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Based on the Sangreal edition of 1969 e.v., with the "Interlude" restored
(absent from the Sangreal edition). Diagrams noted but not described.
Copyright (c) Ordo Templi Orientis
THERE are seven keys to the great gate,
Being eight in one and one in eight.
First, let the body of thee be still,
Bound by the cerements of will,
Corpse-rigid; thus thou mayst abort
The fidget-babes that tease the thought.
Next, let the breath-rhythm be low,
Easy, regular, and slow;
So that thy being be in tune
With the great sea's Pacific swoon.
Third, let thy life be pure and calm,
Swayed softly as a windless palm.
Fourth, let the will-to-live be bound
To the one love of the profound.
Fifth, let the thought, divinely free
From sense, observe its entity.
Watch every thought that springs; enhance
Hour after hour thy vigilance!
Intense and keen, turned inward, miss
No atom of analysis!
Sixth, on one thought securely pinned
Still every whisper of the wind!
So like a flame straight and unstirred
Burn up thy being in one word!
Next, still that ecstasy, prolong
Thy meditation steep and strong,
Slaying even God, should He distract
Thy attention from the chosen act!
Last, all these things in one o'erpowered,
Time that the midnight blossom flowered!
The oneness is. Yet even in this,
My son, thou shall not do amiss
If thou restrain the expression, shoot
Thy glance to rapture's darkling root,
Discarding name, form, sight, and stress
Even of this high consciousness;
Pierce to the heart! I leave thee here:
Thou art the Master. I revere
Thy radiance that rolls afar,
O Brother of the Silver Star!
CROWLEY "AHA!"
Issued by order of
the GREAT WHITE
BROTHERHOOD
known as the A.'.A.'.
Witness our Seal,
N.'.'
Praemonstrator-General
{photograph: The colotype of Crowley from EQUINOX I, 3, just before page 11,
titled underneath "ALEISTER CROWLEY"}
PART II -- MAGICK
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
{photograph: (probably colotype original) of Crowley with implements, titled
underneath "THE MAGICIAN IN HIS ROBE AND CROWN, ARMED WITH WAND, CUP, SWORD,
PANTACLE, BELL, BOOK, AND HOLY OIL."}
CEREMONIAL MAGICK,
footnote: The old spelling MAGICK has been adopted throughout in order
to distinguish the Science of the Magi from all its counterfeits.
THE TRAINING FOR MEDITATION
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
HITHERTO we have spoken only of the mystic path; and we have kept
particularly to the practical exoteric side of it. Such difficulties as we have
mentioned have been purely natural obstacles. For example, the great question of
the surrender of the self, which bulks so largely in most mystical treatises,
has not been referred to at all. We have said only what a man must do; we have
not considered at all what that doing may involve. The rebellion of the will
against the terrible discipline of meditation has not been discussed; one may
now devote a few words to it.
There is no limit to what theologians call "wickedness." Only by experience
can the student discover the ingenuity of the mind in trying to escape from
control. He is perfectly safe so long as he sticks to meditation, doing no more
and no less than that which we have prescribed; but the mind will probably not
let him remain in that simplicity. This fact is the root of all the legends
about the "Saint" being tempted by the '"Devil." Consider the parable of Christ
in the Wilderness, where he is tempted to use his magical power, to do anything
but the thing that should be done. These attacks on the will are as bad as the
thoughts which intrude upon Dharana. It would almost seem as if one could not
succesfully practice meditation until the will had become so strong that no
force in the Universe could either bend or break it. Before concentrating the
lower principle, the mind, one must concentrate the higher principle, the Will.
Failure to understand this has destroyed the value of all attempts to teach
"Yoga," "Menticulture," "New Thought," and the like.
There are methods of training the will, by which it is easy to check one's
progress.
Every one knows the force of habit. Every one knows that if you keep on
acting in a particular way, that action becomes easier, and at last absolutely
natural.
All religions have devised practices for this purpose. If you keep on praying
with your lips long enough, you will one day find yourself praying in your
heart.
The whole question has been threshed out and organized by wise men of old;
they have made a Science of Life complete and perfect; and they have given to it
the name of MAGICK. It is the chief secret of the Ancients, and if the
keys have never been actually lost, they have certainly been little used.
footnote: The holders of those keys have always kept very quiet about
it. This has been especially necessary in Europe, because of the dominance of
persecuting churches.
Again, the confusion of thought caused by the ignorance of the people who did
not understand it has discredited the whole subject. It is now our task to
re-establish this science in its perfection.
To do this we must criticize the Authorities; some of them have made it too
complex, others have completely failed in such simple matters as coherence. Many
of the writers are empirics, still more mere scribes, while by far the largest
class of all is composed of stupid charlatans.
We shall consider a simple form of magick, harmonized from many systems old
and new, describing the various weapons of the Magician and the furniture of his
temple. We shall explain to what each really corresponds, and discuss the
construction and the use of everything.
The Magician works in a Temple; the Universe, which is (be it
remembered!) conterminous with himself.
footnote: By "yourself" you mean the contents of your consciousness.
All without does not exist for you.
In this temple a Circle is drawn upon the floor for the limitation
of his working. This circle is protected by divine names, the influences on
which he relies to keep out hostile thoughts. Within the circle stands an
Altar, the solid basis on which he works, the foundation of all. Upon the
Altar are his Wand, Cup, Sword, and Pantacle,
to represent his Will, his Understanding, his Reason, and the lower parts of his
being, respectively. On the Altar, too, is a phial of Oil, surrounded
by a Scourge, a Dagger, and a Chain, while above the
Altar hangs a Lamp. The Magician wears a Crown, a single Robe,
and a Lamen, and he bears a Book of Conjurations and a
Bell.
The oil consecrates everything that is touched with it; it is his aspiration;
all acts performed in accordance with that are holy. The scourge tortures him;
the dagger wounds him; the chain binds him. It is by virtue of these three that
his aspiration remains pure, and is able to consecrate all other things. He
wears a crown to affirm his lordship, his divinity; a robe to symbolize silence,
and a lamen to declare his work. The book of spells or conjurations is his
magical record, his Karma. In the East is the Magick Fire, in which all
burns up at last.
footnote: He needs nothing else but the apparatus here described for
invocation, by which he calls down that which is above him and within him; but
for evocations, by which he calls forth that which is below him and without
him, he may place a triangle without the circle.
We will now consider each of these matters in detail.
CHAPTER I
THE TEMPLE
THE Temple represents the external Universe. The Magician must take it as he
finds it, so that it is of no particular shape; yet we find written, Liber VII,
vi, 2: "We made us a Temple of stones in the shape of the Universe, even as thou
didst wear openly and I concealed." This shape is the Vesica Piscis; but it is
only the greatest of the Magicians who can thus fashion the Temple. There may,
however, be some choice of rooms; this refers to the power of the Magician to
reincarnate in a suitable body.
{diagram on this page: a magical circle reminiscent of an illustration in the
"Treasure House of Images" in the Equinox. Caption below: "THE CIRCLE".}
CHAPTER II
THE CIRCLE
THE Circle announces the Nature of the Great Work.
Though the Magician has been limited in his choice of room, he is more or
less able to choose what part of the room he will work in. He will consider
convenience and possibility. His circle should not be too small and cramp his
movements; it should not be so large that he has long distances to traverse.
Once the circle is made and consecrated, the Magician must not leave it, or even
lean outside, lest he be destroyed by the hostile forces that are without.
He chooses a circle rather than any other lineal figure for many reasons;
e.g.,
1. He affirms thereby his identity with the infinite.
2. He affirms the equal balance of his working; since all points on the
circumference are equidistant from the centre.
3. He affirms the limitation implied by his devotion to the Great Work. He no
longer wanders about aimlessly in the world.
The centre of this circle is the centre of the Tau of ten squares which is in
the midst, as shown in the illustration. The Tau and the circle together make
one form of the Rosy Cross, the uniting of subject and object which is the Great
Work, and which is symbolized sometimes as this cross and circle, sometimes as
the Lingam-Yoni, sometimes as the Ankh or Crux Ansata, sometimes by the Spire
and Nave of a church or temple, and sometimes as a marriage feast, mystic
marriage, spiritual marriage, "chymical nuptials," and in a hundred other ways.
Whatever the form chosen, it is the symbol of the Great Work.
This place of his working therefore declares the nature and object of the
Work. Those persons who have supposed that the use of these symbols implied
worship of the generative organs, merely attributed to the sages of every time
and country minds of a calibre equal to their own.
The Tau is composed of ten squares for the ten Sephiroth.
footnote: The Ten Sephiroth are the Ten Units. In one system of
classification (see "777") these are so arranged, and various ideas are so
attributed to them, that they have been made to mean anything. The more you
know, the more these numbers mean to you.
About this Tau is escribed a triangle, which is inscribed in the great
Circle; but of the triangle nothing is actually marked but the three corners,
the areas defined by the cutting of the lines bounding this triangle. This
triangle is only visible in the parts which are common to two of the sides; they
have therefore the shape of the diamond, one form of the Yoni. The significance
of this is too complex for our simple treatise; it may be studied in Crowley's "Berashith."
The size of the whole figure is determined by the size of one square of the
Tau. And the size of this square is that of the base of the Altar, which is
placed upon Maukuth. It will follow then that, in spite of the apparent freedom
of the Magician to do anything he likes, he is really determined absolutely; for
as the Altar must have a base proportionate to its height, and as that height
must be convenient for the Magician, the size of the whole will depend upon his
own stature. It is easy to draw a moral lesson from these considerations. We
will merely indicate this one, that the scope of any man's work depends upon his
own original genius. Even the size of the weapons must be determined by
necessary proportion. The exceptions to this rule are the Lamp, which hangs from
the roof, above the centre of the Circle, above the square of Tiphereth; and the
Oil, whose phial is so small that it will suit any altar.
On the Circle are inscribed the Names of God; the Circle is of green, and the
names are in flaming vermilion, of the same colour as the Tau. Without the
Circle are nine pentagrams equidistant,
footnote: Some magicians prefer seven lamps, for the seven Spirits of
God that are before the Throne. Each stands in a heptagram, and in each angle
of the heptagram is a letter, so that the seven names (see "Equinox VII") are
spelt out. But this is a rather different symbolism. Of course in ordinary
specialised working the number of lamps depends on the nature of the work,
"e.g.," three for works of Saturn, eight for works Mercuial, and so on.
in the centre of each of which burns a small Lamp; these are the "Fortresses
upon the Frontiers of the Abyss." See the eleventh Aethyr, Liber 418 ("Equinox
V"). They keep off those forces of darkness which might otherwise break in.
The names of God form a further protection. The Magician may consider what
names he will use; but each name should in some way symbolise this Work in its
method and accomplishment. It is impossible here to enter into this subject
fully; the discovery or construction of suitable names might occupy the most
learned Qabalist for many years.
These nine lamps were originally candles made of human fat, the fat of
enemies
footnote: Or sometimes of "birth-strangled babes," "i.e.," of thoughts
slain ere they could arise into consciousness.
slain by the Magician; they thus served as warnings to any hostile force of
what might be expected if it caused trouble. To-day such candles are difficult
to procure; and it is perhaps simpler to use beeswax. The honey has been taken
by the Magician; nothing is left of the toil of all those hosts of bees but the
mere shell, the fuel of light. This beeswax is also used in the construction of
the Pantacle, and this forms a link between the two symbols. The Pantacle is the
food of the Magus; and some of it he gives up in order to give light to that
which is without. For these lights are only apparently hostile to intrusion;
they serve to illuminate the Circle and the Names of God, and so to bring the
first and outmost symbols of initiation within the view of the profane.
These candles stand upon pentagrams, which symbolize Geburah, severity, and
give protection; but also represent the microcosm, the four elements crowned by
Spirit, the Will of man perfected in its aspiration to the Higher. They are
placed outside the Circle to attract the hostile forces, to give them the first
inkling of the Great Work, which they too must some day perform.
{diagram on this page: A double cubic altar with universal sigil on top,
sigils of the 4 Enochian elemental kings around sides in top half and Enochian
watch towers (elemental squares) around sides in bottom half. There is a scale
at bottom of the diagram and the caption under that: "THE ALTAR. SIDE DESIGNS
FROM DR. DEE, AS IN EQUINOX VII."}
CHAPTER III
THE ALTAR
THE Altar represents the solid basis of the work, the fixed Will
footnote: It represents the extension of Will. Will is the Dyad (see
section on the Wand); 2 x 2 = 4. So the altar is foursquare, and also its ten
squares show 4. 10 = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4.
of the Magician; and the law under which he works. Within this altar
everything is kept, since everything is subject to law. Except the lamp.
According to some authorities the Altar should be made of oak to represent
the stubbornness and rigidity of law; others would make it of Acacia, for Acacia
is the symbol of resurrection.
The Altar is a double cube, which is a rough way of symbolizing the Great
Work; for the doubling of the cube, like the squaring of the circle, was one of
the great problems of antiquity. The surface of this Altar is composed of ten
squares. The top is Kether, and the bottom Malkuth. The height of the Altar is
equal to the height above the ground of the navel of the Magician. The Altar is
connected with the Ark of the Covenant, Noah's Ark, the nave ("navis," a ship)
of the Church, and many other symbols of antiquity, whose symbolism has been
well worked out in an anonymous book called "The Cannon,"
WEH footnote: written by William Stirling
(Elkin Mathews), which should be studied carefully before constructing the
Altar.
For this Altar must embody the Magician's knowledge of the laws of Nature,
which are the laws through which he works.
He should endeavour to make geometrical constructions to symbolize cosmic
measurements. For example, he may take the two diagonals as (say) the diameter
of the sun. Then the side of the altar will be found to have a length equal to
some other cosmic measure, a vesica drawn on the side some other, a "rood cross"
within the vesica yet another. Each Magician should work out his own system of
symbolism -- and he need not confine himself to cosmic measurements. He might,
for example, find some relation to express the law of inverse squares.
The top of the Altar shall be covered with gold, and on this gold should be
engraved some such figure as the Holy Oblation, or the New Jerusalem, or, if he
have the skill, the Microcosm of Vitruvius, of which we give illustrations.
On the sides of the Altar are also sometimes drawn the great tablets of the
elements, and the sigils of the holy elemental kings, as shown in The Equinox,
No. VII; for these are syntheses of the forces of Nature. Yet these are rather
special than general symbols, and this book purports to treat only of the grand
principles of working.
{diagrams on this page, at top the microcosm of Vitruvius from the title page
decoration (not frontispiece as is sometimes said) to Robert Fludd's "Utriusque
Cosmi Maioris scilicet et Minoris Metaphysica, Physica, Atque Technica Historia",
based on a Renaissance copy of Vitruvius' 1st century "De Architectura" as
interpreted by Cesariano in 1521, minus Fludd's rope, clouds and winged
fawn+hourglass, with the caption beneath "DESIGN SUITABLE FOR TOP OF ALTAR", and
below that a geometrical figure of the planets and stars from "The Cannon" fig.
3, p. 30, chap. II. with the under caption "THE HOLY OBLATION"}
{diagram on this page: Inside a dashed equilateral triangle are a scourge,
chain, dagger and a wide, low perfume bottle shaped like a woman's breast with
nipple, below this is a scale in inches and below that the caption "THE SCOURGE,
THE DAGGER, AND THE CHAIN; ENCLOSING THE PHIAL FOR THE HOLY OIL."}
CHAPTER IV
THE SCOURGE, THE DAGGER, AND THE CHAIN
THE Scourge, the Dagger, and the Chain, represent the three alchemical
principles of Sulphur, Mercury, and Salt. These are not the substances which we
now call by these names; they represent "principles," whose operations chemists
have found it more convenient to explain in other ways. But Sulphur represents
the energy of things, Mercury their fluidity, Salt their fixity. They are
analogous to Fire, Air and Water; but they mean rather more, for they represent
something deeper and subtler, and yet more truly active. An almost exact analogy
is given by the three Gunas of the Hindus; Sattvas, Rajas, and Tamas. Sattvas is
Mercury, equable, calm, clear; Rajas is Sulphur, active, excitable, even fierce;
Tamas is Salt, thick, sluggish, heavy, dark.
footnote: There is a long description of these three Gunas in the
Bhagavadgita.
But Hindu philosophy is so occupied with the main idea that only the Absolute
is worth anything, that it tends to consider these Gunas (even Sattvas) as evil.
This is a correct view, but only from above; and we prefer, if we are truly
wise, to avoid this everlasting wail which characterizes the thought of the
Indian peninsula: "Everything is sorrow," etc. Accepting their doctrine of the
two phases of the Absolute, we must, if we are to be consistent, class the two
phases together, either as good or as bad; if one is good and the other bad we
are back again in that duality, to avoid which we invented the Absolute.
The Christian idea that sin was worth while because salvation was so much
more worth while, that redemption is so splendid that innocence was well lost,
is more satisfactory. St. Paul says: "Where sin abounded, there did grace much
more abound. Then shall we do evil that good may come? God forbid." But
(clearly!) it is exactly what God Himself did, or why did He create Satan with
the germ of his "fall" in him?
Instead of condemning the three qualities outright, we should consider them
as parts of a sacrament. This particular aspect of the Scourge, the Dagger, and
the Chain, suggests the sacrament of penance.
The Scourge is Sulphur: its application excites our sluggish natures; and it
may further be used as an instrument of correction, to castigate rebellious
volitions. It is applied to the Nephesh, the Animal Soul, the natural desires.
The Dagger is Mercury: it is used to calm too great heat, by the letting of
blood; and it is this weapon which is plunged into the side or heart of the
Magician to fill the Holy Cup. Those faculties which come between the appetites
and the reason are thus dealt with.
The Chain is Salt: it serves to bind the wandering thoughts; and for this
reason is placed about the neck of the Magician, where Daath is situated.
These instruments also remind us of pain, death, and bondage. Students of the
gospel will recollect that in the martyrdom of Christ these three were used, the
dagger being replaced by the nails.
footnote: This is true of all magical instruments. The Hill of Golgotha
is a circle, and the Cross the Tau. Christ had robe, crown, sceptre, etc.;
this thesis should one day be fully worked out.
The Scourge should be made with a handle of iron; the lash is composed of
nine strands of fine copper wire, in each of which are twisted small pieces of
lead. Iron represents severity, copper love, and lead austerity.
The Dagger is made of steel inlaid with gold; and the hilt is also golden.
The chain{Sic} is made of soft iron. It has 333 links.
footnote: See The Equinox, No. V, "The Vision and the Voice": Xth
Aethyr.
It is now evident why these weapons are grouped around the phial of clear
crystal in which is kept the Holy Oil.
The Scourge keeps the aspiration keen: the Dagger expresses the determination
to sacrifice all; and the Chain restricts any wandering.
We may now consider the Holy Oil itself.
CHAPTER V
THE HOLY OIL
THE Holy Oil is the Aspiration of the Magician; it is that which consecrates
him to the performance of the Great Work; and such is its efficacy that it also
consecrates all the furniture of the Temple and the instruments thereof. It is
also the grace or chrism; for this aspiration is not ambition; it is a quality
bestowed from above. For this reason the Magician will anoint first the top of
his head before proceeding to consecrate the lower centres in their turn.
This oil is of a pure golden colour; and when placed upon the skin it should
burn and thrill through the body with an intensity as of fire. It is the pure
light translated into terms of desire. It is not the Will of the Magician, the
desire of the lower to reach the higher; but it is that spark of the higher in
the Magician which wishes to unite the lower with itself.
Unless therefore the Magician be first anointed with this oil, all his work
will be wasted and evil.
This oil is compounded of four substances. The basis of all is the oil of the
olive. The olive is, traditionally, the gift of Minerva, the Wisdom of God, the
Logos. In this are dissolved three other oils; oil of myrrh, oil of cinnamon,
oil of galangal. The Myrrh is attributed to Binah, the Great Mother, who is both
the understanding of the Magician and that sorrow and compassion which results
from the contemplation of the Universe. The Cinnamon represents Tiphereth, the
Sun -- the Son, in whom Glory and Suffering are identical. The Galangal
represents both Kether and Malkuth, the First and the Last, the One and the
Many, since in this Oil they are One.
These oils taken together represent therefore the whole Tree of Life. The ten
Sephiroth are blended into the perfect gold.
This Oil cannot be prepared from crude myrrh, cinnamon, and galangal. The
attempt to do so only gives a brown mud with which the oil will not mix. These
substances must be themselves refined into pure oils before the final
combination.
This perfect Oil is most penetrating and subtle. Gradually it will spread
itself, a glistening film, over every object in the Temple. Each of these
objects will then flame in the light of the Lamp. This Oil is like that which
was in the widow's curse: it renews and multiplies itself miraculously; its
perfume fills the whole Temple; it is the soul of which the grosser perfume is
the body.
The phial which contains the Oil should be of clear rock crystal, and some
magicians have fashioned it in the shape of the female breast, for that it is
the true nourishment of all that lives. For this reason also it has been made of
mother-of-pearl and stoppered with a ruby.
CHAPTER VI
THE WAND
THE Magical Will is in its essence twofold, for it presupposes a beginning
and an end; to will to be a thing is to admit that you are not that thing.
Hence to will anything but the supreme thing, is to wander still further from
it -- any will but that to give up the self to the Beloved is Black Magick --
yet this surrender is so simple an act that to our complex minds it is the most
difficult of all acts; and hence training is necessary. Further, the Self
surrendered must not be less than the All-Self; one must not come before the
altar of the Most High with an impure or an imperfect offering. As it is written
in Liber LXV, "To await Thee is the end, not the beginning."
This training may lead through all sorts of complications, varying according
to the nature of the student, and hence it may be necessary for him at any
moment to will all sorts of things which to others might seem unconnected with
the goal. Thus it is not "a priori" obvious why a billiard player should need a
file.
Since, then, we may want "anything," let us see to it that our will is strong
enough to obtain anything we want without loss of time.
It is therefore necessary to develop the will to its highest point, even
though the last task but one is the total surrender of this will. Partial
surrender of an imperfect will is of no account in Magick.
The will being a lever, a fulcrum is necessary; this fulcrum is the main
aspiration of the student to attain. All wills which are not dependent upon this
principal will are so many leakages; they are like fat to the athlete.
The majority of the people in this world are ataxic; they cannot coordinate
their mental muscles to make a purposed movement. They have no real will, only a
set of wishes, many of which contradict others. The victim wobbles from one to
the other (and it is no less wobbling because the movements may occasionally be
very violent) and at the end of life the movements cancel each other out.
Nothing has been achieved; except the one thing of which the victim is not
conscious: the destruction of his own character, the confirming of indecision.
Such an one is torn limb from limb by Choronzon.
How then is the will to be trained? All these wishes, whims, caprices,
inclinations, tendencies, appetites, must be detected, examined, judged by the
standard of whether they help or hinder the main purpose, and treated
accordingly.
{diagram on this page: Solomonic sword vertical to the left, flame carved
wand vertical to the right, cup supported by lotus flower tripod (four legs or
three?) center top, circle at center bottom. A vertical scale is to the extreme
right and this caption is below: "THE WAND, CUP, SWORD, AND DISK OR PANTACLE
(drawn to scale)."}
Vigilance and courage are obviously required. I was about to add self-denial,
in deference to conventional speech; but how could I call that self-denial which
is merely denial of those things which hamper the self? It is not suicide to
kill the germs of malaria in one's blood.
Now there are very great difficulties to be overcome in the training of the
mind. Perhaps the greatest is forgetfulness, which is probably the worst form of
what the Buddhists call ignorance. Special practices for training the memory may
be of some use as a preliminary for persons whose memory is naturally poor. In
any case the Magical Record prescribed for Probationers of the A.'.A.'. is
useful and necessary.
Above all the practices of Liber III must be done again and again, for these
practices develop not only vigilance but those inhibiting centres in the brain
which are, according to some psychologists, the mainspring of the mechanism by
which civilized man has raised himself above the savage.
So far it has been spoken, as it were, in the negative. Aaron's rod has
become a serpent, and swallowed the serpents of the other Magicians; it is now
necessary to turn it once more into a rod.
footnote: As everyone knows, the word used in Exodus for a Rod of
Almond is {{Hebrew letters: Mem-tet-Hay Hay-Shin-Qof-Dalet
}, adding to 463. Now 400 is Tau, the path leading from Malkuth to Yesod.
Sixty is Samekh, the path leading leading {{sic}} from Yesod to Tiphereth; and 3
is Gimel, the path leading thence to Kether. The whole rod therefore gives the
paths from the Kingdom to the Crown.}
This Magical Will is the wand in your hand by which the Great Work is
accomplished, by which the Daughter is not merely set upon the throne of the
Mother, but assumed into the Highest.
footnote: In one, the best, system of Magick, the Absolute is called
the Crown, God is called the Father, the Pure Soul is called the Mother, the
Holy Guardian Angel is called the Son, and the Natural Soul is called the
Daughter. The Son purifies the Daughter by wedding her; she thus becomes the
Mother, the uniting of whom with the Father absorbs all into the Crown. See
Liber CDXVIII.
The Magick Wand is thus the principal weapon of the Magus; and the "name" of
that wand is the Magical Oath.
The will being twofold is in Chokmah, who is the Logos, the word; hence some
have said that the word is the will. Thoth the Lord of Magic {sic} is also the
Lord of Speech; Hermes the messenger bears the Caduceus.
Word should express will: hence the Mystic Name of the Probationer is the
expression of his highest Will.
There are, of course, few Probationers who understand themselves sufficiently
to be able to formulate this will to themselves, and therefore at the end of
their probation they choose a new name.
It is convenient therefore for the student to express his will by taking
Magical Oaths.
Since such an oath is irrevocable it should be well considered; and it is
better not to take any oath permanently; because with increase of understanding
may come a perception of the incompatibility of the lesser oath with the
greater.
This is indeed almost certain to occur, and it must be remembered that as the
whole essence of the will is its one-pointedness,
footnote: The Top of the Wand is in Kether -- which is one; and the
Qliphoth of Kether are the Thaumiel, opposing heads that rend and devour each
other.
a dilemma of this sort is the worst in which the Magus can find himself.
Another great point in this consideration of Magick Vows is to keep them in
their proper place. They must be taken for a clearly defined purpose, a clearly
understood purpose, and they must never be allowed to go beyond it.
It is a virtue in a diabetic not to eat sugar, but only in reference to his
own condition. It is not a virtue of universal import. Elijah said on one
occasion: "I do well to be angry;" but such occasions are rare.
Moreover, one man's meat is another man's poison. An oath of poverty might be
very useful for a man who was unable intelligently to use his wealth for the
single end proposed; to another it would be simply stripping himself of energy,
causing him to waste his time over trifles.
There is no power which cannot be pressed in to the service of the Magical
Will: it is only the temptation to value that power for itself which offends.
One does not say: "Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?" unless repeated
prunings have convinced the gardener that the growth must always be a rank one.
"If thine hand offend thee, cut it off!" is the scream of a weakling. If one
killed a dog the first time it misbehaved itself, not many would pass the stage
of puppyhood.
The best vow, and that of most universal application, is the vow of Holy
Obedience; for not only does it lead to perfect freedom, but is a training in
that surrender which is the last task.
WEH footnote: Of all Crowley's views, this is the most controversial.
It appears to fly in the face of Thelema. There is high merit in a vow of
obedience, and necessity; but the merit is to be found in the "small print."
To receive a vow of obedience from another implies perfection in the teacher,
a thing impossible to mortals but possible to roles. To make a vow of
obedience to a mortal is foolish unless conditions of circumstance and
duration are involved.
It has this great value, that it never gets rusty. If the superior to whom
the vow is taken knows his business, he will quickly detect which things are
really displeasing to his pupil, and familiarize him with them.
Disobedience to the superior is a contest between these two wills in the
inferior. The will expressed in his vow, which is the will linked to his highest
will by the fact that he has taken it in order to develop that highest will,
contends with the temporary will, which is based only on temporary
considerations.
The Teacher should then seek gently and firmly to key up the pupil, little by
little, until obedience follows command without reference to what that command
may be; as Loyola wrote: "perinde ac cadaver."
No one has understood the Magical Will better than Loyola; in his system the
individual was forgotten. The will of the General was instantly echoed by every
member of the Order; hence the Society of Jesus became the most formidable of
the religious organizations of the world.
That of the Old Man of the Mountains was perhaps the next best.
The defect in Loyola's system is that the General was not God, and that owing
to various other considerations he was not even necessarily the best man in the
Order.
To become General of the Order he must have willed to become General of the
Order; and because of this he could be nothing more.
To return to the question of the development of the Will. It is always
something to pluck up the weeds, but the flower itself needs tending. Having
crushed all volitions in ourselves, and if necessary in others, which we find
opposing our real Will, that Will itself will grow naturally with greater
freedom. But it is not only necessary to purify the temple itself and consecrate
it; invocations must be made. Hence it is necessary to be constantly doing
things of a positive, not merely of a negative nature, to affirm that Will.
Renunciation and sacrifice are necessary, but they are comparatively easy.
There are a hundred ways of missing, and only one of hitting. To avoid eating
beef is easy; to eat nothing but pork is very difficult.
Levi recommends hat at times the Magical Will itself should be cut off, on
the same principle as one can always work better after a "complete change." Levi
is doubtless right, but he must be understood as saying this "for the hardness
of men's hearts." The turbine is more efficient than a reciprocating engine; and
his counsel is only good for the beginner.
Ultimately the Magical Will so identifies itself with the man's whole being
that it becomes unconscious, and is as constant a force as gravitation. One may
even be surprised at one's own acts, and have to reason out their connection.
But let it be understood that when the Will has thus really raised itself to the
height of Destiny, the man is no more likely to do wrong than he is to float off
into the air.
One may be asked whether there is not a conflict between this development of
the Will and Ethics.
The answer is Yes.
In the Grand Grimoire we are told "to buy an egg without haggling"; and
attainment, and the next step in the path of attainment, is that pearl of great
price, which when a man hath found he straightway selleth all that he hath, and
buyeth that pearl.
With many people custom and habit -- of which ethics is but the social
expression --- are the things most difficult to give up: and it is a useful
practice to break any habit just to get into the way of being free from that
form of slavery. Hence we have practices for breaking up sleep, for putting our
bodies into strained and unnatural positions, for doing difficult exercises of
breathing -- all these, apart from any special merit they may have in themselves
for any particular purpose, have the main merit that the man forces himself to
do them despite any conditions that may exist. Having conquered internal
resistance one may conquer external resistance more easily.
In a steam boat the engine must first overcome its own inertia before it can
attack the resistance of the water.
When the will has thus ceased to be intermittent, it becomes necessary to
consider its size. Gravitation gives an acceleration of thirty-two feet per
second on this planet, on the moon very much less. And a Will, however single
and however constant, may still be of no particular use, because the
circumstances which oppose it may be altogether too strong, or because it is for
some reason unable to get into touch with them. It is useless to wish for the
moon. If one does so, one must consider by what means that Will may be made
effective.
And though a man may have a tremendous Will in one direction it need not
always be sufficient to help him in another; it may even be stupid.
There is the story of the man who practised for forty years to walk across
the Ganges; and, having succeeded, was reproached by his Holy Guru, who said:
"You are a great fool. All your neighbours have been crossing every day on a
raft for two pice."
This occurs to most, perhaps to all, of us in our careers. We spend infinite
pains to learn something, to achieve something, which when gained does not seem
worth even the utterance of the wish.
But this is a wrong view to take. The discipline necessary in order to learn
Latin will stand us in good stead when we wish to do something quite different.
At school our masters punished us; when we leave school, if we have not
learned to punish ourselves, we have learned nothing.
In fact the only danger is that we may value the achievement in itself. The
boy who prides himself on his school knowledge is in danger of becoming a
college professor.
So the Guru of the water-walking Hindu only meant that it was now time to be
dissatisfied with what he had done -- and to employ his powers to some better
end.
And, incidentally, since the divine Will is one, it will be found that there
is no capacity which is not necessarily subservient to the destiny of the man
who possesses it.
One may be unable to tell when a thread of a particular colour will be woven
into the carpet of Destiny. It is only when the carpet is finished and seen from
a proper distance that the position of that particular strand is seen to be
necessary. From this one is tempted to break a lance on that most ancient
battlefield, free-will and destiny.
But even though every man is "determined" so that every action is merely the
passive resultant of the sum-total of the forces which have acted upon him from
eternity, so that his own Will is only the echo of the Will of the Universe, yet
that consciousness of "free-will" is valuable; and if he really understands it
as being the partial and individual expression of that internal motion in a
Universe whose sum is rest, by so much will he feel that harmony, that totality.
And though the happiness which he experiences may be criticised as only one
scale of a balance in whose other scale is an equal misery, there are those who
hold that misery consists only in the feeling of separation from the Universe,
and that consequently all may cancel out among the lesser feelings, leaving only
that infinite bliss which is one phase of the infinite consciousness of that
ALL. Such speculations are somewhat beyond the scope of the present remarks. It
is of no particular moment to observe that the elephant and flea can be no other
than they are; but we do perceive that one is bigger than the other. That is the
fact of practical importance.
We do know that persons can be trained to do things which they could not do
without training -- and anyone who remarks that you cannot train a person unless
it is his destiny to be trained is quite unpractical. Equally it is the destiny
of the trainer to train. There is a fallacy in the determinist argument similar
to the fallacy which is the root of all "systems" of gambling at Roulette. The
odds are just over three to one against red coming up twice running; but after
red has come up once the conditions are changed.
WEH footnote: Exactly four to one before and even after.
It would be useless to insist on such a point were it not for the fact that
many people confuse Philosophy with Magick. Philosophy is the enemy of Magick.
Philosophy assures us that after all nothing matters, and that "che sara sara."
In practical life, and Magick is the most practical of the Arts of life, this
difficulty does not occur. It is useless to argue with a man who is running to
catch a train that he may be destined not to catch it; he just runs, and if he
could spare breath would say "Blow destiny!"
It has been said earlier that the real Magical Will must be toward the
highest attainment, and this can never be until the flowering of the Magical
Understanding. The Wand must be made to grow in length as well as in strength;
it need not do so of its own nature.
The ambition of every boy is to be an engine-driver. Some attain it, and
remain there all their lives.
But in the majority of cases the Understanding grows faster than the Will,
and long before the boy is in a position to attain his wish he has already
forgotten it.
In other cases the Understanding never grows beyond a certain point, and the
Will persists without intelligence.
The business man (for example) has wished for ease and comfort, and to this
end goes daily to his office and slaves under a more cruel taskmaster than the
meanest of the workmen in his pay; he decides to retire, and finds that life in
empty. The end has been swallowed up in the means.
Only those are happy who have desired the unattainable.
All possessions, the material and the spiritual alike, are but dust.
Love, sorrow, and compassion are three sisters who, if they seem freed from
this curse, are only so because of their relation to The Unsatisfied.
Beauty is itself so unattainable that it escapes altogether; and the true
artist, like the true mystic, can never rest. To him the Magician is but a
servant. His wand is of infinite length; it is the creative Mahalingam.
The difficulty with such an one is naturally that his wand being very thin in
proportion to its length is liable to wobble. Very few artists are conscious of
their real purpose, and in very many cases we have this infinite yearning
supported by so frail a constitution that nothing is achieved.
The Magician must build all that he has into his pyramid; and if that pyramid
is to touch the stars, how broad must be the base! There is no knowledge and no
power which is useless to the Magician. One might almost say there is no scrap
of material in the whole Universe with which he can dispense. His ultimate enemy
is the great Magician, the Magician who created the whole illusion of the
Universe; and to meet him in battle, so that nothing is left either of him or of
yourself, you must be exactly equal to him.
At the same time let the Magician never forget that every brick must tend to
the summit of the pyramid -- the sides must be perfectly smooth; there must be
no false summits, even in the lowest layers.
This is the practical and active form of that obligation of a Master of the
Temple in which it is said: "I will interpret every phenomenon as a particular
dealing of God with my soul."
In Liber CLXXV many practical devices for attaining this one-pointedness are
given, and though the subject of that book is devotion to a particular Deity,
its instructions may be easily generalized to suit the development of any form
of will.
This will is then the active form of understanding. The Master of the Temple
asks, on seeing a slug: "What is the purpose of this message from the Unseen?
How shall I interpret this Word of God Most High?" The Magus thinks: "How shall
I use this slug?" And in this course he must persist. Though many things
useless, so far as he can see, are sent to him, one day he will find the one
thing he needs, while his Understanding will appreciate the fact that none of
those other things were useless.
So with these early practices of renunciation it will now be clearly
understood that they were but of temporary use. They were only of value as
training. The adept will laugh over his early absurdities -- the disproportions
will have been harmonized; and the structure of his soul will be seen as
perfectly organic, with no one thing out of its place. He will see himself as
the positive Tau with its ten complete squares within the triangle of the
negatives; and this figure will become one, as soon as from the equilibrium of
opposites he has attained to the identity of opposites.
In all this is will have been seen that the most powerful weapon in the hand
of the student is the Vow of Holy Obedience; and many will wish that they had
the opportunity of putting themselves under a holy Guru. Let them take heart --
for any being capable of giving commands is an efficient Guru for the purpose of
this Vow, provided that he is not too amiable and lazy.
The only reason for choosing a Guru who has himself attained is that he will
aid the vigilance of the sleepy Chela, and, while tempering the Wind to that
shorn lamb, will carefully harden him, and at the same time gladden his ears
with holy discourse. But if such a person is inaccessible, let him choose any
one with whom he has constant intercourse, explain the circumstances, and ask
him to act.
The person should if possible be trustworthy; and let the Chela remember that
if he should be ordered to jump over a cliff it is very much better to do it
than to give up the practice.
And it is of the very greatest importance not to limit the vow in any way.
You must buy the egg without haggling.
In a certain Society the members were bound to do certain things, being
assured that there was "nothing in the vow contrary to their civil, moral, or
religious obligations." So when any one wanted to break his vow he had no
difficulty in discovering a very good reason for it. The vow lost all its force.
WEH footnote: Crowley expressly cites this clause in the Golden Dawn
initiations as the third defense for his publishing the Golden Dawn rituals.
See Equinox I, 4, page 5, "Editorial".
When Buddha took his seat under the blessed Bo-Tree, he took an oath that
none of the inhabitants of the 10,000 worlds should cause him to rise until he
had attained; so that when even Mara the great Arch-Devil, with his three
daughters the arch-temptresses appeared, he remained still.
Now it is useless for the beginner to take so formidable a vow; he has not
yet attained the strength which can defy Mara. Let him estimate his strength,
and take a vow which is within it, but only just within it. Thus Milo began by
carrying a new-born calf; and day by day as it grew into a bull, his strength
was found sufficient.
Again let it be said that Liber III is a most admirable method for the
beginner,
footnote: This book must be carefully read. Its essence is that the
pupil swears to refrain from a certain thought, word, or deed; and on each
breach of the oath, cuts his arm sharply with a razor. This is better than
flagellation because it can be done in public, without attracting notice. It
however forms one of the most hilariously exciting parlour games for the
family circle ever invented. Friends and relations are always ready to do
their utmost to trap you into doing the forbidden thing.
and it will be best, even if he is very confident in his strength, to take
the vow for very short periods, beginning with an hour and increasing daily by
half-hours until the day is filled. Then let him rest awhile, and attempt a
two-day practice; and so on until he is perfect.
He should also begin with the very easiest practices. But the thing which he
is sworn to avoid should not be a thing which normally he would do infrequently;
because the strain on the memory which subserves his vigilance would be very
great, and the practice become difficult. It is just as well at first that the
pain of his arm should be there "at the time when he would normally do the
forbidden thing," to warn him against its repetition.
There will thus be a clear connection in his mind of cause and effect, until
he will be just as careful in avoiding this particular act which he has
consciously determined, as in those other things which in childhood he has been
trained to avoid.
Just as the eyelid unconsciously closes when the eye is threatened,
footnote: If it were not so there would be very few people in the world
who were not blind.
so must he build up in consciousness this power of inhibition until it sinks
below consciousness, adding to his store of automatic force, so that he is free
to devote his conscious energy to a yet higher task.
It is impossible to overrate the value of this inhibition to the man when he
comes to meditate. He has guarded his mind against thoughts A, B, and C; he has
told the sentries to allow no one to pass who is not in uniform. And it will be
very easy for him to extend that power, and to lower the portcullis.
Let him remember, too that there is a difference not only in the frequency of
thoughts -- but in their intensity.
The worst of all is of course the ego, which is almost omnipresent and almost
irresistible, although so deeply-seated that in normal thought one may not
always be aware of it.
Buddha, taking the bull by the horns, made this idea the first to be
attacked.
Each must decide for himself whether this is a wise course to pursue. But it
certainly seems easier to strip off first the things which can easily be done
without.
WEH footnote: Among those who might find the ego an unwise first choice
to attack are those who confuse it with a sense of private property. Many
petty thieves use denial of the ego as an excuse. Three book-thieves and any
number of shop-lifters come to mind.
The majority of people will find most trouble with the Emotions, and thoughts
which excite them.
But is is both possible and necessary not merely to suppress the emotions,
but to turn them into faithful servants. Thus the emotion of anger is
occasionally useful against that portion of the brain whose slackness vitiates
the control.
If there is one emotion which is never useful, it is pride; for this reason,
that it is bound up entirely with the Ego...
No, there is no use for pride!
The destruction of the Perceptions, either the grosser or the subtler,
appears much easier, because the mind not being moved, is free to remember its
control.
It is easy to be so absorbed in a book that one takes no notice of the most
beautiful scenery. But if stung by a wasp the book is immediately forgotten.
The Tendencies are, however, much harder to combat than the three lower
Shandhas put together -- for the simple reason that they are for the most part
below consciousness, and must be, as it were, awakened in order to be destroyed,
so that the will of the Magician is in a sense trying to do two opposite things
at the same time.
Consciousness itself is only destroyed by Samadhi.
One can now see the logical process which begins in refusing to think of a
foot, and ends by destroying the sense of individuality.
Of the methods of destroying various deep-rooted ideas there are many.
The best is perhaps the method of equilibrium. Get the mind into the habit of
calling up the opposite to every thought that may arise. In conversation always
disagree. See the other man's arguments; but, however much your judgment
approves them, find the answer.
Let this be done dispassionately; the more convinced you are that a certain
point of view is right, the more determined you should be to find proofs that it
is wrong.
If you have done this thoroughly, these points of view will cease to trouble
you; you can then assert your own point of view with the calm of a master, which
is more convincing than the enthusiasm of a learner.
You will cease to be interested in controversies; politics, ethics, religion
will seem so many toys, and your Magical Will will be free from these
inhibitions.
In Burma there is only one animal which the people will kill, Russell's
Viper; because, as they say, "either you must kill it or it will kill you"; and
it is a question of which sees the other first.
Now any one idea which is not The Idea must be treated in this fashion. When
you have killed the snake you can use its skin, but as long as it is alive and
free, you are in danger.
And unfortunately the ego-idea, which is the real snake, can throw itself
into a multitude of forms, each clothed in the most brilliant dress. Thus the
devil is said to be able to disguise himself as an angel of light.
Under the strain of a magical vow this is too terribly the case. No normal
human being understands or can understand the temptations of the saints.
An ordinary person with ideas like those which obsessed St. Patrick and St.
Antony would be only fit for an asylum.
The tighter you hold the snake (which was previously asleep in the sun, and
harmless enough, to all appearance), the more it struggles; and it is important
to remember that your hold must tighten correspondingly, or it will escape and
bite you.
Just as if you tell a child not to do a thing -- no matter what -- it will
immediately want to do it, thought otherwise the idea might never have entered
its head, so it is with the saint. We have all of us these tendencies latent in
us; of most of them we might remain unconscious all our lives -- unless they
were awakened by our Magick. They lie in ambush. And every one must be awakened,
and every one must be destroyed. Every one who signs the oath of a Probationer
is stirring up a hornets' nest.
A man has only to affirm his conscious aspiration; and the enemy is upon him.
It seems hardly possible that any one can ever pass through that terrible
year of probation -- and yet the aspirant is not bound to anything difficult; it
almost seems as if he were not bound to anything at all -- and yet experience
teaches us that the effect is like plucking a man from his fireside into
mid-Atlantic in a gale. The truth is, it may be, that the very simplicity of the
task makes it difficult.
The Probationer must cling to his aspiration -- affirm it again and again in
desperation.
He has, perhaps, almost lost sight of it; it has become meaningless to him;
he repeats it mechanically as he is tossed from wave to wave.
But if he can stick to it he will come through.
And, once he "is" through, things will again assume their proper aspect; he
will see that mere illusion were the things that seemed so real, and he will be
fortified against the new trials that await him.
But the unfortunate indeed is he who cannot thus endure. It is useless for
him to say, "I don't like the Atlantic; I will go back to the fireside."
Once take one step on the path, and there is no return. You will remember in
Browning's "Childe Roland to the dark Tower came":
For mark! no sooner was I fairly found
Pledged to the plain, after a pace or two,
Than, pausing to throw backwards a last view
O'er the safe road, 'twas gone: grey plain all round,
Nothing but plain to the horizon's bound.
I might go on; naught else remained to do.
And this is universally true. The statement that the Probationer can resign
when he chooses is in truth only for those who have taken the oath but
superficially.
A real Magical Oath cannot be broken: you think it can, but it can't.
This is the advantage of a real Magical Oath.
However far you go around, you arrive at the end just the same, and all you
have done by attempting to break your oath is to involve yourself in the most
frightful trouble.
It cannot be too clearly understood that such is the nature of things: it
does not depend upon the will of any persons, however powerful or exalted; nor
can Their force, the force of Their great oaths, avail against the weakest oath
of the most trivial of beginners.
The attempt to interfere with the Magical Will of another person would be
wicked, if it were not absurd.
One may attempt to build up a Will when {sic} before nothing existed but a
chaos of whims; but once organization has taken place it is sacred. As Blake
says: "Everything that lives is holy"; and hence the creation of life is the
most sacred of tasks. It does not matter very much to the creator what it is
that he creates; there is room in the universe for both the spider and the fly.
It is from the rubbish-heap of Choronzon that one selects the material for a
god!
This is the ultimate analysis of the Mystery of Redemption, and is possibly
the real reason of the existence (if existence it can be called) of form, or, if
you like, of the Ego.
It is astonishing that this typical cry -- "I am I" -- is the cry of that
which above all is not I.
It was that Master whose Will was so powerful that at its lightest expression
the deaf heard, and the dumb spake, lepers were cleansed and the dead arose to
life, that Master and no other who at the supreme moment of his agony could cry,
"Not my Will, but Thine, be done."
CHAPTER VII
THE CUP
AS the Magick Wand is the Will, the Wisdom, the Word of the Magician, so is
the Magick Cup his Understanding.
This is the cup of which it was written: "Father, if it be Thy Will, let this
cup pass from Me!" And again: "Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?"
And it is also the cup in the hand of OUR LADY BABALON, and the cup of the
Sacrament.
This Cup is full of bitterness, and of blood, and of intoxication.
The Understanding of the Magus is his link with the Invisible, on the passive
side.
His Will errs actively by opposing itself to the Universal Will.
His Understanding errs passively when it receives influence from that which
is not the ultimate truth.
In the beginning the Cup of the student is almost empty; and even such truth
as he receives may leak away, and be lost.
They say that the Venetians made glasses which changed colour if poison was
put into them; of such a glass must the student make his Cup.
Very little experience on the mystic path will show him that of all the
impressions he receives none is true. Either they are false in themselves, or
they are wrongly interpreted in his mind.
There is one truth, and only one. All other thoughts are false.
And as he advances in the knowledge of his mind he will come to understand
that its whole structure is so faulty that it is quite incapable, even in its
most exalted moods, of truth.
He will recognize that any thought merely establishes a relation between the
Ego and the non-Ego.
Kant has shown that even the laws of nature are but the conditions of
thought. And as the current of thought is the blood of the mind, it is said that
the Magick Cup is filled with the blood of the Saints. All thought must be
offered up as a sacrifice.
The Cup can hardly be described as a weapon. It is round like the pantacle --
not straight like the wand and the dagger. Reception, not projection, is its
nature.
footnote: As the Magician is in the position of God towards the Spirit
that he evokes, he stands in the Circle, and the spirit in the Triangle; so
the Magician is in the Triangle with respect to his own God.
So that which is round is to him a symbol of the influence from the higher.
This circle symbolizes the Infinite, as every cross or Tau represents the
Finite. That which is four square shows the Finite fixed into itself; for this
reason the altar is foursquare. It is the solid basis from which all the
operation proceeds. One form
footnote: An ugly form. A better is given in the illustration.
of the magical cup has a sphere beneath the bowl, and is supported upon a
conical base.
This cup (crescent, sphere, cone) represents the three principles of the
Moon, the Sun, and Fire, the three principles which, according to the Hindus,
have course in the body.
footnote: These "principles" are seen by the pupil when first he
succeeds in stilling his mind. That one which happens to be in course at the
moment is the one seen by him. This is so marvellous an experience, even for
one who has pushed astral visions to a very high point, that he may mistake
them for the End. See chapter on Dhyana.
The Hebrew letters corresponding to these principles are Gimel, Resh, and
Shin, and the word formed by them means "a flower" and also "expelled," "cast
forth."
This is the Cup of Purification; as Zoroaster says:
"So therefore first the priest who governeth the works of fire must sprinkle
with the lustral water of the loud-resounding sea."
It is the sea that purifies the world. And the "Great Sea" is in the Qabalah
a name of Binah, "Understanding."
It is by the Understanding of the Magus that his work is purified.
Binah, moreover, is the Moon, and the bowl of this cup is shaped like the
moon.
This moon is the path of Gimel through which the influence from the Crown
descends upon the Sun of Tiphereth.
And this is based upon the pyramid of fire which symbolizes the aspiration of
the student.
In Hindu symbolism the Amrita or "dew of immortality"
footnote: A--, the privative particle; "mrita," mortal.
drips constantly upon a man, but is burnt up by the gross fire of his
appetites. Yogis attempt to catch and so preserve this dew by turning back the
tongue in the mouth.
Concerning the water in this Cup, it may be said that just as the wand should
be perfectly rigid, the ideal solid, so should the water be the ideal fluid.
The Wand is erect, and must extend to Infinity.
The surface of the water is flat, and must extend to Infinity.
One is the line, the other the plane.
But as the Wand is weak without breadth, so is the water false without depth.
The Understanding of the Magus must include all things, and that understanding
must be infinitely profound.
H. G. Wells has said that "every word of which a man is ignorant represents
an idea of which he is ignorant." And it is impossible perfectly to understand
all things unless all things be first known.
Understanding is the structuralization of knowledge.
All impressions are disconnected, as the Babe of the Abyss is so terribly
aware; and the Master of the Temple must sit for 106 seasons in the City of the
Pyramids because this coordination is a tremendous task.
There is nothing particularly occult in this doctrine concerning knowledge
and understanding.
A looking-glass receives all impressions but coordinates none.
The savage has none but the most simple associations of ideas.
Even the ordinary civilized man goes very little further.
All advance in thought is made by collecting the greatest possible number of
facts, classifying them, and grouping them.
The philologist, though perhaps he only speaks one language, has a much
higher type of mind than the linguist who speaks twenty.
This Tree of Thought is exactly paralleled by the tree of nervous structure.
Very many people go about nowadays who are exceedingly "well-informed," but
who have not the slightest idea of the meaning of the facts they know. They have
not developed the necessary higher part of the brain. Induction is impossible to
them.
This capacity for storing away facts is compatible with actual imbecility.
Some imbeciles have been able to store their memories with more knowledge than
perhaps any sane man could hope to acquire.
This is the great fault of modern education -- a child is stuffed with facts,
and no attempt is made to explain their connection and bearing. The result is
that even the facts themselves are soon forgotten.
Any first-rate mind is insulted and irritated by such treatment, and any
first-rate memory is in danger of being spoilt by it.
No two ideas have any real meaning until they are harmonized in a third, and
the operation is only perfect when these ideas are contradictory. This is the
essence of the Hegelian logic.
The Magick Cup, as was shown above, is also the flower. It is the lotus which
opens to the sun, and which collects the dew.
This Lotus is in the hand of Isis the great Mother. It is a symbol similar to
the Cup in the hand of OUR LADY BABALON.
There are also the Lotuses in the human body, according to the Hindu system
of Physiology referred to in the chapter on Dharana.
footnote: These Lotuses are all situated in the spinal column, which
has three channels, Sushumna in the middle, Ida and Pingala on either side
("cf." the Tree of Life). The central channel is compressed at the base by
Kundalini, the magical power, a sleeping serpent. Awake her: she darts up the
spine, and the Prana flows through the Sushumna. See "Raja-Yoga" for more
details.
There is the lotus of three petals in the Sacrum, in which the Kundalini lies
asleep. This lotus is the receptacle of reproductive force.
There is also the six-petalled lotus opposite the navel -- which receives the
forces which nourish the body.
There is also a lotus in the Solar plexus which receives the nervous forces.
The six-petalled lotus in the heart corresponds to Tiphereth, and receives
those vital forces which are connected with the blood.
The sixteen-petalled lotus opposite the larynx receives the nourishment
needed by the breath.
The two-petalled lotus of the pineal gland receives the nourishment needed by
thought, while above the junction of the cranial structures is that sublime
lotus, of a thousand and one petals, which receives the influence from on high;
and in which, in the Adept, the awakened Kundalini takes her pleasure with the
Lord of All.
All these lotuses are figured by the Magick Cup.
In man they are but partly opened, or only opened to their natural
nourishment. In fact it is better to think of them as closed, as secreting that
nourishment, which, because of the lack of sun, turns to poison.
The Magick Cup must have no lid, yet it must be kept veiled most carefully at
all times, except when invocation of the Highest is being made.
This cup must also be hidden from the profane. The Wand must be kept secret
lest the profane, fearing it, should succeed in breaking it; the Cup lest,
wishing to touch it, they should defile it.
Yet the Sprinkling of its water not only purifies the Temple, but blesseth
them that are without: freely must it be poured! But let no one know your real
purpose, and let no one know the secret of your strength. Remember Samson!
Remember Guy Fawkes!
Of the methods of increasing Understanding those of the Holy Qabalah are
perhaps the best, provided that the intellect is thoroughly awake to their
absurdity, and never allows itself to be convinced.
footnote: See the "Interlude" following.
Further meditation of certain sorts is useful: not the strict meditation
which endeavours to still the mind, but such a meditation as Samasati.
footnote: See Equinox V, "The Training of the Mind"; Equinox II, "The
Psychology of Hashish": Equinox VII, "Liber DCCCCXIII."
On the exoteric side if necessary the mind should be trained by the study of
any well-developed science, such as chemistry, or mathematics.
The idea of organization is the first step, that of interpretation the
second. The Master of the Temple, whose grade corresponds to Binah, is sworn to
"interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with his soul."
But even the beginner may attempt this practice with advantage.
Either a fact fits in or it does not; if it does not, harmony is broken; and
as the Universal harmony cannot be broken, the discord must be in the mind of
the student, thus showing that he is not in tune with that Universal choir.
Let him then puzzle out first the great facts, then the little; until one
summer, when he is bald and lethargic after lunch, he understands and
appreciates the existence of flies!
This lack of Understanding with which we all begin is so terrible, so
pitiful. In this world there is so much cruelty, so much waste, so much
stupidity.
The contemplation of the Universe must be at first almost pure anguish. It is
this fact which is responsible for most of the speculations of philosophy.
Mediaeval philosophers when hopelessly astray because their theology
necessitated the reference of all things to the standard of men's welfare.
They even became stupid: Bernardin de St. Pierre (was it not?) said that the
goodness of God was such that wherever men had built a great city, He had placed
a river to assist them in conveying merchandise. But the truth is that in no way
can we imagine the Universe as devised. If horses were made for men to ride,
were not men made for worms to eat?
And so we find once more that the Ego-idea must be ruthlessly rooted out
before Understanding can be attained.
There is an apparent contradiction between this attitude and that of the
Master of the Temple. What can possibly be more selfish than this interpretation
of everything as the dealing of God with the soul?
But it is God who is all and not any part; and every "dealing" must thus be
an expansion of the soul, a destruction of its separateness.
Every ray of the sun expands the flower.
The surface of the water in the Magick Cup is infinite; there is no point
different from any other point.
footnote: "If ye confound the space-marks, saying: They are one; or
saying, They are many ... then expect the direful judgments of Ra Hoor Khuit
... {{sic: error of capitalization, should be: "if ye confound the space-marks
..."}}
This shall regenerate the world, the little world my sister." These are the
words of NUIT, Our Lady of the Stars, of whom Binah is but the troubled
reflection.}
Thus, ultimately, as the wand is a binding and a limitation, so is the Cup an
expansion -- into the Infinite.
And this is the danger of the Cup; it must necessarily be open to all, and
yet if anything is put into it which is out of proportion, unbalanced, or
impure, it takes hurt.
And here again we find difficulty with our thoughts. The grossness and
stupidity of "simple impressions" cloud the waters; "emotions" trouble it;
"perceptions" are still far from the perfect purity of truth; they cause
reflections; while the "tendencies" alter the refractive index, and break up the
light. Even "consciousness" itself is that which distinguishes between the lower
and the higher, the waters which are below the firmament from the waters which
are above the firmament, that appalling stage in the great curse of creation.
Since at the best this water
footnote: The water in this Cup (the latter is also a heart, as shown
by the transition from the ancient to the modern Tarot; the suit "Hearts" in
old packs of cards, and even in modern Spanish and Italian cards, is called
"Cups") is the letter "Mem" (the Hebrew word for water), which has for its
Tarot trump the Hanged Man. This Hanged Man represents the Adept hanging by
one heel from a gallows, which is in the shape of the letter Daleth -- the
letter of the Empress, the heavenly Venus in the Tarot. His legs form a cross,
his arms a triangle, as if by his equilibrium and self-sacrifice he were
bringing the light down and establishing it even in the abyss.
Elementary as this is, it is a very satisfactory hieroglyph of the Great
Work, though the student is warned that the obvious sentimental interpretation
will have to be discarded as soon as it has been understood. It is a very
noble illusion, and therefore a very dangerous one, to figure one's self as
the Redeemer. For, of all the illusions in this Cup -- the subtler and purer
they are, the more difficult they are to detect.
is but a reflection, how tremendously important it becomes that it should be
still!
If the cup is shaken the light will be broken up.
Therefore the Cup is placed upon the Altar, which is foursquare, will
multiplied by will, the confirmation of the will in the Magical Oath, its
fixation in Law.
It is easy to see when water is muddy, and easy to get rid of the mud; but
there are many impurities which defy everything but distillation and even some
which must be fractionated unto 70 times 7.
There is, however, a universal solvent and harmonizer, a certain dew which is
so pure that a single drop of it cast into the water of the Cup will for the
time being bring all to perfection.
This dew is called Love. Even as in the case of human love, the whole
Universe appears perfect to the man who is under its control, so is it, and much
more, with the Divine Love of which it is now spoken.
For human love is an excitement, and not a stilling, of the mind; and as it
is bound to the individual, only leads to greater trouble in the end.
This Divine Love, on the contrary, is attached to no symbol.
It abhors limitation, either in its intensity or its scope. And this is the
dew of the stars of which it is spoken in the Holy Books, for NUIT the Lady of
the Stars is called "the Continuous One of Heaven," and it is that Dew which
bathes the body of the Adept "in a sweet-smelling perfume of sweat."
footnote: See Liber Legis. Equinox VII. {{SIC to the quote, correctly:
".. bathing his whole body in a sweet-smelling perfume of sweat: O Nuit,
continuous one of Heaven, let ...
In this cup, therefore, though all things are placed, by virtue of this dew
all lose their identity. And therefore this Cup is in the hand of BABALON, the
Lady of the City of the Pyramids, wherein no one can be distinguished from any
other, wherein no one may sit until he has lost his name.
Of that which is in the Cup it is also said that it is wine. This is the Cup
of Intoxication. Intoxication means poisoning, and in particular refers to the
poison in which arrows are dipped (Greek
WEH: here in Greek letters: tau-omicron-xi-omicron-nu
, "a bow"). Think of the Vision of the Arrow in Liber 418, and look at the
passages in the Holy Books which speak of the action of the spirit under the
figure of a deadly poison.
For to each individual thing attainment means first and foremost the
destruction of the individuality.
Each of our ideas must be made to give up the Self to the Beloved, so that we
may eventually give up the Self to the Beloved in our turn.
It will be remembered in the History Lection
footnote: Liber LXI, the book given to those who wish to become
Probationers of A.'.A.'.
how the Adepts "who had with smiling faces abandoned their homes and their
possessions -- could with steady calm and firm correctness abandon the Great
Work itself; for this is the last and greatest projection of the Alchemist."
The Master of the Temple has crossed the Abyss, has entered the Palace of the
King's Daughter; he has only to utter one word, and all is dissolved. But,
instead of that, he is found hidden in the earth, tending a garden.
This mystery is all too complex to be elucidated in these fragments of impure
thought; it is a suitable subject for meditation.
An Interlude
Every nursery rime contains profound magical secrets which are open to every
one who has made a study of the correspondences of the Holy Qabalah. To puzzle
out an imaginary meaning for this "nonsense" sets one thinking of the Mysteries;
one enters into deep contemplation of holy things and God Himself leads the soul
to a real illumination. Hence also the necessity of Incarnation; the soul must
descend into all falsity in order to attain All-Truth.
For instance:
Old Mother Hubbard
Went to her cupboard
To get her poor dog a bone;
When she got there,
The cupboard was bare,
And so the poor dog had none.
Who is this ancient and venerable mother of whom it is spoken? Verily she is
none other than Binah, as is evident in the use of the holy letter H with which
her name begins.
Nor is she the sterile Mother Ama-but the fertile Aima; for within her she
bears Vau, the son, for the second letter of her name, and R, the penultimate,
is the Sun, Tiphareth, the Son.
The other three letters of her name, B, A, and D, are the three paths which
join the three supernals.
To what cupboard did she go? Even to the most secret caverns of the Universe.
And who is this dog? Is it not the name of God spelt Qabalistically backwards?
And what is this bone? The bone is the Wand, the holy Lingam!
The complete interpretation of the rune is now open. This rime is the legend
of the murder of Osiris by Typhon.
The limbs of Osiris were scattered in the Nile.
Isis sought them in every corner of the Universe, and she found all except
his sacred lingam, which was not found until quite recently (vide Fuller, The
Star in the West).
Let us take another example from this rich storehouse of magick lore.
Little Bo Peep
She lost her sheep,
And couldn't tell where to find them.
Leave them alone!
And they'll come home,
Dragging their tails behind them.
"Bo" is the root meaning Light, from which spring such words as Bo-Tree,
Bodhisattva, and Buddha.
And "Peep" is Apep, the serpent Apophis. This poem therefore contains the
same symbol as that in the Egyptian and Hebrew Bibles.
The snake is the serpent of initiation, as the Lamb is the Saviour.
This ancient one, the Wisdom of Eternity, sits in its old anguish awaiting
the Redeemer. And this holy verse triumphantly assures us that there is no need
for anxiety. The Saviours will come one after the other, at their own good
pleasure, and as they may be needed, and drag their tails, that is to say those
who follow out their holy commandment, to the ultimate goal.
Again we read:
Little Miss Muffett
Sat on a tuffet,
Eating of curds and whey,
Up came a big spider,
And sat down beside her,
And frightened Miss Muffett away.
Little Miss Muffett unquestionably represents Malkah; for she is unmarried.
She is seated upon a "tuffet"; id est, she is the unregenerate soul upon Tophet,
the pit of hell. And she eats curds and whey, that is, not the pure milk of the
mother, but milk which has undergone decomposition.
But who is the spider? Verily herein is a venerable arcanum connoted! Like
all insects, the spider represents a demon. But why a spider? Who is this spider
"who taketh hold with her hands, and is in King's Palaces"? The name of this
spider is Death. It is the fear of death which first makes the soul aware of its
forlorn condition.
It would be interesting if tradition had preserved for us Miss Muffett's
subsequent adventures.
But we must proceed to consider the interpretation of the following rime:
Little Jack Horner
Sat in a corner,
Eating a Christmas pie.
He stuck in his thumb,
And pulled out a plum,
And said, "What a good boy am I!"
In the interpretation of this remarkable poem there is a difference between
two great schools of Adepts.
One holds that Jack is merely a corruption of John, Ion, he who goes-Hermes,
the Messenger. The other prefers to take Jack simply and reverently as Iacchus,
the spiritual form of Bacchus. But it does not matter very much whether we
insist upon the swiftness or the rapture of the Holy Spirit of God; and that it
is he of whom it is here spoken is evident, for the name Horner could be applied
to none other by even the most casual reader of the Holy Gospels and the works
of Congreve. And the context makes this even clearer, for he sits in a corner,
that is in the place of Christ, the Corner Stone, eating, that is, enjoying,
that which the birth of Christ assures to us. He is the Comforter who replaces
the absent Saviour. If there was still any doubt of His identity it would be
cleared up by the fact that it is the thumb, which is attributed to the element
of Spirit, and not one of the four fingers of the four lesser elements, which he
sticks into the pie of the new dispensation. He plucks forth one who is ripe, no
doubt to send him forth as a teacher into the world, and rejoices that he is so
well carrying out the will of the Father.
Let us pass from this most blessed subject to yet another.
Tom, Tom, the piper's son,
Stole a pig and away he run.
The pig was eat,
And Tom was beat,
And Tom went roaring down the street.
This is one of the more exoteric of these rimes. In fact, it is not much
better than a sun-myth. Tom is Toum, the God of the Sunset (called the Son of
Apollo, the Piper, the maker of music). The only difficulty in the poem concerns
the pig; for anyone who has watched an angry sunset in the Tropics upon the sea,
will recognize how incomparable a description of that sunset is given in that
wonderful last line. Some have thought that the pig refers to the evening
sacrifice, others that she is Hathor, the Lady of the West, in her more sensual
aspect.
But it is probable that this poem is only the frst stanza of an epic. It has
all the characteristic marks. Someone said of the Iliad that it did not finish,
but merely stopped. This is the same. We may be sure that there is more of this
poem. It tells us too much and too little. How came this tragedy of the eating
of a merely stolen pig? Unveil this mystery of who "eat" it!
It must be abandoned, then, as at least partially insoluble. Let us consider
this poem:
Hickory, dickory, dock!
The mouse ran up the clock;
The clock struck one,
And the mouse ran down,
Hickory, dickory, dock!
Here we are on higher ground at once. The clock symbolizes the spinal column,
or, if you prefer it, Time, chosen as one of the conditions of normal
consciousness. The mouse is the Ego; "Mus," a mouse, being only Sum, "I am,"
spelt Qabalistically backwards.
This Ego or Prana or Kundalini force being driven up the spine, the clock
strikes one, that is, the duality of consciousness is abolished. And the force
again subsides to its original level.
"Hickory, dickory, dock!" is perhaps the mantra which was used by the adept
who constructed this rime, thereby hoping to fix it in the minds of men; so that
they might attain to Samadhi by the same method. Others attribute to it a more
profound signifance-which it is impossible to go into at this moment, for we
must turn to:-
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall;
Humpty Dumpty got a great fall;
All the king's horses
And all the king's men
Couldn't set up Humpty Dumpty again.
This is so simple as hardly to require explanation. Humpty Dumpty is of
course the Egg of Spirit, and the wall is the Abyss--his "fall" is therefore the
descent of spirit into matter; and it is only too painfully familiar to us that
all the king's horses and all his men cannot restore us to the height.
Only The King Himself can do that!
But one can hardly comment upon a theme which has been so fruitfully treated
by Ludovicus Carolus, that most holy illuminated man of God. His masterly
treatment of the identity of the three reciprocating paths of Daleth, Teth, and
Pe, is one of the most wonderful passages in the Holy Qabalah. His resolution of
what we take to be the bond of slavery into very love, the embroidered neckband
of honour bestowed upon us by the King himself, is one of the most sublime
passages in this class of literature.
Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater,
Had a wife and couldn't keep her.
He put her in a peanut shell;
Then he kept her very well.
This early authentic text of the Hinayana School of Buddhism is much esteemed
even to-day by the more cultured and devoted followers of that school.
The pumpkin is of course the symbol of resurrection, as is familiar to all
students of the story of Jonah and the gourd.
Peter is therefore the Arahat who has put an end to his series of
resurrections. That he is called Peter is a reference to the symbolizing of
Arahats as stones in the great wall of the guardians of mankind. His wife is of
course (by the usual symbolism) his body, which he could not keep until he put
her in a peanut shell, the yellow robe of a Bhikkhu.
Buddha said that if any man became an Arahat he must either take the vows of
a Bhikkhu that very day, or die, and it is this saying of Buddha's that the
unknown poet wished to commemorate.
Taffy was a Welshman
Taffy was a thief;
Taffy came to my house
And stole a leg of beef.
I went to Taffy's house;
Taffy was in bed.
I took a carving knife,
And cut off Taffy's head.
Taffy is merely short for Taphthatharath, the Spirit of Mercury and the God
of Welshmen or thieves. "My house" is of course equivalent to "my magick
circle." Note that Beth, the letter of Mercury and "The Magus," means "a house."
The beef is a symbol of the Bull, Apis the Redeemer. This is therefore that
which is written, "Oh my God, disguise thy glory! Come as a thief, and let us
steal away the sacraments!"
In the following verse we find that Taffy is "in bed," owing to the operation
of the sacrament. The great task of the Alchemist has been accomplished; the
mercury is fixed.
One can then take the Holy Dagger, and separate the Caput Mortuum from the
Elixir. Some Alchemists believe that the beef represents that dense physical
substance which is imbibed by Mercury for his fixation; but here as always we
should prefer the more spiritual interpretation.
Bye, Baby Bunting!
Daddy's gone a-hunting.
He's gone to get a rabbit-skin
To wrap my Baby Bunting in.
This is mystical charge to the new-born soul to keep still, to remain
steadfast in meditation; for, in Bye, Beth is the letter of thought, Yod that of
the Hermit. It tells the soul that the Father of All will clothe him about with
His own majestical silence. For is not the rabbit he "who lay low and said
nuffin'"?
Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man!
Bake me a cake as fast as you can!
Pat it and prick it and mark it with P!
Bake it in the oven for baby and me!
This rime is usually accompanied (even to-day in the nursery) with a
ceremonial clapping of hands-the symbol of Samadhi. Compare what is said on this
subject in our comment on the famous "Advent" passage in Thessalonians.
The cake is of course the bread of the sacrament, and it would ill become
Frater P. to comment upon the third line-though it may be remarked that even
among the Catholics the wafer has always been marked with a phallus or cross.
CHAPTER VIII
THE SWORD
"THE word of the Lord is quick and powerful, and sharper than a two-edged
sword."
As the Wand is Chokmah, the Will, "the Father," and the Cup the
Understanding, "the Mother," Binah; so the Magick Sword is the Reason, "the
Son," the six Sephiroth of the Ruach, and we shall see that the Pantacle
corresponds to Malkuth, "the Daughter."
The Magick Sword is the analytical faculty; directed against any demon it
attacks his complexity.
Only the simple can withstand the sword. As we are below the Abyss, this
weapon is then entirely destructive: it divides Satan against Satan. It is only
in the lower forms of Magick, the purely human forms, that the Sword has become
so important a weapon. A dagger should be sufficient.
But the mind of man is normally so important to him that the sword is
actually the largest of his weapons; happy is he who can make the dagger
suffice!
The hilt of the Sword should be made of copper.
The guard is composed of the two crescents of the waxing and the waning moon
-- back to back. Spheres are placed between them, forming an equilateral
triangle with the sphere of the pommel.
The blade is straight, pointed, and sharp right up to the guard. It is made
of steel, to equilibrate with the hilt, for steel is the metal of Mars, as
copper is of Venus.
Those two planets are male and female -- and thus reflect the Wand and the
Cup, though in a much lower sense.
The hilt is of Venus, for Love is the motive of this ruthless analysis -- if
this were not so the sword would be a Black Magical weapon.
The pommel of the Sword is in Daath, the guard extends to Chesed and Geburah;
the point is in Malkuth. Some magi make the three spheres of lead, tin, and gold
respectively; the moons are silver, and the grip contains quicksilver, thus
making the Sword symbolic of the seven planets. But this is a phantasy and
affectation.
"Whoso taketh the sword shall perish by the sword," is not a mystical threat,
but a mystical promise. It is our own complexity that must be destroyed.
Here is another parable. Peter, the Stone of the Philosophers, cuts off the
ear of Malchus, the servant of the High Priest (the ear is the organ of Spirit).
In analysis the spiritual part of Malkuth must be separated from it by the
philosophical stone, and then Christus, the Anointed One, makes it whole once
more. "Solve et coagula!"
It is noticeable that this takes place at the arrest of Christ, who is the
son, the Ruach, immediately before his crucifixion.
The Calvary Cross should be of six squares, an unfolded cube, which cube is
this same philosophical stone.
Meditation will reveal many mysteries which are concealed in this symbol.
The Sword or Dagger is attributed to air, all-wandering, all-penetrating, but
unstable; not a phenomenon subtle like fire, not a chemical combination like
water, but a mixture of gases.
footnote: The Oxygen in the air would be too fierce for life; it must
be largely diluted with the inert nitrogen.
The rational mind supports life, but about seventy-nine per cent. of it not
only refuses itself to enter into combination, but prevents the remaining
twenty-one per cent. from doing so. Enthusiasms are checked; the intellect is
the great enemy of devotion. One of the tasks of the Magician is to manage
somehow to separate the Oxygen and Nitrogen in his mind, to stifle four-fifts
so that he may burn up the remainder, a flame of holiness. But this cannot be
done by the Sword.
The Sword, necessary as it is to the Beginner, is but a crude weapon. Its
function is to keep off the enemy or to force a passage through them -- and
though it must be wielded to gain admission to the palace, it cannot be worn at
the marriage feast.
One might say that the Pantacle is the bread of life, and the Sword the knife
which cuts it up. One must have ideas, but one must criticize them.
The Sword, too, is that weapon with which one strikes terror into the demons
and dominates them. One must keep the Ego Lord of the impressions. One must not
allow the circle to be broken by the demon; one must not allow any one idea to
carry one away.
It will readily be seen how very elementary and false all this is -- but for
the beginner it is necessary.
In all dealings with demons the point of the Sword is kept downwards, and it
should not be used for invocation, as is taught in certain schools of magick.
If the Sword is raised towards the Crown, it is no longer really a sword. The
Crown cannot be divided. Certainly the Sword should not be lifted.
The Sword may, however, be clasped in both hands, and kept steady and erect,
symbolizing that thought has become one with the single aspiration, and burnt up
like a flame. This flame is the Shin, the Ruach Alhim, not the mere Ruach Adam.
The divine and not the human consciousness.
The Magician cannot wield the Sword unless the Crown is on his head.
Those Magicians, who have attempted to make the Sword the sole or even the
principal weapon, have only destroyed themselves, not by the destruction of
combination, but by the destruction of division.
footnote: It should be noted that this ambiguity in the word
"destruction" has been the cause of much misunderstanding. "Solve" is
destruction, but so is "coagula." The aim of the Magus is to destroy his
partial thought by uniting it with the Universal Thought, not to make a
further breach and division in the Whole.
Weakness overcomes strength.
The most stable political edifice of history has been that of China, which
was founded principally on politeness; and that of India has proved strong
enough to absorb its many conquerors.
footnote: The Brahmin caste is not so strict as that of the
"heaven-born" (Indian Civil Service).
The Sword has been the great weapon of the last century. Every idea has been
attacked by thinkers, and none has withstood attack. Hence civilization
crumbles.
No settled principles remain. To-day all constructive statesmanship is
empiricism or opportunism. It has been doubted whether there is any real
relation between Mother and Child, any real distinction between Male and Female.
The human mind, in despair, seeing insanity imminent in the breaking up of
these coherent images, has tried to replace them by ideals which are only saved
from destruction, at the very moment of their birth, by their vagueness.
The Will of the King was at least ascertainable at any moment; nobody has yet
devised a means for ascertaining the will of the people.
All conscious willed action is impeded; the march of events is now nothing
but inertia.
Let the Magician consider these matters before he takes the Sword in his
hand. Let him understand that the Ruach, this loose combination of 6 Sephiroth,
only bound together by their attachment to the human will in Tiphereth, must be
rent asunder.
The mind must be broken up into a form of insanity before it can be
transcended.
David said: "I hate thoughts."
The Hindu says: "That which can be thought is not true."
Paul said: "The carnal mind is enmity against God."
And every one who meditates, even for an hour, will soon discover how this
gusty aimless wind makes his flame flicker. "The wind bloweth where it listeth."
The normal man is less than a straw.
footnote: But as it is said, "Similia similibus curantur," we find this
Ruach also the symbol of the Spirit. RVCh ALHIM, the Spirit of God, is 300,
the number of the holy letter Shin. As this is the breath, which by its nature
is double, the two edges of the Sword, the letter H symbolises breath, and H
is the letter of Aries -- the House of Mars, of the Sword: and H is also the
letter of the Mother; this is the link between the Sword and the Cup.
The connection between Breath and Mind has been supposed by some to exist
merely in etymology. But the connection is a truer one.
footnote: It is undoubted that Ruach means primarily "that which moves
or revolves," "a going," "a wheel," "the wind," and that its secondary meaning
was mind because of the observed instability of mind, and its tendency to a
circular motion. "Spiritus" only came to mean Spirit in the modern technical
sense owing to the efforts of the theologians. We have an example of the
proper use of the word in the term: Spirit of Wine -- the airy portion of
wine. But the word "inspire" was perhaps derived from observing the
derangement of the breathing of persons in divine ecstasy.
In any case there is undoubtedly a connection between the respiratory and
mental functions. The Student will find this out by practising Pranayama. By
this exercise some thoughts are barred, and those which do come into the mind
come more slowly than before, so that the mind has time to perceive their
falsity and to destroy them.
On the blade of the Magick Sword is etched the name AGLA, a Notariqon formed
from the initials of the sentence "Ateh Gibor Leolahm Adonai," "To thee be the
Power unto the Ages, O my lord."
And the acid which eats into the steel should be oil of vitrol. Vitrol is a
Notariqon of "Visita Interiora Terrae Rectificando Invenies Occultum Lapidem."
That is to say: By investigating everything and bringing it into harmony and
proportion you will find the hidden stone, the same stone of the philosophers of
which mention has already been made, which turns all into gold. This oil which
can eat into the steel, is further that which is written, Liber LXV, i, 16: "As
an acid eats into steel . . . so am I unto the Spirit of Man."
Note how closely woven into itself is all this symbolism!
The centre of Ruach being the heart, it is seen that this Sword of the Ruach
must be thrust by the Magician into his own heart.
But there is a subsequent task, of which it is spoken -- Liber VII, v, 47.
"He shall await the sword of the Beloved and bare his throat for the stroke." In
the throat is Daath -- the throne of Ruach. Daath is knowledge. This final
destruction of knowledge opens the gate of the City of the Pyramids.
It is also written, Liber CCXX, iii, 11: "Let the woman be girt with a sword
before me." But this refers to the arming of Vedana with Sanna, the overcoming
of emotion by clarity of perception.
It is also spoken, Liber LXV, v, 14, of the Sword of Adonai, "that hath four
blades, the blade of the Thunderbolt, the blade of the Pylon, the blade of the
Serpent, the blade of the Phallus."
But this Sword is not for the ordinary Magician. For this is the Sword
flaming every way that keeps Eden, and in this Sword the Wand and the Cup are
concealed -- so that although the being of the Magician is blasted by the
Thunderbolt, and poisoned by the Serpent, at the same time the organs whose
union is the supreme sacrament are left in him.
At the coming of Adonai the individual is destroyed in both senses. He is
shattered into a thousand pieces, yet at the same time united with the simple
footnote: Compare the first set of verses in Liber XVI. (XVI in the
Taro is Pe, Mars, the Sword.)
Of this it is also spoken by St. Paul in his Epistle to the Church in
Thessalonica: "For the Lord shall descend from Heaven, with a shout, with the
voice of the Archangel, and with the trump of God; and the dead in Christ shall
rise first. Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with
them into the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so shall we be for ever
with the Lord."
The stupid interpretation of this verse as prophetic of a "second advent"
need not concern us; every word of it is, however, worthy of profound
consideration.
"The Lord" is Adonai -- which is the Hebrew for "my Lord"; and He descends
from heaven, the supernal Eden, the Sahasrara Cakkra in man, with a "shout," a
"voice," and a "trump," again airy symbols, for it is air that carries sound.
These sounds refer to those heard by the Adept at the moment of rapture.
This is most accurately pictured in the Tarot Trump called "The Angel," which
corresponds to the letter Shin, the letter of Spirit and of Breath.
The whole mind of man is rent by the advent of Adonai, and is at once caught
up into union with Him. "In the air," the Ruach.
Note that etymologically the word {greek letters here: sigma-upsilon-nu},
"together with," is the Sanskrit "Sam;" and the Hebrew ADNI is the Sanskrit ADHI.
The phrase "together with the Lord," is then literally identical with the
word Samadhi, which is the Sanskrit name of the phenomenon described by Saint
Paul, this union of the ego and the non-ego, subject and object, this chymical
marriage, and thus identical with the symbolism of the Rosy Cross, under a
slightly different aspect.
And since marriage can only take place between one and one, it is evident
that no idea can thus be united, unless it is simple.
Hence every idea must be analysed by the Sword. Hence, too, there must only
be a single thought in the mind of the person meditating.
One may now go on to consider the use of the Sword in purifying emotions into
perceptions.
It was the function of the Cup to interpret the perceptions by the
tendencies; the Sword frees the perceptions from the Web of emotion.
The perceptions are meaningless in themselves; but the emotions are worse,
for they delude their victim into supposing them significant and true.
Every emotion is an obsession; the most horrible of blasphemies is to
attribute any emotion to God in the macrocosm, or to the pure soul in the
microcosm.
How can that which is self-existent, complete, be "moved?" It is even written
that "torsion about a point is iniquity."
WEH footnote: See Macrobius, Iamblichus, Plotinus and sayings
attributed to Pythagoras for these views
But if the point itself could be moved it would cease to be itself, for
position is the only attribute of the point.
The Magician must therefore make himself absolutely free in this respect.
It is the constant practice of Demons to attempt to terrify, to shock, to
disgust, to allure. Against all this he must oppose the Steel of the Sword. If
he has got rid the ego-idea this task will be comparatively easy; unless he has
done so it will be almost impossible. So says the Dhammapada:
Me he abused, and me he beat, he robbed me, he insulted me;
In whom such thoughts find harbourage, hatred will never cease to be.
And this hatred is the thought which inhibits the love whose apotheosis is
Samadhi.
But it is too much to expect of the young Magician to practise attachment to
the distasteful; let him first become indifferent. Let him endeavour to see
facts as facts, as simply as he would see them if they were historical. Let him
avoid the imaginative interpretation of any facts. Let him not put himself in
the place of the people of whom the facts are related, or if he does so, let it
be done only for the purpose of comprehension. Sympathy,
footnote: It is true that sometimes sympathy is necessary to
comprehension.
indignation, praise and blame, are out of place in the observer.
No one has properly considered the question as to the amount and quality of
the light afforded by candles made by waxed Christians.
Who has any idea which joint of the ordinary missionary is preferred by
epicures? It is only a matter of conjecture that Catholics are better eating
than Presbyterians.
Yet these points and their kind are the only ones which have any importance
at the time when the events occur.
Nero did not consider what unborn posterity might think of him; it is
difficult to credit cannibals with the calculation that the recital of their
exploits will induce pious old ladies to replenish their larder.
Very few people have ever "seen" a bull-fight. One set of people goes for
excitement, another set for the perverse excitement which real or simulated
horror affords. Very few people know that blood freshly spilled in the sunlight
is perhaps the most beautiful colour that is to be found in nature.
It is a notorious fact that it is practically impossible to get a reliable
description of what occurs at a spiritualistic "seance;" the emotions cloud the
vision.
Only in the absolute calm of the laboratory, where the observer is perfectly
indifferent to what may happen, only concerned to observe exactly what that
happening is, to measure and to weigh it by means of instruments incapable of
emotion, can one even begin to hope for a truthful record of events. Even the
common physical bases of emotion, the senses of pleasure and pain, lead the
observer infallibly to err. This though they be not sufficiently excited to
disturb his mind.
Plunge one hand into a basin of hot water, the other into a basin of cold
water, then both together into a basin of tepid water; the one hand will say
hot, the other cold.
Even in instruments themselves, their physical qualities, such as expansion
and contraction (which may be called, in a way, the roots of pleasure and pain),
cause error.
Make a thermometer, and the glass is so excited by the necessary fusion that
year by year, for thirty years afterwards or more, the height of the mercury
will continue to alter; how much more then with so plastic a matter as the mind!
There is no emotion which does not leave a mark on the mind, and all marks are
bad marks. Hope and fear are only opposite phases of a single emotion; both are
incompatible with the purity of the soul. With the passions of man the case is
somewhat different, as they are functions of his own will. They need to be
disciplined, not to be suppressed. But emotion is impressed from without. It is
an invasion of the circle.
As the Dhammapada says:
An ill-thatched house is open to the mercy of the rain and wind;
So passion hath the power to break into an unreflecting mind.
A well-thatched house is proof against the fury of the rain and wind;
So passion hath no power to break into a rightly-ordered mind.
Let then the Student practise observation of those things which normally
would cause him emotion; and let him, having written a careful description of
what he sees, check it by the aid of some person familiar with such sights.
Surgical operations and dancing girls are fruitful fields for the beginner.
In reading emotional books such as are inflicted on children, let him always
endeavour to see the event from the standpoint opposite to that of the author.
Yet let him not emulate the partially emancipated child who complained of a
picture of the Colosseum that "there was one poor little lion who hadn't got any
Christian," except in the first instance. Adverse criticism is the first step;
the second must go further.
Having sympathized sufficiently with both the lions and the Christians, let
him open his eyes to that which his sympathy had masked hitherto, that the
picture is abominably conceived, abominably composed, abominably drawn, and
abominably coloured, as it is pretty sure to be.
Let him further study those masters, in science or in art, who have observed
with minds untinctured by emotion.
Let him learn to detect idealizations, to criticize and correct them.
Let him understand the falsehood of Raphael, of Watteau, of Leighton, of
Bouguereau; let him appreciate the truthfulness of John, of Rembrandt, of
Titian, of O'Conor.
Similar studies in literature and philosophy will lead to similar results.
But do not let him neglect the analysis of his own emotions; for until these are
overcome he will be incapable of judging others.
This analysis may be carried out in various ways; one is the materialistic
way. For example, if oppressed by nightmare, let him explain: "This nightmare is
a cerebral congestion."
The strict way of doing this by meditation is Mahasatipatthana,
footnote: See Crowley, "Collected Works," vol. ii, pp. 252-254.
but it should be aided in every moment of life by endeavouring to estimate
occurrences at their true value. Their relativity in particular must be
carefully considered.
Your toothache does not hurt any one outside a very small circle. Floods in
China mean to you nothing but a paragraph in the newspaper. The destruction of
the world itself would have no significance in Sirius. One can hardly imagine
even that the astronomers of Sirius could perceive so trifling a disturbance.
Now considering that Sirius itself is only, as far as you know, but one, and
one of the least important, of the ideas in your mind, why should that mind be
disturbed by your toothache? It is not possible to labour this point without
tautology, for it is a very simple one; but it should be emphasised, for it is a
very simple one. Waugh! Waugh! Waugh! Waugh! Waugh!
In the question of ethics it again becomes vital, for to many people it seems
impossible to consider the merits of any act without dragging in a number of
subjects which have no real connection with it.
The Bible has been mistranslated by perfectly competent scholars because they
had to consider the current theology. The most glaring example is the "Song of
Solomon," a typical piece of Oriental eroticism. But since to admit that it was
this would never do for a canonical book, they had to pretend that it was
symbolical.
They tried to refine away the grossness of the expressions, but even their
hardihood proved unequal to the task.
This form of dishonesty reaches its climax in the expurgating of the
classics. "The Bible is the Word of God, written by holy men, as they were
inspired by the Holy Ghost. But we will cut out those passages which we think
unsuitable." "Shakespeare is our greatest poet -- but, of course, he is very
dreadful." "No one can surpass the lyrics of Shelley, but we must pretend that
he was not an atheist."
Some translators could not bear that the heathen Chinese should use the word
Shang Ti, and pretended that it did not mean God. Others, compelled to admit
that it did mean God, explained that the use of the term showed that "God had
not left himself without a witness even in this most idolatrous of nations. They
had been mysteriously compelled to use it, not knowing what it meant." All this
because of their emotional belief that they were better than the Chinese.
The most dazzling example of this is shown in the history of the study of
Buddhism.
The early scholars simply could not understand that the Buddhist canon denies
the soul, regards the ego as a delusion caused by a special faculty of the
diseased mind, could not understand that the goal of the Buddhist, Nibbana, was
in any way different from their own goal, Heaven, in spite of the perfect
plainness of the language in such dialogues as those between the Arahat Nagasena
and King Melinda; and their attempts to square the text with their
preconceptions will always stand as one of the great follies of the wise.
Again, it is almost impossible for the well-mannered Christian to realize
that Jesus Christ ate with his fingers. The temperance advocate makes believe
that the wine at the marriage feast of Cana was non-alcoholic.
It is a sort of mad syllogism.
"Nobody whom I respect does this."
"I respect So-and-so."
"Therefore, So-and-so did not do this."
The moralist of to-day is furious when one points to the fact that
practically every great man in history was grossly and notoriously immoral.
Enough of this painful subject!
As long as we try to fit facts to theories instead of adopting the scientific
attitude of altering the theories (when necessary) to fit the facts, we shall
remain mired in falsehood.
The religious taunt the scientific man with this open-mindedness, with this
adaptability. "Tell a lie and stick to it!" is "their" golden rule.
{diagram on this page: The Sigillum Dei Aemeth pantacle, taken from the
version in the Equinox. This caption below: "THE SIGILLUM DEI AEMETH, A PANTACLE
MADE BY DR. JOHN DEE.}
CHAPTER IX
THE PANTACLE
AS the Magick Cup is the heavenly food of the Magus, so is the Magick
Pantacle his earthly food.
The Wand was his divine force, and the Sword his human force.
The Cup is hollow to receive the influence from above. The Pantacle is flat
like the fertile plains of earth.
The name Pantacle implies an image of the All, "omne in parvo;" but this is
by a magical transformation of the Pantacle. Just as we made the Sword
symbolical of everything by the force of our Magick, so do we work upon the
Pantacle. That which is merely a piece of common bread shall be the body of God!
The Wand was the will of man, his wisdom, his word; the Cup was his
understanding, the vehicle of grace; the Sword was his reason; and the Pantacle
shall be his body, the temple of the Holy Ghost.
What is the length of this Temple?
From North to South.
What is the breadth of this Temple?
From East to West.
What is the height of this Temple?
From the Abyss to the Abyss.
There is, therefore, nothing movable or immovable under the whole firmament
of heaven which is not included in this pantacle, though it be but "eight inches
in diameter, and in thickness half an inch."
Fire is not matter at all; water is a combination of elements; air almost
entirely a mixture of elements; earth contains all both in admixture and in
combination.
So must it be with this Pantacle, the symbol of earth.
And as this Pantacle is made of pure wax, do not forget that "everything that
lives is holy."
All phenomena are sacraments. Every fact, and even every falsehood, must
enter into the Pantacle; it is the great storehouse from which the Magician
draws.
"In the brown cakes of corn we shall taste the food of the world and be
strong."
footnote: We have avoided dealing with the Pantacle as the Paten of the
Sacrament, though special instructions about it are given in Liber Legis. It
is composed of meal, honey, wine, holy oil, and blood.
When speaking of the Cup, it was shown how every fact must be made
significant, how every stone must have its proper place in the mosaic. Woe were
it were one stone misplaced! But that mosaic cannot be wrought at all, well or
ill, unless every stone be there.
These stones are the simple impressions or experiences; not one may be
foregone.
Do not refuse anything merely because you know that it is the cup of Poison
offered by your enemy; drink it with confidence; it is he that will fall dead!
WEH footnote: Metaphor. Not for reading by children!
How can I give Cambodian art its proper place in art, if I have never heard
of Cambodia? How can the Geologist estimate the age of what lies beneath the
chalk unless he have a piece of knowledge totally unconnected with geology, the
life-history of the animals of whom that chalk is the remains?
This then is a very great difficulty for the Magician. He cannot possibly
have all experience, and though he may console himself philosophically with the
reflection that the Universe is conterminous with such experience as he has, he
will find it grow at such a pace during the early years of his life that he may
almost be tempted to believe in the possibility of experiences beyond his own,
and from a practical standpoint he will seem to be confronted with so many
avenues of knowledge that he will be bewildered which to choose.
The ass hesitated between two thistles; how much more that greater ass, that
incomparably greater ass, between two thousand!
Fortunately it does not matter very much; but he should at least choose those
branches of knowledge which abut directly upon universal problems.
He should choose not one but several, and these should be as diverse as
possible in nature.
It is important that he should strive to excel in some sport, and that that
sport should be the one best calculated to keep this body in health.
He should have a thorough grounding in classics, mathematics and science;
also enough general knowledge of modern languages and of the shifts of life to
enable him to travel in any part of the world with ease and security.
History and geography he can pick up as he wants them; and what should
interest him most in any subject is its links with some other subject, so that
his Pantacle may not lack what painters call "composition."
He will find that, however good his memory may be, ten thousand impressions
enter his mind for every one that it is able to retain even for a day. And the
excellence of a memory lies in the wisdom of its selection.
The best memories so select and judge that practically nothing is retained
which has not some coherence with the general plan of the mind.
All Pantacles will contain the ultimate conceptions of the circle and the
cross, though some will prefer to replace the cross by a point, or by a Tau, or
by a triangle. The Vesica Pisces is sometimes used instead of the circle, or the
circle may be glyphed as a serpent. Time and space and the idea of causality are
sometimes represented; so also are the three stages in the history of
philosophy, in which the three objects of study were successively Nature, God,
and Man.
The duality of consciousness is also sometimes represented; and the Tree of
Life itself may be figured therein, or the categories. An emblem of the Great
Work should be added. But the Pantacle will be imperfect unless each idea is
contrasted in a balanced manner with its opposite, and unless there is a
necessary connection between each pair of ideas and every other pair.
The Neophyte will perhaps do well to make the first sketches for his Pantacle
very large and complex, subsequently simplifying, not so much by exclusion as by
combination, just as a Zoologist, beginning with the four great Apes and Man,
combines all in the single word "primate."
It is not wise to simplify too far, since the ultimate hieroglyphic must be
an infinite. The ultimate resolution not having been performed, its symbol must
not be portrayed.
If any person were to gain access to V.V.V.V.V.,
footnote: The Motto of the Chief of the A.'.A.'., "the Light of the
World Himself."
and ask Him to discourse upon any subject, there is little doubt that He
could only comply by an unbroken silence, and even that might not be wholly
satisfactory, since the Tao Teh King says that the Tao cannot be declared either
by silence or by speech.
In this preliminary task of collecting materials, the idea of the Ego is not
of such great moment; all impressions are phases of the non-ego, and the Ego
serves merely as a receptacle. In fact, to the well regulated mind, there is no
question but that the impressions are real, and that the mind, if not a " |