88 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
88 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
TRANCE.
|
||
The word ®MDUL¯Trance®MDNM¯ implies a passing beyond: scil., the
|
||
conditions which oppress. The whole and sole object of all true Magical and
|
||
Mystical training is to become free from every kind of limitation. Thus,
|
||
body and mind, in the widest sense, are the obstacles in the Path of the
|
||
Wise: the paradox, tragic enough as it seems, is that they are also the
|
||
means of progress. How to get rid of them, to pass beyond or to transcend
|
||
them, is the problem, and this is as strictly practical and scientific as
|
||
that of eliminating impurities from a gas, or of adroitly using mechanical
|
||
laws. Here is the inevitable logical flaw in the sorites of the Adept, that
|
||
he is bound by the very principles which it is his object to overcome: and
|
||
on him who seeks to discard them arbitrarily they haste to take a terrible
|
||
revenge!
|
||
It is in practice, not in theory, that this difficulty suddenly
|
||
disappears. For when we take rational steps to suspend the operation of the
|
||
rational mind, the inhibition does not result in chaos, but in the
|
||
apprehension of the Universe by means of a faculty to which the laws of the
|
||
Reason do not apply; and when, returning to the normal state, we seek to
|
||
analyse our experience, we find that the description abounds in rational
|
||
absurdities.
|
||
On further consideration, however, it becomes gradually clear --
|
||
gradually, because the habit of Trance must be firmly fixed before its
|
||
fulminating impressions are truly intelligible -- that there are not two
|
||
kinds of Thought, or of Nature, but one only. The Law of the Mind is the
|
||
sole substance of the Universe, as well as the sole means by which we
|
||
apprehend it. There is thus no true antithesis between the conditions of
|
||
Trance and those of ratiocination and perception; the fact that Trance is
|
||
not amenable to the rules of argument is impertinent. We say that in Chess
|
||
a Knight traverses the diagonal of a rectangle measuring three squares by
|
||
two, neglecting its motion as a material object in space. We have described
|
||
a definite limited relation in terms of a special sense which works by an
|
||
arbitrary symbolism: when we analyse any example of our ordinary mental
|
||
processes, we find the case entirely similar. for what we `see,' `hear,'
|
||
etc., depends upon our idiosyncrasies, for one thing, and upon conventional
|
||
interpretation for another. Thus we agree to call grass green, and to avoid
|
||
walking over the edge of precipices, without any attempt to make sure that
|
||
any two minds have exactly identical conceptions of what these things may
|
||
mean; and just so we agree upon the moves in Chess. By the rules of the
|
||
game, then, we must think and act, or we risk every kind of error; but we
|
||
amy be perfectly well aware that the rules are arbitrary, and that it is
|
||
after all only a game. The constant folly of the traditional mystic has
|
||
been to be so proud of himself for discovering the great secret that the
|
||
Universe is no more than a toy invented by himself for his amusement that
|
||
he hastens to display his powers by deliberately misunderstanding and
|
||
misusing the toy. He has not grasped the fact that just because it is no
|
||
more than a projection of his own Point-of-View, it is integrally Himself
|
||
that he offends!
|
||
Here lies the error of such Pantheism as that of Mansur el-Hallaj, whom
|
||
Sir Richard Burton so delightfully (twits in the ®MDUL¯Kasidah®MDNM¯ with
|
||
his impotence --
|
||
"Mansur was wise, but wiser they who smote
|
||
him with the hurl(acg)ed stones;
|
||
And though his blood a witness bore, no
|
||
Wisdom-Might could mend his bones.~"
|
||
God was in the stones no less than within his turband-wrapping; and when
|
||
the twain crashed together, one point of perception of the pact was
|
||
obscured -- which was in no wise his design!
|
||
To us, however, this matter is not one for regret; it is (like every
|
||
phenomenon) an Act of Love. And the very definition of such Act is the
|
||
Passing Beyond of two Events into a Third, and their withdrawal into
|
||
Silence or Nothingness by simultaneous reaction. In this sense it may be
|
||
said that the Universe is a constant issue into Trance; and in fact the
|
||
proper understanding of any Event by means of the suitable Contemplation
|
||
should produce the type of Trance appropriate to the complex
|
||
Event-Individual in the case.
|
||
Now all Magick is useful to produce Trance; for (alpha) it trains the
|
||
mind in the discipline necessary to Yoga; (beta) it exalts the spirit to
|
||
the impersonal and divine sublimity which is the first condition of
|
||
success; (gamma) it enlarges the scope of the mind, assuring it full
|
||
mastery of every subtler plane of Nature, thus affording it adequate
|
||
material for ecstatic consummation of the Eucharist of Existence.
|
||
The essence of the idea of Trance is indeed contained in that of Magick,
|
||
which is pre-eminently the transcendental Science and Art. Its method is,
|
||
in one chief sense, Love, the very key of Trance; and, in another, the
|
||
passing beyond normal conditions. The verbs to transcend, to transmit, to
|
||
transcribe, and their like, are all of cardinal virtue in Magick. Hence
|
||
"Love is the law, love under will" is the supreme epitome of Magical
|
||
doctrine, and its universal Formula. For need any man fear to state boldly
|
||
that every Magical Operation soever is only complete when it is
|
||
characterised (in one sense or another) by the occurrence of Trance. It was
|
||
ill done to restrict the use of the word to the supersession of dualistic
|
||
human consciousness by the impersonal and monistic state of Samadhi. Fast
|
||
bubbles the fountain of Error from the morass of Ignorance when distinction
|
||
is forcibly drawn "between any one thing and any other thing." Yea, verily,
|
||
and Amen! it is the first necessity as it is the last attainment of Trance
|
||
to abolish every form and every order of dividuality so fast as it presents
|
||
itself. By this ray may ye read in the Book of your own Magical Record the
|
||
authentic stigma of your own success. |