4599 lines
248 KiB
Plaintext
4599 lines
248 KiB
Plaintext
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THE EQUINOX OF THE GODS
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Copyright 1985
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by
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Ordo Templi Orientis
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P.O. Box 2303
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Berkeley, California
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94702
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PRIVATELY PUBLISHED
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for
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ORDO TEMPLI ORIENTIS
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by
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Fr. A.U.D.C.A.L.
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SAN FRANCISCO
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(typed by Soror Alice)
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ANNUM Lxxx
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SOL IN AQUARIUS
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LUNA IN VIRGO
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A PARAPHRASE OF THE INSCRIPTIONS UPON
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THE OBVERSE OF THE STELE OF REVELLING
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Above, the gemmed azure is
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The naked splendour of Nuit;
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She bends in ecstasy to kiss
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The secret ardours of Hadit.
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The winged globe, the starry blue
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Are mine, o Ankh-f-n-Khonsu.
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I am the Lord of Thebes, and I
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The inspired forth-speaker of Mentu;
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For me unveils the veiled sky,
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The self-slain Ankh-f-n-Khonsu
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Whose words are truth. I invoke, I greet
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Thy presence, o Ra-Hoor-Khuit!
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Unity uttermost showed!
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I adore the might of Thy breath,
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Supreme and terrible God,
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Who makest the gods and death
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To tremble before Thee:--
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I,I adore thee!
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Appear on the throne of Ra!
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Open the ways of the Khu!
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Lighten the ways of the Ka!
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The ways of the Khabs run through
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To stir me or still me!
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Aum! let it kill me!
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The Light is mine; its rays consume
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Me: I have made a secret door
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Into the House of Ra and Tum,
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Of Khephra, and of Ahathoor.
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I am thy Theban, o Mentu,
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The prophet Ankh-f-n-Khonsu!
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By Bes-na-Maut my breast I beat;
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By wise Ta-Nech I weave my spell.
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Show thy star-splendour, O Nuith!
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Bid me within thine House to dwell,
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O winged snake of light, Hadith!
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Abide with me, Ra-Hoor-Khuit!
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(next two pages are front and back of Stele)
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A PARAPHRASE OF THE HIEROGLYPHS OF THE
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II LINES UPON THE REVERSE OF THE STELE
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Saith of Mentu the truth-telling brother
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Who was master of Thebes from his birth:
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O heart of me, heart of my mother!
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O heart which I had upon earth!
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Stand not thou up against me a witness!
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Oppose me not, judge, in my quest!
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Accuse me not now of unfitness
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Before the Great God, the dread Lord of the West!
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For I fastened the one to the other
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With a spell for their mystical girth,
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The earth and the wonderful West,
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When I flourished, o earth, on the breast!
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The dead man Ankh-f-n-Khonsu
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Saith with his voice of truth and calm:
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O thou that hast a single arm!
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O thou that glitterest in the moon!
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I weave thee in the spinning charm;
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I lure thee with the billowy tune.
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The dead man Ankh-f-n-Khonsu
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Hath parted from the darkling crowds,
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Hath joined the dwellers of the light,
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Opening Duant, the star-abodes,
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Their keys receiving.
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The dead man Ankh-f-n-Khonsu
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Hath made his passage into night,
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His pleasure on the earth to do
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Among the living.
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THE EQUINOX OF THE GODS.
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The Official Organ of the A A
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(pic of eye in triangle)
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Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
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Love is the law, love under will.
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The word of the law is
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THELEMA (in Greek)
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The Official Organ of the O.T.O.
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Deus est Homo (lamen in middle)
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Vol. III No. III
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An I x Sol in Libra
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SEPTEMBER MCMXXXVI E.V.
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Issued by the O.T.O.
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A.'. A.'. Publication in Class E.
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(A.'. A.'. SIGIL)
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(O.T.O. LAMEN)
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(BAPHOMET'S SIGNATURE)
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(FOLLOWING ARE PICTURES OF ASTROLOGICAL CHARTS)
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THE NATIVITY OF FRA. P. |THE FIRST INITIATION OF FRA. P.
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--------------------------------|-------------------------------
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OF THE GODS | THE ANNIHILATION OF FRA. P.
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CONTENTS
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Page
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The Summons .............................................. I
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A Summary .............................................. 3
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LIBER AL vel LEGIS
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Sub Figura CCXX as Delivered by XCIII==
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4I8 to DCLXVI ............................................I3
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GENESIS LIBRI AL ............................................39
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ILLUSTRATIONS
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The Stele of Revealing ........................... Frontispiece
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Four Horoscopes ................................ Facing Summons
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First sketch of a Qabalistic Key to Liber AL ................I38
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POCKET
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THE COMMENT
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Facsimile of the MS. of Liber AL
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THE SUMMONS.
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On April 8, 9 and I0, I904, e.v. this book was dictated to
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666 (Aleister Crowley) by Aiwass, a Being whose nature he does
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not fully understand, but who described Himself as "the Minister
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of Hoor-Paar-Kraat" (the Lord of Silence).
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The contents of the book prove to strict scientific demon-
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stration that He possesses knowledge and power quite beyond
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anything that has been hitherto associated with human faculties.
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The circumstances of the dictation are described in the
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Equinox, Vol. I, No. vii: but a fuller account, with an outline
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of the proof of the character of the book is now here to be
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issued.
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The book announces a New Law for mankind.
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It replaces the moral and religious sanctions of the past,
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which have everywhere broken down, by a principle valid for each
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man and woman in the world, and self-evidently indefeasible.
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The spiritual Revolution announced by the book has already
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taken place: hardly a country where it is not openly manifest.
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Ignorance of the true meaning of this new Law has led to
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gross anarchy. Its conscious adoption in its proper sense is the
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sole cure for the political, social and racial unrest which
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have brought about the World War, the catastrophe of Europe and
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America, and the threatening attitude of China, India and Islam.
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Its solution of the fundamental problems of mathematics and
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philosophy will establish a new epoch in history.
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But it must not be supposed that so potent an instrument of
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energy can be used without danger.
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I summon, therefore, by the power and authority entrusted to
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me, every great spirit and mind now on this planed incarnate to
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take effective hold of this transcendent force, and apply it to
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the advancement of the welfare of the human race.
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For as the experience of these two and thirty years has
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shown too terribly, the book cannot be ignored. It has leavened
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Mankind unaware: and Man must make thereof the Bread of Life.
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Its ferment has begun to work on the grape of thought: Man must
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obtain therefrom the Wine of Ecstasy.
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Come then, all ye, in the Name of the Lord of the Aeon, the
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Crowned and Conquering Child, Heru-Ra-Ha: I call ye to partake
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this sacrament.
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Know-will-dare-and be silent!
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The Priest of the Princes,
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ANKH-AF-NA-KHONSU.
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A SUMMARY
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MARSYAS. I bear a message. Heaven hath sent
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(As for The The knowledge of a new sweet way
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Beast 666). Into the Secret Element.
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OLYMPAS. Master, while yet the glory clings
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(Any Aspirant) Declare this mystery magical!
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MARSYAS. I am yet borne on these blue wings
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Into the Essence of the All.
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Now, now I stand on earth again,
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Though, blazing through each nerve and vein,
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The light yet holds its choral course,
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Filling my frame with fiery force
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Like God's. Now hear the Apocalypse!
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New-fledged on these reluctant lips!
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OLYMPAS. I tremble like an aspen, quiver
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Like light upon a rainy river !
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MARSYAS. Do what thou wilt ! is the sole word
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Of law that my attainment heard.
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Arise, and lay thine hand on God !
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Arise, and set a period
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Unto Restriction ! That is sin :
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To hold thine holy spirit in !
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O thou that chafest at thy bars,
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Invoke Nuit beneath her stars
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With a pure heart (Her incense burned
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Of gums and woods, in gold inurned)
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And let the serpent flame therein
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A little, and thy soul shall win
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To lie within her bosom. Lo !
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Thou wouldst give all------and she cries : No !
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Take all, and take me ! Gather spice
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And virgins and great pearls of price !
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Worship me in a single robe,
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Crowned Richly ! Girdle of the globe,
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I love thee. I am drunkenness
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Of the inmost sense, my soul's caress
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Is toward thee ! Let my priestess stand
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Bare and rejoicing, softly fanned
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By smooth-lipped acolytes, upon
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Mine iridescent altar-stone,
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And in her love-chaunt swooningly
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Say evermore : To me ! To me !
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I am the azure-lidded daughter
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Of sunset; the all-girdling water;
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The naked brilliance of the sky
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In the voluptuous night am I !
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With song, with jewel, with perfume,
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Wake all my rose's blush and bloom !
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Drink to me ! Love me ! I love thee,
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My love, my lord--to me ! to me !
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OLYMPAS. There is no harshness in the breath
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Of this--is life surpassed, and death ?
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MARSYAS. There is the Snake that gives delight
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And Knowledge, stirs the heart aright
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With drunkenness. Strange drugs are thine,
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Hadit, and draughts of wizard wine !
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These do no hurt. Thine hermits dwell
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Not in the cold secretive cell,
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But under purple canopies
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With mighty-breasted mistresses
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Magnificent as lionesses--
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Tender and terrible caresses !
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Fire lives, and light, in eager eyes;
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And massed huge hair about them lies.
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They lead their hosts to victory :
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In every joy they are kings ; then see
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That secret serpent coiled to spring
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And win the world ! O priest and king,
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Let there be feasting, foining, fighting,
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A revel of lusting, singing, smiting !
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Work ; be the bed of work ! Hold ! Hold !
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The stars' kiss is as molten gold.
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Harden ! Hold thyself up ! now die--
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Ah ! Ah ! Exceed ! Exceed !
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OLYMPAS. And I ?
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MARSYAS. My stature shall surpass the stars :
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He hath said it ! Men shall worship me
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In hidden woods, on barren scaurs,
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Henceforth to all eternity.
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OLYMPAS. Hail ! I adore thee ! Let us feast.
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MARSYAS. I am the consecrated Beast.
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I build the Abominable House.
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The Scarlet Woman is my Spouse---
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OLYMPAS. What is this word ?
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MARSYAS. Thou canst not know
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Till thou hast passed the Fourth Ordeal.
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OLYMPAS. I worship thee. The moon-rays flow
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Masterfully rich and real
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From thy red mouth, and burst, young suns
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Chanting before the Holy Ones
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Thine Eight Mysterious Orisons !
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MARSYAS. The last spell ! The availing word !
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The two completed by the third !
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The Lord of War, of Vengeance
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That slayeth with a single glance !
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This light is in me of my Lord.
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His Name is this far-whirling sword.
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I push His order. Keen and swift
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My Hawk's eye flames ; these arms uplift
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The Banner of Silence and of Strength---
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Hail ! Hail ! thou are here, my Lord, at length !
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Lo, the Hawk-Headed Lord am I :
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My nemyss shrouds the night-blue sky.
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Hail ! ye twin warriors that guard
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The pillars of the world ! Your time
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Is nigh at hand. The snake that marred
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Heaven with his inexhaustible slime
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Is slain ; I bear the Wand of power,
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The Wand that waxes and that wanes ;
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I crush the Universe this hour
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In my left hand ; and naught remains !
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Ho ! for the splendour in my name
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Hidden and glorious, a flame
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Secretly shooting from the sun.
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Aum ! Ha !--my destiny is done.
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The Word is spoken and concealed.
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OLYMPAS. I am stunned. What wonder was revealed ?
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MARSYAS. The rite is secret.
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OLYMPAS. Profits it ?
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MARSYAS. Only to wisdom and to wit.
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OLYMPAS. The other did no less.
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MARSYAS. Then prove
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Both by the master-key of Love.
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The lock turns stiffly ? Shalt thou shirk
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To use the sacred oil of work ?
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Not from the valley shalt thou wrest
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The eggs that line the eagle's nest !
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Climb, with thy life at stake, the ice,
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The sheer wall of the precipice !
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Master the cornice, gain the breach,
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And learn what next the ridge can teach !
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Yet--not the ridge itself may speak
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The secret of the final peak.
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OLYMPAS. All ridges join at last.
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MARSYAS. Admitted,
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O thou astute and subtle-witted !
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Yet one--loose, jagged, clad in mist !
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Another--firm, smooth, loved and kissed
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By the soft sun ! Our order hath
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This secret of the solar path,
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Even as our Lord the Beast hath won
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The mystic Number of the Sun.
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OLYMPAS. These secrets are too high for me.
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MARSYAS. Nay, little brother ! Come and see !
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Neither by faith nor fear not awe
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Approach the doctrine of the Law !
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Truth, Courage, Love, shall win the bout,
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And those three others be cast out.
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OLYMPAS. Lead me, Master, by the hand d
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Gently to this gracious land !
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Let me drink the doctrine in,
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An all-healing medicine !
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Let me rise, correct and firm,
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Steady striding to the term,
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Master of my fate, to rise
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To imperial destinies ;
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With the sun's ensanguine dart
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Spear-bright in my blazing heart,
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And my being's basil-plant
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Bright and hard as adamant !
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MARSYAS. Yonder, faintly luminous,
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The yellow desert waits for us.
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Lithe and eager, hand in hand,
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We travel to the lonely land.
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There, beneath the stars, the smoke
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Of our incense shall invoke
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The Queen of Space ; and subtly She
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Shall bend from Her Infinity
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Like a lambent flame of blue,
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Touching us, and piercing through
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All the sense-webs that we are
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As the aethyr penetrates a star !
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Her hands caressing the black earth,
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Her sweet lithe body arched for love,
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Her feet a Zephyr to the flowers,
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She calls my name--she gives the sign
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That she is mine, supremely mine,
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And clinging to the infinite girth
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My soul gets perfect joy thereof
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Beyond the abysses and the hours ;
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So that--I kiss her lovely brows ;
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She bathes my body in perfume
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Of sweat....O thou my secret spouse,
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Continuous One of Heaven ! illume
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My soul with this arcane delight,
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Voluptuous Daughter of the Night !
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Eat me up wholly with the glance
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Of thy luxurious brilliance !
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OLYMPAS. The desert calls.
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MARSYAS. Then let us go !
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Or seek the sacramental snow,
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Where like an high-priest I may stand
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With acolytes on every hand,
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The lesser peaks--my will withdrawn
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To invoke the dayspring from the dawn,
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Changing that rosy smoke of light
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To a pure crystalline white ;
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Though the mist of mind, as draws
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A dancer round her limbs the gauze,
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Clothe Light, and show the virgin Sun
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A lemon-pale medallion !
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Thence leap we leashless to the goal,
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Stainless star-rapture of the soul.
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So the altar-fires fade
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As the Godhead is displayed.
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Nay, we stir not. Everywhere
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Is our temple right appointed.
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All the earth is faery fair
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For us. Am I not anointed ?
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The Sigil burns upon the brow
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At the adjuration--here and now.
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OLYMPAS. The air is laden with perfumes.
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MARSYAS. Behold ! it beams--it burns--it blooms.
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. . . . .
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OLYMPAS. Master, how subtly hast thou drawn
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The daylight from the Golden Dawn,
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Bidden the Cavernous Mount unfold
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Its Ruby Rose, its Cross of Gold ;
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Until I saw, flashed from afar,
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The Hawk's Eye in the Silver Star !
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MARSYAS. Peace to all beings. Peace to thee,
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Co-heir of mine eternity !
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Peace to the greatest and the least,
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To nebula and nenuphar !
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Light in abundance be increased
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On them that dream that shadows are !
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OLYMPAS. Blessing and worship to The Beast,
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The prophet of the lovely Star !
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LIBER
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AL VEL
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LEGIS
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SUB FIGURA
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C C X X
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AS DELIVERED BY
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XCIII == 418
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TO
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DCLXVI
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A' A' sigil
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Liber 220: THE BOOK OF THE LAW
|
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1. Had! The manifestation of Nuit.
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||
2. The unveiling of the company of heaven.
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||
3. Every man and every woman is a star.
|
||
4. Every number is infinite; there is no
|
||
difference.
|
||
5. Help me, o warrior lord of Thebes, in my
|
||
unveiling before the Children of men!
|
||
6. Be thou Hadit, my secret centre, my
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||
heart & my tongue!
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||
7. Behold! it is revealed by Aiwass the min-
|
||
ister of Hoor-paar-kraat.
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||
8. The Khabs is in the Khu, not the Khu in
|
||
the Khabs.
|
||
9. Worship then the Khabs, and behold my
|
||
light shed over you!
|
||
10. Let my servants be few & secret: they
|
||
shall rule the many & the known.
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||
11. These are fools that men adore; both
|
||
their Gods & their men are fools.
|
||
12. Come forth, o children, under the stars,
|
||
& take your fill of love!
|
||
13. I am above you and in you. My ecstasy
|
||
is in yours. My joy is to see your joy.
|
||
14. Above, the gemmed azure is
|
||
The naked splendour of Nuit;
|
||
She bends in ecstasy to kiss
|
||
The secret ardours of Hadit.
|
||
The winged globe, the starry blue,
|
||
Are mine, O Ankh-af-na-khonsu!
|
||
15. Now ye shall know that the chosen priest
|
||
& apostle of infinite space is the prince-priest
|
||
the Beast; and in his woman called the Scarlet
|
||
Woman is all power given. They shall gather
|
||
my children into their fold: they shall bring
|
||
the glory of the stars into the hearts of men.
|
||
16. For he is ever a sun, and she a moon.
|
||
But to him is the winged secret flame, and to her
|
||
the stooping starlight.
|
||
17. But ye are not so chosen.
|
||
18. Burn upon their brows, o splendrous
|
||
serpent!
|
||
19. O azure-lidded woman, bend upon them!
|
||
20. The key of the rituals is in the secret
|
||
word which I have given unto him.
|
||
21. With the God & the Adorer I am nothing:
|
||
they do not see me. They are as upon the
|
||
earth; I am Heaven, and there is no other God
|
||
than me, and my lord Hadit.
|
||
22. Now, therefore, I am known to ye by
|
||
my name Nuit, and to him by a secret name
|
||
which I will give him when at last he knoweth
|
||
me. Since I am Infinite Space, and the Infinite
|
||
Stars thereof, do ye also thus. Bind nothing!
|
||
Let there be no difference made among you
|
||
between any one thing & any other thing; for
|
||
thereby there cometh hurt.
|
||
23. But whoso availeth in this, let him be
|
||
the chief of all!
|
||
24. I am Nuit, and my word is six and fifty.
|
||
25. Divide, add, multiply, and understand.
|
||
26. Then saith the prophet and slave of the
|
||
beauteous one: Who am I, and what shall
|
||
be the sign? So she answered him, bending
|
||
down, a lambent flame of blue, all-touching, all
|
||
penetrant, her lovely hands upon the black
|
||
earth, & her lithe body arched for love, and her
|
||
soft feet not hurting the little flowers: Thou
|
||
knowest! And the sign shall be my ecstasy,
|
||
the consciousness of the continuity of exist-
|
||
ence, the omnipresence of my body.
|
||
27. Then the priest answered & said unto
|
||
the Queen of Space, kissing her lovely brows,
|
||
and the dew of her light bathing his whole
|
||
body in a sweet-smelling perfume of sweat: O
|
||
Nuit, continuous one of Heaven, let it be ever
|
||
thus; that men speak not of Thee as One but
|
||
as None; and let them speak not of thee at
|
||
all, since thou art continuous!
|
||
28. None, breathed the light, faint & faery,
|
||
of the stars, and two.
|
||
29. For I am divided for love's sake, for the
|
||
chance of union.
|
||
30. This is the creation of the world, that
|
||
the pain of division is as nothing, and the joy
|
||
of dissolution all.
|
||
31. For these fools of men and their woes
|
||
care not thou at all! They feel little; what
|
||
is, is balanced by weak joys; but ye are my
|
||
chosen ones.
|
||
32. Obey my prophet! follow out the ordeals
|
||
of my knowledge! seek me only! Then the
|
||
joys of my love will redeem ye from all pain.
|
||
This is so: I swear it by the vault of my body;
|
||
by my sacred heart and tongue; by all I can
|
||
give, by all I desire of ye all.
|
||
33. Then the priest fell into a deep trance
|
||
or swoon, & said unto the Queen of Heaven;
|
||
Write unto us the ordeals; write unto us the
|
||
rituals; write unto us the law!
|
||
34. But she said: the ordeals I write not:
|
||
the rituals shall be half known and half con-
|
||
cealed: the Law is for all.
|
||
35. This that thou writest is the threefold
|
||
book of Law.
|
||
36. My scribe Ankh-af-na-khonsu, the priest
|
||
of the princes, shall not in one letter change
|
||
this book; but lest there be folly, he shall com-
|
||
ment thereupon by the wisdom of Ra-Hoor-
|
||
Khu-it.
|
||
37. Also the mantras and spells; the obeah
|
||
and the wanga; the work of the wand and the
|
||
work of the sword; these he shall learn and
|
||
teach.
|
||
38. He must teach; but he may make severe
|
||
the ordeals.
|
||
39. The word of the Law is >THELEMA.<
|
||
40. Who calls us Thelemites will do no
|
||
wrong, if he look but close into the word. For
|
||
there are therein Three Grades, the Hermit,
|
||
and the Lover, and the man of Earth. Do
|
||
what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
|
||
41. The word of Sin is Restriction. O man!
|
||
refuse not thy wife, if she will! O lover, if
|
||
thou wilt, depart! There is no bond that can
|
||
unite the divided but love: all else is a curse.
|
||
Accursed! Accursed be it to the aeons! Hell.
|
||
42. Let it be that state of manyhood bound
|
||
and loathing. So with thy all; thou hast no
|
||
right but to do thy will.
|
||
43. Do that, and no other shall say nay.
|
||
44. For pure will, unassuaged of purpose,
|
||
delivered from the lust of result, is every way
|
||
perfect.
|
||
45. The Perfect and the Perfect are one Per-
|
||
fect and not two; nay, are none!
|
||
46. Nothing is a secret key of this law. Sixty-
|
||
one the Jews call it; I call it eight, eighty, four
|
||
hundred & eighteen.
|
||
47. But they have the half: unite by thine
|
||
art so that all disappear.
|
||
48. My prophet is a fool with his one, one,
|
||
one; are not they the Ox, and none by the
|
||
Book?
|
||
49. Abrogate are all rituals, all ordeals, all
|
||
words and signs. Ra-Hoor-Khuit hath taken
|
||
his seat in the East at the Equinox of the Gods;
|
||
and let Asar be with Isa, who also are one.
|
||
But they are not of me. Let Asar be the
|
||
adorant, Isa the sufferer; Hoor in his secret
|
||
name and splendour is the Lord initiating.
|
||
50. There is a word to say about the Hiero-
|
||
phantic task. Behold! there are three ordeals
|
||
in one, and it may be given in three ways. The
|
||
gross must pass through fire; let the fine be
|
||
tried in intellect, and the lofty chosen ones
|
||
in the highest. Thus ye have star & star, sys-
|
||
tem & system; let not one know well the other!
|
||
51. There are four gates to one palace; the
|
||
floor of that palace is of silver and gold; lapis
|
||
lazuli & jasper are there; and all rare scents;
|
||
jasmine & rose, and the emblems of death.
|
||
Let him enter in turn or at once the four gates;
|
||
let him stand on the floor of the palace. Will
|
||
he not sink? Amn. Ho! warrior, if thy ser-
|
||
vant sink? But there are means and means.
|
||
Be goodly therefore: dress ye all in fine ap-
|
||
parel; eat rich foods and drink sweet wines
|
||
and wines that foam! Also, take your fill and
|
||
will of love as ye will, when, where and with
|
||
whom ye will! But always unto me.
|
||
52. If this be not aright; if ye confound the
|
||
space-marks, saying: They are one; or saying,
|
||
They are many; if the ritual be not ever unto
|
||
me: then expect the direful judgments of Ra
|
||
Hoor Khuit!
|
||
53. This shall regenerate the world, the little
|
||
world my sister, my heart & my tongue, unto
|
||
whom I send this kiss. Also, o scribe and
|
||
prophet, though thou be of the princes, it shall
|
||
not assuage thee nor absolve thee. But ecstasy
|
||
be thine and joy of earth: ever To me! To me!
|
||
54. Change not as much as the style of a
|
||
letter; for behold! thou, o prophet, shalt not
|
||
behold all these mysteries hidden therein.
|
||
55. The child of thy bowels, he shall behold
|
||
them.
|
||
56. Expect him not from the East, nor from
|
||
the West; for from no expected house cometh
|
||
that child. Aum! All words are sacred and
|
||
all prophets true; save only that they under-
|
||
stand a little; solve the first half of the equa-
|
||
tion, leave the second unattacked. But thou
|
||
hast all in the clear light, and some, though
|
||
not all, in the dark.
|
||
57. Invoke me under my stars! Love is the
|
||
law, love under will. Nor let the fools mistake
|
||
love; for there are love and love. There is
|
||
the dove, and there is the serpent. Choose ye
|
||
well! He, my prophet, hath chosen, knowing
|
||
the law of the fortress, and the great mystery
|
||
of the House of God.
|
||
All these old letters of my Book are aright;
|
||
but TS is not the Star. This also is secret: my
|
||
prophet shall reveal it to the wise.
|
||
58. I give unimaginable joys on earth: cer-
|
||
tainty, not faith, while in life, upon death;
|
||
peace unutterable, rest, ecstasy; nor do I de-
|
||
mand aught in sacrifice.
|
||
59. My incense is of resinous woods & gums;
|
||
and there is no blood therein: because of my
|
||
hair the trees of Eternity.
|
||
60. My number is 11, as all their numbers
|
||
who are of us. The Five Pointed Star, with a
|
||
Circle in the Middle, & the circle is Red. My
|
||
colour is black to the blind, but the blue &
|
||
gold are seen of the seeing. Also I have a
|
||
secret glory for them that love me.
|
||
61. But to love me is better than all things:
|
||
if under the night-stars in the desert thou pres-
|
||
ently burnest mine incense before me, invoking
|
||
me with a pure heart, and the Serpent flame
|
||
therein, thou shalt come a little to lie in my
|
||
bosom. For one kiss wilt thou then be willing
|
||
to give all; but whoso gives one particle of dust
|
||
shall lose all in that hour. Ye shall gather
|
||
goods and store of women and spices; ye shall
|
||
wear rich jewels; ye shall exceed the nations
|
||
of the earth in spendour & pride; but always
|
||
in the love of me, and so shall ye come to my
|
||
joy. I charge you earnestly to come before
|
||
me in a single robe, and covered with a rich
|
||
headdress. I love you! I yearn to you! Pale
|
||
or purple, veiled or voluptuous, I who am all
|
||
pleasure and purple, and drunkenness of the
|
||
innermost sense, desire you. Put on the wings,
|
||
and arouse the coiled splendour within you:
|
||
come unto me!
|
||
62. At all my meetings with you shall
|
||
the priestess say -- and her eyes shall burn with
|
||
desire as she stands bare and rejoicing in my
|
||
secret temple -- To me! To me! calling forth
|
||
the flame of the hearts of all in her love-chant.
|
||
63. Sing the rapturous love-song unto me!
|
||
Burn to me perfumes! Wear to me jewels!
|
||
Drink to me, for I love you! I love you!
|
||
64. I am the blue-lidded daughter of Sunset;
|
||
I am the naked brilliance of the voluptuous
|
||
night-sky.
|
||
65. To me! To me!
|
||
66. The Manifestation of Nuit is at an end.
|
||
|
||
***
|
||
|
||
1. Nu! the hiding of Hadit.
|
||
2. Come! all ye, and learn the secret that
|
||
hath not yet been revealed. I, Hadit, am the
|
||
complement of Nu, my bride. I am not ex-
|
||
tended, and Khabs is the name of my House.
|
||
3. In the sphere I am everywhere the cen-
|
||
tre, as she, the circumference, is nowhere
|
||
found.
|
||
4. Yet she shall be known & I never.
|
||
5. Behold! the rituals of the old time are
|
||
black. Let the evil ones be cast away; let the
|
||
good ones be purged by the prophet! Then
|
||
shall this Knowledge go aright.
|
||
6. I am the flame that burns in every heart
|
||
of man, and in the core of every star. I am
|
||
Life, and the giver of Life, yet therefore is the
|
||
knowledge of me the knowledge of death.
|
||
7. I am the Magician and the Exorcist. I
|
||
am the axle of the wheel, and the cube in the
|
||
circle. "Come unto me" is a foolish word: for
|
||
it is I that go.
|
||
8. Who worshipped Heru-pa-kraath have
|
||
worshipped me; ill, for I am the worshipper.
|
||
9. Remember all ye that existence is pure
|
||
joy; that all the sorrows are but as shadows;
|
||
they pass & are done; but there is that which
|
||
remains.
|
||
10. O prophet! thou hast ill will to learn
|
||
this writing.
|
||
11. I see thee hate the hand & the pen; but
|
||
I am stronger.
|
||
12. Because of me in Thee which thou knew-
|
||
est not.
|
||
13. for why? Because thou wast the know-
|
||
er, and me.
|
||
14. Now let there be a veiling of this shrine:
|
||
now let the light devour men and eat them up
|
||
with blindness!
|
||
15. For I am perfect, being Not; and my
|
||
number is nine by the fools; but with the just
|
||
I am eight, and one in eight: Which is vital,
|
||
for I am none indeed. The Empress and the
|
||
King are not of me; for there is a further secret.
|
||
16. I am The Empress & the Hierophant.
|
||
Thus eleven, as my bride is eleven.
|
||
17. Hear me, ye people of sighing!
|
||
The sorrows of pain and regret
|
||
Are left to the dead and the dying,
|
||
The folk that not know me as yet.
|
||
18. These are dead, these fellows; they feel
|
||
not. We are not for the poor and sad: the lords
|
||
of the earth are our kinsfolk.
|
||
19. Is a God to live in a dog? No! but the
|
||
highest are of us. They shall rejoice, our chos-
|
||
en: who sorroweth is not of us.
|
||
20. Beauty and strength, leaping laughter
|
||
and delicious languor, force and fire, are of us.
|
||
21. We have nothing with the outcast and
|
||
the unfit: let them die in their misery. For
|
||
they feel not. Compassion is the vice of kings:
|
||
stamp down the wretched & the weak: this
|
||
is the law of the strong: this is our law and
|
||
the joy of the world. Think not, o king, upon
|
||
that lie: That Thou Must Die: verily thou shalt
|
||
not die, but live. Now let it be understood: If
|
||
the body of the King dissolve, he shall remain
|
||
in pure ecstasy for ever. Nuit! Hadit! Ra-
|
||
Hoor-Khuit! The Sun, Strength & Sight, Light;
|
||
these are for the servants of the Star & the
|
||
Snake.
|
||
22. I am the Snake that giveth Knowledge
|
||
& Delight and bright glory, and stir the hearts
|
||
of men with drunkenness. To worship me take
|
||
wine and strange drugs whereof I will tell my
|
||
prophet, & be drunk thereof! They shall not
|
||
harm ye at all. It is a lie, this folly against
|
||
self. The exposure of innocence is a lie. Be
|
||
strong, o man! lust, enjoy all things of sense
|
||
and rapture: fear not that any God shall deny
|
||
thee for this.
|
||
23. I am alone: there is no God where I am.
|
||
24. Behold! these be grave mysteries; for
|
||
there are also of my friends who be hermits.
|
||
Now think not to find them in the forest or on
|
||
the mountain; but in beds of purple, caressed
|
||
by magnificent beasts of women with large
|
||
limbs, and fire and light in their eyes, and
|
||
masses of flaming hair about them; there shall
|
||
ye find them. Ye shall see them at rule, at
|
||
victorious armies, at all the joy; and there shall
|
||
be in them a joy a million times greater than
|
||
this. Beware lest any force another, King
|
||
against King! Love one another with burning
|
||
hearts; on the low men trample in the fierce
|
||
lust of your pride, in the day of your wrath.
|
||
25. Ye are against the people, O my chosen!
|
||
26. I am the secret Serpent coiled about to
|
||
spring: in my coiling there is joy. If I lift up
|
||
my head, I and my Nuit are one. If I droop
|
||
down mine head, and shoot forth venom, then
|
||
is rapture of the earth, and I and the earth
|
||
are one.
|
||
27. There is great danger in me; for who
|
||
doth not understand these runes shall make a
|
||
great miss. He shall fall down into the pit
|
||
called Because, and there he shall perish with
|
||
the dogs of Reason.
|
||
28. Now a curse upon Because and his kin!
|
||
29. May Because be accursed for ever!
|
||
30. If Will stops and cries Why, invoking
|
||
Because, then Will stops & does nought.
|
||
31. If Power asks why, then is Power weak-
|
||
ness.
|
||
32. Also reason is a lie; for there is a factor
|
||
infinite & unknown; & all their words are
|
||
skew-wise.
|
||
33. Enough of Because! Be he damned
|
||
for a dog!
|
||
34. But ye, o my people, rise up & awake!
|
||
35. Let the rituals be rightly performed with
|
||
joy & beauty!
|
||
36. There are rituals of the elements and
|
||
feasts of the times.
|
||
37. A feast for the first night of the Prophet
|
||
and his Bride!
|
||
38. A feasy for the three days of the writing
|
||
of the Book of the Law.
|
||
39. A feast for Tahuti and the child of the
|
||
Prophet--secret, O Prophet!
|
||
40. A feast for the Supreme Ritual, and a
|
||
feast for the Equinox of the Gods.
|
||
41. A feast for fire and a feast for water;
|
||
a feast for life and a greater feast for death!
|
||
42. A feast every day in your hearts in the
|
||
joy of my rapture!
|
||
43. A feast every night unto Nu, and the
|
||
pleasure of uttermost delight!
|
||
44. Aye! feast! rejoice! there is no dread
|
||
hereafter. There is the dissolution, and eter-
|
||
nal ecstasy in the kisses of Nu.
|
||
45. There is death for the dogs.
|
||
46. Dost thou fail? Art thou sorry? Is fear
|
||
in thine heart?
|
||
47. Where I am these are not.
|
||
48. Pity not the fallen! I never knew them.
|
||
I am not for them. I console not: I hate the
|
||
consoled & the consoler.
|
||
49. I am unique & conqueror. I am not of
|
||
the slaves that perish. Be they damned &
|
||
dead! Amen. (This is of the 4: there is a fifth
|
||
who is invisible, & therein am I as a babe
|
||
in an egg.)
|
||
50. Blue am I and gold in the light of my
|
||
bride: but the red gleam is in my eyes; & my
|
||
spangles are purple & green.
|
||
51. Purple beyond purple: it is the light
|
||
higher than eyesight.
|
||
52. There is a veil: that veil is black. It is
|
||
the veil of the modest woman; it is the veil of
|
||
sorrow, & the pall of death: this is none of me.
|
||
Tear down that lying spectre of the centuries:
|
||
veil not your vices in virtuous words: these
|
||
vices are my service; ye do well, & I will re-
|
||
ward you here and hereafter.
|
||
53. Fear not, o prophet, when these words
|
||
are said, thou shalt not be sorry. Thou art
|
||
emphatically my chosen; and blessed are the
|
||
eyes that thoushalt look upon with gladness.
|
||
But I will hide thee in a mask of sorrow: they
|
||
that see thee shall fear thou art fallen: but I
|
||
lift thee up.
|
||
54. Nor shall they who cry aloud their folly
|
||
that thou meanest nought avail; thou shall re-
|
||
veal it: thou availest: they are the slaves of
|
||
because: They are not of me. The stops as
|
||
thou wilt; the letters? change them not in style
|
||
or value!
|
||
55. Thou shalt obtain the order & value of
|
||
the English Alphabet; thou shalt find new sym-
|
||
bols to attribute them unto.
|
||
56. Begone! ye mockers; even though ye
|
||
laugh in my honour ye shall laugh not long:
|
||
then when ye are sad know that I have for-
|
||
saken you.
|
||
57. He that is righteous shall be righteous
|
||
still; he that is filthy shall be filthy still.
|
||
58. Yea! deem not of change: ye shall be as ye are, & not
|
||
other. Therefore the kings of the earth shall be Kings for
|
||
ever: the slaves shall serve. There is none that shall be
|
||
cast down or lifted up: all is ever as it was. Yet there
|
||
are masked ones my servants: it may be that yonder beggar
|
||
is a King. A King may choose his garment as he will: there
|
||
is no certain test: but a beggar cannot hide his poverty.
|
||
59. Beware therefore! Love all, lest perchance is a King
|
||
concealed! Say you so? Fool! If he be a King, thou canst
|
||
not hurt him.
|
||
60. Therefore strike hard & low, and to hell with them, master!
|
||
61. There is a light before thine eyes, o prophet, a light
|
||
undesired, most desirable.
|
||
62. I am uplifted in thine heart; and the kisses of the stars
|
||
rain hard upon thy body.
|
||
63. Thou art exhaust in the voluptuous fullness of the
|
||
inspiration; the expiration is sweeter than death, more
|
||
rapid and laughterful than a caress of Hell's own worm.
|
||
64. Oh! thou art overcome: we are upon thee; our delight is all
|
||
over thee: hail! hail: prophet of Nu! prophet of Had!
|
||
prophet of Ra-Hoor-Khu! Now rejoice! now come in our
|
||
splendour & rapture! Come in our passionate peace, & write
|
||
sweet words for the Kings.
|
||
65. I am the Master: thou art the Holy Chosen One.
|
||
66. Write, & find ecstasy in writing! Work, & be our bed in
|
||
working! Thrill with the joy of life & death! Ah! thy
|
||
death shall be lovely: whososeeth it shall be glad. Thy
|
||
death shall be the seal of the promise of our age long
|
||
love. Come! lift up thine heart & rejoice! We are one; we
|
||
are none.
|
||
67. Hold! Hold! Bear up in thy rapture; fall not in swoon of
|
||
the excellent kisses!
|
||
68. Harder! Hold up thyself! Lift thine head! breathe not so
|
||
deep-- die!
|
||
69. Ah! Ah! What do I feel? Is the word exhausted?
|
||
70. There is help & hope in other spells. Wisdom says: be
|
||
strong! Then canst thou bear more joy. Be not animal;
|
||
refine thy rapture! If thou drink, drink by the eight and
|
||
ninety rules of art: if thou love exceed by delicacy; and
|
||
if thou do aught joyous, let there be subtlety therein!
|
||
71. But exceed! exceed!
|
||
72. Strive ever to more! and if thou art truly mine -- and
|
||
doubt it not, an if thou art ever joyous! -- death is the
|
||
crown of all.
|
||
73. Ah! Ah! Death! Death! thou shalt long for death. Death is
|
||
forbidden, o man, unto thee.
|
||
74. The length of thy longing shall be the strength of its
|
||
glory. He that lives long & desires death much is ever the
|
||
King among the Kings.
|
||
75. Aye! listen to the numbers & the words:
|
||
76. 4 6 3 8 A B K 2 4 A L G M O R 3 Y X 24 89 R P S T O V A L.
|
||
What meaneth this, o prophet? Thou knowest not; nor shalt
|
||
thou know ever. There cometh one to follow thee: he shall
|
||
expound it. But remember, o chose none, to be me; to follow
|
||
the love of Nu in the star-lit heaven; to look forth upon
|
||
men, to tell them this glad word.
|
||
77. O be thou proud and mighty among men!
|
||
78. Lift up thyself! for there is none like unto thee among men
|
||
or among Gods! Lift up thyself, o my prophet, thy stature
|
||
shall surpass the stars. They shall worship thy name,
|
||
foursquare, mystic, wonderful, the number of the man; and
|
||
the name of thy house 418.
|
||
79. The end of the hiding of Hadit; and blessing & worship to
|
||
the prophet of the lovely Star!
|
||
|
||
***
|
||
|
||
1. Abrahadabra; the reward of Ra Hoor Khut.
|
||
2. There is division hither homeward; there is a word not
|
||
known. Spelling is defunct; all is not aught. Beware! Hold!
|
||
Raise the spell of Ra-Hoor-Khuit!
|
||
3. Now let it be first understood that I am a god of War and of
|
||
Vengeance. I shall deal hardly with them.
|
||
4. Choose ye an island!
|
||
5. Fortify it!
|
||
6. Dung it about with enginery of war!
|
||
7. I will give you a war-engine.
|
||
8. With it ye shall smite the peoples; and none shall stand
|
||
before you.
|
||
9. Lurk! Withdraw! Upon them! this is the Law of the Battle of
|
||
Conquest: thus shall my worship be about my secret house.
|
||
10. Get the stele of revealing itself; set it in thy secret
|
||
temple -- and that temple is already aright disposed -- & it
|
||
shall be your Kiblah for ever. It shall not fade, but
|
||
miraculous colour shall come back to it day after day. Close
|
||
it in locked glass for a proof to the world.
|
||
11. This shall be your only proof. I forbid argument. Conquer!
|
||
That is enough. I will make easy to you the abstruction from
|
||
the ill-ordered house in the Victorious City. Thou shalt
|
||
thyself convey it with worship, o prophet, though thou
|
||
likest it not. Thou shalt have danger & trouble. Ra-Hoor-
|
||
Khu is with thee. Worship me with fire & blood; worship me
|
||
with swords & with spears. Let the woman be girt with a
|
||
sword before me: let blood flow to my name. Trample down the
|
||
Heathen; be upon them, o warrior, I will give you of their
|
||
flesh to eat!
|
||
12. Sacrifice cattle, little and big: after a child.
|
||
13. But not now.
|
||
14. Ye shall see that hour, o blessed Beast, and thou the
|
||
Scarlet Concubine of his desire!
|
||
15. Ye shall be sad thereof.
|
||
16. Deem not too eagerly to catch the promises; fear not to
|
||
undergo the curses. Ye, even ye, know not this meaning all.
|
||
17. Fear not at all; fear neither men nor Fates, nor gods, nor
|
||
anything. Money fear not, nor laughter of the folk folly,
|
||
nor any other power in heaven or upon the earth or under the
|
||
earth. Nu is your refuge as Hadit your light; and I am the
|
||
strength, force, vigour, of your arms.
|
||
18. Mercy let be off; damn them who pity! Kill and torture;
|
||
spare not; be upon them!
|
||
19. That stele they shall call the Abomination of Desolation;
|
||
count well its name, & it shall be to you as 718.
|
||
20. Why? Because of the fall of Because, that he is not there
|
||
again.
|
||
21. Set up my image in the East: thou shalt buy thee an image
|
||
which I will show thee, especial, not unlike the one thou
|
||
knowest. And it shall be suddenly easy for thee to do this.
|
||
22. The other images group around me to support me: let all be
|
||
worshipped, for they shall cluster to exalt me. I am the
|
||
visible object of worship; the others are secret; for the
|
||
Beast & his Bride are they: and for the winners of the
|
||
Ordeal x. What is this? Thou shalt know.
|
||
23. For perfume mix meal & honey & thick leavings of red wine:
|
||
then oil of Abramelin and olive oil, and afterward soften &
|
||
smooth down with rich fresh blood.
|
||
24. The best blood is of the moon, monthly: then the fresh blood
|
||
of a child, or dropping from the host of heaven: then of
|
||
enemies; then of the priest or of the worshippers: last of
|
||
some beast, no matter what.
|
||
25. This burn: of this make cakes & eat unto me. This hath also
|
||
another use; let it be laid before me, and kept thick with
|
||
perfumes of your orison: it shall become full of beetles as
|
||
it were and creeping things sacred unto me.
|
||
26. These slay, naming your enemies; & they shall fall before
|
||
you.
|
||
27. Also these shall breed lust & power of lust in you at the
|
||
eating thereof.
|
||
28. Also ye shall be strong in war.
|
||
29. Moreover, be they long kept, it is better; for they swell
|
||
with my force. All before me.
|
||
30. My altar is of open brass work: burn thereon in silver or
|
||
gold!
|
||
31. There cometh a rich man from the West who shall pour his
|
||
gold upon thee.
|
||
32. From gold forge steel!
|
||
33. Be ready to fly or to smite!
|
||
34. But your holy place shall be untouched throughout the
|
||
centuries: though with fire and sword it be burnt down &
|
||
shattered, yet an invisible house there standeth, and shall
|
||
stand until the fall of the Great Equinox; when Hrumachis
|
||
shall arise and the double-wanded one assume my throne and
|
||
place. Another prophet shall arise, and bring fresh fever
|
||
from the skies; another woman shall awakethe lust & worship
|
||
of the Snake; another soul of God and beast shall mingle in
|
||
the globed priest; another sacrifice shall stain the tomb;
|
||
another king shall reign; and blessing no longer be poured
|
||
To the Hawk-headed mystical Lord!
|
||
35. The half of the word of Heru-ra-ha, called Hoor-pa-kraat and
|
||
Ra-Hoor-Khut.
|
||
36. Then said the prophet unto the God:
|
||
37. I adore thee in the song --
|
||
I am the Lord of Thebes, and I
|
||
The inspired forth-speaker of Mentu;
|
||
For me unveils the veiled sky,
|
||
The self-slain Ankh-af-na-khonsu
|
||
Whose words are truth. I invoke, I greet
|
||
Thy presence, O Ra-Hoor-Khuit!
|
||
Unity uttermost showed!
|
||
I adore the might of Thy breath,
|
||
Supreme and terrible God,
|
||
Who makest the gods and death
|
||
To tremble before Thee: --
|
||
I, I adore thee!
|
||
Appear on the throne of Ra!
|
||
Open the ways of the Khu!
|
||
Lighten the ways of the Ka!
|
||
The ways of the Khabs run through
|
||
To stir me or still me!
|
||
Aum! let it fill me!
|
||
38. So that thy light is in me; & its red flame is as a sword in
|
||
my hand to push thy order. There is a secret door that I
|
||
shall make to establish thy way in all the quarters, (these
|
||
are the adorations, as thou hast written), as it is said:
|
||
|
||
The light is mine; its rays consume
|
||
Me: I have made a secret door
|
||
Into the House of Ra and Tum,
|
||
Of Khephra and of Ahathoor.
|
||
I am thy Theban, O Mentu,
|
||
The prophet Ankh-af-na-khonsu!
|
||
|
||
By Bes-na-Maut my breast I beat;
|
||
By wise Ta-Nech I weave my spell.
|
||
Show thy star-splendour, O Nuit!
|
||
Bid me within thine House to dwell,
|
||
O winged snake of light, Hadit!
|
||
Abide with me, Ra-Hoor-Khuit!
|
||
|
||
39. All this and a book to say how thou didst come hither and a
|
||
reproduction of this ink and paper for ever -- for in it is
|
||
the word secret & not only in the English -- and thy comment
|
||
upon this the Book of the Law shall be printed beautifully
|
||
in red ink and black upon beautiful paper made by hand; and
|
||
to each man and woman that thou meetest, were it but to dine
|
||
or to drink at them, it is the Law to give. Then they shall
|
||
chance to abide in this bliss or no; it is no odds. Do this
|
||
quickly!
|
||
40. But the work of the comment? That is easy; and Hadit burning
|
||
in thy heart shall make swift and secure thy pen.
|
||
41. Establish at thy Kaaba a clerk-house: all must be done well
|
||
and with business way.
|
||
42. The ordeals thou shalt oversee thyself, save only the blind
|
||
ones. Refuse none, but thou shalt know & destroy the
|
||
traitors. I am Ra-Hoor-Khuit; and I am powerful to protect
|
||
my servant. Success is thy proof: argue not; convert not;
|
||
talk not over much! Them that seek to entrap thee, to
|
||
overthrow thee, them attack without pity or quarter; &
|
||
destroy them utterly. Swift as a trodden serpent turn and
|
||
strike! Be thou yet deadlier than he! Drag down their souls
|
||
to awful torment: laugh at their fear: spit upon them!
|
||
43. Let the Scarlet Woman beware! If pity and compassion and
|
||
tenderness visit her heart; if she leave my work to toy with
|
||
old sweetnesses; then shall my vengeance be known. I will
|
||
slay me her child: I will alienate her heart: I will cast
|
||
her out from men: as a shrinking and despised harlot shall
|
||
she crawl through dusk wet streets, and die cold and an-
|
||
hungered.
|
||
44. But let her raise herself in pride! Let her follow me in my
|
||
way! Let her work the work of wickedness! Let her kill her
|
||
heart! Let her be loud and adulterous! Let her be covered
|
||
with jewels, and rich garments, and let her be shameless
|
||
before all men!
|
||
45. Then will I lift her to pinnacles of power: then will I
|
||
breed from her a child mightier than all the kings of the
|
||
earth. I will fill her with joy: with my force shall she see
|
||
& strike at the worship of Nu: she shall achieve Hadit.
|
||
46. I am the warrior Lord of the Forties: the Eighties cower
|
||
before me, & are abased. I will bring you to victory & joy:
|
||
I will be at your arms in battle & ye shall delight to slay.
|
||
Success is your proof; courage is your armour; go on, go on,
|
||
in my strength; & ye shall turn not back for any!
|
||
47. This book shall be translated into all tongues: but always
|
||
with the original in the writing of the Beast; for in the
|
||
chance shape of the letters and their position to one
|
||
another: in these are mysteries that no Beast shall divine.
|
||
Let him not seek to try: but one cometh after him, whence I
|
||
say not, who shall discover the Key of it all. Then this
|
||
line drawn is a key: then this circle squared in its failure
|
||
is a key also. And Abrahadabra. It shall be his child & that
|
||
strangely. Let him not seek after this; for thereby alone
|
||
can he fall from it.
|
||
48. Now this mystery of the letters is done, and I want to go on
|
||
to the holier place.
|
||
49. I am in a secret fourfold word, the blasphemy against all
|
||
gods of men.
|
||
50. Curse them! Curse them! Curse them!
|
||
51. With my Hawk's head I peck at the eyes of Jesus as he hangs
|
||
upon the cross.
|
||
52. I flap my wings in the face of Mohammed & blind him.
|
||
53. With my claws I tear out the flesh of the Indian and the
|
||
Buddhist, Mongol and Din.
|
||
54. Bahlasti! Ompehda! I spit on your crapulous creeds.
|
||
55. Let Mary inviolate be torn upon wheels: for her sake let all
|
||
chaste women be utterly despised among you!
|
||
56. Also for beauty's sake and love's!
|
||
57. Despise also all cowards; professional soldiers who dare not
|
||
fight, but play; all fools despise!
|
||
58. But the keen and the proud, the royal and the lofty; ye are
|
||
brothers!
|
||
59. As brothers fight ye!
|
||
60. There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt.
|
||
61. There is an end of the word of the God enthroned in Ra's
|
||
seat, lightening the girders of the soul.
|
||
62. To Me do ye reverence! to me come ye through tribulation of
|
||
ordeal, which is bliss.
|
||
63. The fool readeth this Book of the Law, and its comment; & he
|
||
understandeth it not.
|
||
64. Let him come through the first ordeal, & it will be to him
|
||
as silver.
|
||
65. Through the second, gold.
|
||
66. Through the third, stones of precious water.
|
||
67. Through the fourth, ultimate sparks of the intimate fire.
|
||
68. Yet to all it shall seem beautiful. Its enemies who say not
|
||
so, are mere liars.
|
||
69. There is success.
|
||
70. I am the Hawk-Headed Lord of Silence & of Strength; my
|
||
nemyss shrouds the night-blue sky.
|
||
71. Hail! ye twin warriors about the pillars of the world! for
|
||
your time is nigh at hand.
|
||
72. I am the Lord of the Double Wand of Power; the wand of the
|
||
Force of Coph Nia-- but my left hand is empty, for I have
|
||
crushed an Universe; & nought remains.
|
||
73. Paste the sheets from right to left and from top to bottom:
|
||
then behold!
|
||
74. There is a splendour in my name hidden and glorious, as the
|
||
sun of midnight is ever the son.
|
||
75. The ending of the words is the Word Abrahadabra.
|
||
|
||
The Book of the Law is Written
|
||
|
||
and Concealed.
|
||
|
||
Aum. Ha.
|
||
|
||
THE COMMENT.
|
||
|
||
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
|
||
|
||
The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this
|
||
copy after the first reading.
|
||
|
||
Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril.
|
||
These are most dire.
|
||
|
||
Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by
|
||
all, as centres of pestilence.
|
||
|
||
All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my
|
||
writings, each for himself.
|
||
|
||
There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt.
|
||
|
||
Love is the law, love under will.
|
||
|
||
The priest of the princes,
|
||
|
||
ANKH-F-N-KHONSU
|
||
|
||
GENESIS LIBRI AL
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER I.*1*
|
||
|
||
The Boyhood of Aleister Crowley.
|
||
|
||
At 36 Clarendon Square, Leamington, Warwickshire, England, at
|
||
I0.50 p.m. on the twelfth day of October, in the Eighteen Hundred
|
||
and Seventy-Fifth Year of the vulgar era, was born the person
|
||
whose history is to be recounted.
|
||
|
||
His father was named Edward Crowley; his mother, Emily Bertha,
|
||
her maiden name being Bishop. Edward Crowley was an Exclusive
|
||
Plymouth Brother, the most considered leader in that sect. This
|
||
branch of the family of Crowley has been settled in England since
|
||
Tudor times, but is Celtic in origin, Crowley being a clan in
|
||
Kerry and other counties in the South-West of Ireland, of the
|
||
same stock as the Breton `de Querouaille' or `de Kerval' which
|
||
gave a Duchess of Portsmouth to England. It is supposed that the
|
||
English branch---the direct ancestry of Edward Alexander
|
||
Crowley---came to England with the Duke of Richmond, and took
|
||
root at Bosworth.
|
||
|
||
In I88Ihe went to live at The Grange, Redhill, Surrey. In I884
|
||
the boy, who had till then been educated by governesses and
|
||
tutors, was sent to a school at St. Leonards, kept by some
|
||
extreme Evangelicals named Habershon. A year later he was
|
||
transferred to a school at Cambridge kept by a Plymouth Brother
|
||
of the name of Champney. (The dates in this paragraph are
|
||
possibly inaccurate. Documentary evidence is at the present
|
||
moment unavailable. Ed.)
|
||
|
||
On March 5, I887, Edward Crowley died. Two years later the boy
|
||
was removed from the school. Those two years were years of
|
||
unheard-of torture. He has written details in the Preface to
|
||
"The World's Tragedy." This torture seriously undermined his
|
||
health. For two years he travelled, mostly in Wales and
|
||
Scotland, with tutors. In I890 he went for a short time to a
|
||
school at Streatham, kept by a man named Yarrow, his mother
|
||
having moved there in order to be near her brother, an extremely
|
||
narrow Evangelical named Tom Bond Bishop. This prepared him for
|
||
Malvern, which he entered at the summer term of I89I. He only
|
||
remained there a year, as his health was still very delicate. In
|
||
the autumn he entered for a term at Tonbridge, but fell seriously
|
||
ill, and had to be removed. The year I893 was spent with tutors,
|
||
principally in Wales, the north of Scotland, and Eastbourne. In
|
||
I895 he completed his studies in chemistry at King's College,
|
||
London, and in October of that year entered Trinity College,
|
||
Cambridge.
|
||
|
||
With this ends the first period of his life. It is only
|
||
necessary to state briefly that his brain developed early. At
|
||
four years old he could read the Bible aloud, showing a marked
|
||
predilection for the lists of long names, the only part of the
|
||
Bible which has not been tampered with by theologians.*1* He
|
||
could also play chess well enough to beat the average amateur,
|
||
and though constantly playing never lost a game till I895.*2* He
|
||
was taught by a tailor who had been summoned to make clothes for
|
||
his father, and was treated as a guest on account of his being a
|
||
fellow "Plymouth Brother". He beat his teacher uniformly after
|
||
the first game. He must have been six or seven years old at this
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
He began to write poetry in I886, if not earlier. Vide
|
||
"Oracles".
|
||
|
||
After the death of his father, who was a man of strong common
|
||
sense, and never allowed his religion to interfere with natural
|
||
affection, he was in the hands of people of an entirely contrary
|
||
disposition. His mental attitude was soon concentrated in hatred
|
||
of the religion which they taught, and his will concentrated in
|
||
revolt against its oppressions. His main method of relief was
|
||
mountaineering, which left him alone with nature, away from the
|
||
tyrants.
|
||
|
||
The years from March, I887, until entering Trinity College,
|
||
Cambridge, in October, I895, represented a continual struggle
|
||
towards freedom. At Cambridge he felt himself to be his own
|
||
master, refused to attend Chapel, Lectures or Hall, and was
|
||
wisely left alone to work out his won salvation by his tutor, the
|
||
late Dr. A. W. Verrall.
|
||
|
||
It must be stated that he possessed natural intellectual ability
|
||
to an altogether extraordinary degree. He had the faculty of
|
||
memory, especially verbal memory, in astonishing perfection.
|
||
|
||
As a boy he could find almost any verse in the Bible after a few
|
||
minutes search. In I900 he was tested in the works of
|
||
Shakespeare, Shelley, Swinburne (Ist series of Poems and
|
||
Ballads), Browning and The Moonstone. He was able to place
|
||
exactly any phrase from any of these books, and in nearly every
|
||
case to continue with the passage.
|
||
|
||
He showed remarkable facility in acquiring the elements of Latin,
|
||
Greek, French, Mathematics and Science. He learnt "little
|
||
Roscoe" almost by heart, on his won initiative. When in the
|
||
Lower Fifth at Malvern, he came out sixth in the school in the
|
||
annual Shakespeare examination, though he had given only two days
|
||
to preparing for it. Once, when the Mathematical Master, wishing
|
||
to devote the hour to cramming advanced pupils, told th class to
|
||
work out a set of examples of Quadratic Equations, he retorted by
|
||
asking at the end of forty minutes what he should do next, and
|
||
handed up the whole series of 63 equations, correct.
|
||
|
||
He passed all his examinations both at school and university
|
||
with honours, though refusing uniformly to work for them.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, he could not be persuaded or constrained to
|
||
apply himself to any subject which did not appeal to him. He
|
||
showed intense repugnance to history, geography, and botany,
|
||
among others. He could never learn to write Greek and Latin
|
||
verses, this probably because the rules of scansion seemed
|
||
arbitrary and formal.
|
||
|
||
Again, it was impossible to him to take interest in anything from
|
||
the moment that he had grasped the principles of "how it was, or
|
||
might be done." This trait prevented him from putting the
|
||
finishing touches to anything he attempted.
|
||
|
||
For instance, he refused to present himself for the second part
|
||
of his final examination for his B.A. degree, simply because
|
||
he knew himself thoroughly master of the subject!*1*
|
||
|
||
This characteristic extended to his physical pleasures. He was
|
||
abjectly incompetent at easy practice climbing on boulders,
|
||
because he knew he could do them. It seemed incredible to the
|
||
other men that this lazy duffer should be the most daring and
|
||
dexterous cragsman of his generation, as he proved himself
|
||
whenever he tackled a precipice which had baffled every other
|
||
climber in the world.*2* Similarly, once he had worked out theo-
|
||
retically a method of climbing a mountain, he was quite content
|
||
to tell the secret to others, and let them appropriate the glory.
|
||
(The first ascent of the Dent du Geant from the Montanvers is a
|
||
case in point.) It mattered everything to him that something
|
||
should be done, nothing that he should be the one to do it.
|
||
|
||
This almost inhuman unselfishness was not incompatible with
|
||
consuming and insatiable personal ambition. The key to the
|
||
puzzle is probably this ; he wanted to be something that nobody
|
||
else had ever been, or could be. He lost interest in chess as
|
||
soon as he had proved to himself (at the age of 22) that he was a
|
||
master of the game, having beaten some of the strongest amateurs
|
||
in England, and even one or two professional "masters." He
|
||
turned from poetry to painting, more or less, when he had made it
|
||
quite certain that he was the greatest poet of his time. Even in
|
||
Magick, having become The Word of the Aeon, and thus taken his
|
||
place with the other Seven Magi known to history, out of reach of
|
||
all possible competition, he began to neglect the subject. He is
|
||
only able to devote himself to it as he does because he has
|
||
eliminated all personal ideas from his Work ; it has become as
|
||
automatic as respiration.
|
||
|
||
We must also put on record his extraordinary powers in certain
|
||
unusual spheres. He can remember the minutest details of a rock-
|
||
climb, after years of absence. He can retrace his steps over any
|
||
path once traversed, in the wildest weathee or the blackest
|
||
night. He can divine the one possible passagr through the most
|
||
complex and dangerous ice-fall. (E.g. the Vuibez seraes in I897,
|
||
the Mer de Glace, right centre, in I899.)
|
||
|
||
He possesses a "sense of direction" independent of any known
|
||
physical methods of taking one's bearings ; and this is as effec-
|
||
tive in strange cities as on mountains or deserts. He can smell
|
||
the presence of water, of snow, and other supposedly scentless
|
||
substances. His endurance is exceptional. He has been known to
|
||
write for 67 consecutive hours : his "Tannhauser" was thus
|
||
written in I900. He has walked over I00 miles in 2 I/2 days, in
|
||
the desert : as in the winter of I9I0. He has frequently made
|
||
expeditions lasting over 36 hours, on mountains, in the most
|
||
adverse connditions. He holds the World's record for the great-
|
||
est number of days spent on a glacier--65 days on the Baltoro in
|
||
I902; also that for the greatest pace uphill over I6,000
|
||
feet--4,000 feet in I hour 23 minutes on Iztaccihuatl in I900;
|
||
that for the highest peak (first ascent by a solitary
|
||
climber)--the Nevado de Toluca in I90I; and numerous others.*1*
|
||
|
||
Yet he is utterly fagged-out by the mere idea of a walk of a few
|
||
hundred yards, if it does not interest him, and excite his
|
||
imagination, to take it ; and it is only with the greatest effort
|
||
that he can summon the energy to write a few lines if, instead of
|
||
his wanting to do them, he merely knows that they must be done.
|
||
|
||
This account has been deemed necessary to explain how it is that
|
||
a man of such unimaginable commanding qualities as to have made
|
||
him world-famous in so many diverse spheres of action, should
|
||
have been so grotesquely unable to make use of his faculties, or
|
||
even of his achievements, in any of the ordinary channels of
|
||
human activity; to consolidate his personal pre-eminence, or even
|
||
to secure his position from a social or economic standpoint.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER II.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Adolescence : Beginnings of Magick.
|
||
|
||
The Birth of
|
||
FRATER PERDURABO.
|
||
|
||
0 =0 to 4 =7
|
||
|
||
Having won freedom, he had the sense not to waste any time in
|
||
enjoying it. He had been deprived of all English literature but
|
||
the Bible during the whole of his youth, and he spent his three
|
||
years at Cambridge in repairing the defect. He was also working
|
||
for the Diplomatic Service, the late Lord Salisbury and the late
|
||
Lord Ritchie having taken an interest in his career, and given
|
||
him nominations. In October, I897, he was suddenly recalled to
|
||
his understanding of the evils of the alleged 'existing
|
||
religion,' and experienced a trance, in which he perceived the
|
||
utter folly of all human ambition. The fame of an ambassador
|
||
rarely outlives a century. That of a poet is almost as
|
||
ephemeral. The earth must one day perish. He must build in some
|
||
material more lasting. This conception drove him to the study of
|
||
Alchemy and Magick. He wrote to the author of "The Book of Black
|
||
Magic and of Pacts," a pompous American named Arthur Waite,
|
||
notorious for the affectations and obscurities of his style, and
|
||
the mealy-mouthed muddle of his mysticism. This nebulous
|
||
impresario, presentin an asthmatic Isis in the Opera "Bull-
|
||
Frogs," had hinted in his preface that he knew certain occult
|
||
sanctuaries wherein Truth and Wisdom were jealously guarded by a
|
||
body of Initiates, to be despensed to the postulant who proved
|
||
himself worthy to partake of their privileges. Mr. Waite
|
||
recommended him to read a book called "The Cloud on the
|
||
Sanctuary."
|
||
|
||
His taste for mountaineering had become a powerful passion, and
|
||
he was climbing in Cumberland when he met Oscar Eckenstein,
|
||
perhaps the greatest of all the mountaineers of his period, with
|
||
whom he was destined to climb thenceforward until I902.
|
||
|
||
In the summer a party was fromed to camp on the Schonbuhl Glacier
|
||
at the foot of the Dent Blanche, with a view to an expedition ot
|
||
the Himalayas later on. During his weeks on the Glacier, where
|
||
the bad weather was continous, he studied assiduously the
|
||
translation by S. L. Mathers of three books which form part of
|
||
von Rosenroth's "Kabbalah Unveiled." On one of his decents to
|
||
Zermatt, he met a distinguished chemist, Julian L. Bater, who had
|
||
studied Alchemy. He hunted this clue through the valley, and
|
||
made Baker promise to meet him in London at the end of the sea-
|
||
son, and introduce him to others who were interested in Occult
|
||
science. This happened in September ; through Baker, he met
|
||
another chemist named George Cecil Jones, who introduced him to
|
||
the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. He made rapid progress in
|
||
this Order, and in the spring of I900 was its chief in England.
|
||
The details of this period must be studied in "The Temple of
|
||
Solomon the King," where a full account of the Order is given.
|
||
In the Order he met one, Allan Bennett, Frater Iehi Aour. Jones
|
||
and Bennett were both Adepts of high standing. The latter came
|
||
to live with him in his flat, and together they carried out many
|
||
operations of ceremonial magick. Allan Bennett was constant
|
||
illhealth, and went to Ceylon at the end of I899. It was on his
|
||
entry into this Order that the subject of this history took the
|
||
motto of "Perdurabo"--'I will endure to the end.'
|
||
|
||
In July, I900, he went to Mexico, and devoted his whole time to
|
||
the continued practice of Magick, in which he obtained
|
||
extraordinary success. (See Equinox Vol. I, No. III for a
|
||
condensed account of some of these. It may be here stated
|
||
summarily that he invoked certain Gods, Goddesses, and Spirits to
|
||
visible appearance, learnt how to heal physical and moral
|
||
diseases, how to make himself invisible, how to obtain
|
||
communications from spiritual sources, how to control other
|
||
minds, etc., etc.) And then....
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER III.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Beginnings of Mysticism.
|
||
|
||
The Birth of
|
||
FRATER OU MH.
|
||
|
||
7=4
|
||
|
||
Oscar Eckenstein, on his arrival in Mexico, where he was to climb
|
||
mountains with the subject of our essay, found him in a rather
|
||
despondent mood. He had attained the most satisfactory results.
|
||
He was able to communicate with thed divine forces, and
|
||
operations such as those of invisibility and evocation had been
|
||
mastered. Yet with all this there was a certain dissatisfaction.
|
||
Success had not given him all that he had hoped for. He placed
|
||
the situration before his companion, rather to clear his own mind
|
||
than hoping for any help, for he supposed him to be entirely
|
||
ignorant of all these subjects, which he habitually treated with
|
||
dislike and contempt. Judge of his surprise, then, when he found
|
||
in this unpromising quarter a messenger form the Great White
|
||
Brotherhood ! His companion told him to abandon all magick.
|
||
|
||
"The Task," said Eckenstein, "involves the control of the mind.
|
||
Yours is a wandering mind." The proposition was indignantly
|
||
denied.
|
||
|
||
"Test it," said the Master. A short experiment was conclusive.
|
||
It was impossible for the boy to keep his mind fixed upon a
|
||
single object for even a few seconds at a time. The mind,
|
||
thougfh perfectly stable in motion, was unable to rest, just as a
|
||
gyroscope falls when the flywheel slows down. An entirely new
|
||
course of experiments was consequently undertaken. Half-an-hour
|
||
every morning and half-an-hour every evening were devoted to
|
||
attempts to control the mind, by the simple process of imagining
|
||
a familiar object, and endeavouring to keep concentrated upon
|
||
it.*1*
|
||
|
||
He soon became sufficiently expert in this initial practice to
|
||
proceed to concentration on regularly moving objects such as a
|
||
pendulum, and, ultimately, on living objects. A further series
|
||
of experiments dealt with the other senses. He tried to imagine
|
||
and retain the taste of chocolate or of quinine, the smell of
|
||
various familiar perfumes, the sound of bells, waterfalls, and so
|
||
on, or the feeling excited by such objects as velvet, silk, fur,
|
||
sand and steel.
|
||
|
||
In the spring of I90I, he left Mexico, went to San Francisco,
|
||
Honolulu, Japan, China and Ceylon, always continuing these
|
||
experiments. His Master had not told him to what they would
|
||
ultimately lead. In Ceylon he found Frater I.A. (Allan Bennett),
|
||
with whom he went to Kandy, where they took a bungalow named
|
||
Marlboroigh, overlooking the lake.
|
||
|
||
|
||
I.A. had himself been developing on similar lines under P.
|
||
Ramanathan, the Solicitor-General of Ceylon, known to occultists
|
||
under the name of Shri Parananda.*2* I.A. told him that in order
|
||
to concentrate he must first see that no interruptions reached
|
||
him from the body, and counselled the adoption of Asana, a
|
||
settled position in which all bodily movement was to be
|
||
suppressed. Further, he was to practice Pranayama, or control of
|
||
the breathing, which has a similar effect in reducing to the
|
||
lowest possible point the internal movements of the body.*1*
|
||
|
||
During the months of this stay at Kandy, he practised these,
|
||
obtained success in Asana, the intense pain of the practices
|
||
being overcome, and changed into an indescribable sense of
|
||
physical well-being and comfort.
|
||
|
||
While in Pranayama he passed through the first stage, which is
|
||
marked by profuse perspiration of a peculiar kind ; the second,
|
||
which is accompanied by rigidity of the body ; and the third, in
|
||
which the body unconsciously hops about the floor, without in any
|
||
way disturbing the Asana.
|
||
|
||
During the latter part of August and the whole of September, his
|
||
practices became continous by day and night, in order to create a
|
||
rhythm in the mind similar to that which Pranayama produces in
|
||
the body. He adopted a Mantra, or sacred sentence, by the
|
||
constant repetition of which it became automatic in his brain, so
|
||
that it would continue through sleep, and he would wake up
|
||
actually repeating the words. Sleep itself, too, was broken up
|
||
into short periods of very light sleep of a peculiar kind, in
|
||
which consciousness is hardly lost, althougfh the body obtains
|
||
perdect rest. These practices continued into October, at the
|
||
beginning of which he reached the state of Dhyana, a tremendous
|
||
spiritual experience, in which the subject and object of
|
||
meditation unite with excessive violence in blinding brilliance
|
||
and music of a kind to which earthly harmony affords no
|
||
parallel.*1*
|
||
|
||
The result of this however was to cause so intense a satisfaction
|
||
with his progress, that he gave up work. He then visited
|
||
Anuradhapura and others of the buried cities of Ceylon. In
|
||
November he went to India, and in January visited I.A. at Akyab
|
||
in Burma,where that Adept was living in a monastery, with the
|
||
intention of preparing himself to take the Yellow Robe of the
|
||
Buddhist Sangha. The whole of the summer of I902 was spent in an
|
||
expedition to Chogo Ri (K2) in the Himalayas.*2* During the
|
||
whole of this period he did very little occult work.
|
||
|
||
November, I902, him in Paris, where he stayed off and on till the
|
||
spring of I903, when he returned to his house in Scotland.
|
||
|
||
We must now go backwards in time, to take up a thread which had
|
||
run through his whole work, so umportant as to demand a chapter
|
||
to itself:--
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IV.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.
|
||
|
||
The Birth of
|
||
FRATER----------*1* 5=6 A. A.
|
||
|
||
In the autumn of I898 George Cecil Jones had directed the
|
||
attention of Frater Perdurabo to a book entitled "The Book of the
|
||
Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage." The essence of this book is
|
||
as follows :
|
||
|
||
The aspirant must have a house secure from observation and
|
||
interference. In this house there must be an oratory with a
|
||
window to the East, and a door to the North opening upon a
|
||
terrace, at the end of which must be a lodge. He must have a
|
||
Robe, Crown, Wand, Altar, Incense, Anointing Oil, and a Silver
|
||
Lamen. The terrace and lodge must be strewn with fine sand. He
|
||
withdraws himself gradually from human intercourse to devote
|
||
himself more and more to prayer for the space of four months. He
|
||
must then occupy two months in almost continuous prayer, speaking
|
||
as little as possible to anybody. At the end of this period he
|
||
invokes a being described as the Holy Guardian Angle, who appears
|
||
to him (or to a child employed by him), and who will write in dew
|
||
upon the Lamen, which is placed upon the Altar. The Oratory is
|
||
filled d with Divine Perfume not of the aspirant's kindling.
|
||
|
||
After a period of communion with the Angel, he summons the Four
|
||
Great Princes of the Daemonic World, and forces them to swear
|
||
obedience.
|
||
|
||
On the following day he calls forward and subdues the Eight Sub-
|
||
Princes ; and the day after that, the many Spirits serving these.
|
||
These inferior Daemons, of whom four act as familiar spirits,
|
||
then operate a collection of talismans for various purposes.
|
||
Such is a brief account of the Operation described in the book.
|
||
|
||
This Operation strongly appealed to our student. He immediately
|
||
set about to procure a suitable house, and to prepare everything
|
||
that might be necessary for the operation. All was ready for the
|
||
beginning in Easter of I900, and it must be said that the
|
||
preliminary work alone is so tremendous that a long story might
|
||
be written of the events of these I8 months of preparation. The
|
||
Operation itself was however never begun. A fortnight or so
|
||
before the time appointed, he received an urgent appeal from his
|
||
Master to save him and the Order from destruction. He gave up
|
||
his own prospects of personal advancement without hesitation, and
|
||
hastened to Paris.*1*
|
||
|
||
That the Master proved to be no Master, and the Order no Order,
|
||
but the incarnation of Disorder, had no effect upon the good
|
||
Karma created by this renunciation of a project on which he had
|
||
set his heart for so long.
|
||
|
||
In Mexico, he kept vigil during several nights in the Temple of
|
||
the Order of the Lamp of the Invisible Light, an Order whose High
|
||
Priest is pledged to maintain a Secret and Eternal Lamp. In this
|
||
shrine he received some shadowing forth of the Vision of the Holy
|
||
Guardian Angel, and that of the Four Great Princes : here also
|
||
he renewed the Oath of the Operation.
|
||
|
||
(The whole of his magical career is best interpreted as the
|
||
performance of this Operation. One must not suppose that
|
||
Initiation is a formality, observing the "unities," like being
|
||
made a Mason. All life pertains to the process, and it pervades
|
||
the whole personality ; the official recognition of attainment is
|
||
merely a token of what had taken place.)
|
||
|
||
On his return to Scotland in I903, he found ample evidence of the
|
||
presence of the forces of the Operation, but by now, having
|
||
conceived that Work in a subtler manner and having prepared to
|
||
carry it out in the Temple of his own body, having seen Magick,
|
||
in short, more of less in the manner in which it is seen in Parts
|
||
II and III of the Book 4, he was able to dispense with the
|
||
exterior physical appurtenances of this Operation.
|
||
|
||
We must now pass over a few years, and deal with the completion
|
||
of this Operation, although it is in a sense irrelevant to the
|
||
purpose of this book.
|
||
|
||
During the winter of I905-6, he was traveling across China. He
|
||
had come to the point of conquering his mind. That mind had
|
||
broken up. He saw that the human mind is by its very nature
|
||
evanescent, because of the fact that nature is not unity but
|
||
duality. Truth is relative. All things end in mystery. In such
|
||
sentences have the philosophers of the past formulated this
|
||
proposition, as announcing the intellectual bankruptcy which he,
|
||
with greater frankness, describes as insanity.
|
||
|
||
Passing from this, he became as a little child, and on reaching
|
||
the Unity behind the mind, found the purpose of his life
|
||
formulated in these words, The Obtaining of the Knowledge and
|
||
Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel.
|
||
|
||
He then found himself, having destroyed all other Karma,
|
||
perfectly free to pursue this one work. He then accomplished the
|
||
six months of Invocation, as prescribed in the Book of the Sacred
|
||
Magic, and was rewarded in October, I906, by complete success.*1*
|
||
|
||
He then proceeded to the evocation and conquest of the Four Great
|
||
Princes and their Inferiors, a work whose results must be studied
|
||
in the light of his subsequent career.
|
||
|
||
We have now finished all that is necessary to say concerning him,
|
||
for the account of some of his further Attainment is given fully
|
||
in Liber CDXVIII, "The Vision and the Voice," also in Equinox
|
||
Vol. I No. X "The Temple of Solomon the King," where the
|
||
unexpected result of the Communion of the Holy Guardian Angel is
|
||
shown in a symbolism which can hardly be understood without
|
||
reference to the events of I904, which are now wholly pertinent
|
||
to this Essay.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V.
|
||
|
||
The Results of Recession.
|
||
|
||
The wisest of the Popes, on being shown some miracles, refused to
|
||
be impressed, remarking that he did not believe in them, he had
|
||
seen too many. The result of the Meditation practices and their
|
||
results, following those of Magick, was to give our student a
|
||
conception of the Universe which was purely mental. Everything
|
||
was a phenomenon in mind. He did not as yet see that this
|
||
conception is self-destructive ; but it made him skeptical, and
|
||
indifferent to whatever happened. You cannot really be impressed
|
||
by anything which you know to be nothing more than one of your
|
||
own thoughts. Any occurrence can be interpreted as a thought, or
|
||
as a relation between two thoughts. In practice this leads to
|
||
profound indifferentism, miracles having become commonplace. But
|
||
what would be the amazement of the priest who, placing the Host
|
||
upon his tongue, found his mouth full of bleeding flesh ! At the
|
||
period of writing, it is evident for what purpose our student was
|
||
led into this state. I t was not to the Magician, not to the
|
||
mystic, it was to a militant member of the Rationalist Press
|
||
Association that the great Revelation was to be made. It was
|
||
necessary to prove to him that there was in actual truth a
|
||
Sanctuary, that there was in sober earnest a body of Adepts. It
|
||
matters nothing whether these Adepts are incarnated or
|
||
discarnated, human or divine. The only point at issue is that
|
||
there should be conscious Beings in possession of the deepest
|
||
secrets of Nature, pledged to the uplifting of humanity, filled
|
||
with Truth, Wisdom and Understanding. It is practical to prove
|
||
the existence of individuals whose knowledge and power, although
|
||
not complete--for the nature of Knowledge and Power is such that
|
||
they can never be complete, since the ideas themselves contain
|
||
imperfections--are yet enormously greater than aught known to the
|
||
rest of humanity.
|
||
|
||
It was of such a body that our student had heard in the "Cloud
|
||
upon the Sanctuary" ; admission to its adyta had been the guiding
|
||
hope of his life. His early attainments had tended rather to
|
||
shake his belief in the existence of such an organization. He
|
||
had not yet reckoned up the events of his life ; he had not yet
|
||
divined the direction and the set purpose informing their
|
||
apparently vagrant course. It might have been by chance that
|
||
whenever he had been confronted with any difficulty the right
|
||
person had instantly come forward to solve it, whether in the
|
||
valleys of Switzerland, the mountains of Mexico, or the jungles
|
||
of the East.
|
||
|
||
At this period of his life he would have scouted the idea as
|
||
fantastic. He had yet to learn that the story of Balaam and his
|
||
prophetic ass might be literally true. For the great Message
|
||
that came to him came, not through the mouth of any person with
|
||
any pretensions to any knowledge of this or any other sort, but
|
||
through an empty-headed woman of society. The plain facts of
|
||
this revelation must be succinctly stated in a new chapter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VI.
|
||
|
||
The Great Revelation.
|
||
|
||
The Arising of
|
||
THE BEAST 666.
|
||
|
||
9=2
|
||
|
||
It has been judged best to reprint as it stands the account of
|
||
these matters originally compiled for "The Temple of Solomon the
|
||
King." (Equinox Vol. I, No. VII, pp 357-386.)*1*
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE PRIEST
|
||
|
||
In opening this the most important section of Frater P.'s career,
|
||
we may be met by the unthinking with the criticism that since it
|
||
deals rather with his relation to others than with his personal
|
||
attainment, it has no place in this volume.*2*
|
||
|
||
Such criticism is indeed shallow. True, the incidents which we
|
||
are about to record took place on planes material or contiguous
|
||
thereto ; true, so obscure is the light by which we walk that
|
||
much must be left in doubt ; true, we have not as yet the supreme
|
||
mystical attainment to record ; but on the other hand it is our
|
||
view that the Seal set upon Attainment may be itself fittingly
|
||
recorded in the story of that Attainment, and that no step in
|
||
progress is more important than that when it is said to the
|
||
aspirant: "Now that you are able to walk alone, let it be your
|
||
first care to use that strength to help others!" And so this
|
||
great event which we are about to describe, an event which will
|
||
lead, as time will show, to the establishment of a New Heaven and
|
||
New Earth for all men, wore the simplest and humblest guise. So
|
||
often the gods come clad as peasants or as children ; nay, I have
|
||
listened to their voices in stones and trees.
|
||
|
||
However, we must not forget that there are persons so sensitive
|
||
and so credulous that they are convinced by anything, I suppose
|
||
that there are nearly as many beds in the world as there are men
|
||
; yet for the Evangelical every bed conceals its Jesuit.
|
||
|
||
We get "Milton composing baby rhymes" and "Locke reasoning in
|
||
gibberish," divine revelations which would shock the intelligence
|
||
of a sheep or a Saxon ; and we find these upheld and defended
|
||
with skill and courage.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, since we are to announce the divine revelation made to
|
||
Fra. P., it is of the last importance that we should study his
|
||
mind as is was at the time of the Unveiling. If we find it to be
|
||
the mind of a neurotic, of a mystic, of a person predisposed, we
|
||
shall slight the revelation ; if it be that of a sane man of the
|
||
world, we shall attach more importance to it.
|
||
|
||
If some dingy Alchemist emerges from his laboratory, and
|
||
proclaims to all Tooting that he has made gold, men doubt ; but
|
||
the conversion to spiritualism of Professor Lombroso made a great
|
||
deal of impression on those who did not understand that his
|
||
criminology was but the heaped delusion of a diseased brain.
|
||
|
||
So we shall find that the A.A. subtly prepared Fra. P. by over
|
||
two years' training in rationalism and indifferentism for Their
|
||
message. And we shall find that so well did They do Their work
|
||
that he refused the message for five years more, in spite of many
|
||
strange proofs of its truth. We shall find even that Fra. P. had
|
||
to be stripped naked of himself before he could effectively
|
||
deliver the message.
|
||
|
||
The battle was between all that mighty will of his and the Voice
|
||
of a Brother who spoke once, and entered again into His silence ;
|
||
and it was not Fra. P. who had the victory.
|
||
|
||
We left Fra. P. in the autumn of I90I having made considerable
|
||
progress in Yoga. We noted that in I902 he did little or nothing
|
||
either in Magic or Mysticism. The interpretation of the occult
|
||
phenomena which he had observed occupied him exclusively, and his
|
||
mind was more and more attracted to materialism.
|
||
|
||
What are phenomena ? he asked. Of noumena I know and can know
|
||
nothing. All I know is, as far as I know, a mere modification of
|
||
the mind, a phase of consciousness. And thought is a secretion
|
||
of the brain. Consciousness is a function of the brain.
|
||
|
||
If this thought was contradicted by the obvious, "And what is the
|
||
brain ? A phenomenon in mind !", it weighed less with him. It
|
||
seemed to his mind as yet unbalanced (for all men are unbalanced
|
||
until they have crossed the Abyss), that it was more important to
|
||
insist on matter than on mind. Idealism wrought such misery, was
|
||
the father of all illusion, never led to research. And yet, what
|
||
odds ? Every act or thought is determined by an infinity of
|
||
causes, is the resultant of an infinity of forces. He analysed
|
||
God, saw that every man had made God in his own image, saw the
|
||
savage and cannibal Jews devoted to a savage and cannibal God,
|
||
who commanded the rape of virgins and the murder of little
|
||
children. He saw the timid inhabitants of India, races
|
||
continually the prey of every robber tribe, inventing the
|
||
effeminate Vishnu; while, under the same name, their conquerors
|
||
worshiped a warrior, the conqueror of Demon Swans. He saw the
|
||
flower of earth throughout all time, the gracious Greeks, what
|
||
gracious gods they had invented. He saw Rome, in its strength
|
||
devoted to Mars, Jupiter and Hercules, in its decay turning to
|
||
emasculate Attis, slain Adonis, murdered Osiris, crucified
|
||
Christ. He could even trace in his own life every aspiration,
|
||
every devotion, as a reflection of his physical and intellectual
|
||
needs. He saw, too, the folly of all this supernaturalism. He
|
||
heard the Boers and the British pray to the same Protestant God,
|
||
and it occurred to him that the early success of the former might
|
||
be due rather to superior valour than to superior praying power,
|
||
and their eventual defeat to the circumstance that they could
|
||
only bring 60,000 men against a quarter of a million. He saw,
|
||
too, the face of humanity mired in its own blood that dripped
|
||
from the leeches of religion fastened to its temples.
|
||
|
||
In all this he saw man as the only thing worth holding to ; the
|
||
one thing that needed to be "saved," but also the one thing that
|
||
could save it.
|
||
|
||
All that he had attained, then, he abandoned. The intuitions of
|
||
the Qabalah were cast behind him with a smile at his youthful
|
||
folly ; magic, if true, led nowhere ; Yoga had become psychology.
|
||
For the solution of his original problems of the universe he
|
||
looked to metaphysics ; he devoted his intellect to the cult of
|
||
absolute reason. He took up once more with Kant, Hume, Spencer,
|
||
Huxley, Tyndall, Maudsley, Mansel, Fitche, Schelling, Hegel, and
|
||
many another ; while as for his life, was he not a man ? He had
|
||
a wife ; he knew his duty to the race, and to his own ancient
|
||
graft thereof. He was a traveller and a sportsman ; very well,
|
||
then, live it ! So we find that from November, I9OI he did no
|
||
practices of any kind until the Spring Equinox of I904, with the
|
||
exception of a casual week in the summer of I903, and an
|
||
exhibition game of magick in the King's Chamber of the Great
|
||
|
||
Pyramid in November, I903, when by his invocations he filled that
|
||
chamber with a brightness as of full moonlight. (This was no
|
||
subjective illusion. The light was sufficient for him to read
|
||
the ritual by.) Only to conclude, "There, you see it ? What's
|
||
the good of it ?"
|
||
|
||
We find him climbing mountains, skating, fishing, hunting big
|
||
game, fulfilling the duties of a husband ; we find him with the
|
||
antipathy to all forms of spiritual thought and work which marks
|
||
disappointment.
|
||
|
||
If one goes up the wrong mountain by mistake, as may happen, no
|
||
beauties of that mountain can compensate for the disillusionment
|
||
when the error is laid bare. Leah may have been a very nice girl
|
||
indeed, but Jacob never cared for her after that terrible
|
||
awakening to find her face on the pillow when, after seven years'
|
||
toil, he wanted the expected Rachel.
|
||
|
||
So Fra. P., after five years barking up the wrong tree, had lost
|
||
interest in trees altogether as far as climbing them was
|
||
concerned. He might indulge in a little human pride : "See,
|
||
Jack, that's the branch I cut my name on when I was a boy"; but
|
||
even the golden fruit of Eternity in its branches, he would have
|
||
done no more than lift his gun and shoot the pigeon that flitted
|
||
through its foliage.
|
||
|
||
Of this "withdrawal from the vision" the proof is not merely
|
||
deducible from the absence of all occult documents in his
|
||
dossier, and from the full occupation of his life in external and
|
||
mundane duties and pleasures, but is made irrefragible and
|
||
emphatic by the positive evidence of his writings. Of these we
|
||
have several examples. Two are dramatisations of Greek
|
||
mythology, a subject offering every opportunity to the occultist.
|
||
Both are markedly free from any such allusions. We have also a
|
||
slim booklet, `Rosa Mundi,' in which the joys of pure human love
|
||
are pictured without the faintest tinge of mystic emotion.
|
||
Further, we have a play, `The God Eater,' in which the Origin of
|
||
Religion, as conceived by Spencer or Frazer, is dramatically
|
||
shown forth ; and lastly we have a satire, `Why Jesus Wept,'
|
||
hard, cynical, and brutal in its estimate of society, but
|
||
careless of any remedy for its ills.
|
||
|
||
It is as if the whole past of the man with all its aspiration and
|
||
attainment was blotted out. He saw life (for the first time,
|
||
perhaps) with commonplace human eyes. Cynicism he could
|
||
understand, romance he could understand ; all beyond was dark.
|
||
Happiness was the bedfellow of contempt.
|
||
|
||
We learn that, late in I903, he was proposing to visit China on a
|
||
sporting expedition, when a certain very commonplace
|
||
communication made to him by his wife caused him to postpone it.
|
||
"Let's go and kill something for a month or two," said he, "and
|
||
if you're right, we'll get back to nurses and doctors."
|
||
|
||
So we find them in Hambantota, the south-eastern province of
|
||
Ceylon, occupied solely with buffalo, elephant, leopard, sambhur,
|
||
and the hundred other objects of the chase.
|
||
|
||
We here insert extracts from the diary, indeed a meagre
|
||
production--after what we have seen of his previous record in
|
||
Ceylon.
|
||
|
||
Whole weeks pass without a word ; the great man was playing
|
||
bridge, poker, or golf!
|
||
|
||
The entry of February I9th reads as if it were going to be
|
||
interesting, but it is followed by that of February 20th. It is
|
||
however certain that about the I4th of March he took possession
|
||
of a flat in Cairo--in the Season !
|
||
|
||
Can bathos go further ?
|
||
So that the entry of March I6th is dated from Cairo.
|
||
(Our notes are given in round brackets.)
|
||
|
||
Frater P.'s Diary
|
||
|
||
(This diary is extremely incomplete and fragmentary. Many
|
||
entries, too, are evidently irrelevant or "blinds." We omit much
|
||
of the latter two types.)
|
||
|
||
"This eventful year I903 finds me at a nameless camp in the
|
||
jungle of a Southern Province of Ceylon ; my thoughts, otherwise
|
||
divided between Yoga and sport, are diverted by the fact of a
|
||
wife..."
|
||
|
||
(This reference to Yoga is the subconscious Magical Will of the
|
||
Vowed Initiate. He was not doing anything ; but, on questioning
|
||
himself, as was his custom at certain seasons, he felt obliged to
|
||
affirm his Aspiration.)
|
||
|
||
Jan. I ...(Much blotted out)...missed deer and hare.
|
||
So annoyed. Yet the omen is that the year is well
|
||
for works of Love and Union ; ill for those of
|
||
Hate. Be mine of Love ! (Note that he does not
|
||
add "and Union.")*1*
|
||
Jan. 28 Embark for Suez.
|
||
Feb. 7 Suez.
|
||
Feb. 8 Landed at Port Said.
|
||
Feb. 9 To Cairo.
|
||
Feb. II Saw b.f.g.
|
||
b.f.b.
|
||
(This entry is quite unintelligible to us.)
|
||
Feb. I9 To Helwan as Oriental Despot.
|
||
(Apparently P. had assumed some disguise, pro-
|
||
bably with the intention of trying to study Islam
|
||
from within as he had done with Hinduism.)
|
||
Feb. 20 Began golf.
|
||
March I6 Began INV. (invocation) IAO*2*
|
||
March I7 THOTH [in Greek] appeared.*3*
|
||
March I8 Told to INV. (invoke) HORUS*4* [in Greek] as the
|
||
sun*5* [drawn] by new way.
|
||
March I9 Did this badly at noon 30.
|
||
March 20 At I0 p.m. did well--Equinox of Gods--Nov--(? new)
|
||
C.R.C. (Christian Rosy Cross, we conjecture.)
|
||
Hoori now Hpnt (obviously "Hierophant").
|
||
March 2I in . I.A.M. (? one o'clock)
|
||
March 22 X.P.B.
|
||
(May this and the entry March 24, refer to the
|
||
brother of the A.A. who found him ?)
|
||
E.P.D. in 84 m.
|
||
(Unintelligible to us ; probably a blind.)
|
||
March 23 Y.K. done. (?His work on the Yi King.)*1*
|
||
March 24 Met [sanskrit] again.
|
||
March 25 823 Thus
|
||
46I =p f l y 2 b z
|
||
2I8 " "
|
||
(Blot) wch trouble with ds.
|
||
(Blot) P.B. (All unintelligible ; possibly a blind.)
|
||
April 6 Go off again to H, taking A's p.
|
||
(This is probably a blind.)
|
||
|
||
Before we go further into the history of this period we must
|
||
premise as follows.
|
||
|
||
Fra. P. never made a thorough record of this period. He seems to
|
||
have wavered between absolute scepticism in the bad sense, a
|
||
dislike of the revelation, on the one hand, and real enthusiasm
|
||
on the other. And the first of these moods would induce him to
|
||
do thins to spoil the effect of the latter. Hence the "blinds"
|
||
and stupid meaningless cyphers which deface the diary.
|
||
|
||
And, as if the Gods themselves wished to darken the Pylon, we
|
||
find later, when P.'s proud will had been broken, and he wished
|
||
to make straight the way of the historian, his memory (one of the
|
||
finest memories in the world) was utterly incompetent to make
|
||
everything certain.
|
||
|
||
However, nothing of which he was not certain will be entered in
|
||
this place.
|
||
|
||
We have one quite unspoiled and authoritative document:
|
||
|
||
"The Book of Results," written in one of the small Japanese
|
||
vellum note-books which he used to carry. Unfortunately, it
|
||
seems to have been abandoned after five days. What happened
|
||
between March 23rd and April 8th ?
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BOOK OF RESULTS
|
||
|
||
March I6th Die [mercury]*1* I invoke IAO.
|
||
(Fra. P. tells us that this was done by the ritual of the
|
||
"Bornless One," identical with the "Preliminary In-
|
||
vocation"*2* in the "Goetia," merely to amuse his wife
|
||
by showing her the sylphs. She refused or was unable
|
||
th see any sylphs, but became "inspired," and kept on
|
||
saying : "They're waiting for you !")
|
||
(Note. The maiden name of his wife was Rose
|
||
Edith Kelly. He called her Ouarda, the Arabic for
|
||
for "Rose." She is hereafter signified by
|
||
"Ouarda the Seer" or "W." for short. Ed.)
|
||
W. says "they" are "waiting for me."
|
||
|
||
I7. [Jupiter]*3* It is "all about the child." Also "all Osiris."
|
||
(Note the cynic and sceptic tone of this entry. How different it
|
||
appears in the light of Liber 4I8 !) Thoth, invoked with great
|
||
success, indwells us. (Yes ; but what happened ? Fra. P. has no
|
||
sort of idea.)
|
||
|
||
I8.[Venus]*4* Revealed that the waiter was Horus, whom I had
|
||
offended and ought to invoke. The ritual revealed in skeleton.
|
||
Promise of success [Saturn]*5* or [Sun]*6* and of Samadhi.
|
||
(Is this "waiter" another sneer ? We are uncertain.)
|
||
|
||
The revealing of the ritual (by W. the seer) consisted
|
||
chiefly in a prohibition of all formulae hitherto used,
|
||
as will be seen from the text printed below.
|
||
|
||
It was probable on this day that P. cross-examined W. about
|
||
Horus. Only the striking character of her identification of the
|
||
God, surely, would have made him trouble to obey her. He
|
||
remembers that he only agreed to obey her in order to show her
|
||
how silly she was, and he taunted her that "nothing could happen
|
||
of you broke all the rules."
|
||
|
||
Here therefore we insert a short note by Fra. P. how W. knew
|
||
R.H.K. (Ra Hoor Khuit)
|
||
|
||
I. Force and Fire (I asked her to describe his moral
|
||
qualities.)
|
||
|
||
2. Deep blue light. (I asked her to describe the conditions
|
||
caused by him. This light is quite unmistakable and unique ; but
|
||
of course her words, though a fair description of it, might
|
||
equally apply to some other.)
|
||
|
||
3. Horus. (I asked her to pick out his name from a list of
|
||
ten dashed off at haphazard.)
|
||
|
||
4. Recognized his figure when shown. (This refers to the
|
||
striking scene in the Boulak Museum, which will be dealt with in
|
||
detail.)
|
||
|
||
5. Knew my past relations with the God. (This means, I think,
|
||
that she knew I had taken his place in temple,*1* etc., and that
|
||
I had never once invoked him.)
|
||
|
||
6. Knew his enemy. (I asked, "Who is his enemy ?" Reply,
|
||
"Forces of the waters--of the Nile." W. knew no Egyptology--or
|
||
anything else.)
|
||
|
||
7. Knew his lineal figure and its colour. (A I/84 chance.)
|
||
|
||
8. Knew his place in temple. (A I/4 chance, at the least.)
|
||
|
||
9. Knew his weapon (from a list of 6.)
|
||
|
||
I0. Knew his planetary nature (from a list of 7 planets.)
|
||
|
||
II. Knew his number (from a list of I0 units.)
|
||
|
||
I2. Picked him out of (a)Five, (b)Three} indifferent, i,e,
|
||
arbitrary symbols. (This means that I settled in my own mind
|
||
that say D of A,B,C,D, and E should represent him and that she
|
||
then said D.)
|
||
|
||
We cannot too strongly insist on the extraordinary character of
|
||
this identification.
|
||
|
||
We had made no pretension to clairvoyance ; nor had P. ever tried
|
||
to train her.
|
||
|
||
P. had great experience with clairvoyants, and it was always a
|
||
point of honour with him to bowl them out. And here was a
|
||
novice, a woman who should never have been allowed outside a
|
||
ballroom, speaking with the authority of God, and proving it by
|
||
unhesitating correctness.
|
||
|
||
One slip, and Fra. P. would have sent her to the devil. And that
|
||
slip was not made. Calculate the odds ! We cannot find a
|
||
mathematical expression for tests I,2,3,4,5, or 6, but the other
|
||
7 tests give us
|
||
|
||
I/I0 x I/84 x I/4 x I/6 x I/7 x I/I0 x I/I5 = I/21,I68,000
|
||
|
||
Twenty-one million to one against her getting through half the
|
||
ordeal !
|
||
|
||
Even if we suppose what is absurd, that she knew the
|
||
correspondences of the Qabalah as well as Fra. P., and had know-
|
||
ledge of his own secret relations with the Unseen, we must strain
|
||
telepathy to explain test I2.
|
||
|
||
(Note. We may add, too, that Fra. P. thinks, but is not quite
|
||
certain, that he also tested her with the Hebrew Alphabet and the
|
||
Tarot trumps, in which case the long odds must be still further
|
||
multiplied by 484, bringing them over the billion mark!
|
||
|
||
But we know that she was perfectly ignorant of the subtle
|
||
correspondences, which were only existing at that time in Fra.
|
||
P.'s own brain.
|
||
|
||
And even if it were so, how are we to explain what followed--the
|
||
discovery of the Stele of Revealing ?
|
||
|
||
To apply test 4, Fra.P. took her to the museum at Boulak, which
|
||
they had not previously visited. She passed by (as P. noted with
|
||
silent glee) several images of Horus. They went upstairs. A
|
||
glass case stood in the distance, too far off for its contents to
|
||
be recognized. But W. recognized it ! "There," she cried,
|
||
"There he is !"
|
||
|
||
Fra. P. advanced to the case. There was the image of Horus in
|
||
the form of Ra Hoor Khuit painted upon a wooden stele of the 26th
|
||
dynasty--and the exhibit bore the number 666 !*1*
|
||
|
||
(And after that it was five years before Fra. P. was force to
|
||
obedience !)
|
||
|
||
This incident must have occurred before the 23rd of March, as the
|
||
entry on that date refers to Ankh-f-n-khonsu.
|
||
|
||
Here is P.'s description of the Stele. "In the museum at Cairo,
|
||
No. 666 is the stele of the Priest Ankh-f-n-khonsu.
|
||
|
||
Horus had a red Disk and green Uraeus.
|
||
|
||
His face is green, his skin indigo.
|
||
His necklace, anklets, and bracelets are gold.
|
||
His nemyss nearly black from blue.
|
||
His tunic is the Leopard's skin, and his apron green and gold.
|
||
Green is the wand of double Power ; his r.h. is empty.
|
||
His throne is indigo the gnomon, red the square.
|
||
The light is gamboge.
|
||
Above him are the Winged Globe and the bent figure of the
|
||
heavenly Isis, her hands and feet touching earth.
|
||
|
||
(We print the most recent translation of the Stele, by Messrs.
|
||
Alan Gardiner, Litt. D., and Battiscombe Gunn. It differs
|
||
slightly from that used by Fra. P., which was due to the
|
||
assistant-curator of the Museum at Boulak.)
|
||
|
||
STELE OF ANKH-F-NA-KHONSU.
|
||
|
||
Obverse
|
||
|
||
Topmost Register (under Winged Disk)
|
||
Behdet (? Hadit ?), the Great God, the Lord of Heaven.
|
||
Middle Register. Two vertical lines to left :---
|
||
Ra-Harakhti, Master of the Gods.
|
||
Five vertical lines to right :---
|
||
Osiris, the Priest of Montu, Lord of Thebes, Opener of the
|
||
doors of Nut in Karnak, Ankh-f-n-Khonsu, the Justified.
|
||
Below Altar :---
|
||
Oxen, Geese, Wine (?), Bread.
|
||
Behind the god is the hieroglyph of Amenti.
|
||
Lowest Register.
|
||
|
||
(I) Saith Osiris, the Priest of Montu, Lord of Thebes, the
|
||
opener of the Doors of Nut in Karnak, Ankh-f-n-Khonsu, (2) the
|
||
Justified :--"Hail, Thou whose praise is high (the highly
|
||
praised), thou great-willed. O Soul (ba) very awful (lit.
|
||
mighty, of awe) that giveth the terror of him (3) among the Gods,
|
||
shining in glory upon his great throne, making ways for the Soul
|
||
(ba) for the Spirit (yekh) and for the Shadow (khabt) : I am
|
||
prepared and I shine forth as one that is prepared. (4) I have
|
||
made way to the place in which are Ra, Tom, Khepri and Hathor."
|
||
|
||
Osiris, the Priest of Montu, Lord of Thebes (5) Ankh-f-na-Khonsu,
|
||
the Justified ; son of MNBSNMT*1* ; born of the Sistrum-bearer of
|
||
Amon, the Lady Atne-sher.
|
||
|
||
Reverse.
|
||
|
||
Eleven lines of writing.
|
||
|
||
(I) Saith Osiris, the Priest of Montu, Lord of Thebes, Ankh-f-
|
||
(2)na-Khonsu, the Justified :--"My heart from my mother, my heart
|
||
(different word, apparently synonymous, but probably not so at
|
||
all) of my existence (3) upon earth, stand not forth against me
|
||
as witness, drive me not back (4) among the Sovereign Judges
|
||
(quite an arbitrary conventional translation of the original
|
||
word), neither incline against me in the presence of the Great
|
||
God, the Lord of the West (Osiris of course) ; (5) Now that I am
|
||
united with Earth in the Great West, and endure no longer upon
|
||
Earth.
|
||
|
||
(6). Saith Osiris, he who is in Thebes, Ankh-f-na-Khonsu, the
|
||
Justified : "O Only (7) One, shining like (or in) the Moon;
|
||
Osiris Ankh-f-(8)na_Khonsu has come froth upon high among these
|
||
thy multitudes. (9) He that gathereth together those that are
|
||
in the Light, the Underworld (duat) is (also) (10) opened to him
|
||
; lo Osiris Ankh-f-na-Khonsu, cometh forth (II) by day to do all
|
||
that he wisheth upon earth among the living."
|
||
|
||
There is one other object to complete the secret of Wisdom--(P.
|
||
notes "perhaps a Thoth") or it is in the hieroglyphs.
|
||
(This last paragraph is, we suppose, dictated by W.)
|
||
|
||
We now return to the "Book of Results."
|
||
|
||
I9 The ritual written out and the invocation done--
|
||
little success.
|
||
20 Revealed (We cannot make out if this revelation
|
||
comes from W. or is a result of the ritual. But
|
||
almost certainly the former, as it precedes the "Great
|
||
Success" entry) that the Equinox of the Gods is come,
|
||
Horus taking the Throne of the East and all rituals,
|
||
etc., being abrogated.
|
||
(To explain this*1* we append to this chapter the G.D.
|
||
ritual of the Equinox, which was celebrated in the
|
||
spring and autumn within 48 hours of the actual
|
||
dates of Sol entering Aries and Libra.)
|
||
20 (contd.) Great success in midnight invocation.
|
||
(The other diary says I0 P.M. "Midnight" is perhaps a
|
||
loose phrase, or perhaps marks the climax of the
|
||
ritual.)
|
||
I am to formulate a new link of an Order with the
|
||
Solar Force.
|
||
|
||
(It is not clear what happened in this invocation ; but it is
|
||
evident from another note of certainly later date, that "great
|
||
success" does not mean "Samadhi." For P. writes: "I make it an
|
||
absolute condition that I should attain Samadhi in the god's won
|
||
interest." His memory concurs in this. It was the Samadhi
|
||
attained in October, I906, that set him again in the path of
|
||
obedience to this revelation.
|
||
|
||
But that "great success" means something very important is clear
|
||
enough. The sneering sceptic of the I7th of March must have had
|
||
a shock before he wrote those words.)
|
||
|
||
2I. [moon]. [sun] enters [aries].*1*
|
||
22. [mars]*2* The day of rest, on which nothing whatever of
|
||
magic is to be done at all. [mercury]*3* is to be the
|
||
great day of invocation.
|
||
|
||
(This note is due to W.'s prompting or to his own rationalizing
|
||
imagination.)
|
||
|
||
23. The Secret of Wisdom.
|
||
(We omit the record of a long and futile Tarot divination.)
|
||
At this point we may insert the Ritual which was so successful on
|
||
the 20th.
|
||
|
||
|
||
INVOCATION OF HORUS
|
||
ACCORDING TO THE DIVINE VISION OF W., THE
|
||
SEER.
|
||
|
||
To be performed before a window open to the E. or N. without
|
||
incense. The room to be filled with jewels, but only diamonds to
|
||
be worn. A sword, unconsecrated, 44 pearl beads to be told.
|
||
Stand. Bright daylight at I2.30 noon. Lock doors. White robes.
|
||
Bare feet. Be very loud. Saturday. Use the Sign of Apophis and
|
||
Typhon.
|
||
|
||
The above is W.'s answer to various questions posed by P.
|
||
|
||
Preliminary. Banish. L.B.R. Pentagram. L.B.R. Hexagram.
|
||
Flaming sword. Abrahadabra, Invoke. As before.
|
||
(These are P.'s ideas for the ritual. W. replied, "Omit.")
|
||
|
||
The MS. of this Ritual bears and left unrevised, save perhaps for
|
||
one glance. There are mistakes in grammar and spelling unique in
|
||
all MSS. of Fra. P. ; the use of capitals is irregular, and the
|
||
punctuation almost wanting.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
CONFESSION
|
||
|
||
Unprepared and uninvoking Thee, I, OY MH, Fra R.R. et A.C., am
|
||
here in Thy Presence--for Thou art Everywhere, O Lord Horus !--to
|
||
confess humbly before Thee my neglect and scorn of Thee.
|
||
|
||
How shall I humble myself enough before Thee ? Thou art the
|
||
mighty and unconquered Lord of the Universe : I am a spark of
|
||
Thine unutterable Radiance.
|
||
|
||
How should I approach Thee ? but Thou art Everywhere.
|
||
|
||
But Thou hast graciously deigned to call me unto Thee, to this
|
||
Exorcism of Art, that I may be Thy Servant, Thine Adept, O Bright
|
||
One, O Sun of Glory ! Thou hast called me--should I not then
|
||
hasten to Thy Presence ?
|
||
|
||
With unwashen hands therefore I come unto Thee, and I lament my
|
||
wandering from Thee--but Thou knowest !
|
||
|
||
Yea, I have evil !
|
||
|
||
If one (doubtless a reference to S.R.M.D. who was much obsessed
|
||
by Mars, P. saw Horus at first as Geburah ; later as an aspect of
|
||
Tiphereth, including Chesed and Geburah--the red Triangle
|
||
inverted--an aspect opposite to Osiris.) blasphemed Thee, why
|
||
should I therefore forsake Thee ? But Thou art the Avenger ; all
|
||
is with Thee.
|
||
|
||
I bow my neck before Thee ; and as once Thy sword was upon it
|
||
(see G.D. Ceremony of Neophyte, the Obligation), so am I in Thy
|
||
hands. Strike if Thou wilt : spare if Thou wilt : but accept
|
||
me as I am.
|
||
|
||
My trust is in Thee : shall I be confounded ? This Ritual of Art
|
||
; this Forty and Fourfold Invocation ; this Sacrifice of
|
||
Blood--(Merely, we suppose, that 44=DM, blood. Possibly a bowl
|
||
of blood was used. P. thinks it was in some of the workings at
|
||
this time, but is not sure if it was this one.)--these I do not
|
||
comprehend.
|
||
|
||
It is enough if I obey Thy decree ; did Thy fiat go forth for my
|
||
eternal misery, were it not my joy to execute Thy Sentence on
|
||
myself ?
|
||
|
||
For why ? For that All is in Thee and of Thee ; it is enough if
|
||
I burn up in the intolerable glory of Thy presence.
|
||
|
||
Enough ! I turn toward Thy Promise.
|
||
|
||
Doubtful are the Words : Dark are the Ways : but in Thy Words
|
||
and Ways is Light. Thus then now as ever, I enter the Path of
|
||
Darkness, if haply so I may attain the Light.
|
||
|
||
Hail !
|
||
|
||
a I [aleph]
|
||
|
||
Strike, strike the master chord !
|
||
Draw, draw the Flaming Sword !
|
||
Crowned Child and Conquering Lord,
|
||
Horus, avenger !
|
||
|
||
I. O Thou of the Head of the Hawk ! Thee, Thee, I invoke!
|
||
(At every "Thee I invoke," throughout whole ritual, give the
|
||
sign of Apophis.)
|
||
|
||
A. Thou only-begotten-child of Osiris Thy Father, and Isis Thy
|
||
Mother. He that was slain ; She that bore Thee in Her womb
|
||
flying from the Terror of the Water. Thee, Thee I invoke !
|
||
|
||
2. O Thou whose Apron is of flashing white, whiter than
|
||
the Forehead of the Morning ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
B. O Thou who hast formulated Thy Father and made fertile
|
||
Thy Mother ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
3. O Thou whose garment is of golden glory with the azure
|
||
bars of sky ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
C. Thou, who didst avenge the Horror of Death ; Thou the
|
||
slayer of Typhon ! Thou who didst lift Thine arms, and
|
||
the Dragons of Death were as dust : Thou who didst
|
||
raise Thine Head, and the Crocodile of Nile was abased
|
||
before Thee ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
4. O Thou whose Nemyss hideth the Universe with night, the
|
||
impermeable Blue ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
D. Thou who travellest in the Boat of Ra, abiding at the
|
||
Helm of the Aftet boat and of the Sektet boat ! Thee,
|
||
Thee, I invoke !
|
||
5. Thou who bearest the Wand of Double Power ! Thee,
|
||
Thee, I invoke !
|
||
E. Thou about whose presence is shed the darkness of Blue
|
||
Light, the unfathomable glory of the outmost Ether, the
|
||
untravelled, the unthinkable immensity of
|
||
Space. Thou who concentrest all the Thirty Ethers in
|
||
one darkling sphere of Fire ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
6. O Thou who bearest the Rose and Cross of Life and
|
||
Light ! Thee, Thee, I invoke !
|
||
The Voice of the Five.
|
||
The Voice of the Six.
|
||
Eleven are the Voices.
|
||
Abrahadabra !
|
||
|
||
|
||
[beta] II [beth]
|
||
|
||
Strike, strike the master chord !
|
||
Draw, draw the Flaming Sword !
|
||
Crowned Child and Conquering Lord,
|
||
Horus, Avenger !
|
||
|
||
I. By thy name of Ra, I invoke Thee, Hawk of the Sun, the
|
||
glorious one !
|
||
2. By thy name Harmachis, youth of the Brilliant Morning,
|
||
I invoke Thee !
|
||
3. By thy name, Mau, I invoke Thee, Lion of the Midday
|
||
Sun !
|
||
4. By thy name Tum, Hawk of the Even, crimson splendour of
|
||
the Sunset, I invoke Thee !
|
||
5. By thy name Khep-Ra I invoke Thee, O Beetle of the
|
||
hidden Mastery of Midnight !
|
||
A. By thy name Heru-pa-Kraat, Lord of Silence, Beautiful
|
||
Child that standest on the Dragons of the Deep, I
|
||
invoke Thee !
|
||
B. By thy name Apollo, I invoke Thee, O man of Strength
|
||
and splendour, O poet, O father !
|
||
C. By thy name of Phoebus, that drivest thy chariot
|
||
through the Heaven of Zeus, I invoke Thee !
|
||
D. By thy name of Odin I invoke Thee, O warrior of the
|
||
North, O Renown of the Sagas !
|
||
E. By thy name of Jeheshua, O child of the Flaming Star,
|
||
I invoke Thee !
|
||
F. By Thine own, Thy secret name Hoori, Thee I invoke !
|
||
|
||
The Names are Five.
|
||
The Names are Six.
|
||
Eleven are the Names !
|
||
Abrahadabra !
|
||
|
||
Behold ! I stand in the midst. Mine is the symbol of Osiris; to
|
||
Thee are mine eyes ever turned. Unto the splendour of Geburah,
|
||
the Magnificence of Chesed, the mystery of Daath, thither I lift
|
||
up mine eyes. This have I sought, and I have sought the Unity :
|
||
hear Thou me !
|
||
|
||
|
||
[GAMMA] III [GIMEL]
|
||
|
||
I. Mine is the Head of the Man, and my insight is keen as
|
||
the Hawk's. By my head I invoke Thee !
|
||
A. I am the only-begotten child of my Father and Mother.
|
||
By my body I invoke Thee !
|
||
2. About me shine the Diamonds of Radiance white and pure.
|
||
By their brightness I invoke Thee !
|
||
B. Mine is the Red Triangle Reversed, the Sign given of
|
||
none, save it be of Thee, O Lord ! (This sign had been
|
||
previously communicated by W. It was entirely new to
|
||
P.) By the Lamen I invoke Thee !
|
||
3. Mine is the garment of white sewn with gold, the
|
||
flashing abbai that I wear. By my robe I invoke Thee !
|
||
C. Mine is the sign of Apophis and Typhon ! By the sign
|
||
I invoke Thee !
|
||
4. Mine is the turban of white and gold, and mine the blue
|
||
vigour of the intimate air ! By my crown I invoke
|
||
Thee !
|
||
D. My fingers travel on the Beads of Pearl ; so run I
|
||
after Thee in thy car of glory. By my fingers I invoke
|
||
Thee ! (On Saturday the string of pearls broke : so
|
||
I changed the invocation to "My mystic sigils travel in
|
||
the Bark of the Akasa, etc. By the spells I invoke
|
||
Thee !--P.)
|
||
5. I bear the Wand of Double Power in the Voice of the
|
||
Master--Abrahadabra ! By the word I invoke Thee !
|
||
E. Mine are the dark-blue waves of music in the song that
|
||
I made of old to invoke Thee---
|
||
Strike, strike the master chord !
|
||
Draw, draw the Flaming Sword !
|
||
Crowned Child and Conquering Lord,
|
||
Horus, avenger !
|
||
|
||
By the Song I invoke Thee !
|
||
6. In my hand is thy Sword of Revenge ; let it strike at
|
||
Thy Bidding ! By the Sword I invoke Thee !
|
||
|
||
The Voice of the Five.
|
||
The Voice of the Six.
|
||
Eleven are the Voices.
|
||
Abrahadabra !
|
||
|
||
|
||
{help] IV [resh]
|
||
|
||
(This section merely repeats section I in the first person. Thus
|
||
it begins : I. "Mine is the Head of the Hawk ! Abrahadabra!"
|
||
and ends : 6. "I bear the Rose and Cross of Life and Light!
|
||
Abrahadabra !" giving the Sign at each Abrahadabra. Remaining in
|
||
the Sign, the invocation concludes:)
|
||
|
||
Therefore I say unto thee : Come forth and dwell in me;
|
||
so that every my Spirit, whether of the Firmament, or of
|
||
the Ether, or of the Earth or under the Earth ; on dry
|
||
land or in the Water, or Whirling Air or of Rushing Fire;
|
||
and every spell and scourge of God the Vast One may be
|
||
THOU. Abrahadabra !
|
||
|
||
The Adoration--impromptu.
|
||
|
||
Close by banishing. (I think this was omitted at W.'s
|
||
order.---P.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
During the period March 23rd--April 8th, whatever else may have
|
||
happened, it is at least certain that work was continued to some
|
||
extent, that the inscriptions of the stele were translated for
|
||
Fra. P., and that he paraphrased the latter in verse. For we
|
||
find him using, or prepared to use, the same in the text of Liber
|
||
Legis.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps then, perhaps later, he made out the "namecoincidences of
|
||
the Qabalah," to which we must now direct the reader's attention.
|
||
|
||
The MS. is a mere fragmentary sketch.
|
||
Ch=8=ChlTh=4I8 Abrahadabra=RA-HVVR (Ra-Hoor).
|
||
|
||
Also 8 is the great symbol I adore.
|
||
(This may be because of its likeness to [?] or because of
|
||
its [old G.D.] attributions to Daath, P. being then a
|
||
rationalist; or for some other reason.)
|
||
So is O.
|
||
O=A in the Book of Thoth (The Tarot).
|
||
A=III with all its great meanings, [sun]=6
|
||
Now 666=My name, the number of the stele, the number of The
|
||
Beast (See Apocalypse), the number of the Man.
|
||
The Beast AChIHA=666 in full. (The usual spelling is
|
||
ChIVA.)
|
||
(A=III, Ch=4I8, I=20, H=6, A=III.)
|
||
HRV-RA-HA. 2II + 201 + 6=4I8.
|
||
This name occurs only in L. Legis, and is a test of that
|
||
book rather than of the stele.)
|
||
ANKH-P-N-KHONShU-T=666
|
||
(We trust the addition of the termination T will be found
|
||
justifies.)
|
||
{Bes-n-maut, B I Sh N A - M A V T }=888
|
||
{Ta-Nich, Th A - N I Ch }=Ch x A.
|
||
Nuteru NVTh IRV=666
|
||
Montu MVNTV=III.
|
||
Aiwass AIVAS=78, the influence or messenger, or the Book T.
|
||
(P.S. Note this error ! Ed.)
|
||
Ta-Nich TA-NICh = 78. Alternatively, Sh for Ch gives 370, O
|
||
Sh, Creation.
|
||
So much we extract from volumes filled with minute calcula-
|
||
tions, of which the bulk is no longer intelligible even to Fra.
|
||
P.
|
||
|
||
His memory, however, assures us that the coincidences were much
|
||
more numerous and striking than those we have been able to
|
||
reproduce here ; but his attitude is, we understand that after
|
||
all "It's all in Liber Legis. `Success is thy proof: argue not;
|
||
convert not ; talk not overmuch !'" And indeed in the Commentary
|
||
to that Book will be found sufficient for the most wary of
|
||
inquirers.
|
||
|
||
Now who, it may be asked, was Aiwass ? It is the name given by
|
||
W. to P. as that of her informant. Also it is the name given as
|
||
that of the revealer of Liber Legis. But whether Aiwass is a
|
||
spiritual being, or a man known to Fra. P., is a matter of the
|
||
merest conjecture. His number is 78*1*, that of Mezla, the
|
||
Channel through which Macroprosopus reveals Himself to, or
|
||
showers His influence upon, Microposopus.*2* So we find Fra. P.
|
||
speaking of him at one time as of another, but more advanced man
|
||
; at another time as if it were the name of his own superior in
|
||
the Spiritual Hierarchy. And to all questions Fra. P. finds a
|
||
reply, either pointing out "the subtle metaphysical distinction
|
||
between curiosity and hard work," or indicating that among the
|
||
Brethren "names are only lies," or in some other way defeating
|
||
the very plain purpose of the historian.
|
||
|
||
The same remark applies to all queries with regard to
|
||
V.V.V.V.V.;*3* with this addition, that in this case he
|
||
condescends to argue and to instruct. "If I tell you," he once
|
||
said to the present writer, "that V.V.V.V.V. is a Mr. Smith and
|
||
lives at Clapham, you will at once go round and tell everybody
|
||
that V.V.V.V.V. is a Mr. Smith of Clapham, which is not true.
|
||
V.V.V.V.V. is the Light of the World itself, the sole Mediator
|
||
between God and Man ; and in your present frame of mind (that of
|
||
a poopstick) you cannot see that the two statements may be
|
||
identical for the Brothers of the A.A. ! Did not your
|
||
greatgrandfather argue that no good thing could come out of
|
||
Nazareth ? `Is not this the carpenter's son ? is not his mother
|
||
called Mary? and his brethren, James and Joses, and Simon, and
|
||
Judas ? And his sisters, are they not all with us ? Whence then
|
||
hath this man all these things ? And they were offended in
|
||
him.'"
|
||
|
||
Similarly with regard to the writing of Liber Legis, Fr. P. will
|
||
only say that it is in no way "automatic writing," that he heard
|
||
clearly and distinctly the human articulate accents of a man.
|
||
Once, on page 6, he is told to edit a sentence ; and once, on
|
||
page 19, W. supplies a sentence which he had failed to hear.
|
||
|
||
To this writing we now turn.
|
||
|
||
It must have been on the first of April that W. commanded P. (now
|
||
somewhat cowed) to enter the "temple" exactly at 12 o'clock noon
|
||
on three successive days, and to write down what he should hear,
|
||
rising exactly at 1 o'clock.
|
||
|
||
This he did. Immediately on his taking his seat the Voice began
|
||
its Utterance, and ended exactly at the expiration of the hour.
|
||
|
||
These are the three chapters of Liber Legis, and we have nothing
|
||
to add.
|
||
|
||
The full title of the book is, as P. first chose to name it,
|
||
|
||
LIBER L vel LEGIS
|
||
sub figura CCXX
|
||
as delivered by LXXVIII to DCLXVI
|
||
|
||
and it is the First and Greatest of those Class A publications of
|
||
A.A. of which is not to be altered so much as the style of a
|
||
letter.
|
||
This was the original title devised by 666 to appear in the
|
||
1909 publication. The "Key of it all" and the true spelling of
|
||
Aiwass had not then been discovered.
|
||
|
||
FESTIVAL OF
|
||
|
||
(Temple arranged as for 0degree = 0 [?].)
|
||
Ht. (knocks) Fratres and Sorores of all grades of the Golden
|
||
Dawn in the Outer, let us celebrate the Festival of the
|
||
(Vernal) Autumnal Equinox !
|
||
All rise.
|
||
Ht. Frater Kerux, proclaim the fact, and announce the abro-
|
||
gation of the present Pass Word.
|
||
K. (Going to Ht.'s right, saluting, and facing West).
|
||
In the Name of the Lord of the Universe, and by
|
||
{ Vernal }
|
||
command of the V.H.Ht., I proclaim the { Autumnal }
|
||
Equinox, and declare that the Pass Word. . . . . . .
|
||
is abrogated.
|
||
Ht. Let us, according to ancient custom, consecrate the
|
||
return of the {Vernal/Autumnal} Equinox.
|
||
|
||
Light.
|
||
Hs. Darkness.
|
||
Ht. East.
|
||
Hs. West.
|
||
Ht. Air.
|
||
Hs. Water.
|
||
Hg. (knocks) I am the Reconciler between them.
|
||
All give signs.
|
||
D. Heat.
|
||
S. Cold.
|
||
D. South.
|
||
S. North.
|
||
D. Fire.
|
||
S. Earth.
|
||
Hg. (knocks) I am the Reconciler between them.
|
||
All give signs.
|
||
Ht. (knocks) One Creator.
|
||
D. One Preserver.
|
||
Hs. (knocks) One Destroyer.
|
||
S. One Redeemer.
|
||
Hg. (knocks) One Reconciler between them.
|
||
All give signs.
|
||
|
||
Each retiring officer in turn, beginning with Ht. quits his post
|
||
by the left hand and goes to the foot of Throne. He there
|
||
disrobes, placing robe and lamen at foot of Throne or Dais. He
|
||
then proceeds with the Sun's course to the Altar, and lays
|
||
thereon his special insignia, viz : Ht., Sceptre : Hs., Sword :
|
||
Hg., Sceptre : K., Lamp and Wand : S., Cup : D., Censer :
|
||
repeating out-going Password as he does so.
|
||
|
||
Ht. taking from the Altar the Rose, returns with the Sun
|
||
to his post :
|
||
Hs. takes Cup of Wine :
|
||
Hf. waits for the Kerux and takes his Red Lamp from him.
|
||
K. takes nothing.
|
||
S. takes platter of salt.
|
||
D. takes emblem of Elemental Fire.
|
||
|
||
Returning each to his place.
|
||
|
||
The remaining members form a column in the North and, led by
|
||
Kerux, proceed to the East ; when all are in column along East
|
||
side each turns to the left and faces Hierophant.
|
||
|
||
Ht. Let us adore the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Holy art Thou, Lord of the Air, who has created the
|
||
Firmament. (Making with the Rose the sign of the
|
||
Cross in the Air towards the East.)
|
||
All give signs. Procession moves on to the South, halts,
|
||
and all face South.
|
||
|
||
D. (facing South) Let us adore the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Holy art Thou, Lord of the Fire, wherein Thou hast
|
||
shown forth the Throne of Thy Glory. (Making with the
|
||
Fire the sign of the Cross towards the South.)
|
||
All give signs. Procession moves on to the West, halts, and
|
||
faces West.
|
||
|
||
Hs. (facing West) Let us adore the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Holy art Thou, Lord of the Waters, whereon Thy Spirit
|
||
moved at the beginning. (Making with the Cup the sign
|
||
of the Cross in the Air before him.)
|
||
All give sign. Procession passes on to the North. All halt
|
||
and face North.
|
||
|
||
S. (facing North)Let us adore the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Holy art Thou, Lord of the Earth, which Thou hast made
|
||
Thy footstool. (Making with the platter of Salt the
|
||
sign of the Cross toward the North.)
|
||
All give signs. All resume their places and face the usual
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
Hg. Let us adore the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Holy art Thou, Who art in all things, in Whom are all
|
||
things ;
|
||
If I climb up into Heaven, Thou art there ;
|
||
If I go down into Hell, Thou art there also ;
|
||
If I take the Wings of the Morning and remain in the
|
||
uttermost parts of the Sea, even there shall Thy hand
|
||
lead me and Thy right hand shall hold me.
|
||
If I say "Peradventure the Darkness shall cover me,"
|
||
even the Night shall be Light unto Thee.
|
||
Thine is the Air with its Movement.
|
||
Thine is the Fire with its flashing Flame.
|
||
Thine is the Water with its Flux and Reflux.
|
||
Thine is the Earth with its Eternal Stability.
|
||
(Makes the sign of the Cross with Red Lamp.)
|
||
|
||
All give signs. Ht. goes to Altar and deposits Rose.
|
||
Imperator meanwhile assumes the Throne.
|
||
|
||
Ht. returns to a seat on the immediate left as Past Hiero-
|
||
phant. Each old Officer now proceeds in turn to Altar and places
|
||
upon it the ensign he had taken therefrom, returning to places of
|
||
their grade, not their Thrones, with nothing in their hands :
|
||
they sit as common members, leaving all offices vacant.
|
||
|
||
Imperator. By the Power and Authority in me vested, I
|
||
confer upon you the new Pass Word. It is..........
|
||
The Officers of this Temple for the ensuing half-year
|
||
are as follows :--
|
||
(Reads list of New Officers.)
|
||
New Officers come up in turn and are robed by the Imperator.
|
||
Each new Officer in turn passes to the Altar and takes his
|
||
insignia therefrom, repeating aloud :
|
||
By the Pass Word.......I claim my....................
|
||
S., after claiming his Cup, purifies the Hall and the
|
||
Members by Water, without a word spoken by the Ht. unless he
|
||
fails in this duty.
|
||
D., after claiming his Censer, consecrates the Hall and the
|
||
Members by Fire, without unnecessary word from Ht.
|
||
|
||
THE MYSTIC CIRCUMAMBULATION.
|
||
|
||
This should take place in Silence, but if the Members be
|
||
unprovided with Rituals, the Ht. may order it as follows: All
|
||
form in North, K., Hg., Members, Hs., S., D.
|
||
Each Member as he passes the Throne repeats the Pass Word
|
||
aloud.
|
||
Ht. Let us invoke the Lord of the Universe.
|
||
Lord of the Universe, Blessed be Thy Name unto the
|
||
Eternal Ages.
|
||
Look with favour upon this Order, and grant that its
|
||
members may at length attain to the true Summum Bonum,
|
||
the Stone of the Wise, the Perfect Wisdom and the
|
||
Eternal Light.
|
||
To the Glory of Thine Ineffable Name. AMEN.
|
||
All salute.
|
||
|
||
Ht. Frater Kerux, in the Name of the Lord of the Universe,
|
||
I command you to declare that the {Vernal/Autumnal}
|
||
Equinox has returned, and that...............is the
|
||
Pass Word for the next six months.
|
||
K. In the Name of the Lord of the Universe and by com-
|
||
mand of the V.H.Ht. I declare that the Sun has enter-
|
||
ed {Aries/Libra}, the Sign of the {Vernal/Autumnal}
|
||
Equinox, and that the Pass Word for the ensuing half-
|
||
year will be............
|
||
Ht. Khabs. Pax. In.
|
||
Hs. Am. Konx. Extension.
|
||
Hg. Pekht. Om. Light.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VII.
|
||
|
||
Remarks on the method of receiving Liber Legis, on
|
||
the Conditions prevailing at the time of the writing,
|
||
and on certain technical difficulties connected with
|
||
the Literary form of the Book.*1*
|
||
|
||
I
|
||
|
||
Certain very serious questions have arisen with regard to
|
||
the method by which this Book was obtained. I do not refer to
|
||
those doubts--real or pretended--which hostility engenders, for
|
||
all such are dispelled by study of the text ; no forger could
|
||
have prepared so complex a set of numerical and literal puzzles
|
||
as to leave himself (a) devoted to the solution for years after,
|
||
(b) baffled by a simplicity which when desclosed leaves one
|
||
gasping at its profundity, (c) enlightened only by progressive
|
||
initiation, or by "accidental" events apparently disconnected
|
||
with the Book, which occurred long after its publication, (d)
|
||
hostile, bewildered, and careless even in the face of independent
|
||
testimony as to the power and clarity of the Book, and of the
|
||
fact that by Its light other men have attained the loftiest
|
||
summits of initiation in a tithe of the time which history and
|
||
experience would lead one to expect, and (e) angrily unwilling to
|
||
proceed with that part of the Work appointed for him which is
|
||
detailed in Chapter III, even when the course of events on the
|
||
planet, war, revolution, and the collapse of the social and
|
||
religious systems of civilization, proved plainly to him that
|
||
whether he liked it or no, Ra Hoor Khuit was indeed Lord of the
|
||
Aeon, the Crowned and Conquering Child whose innocence meant no
|
||
more than inhuman cruelty and wantonly senseless destructiveness
|
||
as he avenged Isis our mother the Earth and the Heaven for the
|
||
murder and mutilation of Osiris, Man, her son. The War of 1914-
|
||
18 and its sequels have proved even to the dullest statesmen,
|
||
beyond wit of even the most subtly sophistical theologians to
|
||
gloze, that death is not an unmixed benefit either to the
|
||
individual or the community : that force and fire of leaping
|
||
manhood are more useful to a nation than cringing respectability
|
||
and emasculate servility; that genius goes with courage, and the
|
||
sense of shame and guilt with "Defeatism."
|
||
|
||
For these reasons and many more I am certain, I the Beast, whose
|
||
number is Six Hundred and Sixty Six, that this Third Chapter of
|
||
the Book of the Law is nothing less than the authentic Word, the
|
||
Word of the Aeon, the Truth about Nature at this time and on this
|
||
planet. I wrote it, hating it and sneering at it, secretly glad
|
||
that I could use it to revolt against this Task most terrible
|
||
that the Gods have thrust remorselessly upon my shoulders, their
|
||
Cross of burning steel that I must carry even to my Calvary, the
|
||
place of a skull, there to be eased of its weight only that I be
|
||
crucified thereon. But, being lifted up, I will draw the whole
|
||
world unto me ; and men shall worship me the Beast, Six Hundred
|
||
and Three-score and Six, celebrating to Me their Midnight Mass
|
||
every time soever when they do that they will, and on Mine altar
|
||
slaying to Me that victim I most relish, their Selves ; when Love
|
||
designs and Will executes the Rite whereby (an they know it or
|
||
not) their God in man is offered to me The Beast, their God, the
|
||
Rite whose virtue, making their God of their throned Beast,
|
||
leaves nothing, howso bestial, undivine.
|
||
|
||
On such lines my own "conversion" to my own "religion" may take
|
||
place, though as I write these words all but twelve weeks of
|
||
Sixteen years are well nigh past.*1*
|
||
|
||
|
||
II
|
||
|
||
This long digression is but to explain that I, myself, who issue
|
||
Liber Legis, am no fanatic partisan. I will obey my orders (III,
|
||
42) "Argue not, convert not ;" even though I shirk some others.
|
||
I shall not deign to answer sceptical enquiries as to the origin
|
||
of the Book. "Success is your proof." I, of all men on this
|
||
Earth reputed mightiest in Magick, by mine enemies more than by
|
||
my friends, have striven to lose this Book, to forget it, defy
|
||
it, criticise it, escape it, these nigh sixteen years ; and It
|
||
holds me to the course It sets, even as the Mountain of Lodestone
|
||
holds the ship, or Helios by invisible bonds controls his
|
||
planets; yea, or as BABALON grips between her thighs the Great
|
||
Wild Beast she straddles !
|
||
|
||
So much for the sceptics ; put your heads in the Lion's mouth ;
|
||
so may you come to certainty, whether I be stuffed with straw !
|
||
|
||
But, in the text of the Book itself, are thorns for the flesh of
|
||
the most ardent swain as he buries his face in the roses; some of
|
||
the ivy that clings about the Thyrse of this Dionysus is Poison
|
||
Ivy. The question arises, especially on examining the original
|
||
manuscript in My handwriting: "Who wrote these words ?"
|
||
|
||
Of course I wrote them, ink on paper, in the material sense; but
|
||
they are not My words, unless Aiwaz be taken to be no more than
|
||
my subconscious self, or some part of it : in that case, my
|
||
conscious self being ignorant of the Truth in the Book and
|
||
hostile to most of the ethics and philosophy of the Book, Aiwaz
|
||
is a severely suppressed part of me.*1* If so, the theorist must
|
||
suggest a reason for this explosive yet ceremonially controlled
|
||
manifestation, and furnish and explanation of the dovetailing of
|
||
Events in subsequent years with His word written and published.
|
||
In any case, whatever "Aiwaz" is, "Aiwaz" is an Intelligence
|
||
possessed of power and knowledge absolutely beyond human
|
||
experience ; and therefore Aiwaz is a Being worthy, as the
|
||
current use of the word allows, of the title of a God, yea verily
|
||
and amen, of a God. Man has no such fact recorded, by proof
|
||
established in surety beyond cavil of critic, as this Book, to
|
||
witness the existence of and Intelligence praeterhuman and
|
||
articulate, purposefully interfering in the philosophy, religion,
|
||
ethics, economics and politics of the Planet.
|
||
|
||
The proof of His praeterhuman Nature--call Him a Devil or a God
|
||
or even an Elemental as you will--is partly external, depending
|
||
on events and persons without the sphere of Its influence, partly
|
||
internal, depending on the concealment of (a) certain Truths,
|
||
some previously known, some not known, but for the most part
|
||
beyond the scope of my mind at the time of writing, (b) of an
|
||
harmony of letters and numbers subtle, delicate and exact, and
|
||
(c) of Keys to all life's mysteries, both pertinent to occult
|
||
science and otherwise, and to all the Locks of Thought ; the
|
||
concealment of these three galaxies of glory, I say, in a cipher
|
||
simple and luminous, but yet illegible for over Fourteen years,
|
||
and translated even then not by me, but by my mysterious Child
|
||
according to the Foreknowledge written in the Book itself, in
|
||
terms so complex that the exact fulfilment of the conditions of
|
||
His birth, which occurred with incredible precision, seemed
|
||
beyond all possibility, a cipher involving higher mathematics,
|
||
and a knowledge of the Hebrew, Greek and Arabic Qabalahs as well
|
||
as the True Lost Word of the Freemason, is yet veiled within the
|
||
casual silk-stuff of ordinary English words, nay, even in the
|
||
apparently accidental circumstance of the characters of the
|
||
haste-harried scrawl of My pen.
|
||
|
||
Many such cases of double entendre, paranomasia in one language
|
||
or another, sometimes two at once, numerical-literal puzzles,
|
||
and even (on one occasion) an illuminating connexion of letters
|
||
in various lines by a slashing scratch, will be found in the
|
||
Qabalistic section of the Commentary.*1*
|
||
|
||
|
||
III
|
||
|
||
As an example of the first method above mentioned, we have, Cap.
|
||
III, "The fool readeth this Book--and he understandeth it not."
|
||
This has a secret reverse-sense, meaning :
|
||
|
||
The fool (Parzival = Fra. O.I.V.V.I.O.) understandeth it (being a
|
||
Magister Templi, the Grade attributed to Understanding) not (i.e.
|
||
to be `not').
|
||
|
||
This Parzival, adding to 418, is (in the legend of the Graal) the
|
||
son of Kamuret, adding to 666, being the son of me The Beast by
|
||
the Scarlet Woman Hilarion. This was a Name chosen by her when
|
||
half drunk, as a theft from Theosophical legend, but containing
|
||
many of our letter-number Keys to the Mysteries ; the number of
|
||
the petals in the most sacred lotus. It adds to 1001, which also
|
||
is Seven times Eleven times Thirteen, a series of factors which
|
||
may be read as The Scarlet Woman's Love by Magick producing
|
||
Unity, in Hebrew Achad. For 7 is the number of Venus, and the
|
||
secret seven-lettered Name of my concubine B A B A L O N is
|
||
written with Seven Sevens, thus:
|
||
|
||
77 + _7_ + 7 + 77 = 156, the number of BABALON.
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
418 is the number of the Word of the Magical Formula of this
|
||
Aeon. (666 is I, The Beast.)
|
||
|
||
Parzival had also the name Achad as a Neophyte of A.A., and it
|
||
was Achad whom Hilarion bare to Me. And Achad means Unity, and
|
||
the letter of Unity is Aleph, the letter of The Fool in the
|
||
Tarot. Now this Fool invoked the Magical Formula of the Aeon by
|
||
taking as his Magick, or True, Name one which added also to 418.
|
||
|
||
He took it for his Name on Entering the Gnosis where is
|
||
Understanding, and he understood it--this Book--not. That is, he
|
||
understood that this Book was, so to speak, a vesture or veil
|
||
upon the idea of "not." In Hebrew "not" is LA, 31, and AL is
|
||
God, 31, while there is a third 31 still deeplier hidden in the
|
||
double letter ST, which is a graphic glyph of the sun and moon
|
||
conjoined to look like a foreshortened Phallus, thus--when
|
||
written in Greek capitals. This S or Sigma is like a phallus,
|
||
thus,[ Greec] , when writ small ; and like a serpent or
|
||
spermatozoon when writ final, thus, [Greec]. This T or Theta is
|
||
the point in the circle, or phallus in the kteis, and also the
|
||
Sun just as C is the Moon, male and female.
|
||
|
||
But Sigma in Hebrew is Shin, 300, the letter of Fire and of the
|
||
"Spirit of the Gods" which broods upon the Formless Void in the
|
||
Beginning, being by shape a triple tongue of flame, and by
|
||
meaning a tooth, which is the only part of the secret and solid
|
||
foundation of Man that is manifested normally. Teeth serve him
|
||
to fight, to crush, to cut, to rend, to bite and grip his prey ;
|
||
they witness that he is a fierce, dangerous, and carnivorous
|
||
animal. But they are also the best witness to the mastery of
|
||
Spirit over Matter, the extreme hardness of their substance being
|
||
chiselled and polished and covered with a glistening film by Lefe
|
||
no less easily and beautifully than is does with more naturally
|
||
plastic types of substance.
|
||
|
||
Teeth are displayed when our Secret Self--our Subconscious Ego,
|
||
whose Magical Image is our individuality expressed in mental and
|
||
bodily form--our Holy Guardian Angel--comes forth and declares
|
||
our True Will to our fellows, whether to snarl or to sneer, to
|
||
smile or to laugh.
|
||
|
||
Teeth serve us to pronounce the dental letters which in their
|
||
deepest nature express decision, fortitude, endurance, just as
|
||
gutturals suggest the breath of Life itself free-flowing, and
|
||
labials the duplex vibrations of action and reaction. Pronounce
|
||
T,D,S or N, and you will find them all continuously forcible
|
||
exhalations whose difference is determined solely by the position
|
||
of the tongue, the teeth being bared as when a wild beast turns
|
||
to bay. The sibilant sound of S or Sh is our English word, and
|
||
also the Hebrew word, Hush, a strongly aspirated S, and suggests
|
||
the hiss of a snake. Now this hiss is the common sign of
|
||
recognition between men when one wants to call another's
|
||
attention without disturbing the silence more than necessary.
|
||
(Also we have Hist, our Double letter.) This hiss means :
|
||
"Attention ! A man !" For in all Semitic and some Aryan
|
||
languages, ISh or a closely similar word means "a man." Say it:
|
||
you must bare your clenched teeth as in defiance, and breathe
|
||
harshly out as in excitement.
|
||
|
||
Hiss ! Sh ! means "Keep silent ! there's danger if you are heard.
|
||
Attention ! There's a man somewhere, deadly as a snake. Breathe
|
||
hard ; there's a fight coming."
|
||
|
||
This Sh is then the forcible subtle creative Spirit of Life,
|
||
fiery and triplex, continous, Silence of pure Breath modified
|
||
into sound by two and thirty obstacles, as the Zero of Empty
|
||
Space, though it contain all Life, only takes form according (as
|
||
the Qabalists say) to the two and thirty "Paths" of Number and
|
||
Letter which obstruct it.
|
||
|
||
Now the other letter, Theta or Teth, has the value of Nine, which
|
||
is that of AVB, the Secret Magick of Obeah, and of the Sephira
|
||
Yesod, which is the seat in man of the sexual function by whose
|
||
Magick he overcomes even Death, and that in more ways than one,
|
||
ways that are known to none but the loftiest and most upright
|
||
Initiates, baptised by the Baptism of Wisdom, and communicants at
|
||
that Eucharist where the Fragment of the Host in the Chalice
|
||
becomes whole.*1*
|
||
|
||
This T is the letter of Leo, the Lion, the house of heaven sacred
|
||
to the Sun. (Thus also we find in it the number 6, whence 666).
|
||
And Teth means a Serpent, the symbol of the magical Life of the
|
||
Soul, lord of "the double wand" of life and death. The serpent
|
||
is royal, hooded, wise, silent save for an hiss when need is to
|
||
disclose his Will ; he devours his tail---the glyph of Eternity,
|
||
of Nothingness and of Space ; he moves wavelike, one immaterial
|
||
essence travelling through crest and trough, as a man's soul
|
||
through lives and deaths. He straightens out ; he is the Rod
|
||
that strikes, the Light-radiance of the Sun or the Life radiance
|
||
of the Phallus.
|
||
|
||
The sound of T is tenuous and sharply final ; it suggests a
|
||
spontaneous act sudden and irrevocable, like the snake's bite,
|
||
the loin's snap, the Sun's stroke, and the Lingam's.
|
||
|
||
Now in the Tarot the Trump illustrating this letter Sh is and
|
||
old form of the Stele of Revealing, Nuith with Shu and Seb, the
|
||
pantacle or magical picture of the old Aeon, as Nuit with Hadit
|
||
and Ra Hoor Khuit is of the new. The number of this Trump is XX.
|
||
It is called the Angel, the messenger from Heaven of the new
|
||
Word. The Trump giving the picture of T is called Strength. It
|
||
shows the Scarlet Woman, BABALON, riding (or conjoined with) me
|
||
The Beast ; and this card is my special card, for I am Baphomet,
|
||
"the Lion and the Serpent," and 666, the "full number" of the
|
||
Sun.*1*
|
||
|
||
So then, as Sh, XX, shows the Gods of the Book of the Law and T,
|
||
XI, shows the human beings in that Book, me and my concubine, the
|
||
two cards illustrate the whole Book in pictorial form.
|
||
|
||
Now XX + XI = XXXI, 31, which we needed to put with LA, 31 and
|
||
AL, 31, that we might have 31 x 3 = 93, the Word of the Law,
|
||
THELEMA [in greek], Will, and hhelp, Love which under Will, is
|
||
the Law. It is also the number of Aiwaz, the Author of the Book,
|
||
of the Lost Word whose formula does in sober truth "raise Hiram,"
|
||
and of many another close-woven Word of Truth.
|
||
|
||
Now then this Two-in-One letter [sun, moon], is the third Key to
|
||
this Law ; and on the discovery of that fact, after years of
|
||
constant seeking, what sudden splendours of Truth, sacred as
|
||
secret, blazed in the midnight of my mind.! Observe now : "this
|
||
circle squared in its failure is a key also." Now I knew that in
|
||
the value of the letters of ALHIM, "the Gods," the Jews had
|
||
concealed a not quite correct value of [pi], the ratio of a
|
||
circle's circumference to its diameter, to 4 places of decimals :
|
||
3.1415 ; nearer would be 3.1416. If I prefix our Key, 31,
|
||
putting [sun, moon], Set or Satan, before the old Gods, I get
|
||
3.141593, [pi] correct to Six places, Six being my own number and
|
||
that of Horus the Sun. And the whole number of this new Name is
|
||
395,*1* which on analysis yields and astounding cluster of
|
||
numerical "mysteries."
|
||
|
||
Now for an example of the `paronomasia' or pun. Chapter III,
|
||
17---"Ye, even ye, know not this meaning all." (Note how the
|
||
peculiar grammar suggests a hidden meaning.) Now YE is in Hebrew
|
||
Yod He, the man and the woman ; The Beast and BABALON, whom the
|
||
God was addressing in his verse. Know suggests `no' which gives
|
||
LA, 31 ; `not' is LA, 31, again, by actual meaning ; and `all'
|
||
refers to AL, 31, again. (Again, ALL is 61, AIN, "nothing.")
|
||
|
||
|
||
V
|
||
|
||
Then we have numerical problems like this. "Six and fifty.
|
||
Divide, add, multiply and understand." 6 [divided by] 50 gives
|
||
0.12, a perfect glyph-statement of the metaphysics of the Book.
|
||
|
||
The external evidence for the Book is accumulating yearly : the
|
||
incidents connected with the discovery of the true spelling of
|
||
Aiwaz are alone sufficient to place it beyond all quaver of doubt
|
||
that I am really in touch with a Being of intelligence and power
|
||
immensely subtler and greater than aught we can call human.
|
||
|
||
This has been the One Fundamental Question of Religion. We know
|
||
of invisible powers, and to spare ! But is there any
|
||
Intelligence or Individuality (of the same general type as ours)
|
||
independent of our human brain-structure ? For the first time in
|
||
history, yes ! Aiwaz has guven us proof : the most important
|
||
gate toward Knowledge suings wide.
|
||
|
||
I, Aleister Crowley, declare upon my honour as a gentleman that I
|
||
hold this revelation a million times more important than the
|
||
discovery of the Wheel, or even of the Laws of Physics or
|
||
Mathematics. Fire and Tools made Man master of his planet :
|
||
Writing developed his mind ; but his Soul was a guess until the
|
||
Book of the Law proved this.
|
||
|
||
I, a master of English, was made to take down in three hours,
|
||
from dictation, sixty-five 8" x I0" pages of words not only
|
||
strange, but often displeasing to me in themselves ; concealing
|
||
in cipher propositions unknown to me, majestic and profound ;
|
||
foretelling events public and private beyond my control, or that
|
||
of any man.
|
||
|
||
This Book proves : there is a Person thinking and acting in a
|
||
praeterhuman manner, either without a body of flesh, or with the
|
||
power of communicating telepathically with men and inscrutably
|
||
directing their actions.
|
||
|
||
|
||
VI
|
||
|
||
I write this therefore with a sense of responsibility so acute
|
||
that for the first time in my life I regret my sense of humour
|
||
and the literary practical jokes which it has caused me to
|
||
perpetrate. I am glad, though, that care was taken of the MS.
|
||
itself and of diaries and letters of the period, so that the
|
||
physical facts are as plain as can be desired.
|
||
|
||
MY sincerity and seriousness are proved by my life. I have
|
||
fought this Book and fled it ; I have defiled it and I have
|
||
suffered for its sake. Present or absent to my mind, it has been
|
||
my Invisible Ruler. It has overcome me ; year after year extends
|
||
its invasion of my being. I am the captive of the Crowned and
|
||
Conquering Child.
|
||
|
||
The point then arises : How did the Book of the Law come to be
|
||
written ? The description in The Equinox, I, VII, might well be
|
||
more detailed ; and I might also elucidate the problem of the
|
||
apparent changes of speaker, and the occasional lapses from
|
||
straightforward scribecraft in the MS.
|
||
|
||
I may observe that I should not have left such obvious grounds
|
||
for indictment as these had I prepared the MS. to look pretty to
|
||
a critical eye ; nor should I have left such curious deformities
|
||
of grammar and syntax, defects of rhythm, and awkwardness of
|
||
phrase. I should not have printed passages, some rambling and
|
||
unintelligible, some repugnant to reason by their absurdity,
|
||
others again by their barbaric ferocity abhorrent to heart. I
|
||
should not have allowed such jumbles of matter, such abrupt jerks
|
||
from subject to subject, disorder ravaging reason with
|
||
disconnected sluttishness. I should not have tolerated the
|
||
discords, jarred and jagged, of manner, as when a sublime
|
||
panegyric of Death is followed first by a cipher and then by a
|
||
prophecy, before, without taking breath, the author leaps to the
|
||
utmost magnificence of thought both mystical and practical, in
|
||
language so concise, simple, and lyrical as to bemuse our very
|
||
amazement. I should not have spelt "Ay" "Aye," or acquiesced in
|
||
the horror "abstruction."
|
||
|
||
Compare with this Book my "jokes," where I pretend to edit the
|
||
MS. of another: "Alice," "Amphora," "Clouds without Water."
|
||
Observe in each case the technical perfection of the "discovered"
|
||
or "translated" MS., smooth skilled elaborte art and craft of a
|
||
Past Master Workman ; observe the carefully detailed tone and
|
||
style of the prefaces, and the sedulous creation of the
|
||
personalities of the imaginary author and the imaginary editor.
|
||
|
||
Note, moreover, with what greedy vanity I claim authorship even
|
||
of all the other A.A. Books in Class A, though I wrote them
|
||
inspired beyond all I know to be I. Yet in these Books did
|
||
Aleister Crowley, the master of English both in prose and in
|
||
verse, partake insofar as he was That. Compare those Books with
|
||
the Book of the Law ! They style is simple and sublime ; the
|
||
imagery is gorgeous and faultless ; the rhythm is subtle and
|
||
intoxicating ; the theme is interpreted in faultless symphony.
|
||
There are no errors of grammar, no infelicities of phrase. Each
|
||
Book is perfect in its kind.
|
||
|
||
I, daring to snatch credit for these, in that brutal Index to The
|
||
Equinox Volume One, dared nowise to lay claim to have touched the
|
||
Book of the Law, not with my littlest finger-tip.
|
||
|
||
I, boasting of my many Books ; I, swearing each a masterpiece; I
|
||
attach the Book of the Law at a dozen points of literature. Even
|
||
so, with the dame breath, I testify, as a Master of English, that
|
||
I am utterly incapable, even when most inspired, fo such English
|
||
as I find in that Book again and again.
|
||
|
||
Terse, yet sublime, are these verses of this Book ; subtle yet
|
||
simple ; matchless for rhythm, direct as a ray of light. Its
|
||
imagery is gorgeous without decadence. It deals with primary
|
||
ideas. It announces revolutions in philosophy, religion, ethics,
|
||
yea, in the whole nature of Man. For this it needs no more than
|
||
to roll sea-billows solemnly forht, eight words, as `Every man
|
||
and every woman is a star," or it bursts in a mountain torrent of
|
||
monosyllables as "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the
|
||
Law."
|
||
|
||
Nuith cries : "I love you," like a lover ; when even John reached
|
||
only to the cold impersonal proposition "God is love." She woos
|
||
like a msitress ; whispers "To me !" in every ear ; Jesus, with
|
||
needless verb, appeals vehemently to them "that labour and are
|
||
heavy laden." Yet he can promise in the present, says: "I give
|
||
unimaginable joys on earth," making life worth while ;
|
||
"certainty, not faith, while in life, upon death," the electric
|
||
light Knowledge for the churchyard corpsecandle Faith, making
|
||
life fear-free, and death itself worth while: "peach
|
||
unutterable, rest, ecstasy," making mind and body at ease that
|
||
soul may be free to transcend them when It will.
|
||
|
||
I have never written such English ; nor could I ever, that well I
|
||
know. Shakespeare could not have written it: still less could
|
||
Keats, Shelley, Swift, Sterne or even Wordsworth. Only in the
|
||
Books of Job and Ecclesiastes, in the work of Blake, or possibly
|
||
in that of Poe, is there any approach to such succinct depth of
|
||
thought in such musical simplicity of form, unless it be in Greek
|
||
and Latin poets. Nor Poe nor Blake could have sustained their
|
||
effort as does this our Book of the Law ; and the Hebrews used
|
||
tricks of verse, mechanical props to support them.
|
||
|
||
How then---back once more to the Path !---how then did it come to
|
||
be written ?
|
||
|
||
|
||
VIII
|
||
|
||
I shall make what I may call an inventory of the furniture of the
|
||
Temple, the circumstances of the case. I shall describe the
|
||
conditions of the phenomenon as if it were any other unexplained
|
||
event in Nature.
|
||
|
||
I. The time.
|
||
Chapter 1 was written between Noon and 1 p.m. on
|
||
April 8, 1904.
|
||
Chapter II between Noon and I p.m. on April 9,
|
||
I904.
|
||
Chapter III between Noon and I p.m. on April I0,
|
||
I904.
|
||
|
||
The writing began exactly on the stroke of the hour, and ended
|
||
exactly an hour later ; it was hurried throughour, with no pauses
|
||
of any kind.
|
||
|
||
2. The place.
|
||
The city was Cairo.
|
||
The street, or rather streets, I do not remember. There is a
|
||
`Place' where four or five streets intersect ; it is near the
|
||
Boulak Museum, but a fairly long way from Shepherd's. The
|
||
quarter is fashionable European. The house occupied a corner. I
|
||
do not remember its orientation ; but, as appears from the
|
||
instructions for invoking Horus, one window of the temple opened
|
||
to the East or Norht. The apatment was of several rooms on the
|
||
ground floor, well furnished in the Anglo-Egyptian style. It was
|
||
let by a firm named Congdon & Co.
|
||
|
||
The room was a drawing-room cleared of fragile obstacles, but not
|
||
otherwise prepared to serve as a temple. It had double doors,
|
||
poening on to the corridor to the North and a door to the East
|
||
leading to another room, the dining-room, I think. It had two
|
||
windows opening on the Place, to the South, and a writing table
|
||
against the wall between them.
|
||
|
||
3. The people.
|
||
A. Myself, age 28 1/2. In good health, fond of out-door
|
||
sports, especially mountaineering and big-game shooting. An
|
||
Adept Major of the A.A. but weary of mysticism and
|
||
dissatisfied with Magick. A rationalist, Buddhist, agnostic,
|
||
anti-clerical, anti-moral, Tory and Jacobite. A chess-player,
|
||
first-class amateur, able to play three games simultaneously
|
||
blindfold. A reading and writing addict. Education : private
|
||
governess and tutors, preliminary school Habershon's at St.
|
||
Leonards, Sussex, private tutors, private school 5I Bateman St.,
|
||
Cambridge, private tutors, Yarrow's School, Streatham, near
|
||
London. Malvern College, Tonbridge School, private tutors,
|
||
Eastbourne College, King's College, London, Trinity College,
|
||
Cambridge.
|
||
|
||
Morality---Sexually powerful and passionate. Strongly male to
|
||
women ; free from any similar impulse toward my own sex. My
|
||
passion for women very unselfish ; the main motive to give them
|
||
pleasure. Hence, intense ambition to understand the feminine
|
||
nature ; for this purpose, to identify myself with their
|
||
feelings, and to use all means appropriate. Imaginative, subtle,
|
||
insatiable ; the whole business a mere clumsy attempt to quench
|
||
the thirst of the soul. This thirst has indeed been my one
|
||
paramout Lord, directing all my acts without allowing any other
|
||
considerations soever to affect it in the least.
|
||
|
||
Strictly temperate as to drink, had never once been even near
|
||
intoxication. Light wine my only form of alcohol.
|
||
|
||
Sense of justice and equity so sensitive, well-balanced and
|
||
compelling as to be almost an obsession.
|
||
|
||
Generous, unless suspicious that I was being fleeced : "penny
|
||
wise and pound foolish." Spendthrift, careless, not a gambler
|
||
because I valued winning at games of skill, which flattered my
|
||
vanity.
|
||
|
||
Kind, gentle, affectionate, selfish, conceited, reckless and
|
||
cautious by turns.
|
||
|
||
Incapable of bearing a grudge, even for the gravest insults and
|
||
injuries ; yet enjoying to inflict pain for its own sake. Can
|
||
attack an unsuspecting stranger, and torture him cruelly for
|
||
years, without feeling the slightest animosity toward him. Fond
|
||
of animals and children, who return my love, almost always.
|
||
Consider abortion the most shameful form of murder, and loathe
|
||
the social codes which encourage it.
|
||
|
||
Hated and despised my mother and her family ; loved and respected
|
||
my father and his.
|
||
Critical events in my life.
|
||
First travelled outside England, I883.
|
||
Father died March 5, I887.
|
||
Albuminuria stopped my schooling, I890-92.
|
||
First sexual act, probably I889.
|
||
Ditto with a woman March, I89I (Torquay--a theatre girl).
|
||
First serious mountain-climbing, in Skye, I892. (The
|
||
"Pinnacle Ridge" of Sgurr-nan-Gillean.)
|
||
First Alpine climb, I894.
|
||
Admitted to the Military Order of the Temple midnight,
|
||
December 3I, I896.
|
||
Admitted to permanent office in the Temple midnight,
|
||
December 3I, I897.
|
||
Bought Boleskine, I899.
|
||
First Mexican climb, I900.
|
||
First Big game, I90I.
|
||
First Himalayan climb, I902. (Chogo Ri, or "K2"
|
||
expedition.)
|
||
Married at Dingwall, Scotland, August I2, I903.
|
||
Honeymoon at Boleskine, thence to London, Paris, Naples,
|
||
Egypt, Ceylon, and back to Egypt, Helwan and then Cairo early in
|
||
I904.
|
||
|
||
My "occult" career.
|
||
|
||
Parents Plymouth Brethren, exclusive.
|
||
Father a real P.B. and therefore tolerant to his son.
|
||
Mother only became P.B. to please him, perhaps to catch him,
|
||
and so pedantically fanatical.
|
||
After his death I was tortured with insensate persistency,
|
||
till I said : Evil, be thou my good ! I practised wickedness
|
||
furtively as a magical formula, even when it was distasteful ;
|
||
e.g. I would sneak into a church*1*---a place my mother would not
|
||
enter at the funeral service of her best-loved sister.
|
||
|
||
Revolted openly when puberty gave me a moral sense.
|
||
Hunted new "Sins" till October, '97, when one of them turned
|
||
to bay, and helped me to experience the "Trance of Sorrow."
|
||
(Perception of the Impermanence fo even the greatest human
|
||
endeavour.) I invoked assistance, Easter, '98.
|
||
Initiated in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, November
|
||
I8, '98.
|
||
Began to perform the Abramelin Operation, I899.
|
||
Initiated in the Order R.R. et A.C., January, I909.
|
||
Made a 33<degree> Freemason, I900.
|
||
Began Yoga practices, I900.
|
||
Obtained first Dhyana, October I, I90I.
|
||
Abandoned all serious occult work of every sort, October 3,
|
||
I90I, and continued in this course of action till July, I903,
|
||
when I tried vainly to force myself to become a Buddhist Hermit
|
||
Highland Laird.
|
||
|
||
Marriage was an uninterrupted sexual debauch up to the time of
|
||
the writing of the Book of the Law.
|
||
|
||
B. Rose Edith Kelly.
|
||
Born I874 (July 23). About '95 married one Major Skerrett,
|
||
R.A.M.C., and lived with him some two years in South Africa. He
|
||
died in '97.
|
||
|
||
She indulged in a few feeble-executed intrigues till August I2,
|
||
I903, when she became my wife, becoming pregnant with a girl born
|
||
July 28, I904. Health, admirable robust at all points; she was
|
||
both active and enduring, as our travels in Ceylon and across
|
||
China prove. Figure perfect, neither big nor little, face pretty
|
||
without being petty ; she only missed Beauty by lacking Goethe's
|
||
"touch of the bizarre." Personality intensely powerful and
|
||
magnevit, intellect absent but mind adaptable to that of any
|
||
companion, so that she could always say the right nothing.
|
||
|
||
Charm, grace, vitality, vivacity, tact, manners, all
|
||
inexpressible fascinating.
|
||
|
||
From her mother she inherited dipsomania, as bad a case for
|
||
stealth, cunning, falsehood, treachery, and hypocrisy as the
|
||
specialist I consulted had ever known. This was, however, latent
|
||
during the satisfacion of sexuality,*1* which ousted all else in
|
||
her life, as it did in mine.
|
||
|
||
Education strictly social and domestic ; she did not even know
|
||
schoolgirl French. She had read nothing, not so much as novels.
|
||
She was a miracle of perfection as Poetic Ideal, Mistress, Wife,
|
||
Mother, House-president, Nurse Pal and Comrade.
|
||
|
||
C. Our head servant, Hassan or Hamid, I forget which.
|
||
A tall, dignified, hansome athlete of about 30. Spoke good
|
||
English and ran the household well ; always there and never in
|
||
the way.
|
||
|
||
I suppose I hardly ever saw the servants under his authority: I
|
||
do not even know how many there were.
|
||
|
||
D. Lieut.-Col. Somebody, beginning, I think, with a B,
|
||
married, middle-aged, with manners like the Rules of a Prison. I
|
||
cannot remember that I ever saw him ; but the apartment was
|
||
sublet to me by him.
|
||
|
||
E. Brugsch Bey of the Boulak Museum dined with us once to
|
||
discuss the Stele in his charge, and to arrage for its
|
||
"abstruction." His French assistant curator, who translated the
|
||
hieroglyphs on the Stele for us.
|
||
|
||
A Mr. Bach, owner of the "Egyptian News," an hotel, a hunk of
|
||
railway, &c., &c., dined once.
|
||
|
||
Otherwise we knew nobody in Cairo except natives, occasionally
|
||
hobnobbed with a General Dickson, who had accepted Islam, carpet
|
||
merchant, pimps, jewellers, and such small deer. Contradictory
|
||
hints in one of my diaries were inserted deliberately to mislead,
|
||
for some sill no-reason unconnected with Magick.*1*
|
||
|
||
4. The events leading up to the Writing of the Book. I
|
||
summarize them from Eqx. I, VII.
|
||
|
||
March I6. Tried to shew the Sylphs to Rose.*1* She was in a
|
||
dazed state, stupid, possible drunk ; possibly hysterical from
|
||
pregnancy. She could see nothing, but could hear. She was
|
||
fiercely excited at the messages, and passionately insistent that
|
||
I should take them seriously.
|
||
|
||
I was annoyed at her irrelevance, and her infliction of nonsense
|
||
upon me.
|
||
|
||
She had never been in any state even remotely resembling this,
|
||
though I ahd made the same invocation (in full) in the King's
|
||
chamber fo the Great Pyramid during the night which we spent
|
||
there in the previous autumn.
|
||
|
||
March I7. More apparently nonsensical messages, this time
|
||
spontaneous. I invoke Thoth, probably as in Liber LXIV, and
|
||
presumably to clear up the muddle.
|
||
|
||
March I8. Thoth evidently got clear through to her ; for she
|
||
discovers that Horus is addressing me through her, and
|
||
indentifies Him by a method utterly excluding chance or
|
||
coincidence, and involving knowledge which only I possessed, some
|
||
of it arbitrary, so that she or her informant must have been able
|
||
to read my mind as well as if I had spolen it.
|
||
|
||
Then she, challenged to point out His image, passes by many such
|
||
to fix on the one in the Stele. The cross-examination must hace
|
||
taken place between March 20 and 23.
|
||
|
||
March 20. Success in my invocation of Horus, by "breaking all
|
||
the rules" at her command. This success convinced me magically,
|
||
and encouraged me to test her as above mentioned. I should
|
||
certainly have referred to the Stlel in my ritual had I seen it
|
||
before this date. I should fix Monday, March 2I, for the Visit
|
||
ot Boulak.
|
||
|
||
Between March 23 and April 8 the Hieroglyphs on the Stele were
|
||
evidently translated by the assistant-curator at Boulak, into
|
||
either French or English--I am almost sure it was French--and
|
||
versified (as now printed) by me.
|
||
|
||
Between these dates, too, my wife must have told me that her
|
||
informant was not Horus, or Ra Hoor Khuit, but a messenger from
|
||
Him, named Aiwass.
|
||
|
||
I thought that she might have faked this name from constantly
|
||
hearing "Aiwa," the word for "Yes" in Arabic. She could not have
|
||
invented a name of this kind, though ; her next best was to find
|
||
a phrase like "balmy puppy" ofr a friend, or corrupt a name like
|
||
Neuberg into an obscene insult.
|
||
|
||
The silence of my diaries seems to prove that she gave me nothing
|
||
more of importance. I was working out the Magical problem
|
||
presented to me by the events of March I6-2I. Any questions that
|
||
I asked her were either unanswered, or answered by a Being whose
|
||
mind was so different from mine that we failed to converse. All
|
||
my wife obtained from Him was to command me to do things
|
||
magically absurd. He would not play my game : I must play His.
|
||
|
||
April 7. Not later than this date was I ordered to enter the
|
||
"tmeple" exactly at noon on the three days following, and write
|
||
down what I heard during one hour, nor more nor less. I imagine
|
||
that some preparations were made, possilby some bull's blood
|
||
burned for incense, or order taken about details of dress ro diet
|
||
; I remember nothing at all, one way or the other. Bull's blood
|
||
was burnt some time in this sojourn in Cairo ; but I forget why
|
||
or when. I think it was used at the "Invocation of the Sylphs."
|
||
|
||
5. The actual writing.
|
||
|
||
The three days were precisely similar, save that on the last day
|
||
I became nervous lest I should fail to hear the Voice of Aiwass.
|
||
They may then be described together.
|
||
|
||
I went into the "temple" a minute early, so as to shut the door
|
||
and sit down on the stroke of Noon.
|
||
|
||
On my table were my pen--a Swan Fountain--and supplies of Quarto
|
||
typewriting paper, 8" x I0".
|
||
|
||
I never looked round in the room at any time.
|
||
|
||
The Voice of Aiwass came apparently from over my left shoulder,
|
||
from the furthest corner of the room. It seemed to echo itself
|
||
in my physical heart in a very strange manner, hard to describe.
|
||
I have noticed a similar phenomenon when I have been waiting for
|
||
a message fraught with great hope or dread. The voice was
|
||
passionately poured, as if Aiwass were alert about the time-
|
||
limit. I wrote 65 pages of this present essay (at about my usual
|
||
rate of composition) in about I0 1/2 hours as against the 3 hours
|
||
of the 65 pages of the Book of the Law. I was pushed hard to
|
||
keep the pace ; the MS. shows it clearly enough.
|
||
|
||
The voice was of deep timbre, musical and expressive, its tones
|
||
solemn, voluptuous, tender, fierce or aught else as suited the
|
||
moods of the message. Not bass--perhaps a rich tneor or
|
||
baritone.
|
||
|
||
The English was free of either native or foreign accent,
|
||
perfectly pure of local or caste mannerisma, thus startling and
|
||
even uncanny at first hearing.*1*
|
||
|
||
I had a strong impression*1* that the speaker was actually in the
|
||
corner where he seemed to be, in a body of "fine matter,"
|
||
transparent as a veil of gauze, or a cloud of incense-smoke. He
|
||
seemed to be a tall, dark man in his thirties, well-knit, active
|
||
and strong, with the face of a savage king, and eyes veiled lest
|
||
their gaze should destroy what they saw. The dress was not Arab;
|
||
it suggested Assyria or Persia, but very vaguely. I took little
|
||
note of it, for to me at that time Aiwass and an"angel" such as I
|
||
had often seen in visions, a being purely astral.
|
||
|
||
I now incline to believe that Aiwass is not only the God or Demon
|
||
or Devil once held holy in Sumer, and mine own Guradian Angel,
|
||
but also a man as I am, insofar as He uses a human body to make
|
||
His magical link with Mankind, whom He loves, and that He is thus
|
||
and Ipsissimus, the Head of the A.A. Even I can do, in a much
|
||
feebler way, this Work of being a God and a Beast, &c., &c., all
|
||
at the same time, with equal fullness of life.*2*
|
||
|
||
6. The Editing of the Book.
|
||
|
||
"Change not so much as the style of a letter" in the text saved
|
||
me from Crowley-fying the wholde Book, and spoiling everything.
|
||
|
||
The MS. shows what has been done, and why, as follows:
|
||
|
||
A. On page 6 Aiwaz instructs me to "write this (what he had
|
||
just said) in whiter words," for my mind revelled at His
|
||
phrase. He added at once "But go forth on," i.e., with
|
||
His utterance, leaving the emendation until later.
|
||
|
||
B. On page I9 I failed to hear a sentence, and (later on)
|
||
the Scarlet Woman, invoking Aiwass, wrote in the missing
|
||
words. (How ? She was not in the room at the time, and
|
||
heard nothing.)
|
||
|
||
C. Page 20 of Cap. III, I got a phrase indistinctly, and
|
||
she put it in, as for "B."
|
||
|
||
D. The versified paraphrase of the hieroglyphs on the Stele
|
||
being ready, Aiwaz allowed me to insert these later, so
|
||
as to save time.
|
||
|
||
These four apart, the MS. is exactly as it was written on those
|
||
three days. The Critical Recension will explain theses points as
|
||
they occur.
|
||
|
||
The problem of the literary form of this Book is astonishingly
|
||
complex; but the internal evidence of the sense is usually
|
||
sufficient of make it clear, on inspection, as to who is speaking
|
||
and who is being addressed.
|
||
|
||
There was, however, no actual voice audible save that of Aiwaz.
|
||
Even my own remarks made silently were incorporated by him
|
||
audibly, wherever such occur.
|
||
|
||
Chapter I
|
||
|
||
Verse I. Nuit is the speaker. She invokes her lover and then
|
||
begins to give a title to her speech in the end of verse I--20.
|
||
|
||
In verses 3 and 4, she begins her discourse. So far her
|
||
remarks have been addressed to no one in particular.
|
||
|
||
Verse 4 startled my intelligence into revolt.
|
||
|
||
In verse 5 she explains that she is speaking, and appeals to
|
||
me personally to help her to unveil by taking down her message.
|
||
|
||
In verse 6 she claims me for her chosen, and I think that I
|
||
then became afraid lest I should be expected to do too much. She
|
||
answers this fear in verse 7 by introducing Aiwaz as the actual
|
||
speaker in articulate human accents on her behalf.
|
||
|
||
In verse 8 the oration continues, and we now see that it is
|
||
addressed to mankind in general. This continues till verse I3.
|
||
|
||
Verse I4 is from the Stele. It seems to have been written
|
||
in by me as a kind of appreciation of what she had just said.
|
||
|
||
Verse I5 emphasizes that it is mankind in general that is
|
||
addressed; for the Beast is spoken of in the third person, though
|
||
his was the only human ear to hear the words.
|
||
|
||
Verses I8--I9 seem to be almost in the nature of a quotation
|
||
from some hymn. It is not quite natural for her to address
|
||
herself as she appears to do in verse I9.
|
||
|
||
Verse 26. The question "Who am I and what shall be the
|
||
sign?" is my own conscious thought. In the previous verses I
|
||
have been called to an exalted mission, and I naturally feel
|
||
nervous. This thought is then entered in the record by Aiwaz as
|
||
if it were a story that he was telling ; and he develops this
|
||
story after her answer, in order to bring bvack the thread of the
|
||
chapter to the numerical mysteries of Nuith begun in verses 24-
|
||
|
||
25, and now continued in verse 28.
|
||
Another doubt must have arisen in my mind at verse 30 ; and
|
||
this doubt is interpreted and explained ot me personally in verse
|
||
3I.
|
||
|
||
The address to mankind is resumed in verse 32, and Nuith
|
||
emphasizes the point of verse 30 which has caused me to doubt.
|
||
She confirms this with an oath, and I was convinced. I thought
|
||
ot myself, " in this case let us hace written instructions as to
|
||
the technique," and Aiwaz again makes a story out of my request
|
||
as in verse 26.
|
||
|
||
In verse 35 it seems that she is addressing me personally,
|
||
but in verse 36 she speaks of me in the third person.
|
||
|
||
Verse 40. The word "us" is very puzzling. It apparently
|
||
means "All those who have accepted the Law whose word is
|
||
Thelema." Among these she includes herself.
|
||
|
||
There is nwo no difficulty for a long while. It is a
|
||
general address dealing with varoious subjects, to the end of
|
||
verse 52.
|
||
|
||
From verses 53-56 we have a strictly personal address to me.
|
||
|
||
In verse 57 Nuith resumes her general exhortation. And I am
|
||
spoken of once more in the third person.
|
||
|
||
Verse 6I. The word "Thou" is not a personal address. It
|
||
means any single person, as pooosed to a company. The "Ye" in
|
||
the third sentence indeicates the proper conduct for worshippers
|
||
as a body. The "you," in sentence 4, of course applies to a
|
||
single person ; but the plural form suggests that it is a matter
|
||
of public worship as opposed to the invocation in the desert of
|
||
the first sentence of this verse.
|
||
|
||
There is no further difficulty in this chapter.
|
||
|
||
Verse 66 is the statement of Aiwaz that the words of verse
|
||
65, which were spoken diminuendo down to pianissimo, indicated
|
||
the withdrawl of the goddess.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER II
|
||
|
||
Hadith himself is evidently the speaker from the srart. The
|
||
remarks are general. In verse 5 I am spoken of in the third
|
||
person.
|
||
|
||
After verse 9 he notices my vehement objections to writing
|
||
statements to which my conscious self was obstinately opposed.
|
||
|
||
Verse I0, addressed to me notes that fact ; and in verse II
|
||
he declares that he is my master, and that the reason for this is
|
||
that he is my secret self, as explained in verses I2-I3.
|
||
|
||
The interruption seems to have added excitement to the
|
||
discousre, for verse I4 is violent.
|
||
|
||
Verses I5 & I6 offer a riddle, while verse I7 is a sort of
|
||
parody of poetry.
|
||
|
||
Verse I8 continues his attack on my conscious mind. In
|
||
verses I5-I8 the style is complicated, brutal, sneering and
|
||
jeering. I feel the whole passage as a contemptuous beating down
|
||
of the resistance of my mind.
|
||
|
||
In verse I9 he returns to the exalted style with which he
|
||
began until I interfered.
|
||
|
||
The passage seems addressed to what he calls his chosen or
|
||
his people, though it is not explained exactly what he means by
|
||
the words.
|
||
|
||
This passage from verse I9 to verse 52 is of sustained and
|
||
matchless eloquence.
|
||
|
||
I must have objected to something in verse 52, for verse 53
|
||
is directed to encourage me personally as to having transmitted
|
||
this message.
|
||
|
||
Verse 54 deals with another point as to the intelligibility
|
||
of the message.
|
||
|
||
Verse 55 instructed me to obtain the English Qabalah ; it
|
||
made me incredulous, as the task seemed an impossible one, and
|
||
probably his perception of this criticism inspired verse 56,
|
||
though "ye mockers" applies evidently to my enemies, referred to
|
||
in verse 54.
|
||
|
||
Verse 57 brings us back to the suject begun in verse 2I. It
|
||
is a quotation from the Apocalypse verbatim, and is probably
|
||
suggested by the matter of verse 56.
|
||
|
||
There is no real change in the essence of anything, however
|
||
its combinations vary.
|
||
|
||
Verses 58-60 conclude the passage.
|
||
|
||
Verse 6I. The address is now strictly personal. During all
|
||
this time Hadith had been breaking down my resistance with his
|
||
violently expresses and varied phrases. As a result of this, I
|
||
attained to the trance described in these verses from 6I-68.
|
||
|
||
Verse 69 is the return to consciousness of myself. It was a
|
||
sort of gasping question as a man coming out of Ether might ask
|
||
"Where am I ?" I think that this is the one passage in the whole
|
||
book which was not spoken by Aiwaz ; and I ought to say that
|
||
these verses 63-68 were writeen without conscious hearing at all.
|
||
|
||
Verse 70 does not deign to reply to my questions, but points
|
||
out the way to manage life. This continues until verse 74, and
|
||
seems to be addressed not to me persoanllly but to any man,
|
||
despite the use of the word "Thou."
|
||
|
||
Verse 75 abruptly changes the subject, interpolating the
|
||
riddle of verse 76 with its prophecy. This verse is addressed to
|
||
me personally, and continues to the end of verse 78 to mingle
|
||
lyrical eloquence with literal and numerical puzzles.
|
||
|
||
Verse 79 is the statement of Aiwaz that the end of the chapter
|
||
has come. To this he adds his personal compliment to myself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chapter III
|
||
|
||
Verse I appears to complete the triangle begun by the first
|
||
verses of the two previous chapters. It is a simple statement
|
||
involving no particular speaker or hearer. The ommission of the
|
||
"i" in the name of God appears to have alarmed me, and in verse 2
|
||
Aiwaz offers a hurried explanation in a somewhat excited manner,
|
||
and invokes Ra-Hoor-Khuit.
|
||
|
||
Verse 3 is spoken by Ra-Hoor-Khuit. "Them" evidently refers to
|
||
some undescribed enemies, and "ye" to those who accept his
|
||
formula. This passage ends with verse 9. Verse 10 and verse 11
|
||
are addressed to me personally and the Scarlet Woman, as shown in
|
||
the continuation of his passage which seems to end with verse 33,
|
||
though it is left rather vague at times as to whether the Beast,
|
||
or the Beast and his concubine, or the adherents of Horus,
|
||
generally, are exhorted.
|
||
|
||
Verse 34 is a kind of poetical peroration, and is not
|
||
addressed in particular to anybody. It is a statement of events
|
||
to come.
|
||
|
||
Verse 35 states simply that section one of this chapter is
|
||
completed.
|
||
|
||
I seem to have become enthusiastic, for there is a kind of
|
||
interlude reported by Aiwaz of my song of adoration translated
|
||
form the Stele; the incident parallels that of chapter I, verse
|
||
26, &c.
|
||
|
||
It is to be noted that the translations from the Stele in
|
||
verses 37-38 were no more than instantanious thoughts to be
|
||
inserted afterwards.
|
||
|
||
Verse 38 begins with my address to the God in the first
|
||
sentence, while in the second is his reply to me. He then refers
|
||
to the hieroglyphs of the Stele, and bids me quote my
|
||
praraphrases. This order was given by a species of wordless
|
||
gesture, not visible or audible, but sensible in some occult
|
||
manner.
|
||
|
||
Verses 39-42 are instructions for me personally.
|
||
|
||
Verses 43-45 indicate the proper course of conduct for the
|
||
Scarlet Woman.
|
||
|
||
Verse 46 is again more general--a sort of address to
|
||
soldiers before battle.
|
||
|
||
Verse 47 is again mostly personal instruction, mixed up with
|
||
prophecies, proof of the praeterhuman origin of the Book, and
|
||
other matters.
|
||
|
||
I observe that this instruction, taken with with those not
|
||
to change "so much as a style of a letter," etc., imply that my
|
||
pen was under the physical control of Aiwaz; for this dictation
|
||
did not include directions as to the use of capitals, and the
|
||
occasional mis-spellings are most assuredly not mine!
|
||
|
||
Verse 48 impatiently dismisses such practical matters as a
|
||
nuisance.
|
||
|
||
Verses 49-59 contain a series of declerations of war; and
|
||
there is no further difficulty as to the speaker or hearer to the
|
||
end of the chapter, although the subject changes repeatedly in an
|
||
incomprehensible manner. Only verse 75 do we find a perroation
|
||
on the whole book, presumably by Aiwaz, ending by his formula of
|
||
withdrawal.
|
||
|
||
______________________
|
||
|
||
I conclude by laying down the principles of Exegesis on
|
||
which I have based my comment.*1*
|
||
|
||
I. It is "my scribe Ankh-af-na-khonsu" (CCXX, I, 36) who
|
||
"shall comment" on "this book" "by the wisdom of Ra-Hoor-Khuit";
|
||
that is, Aleister Crowley shall write the Comment from the point
|
||
of view of the manifested positive Lord of the Aeon, in plain
|
||
terms of the finite, and not those of the infinite.
|
||
|
||
2. "Hadit burning in thy heart shall make swift and secure
|
||
thy pen" (CCXX, III, 40). My own inspiration, not any alien
|
||
advice or intellectual consideration, is to be the energizing
|
||
froce of this work.
|
||
|
||
3. Where the text is simple straightforward English, I
|
||
shall not seek, or allow, and interpretation at variance with it.
|
||
|
||
I may admit a Qabalistic or cryptographic secondary meaning
|
||
when such confirms, amplifies, deepens, intensifies, or clarifes
|
||
the obvious common-sense significance ; but only if it be part of
|
||
the general plan of the "latent light," and self-proven by
|
||
abundatnt witness.
|
||
|
||
For example: "To me !" (I, 65) is to be taken primarily in
|
||
its obvious sense as the Call of Nuith to us Her stars.
|
||
|
||
The transliteration "TO MH" may be admitted as the
|
||
"signature" of Nuith, identifying Her as the speaker; because
|
||
these Greek Words mean "The Not," which is Her Name.
|
||
|
||
This Gematria of TO MH may be admitted as further
|
||
confirmation, because their number 4I8 is elsewhere manifested as
|
||
that of the Aeon.
|
||
|
||
But TO MH is not to be taken as negating the previous
|
||
verses, or 4I8 as indicating the fromula of approach to Her,
|
||
although in point of fact it is so, being the Rubrick of the
|
||
Great Work. I refuse to consider mere appropriateness as
|
||
conferring title to authority, and to read my own personal
|
||
theories into the Book. I insist that all interpretation shall
|
||
be incontestably authentic, neither less, more, nor other than
|
||
was meant is the Mind of Aiwaz.
|
||
|
||
4. I lay claim to be the sole authority competent to decide
|
||
disputed points with regard to the Book of the Law, seeing that
|
||
its Author, Aiwaz, is none other than mine own Holy Guardian
|
||
Angel, to Whose Knowledge and Conversation I hace attained, so
|
||
that I have exclusive access to Him. I have duly referred every
|
||
difficulty to Him directly, and received His answer; my award is
|
||
therefore absolute without appeal.
|
||
|
||
5. The verse, II, 47, "one cometh after him, whence I say
|
||
not, who shall discover the key of it all," has been fulfilled by
|
||
"one" Achad is not said to extend beyond this single exploit;
|
||
Achad is nowhere indeicated as appointed or even authorized to
|
||
relieve The Beast of His task of the Comment. Achad has proved
|
||
himself,*1* and proved the Book, by his on achievement; and this
|
||
shall suffice.
|
||
|
||
6. Wherever
|
||
a. The words of the Text are obscure in themselves;
|
||
where
|
||
b. The expression is strained ; where
|
||
c. The Syntax,
|
||
d. Grammar,
|
||
e. Spelling, or
|
||
f. The use of capital letters present peculiarities ;
|
||
where
|
||
g. Non-English words occur ; where the style suggests
|
||
h. Paronomasia,
|
||
i. Ambiguity, or
|
||
j. Obliquity ; or where
|
||
k. A problem is explicitly declared to exist; in all
|
||
such cases I shall seek for a meaning hidden by
|
||
means of Qabalistic correspondences, cryptography,
|
||
or literary subtleties. I shall admit no solution
|
||
which is not at once simple, striking, consonant
|
||
with the general plan of the Book ; and not only
|
||
adequate but necessary.
|
||
|
||
Examples:
|
||
|
||
i I, 4. Here teh obvious sense of the text is non-
|
||
sense ; it therefore needs intimate analysis.
|
||
ii II, I7, line 4. The natural order of the words is
|
||
distorted by placing "not" before "know me"; it is
|
||
proper to ask what object is attained by this
|
||
peculiarity of phrasing.
|
||
iii I, I3. The text as it stands is unintelligible; it
|
||
calls attention to itself ; a meaning must be found
|
||
which will not only justify the apparent error, but
|
||
prove the necessity of employing that and no other
|
||
expression.
|
||
iv II, 76. "to be me" for "to be I." The unusual
|
||
grammar invites enquiry ; it suggests that "me" is
|
||
a concealed name, perhaps MH, "Not," Nuith, since
|
||
to be Nuith is the satisfaction of the formula of
|
||
the Speaker, Hadith.
|
||
v III, I. The omission of the "i" in "Khuit" is in-
|
||
dicative that some concealed doctrine is based upon
|
||
the variant.
|
||
vi II, 27. The spelling of "Because" with a capital B
|
||
suggests that it may be a proper name, and possibly
|
||
that its Greek or Hebrew equivalent may identify the
|
||
idea Qabalistically with some enemy of our Hier-
|
||
archy ; also that such word may demand a capital
|
||
value for its initial.
|
||
vii III, II. "Abstruction" suggests that an idea other-
|
||
wise inexpressible is conveyed in this manner.
|
||
Paraphrase is here inadmissible as a sufficient in-
|
||
terpretation; there must be a correspondence in the
|
||
actual structure of the word with its etymologically
|
||
-deduced meaning.
|
||
viii III, 74. The words "sun" and "son" are evidently
|
||
chosen for the identity of their sound-value; the
|
||
inelegance of the phrase therefroe insists on some
|
||
such adequate justification as the existence of a
|
||
hidden treasure of meaning.
|
||
ix III, 73. The ambiguity of the instruction warrants
|
||
the supposition that the wrods must somehow contain
|
||
a cryptographic formula for so arranging the sheets
|
||
of the MS. that an Arcanum becomes manifest.
|
||
x I, 26. The apparent evasion of a direct reply in
|
||
"Thou knowest !" suggests that the words conceal a
|
||
precise answer more convincing in cipher than their
|
||
openly-expressed equvialent could be.
|
||
xi II, I5. The text explicity invites Qabalistic ana-
|
||
lysis.
|
||
|
||
7. The Comment must be consistent with itself at all
|
||
points; it must exhibit ther Book of the Law as of absolute
|
||
authority on all possible questions proper to Mankind, as
|
||
offering the perfect solution of all problems philosophical and
|
||
practical without exception.
|
||
|
||
8. The Comment must prove beyond possibility of error that
|
||
the Book of the Law,
|
||
|
||
a. Bears witness in itself to the quthorship of Aiwaz,
|
||
an Intelligence independent of incarnation ; and
|
||
b. Is warranted wrothy of its claim to credence by the
|
||
evidence of external events.
|
||
|
||
For example, the first proposition is proved by the
|
||
cryptography connected with 3I, 93, 4I8, 666,[pi], etc.; and the
|
||
second by the concurrence of circumstance with various statements
|
||
in the text such that the categories of time and causality forbid
|
||
all explanations which exclued its own postulates, while the law
|
||
of probabilities makes coincidence inconceivavle as an evasion of
|
||
the issue.
|
||
|
||
|
||
9. The Comment must be expressed in terms intelligible to
|
||
the minds of men of average education, and independent of
|
||
abstruse technicalities.
|
||
|
||
I0. The Comment must be pertinent to the problems of our own
|
||
tiems, and present the principles of the Law in a manner
|
||
susceptible of present practical application. It must satisfy
|
||
all types of intelligence, neither revolting to rational,
|
||
scientific, mathematical, and philosophical thinkers, nor
|
||
repugnant to religious and romantic temperaments.
|
||
|
||
II. The Comment must appeal on behalf of the Law to the
|
||
authority of Experience. It must make Success the proof of the
|
||
Truth of the Book of the Law at every point of contact with
|
||
Reality.
|
||
|
||
The Word fo Aiwaz must put forth a perfect presentation of
|
||
the Universe as Necessary, Intelligible, Self-subsistent, as
|
||
Integral, Absolute, and Immanent. It must satisfy all
|
||
intuitions, explain all enigmas, and compse all conflicts. It
|
||
must reveal Reality, reconcile Reason with Relativity; and,
|
||
resolving not only all antinomies in the Absolute, but all
|
||
antipathies in the appreciation of Aptness, assure the
|
||
acquiescence of every faculty of manking in the perfection of its
|
||
plenary propriety.
|
||
|
||
Releasing us from every restrition upon Right, the Word of
|
||
Aiwaz must extend its empire by enlisting the allegiance of every
|
||
man and every woman that puts its truth to the test.
|
||
|
||
On these principles, to the pitch of my power, will I the
|
||
Beast 666, who received the Book of the Law from the Mouth of
|
||
mine Angel Aiwaz, make my comment thereon ; being armed with the
|
||
word : "But the work of the comment ?
|
||
|
||
That is easy ; and Hadit in thy heart shall make swift and secure
|
||
thy pen."
|
||
|
||
____________________
|
||
|
||
|
||
Editorial Note to this Chapter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The reader is now in full possession of the account of "how
|
||
thou didst come hither". The student who wishes to act
|
||
intelligently will be at pains to make himself thoroughly
|
||
acquainted at teh outset with the whole of the external
|
||
circumstances connected with the Writing of the Book, whether
|
||
they are of biographical or other importance. He should thus be
|
||
able to approach the Book with his mind prepared to apprehend the
|
||
unique character of their contents in repect of its true
|
||
Authorship, the peculiarities of Its methods of communicating
|
||
Thought, and the nature of Its claim to be the Canon of Truth,
|
||
the Key of Progress, and the Arbiter of Conduct. He will be able
|
||
to form his own judgment upon It, only insofar as he is fixed in
|
||
the proper Point-of-View; the sole question for him is to decide
|
||
whether It is or is not that which It claims to be, the New Law
|
||
in the same sense as the Vedas, the Pentateuch, the Tao Teh King,
|
||
and Qu'ran are Laws, but with the added Authority of Verbal,
|
||
Literal, and Graphic inspiration established and counter-checked
|
||
by internal evidence with the impeccable precision of a
|
||
mathematical demonstration. If It be that, It is an unique
|
||
document, valid absolutely within the terms of its self-contained
|
||
thesis, incomparabley more valuable than any other Transcript of
|
||
Thought which we possess.
|
||
|
||
If It be not wholly that, it is a worthless curiosity of
|
||
literature; worse, it is and appalling proof that no kind or
|
||
degree of evidence soever is sufficient to establish any possible
|
||
proposition, since the closest concatenation of circumstances may
|
||
be no more than the jetsam of chance, and the most comprehensive
|
||
plans of purpose a puerile pantomime. To reject this Book is to
|
||
make Reason itself ridiculous and the Law of Probabilities a
|
||
caprice. In Its fall it shatters the structure of Science, and
|
||
buries the whole hope of man's heart in the rubble, throwing upon
|
||
its heaps the sceptic, blinded, crippled, and gone melancholy
|
||
mad.
|
||
|
||
The reader must face the problem squarely; half-measures
|
||
will not avail. If there be qught he recognize as transcendental
|
||
Truth, he cannot admit the possibility that the Speaker, taking
|
||
such pains to prove Himself and His Word, should yet incorporate
|
||
Falsehood in the same elaborate engines. If the Book be but a
|
||
monument of a mortal's madness, he must tremble that such power
|
||
and cunning may be the accomplices of insane and criminal
|
||
archanarchs.
|
||
|
||
But if he know the Book to be justified of Itself, It shall
|
||
be justified also of Its children; and he will glow with gladness
|
||
in his heart as he reads the sixty-third to the sixty-seventh
|
||
verses of Its chapter, and gain his first glimpse of Who he
|
||
himself is in truth, and to what fulfilment of Himself It is of
|
||
virtue to bring Him.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
||
Summary of the Case.
|
||
|
||
In this revelation is the basis of the future Aeon. Within
|
||
the memory of man we have had the Pagan period, the worship of
|
||
Nature, of Isis, of the Mother, of the Past; the Christian
|
||
period, the worship of Man, of Osiris, of the Present. The first
|
||
period is simple, quiet, easy, and pleasant; the material ignores
|
||
the spiritual; the second is of suffering and death: the
|
||
spiritual strives to ignore the material. Christianity and all
|
||
cognate religions worship death, glorify suffering, deify
|
||
corpses. The new Aeon is the worship of the spiritual made one
|
||
with the material, of Horus, of the Child, of the Future.
|
||
|
||
Isis was Liberty ; Osiris, bondage ; but the new Liberty is
|
||
that of Horus. Osiris conquered her because she did not
|
||
understand him. Horuse avenges both his Father and his Mother.
|
||
This child Horus is a twin, two in one. Horus and Harpocrates
|
||
are one, and they are also one with Set or Apophis, the destroyer
|
||
of Osiris. It is by the destruction of the principle of death
|
||
that they are born. The establishment of this new Aeon, this new
|
||
fundamental principle, is the great work now to be accomplished
|
||
in the world.
|
||
|
||
FRATER PERDURABO, to whom this revelation was made with so
|
||
many signs and wonders, was himself unconvinced. He struggled
|
||
against it for years. Not until the completion of His own
|
||
initiation at the end of I909 did he understand how perfectly he
|
||
was bound to carry out this work.*1* Again and again He turned
|
||
away from it, took it up for a few days or hours, then laid it
|
||
aside. He even attempted to destroy its value, to nullify the
|
||
result. Again and again the unsleeping might of the Watchers
|
||
drove Him back to the work; and it was at the very moment when He
|
||
thought Himself to have escaped that He found Himself fixed for
|
||
ever with no possibility of again turning asede for the fraction
|
||
of second from the Path.
|
||
|
||
The history of this must one day be told by a more vivid
|
||
voice. Properly considered, it is a history of continuous
|
||
miracle. Enough if it is now said that in this Law lies the
|
||
whole future: it is the Law of Liberty, and those who refuse it
|
||
proclaim themselves slaves, and as slaves shall they be chained
|
||
and flogged. It is the Law of Love, and those who refuse it
|
||
declare themselves to be the children of hate, and their hate
|
||
shall return upon them and consume them with its unending
|
||
tortures. It is the Law of Life, and those who refuse it shall
|
||
be subject to death; and death shall catch them unawares. Even
|
||
their life shall be a living death. It is the Law of Light, and
|
||
those who refuse it thereby make themselves dark for ever.
|
||
|
||
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law! Refuse
|
||
this, and fall under the curse of destiny. Divide will against
|
||
itself, the result is impotence and strife, strife-in-vain. The
|
||
Law condemns no man. Accept the Law, and everything is lawful.
|
||
|
||
Refuse the Law, you put yourself beyond its pale. It is the Law
|
||
that Jesus Christ, or rather the Gnostic tradition of which the
|
||
Christ-legend is a degradation, attempted to teach; but nearly
|
||
every word he*1* said was mininterpreted and garbled by his
|
||
enemies, particularly by those who called themselves his
|
||
disciples. In any case the Aeon was not ready for a Law of
|
||
Freedom. Of all his followers only St. Augustine appears to have
|
||
got even a glimmer of what he meant.
|
||
|
||
A further attempt to teach this law was made through Sir Edward
|
||
Kelly at the end of the sixteenth century. The bondage of
|
||
orthodoxy prevented his words from being heard, or understood.
|
||
In many ohter ways has the spirit of truth striven with man, and
|
||
partial shadows of this truth have been the greatest allies of
|
||
science and philosophy. Only now has success been attained. A
|
||
perfect vehicle was found, and the message enshrined in a
|
||
jewelled casket; that is to say, in a book with the injunction
|
||
"Change not as much as the style of a letter." This book is
|
||
reproduced in facsimile, in order that there shall be no
|
||
possibility of corrupting it. Here, then, we have an absolutely
|
||
fixed and definite standpoint for the foundation of an universal
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
We have the Key to the resolution of all human problems,
|
||
both philosophical and practical. If we have seemed to labour
|
||
at proof, our love must be the excuse for our infirmity ; for we
|
||
know well that which is written in the Book:
|
||
|
||
"Success is your proof."
|
||
|
||
We ask no more than one witness ; and we call upon Time to
|
||
take the Oath, and testify to the Truth of our plea.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
FOOTNOTES
|
||
|
||
PAGE 41
|
||
1) In the Book of the Law we find in the 3rd chapter and the
|
||
39th to the 41st verse an instruction to issue a book to say how
|
||
this Revelation was obtained, with certain details with regard to
|
||
the style in which it is to done.
|
||
It has hitherto been impossible to comply with this injunc-
|
||
tion, although an attempt was made in "The Temple of Solomon the
|
||
King". We now proceed to do so; the subject divides itself into
|
||
Eight Chapters.----[Ed.]
|
||
|
||
PAGE 43
|
||
1) This curious trait may perhaps be evidence of his poetical
|
||
feeling, his passion for the bizarre and mysterious, or even of
|
||
his aptitude for the Hebrew Qabalah. It may also be interpreted
|
||
as a clue to his magical ancestry.
|
||
2) The first man to beat him was H. E. Atkins, British Chess
|
||
Champion (Amateur) for many years.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 45
|
||
1) Swinburne similarly refused to be examined in Classics at
|
||
Oxford on the ground that he knew more than the examiners.
|
||
2) In Chess also he has beaten many International Masters, and
|
||
ranks on the Continent as a Minor Master himself. But he cannot
|
||
be relied upon to win against a second-rate player in a Club
|
||
Match.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 47
|
||
1) Written in I920 e.v.: these records may no longer stand.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 52
|
||
1) See Part I of Book 4 for a description of this, and an expla-
|
||
nation of the difficulty of the task, even in the case of one
|
||
whose powers of concentrated attention, in the ordinary sense of
|
||
the phrase, are highly developed.
|
||
2) He is the author of commentaries on the Gospels of Matthew
|
||
and John, which he explains as containing many of the aphorisms
|
||
of Yoga.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 53
|
||
1) See Part I of Book 4 for full descriptions, and Equinox for
|
||
some of FRATER PERDURABO'S records of these practices.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 54
|
||
1) See Part I of Book 4, and Equinox Vol. I, No. IV.
|
||
2) An account of this journey is given by Dr. Jacot-Guillarmod:
|
||
"Six mois dans l'Himalaya." His own story is in "The Spirit of
|
||
Solitude" (The Confessions of Aleister Crowley) Vol. II.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 55
|
||
1) The Mystic Name of an Adept of this degree is not to be
|
||
divulged without special reasons for so doing.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 56
|
||
1) See the Equinox "The Temple of Solomon the King" for a fairly
|
||
full account of these various matters. The "Master" was the late
|
||
S.L. Mathers.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 58
|
||
1) An account of these matters, in part, is to be found in the
|
||
Equinox, Vol. I, No. VIII, and in his own poem "Aha !"
|
||
|
||
PAGE 6I
|
||
1) The notes for this article were worked out in collaboration
|
||
with Captain (now Major-General) J.F.C. Fuller. Every means of
|
||
cross-examination was pressed to the utmost.
|
||
2) Projected by Fuller as no more than a record of the personal
|
||
attainment of Aleister Crowley.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 68
|
||
1) As a devotee of Yoga, "Union," would have done.
|
||
2) Given in Liber Samekh: see "Magick."
|
||
3) Thoth, the Egytian God of Wisdom and Magick.
|
||
4) Horus.
|
||
5) The Sun.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 69
|
||
1) More probably a blind.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 70
|
||
1) I.e. Wednesday.
|
||
2) See "Magick" Appendix Liber CXX.
|
||
3) Thursday.
|
||
4) Friday.
|
||
5) Saturday.
|
||
6) Sunday.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 7I
|
||
1) See Equinox Vol. I, No. II, the Neophyte Ritual of the G.D.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 73
|
||
1) 666 had been taken by Fra. P. as the number of His own Name
|
||
(The Beast) long years before, in His childhood. There could be
|
||
no physical causal connection here ; and coincidence, sufficient
|
||
to explain this one isolated fact, becomes inadequate in view of
|
||
the other evidence.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 75
|
||
1) (The father's name. The method of spelling shows that he was
|
||
a foreigner. There is no clue to the vocalisation).
|
||
|
||
PAGE 76
|
||
1) The analogy is between the "new formula" given by the "Word"
|
||
every six months in the Order, and that given every couple of
|
||
thousand years (more or less) by the Word of a Magus to the whole
|
||
or part of Mankind.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 77
|
||
1) "Monday. The Sun enters Aries." i.e. Springs begins.
|
||
2) Tuesday.
|
||
3) Wednesday.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 86
|
||
1) But see the miraculous events connected with "The Revival of
|
||
Magick" described in Magick pp. 257-260, where he is shewn as 93.
|
||
2) I.e. the messenger of God to Man.
|
||
3) The motto of Fra. P. as a Magister Templi 8[degree] = 3[?];
|
||
He used it in His office of giving out the "Official Books of
|
||
A.A." to the word in the Equinox.
|
||
4) J.F.C. Fuller.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 94
|
||
1) This paper was written, independently of any idea of its
|
||
present place in this Book, by The Beast 666 Himself, in the
|
||
Abbey of Thelema in Cefalu, Sicily. No further apology is of-
|
||
fered for any repetitious of statements made in previous chap-
|
||
ters.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 96
|
||
1) Written in I920, e.v.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 97
|
||
1) Such a theory would further imply that I am, unknown to
|
||
myself, possessed of all sorts of praeternatural knowledge and
|
||
power. The law of Parsimony of Thought (Sir W. Hamilton) appears
|
||
in rebuttal. Aiwaz calls Himself "the minister of Hoor-parr-
|
||
Kraat," the twin of Heru-Ra-Ha. This is the dual form of Horus,
|
||
child of Isis and Osiris.
|
||
|
||
PAGE 98
|
||
1) In preparation.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I0I
|
||
1) The Chalice is not presented to laymen. Those who understand
|
||
the reason for this and other details of the Mass, will wonder at
|
||
the perfection with which the Roman Communion has preserved the
|
||
form, and lost the substance, of the Supreme Magical Ritual of
|
||
the True Gnosis.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I02
|
||
1) The "magical numbers" of the Sun are, according to tradition,
|
||
6, (6 x 6) 36, (666 [divided by] III, and [epsilon] (I-36) 666.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I03
|
||
1) Shin 300 Teht 9 Aleph I Lamed 30 He 5 Yod I0 Mem 40. Note
|
||
that 395 being the corrections required ! Note also the 3I and
|
||
the 93 in this value of [pi].
|
||
|
||
PAGE I07
|
||
1) See Liber LXV, I, Equinox III, and Liber VII Equinox III, II,
|
||
especially.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II2
|
||
1) Church of England. I confidently supposed that Anglicansim
|
||
was a peculiarly violent form of Devil-Worship, and was in de-
|
||
spair at being unable to discover where the Abomination came in.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II3
|
||
1) It broke out during my absence (I906), and made it impossible
|
||
to resume the previous relations.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II4
|
||
1) See previous chapter.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II5
|
||
1) I invoked them by the Air section of Liber Samekh, and the
|
||
appropriate God-names, Pentagrams, & c.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II7
|
||
1) The effect was thus as if the language were "English-in-
|
||
itself," without any background, such as exists when one hears
|
||
any one human speak it, and enables one to assign all sorts of
|
||
attributes to the speaker.
|
||
|
||
PAGE II8
|
||
1) This impression seems to have been a sort of visualization in
|
||
the imagination. It is not uncommon for me to receive intima-
|
||
tions in this manner.
|
||
2) I do not necessarily mean that he is a member of human socie-
|
||
ty in quite the normal way. He might rather be able to form for
|
||
Himself a human body as circumstances indicate, from the appro-
|
||
priate Elements, and dissolve it when the occasion for its use is
|
||
past. I say this because I have been permitted to see Him in
|
||
recent years in a variety of physical appearances, all equally
|
||
"material" in the sense in which my own body is so.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I26
|
||
1) The following passage, to the end of the chapter, refers to
|
||
the Commentary ; whereas the Comment itself is printed, above,
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||
with the text. This Comment is the really inspired message,
|
||
cutting as it does all the difficulties with a single keen
|
||
stroke. We have deciede, however, to retain the passage for its
|
||
essential interest and as a preliminary to the publication of the
|
||
Commentary---Ed.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I27
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||
1) I note that A Ch D is "his child" without reference to The
|
||
Scarlet Woman ; whereas the Child who is to be "mightier than all
|
||
the kings of the earth" is to be bred from Her, without reference
|
||
to the Beast. There is no indication that these two children are
|
||
not identical ; but there is none that they are. Hans "Carter" (
|
||
or Hirsig) might perfectly well be the latter of these children.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I35
|
||
1) Indeed, it was not until his Word became conterminous with
|
||
Himself and His Universe that all alien ideas lost their meaning
|
||
for Him.
|
||
|
||
PAGE I36
|
||
1) Consult Equinox III 2 "Jesus," a study of the New Testment by
|
||
The Beast 666, where it is proven that "Jesus" is a composite
|
||
figure of several incompatible elements. There is therefore no
|
||
"he" in the case. The Gospels are a crude compilation of Gnosti-
|
||
cism, Judaism, Essenism, Hinduism, Buddhism, with the watch-words
|
||
of various sacerdotal-political cults, thrown at random into a
|
||
hotch-potch of the distroted legends of the persons of the Pagan
|
||
Pantheon, all glued with a semblance of unity in the interests of
|
||
sustaining the shaken fabric of lacal faiths against the assults
|
||
of the consolidation of civilization, and of applying the cooper-
|
||
ative principle to businesses whose throats were being cut by
|
||
competition.
|
||
|
||
|
||
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