aleister Crowley's sister Grace Mary Elizabeth Crowley died
|
||
on this date leaving young Aleister an only child.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Love is the law, love under will.
|
||
Liber AL vel Legis I:57
|
||
|
||
Cornelius/Herndon.
|
||
|
||
|
||
*************************************************************************
|
||
|
||
February 1992 e.v. Thelema Lodge Calendar (February & March events)
|
||
|
||
Mailed free within 100 miles of San Francisco California
|
||
|
||
Ordo Templi Orientis
|
||
P.O. Box 2303
|
||
Berkeley, CA 94702 USA
|
||
|
||
Temple Location: 588 63rd St.
|
||
Oakland, California
|
||
(Entrance in back, downstairs)
|
||
|
||
Phones: TEMPLE PHONE: (415) 654-3580
|
||
LODGE MASTER: (415) 658-3280
|
||
Messages only: (415) 454-5176
|
||
|
||
Compuserve: 72105,1351
|
||
|
||
|
||
*************************************************************************
|
||
|
||
Please feel free to forward this file to any BBS willing to take it
|
||
|
||
l. C |