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-
-
- DUTY
-
- by
-
- ALEISTER CROWLEY
-
-
- (a note on the chief rules of practical conduct to be observed
- by those who accept the Law of Thelema.)
-
- "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law."
- "There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt."
- "...thou hast no right but to do thy will. Do that
- and no other shall say nay. For pure will, unassuaged
- of purpose, delivered from the lust of result, is
- every way perfect."
- "Love is the law, love under will."
- "Every man and every woman is a star."
-
-
- A. YOUR DUTY TO YOURSELF
-
- 1. Find yourself to be the centre of your own Universe
-
- "I am the flame that burns in every heart of man, and
- in the core of every star."
-
- 2. Explore the Nature and Powers of your own Being.
-
- This includes everything which is, or can be for you:
- and you must accept everything exactly as it is in
- itself, as one of the factors which go to make up your
- True Self. This True Self thus ultimately includes
- all things soever: its discovery is Initiation (the
- travelling inwards) and as its Nature is to move
- continually, it must be understood not as static, but
- as dynamic, not as a Noun but as a Verb.
-
- 3. Develop in due harmony and proportion every faculty which
- you possess.
-
- "Wisdom says: be strong!"
- "But exceed! exceed!"
- "Be strong, o man, lust, enjoy all things of sense and
- rapture: fear not that any God shall deny thee for
- this"
-
- 4. Contemplate your own Nature.
-
- Consider every element thereof both separately and in
- relation to all the rest as to judge accurately the
- true purpose of the totality of your Being.
-
- 5. Find the formula of this purpose, or "True Will", in an
- expression as simple as possible.
-
- Leave to understand clearly how best to manipulate the
- energies which you control to obtain the results most
- favourable to it from its relations with the part of
- the Universe which you do not yet control.
-
- 6. Extend the dominion of your consciousness, and its control
- of all forces alien to it, to the utmost.
-
- Do this by the ever stronger and more skilful
- application of your faculties to the finer, clearer,
- fuller, and more accurate perception, the better
- understanding, and the more wisely ordered government,
- of that external Universe.
-
- 7. Never permit the thought or will of any other Being to
- interfere with your own.
-
- Be constantly vigilant to resent, and on the alert to
- resist, with unvanquishable ardour and vehemence of
- passion unquenchable, every attempt of any other Being
- to influence you otherwise than by contributing new
- facts to your experience of the Universe, or by
- assisting you to reach a higher synthesis of Truth by
- the mode of passionate fusion.
-
- 8. Do not repress or restrict any true instinct of your
- Nature; but devote all in perfection to the sole service of
- your one True Will.
-
- "Be goodly therefore"
- "The Word of Sin is Restriction. O man! refuse not
- thy wife if she will. O lover, if thou wilt, depart.
- There is no bond that can unite the divided but love:
- all else is a curse. Accursed! Accursed! be it to
- the aeons. Hell. So with thy all: thou hast no right
- but to do thy will. Do that and no other shall say
- nay. For pure will, unassuaged of purpose, delivered
- from the lust of result, is every way perfect."
- "Ye shall gather goods and store of women and Spices;
- ye shall exceed the nations of the earth is Splendour
- & pride; but always in the love of me, and so shall ye
- come to my joy."
-
- 9. Rejoice!
-
- "Remember all ye that existence is pure joy; that all
- the sorrows are but shadows; they pass & are done; but
- there is that which remains."
- "But ye, o my people, rise up and awake! Let the
- rituals be rightly performed with joy and beauty! ...
- A feast for fire and a feast for water; a feast for
- life and a greater feast for death! A feast every day
- in your hearts in the joy of my rapture. A feast
- every night unto Nuit, and the pleasure of uttermost
- delight. Aye! feast! rejoice! there is no dread
- hereafter. There is no dissolution and eternal
- ecstacy in the kisses of Nu."
- "Now rejoice! now come in our splendour and rapture!
- Come in our passionate peace, & write sweet words for
- the Kings!"
- "Thrill with the joy of life & death! Ah! thy death
- shall be lovely: whose seeth it shall be glad. Thy
- death shall be the seal of the promise of our agelong
- love. Come! lift up thy heart & rejoice!"
- "Is God to live in a dog? No! but the highest are of
- us. They shall rejoice: who sorroweth is not of use.
- Beauty and strength, leaping laughter and delicious
- langour, force and fire, are of us."
-
- B. YOUR DUTY TO OTHER INDIVIDUAL MEN AND WOMEN
-
- 1. "Love is the law, love under will."
-
- Unite yourself passionately with every other form of
- consciousness, thus destroying the sense of
- seperateness from the Whole, and creating a new
- base-line in the Universe from which to measure it.
-
- 2. "As brothers fight ye."
-
- "If he be a king thou canst not hurt him."
- To bring out saliently the differences between two
- points-of-view is useful to both in measuring the
- position of each in the whole. Combat stimulates the
- virile or creative energy; and, like love, of which it
- is one form, excites the mind to an orgasm which
- enables it to transcend its rational dullness.
-
- 3. Abstain from all interferences with other wills.
-
- "Beware lest any force another, King against King!"
- (The love and war in the previous injunctions are of
- the nature of sport, where one respects, and learns
- from the opponent, but never interferes with him,
- outside the actual game.) To seek to dominate or
- influence another is to seek to deform or destroy him;
- and he is a necessary part of one's own Universe, that
- is, of one's self.
-
- 4. Seek, if you so will, to enlighten another when need
- arises.
-
- This may be done, always with the strict respect for
- the attitude of the good sportsman, when he is in
- distress through failure to understand himself
- clearly, especially when he specifically demands help;
- for his darkness may hinder one's perception of his
- perfection. (Yet also his darkness may serve as a
- warning, or excite one's interest.) It is also lawful
- when his ignorance has lead him to interfere with
- one's will. All interference is in any case
- dangerous, and demands the exercise of extreme skill
- and good judgement, fortified by experience. To
- influence another is to leave one's citadel unguarded;
- and the attempt commonly ends in losing one's own
- self-supremacy.
-
- 5. Worship all!
-
- "Every man and every woman is a star."
- "Mercy let be off: damn those who pity."
- "We have nothing with the outcast and the unfit: let
- them die in their misery: For they feel not.
- Compassion is the vice of kings: stamp down the
- wretched and the weak: this is the law of the strong:
- this is our law and the joy of the world. Think not,
- o king, upon that lie: That Thou Must Die: verily thou
- shalt not die, but live! Now let it be understood if
- the body of the King dissolve, he shall remain in pure
- ecstacy for ever. Nuit Hadit Ra-Hoor-Khuit. The Sun,
- Strength and Sight, Light these are for the servants
- of the Star & the Snake."
-
- Each being is, exactly as you are, the sole centre of
- a Universe in no wise identical with, or even
- assimilable to, your own. The impersonal Universe of
- "Nature" is only an abstraction, approximately tru ,
- of the factors which it is convenient to regard as
- common to all. The Universe of another is therefore
- necessarily unknown to, and unknowable by, you; but it
- induces currents of energy in yours by determining in
- part your reactions. Use men and women, therefore,
- with the absolute respect due to inviolable standards
- of measurement; verify your own observations by
- comparison with similar judgements made by them; and,
- studying the methods which determine their failure or
- success, acquire for yourself the wit and skill
- required to cope with your own problems.
-
- C. YOUR DUTY TO MANKIND
-
- 1. Establish the Law of Thelema as the sole basis of conduct.
-
- The general welfare of the race being necessary in
- many respects to your own, that well-being, like your
- own, principally a function of the intellegent and
- wise observance of the Law of Thelema, it is of the
- very first importance to you that every individual
- should accept frankly that Law, and strictly govern
- himself in full accordance therewith.
-
- You may regard the establishment of the Law of Thelema
- as an essential element of your True Will, since,
- whatever the ultimate nature of that Will, the evident
- condition of putting it into execution is freedom from
- external interference.
-
- Governments often exhibit the most deplorable
- stupidity, however enlightened may be the men who
- compose and constitute them, or the people whose
- destinies they direct. It is therefore incumbent on
- every man and woman to take the proper steps to cause
- the revisions of all existing statutes on the basis of
- the Law of Thelema. This Law being a Law of Liberty,
- the aim of the legislation must be to secure the
- amplest freedom for each individual in the state,
- eschewing the presumptious assumption that any given
- positive ideal is worthy to be obtained.
-
- "The Word of Sin is Restriction."
-
- The essence of crime is that it restricts the freedom
- of the individual outraged. (Thus, murder restricts
- his right to live; robbery, his right to enjoy the
- fruits of his labour; coining, his right to the
- guarantee of the State that he shall barter in
- security; etc.) It is then the common duty to prevent
- crime by segregating the criminal, and by the threat
- of reprisals; also, to teach the criminal that his
- acts, being analyzed, are contrary to his own True
- Will. (This may often be accomplished by taking from
- him the right which he has denied to others; as by
- outlawing the thief, so that he feels constant anxiety
- for the safety of his own possessions, removed from
- the ward of the State.) The rule is quite simple. He
- who violated any right declares magically that it does
- not exist; therefore it no longer does so, for him.
-
- Crime being a direct spiritual violation of the Law of
- Thelema, it should not be tolerated in the community.
- Those who possess the instinct should be segregated in
- a settlement to build up a state of their own, so to
- learn the necessity of themselves imposing and
- maintaining rules of justice.
-
- All artificial crimes should be abolished. When
- fantastic restrictions disappear, the greater freedom
- of the individual will itself teach him to avoid acts
- which really restrict natural rights. Thus real crime
- will diminish dramatically.
-
- The administration of the Law should be simplified by
- training men of uprightness and discretion whose will
- is to fulfill this function in the community to decide
- all complaints by the abstract principle of the Law of
- Thelema, and to award judgement on the basis of the
- actual restriction caused by the offense.
-
- The ultimate aim is thus to reintegrate conscience, on
- true scientific principles, as the warden of conduct,
- the monitor of the people, and the guarantee of the
- governors.
-
- D. YOUR DUTY TO ALL OTHER BEINGS AND THINGS
-
- 1. Apply the Law of Thelema to all problems of fitness, use,
- and development.
-
- It is a violation of the Law of Thelema to abuse the
- natural qualities of any animal or object by diverting
- it from its proper function, as determined by
- consideration of its history and structure. Thus, to
- train children to perform mental operations, or to
- practice tasks, for which they are unfitted, is a
- crime against nature. Similarly, to build houses of
- rotten material, to adulterate food, to destroy
- forests, etc., etc., is to offend.
-
- The Law of Thelema is to be applied unflinchingly to
- decide every question of conduct. The inherent
- fitness of any thing for any proposed use should be
- the sole criterion.
-
- Apparent, and sometimes even real, conflict between
- interests will frequently arise. Such cases are to be
- decided by the general value of the contending parties
- in the scale of Nature. Thus, a tree has a right to
- its life; but a man being more than a tree, he may cut
- it down for fuel or shelter when need arises. Even
- so, let him remember that the Law never fails to
- avenge infractions: as when wanton deforestation has
- ruined a climate or a soil, or as when the importation
- of rabbits for a cheap supply of food has created a
- plague.
-
- Observe that the violation of the Law of Thelema
- produces cumulative ills. The drain of the
- agricultural population to big cities, due chiefly to
- persuading them to abandon their natural ideals, has
- not only made the country less tolerable to the
- peasant, but debauched the town. And the error tends
- to increase in geometrical progression, until a remedy
- has become almost inconceivable and the whole
- structure of society is threatened with ruin.
-
- The wise application based on observation and
- experience of the Law of Thelema is to work in
- conscious harmony with Evolution. Experiments in
- creation, involving variation from existing types, are
- lawful and necessary. Their value is to be judged by
- their fertility as bearing witness to their harmony
- with the course of nature towards perfection.
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