347 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
347 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
(Part 1 of 8)
|
||
|
||
THE EQUINOX VOLUME III, NUMBER FOUR
|
||
|
||
EIGHT LECTURES ON YOGA
|
||
|
||
BY
|
||
|
||
MAHATMA GURU
|
||
SRI PARAMAHANSA SHIVAJI
|
||
|
||
|
||
BY ALEISTER CROWLEY
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
*******************
|
||
PREFACE
|
||
*******************
|
||
|
||
Aleister Crowley has achieved the reputation of being a master
|
||
of the English language. This book which is as fresh and vibrant
|
||
today as when it was penned over thirty years ago demonstrates this
|
||
fact. It shows how impossible it is to categorize him as a particu-
|
||
lar kind of stylist. At turns he can be satirical, poetical, sarcas-
|
||
tic, rhetorical, philosophical or mystical, gliding so easily from
|
||
one to the other that the average reader is hard put to determine
|
||
whether or not to take him at face value.
|
||
His description of mystical states of consciousness clarifies
|
||
what tomes of more erudite writing fails to elucidate. It is in
|
||
effect a continuation of Part I of Book 4 brought to maturity.
|
||
Nearly three decades had elapsed between the writing of these two
|
||
books, in which time his own inner development had soared ineffably.
|
||
A great deal of what he has to say may seem prosaic at first sight,
|
||
but do not be fooled by this. Other of his comments are profound
|
||
beyond belief, requiring careful and long meditation if full value is
|
||
to be derived from them.
|
||
This is not a book to be read while standing or running. It is
|
||
a high water mark of Crowley's literary career, incorporating all
|
||
that we should expect from one who had experimented with and mastered
|
||
most technical forms of spiritual growth. There is humor here, a
|
||
great deal of sagacity, and much practical advice. This book cannot
|
||
be dispensed with for the student for whom Yoga is 'the way.'
|
||
|
||
Israel Regardie
|
||
March 21, 1969
|
||
Studio City, Calif.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
***************************
|
||
CONTENTS
|
||
***************************
|
||
|
||
YOGA FOR YAHOOS
|
||
|
||
First Lecture. First Principles. . . . . . . Part 1
|
||
|
||
Second Lecture. Yama . . . . . . . . . . . . Part 2
|
||
|
||
Third Lecture. Niyama. . . . . . . . . . . . Part 3
|
||
|
||
Fourth Lecture. Asana and Pranayama. . . . . Part 4
|
||
|
||
YOGA FOR YELLOWBELLIES
|
||
|
||
First Lecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part 5
|
||
|
||
Second Lecture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part 6
|
||
|
||
Third Lecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part 7
|
||
|
||
Fourth Lecture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Part 8
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
************************************************************
|
||
YOGA FOR YAHOOS.
|
||
|
||
FIRST LECTURE. FIRST PRINCIPLES.
|
||
************************************************************
|
||
|
||
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
|
||
|
||
It is my will to explain the subject of Yoga in clear language,
|
||
without resort to jargon or the enunciation of fantastic hypotheses,
|
||
in order that this great science may be thoroughly understood as of
|
||
universal importance.
|
||
For, like all great things, it is simple; but, like all great
|
||
things, it is masked by confused thinking; and, only too often,
|
||
brought into contempt by the machinations of knavery.
|
||
(1) There is more nonsense talked and written about Yoga than
|
||
about anything else in the world. Most of this nonsense, which is
|
||
fostered by charlatans, is based upon the idea that there is some-
|
||
thing mysterious and Oriental about it. There isn't. Do not look to
|
||
me for obelisks and odalisques, Rahat Loucoum, bul-buls, or any other
|
||
tinsel imagery of the Yoga-mongers. I am neat but not gaudy. There
|
||
is nothing mysterious or Oriental about anything, as everybody knows
|
||
who has spent a little time intelligently in the continents of Asia
|
||
and Africa. I propose to invoke the most remote and elusive of all
|
||
Gods to throw clear light upon the subject -- the light of common
|
||
sense.
|
||
(2) All phenomena of which we are aware take place in our own
|
||
minds, and therefore the only thing we have to look at is the mind;
|
||
which is a more constant quantity over all the species of humanity
|
||
than is generally supposed. What appear to be radical differences,
|
||
irreconcilable by argument, are usually found to be due to the
|
||
obstinacy of habit produced by generations of systematic sectarian
|
||
training.
|
||
(3) We must then begin the study of Yoga by looking at the
|
||
meaning of the word. It means Union, from the same Sanskrit root as
|
||
the Greek word Zeugma, the Latin word Jugum, and the English word
|
||
yoke. (Yeug -- to join.)
|
||
When a dancing girl is dedicated to the service of a temple
|
||
there is a Yoga of her relations to celebrate. Yoga, in short, may
|
||
be translated 'tea fight,' which doubtless accounts for the fact that
|
||
all the students of Yoga in England do nothing but gossip over
|
||
endless libations of Lyons' 1s. 2d.
|
||
(4) Yoga means Union.
|
||
In what sense are we to consider this? How is the word Yoga to
|
||
imply a system of religious training or a description of religious
|
||
experience?
|
||
You may note incidentally that the word Religion is really
|
||
identifiable with Yoga. It means a binding together.
|
||
(5) Yoga means Union.
|
||
What are the elements which are united or to be united when this
|
||
word is used in its common sense of a practice widely spread in
|
||
Hindustan whose object is the emancipation of the individual who
|
||
studies and practises it from the less pleasing features of his life
|
||
on this planet?
|
||
I say Hindustan, but I really mean anywhere on the earth; for
|
||
research has shown that similar methods producing similar results are
|
||
to be found in every country. The details vary, but the general
|
||
structure is the same. Because all bodies, and so all minds, have
|
||
identical Forms.
|
||
(6) Yoga means Union.
|
||
In the mind of a pious person, the inferiority complex which
|
||
accounts for his piety compels him to interpret this emancipation as
|
||
union with the gaseous vertebrate whom he has invented and called
|
||
God. On the cloudy vapour of his fears his imagination has thrown a
|
||
vast distorted shadow of himself, and he is duly terrified; and the
|
||
more he cringes before it, the more the spectre seems to stoop to
|
||
crush him. People with these ideas will never get to anywhere but
|
||
Lunatic Asylums and Churches.
|
||
It is because of this overwhelming miasma of fear that the whole
|
||
subject of Yoga has become obscure. A perfectly simple problem has
|
||
been complicated by the most abject ethical and superstitious non-
|
||
sense. Yet all the time the truth is patent in the word itself.
|
||
(7) Yoga means Union.
|
||
We may now consider what Yoga really is. Let us go for a moment
|
||
into the nature of consciousness with the tail of an eye on such
|
||
sciences as mathematics, biology, and chemistry.
|
||
In mathematics the expression 'a' plus 'b' plus 'c' is a trivi-
|
||
ality. Write 'a' plus 'b' plus 'c' equals 0, and you obtain an
|
||
equation from which the most glorious truths may be developed.
|
||
In biology the cell divides endlessly, but never becomes any-
|
||
thing different; but if we unite cells of opposite qualities, male
|
||
and female, we lay the foundations of a structure whose summit is
|
||
unattainably fixed in the heavens of imagination.
|
||
Similar facts occur in chemistry. The atom by itself has few
|
||
constant qualities, none of them particulary significant; but as soon
|
||
as an element combines with the object of its hunger we get not only
|
||
the ecstatic production of light, heat, and so forth, but a more
|
||
complex structure having few or none of the qualities of its ele-
|
||
ments, but capable of further combination into complexities of
|
||
astonishing sublimity. All these combinations, these unions, are
|
||
Yoga.
|
||
(8) Yoga means Union.
|
||
How are we to apply this word to the phenomena of mind?
|
||
What is the first characteristic of everything in thought? How
|
||
did it come to be a thought at all? Only by making a distinction
|
||
between it and the rest of the world.
|
||
The first proposition, the type of all propositions, is: S is P.
|
||
There must be two things -- different things -- whose relation forms
|
||
knowledge.
|
||
Yoga is first of all the union of the subject and the object of
|
||
consciousness: of the seer with the thing seen.
|
||
(9) Now, there is nothing strange of wonderful about all this.
|
||
The study of the principles of Yoga is very useful to the average
|
||
man, if only to make him think about the nature of the world as he
|
||
supposes that he knows it.
|
||
Let us consider a piece of cheese. We say that this has certain
|
||
qualities, shape, structure, colour, solidity, weight, taste, smell,
|
||
consistency and the rest; but investigation has shown that this is
|
||
all illusory. Where are these qualities? Not in the cheese, for
|
||
different observers give quite different accounts of it. Not in
|
||
ourselves, for we do not perceive them in the absence of the cheese.
|
||
All 'material things,' all impressions, are phantoms.
|
||
In reality the cheese is nothing but a series of electric
|
||
charges. Even the most fundamental quality of all, mass, has been
|
||
found not to exist. The same is true of the matter in our brains
|
||
which is partly responsible for these perceptions. What then are
|
||
these qualities of which we are all so sure? They would not exist
|
||
without our brains; they would not exist without the cheese. They
|
||
are the results of the union, that is of the Yoga, of the seer and
|
||
the seen, of subject and object in consciousness as the philosophical
|
||
phrase goes. They have no material existence; they are only names
|
||
given to the ecstatic results of this particular form of Yoga.
|
||
(10) I think that nothing can be more helpful to the student of
|
||
Yoga than to get the above proposition firmly established in his
|
||
subconscious mind. About nine-tenths of the trouble in understanding
|
||
the subject is all this ballyhoo about Yoga being mysterious and
|
||
Oriental. The principles of Yoga, and the spiritual results of Yoga,
|
||
are demonstrated in every conscious and unconscious happening. This
|
||
is that which is written in 'The Book of the Law' -- Love is the law,
|
||
love under will -- for Love is the instinct to unite, and the act of
|
||
uniting. But this cannot be done indiscriminately, it must be done
|
||
'under will,' that is, in accordance with the nature of the particu-
|
||
lar units concerned. Hydrogen has no love for Hydrogen; it is not
|
||
the nature, or the 'true Will' of Hydrogen to seek to unite with a
|
||
molecule of its own kind. Add Hydrogen to Hydrogen: nothing happens
|
||
to its quality: it is only its quantity that changes. It rather
|
||
seeks to enlarge its experience of its possibilities by union with
|
||
atoms of opposite character, such as Oxygen; with this it combines
|
||
(with an explosion of light, heat, and sound) to form water. The
|
||
result is entirely different from either of the component elements,
|
||
and has another kind of 'true Will,' such as to unite (with similar
|
||
disengagement of light and heat) with Potassium, while the resulting
|
||
'caustic Potash' has in its turn a totally new series of qualities,
|
||
with still another 'true Will' of its own; that is, to unite
|
||
explosively with acids. And so on.
|
||
(11) It may seem to some of you that these explanations have
|
||
rather knocked the bottom out of Yoga; that I have reduced it to the
|
||
category of common things. That was my object. There is no sense in
|
||
being frightened of Yoga, awed by Yoga, muddled and mystified by
|
||
Yoga, or enthusiastic over Yoga. If we are to make any progress in
|
||
its study, we need clear heads and the impersonal scientific atti-
|
||
tude. It is especially important not to bedevil ourselves with
|
||
Oriental jargon. We may have to use a few Sanskrit words; but that
|
||
is only because they have no English equivalents; and any attempt to
|
||
translate them burdens us with the connotations of the existing
|
||
English words which we employ. However, these words are very few;
|
||
and, if the definitions which I propose to give you are carefully
|
||
studied, they should present no difficulty.
|
||
(12) Having now understood that Yoga is the essence of all
|
||
phenomena whatsoever, we may ask what is the special meaning of the
|
||
word in respect of our proposed investigation, since the process and
|
||
the results are familiar to every one of us; so familiar indeed that
|
||
there is actually nothing else at all of which we have any knowledge.
|
||
It *is* knowledge.
|
||
What is it we are going to study, and why should we study it?
|
||
(13) The answer is very simple.
|
||
All this Yoga that we know and practice, this Yoga that produced
|
||
these ecstatic results that we call phenomena, includes among its
|
||
spiritual emanations a good deal of unpleasantness. The more we
|
||
study this universe produced by our Yoga, the more we collect and
|
||
synthesize our experience, the nearer we get to a perception of what
|
||
the Buddha declared to be characteristic of all component things:
|
||
Sorrow, Change, and Absence of any permanent principle. We constant-
|
||
ly approach his enunciation of the first two 'Noble Truths,' as he
|
||
called them. 'Everything is Sorrow'; and 'The cause of Sorrow is
|
||
Desire.' By the word 'Desire' he meant exactly what is meant by
|
||
'Love' in 'The Book of the Law' which I quoted a few moments ago.
|
||
'Desire' is the need of every unit to extend its experience by
|
||
combining with its opposite.
|
||
(14) It is easy enough to construct the whole series of argu-
|
||
ments which lead up to the first 'Noble Truth.'
|
||
Every operation of Love is the satisfaction of a bitter hunger,
|
||
but the appetite only grows fiercer by satisfaction; so that we can
|
||
say with the Preacher: 'He that increaseth knowledge increaseth
|
||
Sorrow.' The root of all this sorrow is in the sense of insufficien-
|
||
cy; the need to unite, to lose oneself in the beloved object, is the
|
||
manifest proof of this fact, and it is clear also that the satisfac-
|
||
tion produces only a temporary relief, because the process expands
|
||
indefinitely. The thirst increases with drinking. The only complete
|
||
satisfaction conceivable would be the Yoga of the atom with the
|
||
entire universe. This fact is easily perceived, and has been con-
|
||
stantly expressed in the mystical philosophies of the West; the only
|
||
goal is 'Union with God.' Of course, we only use the word 'God'
|
||
because we have been brought up in superstition, and the higher
|
||
philosophers both in the East and in the West have preferred to speak
|
||
of union with the All or with the Absolute. More superstitions!
|
||
(15) Very well, then, there is no difficulty at all; since
|
||
every thought in our being, every cell in our bodies, every electron
|
||
and proton of our atoms, is nothing but Yoga and the result of Yoga.
|
||
All we have to do to obtain emancipation, satisfaction, everything we
|
||
want is to perform this universal and inevitable operation upon the
|
||
Absolute itself. Some of the more sophisticated members of my
|
||
audience may possibly be thinking that there is a catch in it
|
||
somewhere. They are perfectly right.
|
||
(16) The snag is simply this. Every element of which we are
|
||
composed is indeed constantly occupied in the satisfaction of its
|
||
particular needs by its own particular Yoga; but for that very reason
|
||
it is completely obsessed by its own function, which it must natural-
|
||
ly consider as the Be-All and End-All of its existence. For in-
|
||
stance, if you take a glass tube open at both ends and put it over a
|
||
bee on the windowpane it will continue beating against the window to
|
||
the point of exhaustion and death, instead of escaping through the
|
||
tube. We must not confuse the necessary automatic functioning of any
|
||
of our elements with the true Will which is the proper orbit of any
|
||
star. A human being only acts as a unit at all because of countless
|
||
generations of training. Evolutionary processes have set up a higher
|
||
order of Yogic action by which we have managed to subordinate what we
|
||
consider particular interests to what we consider the general wel-
|
||
fare. We are communities; and our well-being depends upon the wisdom
|
||
of our Councils, and the discipline with which their decisions are
|
||
enforced. The more complicated we are, the higher we are in the
|
||
scale of evolution, the more complex and difficult is the task of
|
||
legislation and of maintaining order.
|
||
(17) In highly civilised communities like our own (*loud
|
||
laughter*), the individual is constantly being attacked by conflict-
|
||
ing interests and necessities; his individuality is constantly being
|
||
assailed by the impact of other people; and in a very large number of
|
||
cases he is unable to stand up to the strain. 'Schizophrenia,' which
|
||
is a lovely word, and may or may not be found in your dictionary, is
|
||
an exceedingly common complaint. It means the splitting up of the
|
||
mind. In extreme cases we get the phenomena of multiple personality,
|
||
Jekyll and Hyde, only more so. At the best, when a man says 'I' he
|
||
refers only to a transitory phenomenon. His 'I' changes as he utters
|
||
the word. But -- philosophy apart -- it is rarer and rarer to find a
|
||
man with a mind of his own and a will of his own, even in this
|
||
modified sense.
|
||
(18) I want you therefore to see the nature of the obstacles to
|
||
union with the Absolute. For one thing, the Yoga which we constantly
|
||
practice has not invariable results; there is a question of atten-
|
||
tion, of investigation, of reflexion. I propose to deal in a future
|
||
instruction with the modifications of our perception thus caused, for
|
||
they are of great importance to our science of Yoga. For example,
|
||
the classical case of the two men lost in a thick wood at night. One
|
||
says to the other: 'That dog barking is not a grasshopper; it is the
|
||
creaking of a cart.' Or again, 'He thought he saw a banker's clerk
|
||
descending from a bus. He looked again, and saw it was a
|
||
hippopotamus.'
|
||
Everyone who has done any scientific investigation knows pain-
|
||
fully how every observation must be corrected again and again. The
|
||
need of Yoga is so bitter that it blinds us. We are constantly
|
||
tempted to see and hear what we want to see and hear.
|
||
(19) It is therefore incumbent upon us, if we wish to make the
|
||
universal and final Yoga with the Absolute, to master every element
|
||
of our being, to protect it against all civil and external war, to
|
||
intensify every faculty to the utmost, to train outselves in know-
|
||
ledge and power to the utmost; so that at the proper moment we may be
|
||
in perfect condition to fling ourselves up into the furnace of
|
||
ecstasy which flames from the abyss of annihilation.
|
||
|
||
Love is the law, love under will.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Love is the satisfaction of a bitter hunger,
|
||
but the appetite only grows fiercer by satisfaction; so that we can
|
||
say with the Preacher: 'He that increaseth knowledge increaseth
|
||
Sorrow.' The root of all this sorrow is in the sense of insufficien-
|
||
cy; the need to unite, to lose oneself in the beloved object, is the
|
||
manifest proof of this fact, and it is clear also that the satisfac-
|
||
tion produces only a temporary relief, because the process expands
|
||
indefinitely. The thirst increases with drinking. The only complete
|
||
sati |