89 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
89 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
LOVE.
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"Now the Magus is Love, and bindeth together That and This in his
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Conjuration."
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The Formula of Tetragrammaton is the complete mathematical expression of
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Love. Its essence is this: any two things unite, with a double effect;
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firstly, the destruction of both, accompanied by the ecstasy due to the
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relief of the strain of separateness; secondly, the creation of a third
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thing, accompanied by the ecstasy of the realisation of existence, which is
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Joy until with development it becomes aware of its imperfection, and loves.
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This formula of Love is universal; all the laws of Nature are its
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servitors. Thus, gravitation, chemical affinity, electrical potential, and
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the rest -- and these are alike mere aspects of the general law -- are so
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many differently-observed statements of the unique tendency.
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The Universe is conserved by the duplex action involved in the formula.
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The disappearance of Father and Mother is precisely compensated by the
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emergence of Son and Daughter. It may therefore be considered as a
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perpetual-motion-engine which continually develops rapture in each of its
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phases.
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The sacrifice of Iphigenia at Aulis may be taken as typical of the
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formula: the mystical effect is the assumption of the maid to the bosom of
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the goddess; while, for the magical, the destruction of her earthly part,
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the fawn composes the rage of AEolus, and bids the Danaids set sail.
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Now it cannot be too clearly understood, or too acutely realised by
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means of action, that the intensity of the Joy liberated varies with the
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original degree of opposition between the two elements of the union. Heat,
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light, electricity are phenomena expressive of the fullness of passion, and
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their value is greatest when the diversity of the Energies composing the
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marriage is most strenuous. One obtains more from the explosion of Hydrogen
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and Oxygen than from the dull combination of substances indifferent to each
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other. Thus, the union of Nitrogen and Chlorine is so little satisfying to
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either molecule, that the resulting compound disintegrates with explosive
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violence at the slightest shock. We might say, then, in the language of
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Thelema, that such an act of love is not "love under will." It is, so to
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speak, a black magical operation.
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Let us consider, in a figure, the "feelings' of a molecule of Hydrogen
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in the presence of one of Oxygen or of Chlorine. It is made to suffer
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intensely by the realisation of the extremity of its deviation from the
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perfect type of monad by the contemplation of an element so supremely
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opposed to its own nature at every point. So far as it is egoist, its
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reaction must be scorn and hatred; but as it understands by the true shame
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that is put upon its separateness by the presence of its opposite, these
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feelings turn to anguished yearning. It begins to crave the electric spark
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which will enable it to assuage its pangs by the annihilation of all those
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properties which constitute its separate existence, in the rapture of
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union, and at the same time to fulfil its passion to create a perfect type
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of Peace.
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We see the same psychology everywhere in the physical world. A stronger
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and more elaborate illustration might well have been drawn, were the
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purpose of this essay less catholic, from the structure of the atoms
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themselves, and their effort to resolve the agony of their agitation in the
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beatific Nirvana of the `noble' gases.
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The process of Love under Will is evidently progressive. The Father who
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has slain himself in the womb of the Mother finds himself again, with her,
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and transfigured, in the Son. This Son acts as a new Father; and it is thus
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that the Self is constantly aggrandized, and able to counterpoise an ever
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greater Not-Self, until the final act of Love under Will which comprehends
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the Universe in Sammasamadhi.
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The passion of Hatred is thus really directed against oneself; it is the
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expression of the pain and shame of separateness; and it only appears to be
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directed against the opposite by psychological transference. This thesis
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the School of Freud has made sufficiently clear.
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There is then little indeed in common between Love and such tepid
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passions as regard, affection, or kindliness; it is the uninitiate, who, to
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his damnation in a hell of cabbage soup and soap-suds, confuses them.
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Love may best be defined as the passion of Hatred inflamed to the point
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of madness, when it takes refuge in Self-destruction.
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Love is clear-sighted with the lust of deadly rage, anatomizing its
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victim with keen energy, seeking where best to strike home mortally to the
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heart; it becomes blind only when its fury has completely overpowered it,
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and thrust it into the red maw of the furnace of self-immolation.
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We must further distinguish in this magical sense from the sexual
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formula, symbol and type though that be thereof. For the pure essence of
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Magick is a function of ultimate atomic consciousness, and its operations
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must be refined from all confusion and contamination. The truly magical
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operations of Love are therefore the Trances, more especially those of
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Understanding; as will readily have been appreciated by those who have made
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a careful Qabalistic study of the nature of Binah. For she is omniform as
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Love and as Death, the Great Sea whence all Life springs, and whose black
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womb reabsorbs all. She thus resumes in herself the duplex process of the
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Formula of Love under Will; for is not Pan the All-Begetter in the heart of
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the Groves at high noon, and is not Her "hair the trees of Eternity" the
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filaments of All-Devouring Godhead "under the Night of Pan?"
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Yet let it not be forgotten that though She be love, her function is but
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passive; she is the vehicle of the Word, of Chokmah, Wisdom, the
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All-Father, who is the Will of the All-One. And thus they err with grievous
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error and dire who prate of Love as the Formula of Magick; Love is
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unbalanced, void, vague, undirected, sterile, nay, more, a very Shell, the
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prey of abject orts demonic: Love must be <20>MDUL<55>"under will."<22>MDNM<4E>
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