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- CHAPTER LXX
-
- MORALITY (1)
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- "Tu l'as voulu, Georges Dandin!" I knew from the first that your sly,
- insidious, poisoned poniard, slipped in between my ribs, would soon
- or late involve a complete exposition of the whole subject of Morality.
-
- Of we go! What really is it? The word comes from Mos, Latin for
- custom, manner. Similarly, ethics: from Greek ESOC custom. "It
- isn't done" may be modern slang, but it's correct. Interesting to
- study the usage of "moeurs" and "manières" in French. "Manner" from
- "manus" --- hand: it is "the way to handle things."
-
- But the theological conception has steered a very wrong course, even
- for theology; brought in Divine Injunction, and Conscience, and a
- whole host of bogeys. (Candles in hollow turnips deceive nobody out-
- side a churchyard!)
-
- So we find ourselves discussing a "palely wandering" phantom idea
- whose connotations or extensions depend on the time, the place, and
- the victim. We know "the crimes of Clapham chaste in Martaban," and
- the difference between Old and New Testament morality in such matters
- as polygamy and diet; while the fur flies when two learned professors
- go down with a smart attack of Odium Theologicum, and are ready to
- destroy a civilization on the question of whether it is right or wrong
- for a priest (or presbyter? or minister?) to wear a white nightie or a
- black in the pulpit.
-
- But what you want to know is the difference between (a) common or area
- morality, (b) Yogin -- or "holy man's" morality, and (c) the Magical
- Morality of the New Aeon of Thelema.
-
- 1. Area Morality: This is the code of the "Slave-Gods," very thor-
- ougly analysed, pulverized, and de-loused by Nietzsche in Antichrist.
- It consists of all the meanest vices, especially envy, cowardice,
- cruelty and greed: all based on over-mastering Fear. Fear of the
- nightmare type. With this incubus, the rich and powerful have devised
- an engine to keep down the poor and the weak. They are lavish alike
- with threats and promises in Ogre Bogey's Castle and Cloud-Cuckoo-Land.
- "Religion is the opium of the people," when they flinch no longer
- from the phantom knout.
-
- 2. Eight Lectures on Yoga gives a reasonable account of the essence
- of this matter, especially in the talks on Yama and Niyama. (A book
- on this subject might well include a few quotations, notably from
- paragraphs 8, 9 and 10 in the former). It might be summarized as
- "doing that, and only that, which facilitates the task in hand." A
- line of conduct becomes a custom when experience has shown that to
- follow it makes for success. "Don't press!" "Play with a straight
- bat!" "Don't draw to five!" do not involve abstract considerations
-
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- 1
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- of right and wrong. Orthodox Hinduism has raped this pure system, and
- begotten a bastard code which reeks of religion. A political manoeuvre
- of the Brahmin caste.
-
- Suppose we relax a little, come down to earth, and look at what the
- far-famed morality of the Holy Man was, and is, in actual practice.
- You will find this useful to crush Toshophist and Antroposophagist1
- cockroaches as well as the ordinary Christian Scolex when they assail
- you.
-
- In the lands of Hinduism and (to a less extent) of Islam, the Sultan,
- the Dewan, the Maharajah, the Emir, or whatsoever they call "the Grand
- Pandjandrum Himself, with the little round button on top," it is almost
- a 100 per cent rule that the button works loose and is lost! Even in
- less exalted circles, any absolute ruler, on however petty a scale, is
- liable to go the whole hog in an unexceptionably hoggish fashion. He
- has none to gainsay him, and he sees no reason for controlling himself.
- This suits nearly everybody pretty well; the shrewd Wazir can govern
- while his "master" fills up on "The King's Peg" (we must try one when
- champagne is once again reasonably cheap) and all the other sensuous
- and sensual delights unstinted. The result is that by the time he is
- twenty --- he was probably married at 12 --- he is no longer fitted to
- carry out his very first duty to the State, the production of an heir.
-
- Quite contrary to this is the career of the "Holy Man." Accustomed to
- the severest physical toil, inured to all the rigours of climate,
- aloof from every noxious excess, he becomes a very champion of virility.
- (Of course, there are exceptions, but the average "holy man" is a
- fairly tall fellow of his hands). More, he has been particularly
- trained for this form of asceticism by all sorts of secret methods and
- practices; some of these, but the way, I was able to learn myself, and
- found surprisingly efficacious.
-
- So we have the law of supply and demand at work as uncomplainingly as
- usual: the Holy Man prays for the threatened Dynasty, blesses the
- Barren Queen; and they all live happy ever after. This is not an
- Arabian Night's Tale of Antiquity; it is the same today: there are
- very few Englishmen who have spent any time in India who have not been
- approached with proposals of this character.
-
- Similar conditions, curiously enough, existed in France; the "fils à
- papa" was usually a hopeless rotter, and his wife often resorted to a
- famous monastery on the Riviera, where was an exceptionally holy Image
- of the Blessed Virgin Mary, prayers unto whom removed sterility. But
- when M. Combes turned out the monks, the Image somehow lost it virtue.
-
- Now get your Bible and turn up Luke VIII, 2! When the sal volatile has
- worked, turn to John XIII 2,3 and ask a scholar what any Greek of the
- period would have understood by the technical expressions there unambigu-
- ously employed.
-
- 1^ WEH NOTE: This is a reference to the school of thought of Rudolf Steiner.
- By the time of this writing, Steiner's students were being taught that Crowley
- was a "bad man". Tit for tat. Anthroposophy presents a merging of several
- branches of mysticism with dance and movement. It rewards study, but one
- shouldn't mention A.C. at the Steiner schools until one has acquired what
- one wants!
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- 2
-
- Presently, I hope, you will begin to wonder whether, after all, the
- "morality" of the middle classes of the nineteenth century, in Anglo-
- Saxon countries, is quite as axiomatic as you were taught to suppose.
-
- Please let me emphasize the fact that I have heard and seen these condi-
- tions in Eastern countries with my own ears and eyes. Vivekananda ---
- certainly the best of the modern Indian writes on Yoga --- complained
- bitterly that the old greymalkin witches of New York who called them-
- selves his disciples had to be dodged with infinite precaution whenever
- he wanted to spend an evening in the Tenderloin. On the other hand,
- the Sheikh of Mish --- and a very holy Sheikh he was --- introduced his
- "boy friend" as such to me when I visited him in the Sahara, without
- the slightest shame or embarrassment.
-
- Believe me, the humbug about "morality" in this country and the U.S.A.,
- yes, even on the Continent in pious circles, is Hobgoblin No. 1 on the
- path of the Wise. If you are fooled by that, you will never get out
- of the stinking bog of platitudinous mouthings of make-believe "Masters."
- Need I refer to the fact that most of the unco' guid are penny plain
- hypocrites. A little less vile are those whose prejudices are Freudian
- in character, who "compound for sins that they're inclined to, By damn-
- ing those they have no mind to."
-
- Even when, poor-spirited molluscs, they are honest, all that twaddle is
- Negation. "Hang your clothes on a hickory limb, and don't go near the
- water!" does not produce a Gertrud Ederle. Thank God, the modern girl
- has cast off at least one of her fetters --- the ceinture de chastété!
-
- Perhaps we have now relaxed enough; we see that the "Holy man" is not
- such a fool as he looks; and we may get on with our excursions into
- the "Morality" of the Law of the New Aeon, which is the Aeon of Horus,
- crowned and conquering child: and --- "The word of the Law is Thelema{this
- word in Greek caps}."
-
- 3. So much of The Book of the Law deals directly or indirectly with
- morals that to quote relevant passages would be merely bewildering.
- Not that this state of mind fails to result from the first, second,
- third and ninety-third perusals!
-
- "When Duty bellows loud 'Thou must!'
- The youth replies 'Pike's Peak or Bust!'"
-
- is all very well, or might be if the bellow gave further particulars.
- And one's general impression may very well be that Thelema not only
- gives general licence to to any fool thing that comes into one's head,
- but urges in the most emphatic terms, reinforced by the most eloquent
- appeals in superb language, by glowing promises, and by categorical
- assurance that no harm can possibly come thereby, the performance of
- just that specific type of action, the maintenance of just that line
- of conduct, which is most severely depreciated by the high priests and
- jurists of every religion, every system of ethics, that ever was under
- the sun!
-
- You may look sourly down a meanly-pointed nose, or yell "Whoop La!" and
- make for Piccadilly Circus: in either case you will be wrong; you will
- not have understood the Book.
-
- Shameful confession, one of my own Chelas (or so it is rather incredibly
-
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- 3
-
- reported to me) said recently: "Self-discipline is a form of Restric-
- tion." (That, you remember, is "The word of Sin ...".) Of all the utter
- rubbish! (Anyhow, he was a "centre of pestilence" for discussing the
- Book at all.) About 90 % of Thelema, at a guess, is nothing but
- self-discipline. One is only allowed to do anything and everything so
- as to have more scope for exercising that virtue.
-
- concentrate on "...thou hast no right but to do thy will." The point is
- that any possible act is to be performed if it is a necessary factor
- in that Equation of your Will. Any act that is not such a factor,
- however harmless, noble, virtuous or what not, is at the best a waste
- of energy. But there are no artificial barriers on any type of act in
- general. The standard of conduct has one single touchstone. There
- may be --- there will be --- every kind of difficulty in determining whether,
- by this standard, any given act is "right" or "wrong": but there should
- be no confusion. No act is righteous in itself, but only in reference
- to the True Will of the person who proposes to perform it. This is the
- Doctrine of Relativity applied to the moral sphere.
-
- I think that, if you have understood this, the whole theory is now
- within your grasp; hold it fast, and lay about you!
-
- Of course, there must be certain courses of action which, generally
- speaking, will be right for pretty well everybody. Some, per contra,
- will be generally barred, as interfering with another's equal right.
- Some cases will be so difficult that only a Magister Templi can judge
- them, and a Magus carry them wisely into effect. Fearsome responsibility,
- I should say, that of the Masters who began the building-up of the New
- Aeon by bringing about these Wars!
-
- (I do wish that we had the sense to take our ideas of Peace conditions
- from the Bible, as our rulers so loudly profess that they do. The
- Enemy knows well enough that there is no other way to make a war pay.)
-
- Now then, I hope that we have succeeded in clarifying this exceptionally
- muddy marish water of morality from most of its alien and toxic dirt;
- too often the Aspirant to the Sacred Wisdom finds no firm path under his
- feet; the Bog of Respectability mires him who sought the Garden of
- Delights; soon the last bubbles burst from his choked lungs; he is
- engulfed in the Slough of Despond.
-
- In the passive elements of Earth and Water is no creative virtue to
- cleanse themselves from such impurity as they chance to acquire; it is
- therefore of cardinal importance to watch them, guard them, keep their
- Purity untainted and unsoiled; shall the Holy Grail brim with poison
- of Asps, and the golden Paten be defiled with the Bread of Iniquity?
- Come Fire, come Air, cleanse ye and kindle the pure instruments, that
- Spirit may indwell, inform, inspire the whole, the One Continuous
- Sacrament of Life!
-
- We have considered this Morality from quite a number of very different
- points of view; wrought subtly and accurately into final shape, you
- should find no further difficulty in understanding fully at least the
- theoretical and abstract aspects of the business.
-
- But as to your own wit of judgment as to the general rules of your
- own private Code of Morals, what is "right" and what is "wrong" for
- you, that will emerge only from long self-analysis such as is the
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- 4
-
- chief work of the Sword in the process of your Initiation.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally.
-
- 666
-
- P.S. Most of this is stated or implied in AHA!
-
- MARSYAS . . . . . . . . . . . Be ever as you can
- A simple honest gentleman!
- Body and manners be at ease,
- Not bloat with blazoned sanctities!
- Who fights as fights the soldier-saint?
- And see the artist-adept paint!
- Weak are the souls that fear the stress
- Of earth upon their holiness!
- They fast, they eat fantastic food,
- They prate of beans and brotherhood,
- Wear sandals, and long hair, and spats,
- And think that makes them Arahats!
- How shall man still his spirit-storm?
- Rational dress and Food Reform!
-
- OLYMPAS I know such saints.
-
- MARSYAS An easy vice:
- So wondrous well they advertise!
- O their mean souls are satisfied
- With wind of spiritual pride.
- They're all negation. "Do not eat;
- What poison to the soul is meat!
- Drink not; smoke not; deny the will!
- Wine and tobacco make us ill."
- Magic is life: the Will to Live
- Is one supreme Affirmative.
- These things that flinch from Life are worth
- No more to Heaven than to Earth.
- Affirm the everlasting Yes!
-
- OLYMPAS Those saints at least score one success:
- Perfection of their priggishness!
-
- MARSYAS Enough. The soul is subtlier fed
- With meditation's wine and bread.
- Forget their failings and our own;
- Fix all our thoughts on love alone!
-
- CHAPTER LXXI
-
- MORALITY (2)
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- The contents of your letter appalled me. I had hoped that you had
-
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-
- left behind forever all that quality of thinking. It is unclean. It
- is stuffy and flabby. You write of a matter about which you cannot
- possibly have information, and what you say is not even a good guess;
- it is simply contrary to fact. It shows also that you have failed to
- grasp the nature of the O.T.O. Its main raison d'etre, apart from
- social and political plans, is the teaching and use of a secret method
- of achieving certain results. This secret is a scientific secret; it
- is guarded against betrayal or abuse by a very simple automatic arrange-
- ment. Its guardians cannot be "dying" any more than electricians as
- a class can be.
-
- It is really difficult to answer your letters. You have got things so
- higgledy-piggledy. You write of the constitutions of two orders, the
- A.'. A.'. and the O.T.O.; yet you ignore the printed information about
- them which you are supposed to have read.
-
- I have to answer each sentence of your letter separately, so incoherent
- have you become!
-
- You are a "student" of A.'. A.'., and become a Probationer as soon as
- you take and pass the examination. (This is intended mostly to make
- sure that you have some general idea of the principal branches of the
- subject, and know the more important correspondences,) The rest: ---
- please read One Star in Sight again, and do for God's sake try to
- assimilate the information there very clearly and very fully given!
-
- It is terrifyingly near the state of mind which we symbolize by Choron-
- zon, this hurrying flustered dash of yours from one point of view to
- another: a set of statements all true after a fashion, but flung out
- with such apprehensive agitation that a sensitive reader like myself
- comes near to being upset.
-
- You say that you must tread the Path alone: quite true, if only because
- anything that exists for you is necessarily part of yourself. Yet you
- have to "go to others", and you become a veritable busybody. You quote
- odd opinions at random without the means of estimating their value.
-
- Cannot I ever get you to understand the difference between an honest
- and dishonest teacher? I have always made it a rule never to put for-
- ward any statement of which I cannot produce proof; when I venture a
- personal opinion it is always Marked in Plain Figures to that effect.
- (I refer you to Magick p. 368: p. 375, paragraphs 1 and 2:. and p. 415,
- paragraphs 000 and 00. We insist from the beginning on the individual
- character of the work, and upon the necessity of maintaining the objec-
- tive and sceptical standpoint. You are explicitly warned against
- reliance upon "authority," even that of the Order itself.) Consider
- my own assets, personal, social, educational, experiential and the
- rest: don't you see that all I had to do was to put out some brightly-
- coloured and mellifluous lie, and avoid treading on too many toes, to
- have had hundreds of thousands of idiots worshipping me?
-
- Please get a Konx om Pax somehow, and read p. XII:
-
- "It's only too easy to form a cult,
- "To cry a crusade with 'Deus Vult' . . . .
- "A pinch of Bible, a gallon of gas,
- "And I, or any otherguess ass,
- "Could bring to our mystical Moonlight Mass
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- "Those empty-headed Athenians."
-
- and so on.
-
- But I never forget that I am working on the 2,000 year basis; my work
- will stand when all the pompous platitudes and pleasant pieties have
- withered for the iridescent soft-soap bubbles that they are.
-
- Soap! yes, indeed. I work on gold, and gold must be cleansed with
- acid.
-
- I really cannot understand how you can be so inaccurate, with the very
- text before your eyes! You write --- "you write that in Jan. 1899 etc."
- But I don't. Captain J. F. C. Fuller wrote it. A small point; but
- you must learn to be careful about every tiniest detail.
-
- Then you go on about "not only invisible chiefs2 of the A.'. A.'. . . . . .
- but also the Chiefs of the Golden Dawn . . ." The Golden Dawn is merely
- the name for the Outer Order: see Magick pp. 230-231. You have never
- been taught to read carefully. You write of Theoricus as the grade
- following Neophyte: it isn't. Back to Magick pp. 230-231! You have
- never taken the trouble to go with me through the Rituals of O.T.O.,
- or you would not ask such questions. The O.T.O. is a training of
- the Masonic type; there is no "astral" work in it at all, nor any Yoga.
- There is a certain amount of Qabalah, and that of great doctrinal value.
- But the really vital matter is the gradual progress towards disclosure
- of the Secret of the Ninth Degree. To use that secret to advantage
- involves mastery both of Yoga and of Magick; but neither is taught in
- the Order. Now it comes to be mentioned, this is really very strange.
- However, I didn't invent the system; I must suppose that those who
- did knew what they were about.
-
- To me it is (a) convenient in various practical ways, (b) a machine
- for carrying out the orders of the Secret Chiefs of A.'. A.'. (c) by
- virtue of the Secret a magical weapon of incalculable power.
-
- You are not "stuck." You can use your Astral Body well enough: too
- well, in one way. But I think you need a few more journeys with me:
- you ought to get on to the stage where the vision results from a
- definite invocation.
-
- Do please forget all these vague statements about the "clarification
- of one's dream-life" (meaning what?) and "shadow-thinking" (meaning
- what?) These speculations are idle, and idleness is poison. In your
- very next paragraph you give the whole show away! "Artistically it
- appeals to me --- but not spiritually." You have been spiritually
- poisoned.
-
- What blasphemy more hideous could be penned? What lie so base, so
- false, so nasty, what so devilish and deadly a doctrine? I feel con-
- taminated by the mere fact of being in a world where such filth is
- possible to conceive. I am all but in tears to think of my beloved
- sister tortured by so foul a denizen of the Abyss. Cannot you see in
- this the root of all your toadstool spawn of miseries, of doubts, of
- fears, of indecisions?
- 2* How do you know They are "invisible?" I foresee that sooner or later
- you will be asking for more information about them, so I am planning a
- separate letter to supply this. (See Letters IX, L and LXXVII)
-
-
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- 7
-
-
- As an Artist you are a consecrated Virgin Priestess, the Oracle of the
- Most High. None has the right to approach you save with the most
- blessed awe, with arms outstretched as to invoke your benediction.
-
- By "spiritually" you mean no more than "according to the lower and
- middle-middle-class morality of the Anglo-Saxon of the period when
- Longfellow and Tennyson were supposed to be poets, and Royal Academi-
- cians painters."
-
- There is a highly popular school of "occultists" which is 99 % an
- escape-mechanism. The fear of death is one of the bogeys; but far
- deeper is the root-fear --- fear of being alone, of being oneself, of
- life itself. With this there goes the sense of guilt.
-
- The Book of the Law cuts directly at the root of all this calamitous,
- this infamous tissue of falsehood.
-
- What is the meaning of Initiation? It is the Path to the realisation
- of your Self as the sole, the supreme, the absolute of all Truth,
- Beauty, Purity, Perfection!
-
- What is the artistic sense in you? What but the One Channel always
- open to you through which this Light flows freely to enkindle you
- (and the world through you) with flowers of inexhaustible fervour and
- flame?
-
- And you set up against That this spectre of grim fear, of shame, of
- qualms and doubts, of inward quakings lest --- --- you are too stricken
- with panic to see clearly what the horror is. You say "the elemental
- spirits and the Archangels are watching." (!) My dear, dear, sister,
- did you invent these beings for no better purpose than to spy on you?
- They are there to serve you; they are parts of your being whose func-
- tion is to enable you to reach further in one particular direction or
- another without interference from the other parts, so long as you
- happen to need them for some service or other in the Great Work.
-
- Please cleanse your mind once and for all of this delusion, disastrous
- and most damnable, that there can be opposition between two essential
- parts of your nature.
-
- I think this idea is a monstrous growth upon the tetanus-soaked soil
- of your fear of "the senses." Observe how all these mealy-mouthed
- prigs develop their distrust of Life until hardly an action remains
- that is not "dangerous" or in some way harmful. They dare not smoke,
- drink, love --- do anything natural to them. They are right!! The Self
- in them is Guilt, a marsh miasmal of foul pestilence. Last, since
- "nature, though one expel it with a pitchfork, always returns," they
- do their "sins" in secret, and pile hypocrisy upon the summit of all
- their other vices.
-
- I cannot write more; it makes me too sad. I hope there is no need.
- Do be your Self, the radiant Daughter of the Muse!
-
- With that command I turn to other tasks.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
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- 8
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- Fraternally yours ever,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXII
-
- EDUCATION
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- Education means "leading out"; this is not the same as "stuffing in".
-
- I refuse to enlarge on this theme; it is all-important. To extract
- something, you should first know what is there. Here astrology ought
- to give useful hints; its indications give the mind something to work
- on. Experience makes "confirmation strong as Holy Writ;" but beware
- of à priori. Do not be dogmatic; do not insist in the face of dis-
- appointment. Astrology in education is useful as geology is to the
- prospector; it tells you the sort of thing to look for, and the
- direction in which to explore.
-
- There are, however, two main lines of teaching which are of universal
- value to normal children; it is hardly possible to begin too early.
-
- Firstly, accustom his ear from the start to noble sounds; the music
- of nature and the rhythm of great poetry. Do not aim at his understand-
- ing, but at his subconscious mind. Protect him from cacophonous noise;
- avoid scoring any cheap success with him by inflicting jingles; do not
- insult him by "baby-talk."
-
- Secondly, let him understand, as soon as you start actual teaching, the
- difference between the real and the conventional in what you make him
- memorize. Nothing irritates children more than the arbitrary "because
- I say so."
-
- Nobody knows why the alphabet has the order which we know; it is quite
- senseless. One could construct a much more rational order: e.g. the
- Mother, the Single and the Double letters, all in the natural order of
- the elements, planets and signs. Again, we have the "Missionary" Alpha-
- bet, arranged "scientifically" as Gutturals, modified ditto, Dentals,
- Labials, vowels and so on; a most repulsive concoction! But I would
- not accept any emendation from the God Thoth himself; it is infinitely
- simpler to stick to the familiar order. But explain to the child that
- this is only for convenience, like the rule of the road; indeed, like
- almost any rules!
-
- But when your teaching is of the disputable kind, explain that too;
- encourage him to question, to demand a reason and to disagree. Get him
- to fence with you; sharpen his wits by dialectic; lure him into think-
- ing for himself. I want tricks which will show him the advantages of a
- given subject of study; make him pester you to teach him. We did this
- most successfully at the Abbey of Thelema in Cefalu; let me give you an
- instance: reading. One of us would take the children shopping and bring
- up the subject of ice-cream. Where, oh where could we get some?
-
- Presently one would exclaim and point to a placard and say, "I really
- do believe there'll be some there" --- and lo! it was so. Then they
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- would wonder how one knew, and one would say: Why, there's "Helados"
- printed on that piece of card in the window. They would want to learn
- to read at once. We would discourage them, saying what hard word it
- was, and how much crying it cost, at the same time giving another demon-
- stration of the advantages. They would insist, and we should yield ---
- to active, eager children, not to dullards that hated the idea of
- "lessons." So with pretty well everything; we first excited the
- child's will in the desired direction.
-
- But (you ask) are there any special branches of learning which you
- regard as essential for all?
-
- Yes.
-
- Our old unvalued friend St. Paul, the cunning crook who turned the
- Jewish communism of the Apostles into an international ramp, saw in a
- vision a man from Macedonia who said "Come over and help us!" This
- time it has been a woman from California, but the purport of her plaints
- was identical. Much as I should like to see my Father the Sun once more
- before I die, nothing doing until --- if ever --- life recovers from the
- blight of regulations. Luckily, one thing she said helps us out: some-
- one had told her that I had written on Education in Liber Aleph --- The
- Book of Wisdom or Folly --- which has been ready for the printer for more
- than a quarter of a century --- and there's nothing I can do about it!
-
- However, I looked up the typescript. The book is itself Education;
- there are, however, six chapters which treat of the subject in the
- Special sense in which your question has involved us.
-
- So I shall fling these chapters headlong into this letter.
-
- DE VOLUNTATE JUVENUM
-
- Long, O my Son, hath been this Digression from the plain Path of
- My word concerning Children; but it was most needful that thou
- shouldst understand the Limits of true Liberty. For that is not
- the Will of any Man which ultimateth in his own Ruin and that of
- all his Fellows; and that is not Liberty whose Exercise bringeth
- him to Bondage. Thou mayst therefore assume that it is always an
- essential Part of the Will of any Child to grow to Manhood or to
- Womanhood in Health, and his Guardians may therefore prevent him
- from ignorantly acting in Opposition thereunto, Care being always
- taken to remove the cause of the Error, namely, Ignorance, as
- aforesaid. Thou mayst also assume that it is Part of the Child's
- Will to train every Function of the Mind; and the Guardians may
- therefore combat the Inertia which hinders its Development. Yet
- here is much Caution necessary, and it is better to work by
- exciting and satisfying any natural Curiosity than by forcing
- Application to set Tasks, however obvious this Necessity may
- appear.
-
- DE MODO DISPUTANDI
-
- Now in this training of the Child is one most dear Consideration,
- that I shall impress upon thee as is Conformity with out holy
- Experience in the way of Truth. And it is this, that since that
- which can be thought is not true, every Statement is in some sense
- false. Even on the Sea of Pure Reason, we may say that every
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 10
-
- Statement is in some Sense disputable. Therefore in every Case,
- even the simplest, the Child should be taught not only the Thesis,
- but also its opposite, leaving the Decision to the child's own
- Judgment and good Sense, fortified by Experience. And this Prac-
- tice will develop its Power of Thought, and its Confidence in
- itself, and its Interest in all Knowledge. But most of all beware
- against any Attempt to bias its Mind on any Point that lieth with-
- out the Square of ascertained and undisputed Fact. Remember also,
- even when thou art most sure, that so were they sure who gave
- Instruction to the young Copernicus. Pay Reverence also to the
- Unknown unto whom thou presumest to impart thy knowledge; for he may
- be one greater than thou.
-
- DE VOLUTATE JVENIS COGNOSCENDA
-
- It is important that thou shouldst understand as early as may be
- what is the true Will of the Child in the Matter of his Career.
- Be thou well aware of all Ideals and Daydreams; for the Child is
- himself, and not thy Toy. Recall the comic Tragedy of Napoleon
- and the King of Rome; build not an House for a wild Goat, nor
- plant a Forest for the Domain of a Shark. But be thou vigilant
- for every Sign, conscious or unconscious, of the Will of the Child,
- giving him then all Opportunity to pursue the Path which he thus
- indicates. Learn this, that he, being young, will weary quickly
- of all false Ways, however pleasant they may be to him at the Out-
- set; but of the true Way he will not weary. This being in this
- Manner discovered, thou mayst prepare it for him perfectly; for
- no man can keep all Roads open for ever. And to him making his
- Choice explain how one may not travel far on any one Road without
- a general Knowledge of Things apparently irrelevant. And with
- that he will understand, and bend him wisely to his Work.
-
- DE ARTE MENTIS COLENDI, (1) MATHEMATICA.
-
- Now, concerning the first Foundation of Thy Mind I will say
- somewhat. Thou shalt study with Diligence in the Mathematics,
- because thereby shall be revealed unto thee the Laws of thine own
- Reason and the Limitations thereof. This Science manifesteth unto
- thee thy true Nature in respect of the Machinery whereby it worketh,
- and showeth in pure Nakedness, without Clothing of Personality or
- Desire, the Anatomy of thy conscious Self. Furthermore, by this
- thou mayst understand the Essence of the Relations between all
- Things, and the Nature of Necessity, and come to the Knowledge of
- Form. For this Mathematics is as it were the last Veil before the
- Image of Truth, so that there is no Way better than our Holy
- Qabalah, which analyseth all Things soever, and reduceth them
- to pure Number; and thus their Natures being no longer coloured
- and confused, they may be regulated and formulated in Simplicity
- by the Operation of Pure Reason, to their great Comfort in the
- Work of our Transcendental Art, whereby the Many become One.
-
- SEQUITUR (2) CLASSICA
-
- My son, neglect not in any wise the study of the Writings of
- Antiquity, and that in the original Language. For by this thou
- shalt discover the History of the Structure of thy Mind, that is,
- its Nature regarded as the last Term in a Sequence of Causes and
- Effects. For thy Mind hath been built up of these Elements, so
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 11
-
- that in these Books thou mayst bring into the Light thine own
- sub-conscious Memories. And thy Memory is as it were the Mortar
- in the House of thy Mind, without which is no Cohesion or Indi-
- viduality possible, so that it is called Dementia. And these
- Books have lived long and become famous because they are the
- Fruits of ancient Trees whereof thou art directly the Heir, where-
- fore (say I) they are more truly germane to thine own Nature than
- Books of Collateral Offshoots, though such were in themselves
- better and wiser. Yes, O my son, in these Writings thou mayst
- study to come to the true Comprehension of thine own Nature, and
- that of the whole Universe, in the dimensions of Time, even as
- the Mathematic declareth it in that of Space: that is, of Exten-
- sion. Moreover, by this Study shall the Child comprehend the
- Foundation of Manners: the which, as sayeth one of the Sons of
- Wisdom, maketh Man.
-
- SEQUITUR (3) SCIENTIFICA
-
- Since Time and Space are the conditions of Mind, these two
- Studies are fundamental. Yet there remaineth Causality, which
- is the Root of the Actions and Reactions of Nature. This also
- shalt thou seek ardently, that thou mayest comprehend the
- Variety of the Universe, its Harmony and its Beauty, with the
- Knowledge of that which compelleth it. Yet this is not equal
- to the former two in Power to reveal thee to thyself; and its
- first Use is to instruct thee in the true Method of Advancement
- in Knowledge, which is, fundamentally, the observation of the
- Like and Unlike. Also, it shall arouse in thee the Ecstasy
- of Wonder; and it shall bring thee to a proper Understanding
- of Art Magick. For our Magick is but one of the Powers that
- lie within us undeveloped and unanalysed; and it is by the
- Method of Science that it must be made clear, and available to
- the Use of Man. Is not this a Gift beyond Price, the Fruit
- of a Tree not only of Knowledge but of Life? For there is that
- in Man which is God, and there is that also which is Dust; and
- by our Magick we shall make these twain one Flesh, to the Ob-
- taining of the Empery of the Universe.
-
- I suppose I might have put it more concisely: Classics is itself
- Initiation, being the key of the Unconscious; Mathematics is the Art
- of manipulating the Ruach, and of raising it to Neschamah; and Science
- is co-terminous with Magick.
-
- These are the three branches of study which I regard as fundamental.
- No others are in the same class. For instance, Geography is almost
- meaningless until one makes it real by dint of honest travel, which
- does not mean either "commuting" or "luxury cruises," still less
- "globe-trotting." Law is a specialized study, with a view to a career;
- History is too unsystematic and uncertain to be of much use as mental
- training; Art is to be studied for and by one's solitary self; any
- teaching soever is rank poison.
-
- The final wisdom on this subject is perhaps the old "Something of
- everything, and everything of something."
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours ever,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 12
-
-
- 666
-
- P.S. Better mention, perhaps, that literacy is no test of education.
- For ignorance of life, the don class leaves all others at the post;
- and it is these monkish and monkeyish recluses, with their hideous
- clatter and cackle, "The tittering, thin-bearded, epicene," "Dwarf,
- fringed with fear," the obscene vole, dweller by and in backwaters
- that has foisted upon us the grotesque and poisonous superstition
- that wisdom abides only in dogs-eared, worm-eaten, mule-inspired
- long-forgotten as misbegotten folios.
-
- I like the story --- it is a true tale --- of the old Jew millionaire who
- bought up the annual waste of the Pennsylvania Railroad --- a matter of
- Three Million Dollars. He called with his cheque very neatly made
- out --- and signed it by making his mark! The Railroad Man was naturally
- falbbergasted, and could not help exclaiming, "Yet you made all those
- millions of yours --- what would you have been if only you had been able
- to read and write?" "Doorkeeper at the Synagogue" was the prompt
- reply. His illiteracy had disqualified him when he applied for the
- job after landing.
-
- The story is not only true, but "of all Truth;" see my previous letter
- on "Certainty.
-
- Books are not the only medium even of learning; more, what they teach
- is partial, prejudiced, meagre, sterile, uncertain, and alien to
- reality. It follows that all the best books are those which make no
- pretence to accuracy: poetry, theatre, fiction. All others date.
- Another point is that Truth abides above and aloof from intellectual
- expression, and consequently those books which bear the Magic Keys
- of the Portal of the Intelligible by dint of inspiration and suggestion
- come more nearly to grips with Reality than those whose appeal is only
- to the Intellect. "Didactic" poetry, "realistic" plays and novels,
- are contradictions in terms.
-
- P.P.S. One more effort: the above reminds me that I have said no
- word about the other side of the medal. There are many children who
- cannot be educated at all in any sense of the word. It is an abonin-
- able waste of both of them and of the teacher to push against brick
- walls.
-
- Yet one last point. I am as near seventy as makes no matter, and I
- am still learning with all my might. All my life I have been taught:
- governesses, private tutors, schools, private and public, the best of
- the Universities: how little I know! I have traveled all over the
- world in all conditions, from "grand seigneur," to "holy man;" how
- little I know!
-
- What then of the ninety-and-nine, dragged by the ears through suicide
- examinations, and kicked out of school into factory in their teens?
- They have learnt only just enough to facilitate the swallowing of the
- gross venal lies of the radio and the Yellow Press; or, if mother-
- wit has chanced to warn them, they learn a little --- very little ---
- more, getting their Science from a Shilling Handbook and so on, till
- they know just enough to become dangerous agitators.
-
- No, anything like a real education demands leisure, the conversation
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 13
-
- of the wise, the means to travel, and the rest.
-
- There is only one solution: to pick out the diamonds from the clay,
- cut them, polish them, and set them as they deserve. Attempt no idiot
- experiments with the muck of the mine! You will observe that I am
- advocating an aristocratic revolution. And so I am!
-
- P.P.P.S. Short of the ideals above outlined, you may as well have
- a pis aller --- words of astonishing insight and wisdom, not alien to
- the Law Thelema, and written by one who was trained on The Book of the
- Law.
-
- "Self-confidence must be cultivated in the younger members of
- the nation from childhood onwards. Their whole education and
- training must be directed towards giving them a conviction that
- they are superior to others", wrote Hitler.
-
- "In the case of female education," I read on, "the main stress
- should be laid on bodily training, after that on character, and,
- last of all, on the intellect; but the one absolute aim of female
- education must be with a view to the future mother."
-
- They are quoted as an extreme example of all that is horrible and evil
- by Mr. George E. Chust of the Daily Telegraph --- from Mein Kampf!
-
- P.P.P.P.S. There is a game, an improvement on the "Spelling Bee" --- I
- have anti-christened it "Fore and aft" so as to be natty and naval ---
- which is in my opinion one of the three or four best indoor games for
- two ever invented., Here are the rules, in brief: any disputed points?
- Apply to me.
-
- 1. A "Word" consists of four or more letters.
-
- 2. It must be printed in big black type in the Dictionary chosen for
- reference. (Nuttall's is fairly good, though some very well-known
- words are omitted. The Oxford Pocket Dictionary is useless; it is
- for morons, illiterates, wallowers in "Basic English" --- and [I suppose]
- Oxonians. No proper names, however well-known, unless used as common:
- e.g. Bobby, a flatfoot, a beetlecrusher, a harness bull; or Xantippe,
- a shrew, a lady. X-rays is given in the plural only: ditto "Röntgen-
- rays", and they give "Röntgenogram". "You never can tell!" Participles,
- plurals and the like are not "words" unless printed as such in big
- black type. E.g. Nuttall's "Juttingly" is a word; "jutting" is not,
- being in smaller type. "Soaking" is in small type, but also in big
- type as a noun; so it is a word.)
-
- 3. The Dictionary is the sole and final arbiter. This produces blas-
- phemy, but averts assassination.
-
- 4. The first player starts with the letter A. The second may put any
- letter he chooses either before or after that A. The other continues
- as he will, and can.
-
- 5. The player who cannot add a letter without completing a "word"
- loses.
-
- They proceed to B, and so on to Z.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 14
-
- 6. A player whose turn it is must either add his letter within a
- reasonable (This is a matter of good feeling, courtesy and considera-
- tion) time, may say "I challenge" or, alternatively, "That is a 'word'."
- The other must then give the "word" that he intends, or deny that it
- is a "word" within the meaning of the Art, as the case may be. The
- Dictionary decides the winner. The challenged player may give one
- word only, and that in the form which is printed in the Dictionary;
- e.g. if he were challenged at BRUSS, and answered Brussels, he would
- lose; if BRUSSELS-SPROUTS, he would win. Hyphens need not be given.
- CASHMERE is a "word"; it is a kind of shawl, etc., so is CHARLEY, a
- night-watchman. Don't argue: the Dictionary decides.
-
- 7. This game calls not only for an extensive vocabulary but for courage;
- foresight, judgment, resource, subtlety and even low cunning. It can
- be played by more than two players, but the more there are, the more
- the element of chance comes in; and this is hateful to really fine
- players and diminishes the excitement. The rapier-play of two experts,
- when a word changes from one line of formation to another, and then
- again, perhaps even a third time, is as exhilarating as a baseball-
- game or a bull-fight.
-
- And what the Tartarus-Tophet-Jehanna has all this to do with Education,
- and the Great Work? This, child! H.G.Wells and others have pointed
- out with serene justice that a gap in your vocabulary implies a gap in
- your mind; you lack the corresponding idea. Too true, "Erbert! But
- I threap that a pakeha with such xerotes as his will chowter with an
- arsis of ischonophony, beyond aught that any fub, even in Vigonia and
- dwale mammodis with a cascade from a Dewan tauty, a kiss-me-quick, a
- chou over her merkin and a parka over her chudder could do to save
- him, and have an emprosthotonos, when he reads this. Sruti!
-
- (Whaur's your Wullie Chaucer noo?)
-
- I put this in for you because an American officer3, very dear to me,
- flited from the Front for a few days to ask me a few questions --- oh,
- "very much above your exalted grade" my dear --- and I thought it might
- be useful to him to learn this game, needing, as it does, such very
- meagre apparatus, to wile away some of the long hours between attacks.
- He picked it up quickly enough; but, after a bit when I suggested
- that he should pass it on to his comrades-in-arms, he jeered at me
- openly!
-
- Their vocabulary to mine, he said, holds just about the same proportion
- as mine does to yours; I hypothesized modestly, "about five per cent."
- (After all, I am forty-five years his senior.) He roared at me. "Not
- one in a hundred," he said, "know so much as the names of nine-tenths
- of the subjects that I discuss habitually and fluently. They gasp,
- they gape, they grunt, the gibber; it is almost always black bewilder-
- ment4. And some of them are college graduates --- which I'm not."
- 3^ WEH NOTE: Probably Grady Louis McMurtry, who became "Caliph" or
- acting head of O.T.O. many years later.
-
- 4* They attach no meaning to these words:
- Palaeontology
- Criterion
- Vector
- Synthesis (They know "synthetic" but can't connect it with the noun)
- Epitome
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 15
-
-
- He was snatched from school, and given a commission on the spot, appar-
- ently because he was one of very few that could be differentiated from
- the average Learned Pig.
-
- All this made me exceeding sorrowful. I began to understand why my
- Liber OZ, written entirely in words of one syllable only, with this
- very idea in mind, turned out to be completely beyond the average man's
- (or woman's) understanding. I had some Mass Observation done on it.
-
- "But this is rank socialism," "Sy, ayn't this all Fascism?" "Oh
- Golly!" "Cripes!" "Coo!" "How dreadful!" about the nearest most of
- them got to Ralph Straus and Desmond MacCarthy!
-
- Words of one syllable! Louis Marlow5 had already told me what a fool
- I was to expect that. "All they can digest," said he, "is a mess of
- stewed clichés with Bird's custard Power."
-
- Damn everything --- it's true, it's true.
-
- So do you at least get together the stones that you need to build
- your Basilica!
-
- CHAPTER LXXIII.
-
- "MONSTERS," NIGGERS, JEWS, ETC.
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- Come now, is this quite fair? When I agreed to tip you off about
- Magick and the rest, I certainly never expected to be treated as if I
- were being interviewed by an American Sunday Newspaper. What do I
- prefer for breakfast, and my views on the future of the theatre, and
- is the Great White Brotherhood in favour of Eugenic Babies? No, dear
- sister --- I nearly said sob-sister. But this I will say, you have been
- very artful, and led me on very cleverly --- you must have been a terror
- to young men --- for the matter of that, I dare say you are still!
-
- And I don't see how to get out of swallowing this last sly bait; as
- you say, "Every man and every woman is a star." does need some attention
- to the definition of "man" and "woman". What is the position, you say,
- of "monsters"? And men of "inferior" races, like the Veddah, Hottentot
- and the Australian Blackfellow? There must be a line somewhere, and
- Foreign Policy (To them a mere phrase; no idea of its connotation
- or principles)
- Demology
- Entrepreneur
- Correspondent and Co-respondent. (They don't know the difference)
- Subcutaneous
- Chordee)
- Gleet ) (Although they have them!)
- Histology ("Something to do with history")
- 5^ WEH NOTE: Louis Umfraville Wilkinson wrote under this pen name. He was
- one of two individuals named to be literary executors under Crowley's
- Last Will and Testament.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 16
-
- will I please draw it? You make me feel like Giotto!
-
- There is one remark which I must make at the beginning. It's some
- poet or other, Tennyson or Kipling, I think (I forget who) that wrote:
- "Folks in the loomp, is baad." It is true all round. Someone wisely
- took note that the vilest man alive had always found someone to love
- him. Remember the monster6 that Sir Frederick Treves picked up from
- an East End peep-show, and had petted by princesses? (What a cunning
- trick!) Revolting, all the same, to read his account of it. He --- the
- monster, not Treves! --- seems to have been a most charming individual ---
- ah! That's the word we want. Every individual has some qualities
- that endear him to some other. And per contra, I doubt if there is any
- class which is not detestable to some other class. Artists, police,
- the clergy, "reds," foxhunters, Freemasons, Jews, "heaven-born," women's
- clubwomen (especially in U.S.A.), "Methodys," golfers, dog-lovers;
- you can't find one body without its "natural" enemies. It's right,
- what's worse; every class, as a class, is almost sure to have more
- defects than qualities. As soon as you put men together, they somehow
- sink, corporatively, below the level of the worst of the individuals
- composing it. Collect scholars on a club committee, or men of science
- on a jury; all their virtues vanish, and their vices pop out, rein-
- forced by the self-confidence which the power of numbers is bound to
- bestow.
-
- It is peculiarly noticeable that when a class is a ruling minority, it
- acquires a detestation as well as a contempt for the surrounding "mob."
- In the Northern States of U.S.A., where the whites are overwhelming in
- number, the "nigger" can be more or less a "regular fellow;" in the
- South, where fear is a factor, Lynch Law prevails. (Should it? The
- reason for "NO" is that it is a confession of weakness.) But in the
- North, there is a very strong feeling about certain other classes: the
- Irish, the Italians, the Jews. Why? Fear again; the Irish in poli-
- tics, the Italians in crime, the Jews in finance. But none of these
- phobias prevent friendship between individuals of hostile classes.
-
- I think that perhaps I have already written enough --- at least enough
- to start you thinking on the right lines. And mark well this! The
- submergence of the individual in his class means the end of all true
- human relations between men. Socialism means war. When the class
- moves as a class, there can be no exceptions.
-
- This is no original thought of mine; Stalin and Hitler both saw it
- crystal-clear; both, the one adroitly, the other clumsily, but with
- equally consummate hypocrisy, acted it out. They picked individuals
- to rule under their autocracy, killed off those that wouldn't fit,
- destroyed the power of the Trades Unions or Soviets while pretending
- to make them powerful and prosperous, and settled down to the serious
- business of preparing for the war which both knew to be inevitable.
-
- It is this fundamental fact which ensures that every democracy shall
- end with an upstart autocrat; the stability of peace depends upon
- the original idea which aggrandized America in a century from four
- millions to a hundred: extreme individualism with opportunity. Our
- own longest period of peace abroad (bar frontier skirmishes like the
- Crimean war) and prosperity at home coincided with Free Trade and
- Laissez-faire.
-
- 6^ WEH NOTE {needs research}: Is this the "Elephant Man"?
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 17
-
- Now we may return, refreshed, to the main question of monsters, real
- (like Treves') or imaginary like Jews and niggers.
-
- 'Arf a mo! Haven't we solved the problem, ambulando? Everything
- would be okydoke and hunkydory if only we can prevent classes from
- acting as such?
-
- I suppose so. Then, what about a spot of pithy paradox for a change?
-
- Why should the classes want to act as classes? It's obvious; "Union
- is strength." The worst Fifteen can do more with a football than the
- best opposing team of one --- excuse my Irish!
-
- Well, that tortoise is that elephant based upon? Why, still obviously,
- upon the universal sense of individual weakness. We all want a big
- bruvver to tell of him! Hence the Gods and the Classes. It's fear
- at the base of the whole pyramid of skulls.
-
- How right politicians are to look upon their constituents as cattle!
- Anyone who has any experience of dealing with any class as such knows
- the futility of appealing to intelligence, indeed to any other quali-
- ties than those of brutes.
-
- And so, whenever we find one Man who has no fear like Ibsen's Doctor
- Stockmann or Mark Twain's Colonel Grainger that strolled out on his
- balcony with his shotgun to face the mob that had come to lynch him,
- he can get away with it. "An Enemy of the People" wrote Ibsen, "Ye
- are against the people, O my chosen!" says The Book of the Law. (AL
- II, 25).
-
- Not only does it seem to me the only conceivable way of reconciling
- this and similar passages with "Every man and every woman is a star."
- to assert the sovereignty of the individual, and to deny the right-
- to-exist to "class-consciousness," "crowd-psychology," and so to mob-
- rule and Lynch-Law, but also the only practicable plan whereby we may
- each one of us settle down peaceably to mind his own business, to
- pursue his True Will, and to accomplish the Great Work.
-
- So never lose sight for a moment of the maxim so often repeated in
- one context or another in these letters: that fear is at the root of
- every possibility of trouble, and that "Fear is failure, and the fore-
- runner of failure. Be thou therefore without fear; for in the heart
- of the coward virtue abideth not."
-
- Good-night; and don't look under the bed!
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXIV.
-
- OBSTACLES ON THE PATH.
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 18
-
-
- Peccavi! And how! But my excuse is good, and I will try to make
- amends.
-
- First, a little counter-attack --- your letter is so rambling and diffuse
- that at first I couldn't make out what you were getting at, and at last
- decided that it is much too random to reproduce, or even to deal with
- in detail. I shall simply formulate the case for the Prosecution, plead
- guilty, and appeal for clemency.
-
- The gravamen is that the Path of the Wise is gay with flowers, gilded
- with kiosks, and beset with snares; that every step is the Abode of
- Terror and Rapture --- and all that! Yet I habitually write in the manner
- of a drunken dominie! You "gaped for Aeschylus, and got Theognis."
-
- I tempted you, it seems with The Chymical Marriage of Christian
- Rosencreutz, its incomparable mystery and glamour, its fugitive
- beauty, its ineffable romance, its chivalry and its adventure, pellucid
- gleams as of sunlight under the sea, vast brooding wings of horror
- overshadowing the firmament, yet with strong Starlight constant over-
- bead. And then I let you down!
-
- You did expect at least something of the atmosphere of the Arabian
- Nights; if not so high, of Apuleius and Petronius Arbiter; of Rabelais,
- Meinhold, de la Motte Fouqué; and the Morte d'Arthur in later times, of
- Balzac, Dumas, Lytton, Huysmans, Mabel Collins and Arthur Machen.
-
- You look at me with strange sad eyes: "But you, too, Master, have not
- you too led a life as strange, as glamourous, as weird and as romantic,
- as the best of them? Then why this cold detachment from that ambience?"
- Well, if you put it like that, I can only say that I feel at the same
- time more guilty and entirely innocent!
-
- For, while the charge is true, the defence is not to be shaken.
-
- The worst of all teachers are the Boloney Magnates, of whom I have
- already given some account. But the next worst are just exactly those
- who try to create an atmosphere of romance, and succeed only in a crude
- theatricalism. So, avoiding the swirling turmoil of Scylla, I have
- broken the ship on the barren rock Charybdis.{Editorial Q. --- isn't this bas-
- akwards? WEH}
-
- Now let me hearten you, brave sister! All the old tales are true!
- You can have as many dragons, princesses, vampires, knights-errant,
- glendowers, enchanted apes, Jinn, sorcerers and incubi as you like to
- fancy, and --- whoa Emma! did I tell you about Cardinal Newman? Well,
- I will.
-
- The one passage in his snivelling Apologia which impressed me was a
- tale of his childhood --- before the real poet, lover and mystic had
- been buried beneath the dung-heap of Theology. He tells us that he
- read the Arabian Nights --- in a heavily Bowdlerized edition, bet you
- a tosser! --- and was enchanted, like the rest of us, so that he sighed
- "I wish these tales were true!" The same thing happened to me; but
- I set my teeth, and muttered: "I will make these tales true!"
-
- Well, I have, haven't I? You said it yourself!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 19
-
- Let me be very frank about one point. It has always puzzled me com-
- pletely why one is forbidden to relate certain of one's adventures.
- You remember, perhaps, in one of these letters I started out gaily to
- tell you some quite simple things --- I couldn't, can't, see quite what
- harm could come of it --- and I was pulled up sharp --- yes, and actually
- punished, like a school-boy! I had often done much more impudent
- things, and nobody seemed to give a hoot. Oh somebody tell me why!
-
- The only suggestion that occurs to me is that I might somehow be
- "giving occasion to the enemy to blaspheme." Let it go at that!
- "Enough of Because! Be he damned for a dog!"
-
- Yes child, my deepest attitude is to be found in my life. I have been
- to most of the holy inaccessible places, and talked with the most holy
- inaccessible men; I have dared all the most dangerous adventures, both
- of the flesh and of the spirit; and I challenge the world's literature
- to match for sublimity and terror such experiences as those in the
- latter half of The Vision and the Voice.
-
- You understand, of course, that I say all this merely in indication;
- or rather, as I said before, as an appeal for clemency.
-
- On the contrary (you will retort) you are a mean cat (Felis Leo,
- please!) not to let us all in on the ground floor of so imposing a
- Cathedral!
-
- To atone? Not a catalogue, which would be interminable; not a classi-
- fication, which would be impossible, save in the roughest terms;
- nothing but a few short notes, possibly an anecdote or so. Just a
- tickle or a dram of schnapps, to enliven the proceedings. ordeals ---
- temptations --- that sort of thing. A general Khabardar karo! With
- now and then a snappy Achtung!
-
- Oh, curse this mind of mine! I just can't help running to hide under
- the broad skirts of the Qabalah! It's Disk, Sword, Cup and Wand again!
- Sorry, but c'est trop fort pour moi.
-
- Disks. To master Earth, remember that the Disk is always spinning;
- fix this idea, get rid of its solidity.
-
- Commonly, the first tests of the young Aspirant refer to cash --- "that's
- God's sol solid in this world." The proper magical attitude is very
- hard to describe. (I'm not talking of that black hen's egg any more;
- that is simple.) Very sorry to have to say it, but it is not unlike
- that of the spendthrift. Money must circulate, or it loses its true
- value. A banker in New York once told me that the dollar circulated
- nine times as fast as the English equivalent, so that people seemed
- to themselves to be nine times as rich. (I told you about the £100
- note in a special letter on Money). But here I am stressing the
- spiritual effect; what happens is that anxiety vanishes; one feel
- that as it goes out, so it comes in. This view is not incompatible
- with thrift and prudence, and all that lot of virtues, far from it, it
- tucks in with them quite easily. You must practise this; there's a
- knack in it. Success in this leads to a very curious result indeed;
- not only does the refusal to count (Fourpen'north or Yoga, please miss,
- and Mum says can I have a penny if I bring back the bottle!), bring
- about the needlessness of counting, but also one acquires the power
- to command!
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 20
-
-
- A century ago, very nearly, there lived in Bristol and "Open Brother"
- names Muller, who was a wizard at this; Grace before breakfast, the
- usual palaver about the Lord and His blessings and His bounty et
- cetera, da capo; to conclude "and, Blessed Lord, we would humbly
- venture to remind Thee that this morning Thou art £3 4s. 6 1/2d.
- short in the accounts; trusting that Thou wilt give this small matter
- Thine immediate attention, for Jesus' Christ's sake, Amen." Sure
- enough, when he came to open his post, there would be just enough,
- sometimes exactly enough, to cover that amount.
-
- This story was told me by an enemy, who thought quite seriously that
- he would go to Hell for being "Open." ("Open" Brethren were lax about
- the Lord's Supper, let people partake who were not sound upon the
- Ramsgate Question; and other Theological Atrocities!) It meant that
- the facts were so undeniable that the "advertisement for Answer to
- Prayer" outweighed the "miracle by a heretic."
-
- I knew a poetess of great distinction who used to amuse herself by
- breaking off a conversation and saying, "Give me a franc" (or a shilling,
- or any small sum) and then going on with her previous remarks. She told
- me that of over a hundred people I was the second who had passed the coin
- to her without remark of any kind.
-
- This story --- do you think? --- is neither here no there. No, my remarks
- are rarely asyntartete. The Masters, at one stage or another of initia-
- tion --- it is forbidden to indicate the conditions --- arrange for some
- test of the Aspirant's attitude in some matter, not necessarily involv-
- ing cash. If he fails, goodnight!
-
- Swords, now. The snags connected with this type of test are probably
- the nastiest of any. Misunderstanding, confusion, logical error (and,
- worse, logical precision of the kind that distinguishes many lunatics),
- dispersion, indecision, failure to estimate values correctly --- oh! ---
- there is no end to the list. So much so, indeed, that there is no
- specific critical test, it is all part of the routine, and goes on
- incessantly.
-
- Well, there is just one. Without warning a decision of critical
- importance has to be made by the candidate, and he is given so many
- minutes to say Yes or No. He gets no second chance.
-
- But I must warn you of one particular disgrace. You know that people
- of low mentality haunt fortune-tellers of equal calibre, but with more
- low cunning. They do not really want to know the future, or to get
- advice; their real object is to persuade some supposed "authority"
- to flatter them and confirm them in their folly and stupidity.
-
- It is the same thing with a terrifying percentage of the people that
- come for "teaching" and "initiation." The moment they learn anything
- they didn't know before, off they fly in a temper! No sooner does
- it become apparent that the Master is not a stupid middle-class prig
- and hypocrite --- another edition of themselves, in short --- they are
- frightened, they are horrified, they flee away on both their feet,
- like the man in the Bible! I have seen people turn fish-belly pale
- in the face, and come near fainting outright, when it has dawned upon
- them suddenly that magick is a real thing!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 21
-
- It's all beyond me!
-
- Cups: we are much more definite again. The great test is so well
- known, and accounts have already been published, that it can be here
- plainly stated. Early in his career, the Aspirant is exposed to the
- seductions of a Vampire, and warned in due form and due season.
-
- "Sleep with A,B,C,D,E and F, my lad, and our hearty best wishes! But
- not with G on any account, on peril of your work!"
-
- So off he goes to G, without a second's hesitation. This test may be
- prolonged; the deadliness and subtlety of the danger has been recog-
- nized, and he may have half a dozen warnings, either direct or springing
- from his relations with her. And the penalty is not so drastically
- final; often he gets off with a term of penal servitude.
-
- On the other hand, the Aspirant who can spot at the first hint why the
- Masters think that particular woman a danger, and acts promptly and
- decisively as he should, is secretly marked down as a sword of very
- fine temper indeed!
-
- The rest of the Cup Ordeals consists for the most part of progressive
- estimations of the quality of the Postulant's devotion to the work;
- there is not, as a rule, anything particularly spectacular or dramatic
- in it. If you stick to your Greetings and Adorations and all such
- mnemonics, you are not likely to go very far wrong.
-
- Wands: this obviously a pure question of Will. You will find as
- you go on that obstacles of varying degrees of difficulty confront you;
- and the way in which you deal with them is most carefully watched.
- The best advice that I can give is to remember that there is little
- need of the Bull-at-a-Gate method, though that must always be ready
- in reserve; no, the best analogy is rapier-play. Elastic strength.
- Warfare shows us.
-
- That seems to cover your question more or less; but don't forget that
- it depends on yourself how much of the dramatic quality colours your
- Path. I suppose I have been lucky to have had the use of all the
- traditional trappings; but it is always possible to make a "coat of
- many colours" out of a heap of rags. To show you that you have had
- Chaucer and John Bunyan --- yes, and Laurence Sterne: to bring up the
- rear, James Thomson (B.V.) to say nothing of Conrad and Hardy. Nor
- let me forget The Cream of the Jest and The Rivet in Grandfather's
- Neck of my friend, James Branch Cabell.
-
- So now, fair damozel, bestride thy palfrey, and away to the Mountains
- of Magick!
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Fraternally,
-
- 666
-
- P.S. One danger I had purposely passed over, as it is not likely to
- come your way. But, since others may read these letters ---
-
- Some, and these the men of highest promise, often of great achievement,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 22
-
- are tempted by Treason. The acquire a "Judas-complex,' think how
- splendid it would be if they were to destroy the Order --- or, at the
- very least, unhorse the Master.
-
- This is, of course, absurd in itself, because if they had crossed the
- Abyss, they would understand why it is impossible. It would be like
- "destroying Electricity," or "debunking" the Venus of Milo. The maxi-
- mum of success possible in such an operation would be to become a
- "Black-Brother;" but what happens in practice, so far as my own
- experience goes, is complete dispersion of the mental faculties amount-
- ing to suicide; I could quote no less than four cases in which actual
- physical self-murder was the direct result.
-
- CHAPTER LXXV.
-
- THE A.'. A.'. AND THE PLANET
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- You Write:
-
- "Am I to understand that the A.'. A.'. has two main lines of Work.
- (1) The initiation of Individuals, (2) Action on the world in
- general --- say "Weltpolitik"? Because your letters on the History
- of Magick do imply (2); and yet the A.'. A.'. discourages any
- form of group working. Is it that the Masters (8° = 3■ Magistri
- Templi) having been admitted to the Third Order --- the A.'. A.'.
- proper; below this are R.R. et A.C. and G.'. D.'. --- are no longer
- liable to the dangers which make group activity in lower grades
- undesirable. Or do they still work as Individuals, yet, because
- they are initiates, appear to act as a corporate body? You have
- often expressed yourself as if this were so. 'Of course, They had
- to pick on me to do the dirty work' is a typical growl of the old
- Big Lion! But again there is that Magical Memory of yours when
- you came down from that Hermitage in the little wood overhanging
- the nullah below the Great Peak 'somewhere in Asia' and sat in
- some sort of Consistory in the valley where the great Lamaserai ---
- or whatever it was --- towers over the track, (I quote some of your
- phrases from memory.) Which is it?"
-
- My dear child, that is all very sensibly put; and the answer is that
- Convenience would decide. Then you go on, after a digression:
-
- "Then how are They acting at present? What impact has the new
- Word, Thelema, made upon the planet? What are we to expect as a
- result? And can we poor benighted outsiders help Them in any way?
- I know it's 'cheek' to ask."
-
- then turn the other cheek, and repeat the question! I will do my best
- to make it all clear. But do not forget that I am myself completely
- in the dark with regard to the special functions of most of my
- colleagues.
-
- To begin, then!
-
- Achtung! I am going to be hard-boiled; my first act is to enlist the
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 23
-
- Devil himself in our ranks, and take the Materialistic Interpretation
- of History from Karl Marx, and accept economic laws as the manifest
- levers which determine the fortune of one part of the earth or another.
-
- I shall take exception only by showing that these principles are second-
- ary: oil in Texas, nitrates on the Pacific slope of the Andes, suphur
- in Louisiana (which put Etna's nose out of joint by making it cheaper
- for the burgers of Messina to import it from four thousand miles away
- instead of digging it out of their own back garden), even coal and
- timber, upset very few apple-carts until individual genius had found
- for these commodities such uses as our grandfathers never dreamed.
- The technical developments of almost every form of wealth are the
- forebears of Big Business; and Big Business, directly or indirectly,
- is the immediate cause of War.
-
- In the "To-day and to-morrow" series is an essay called Ouroboros, by
- Garet Garrett; one of the most shrewd and deep-delving analysis of
- economics ever written. May I condense him crudely? Mass Production
- for profit fails when its markets are exhausted; so every effort is
- made to impose it not only on the native but the foreigner, and should
- guile fail, then force!
-
- But the process ineluctably goes on; when the whole world buys the
- nasty stuff, and will accept no other, the exploiter is still faced by
- diminishing returns. No possibility of expansion; sooner or later
- dividends dwindle, and the Business is Bust.
-
- To even the most stupid it becomes plain at this stage that war is
- wholly ruinous; organization breaks down altogether; one meaningless
- revolution follows another; famine and pestilence complete the job.
-
- Last time --- when Osiris replaced Isis --- the wreck was limited in scope
- --- note that it was the civilized, the organized part that broke down.
-
- (Jews and Arabs could remain aloof, and keep a small torch burning
- until Light returned with the Renaissance.)
-
- This time there is no civilization which can escape being involved in
- the totality of the catastrophe.
-
- Towards this collapse all totalitarian movements inevitably tend.
- Bertrand Russell himself admits that, although himself "temperamentally
- Anarchistic," Society must be yet more organized than it is to-day if
- it is to exist at all.
-
- But his, as Garet Garrett shows, is the John Gilpin type of horseman-
- ship. We are to-day more or less at the stage where "off flew Gilpin's
- hat and wig."
-
- Achievement of high aims, which tends ultimately to the well-being, the
- prosperity of the republic, depends on the proportion of masters to
- servants. The stability of a building depends on the proportion of
- superstructure to foundations. The rule holds good in every department
- of Nature. There is an optimum for every case. If there is one barber
- for ten thousand men, most of them will remain unshorn; if there are
- five thousand barbers, most of them will be out of a job.
-
- Apply this measure to society; there must be an optimum relation between
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 24
-
- industry and agriculture, between town and country. When the proper
- balance is not struck, the community must depend on outside help,
- importing what it lacks, exporting its surplus. This is an unnatural
- state of affairs; it results in business, and therefore ultimately in
- war. That is, as soon as the stress set up by the conditions becomes
- insupportable. So long as "business" is confined to luxuries, no great
- harm need result; but when interference with the flow of foreign trade
- threatens actual necessities, the unit concerned realizes that it is in
- danger of strangulation. Consider England's food supply! Switzerland,
- Russia, China, the U.S.A. can laugh at U-boats. England must support
- a Navy, a wealth-consuming, not a wealth-producing, item in the Budget.
- Similar remarks apply to practically all Government Departments. The
- minimum of organization is desirable; all artificial doctrinaire
- multiplication of works which produce no wealth is waste; and for
- many reasons (some absurd, like "social position") tend to create fresh
- unnecessary necessities. Ad infinitum, like the fleas in the epigram!
-
- When laws are reasonable in the eyes of the average man, he respects
- them, keeps them, does his best to maintain them; therefore a minute
- Police Force, with powers strictly limited, is adequate to deal with the
- almost negligibly small criminal class. A convention is laudable when
- it is convenient. When laws are unjust, monstrous, ridiculous, that
- same average man, will he-nill he, becomes a criminal; and the law
- requires a Tcheka or a Gestapo with dictatorial powers and no safeguards
- to maintain the farce. Also, corruption becomes normal in official
- circles; and is excused. I refer you to Mr. J. H. Thomas.7
-
- One evil leads to another; the seven devils always take possession of
- a house that is swept and garnished to he point at which people find
- it uncomfortable.
-
- But is not all this beside the point, you ask? No. It was needful to
- indicate this cumulative progression to social shipwreck,because,
- to-day an obvious peril of the most menacing, in 1904 no ordinary sane
- person foresaw anything of the sort. But special knowledge alters
- things, and it is certain that the Masters anticipated, with great
- exactness of calculation, the way things would go in the political
- world.
-
- Practically all the messages received during the "Cairo Working" (March-
- April 1904 e.v.) came to me through Ouarda. No woman ever lived who
- was more ignorant of, or less interested in, anything to do with poli-
- tics, or the welfare of the race; she cared for nothing beyond her
- personal comfort and pleasure. When the communications ceased, she
- dropped the whole affair without a thought.
-
- She nearly always referred to the authors of these messages as "They:"
- when asked who "They" were, she would say haltingly and stupidly "the
- gods," or some equally unhelpful term. But she was always absolutely
- clear and precise as to the instructions. The New Aeon was to supersede
- the old; my special job was to preserve the Sacred Tradition, so that
- a new Renaissance might in due season rekindle the hidden Light. I was
- accordingly to make a Quintessence of the Ancient Wisdom, and publish
- it in as permanent a form as possible. This I did in The Equinox. I
- should perhaps have been strictly classical, and admitted only the
- 7* The Chancellor of the Exchequer, having fixed the increase of Income
- Tax at threepence, proceeded to defraud the Insurance Companies by
- insuring himself against a rise of the sum!
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 25
-
- "Publication in Class "A", "A-B", "B " and "D" material. But I had the
- idea that it would be a good plan to add all sorts of other stuff, so
- that people who were not in any way interested in the real Work might
- preserve their copies.
-
- This by the way: the essence this letter is to show that "They",
- not one person but a number acting in concert, not only foresaw a
- planet-wide catastrophe, but were agreed on measures calculated to
- assure the survival of the Wisdom worth saving until the time, perhaps
- three hundred or six hundred years later, when a new current should
- revive the shattered thought of mankind.
-
- The Equinox, in a word, was to be a sort of Rosetta Stone.
-
- There is one other matter of incomparable importance: the wars which
- have begun the disintegration of the world have followed, each at an
- interval of nine months, the operative publications of The Book of the
- Law. This again seems to make it almost certain that "They" not only
- know the future, at least in broad outline, but are at pains to arrange
- it. I have no doubt that the advance of Natural Science is in the
- charge of a certain group of "Masters." Even the spiritually and
- morally as well as the physically destructive phenomena of our age must
- be parts of some vast all-comprehensive plan.
-
- Putting two and two together, and making 718, it looks as if the Masters
- acquiesced in and helped to fulfill, the formula of the catastrophic
- succession of the Aeons.
-
- An analogy. We have the secret of the Elixir of Life, and could carry
- on in the same body indefinitely; yet at least some masters prefer to
- reincarnate in the regular way, only taking care to waste no time in
- Amennti, but to get back to the Old Bench and pick up the New Tools
- with the minimum of delay.
-
- By having attained the Freedom of "Elysian, windless, fortunate abodes
- Beyond Heaven's constellated wilderness" "we are blessed; and bless"
- by refusing to linger therein, but shouldering once more "Atlantean
- the load of the too vast orb of" the Karma of Mankind.
-
- This hypothesis does at least make intelligible Their action in riding
- for a fall instead of preventing it. It may also be that They feel
- that human progress has reached its asymptote so far as the old Formula
- can take it. In fact, unless we take some such view, there does not
- seem to be much point in taking an action so fundamentally revolutionary
- (on the surface) as the proclamation of a New Word.
-
- But then (you will object, if an objection it be) people like Lenin,
- Hitler, Mussolini, the Mikado, et hoc genus omne, are loyal emissaries
- of the Masters, or the gods! Well, why not? An analogy, once more.
- In the Christian legend we find God (omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent)
- employing Judas, Pilate and Herod, no less than Jesus, as actors in the
- Drama which replaced Isis by Osiris in the Great Formula. Perfectly
- true; but this fact does not in any way exculpate the criminals. It is
- no excuse for the Commandants of Belsen and Buchenwald that they were
- acting under orders. The Drama is not mere play-acting, in which the
- most virtuous man may play the vilest of parts.
-
- Your further objection, doubtless, will be that this theory makes the
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 26
-
- Masters responsible for the agony of the planet. I refer you to The
- Book of the Heart Girt with a Serpent, Cp I, v. 33-4-0.
-
- 33. Let us take our delight in the multitude of men!
- Let us shape unto ourselves a boat of Mother-of-Pearl from
- them, that we may ride upon the river of Amrit!
-
- 34. Thou seest yon petal of Amaranth, blown by the wind from the
- low sweet brows of Hathor?
-
- 35. (The magister saw it and rejoiced in the beauty of it) Listen!
-
- 36. (From a certain world came an infinite wail) That falling
- petal seemed to the little ones a wave to engulph their
- continent.
-
- 37. So they will reproach thy servant, saying: Who hath set thee
- to save us?
-
- 38. He will be sore distressed.
-
- 39. All they will understand not that thou and I are fashioning
- a boat of Mother-of-Pearl. We will sail down the river of
- Amrit even to the yew groves of Yama, where we may rejoice
- exceedingly.
-
- 40. The joy of men shall be our silver gleam, their woe our blue
- gleam --- all in the Mother-of-pearl.
-
- And again, Cp. I, v. 50-52 and v. 56-62.
-
- 50. Adonai spake yet again with V.V.V.V.V. and said: The earth
- is ripe for vintage; let us eat of her grapes, and be drunken
- thereon.
-
- 51. And V.V.V.V.V. answered and said: O my Lord, my dove, my
- excellent one, how shall this word seem unto the children of
- men?
-
- 52. And He answered him: Not as thou canst see. It is certain
- that every letter of this cipher hath some value; but who
- shall determine the value? For it varieth ever, according
- to the subtlety of him that made it.
-
- . . . . . . . .
-
- 56. And Adonai said: The strong brown reaper swept his swathe and
- rejoiced. The wise man counted his muscles and pondered, and
- understood not, and was sad. Reap thou and rejoice!
-
- 57. Then was the adept glad, and lifted his arm. Lo! an earth-
- quake, and plague, and terror on the earth! A casting down of
- them that sate in high places; a famine upon the multitude!
-
- 58. And the grape fell ripe and rich into his mouth.
-
- 59. Stained is the purple of thy mouth, O brilliant one with the
- white glory of he lips of Adonai.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 27
-
-
- 60. The foam of the grape is like the storm upon the sea; the
- ships tremble and shudder; the shipmaster is afraid.
-
- 61. That is thy drunkenness, O holy one, and the winds whirl away
- the soul of the scribe into the happy haven.
-
- 62. O Lord God! Let the haven be cast down by the fury of the
- storm! Let the foam of the grape tincture my soul with thy
- light!
-
- . . . . . . . .
-
- Yes, I dare say. But is there not here a sort of moral oxymoron? Are
- not the Masters pursuing two diametrically opposed policies at the same
- time?
-
- Genius --- or Initiation, which implies the liberation and development of
- the genius latent in us all (is not one of names of the "Holy
- Guardian Angel" the Genius?) --- is practically the monopoly of the "crazy
- adventurer," as the official mind will most certainly rate him. Then
- why do not the Masters oppose all forms of organization tooth-and-nail?
-
- It depends, surely, on the stage which a society has reached on its fall
- to the servile state. Civilization of course, implies organization up
- to a certain point. The freedom of any function is built upon system;
- and so long as Law and Order make it easier for a man to do his True
- Will, they are admirable. It is when system is adored for its own sake,
- or as a means of endowing mediocrities with power as such, that the
- "critical temperature" is attained.
-
- It so happens that I write this on the eve of a General Election in
- England; and it seems to me that whichever wins, England loses:
-
- The Socialists openly proclaim that they mean to run the country on
- the lines of a convict prison; but the Tories, for all their fine talk,
- would be helpless against the Banks and the Trusts to whom they must
- look for support.
-
- Still, perhaps with a little help from Hashish, one can imagine a Mer-
- chant Prince or a Banker being intelligent, or even, in a weak moment,
- human; and this is not the case with officials. The standard, moreover,
- of education and Good Manners, low as it is, is less low in Tory circles.
-
- As I think that totalitarian methods are already on the way to extinguish
- the last spark of manly independence --- that is, in self-styled civilized
- countries --- it seems to me that we all should regard with shrewd suspi-
- cion any plans for "perfecting" social conditions. The extreme horror
- is the formula of the gregarious type of insect. Inherent in the
- premises is the impossibility of advance.
-
- One may sum the policy of the A.'. A.'. as follows:
-
- 1. To assist the initiation of the individual.
- 2. To maintain a form of social order in which the adventure of
- initiation is easy --- to undertake!
- 3. To work out the Magical Formula of the New Aeon.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 28
-
- "Ye-e-ss, I s-e-e."
-
- I doubt it. But what you are asking is how to decide upon your personal
- programme.
-
- The intelligent visitor from who knows what planet was puzzled. He
- chanced to have landed in England --- to find a General Election in full
- blast. (The operative word is "blast".) They must be absolute imbeciles,
- was his first reaction, to risk upsetting the policy of Government with
- a first-class war on.
-
- (There would have been no need of such nonsense --- I interrupted --- if
- Parliament was elected by my simple plan. I'll give you the main idea;
- I don't insist on the figures. When a candidate is returned by 50 per-
- cent over his runner-up, he sits for five years. If forty percent,
- four years; and so on. An alternative --- to "stagger" the assembly, as
- (I think) is done in the Senate of the United States.)
-
- How are you going to vote?
-
- Rather like the question of the dentist8. The teeth can be tinkered:
- of course, sooner or later they have to go. Is it worth the trouble
- and expense? The Socialists would have them all out right away, and
- replaced by a set of "dentures," which (obviously) are perfect. Arrange
- them, change them, choose your own pattern; no trouble, no pain: all
- one's dream come true! But hardly biological.
-
- You may argue that convicts are examples of living individuals whose
- safety, shelter, nourishment and the rest are organized with the utmost
- care; but accidents will happen in the best-regulated "brown stone
- jugs." The one ideally automatic case is the foetus. You will agree
- that here is lack of initiative; in fact, its "True Will" is to escape,
- albeit into a harsh and hostile universe, fraught with unknown and
- incalculable dangers.
-
- As the Ritual says: "Prepare to enter the Immeasurable Region!"
-
- I think your decision should depend on how far caries has travelled on
- its road of destruction.
-
- I do not think that the Masters need be unanimous.
-
- A practical plan might be for them to concentrate on one particular
- group, or one part of the world, and to keep this in as good shape as
- possible until the time has come for Nature to grow a new set.
-
- They will be grown on a new Formula, to meet the new needs, just as
- when our "permanent" (Alas, not much!) set replace our milk-teeth.
-
- You ask me if I think this change can be made without bloodshed.
-
- No. The obscure autocrats of Diplomacy and Big Business are infinitely
- stupid and short-sighted; they cannot see an inch beyond their too
- 8^ WEH NOTE: Crowley suffered from bad teeth in his last years, finally
- having them extracted about six months before his death in 1947 e.v. It is
- speculated that secondary infection from the extraction may have contributed
- to his death from pneumonia in December of that year.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 29
-
- often stigmatically shapen probosces, except where the profit of the
- next financial year is concerned. They live in perpetual panic, and
- shy at their own shadows. The accordingly attack even the most innoc-
- uous windmills in suicidal charges.
-
- Yes: bella, horrida bella,
- Et flavem Tibrim spumantem sanguine cerno.
-
- So, whichever way you vote, you are asking for trouble, or would do,
- if the vote had any meaning. The result of any election, or for the
- matter of that any revolution, is an almost wholly insignificant compo-
- nent of those stupendous and inscrutable Magical Forces which determine
- the destinies of the planet.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXVI.
-
- THE GODS: HOW AND WHY THEY OVERLAP
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- Your last letter.
-
- I am glad: it shows you have been putting in some genuine original
- work. Result! You make a very shrewd observation; you have noticed
- the curious fashion in which Gods seem to overlap. It is not the same
- (you point out) with Angels. In no other system do we find a parallel
- for the Living Creatures. Wheels, Wings, Fiery Serpents, with such
- quasi-human cohorts as the Beni Elohim who beget the children on women,
- to whom the Qabalah has introduced us. The Beni Elohim is actually
- an exception; there is the Incubus and some of the Fairy Folk, as
- well as certain Gods and demi-Gods, who act thus paternally. But you
- are right in the main. The Arabs, for example, have "seven heavens"
- and seven Orders of Angels, also Jinn; but the classes are by no means
- identical. This, even though certain Archangels, notably Gabriel,
- appear in both systems. But then Gabriel is a definite individual, a
- person --- and this fact is the key to your puzzle.
-
- For, as I have explained in a previous letter, Gods are people: macro-
- cosms, not mere collocations of the elements, planets and signs as are
- most of the angels, intelligences and spirits. It is interesting to
- note that Gabriel in particular seems to be more than one of these;
- he enjoys the divine privilege of being himself. Between you and me
- and the pylon, I suspect that Gabriel who gave the Q'uran to
- Mohammed was in reality a "Master" or messenger of some such person,
- more or less as Aiwass describes himself as "...the minister of Hoor-paar-
- kraat." (AL I, 7) His name implies some such function; for G.B.R.
- is Mercury between the Two Greater Lights, Sol and Luna. This seems
- to mean that he is something more than a lunar or terrestrial arch-
- angel; as he would appear to be from 777. (There now! That was my
- private fiend again --- the Demon of Digression. Back to our Gods!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 30
-
- 777 itself, to say nothing of The Golden Bough and the Good Lord
- knows how many other similar monuments of lexicography (for really
- they are little more), is our text-book. We are bound to note at
- once that the Gods sympathise, run into one another, coalesce much
- more closely than any other of the Orders of Being. There is not
- really much in common between a jackal and a beetle, or between a
- wolf and an owl, although they are grouped under Pisces or Aries
- respectively. But Adonis, Attis, Osiris, Melcarth, Mithras, Marsyas
- --- --- --- a whole string of them comes tripping off the tongue. They all
- have histories; their birth, their life, their death, their subsequent
- career; all goes naturally with them exactly as if they were (say) a
- set of warriors, painters, anything superbly human. We feel instinc-
- tively that we know them, or at least know of them in the same sense
- that we know of our fellow men and women; and that is a sense which
- never so much as occurs to us when we discuss Archangels. The great
- exception is the Holy Guardian Angel; and this as I have shewn in
- another letter is for exactly the same reason; He is a Person, a
- macrocosmic Individual. (We do not know about his birth and so on;
- but that is because he is, so to speak, a private God; he only appears
- to the world at all through some reference to him by his client; for
- instance, the genius or Augoeides of Socrates).
-
- Let us see how this works in practice. Consider Zeus, Jupiter, Amon-
- Ra, Indra, etc., we can think of them as the same identical people
- known and described by Greeks, Romans, Egyptians and Hindus; they
- differ as Mont Cervin differs from Monte Silvio and the Matterhorn.
- (They are bound to appear different, because the mountain does not look
- the same from Zermatt as it does from Domodossola, or even as seen by
- a French-Swiss and a German-Swiss.) In the same way read the Life of
- Napoleon written by one of his marshals, by Michelet (a rabid Republi-
- can), by Lord Rosebery, by a patriotic Russian, and by a German poet
- and philosopher: one can hardly believe that the subject of any two
- of these biographies is the same man.
-
- But upon certain points the identity is bound to transpire; even when
- we read of his crushing and classic defeat at Waterloo by the Belgians,
- the man is detected. Transferring the analogy to the Gods, it is then
- open to us to suppose that Tahuti, Thoth, Hermes, Mercury, Loki, Hanuman
- and the rest are identical, and that the diversity of the name and the
- series of exploits is due merely to the accidents of time and space.
- But it is at least equally plausible to suggest that these Gods are
- different individuals, although of the identical Order of Being,
- characteristics and function. Very much as if one took Drake, Frobisher,
- Raleigh, Hood, Blake, Rodney and Nelson, as seen through the mists of
- history, tradition, legend and plain mythopoeia. Add a few names not
- English, and our position is closely parallel. Personally, I incline
- to the latter hypothesis; but it would be hard to say why, unless that
- it is because I feel that to identify them completely would be to re-
- duce their stature to that of personifications of various cosmic energies.
-
- History lends its weight to my view. When the philosophic schools,
- unable to refute the charge of absurdity leveled at the orthodox
- devotee who believed that Mars actually begot Romulus and Remus on a
- Vestal Virgin, explained that Mars was no more than the martial instinct,
- and the Virgin a type of Purity, their faith declined, and with it
- Roman Virtue. "Educate" Colonel Blimp's children and we have the
- "intelligentsia" of Bloomsbury. I am very sorry about all this; but
- life must always be brutal and stupid so long as it depends upon
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 31
-
- animals and vegetables for nourishment.
-
- How restore faith in the Gods? There is only one way; we must get to
- know them personally. And that, of course, is one of the principal
- tasks of the Magician.
-
- One further remark. I have suggested that all these "identical" gods
- are in reality distinct persons, but belonging to the same families.
- Can we follow up this line of thought? Yes: but I will defer it to
- a subsequent letter.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXXVII
-
- WORK WORTH WHILE: WHY?
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- Your remarks on my 0 = 2 letter are very apt and inspiriting --- that is
- if I have rightly understood what you want to say. (Really, you know,
- they are a bit muddled --- or I am!) May I frame your question, if it
- is a question, in my own terms? Yes? Right.
-
- You say that I have advanced an invulnerable theory of the Universe
- in philosophical and mathematical language, and you suppose (under-
- lined three times with two question marks) that one could, with a great
- effort, deduce therefrom perfectly good reasons for an unswerving
- contemplation of one's umbilicus, or the performance of strange dances
- and the vibration of mysterious names. But what are you to say (you
- enquire) to the ordinary Bloke-on-the-Boulevard, to the man of the
- world who has acquired a shrewd knowledge of Nature, but finds no
- rational guide to the conduct of life. He observes many unsatisfactory
- elements in the way things go, and for his own sake would like to
- "remould them nearer to the heart's desire," to refurbish the cliché
- of Fitzgerald about "this sorry scheme of things." He is not in the
- least interested in the learned exposition of 0 = 2. But he is aware
- that the A.'. A.'. professes a sound solution of the problem of conduct
- and would like to know if its programme can be justified in terms of
- Common Sense.
-
- As luck would have it, only a few weeks ago I was asked to address a
- group of just such people --- and they gave me three-quarters of an
- hour's notice. It was really more like ten minutes, as the rest of
- the time was bespoke by letter-writing and posting which could in no
- wise be postponed.
-
- So I had to devise an adequate gambit, one which ruthlessly excluded
- any touch of subtlety, or any assumption of previous knowledge of the
- subject on the part of the audience.
-
- It came off. For the first time in history, the laymen elicited intel-
- ligent and relevant questions. There were only three half-wits in the
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 32
-
- five score or so persons present, and these (naturally!) were just those
- people who claimed to have studied the subject.
-
- What follows is a rough outline of my argument.
-
- I began by pointing out that Nature exercises many forms of Energy,
- which are not directly observable by the senses. In fact, the History
- of Science for the last hundred and fifty years or so has consisted
- principally of the discovery of such types, with their analysis, measure-
- ment and manipulation. There is every reason to suppose that many such
- remain to be discovered.
-
- But what has in no case been observed is any trace of will or of
- intelligence, except through some apparatus involving a nervous and
- cerebral system.
-
- At this point I want especially to call your attention to certain
- species of animals (bees and termites are obvious cases) where a
- collective consciousness seems to exist, since the community acts as
- a whole in evidently purposeful ways, yet the units of that community
- are not even complete in themselves. (Isn't there some series of
- worms, each sub-type able only to subsist on the excrement of its
- preserver in the series?)
-
- Then there are the phenomena of mob psychology, where a crowd gleefully
- combine to perform acts which would horrify any single individual. And
- there is the exceeding strange and interesting psychology of the "par-
- touse" --- this is a little more, in my judgment, than a spinthria.
-
- In all such cases the operative consciousness does not reside in any
- single person, as one might argue that it did when an orator "carries
- away" his audience. But these remarks have rather shunted one into a
- siding away from the main line of argument. My most important point
- is to insist that even with the most familiar forms of energy, man has
- done no creative work so ever. He has discovered, examined, measured
- (rather clumsily) and used, but in no case has he understood, still
- less explained, the causes of phenomena. Sometimes he cannot even
- reconcile different "laws of Nature." So we find J.W.N. Sullivan
- exclaiming "The scientific adventure may yet have to be abandoned,"
- and to me personally he confessed "It may yet turn out that the mathe-
- matical approach to Reality may have to be supplanted by the Magical."
-
- Now in Nature it leaps at one that Will and Intelligence are behind
- phenomena. My old friend and colleague Professor Buckmaster, who
- wrote a book on "Blood" which, he admitted, could not possibly be
- understood by more than six people, told me that the ingenuity of the
- structure of the human kidney "almost frightened" him. Yet in all
- Nature there is no trace whatever of any purpose such as human mentality
- can grasp. Again, apparent purpose often appears to be baffled. Take
- one example. Evolution, working through thousands of years to estab-
- lish a most subtle scheme of cross-fertilization, found, just as it was
- perfect, conditions so altered that it was completely useless.
-
- The "law of cause and effect" itself took a death-blow when Hesinger
- showed that the old formula "If A then B" was invalid, and must be
- altered to "If A, then B or C or D or E or . . . "
-
- But at least we know enough phenomena to make it certain that Will and
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 33
-
- Intelligence do exist somehow apart from any nervous and cerebral system
- of which we are aware, and that these must be of a type which transcends
- our human consciousness as that does that of a limpet or a lichen.
-
- It follows that somehow, somewhere, there must be "gods" or "Masters"
- --- whatever name you like. And that, I suppose, is what you may call
- the premise major of my syllogism.
-
- The minor, I confess, is not so apodeictic. No one, I suppose, is
- going to point proudly to the present state of human affairs, as evi-
- dence that we are all becoming wiser and nobler every minute, as
- people did seventy years ago. (I was brought up in the faith that
- Queen Victoria would never die, and that Consols would never go below
- par.
-
- In face, one may suspect that the majority of well-instructed men
- expect nothing but that History will repeat itself, and our civiliza-
- tion go the way of all the others whose ruins we dig up in every quarter
- of the earth.
-
- (Our own destruction may be more compete than theirs; for most of
- the monuments to our intelligence, sobriety and industry are made of
- steel, and would vanish in a very few years after the smash.)
-
- Well, if we have to wait for the calamity, and for evolution to begin
- all over again in a number of centuries --- with luck! --- one thing is
- at least quite certain: we can do nothing about it. Any form of
- activity must be as futile and as fatuous as any other; and the only
- sensible philosophy must be "Let us eat and drink for tomorrow we die."
-
- Is there a conceivable alternative?
-
- Well, consider the cause of the impending collapse. It is quite simple:
- Knowledge is loose, without control of Will and of Intelligence. (How
- clearly the Qabalah states and demonstrates this doctrine! But I
- musn't be naughty; let me stick to Common Sense!)
-
- Now, these qualities in us having failed to measure up to the situation
- of the world, one hope remains; to get into communication with those
- "gods" or "masters" whose existence was demonstrated in my Premise Major
- and learn from Them.
-
- But is this possible?
-
- Tradition and experience unite to assert that it is so; moreover,
- various forms of technique for accomplishing this are at our disposal.
-
- This is what is called The Great Work; and it is abundantly clear that
- no other aim is worth pursuit.
-
- So much for the argument; it will be agreed readily enough that to
- put it into practice we shall need an Alphabet, a Grammar and a Diction-
- ary. Follow the Axioms, the Postulates, the Theorems; finally, the
- Experiments.
-
- And that is what all these letters are about.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 34
-
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXVIII.
-
- SORE SPOTS
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- Three in one and one in three --- it's the Athanasian Creed in the Black
- Mass --- eh! What's that you say? Oh, quite right, quite, quite right
- of you to remind me. "Definition first!"
-
- A "sore spot" is one which reacts abnormally and violently, however
- gently you touch it; more, all the other bits of you give a painful
- jerk, however disconnected they may seem. Still more, the entire
- System undergoes a spasm of apprehension; and the total result is
- that the mental as well as the physical system is quite unable to
- grasp the situation with any accuracy, and the whole man is temporarily
- engulphed in what is naturally not far from a condition of insanity.
-
- (Now, Athanasius! It's all right; the lady has gone away to think it
- over.)
-
- In --- shall I say "Anglo-Saxondom," or "Teutonic breeds," or "bourgeoisie,
- so as to include some of the French whom when they are good are very
- good indeed, but when they are bad, they are horrid? --- the presiding
- God/Gods of this Trinity is/are: 1. Sex, 2. Religion, 3. "Drugs;" and
- the greatest of these is Sex, actually the main root of which the other
- two are tough and twisted stems, each with its peculiar species of
- poisonous flowers, sometimes superficially so attractive that their
- nastiness passes for Beauty.
-
- I shall leave it to the psychoanalysts to demonstrate the reduction to
- Sex, merely remarking that though I agree with their analysis as far as
- it goes, I do not allow it to stop where they do.
-
- For us, Sex is the first unconscious manifestation of Chiah, the Creative
- Energy; and although (like everything else) it is shown both on the
- spiritual and the physical planes, its most important forth-showing is
- on the "Magical" plane, because it actually produces phenomena which
- partake of all these. It is the True Will on the creative plane: "By
- Wisdom formed He the worlds." So soon as its thaumaturgy is accomplished,
- it is, through Binah, understood as the Logos. Thus in Sex we find
- every one of the primary Correspondences of Chokmah. Being thus inef-
- fable and sacrosanct, it is (plainly enough) peculiarly liable to
- profanation. Being profaned, it is naturally more unspeakably nasty
- than any other of the "Mysteries." You will find a good deal on this
- subject implied in Artemis Iota, attached to another of my letters to
- you.
-
- Before tackling "Sore Spots" seriously, there is after all, one point
- which should be made clear as to this Trinitarian simplification.
-
- One of the most interesting and fruitful periods of my life was when
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 35
-
- I was involved in research as to the meaning of Sankhara: "tendencies"
- may be, indeed is, a good enough translation, but it leaves one very
- much as deeply in the dark as before. You remember --- I hope! --- that
- Sankhara lies between Vinnanam, Pure Consciousness, and Sanna, Percep-
- tion. For instance, an electric fan in motion: a house-fly "tends"
- to see the vanes as we do when they are still, we "tend" to see a
- diaphanous blur.
-
- Then, in delirium tremens, why do we tend to see pink rats rather
- than begonias or gazelles?
-
- We tend to see the myriad flashing colours of the humming bird; the
- bird itself does not; it has no apparatus of colour-sense; to him
- all appears a neutral tint, varying only in degrees of brightness.
-
- Such were some of the fundamental facts that directed the course of
- my research, whose results you may read in "The Psychology of Hashish",
- by Oliver Haddo in The Equinox, Vol. I, No. 2. The general basis of
- this Essay is Sankhara; it shows how very striking are the analogies
- between, (1) the results obtained by Mystics --- this includes the Ecstasy
- of Sexual Feeling, as you may read in pretty nearly all of them, from
- St. Augustine to St. Teresa and the Nun Gertrude. The stages recounted
- by the Buddha in his psychological analyses correspond with almost
- incredible accuracy. (2) The phenomena observed by those who use
- opium, hashish, and some other "drugs" (3) The phenomena of various
- forms of insanity.
-
- The facts of this research are infuriating to the religious mystic;
- and the fact of its main conclusion is liable to drive him into so
- delirious a frenzy of rage as to make one reach for one's notebook ---
- one more typical extreme case!
-
- Now of course very few religious persons know that they are mystics ---
- already it annoys them to suggest it! --- but, whether the lady doth
- protest too much, or too little, the fact is that they are. There is
- no true rational meaning in religion. consider the Athanasian Creed
- itself!
-
- Observe that the rationalist dare not yield a millionth of a millimetre.
-
- "First cut the Liquefaction, what comes next
- But Fichte's clever cut at God himself? . . .
- The first step, I am master not to take:"
-
- says Bishop Blougram, and is pinned to the cork labelled "St. Januarius"!
-
- This dilemma, consciously or subconsciously, is well rooted in the
- minds of everybody who takes Life, in any one of its forms, seriously.
- He feels the touch of the rapier, however shrewdly or cautiously
- wielded. The salute itself is more than enough; he feels already
- the thrust to his vitals.
-
- I remember sailing happily in to breakfast at Camberwell Vicarage, and
- saying cheerfully, in absolute good faith: "A fine morning, Mr. Kelly!"
- I was astounded at the reply. The dear old gentleman --- and he really
- was one of the best! --- half choked, then gobbled at me like a turkey!
- "You're a very insolent young man!" Poor, tiny Aleister! How was I
- to know that his son had driven it well home that the hallmark of
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 36
-
- English stupidity was that the only safe topic of conversation was the
- weather. And so my greeting was instantly construed as a deliberate
- insult!
-
- A typical example of the irrationality of the reactions of a sufferer!
-
- Now, from this schoolboy level, let us rise and put the case a little
- more strongly. Let us quit the shallows of social backchat for the
- gloomy and horrific abysses of a murder trial!
-
- To every man and woman that has not seen Sex as it is, faced it,
- mastered it --- you will find elsewhere in these letters sufficient on
- this matter --- it is his secret guilt. Imagine, then, how at any
- reference however remote, the "sinner" quails, his inmost mystery laid
- bare, his evil conscience holding up a tarnished mirror to his deformed
- and hideous face! Often enough, he does not mind gross jests which
- admit complicity on the part of the other; but any allusion to the
- Truth, and his soul shrieks: I am found out! Then apoplectic Fear
- puts on the mask of Indignation and Disgust.
-
- As for a serious discussion of anything concerned therewith, why, every
- word is a new rasping tear. The mind takes refuge in irrational and
- irrelevant outbursts of feigned rage and horror.
-
- In the case of religion, the consciousness of guilt extended to cover
- everything from "playin' chuch-farden on the blesséd tombstones" to
- "the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost." Against this vague and mon-
- strous bogey, religion is the only safeguard, and therefore to suggest
- the unsoundness of the guarantee is to strike at the roots of all
- security. It is like hinting to some besotted and uxorious oldster,
- that his young wife may be unfaithful. It is the poison that Iago
- dripped so skillfully into the long hairy ear of the dull Moor. So he
- reacts irrationally --- every bush conceals a bear --- nay, more likely a
- Boojum, or a Bunyip, or some other creature of fear-spurred Imagination!
- "Monstrum informe, ingens, horrendum." Note well the "informe."
-
- And because the guarantee is unsound (and must be, or where would be
- the point of "Faith"?) reassurance is in the nature of things impossible.
- Like the demented rider in The Erl-King, the chase goes ever wilder
- and wilder, until he plunges at the end into the bottomless bog of
- madness and destruction.
-
- I wonder how many lunatics there are in the "bughouse" to-day --- in the
- times of"evangelical revival" the number was fantastic --- who got there
- through fear that they had somehow committed the aforesaid "blasphemy
- against the Holy Ghost." The unknown again. The Bible does not tell
- us that it is; only that it is unpardonable. Nor Grace, nor Faith,
- nor predestination avail in the least; for all you know, you may have
- committed it. Reassurance is impossible; no ceinture de chasteté
- avails to avert this danger.
-
- Again with drugs, it is the unknown which is the horrific factor. Most
- people get their information on the subject from the yellowest of yellow
- newspapers, magazines and novels. So darkly deep is their ignorance
- that that do not know what the word means --- like us so often, yes?
- Wide sections of the U.S.A. are scared of tea and coffee. They blench
- when you point out that bicarbonate of soda is a drug just as much as
- cocaine; at the same time they literally shovel in the really danger-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 37
-
- ous Aspirin, to say nothing of the thousand Patent Medicines blared at
- them from every radio --- as if the Press were not enough to poison the
- whole population! Blank-eyed, they gasp when they learn that of all
- classes, the first place among "drug addicts" is that of the doctor.
-
- But the crisis in which fear becomes phobia is the unreasoning aversion,
- the shuddering of panic, above all, the passionate refusal to learn
- anything about "drugs," to analyse the conditions, still less to face
- them; and the spasmodic invention of imaginary terrors, as if the real
- dangers were not enough to serve as a warning.
-
- Now why? Surely because in the sub-conscious lies an instinct that
- in these obscure medicines indeed lies the key of some forbidden sanc-
- tuary. There is a fascination as irrational and therefore as strong,
- as the fear. Here is the point at which they link up with sex and
- religion. Oh, how well nigh almighty is the urgency to him who reads
- those few great writers who understood the subject from experience:
- de Quincey, Ludlow, Poe and Baudelaire: into whom burn the pointed
- parallels between their adventures and those of all the mystics, East
- and West!
-
- The worst of this correspondence-form is that you are always asking
- simple elementary questions which require half a dozen treatises to
- answer: so, take this, with my blessing!
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
-
- P.S. One further reflection. With all these "sore spots" is closely
- linked the idea of cruelty. I need not touch upon the relation of
- cruelty to sex; the theme has been worn threadbare. But in religion,
- note the Bottomless Pit and the Eternal Flame; in Buddhism, the eighteen
- hot and eighteen cold Hells, with many another beneath. Hindu eschatol-
- ogy has countless Hells; even pedestrian, precise Islam, and the
- calculating Qabalists, each hoast of Seven. Again with drugs as with
- insanity, we are confronted constantly with nameless terrors; the idea
- of formlessness, of infinity pervades them alike. Consider the man who
- takes every chance gesture of a stranger in the street as a secret
- sign passed from one of his persecutors to another; consider those
- who refuse food because of the mysterious conspiracy to poison them.
-
- All sanity, which is all Science, is founded upon Limit. We must be
- able to cut off, to define, to measure. Naturally, then, their oppo-
- sites, Insanity and Religion, have for their prime characteristic, the
- Indefinable, Incomprehensible, Immeasurable.
-
- The healing virtue of these words is this: examine the sore spot,
- analyse it, probe it; then disinfection and the Vis Medicatrix Naturae,
- complete the cure.
-
- I had just finished this when in comes your very pertinent "Supplemen-
- tary" Postcard. "Doesn't hypocrisy fit in here, somehow?" Indeed it
- does, my child!
-
- Corresponding to, and the poison bacillus of, that centre of infection,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 38
-
- is a Trinity of pure Evil, the total abnegation of Thelema. Well known
- to the psycho-analyst: the name thereof Shame --- Guilt --- Fear. The
- Anglo-Saxon or bourgeois mentality is soaked therein; and his remedy
- so far from our exploratory-disinfection method, is to hide the gan-
- grened mass with dirty poultices. He has always a text of Scripture
- or some other authority to paint his foulest acts in glowing colours;
- and if he wants a glass of beer, he hates the stuff, but "doctor's
- orders, my boy, doctor's orders."
-
- There is really nothing new to be said about hypocrisy; it has been
- analysed, exposed, lashed by every great Artist; quite without effect.
- It gets worse as the socialistic idea thrives, as the individual leans
- ever harder on the moral support of the herd.9
-
- "My friend Freddy Lyon . . . told me a story . . . of the Volga Famine.
- Some A.R.A. 'higher-ups' from New York were making a tour of inspection
- . . . Among them was a worthy but sentimental citizen who gushed about
- the unhappy Russians and the poor little starving children and what a
- privilege it was for Mr. Lyon to be doing this noble work for humanity
- and so on and so forth until Lyon said he was ready to choke him . . .
- After lunch the visitors suggested they would like to visit the ceme-
- tary. It was, said Freddy, a horrid sight, nude, dead bodies piled up
- ten high like faggots, because the population was so destitute that
- every stitch of clothing was needed for the living. The visitors were
- sickened by what they saw, and even the gushing one was silent as they
- walked back to the cemetery gate. Suddenly he caught Freddy by the arm.
- 'Look there!' he said, 'Is not that something to restore our faith in
- the goodness of God in the midst of all these horrors?' He pointed to
- a big woolly dog lying asleep on a grave with his head between his paws,
- and continued impressively. 'Faithful unto death and beyond. I have
- often heard of a dog refusing to be comforted when his master died,
- lying desolate on his grave, but I never thought to see such a thing my-
- self.' That was too much for Freddy Lyon. 'Yes,' he said cruelly, 'but
- look at the dog's paws and muzzle' --- they were stiff with clotted blood
- --- 'he's not mourning his master, he's sleeping off a meal.'
-
- 'At which point,' Lyon concluded his story with gusto, 'that talkative
- guy did the opposite of sleeping off his lunch in a very thorough manner,
- and there wasn't another peep out of him until we put him on the train.'"
- P.S. Here is a very different set of reactions. I do not quite know
- why I am putting it in; is it some sub-conscious attraction of my own?
- Anyhow, here it is; call it
-
- LA POULE AUX RATS
-
- Time: a fine Sunday evening in June, just one and twenty years ago.
- Place: Paris, just off the Place des Tertres, overlooking the city.
- A large and lovely studio, panelled in oak. Strange: it was completely
- bare, and so far as one could see, it had no door. The skylights, mind-
- ful, were carefully screened with broidered stuff. A gallery, some ten
- feet from the floor, ran round one corner. Here was a buffet loaded
- with priceless wines and liquors of all sorts --- except the "soft" ---
- and excellent variety of all cold "snack" refreshments. One gained it
- by a staircase from the lower floor.
-
- 9* Here is a most pertinent story from I Write as I Please by my old
- friend, Walter Duranty. It shows how the sentimental point of view
- blinds its addicts to the most obvious facts.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 39
-
- By the buffet, the old butler: oh, for a painter to portray his Weari-
- ness of Evil Wisdom!
-
- Our host led us to the gallery; "we ate and drank and saw" not God
- also, but the lady responsible for the heavy tread upon the stairs. A
- woman of the Halles Centrales, in her early forties; coarse, brutal,
- ugly, robust, square-set, curiously radiant with some magnetic form of
- energy.
-
- I cannot describe her clothes --- for lack of material. She greeted us
- all round with a sort of surly good humour. The butler took a pot of
- very far-gone Roquefort cheese, and smeared her all over. She drank
- to us, and clumped away downstairs. She came out into the studio from
- under the gallery, braced herself and shook her mop of hair as if about
- to wrestle, waved to us and waited.
-
- A minute later a small trap at the far end of the studio was smartly
- pulled up; in rushed a hundred starving rats. There was a moment's
- hesitation; but the smell of the cheese was too much, and they rushed
- her. She caught one in both hands, bit through its spine, and flung
- it aside.
-
- Softly repeating to myself passages from The Revenge by the late Alfred
- Lord Tennyson, of which the scene most powerfully reminded me. "Rat
- after rat, for half an hour, flung back as fast as it came." Their
- courage wilted; the hunted became the huntress; I thought of Artemis
- as I sang softly to myself, "When the hounds of spring are on winter's
- traces." But she pursued; snapped the last spine, and flung it into
- the gallery with a yell of triumph.
-
- It was not so easy a victory as I have perhaps described it, once she
- slipped in the slime and came down with a thud; and at the end blood
- spurted from innumerable bites.
-
- The whole scene was too much for most of the men; they literally
- howled liked famished wolves, and shook the balustrade until it creaked
- and groaned. Presently one slipped over, let himself lightly to the
- floor and charged. Others followed. All had their heart's desire. I
- was reminded of Swinburn's Laus Veneris,
-
- "I let mine eyes have all their will of thee
- I seal myself upon thee with my might."
-
- As for the women, the ferocious glitter of their eyes was almost terri-
- fying. One of them, true, would have joined the happy warriors below;
- but the butler roughly pulled her back, saying in a shocked voice,
- "Madame est normale." (I enjoyed that!) Others consoled themselves
- by capturing those males who were too timid to risk the jump.
-
- I swallowed a last glass of champagne, and then "je filai a l'Anglais."
-
- Summary: a pleasant time was had by all.
-
- _______________
-
- Note for political economists: the woman took 10,000 francs (at about
- 125 to the £); she took three weeks in hospital and three weeks' holi-
- day between the shows. She was, or had been, the mistress of a Minister
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 40
-
- with "peuple" ideas, though he was an aristocrat of very old vintage;
- and he helped her to have her daughters brought up in one of the most
- exclusive convents in France.
-
- CHAPTER LXXIX
-
- PROGRESS
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- You will certainly have to have an india-rubber medal for persistence:
- this is the nth time that you have tried to catch me contradicting
- myself.
-
- Well, so I do, and must, every time I make any statement whatever, as
- has been shown several times in this chatty little interchange of views.
- But that is not what you mean.
-
- You say --- permit me to condense your more than somewhat tautological,
- pleonastic, prolix, diffuse and incoherent elucubrations! --- that the
- whole idea of the Great Order is based on faith in Progress. The doc-
- trine of successive aeons is nothing else. The system of training is
- nothing else. Nothing, in fact, is anything else. Maugré this and in
- despite thereof (you continue, with a knavish gleam in your hither eye)
- I am everlastingly throwing down the whole jerry-built castle by my
- cynical reflections. (Some one --- Anthony Hope in a lucid moment, I
- thing --- says that cynicism is always a confession of failure --- "sour
- grapes.") Maybe, some of the time. But the explanation is very simple,
- and you ought to have been able to think it out for yourself. It is a
- question of the "Universe of Discourse," of Perspective. An engineer
- may swear himself ultra-marine in the map all the time at the daily
- mistakes and mishaps that go on all the time under his nose, yet at
- dinner tell his friends complacently that the bridge is going up better
- than he ever expected.
-
- Just so, my gibes are directed at incidents; but my heart's truth is
- fixed on the grand spiral.
-
- All the same, I am glad you wrote; it is a text for a little sermon
- that I have had in mind for a long while on the conditions of progress
-
- Number One is obviously Irregularity, Eccentricity, Disorder, the Revolu-
- tionary Spirit, Experiment.
-
- I have no patience whatever with Utopia-mongers. Biology simply shouts
- at us that the happy contented community, everyone with his own (often
- highly specialized) job, nobody in need, nobody in danger, is necessarily
- stagnant. Termites and other ants, bees, beavers; these and many
- another have produced perfect systems. What is the first characteristic?
- Stupidity. "Where there is no vision, the people shall perish." What is
- the Fighter Termite to do, after he has been blocked out of his home?
- None of these communities possess any resource at all against any unfore-
- seen unfavourable change of circumstance. (We look rather like that just
- now at the end of 1944 e.v.) Nor does anyone of them show any achievement;
- having got to the end of their biological tether, they stay out, without
- an aim, an idea, an effort. The leech, an insufferable pest in its
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 41
-
- belt --- it has killed off tiger, rhinoceros, anything with a nostril! ---
- is the curse of our military station at Lebong --- or was when I was
- there. At Darjeeling, a few hundred feet higher, devil a one! They
- have no one to think: now how can we flourish up higher? Those old
- forlorn-hope Miss-Sahibs --- how wide are their nostrils! Then --- how?
-
- Consider for a moment our own Empire. How did that spread all over the
- planet? It was the imaginative logic, the audacity, the adroit adapta-
- bility, of the Adventurer that blasted the road.
-
- The sunny Socialist smiles his superior smile, and condescends to
- instruct us. That was an unfortunate, though perhaps sometimes neces-
- sary, stage in the perfection of Society.
-
- Something in that. But there are other kinds of Adventure. My imagina-
- tion can set no limit to the possibilities of Science, or of Art: our
- own Great Work is evidence of that.
-
- Last Sunday I looked through an interview with the least brain-bound
- of these ruminators --- poor old, dear old G. for gaga Bernard Shaw.
-
- The artist, said he, was a special case. he should have a nice easy
- job, three or four hours a day, and be free for the rest of it to devote
- himself to his Art. I wonder how much of his own work would have seen
- daylight if he had been tied to some silly robot soul-killing, nerve-
- crushing, mind-infuriating routine job for even one half-hour a day!
- When I am on a piece of work, I grudge the time for eating; and when
- it's done, I need the absolute relaxation of leisured luxury.
-
- Then what of the Work itself? If the Idea be truly new and important,
- God help it! The whole class of men affected jump on it with one accord,
- if haply they may crush it in the germ. Read a little of the History of
- Medicine! Any man who shows a sign of independent thought is watched,
- is thwarted. He persists and is threatened and bullied. He persists;
- every engine of oppression is set in motion against him. Then some-
- thing snaps; either they succeed in killing him (Ross, who defeated
- malaria, nearly starved to death) or they make him a baronet, or a peer,
- or make his death a Day of National Mourning, and bury him in the Pan-
- theon --- "auc grands hommes la patrie reconnaissante" --- like Pasteur after
- one of the most infamous campaigns of persecution in history.
-
- Then, of course, entertainment must be standardized. It costs money to
- produce; and who will produce anything which can only appeal to the
- very few --- to none at all, soon, if these swine have their way. So, if
- it is new, is original, is worth one's while, it must be ignored.
- Besides, being new and incomprehensible to the great Us, it may be
- dangerous, and must be suppressed.
-
- In all literature I know no pages so terrifying as those in Louis
- Marlow's Mr. Amberthwaite, which describe his dream. I wish I could
- quote it, with Sinai as the orchestra; never mind, read it again. And
- we are on the way --- far on the way --- to That!
-
- Now, obviously, the robot education, robot textbooks stuffed in by robot
- teachers, will have done wonders with the help of the bovine well-being
- to produce a race of robot boys.
-
- All independence, all imagination, all spirit of Adventure, will have
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 42
-
- been ground down and rolled out smooth by this ghastly engine. But ---
- Nature is not so easily beaten; a few boys and girls will somehow
- escape, and either by instinct or by observation, have the sense to
- keep secret. Now whatever their own peculiar genius may select as their
- line, they will realise that nothing is possible in any way while the
- accursed system stands. Their first duty is Revolt. And presently
- some one will come along with the wit and the will and the weapon, and
- blow the whole most damnable bag of tricks sky-high.
-
- We had better busy ourselves about this while it is still possible to
- get back to freedom without universal bloodshed.
-
- "All right, Master, you win! Now give us your own idea of Utopia."
-
- An Utopia to end Utopias? Very good, so I will. Education, to begin
- with; well, you've had all that in another letter. The main thing to
- remember is that I want every individual taught as such, according to
- his own special qualities. Then, teach them both sides of every ques-
- tion: history, for example, as the play of economic forces, also, as
- due to the intervention of Divine Providence, or of "Sports" of genius:
- and so for the rest. Train them to doubt --- and to dare!
-
- Then, somehow, as large a number of the most promising rebels should be
- selected to lead a life of luxury and leisure. Let every country, by
- dint of honouring its old traditions, be as different as possible from
- every other. Restore the "Grant tour," or rather, the roving Englishman
- of the Nineteenth Century. Entrust them with the secrets of discipline,
- of authority, or power. Hardship and danger in full measure: and
- responsibility.
-
- A great deal of such material will be as disgustingly wasted as it has
- been in the past; and there will be much abuse of privilege. But this
- must be allowed and allowed for; no very great harm will result, as the
- weak and vicious will weed themselves out.
-
- The pure gold will repay us ten thousandfold. You ask examples? With
- us, the Elizabethan and the Victorian periods stand out. What is most
- wanted is opportunity and reward. Under Victoria there was some --- taste
- the late Samuel Smiles Esquire, D.D. (wasn't he?) --- but not enough, and
- Industrialism, the mother and nurse of Socialism, was destroying the
- soul of the people.
-
- In my not very maternal remarks on Mother-love, was included the sub-
- stance of the one wise saying of my pet American lunatic "You can't get
- past their biology." This is so true, and so disheartening, that it
- arouses me to combat. Must we for ever be bound to the inconvenient
- habit of sows and cabbages? I pick up the glove.
-
- Isn't it Aldous Huxley who says somewhere that some species or other
- can never develop higher powers because its brain is shut in by its
- carapace? I thought this too, long ago; and I went into interminable
- conferences with my old friend, Professor Buckmaster; I wanted to
- extend brain surgery to produce the phenomena of Yoga. Also, I wondered
- what would happened if we wedged apart the sections of the cranium at, or
- shortly after, birth, so as to prevent them closing and giving the brain
- a chance to grow.
-
- I suspect, by the way, that something of the sort is done in China and
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 43
-
- Bruma; but the object is merely to produce megalocephalic idiots as a
- valuable addition to the financial resources of the family.
-
- I thought that modern physiology, with its great recent advances in
- knowledge of the specialized functions of the brain, might quite
- possibly succeed in producing genius.
-
- You would not surprise me if you told me that something of the sort is
- being tried in Russia, with its Communism modelled so closely on that
- of Ivan the Terrible at the moment, war or no war! Qui vivra verra.
-
- Anyhow, all that I really want you to get into your head "sunning over
- with little curls" is that Progress demands Anarchy tempered by Common
- Sense, and that the most formidable obstacle is this Biology.
-
- The experience of the Magician and the Yogi does suggest that there is
- room in the human brain as at present constituted for almost limitless
- expansion. At least our system of Training is more immediately practi-
- cal than digging up our Corpora Quadragenina and planting them in a
- Monkey's Medulla just to see what will come of it. So put down that
- bread-knife!
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally,
-
- 666
- CHAPTER LXXX
-
- LIFE A GAMBLE
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- In one or two --- no, I think more like three or four --- letters of yours
- to hand in the last couple of months, you have put forward various
- excuses for slackness, the necessities of your economic situation.
- You say you must have "regular work," and a "steady income" and all
- that sort of thing. My innocent child, that species of Magick is
- quite simple. Take the horns of a hare . . . That's enough for the
- present: I'll tell you what to do with them when you've got them.
-
- In Macbeth we read ---
-
- . . . . "Security
- Is mortals' chiefest enemy."
-
- but this is another kind of security; it is the Hubris which "tempts
- Providence," the insolence of thinking that nothing can go wrong.
-
- Anyhow, there's no such thing as safety. Life is a gamble. From the
- moment of incarnation a million accidents are possible. Miscarriage,
- still-birth, abortion; throughout life, until your heart beats for the
- last time, "you never can tell" - - - - - and then you start all over
- again with your next incarnation!
-
- (I wish I had a copy of a short story of mine called "Every Precaution."
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 44
-
- The gallant young Uplift Expert, the one hundred per cent red-blooded,
- clean-living, heir of the Eternities, takes his young fiancée and
- female counterpart to the "Old Absinthe House" in New Orleans to show
- her the terrible results of Wrong-Doing. They are going to avoid all
- that; their child is going to be the Quintessence of Americanism.
-
- They marry and take a cottage by Lake Pasquaney. Presently, he being
- (so she said) away on a business trip, the tradesmen complained that
- she seemed to need very little pabulum. Somehow, people got suspicious,
- and sure enough, when they broke in, they found that she had pickled
- him! This story is founded on fact; damn it, why did the MS have to
- get lost?)
-
- Even suicide is not a "dead bird." I knew a creature once --- careless
- observers often mistook him of a man --- who tried three times, pistol,
- rope and poison. Something always went wrong. (Like the Babbacombe
- murderer, who went to the scaffold three times, and lived to a green
- old age!) Finally he did poison himself, by accident, when he had no
- intention whatever of doing anything of the sort.
-
- "Where's the Book of Lies? Ah, here we are. "It is chance, and chance
- only, that rules the Universe; therefore, and therefore only, life is
- good."
-
- Then, is it mere fatuity and folly to make plans? Was not the IXth
- Atu, the Hermit, also at one time called "Prudence?" Of course.
- Abstract philosophy rarely coincides with common-sense. We should
- plan as carefully as we can; but we should always allow a margin for
- every conceivable accident.
-
- Nor should we trust to luck, like England, when she goes to war. Bret
- Harte has an admirable story "The Outcasts of Poker Flat" in which the
- "bad man," the crooked gambler, gives his life for the safety of the
- rest of his party, and winds up all with the remark: "Life isn't in
- having the luck of the cards, but in playing a poor hand well."
-
- Yes, I daresay, all very fine; but what you wanted to know was about
- the propriety of taking risks in Magick.
-
- So off we go.
-
- Risks, we have agreed, are always unavoidable; but we can calculate
- them. The best and wisest man I ever knew, the late Oscar Eckenstein,
- was once offered a job which gave him a fifty percent chance of survi-
- val. He calmly sat down, worked out his "expectation of life," his
- "expectation of income," and the Lord alone knows what other factors.
- It came out that the pay offered was a thousand pounds or so less than
- he might expect normally, so he turned down the offer. Not a trace of
- sentiment of any kind!
-
- Now let us consider an "A.B. case." John Jeremiah Jenkins sees a short
- cut to his performance of the Great work. To seize this opportunity,
- he must give up a steady job with good prospects and as near safety as
- is possible in the nature of things, for a slim chance of a career in
- the most insecure of all the professions.
-
- He can do it; that is at the mercy of his Will; but he risks something
- very close to the utter wreck and ruin of his future. Only a miracle
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 45
-
- can bring him through. Just so! But is he not neglecting one factor
- in his problem? Who put this romantically insane opportunity in his
- way? The Gods: it must be, since he is performing the Great Work. Very
- well then! It is up to Them to watch: "he shall give his angels charge
- over thee to keep thee in all thy ways: in their hands they shall bear
- thee up lest thou dash thy foot against a stone."
-
- What's more, he must leave it at that; he must not insult Them by
- constantly looking out for extra safeguards, or "hedging." (You remember
- the Major in The Suicide Club when Prince Florizel was picking seconds
- for a duel? "In all my life I never so much as hedged a bet.") You
- must give Them plenty of opportunity to show Their approval by steering
- you miraculously through one crisis after another.
-
- This course of conduct may seem to you a little like the "Act of Truth"
- but this is only superficially the case. The latter is usually an
- emergency measure, and either not particularly serious or as serious
- as anything can be. But what I have said above amounts really to a
- regular Rule of Life.
-
- Need I add that the prime and essential requisite in all this Work is
- that you so devote yourself to, and identify yourself with, the Gods,
- that there is never any doubt in your mind as to what They intend you
- to do?
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally.
-
- CHAPTER LXXXI
-
- METHOD OF TRAINING
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- In your well-worn copy of the Bagh-i-muattar you have no doubt triply
- underlined that great verse:
-
- "Who hath the How is careless of the Why,"
-
- which shows how cunning I was to induce you to put all your "why"
- questions first.
-
- But now let us get down to orichalc taques, as the Norman peasant might
- say.
-
- The first and absolutely essential task for the Aspirant is to write
- his Magical Record.
-
- You know some elementary Mechanics --- the Triangle of Forces, and all
- that. Well, if we have a body acted on by two equal forces, one pulling
- it East, the other south, it will tend to move in a south-Easterly
- direction. But if the "south" force is (say) twice as strong, it will
- move south of South-East.
-
- Now you, sitting in your study reading this letter, got there and were
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 46
-
- compelled to do that, as the result of the impact upon you of countless
- quintillions of forces of every kind. I don't expect you to discover
- all these and calculate and report them; but I want you to set down
- all the main currents. For so you should be able to get some sort of
- answer to the question "Where do we go from here, boys?"
-
- I am not a guesser; and I cannot judge you, or advise you, or help you,
- unless and until I know the facts as thoroughly as you are able to allow
- me to do.
-
- The construction of this Record is, incidentally, the first step in the
- practice called Sammasati, and leads to the acquisition of the Magical
- Memory --- the memory of your previous incarnations. So there is another
- reason, terrifically cogent, for writing this Magical Record as clearly
- and as fully as you can.
-
- This best explanation of how to set about the task is given in Liber
- Thisharb.
-
- some of this sounds rather advanced and technical; but it ought to give
- you the general idea. You should begin with your parents and the family
- traditions; the circumstances of your birth and education; your social
- position; your financial situation; your physique, health, illnesses;
- your vita sexualis; your hobbies and amusements; what you are good at,
- what not; how you came to be interested in the Great Work; what (if
- you have been on false trails, Toshophists, Antroposophagists, sham
- Rosicrucians, etc.) has been "your previous condition of servitude;"
- how you found me, and decided to enlist my aid.
-
- That, by itself, helps you to understand yourself, and me to understand
- you.
-
- From that point the keeping of the Record is quite easy. All you have
- to do is to put down what practices you mean to begin, how you get on
- with them from day to day, and (at intervals) what I have to say about
- your progress.
-
- Remember always that we have no use for piety, for vague chatter, for
- guesswork; we are as strictly scientific as biologists or chemists.
- We ban emotion from the start; we demand perception; and (as you will
- see later on) even perception is not acceptable until we have made sure
- of its bases by a study of what we call the "tendencies."
-
- That is all about the Magical Record; the way is now clear to set
- forth our Method. This is two-fold. (1) Yoga, introversion, (2)
- Magick, extroversion. (These are rough but useful connotations.) The
- two seem, at first glance, to be opposed; but, when you have advanced
- a little in both, you find that the concentration learnt in Yoga is
- of immense use in attaining the mental powers necessary in magick; on
- the other hand, the discipline of Magick is of the greatest service in
- Yoga.
-
- Let me remark, by the way, that to my mind one of the greatest beauties,
- and most encouraging confirmations of the validity of our system, is
- the matchless harmony of its elements. Always, when we pursue any one
- path to its end, we find that it has become one with some other path
- which at the outset appeared utterly irreconcilable with it.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 47
-
- ("Write down that the tearing apart is the crushing together" comes
- from an actual experience. See Liber 418, The Vision and the Voice,
- which teems with similar passages, and is itself an outstanding example
- of the unity of the Yogic and the Magical methods.)
-
- To study Yoga, you have my Book 4 Part I and my Eight Lectures on Yoga.
- Then there is Vivekananda's Raja Yoga and several little-known Hindu
- writers; these latter are very practical and technical, but one really
- needs to be a Hindu to make much use of them. The former is very good
- indeed, if your remember to switch off when he slides into sloppiness,
- which luckily is not often.
-
- To study Magick" Book 4, Parts II, III (Magick in Theory and Practice)
- and IV (The Equinox of the Gods.) Add The Book of Thoth and the you
- are: ---
-
-
- "Being furnished with complete armour and armed,
- he is similar to the goddess."
-
- Of other writers, you have The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin
- the Mage," and any of the works of Eliphaz Lévi. But that's all.
-
- But --- I suppose you knew all this long ago. It may help if I try to
- expound the essence of these two Methods in very simple language, and
- very different language. By contrast and comparison, you should be
- able, without reading even one of all those books, to get a perfectly
- clear idea in perspective of "what's coming to you!"
-
- The process of analysing, developing and controlling the mind is the
- essence of all Yoga practices.
-
- Magick explores and learns to control those regions of Nature which lie
- beyond the objects of sense. Reaching the highest parts of these
- regions, called the divine, one proceeds by the exaltation (? = intoxi-
- cation? Yes, of a sublime sort) of the consciousness to identify oneself
- with those "celestial" Beings.
-
- In Yoga, various practices prevent the body and its functions from
- interrupting the mental process. Then, one inhibits that process
- itself: the stilling of "thoughts" allows one to become aware of men-
- tal functions beyond the intellectual; these functions have their own
- peculiar properties and powers. Each sheath, as one goes deeper, is
- discarded as "unreal;" finally one apprehends that nothing which is
- the only true and real form of existence. (But then it does not exist:
- in these regions of thought words always become nightmares of self-
- contradiction. This is as it should be.)
-
- In Magick, on the contrary, one passes through the veil of the exterior
- world (which, as in Yoga, but in another sense, becomes "unreal" by
- comparison as one passes beyond) one creates a subtle body (instrument
- is a better term) called the body of Light; this one develops and con-
- trols; it gains new powers as one progresses, usually by means of what
- is called "initiation:" finally, one carries on almost one's whole life
- in this Body of Light, and achieves in its own way the mastery of the
- Universe.
-
- The first step in Yoga is "Keep still."
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 48
-
-
- The first step in Magick is "Travel beyond the world of the senses."
-
- There, that is the whole business in a nutshell, and expressed so that
- anyone, however ignorant of the subject, may grasp the essentials (I
- hope).
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours fraternally.
-
- CHAPTER LXXXII
-
- EPISTOLA PENULTIMA: THE TWO WAYS TO REALITY
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- How very sensible of you, though I admit somewhat exacting!
-
- You write --- Will you tell me exactly why I should devote so much of my
- valuable time to subjects like Magick and Yoga.
-
- That is all very well. But you ask me to put it in syllogistic form.
- I have no doubt this can be done, though the task seems somewhat compli-
- cated. I think I will leave it to you to construct your series of
- syllogisms yourself from the arguments of this letter.
-
- In your main question the operative word is "valuable." Why, I ask, in
- my turn, should you consider your time valuable? It certainly is not
- valuable unless the universe has a meaning, and what is more, unless
- you know what that meaning is --- at least roughly --- it is millions to
- one that you will find yourself barking up the wrong tree.
-
- First of all let us consider this question of the meaning of the universe.
- It is its own evidence to design, and that design intelligent design.
- There is no question of any moral significance --- "one man's meat is
- another man's poison" and so on. But there can be no possible doubt
- about the existence of some kind of intelligence, and that kind is far
- superior to anything of which we know as human.
-
- How then are we to explore, and finally to interpret this intelligence?
-
- It seems to me that there are two ways and only two. Imagine for a
- moment that you are an orphan in charge of a guardian, inconceivably
- learned from your point of view. Suppose therefore that you are puzzled
- by some problem suitable to your childish nature, your obvious and most
- simple way is to approach your guardian and ask him to enlighten you. It
- is clearly part of his function as guardian to do his best to help you.
- Very good, that is the first method, and close parallel with what we
- understand by the word Magick. We are bothered by some difficulty about
- one of the elements --- say Fire --- it is therefore natural to evoke a
- Salamander to instruct you on the difficult point. But you must remember
- that your Holy Guardian Angel is not only far more fully instructed than
- yourself on every point that you can conceive, but you may go so far as
- to say that it is definitely his work, or part of his work; remembering
- always that he inhabits a sphere or plane which is entirely different
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 49
-
- from anything of which you are normally aware.
-
- To attain to the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel
- is consequently without doubt by far the simplest way by which you can
- yourself approach that higher order of being.
-
- That, then, is a clearly intelligible method of procedure. We call it
- Magick.
-
- It is of course possible to strengthen the link between him and your-
- self so that in course of time you became capable of moving and,
- generally speaking, operating on that plane which is his natural habitat.
-
- There is however one other way, and one only, as far as I can see, of
- reaching this state. It is at least theoretically possible to exalt
- the whole of your own consciousness until it becomes as free to move
- on that exalted plane as it is for him. You should note, by the way,
- that in this case the postulation of another being is not necessary.
- There is no way of refuting the solipsism if you feel like that.
- Personally I cannot accede to its axiom. The evidence for an external
- universe appears to me perfectly adequate.
-
- Still there is no extra charge for thinking on those lines if you so
- wish.
-
- I have paid a great deal of attention in the course of my life to the
- method of exalting the human consciousness in this way; and it is
- really quite legitimate to identify my teaching with that of the Yogis.
-
- I must however point out that in the course of my instruction I have
- given continual warnings as to the dangers of this line of research.
- For one thing there is no means of checking your results in the ordi-
- nary scientific sense. It is always perfectly easy to find a subjective
- explanation of any phenomenon; and when one considers that the greatest
- of all the dangers in any line of research arise from egocentric vanity,
- I do not think I have exceeded my duty in anything that I have said to
- deter students from undertaking so dangerous a course as Yoga.
-
- It is, of course, much safer if you are in a position to pursue in the
- Indian Jungles, provided that your health will stand the climate and
- also, I must say, unless you have a really sound teacher on whom you
- can safely rely. But then, if we once introduce a teacher, why not go
- to the Fountain-head and press towards the Knowledge and conversation
- of the Holy Guardian Angel?
-
- In any case your Indian teacher will ultimately direct you to seek
- guidance from that source, so it seems to me that you have gone to a
- great deal of extra trouble and incurred a great deal of unnecessary
- danger by not leaving yourself in the first place in the hands of the
- Holy Guardian Angel.
-
- In any case there are the two methods which stand as alternatives. I
- do not know of any third one which can be of any use whatever. Logi-
- cally, since you have asked me to be logical, there is certainly no
- third way; there is the external way of Magick, and the internal way
- of Yoga: there you have your alternatives, and there they cease.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 50
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXXIII
-
- EPISTOLA ULTIMA
-
- Cara Soror,
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- The suggestion in your last letter to me is a very sensible one. I do
- think that people in general would like to get some idea of my system
- of training as a whole, in a comprehensive form. In the past there has
- been far too much of referring them to one quite unprocurable document
- and then to another which probably has not even been written. No wonder
- that they go away sorrowful. So I am going to put in as the last of
- this series of Letters an account, as clear and as succinct as the gods
- enable me to do, of what they may expect to have to do to get good marks
- from Grandfather. Of course I shall not be able to avoid altogether
- reference to the various official documents, but I will make these as
- short and as few as I can.
-
- First of all then, my system can be divided into two parts. Apparently
- diametrically opposed, but at the end converging, the one helping the
- other until the final method of progress partakes equally of both ele-
- ments.
-
- For convenience I shall call the first method Magick, and the second
- method Yoga. The opposition between these is very plain for the
- direction of Magick is wholly outward, that of Yoga wholly inward.
-
- I will deal first then with Magick. How do I define this word?
-
- Magick is the science and art of causing change to occur in accordance
- with the will. (Obviously then all scientific methods can be included
- in this term.)
-
- I have to assume in all that follows that you have thoroughly under-
- stood the doctrine of 0 = 2.
-
- All Magical action may be classed as under the formula of progression
- from the "0" to the "2"; in other words it is complete extraversion.
-
- The aspiring Magician only analyses himself for the purpose of finding
- new worlds to conquer. His first objective is the astral plane; its
- discovery, the classification of its tenants, and their control.
-
- All his early practises therefore are devoted to exploring the worlds
- which surround (if you choose, or if your prefer --- are contained in)
- the object of sense. If there is a tree in your garden, you want to
- find out whether that tree is occupied by a nymph or a nat, and if so,
- what are they like? How do they act? How can you make them useful to
- your purpose? It is in fact the ordinary every-day scientific method
- of exploration. The only difference is that in the course of one's
- experiments one becomes aware of parts of the nature of the object to
- be examined which are subtler and perhaps more powerful, nearer to
- reality, than those which ordinary scientific examination discloses.
- You will notice, however, that the qualities above-mentioned are iden-
- tical. The chemical elements which go to form a tree are subtler,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 51
-
- more powerful and nearer to reality than the tree as it is presented to
- the senses.
-
- Finally, we reach the conception of molecules, atoms, electrons, protons,
- neutrons and so on, and nobody needs telling nowadays what unfathomable
- potencies lie hidden in the atom.
-
- When I say subtler, moreover, I mean it. The analysis of matter has
- resulted in the extraordinary discovery that the definition of matter
- as given by the physicist of to-day is very similar indeed to the
- definition of spirit as stated by the mystics of the middle ages.
-
- Henry Poincaré has well pointed out that the results of scientific
- experiment as we know them, are altogether in their way dependant on
- the existence of our own peculiar natures. If, for example, we had no
- sense to use in our exploration but that of hearing, we should have
- worked out a classification of trees entirely different from that which
- we now possess. We should have taught our students how to distinguish
- the sounds made by an oak and an elm respectively in a storm; the
- differences in the rustling of various kinds of grass, and so on.
-
- Similarly the results of our magical experiments are naturally and
- necessarily very distinct from those which we obtain by ordinary
- methods. to begin with we must build up an apparatus of examination,
- and this we do by discovering and developing qualities in our own sturc-
- ture which ware suitable for the purpose.
-
- The first step is the separation of (what we call, for convenience) the
- astral body from the physical body. As our experiments proceed, we find
- that our astral body itself can be divided into grosser and subtler com-
- ponents. In this way we become aware of the existence of what we call,
- for convenience, the Holy Guardian Angel, and the more we realise the
- implications of the theory of the existence of such a being, the clearer
- it becomes that our supreme task is to put ourselves into intimate
- communication with him.
-
- For one thing, we shall find that in the object of sense which we
- examine there are elements which resist our examination. We must raise
- ourselves to a plane in which we obtain complete control of such.
-
- It is found furthermore in the course of experiment that a great many
- of the apparent differences in our study conceal a hidden unity, and
- vice versa. Like every other science, both the subject and the object
- of the work increase as that work proceeds.
-
- Take a simple matter like Mathematics as our analogy. The schoolboy
- struggling with the Rule of Three is a very rudimentary image of the
- advanced mathematician working on the differential calculus.
-
- From the above it ought to be clear to you that I have said all that
- really needs to be said in explaining the whole of Magick as the science
- and art of extending, first in oneself, one's own faculties, secondly
- in external nature their hidden characteristics.
-
- Before closing the subject entirely I think it well to point out that
- there are quite a number of worlds on which a good deal of work remains
- to be done. In particular I cannot refrain from mentioning the work of
- Dr. Dee and Sir Edward Kelly. My own work on this subject has been so
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 52
-
- elaborate and extensive that I shall never sufficiently regret that I
- never had an opportunity of completing it, but I should like to empha-
- size that the obtaining of a book like Liber 418 is in itself so
- outstanding an achievement that it should serve as an encouragement to
- all Magicians.
-
- In the case of many worlds, in particular that of Abra Melin, of the
- greater and lesser Keys of Solomon, of Pietro di Abano, of Cornelius
- Agrippa, while we have perfectly adequate information as to the methods
- we have very meagre examples of the results, especially so far as refers
- to the technical side of the work.
-
- I must conclude with a warning. So many of these branches of magick
- are so fascinating that any one of them is liable to take hold of the
- Magician by the short hair and upset his balance completely. It should
- never be forgotten for a single moment that the central and essential
- work of the Magicians is the attainment of the Knowledge and Conversa-
- tion of the Holy Guardian Angel. Once he has achieved this he must of
- course be left entirely in the hands of that Angel, who can be invari-
- ably and inevitably relied upon to lead him to the further great step ---
- crossing of the abyss and the attainment of the grade of Master of the
- Temple.
-
- Anything apart from this course is a side issue and unless so regarded
- may lead to the complete ruin of the whole work of the Magician.
-
- II
-
- The second part of this letter, which appears to be expanding into a
- sort of essay, will be devoted to Yoga. You will have noticed that the
- grade of Master of the Temple is itself intimately associated with Yoga.
- It is when one reaches this plane that the apparently contradictory
- forms of the Great Work, Magick and Yoga, begin to converge, though even
- earlier in the course of the work it must have been noticed that achieve-
- ments in Yoga have been of great assistance to magical operations, and
- that many of the mental states necessary to the development of the
- Magician are identical with those attained in the course of the strictly
- technical Yogic operations.
-
- The literature necessary to the study of Magick is somewhat variegated;
- there are quite a number of classics on the subject and though it would
- be easy enough for me to draw up a list of not more than half-a dozen
- which I consider really essential, there may be as many as an hundred
- which in the more or less subsidiary forms are useful to the magician.
-
- With Yoga the case is very different indeed. The literature on the
- subject is so enormous and contains so vast a number of more or less
- secret documents which circulate from hand to hand, that I believe
- that the best advice I can give anyone is to cut one's cloth very
- sparingly if one is to make a fitting suit. I do not think I am going
- too far if I say that Part I of Book 4 and my Eight Lectures on Yoga
- form an absolutely sufficient guide to the useful practise of the
- subject; anything else is almost certain to operate as a distraction.
-
- Swami Vivekananda summarised Yoga under four headings, and I do not
- think that one can improve on that classification. His four are: Gnana,
- Raja, Bhakti and Hatha, and comprise all divisions that it is desirable
- to make. As soon as one begins to add such sections as Mantra Yoga, you
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 53
-
- are adding to without enriching the classification, and once you begin
- where are you to stop? But I honestly believe that the excessive
- simplication given in Eight Lectures on Yoga is a practical advantage.
- Any given type of Yogas is the work of a lifetime and for that reason
- alone it is desirable to confine oneself from the beginning to an
- absolutely simple programme.
-
- What then is the difference between Yoga and Magick? Magick is extra-
- verson, the discovery of and subsequently the classification of and
- finally the control of new worlds on new planes. So far as it concerns
- the development of the mind its object and method are perfectly simple.
- What is wanted is exaltation. The aim is to identify oneself with the
- highest essence of whatever world is under consideration.
-
- With Yoga you might easily slip into saying that it was identical, with
- the exception that the new worlds are from the start recognised as
- already existing within the human cosmos, but nobody is asked to extend
- these worlds in any way; on the contrary the object is to analyse ever
- more minutely, and the control to which one approaches is not external
- but internal. At all times one is concentrated on the idea of simpli-
- cation. The recognition of any new idea or form of ideas, is invariably
- the signal for its rejection: "not that, not that."
-
- One might simplify this explanation by constructing some sort of
- apophthegm; Magick is the journey from 0 to 2, Yoga from 2 to 0. It
- is a very good rule for the Yogi to keep this mind constantly fixed on
- the fact that any idea soever is false. There is actually a Hindu
- proverb "That which can be thought is not true." consequently the
- existence of any idea in the mind is an immediate refutation of it,
- but equally the contraries as well as contradictory of that idea are
- false, and the result of this is to knock the second law of formal logic
- to pieces.
-
- One puts up a sort of sorites --- A is B, therefore A is not B; therefore
- not A is not B; and all these contrary statements are equally false,
- but in order to realise this fact they must themselves be announced by
- the mind as ecstatic discoveries of truth.
-
- The result of all this naturally is that the mind very rapidly becomes
- a discredited instrument, and one attains to a totally different and
- much more exalted type of mind, and the same destructive criticism
- which one applied to the original consciousness applies equally to
- this higher consciousness, and one gets to one higher still which is
- again destroyed. In The Equinox, Vol. I there is an essay called "The
- Soldier and the Hunchback: ! and ?" In Liber Aleph too there are
- several chapters about attainment by what is called the Method of
- Ladders.
-
- All these operations are equally valid and equally invalid, and the
- result of this is that the whole subject of Yoga leads to constantly
- increasing confusion. The fineness of the analytical instrument seems
- to defeat its own purpose and it is perhaps because of that confession
- that I have always felt in my deepest consciousness that the method of
- Magick is on the whole less dangerous than that of Yoga. This is parti-
- cularly the case when discussing these matters with a Western mind.
-
- It is true that our 0 = 2 formula remains infinitely useful because it
- is of such potency in destroying the scepticism which so often dis-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 54
-
- heartens one, especially in the highest realms of Magick. The criticism
- which the enemy directs against your sun-kissed tower is thrown back
- from those glittering walls, You accept the criticism at the same time
- as you dismiss it with a laugh.
-
- On the whole therefore I continue to regard the discipline of Yoga as
- its most valuable feature. The results attained by pushing Yoga to its
- end are on their own showing worthless, whereas the attainment of Magick,
- however lofty, is still immune to all criticism and at every period of
- its construction has been perfectly sympathetic with the normal conscious-
- ness of man.
-
- On this view indeed, one might laughingly remark that Yoga at its best
- is a smoke-screen thrown out by a battleship in self-protection.
-
- It may seem to you strange as you read this letter to have watched how
- the pendulum has swung always a little more and more towards the side
- of Magick. I do not know why this should have been, but that it is so
- I have no doubt whatever. I see quite clearly now that Yoga from its
- very first beginnings is liable to lead the mind away into a condition
- of muddle, and though for each such state Yoga itself provides the
- necessary cure, may not one ask oneself if it is really wise to begin
- one's work with axioms and postulates which are inherently dangerous.
- The whole controversy might be expressed as a differential equation.
- Their curves become identical only at infinity, and there is no doubt,
- at least to my mind, that the curve of Magick follows a more pleasant
- track than that of Yoga.
-
- To take one point alone: it is evidently more satisfactory to have
- one's malignant demons external to oneself.
-
- As I have written it has become clearer to me that this is the case,
- but I should not like you to arise from its perusal with any idea that
- I have been in some way derogating Yoga. I would not like to maintain
- that it is necessary to Magick because there have been many very great
- magicians who knew nothing at all of the subject but I am just as
- strongly convinced as I was before that the practice of Yoga in itself
- is of enormous assistance to the Magician in his more intelligible
- path, only adding that he should beware lest the logical antinomies
- inherent in Yoga divert him from or discourage him in his simple path.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Yours,
-
- 666
-
- THELEMIC BOOKS REFERRED TO IN THIS VOLUME.
-
-
-
- BOOK 4, PART I --- A concise and clear treatise on
- Yoga and mysticism.
-
- BOOK 4, PART II --- An introductory treatise on the
- practice of Magick.
-
- BOOK OF LIES, The --- Which is --- This book deals with many matters
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 55
-
- also falsely called "Breaks" on all planes of the highest im-
- portance.
-
- COLLECTED WORKS --- These works contain many mystical
- and magical secrets, both stated
- clearly in prose, and woven into
- the Robe of sublimest poesy.
-
- DAIRY OF A DRUG FIEND, The --- A true story of drug addicts who
- were cured of their affliction by
- a strict régime and the constant
- guidance of a Master.
-
- EQUINOX, The
- Vol. I, No. 1 - 10
- Vol. III, No. 1 --- Contains an immense number and
- variety of official publications,
- rituals, treatises, etc. Also
- special Supplements such as The
- Vision and the Voice; translation
- of Eliphas Lévi's The Key of the
- Mysteries; Sepher Sephiroth; H.
- P. Blavatsky's The Voice of the
- Silence, with a Commentary by
- Fr. O.M., etc., etc.
-
- Vol. III, 3 --- The Equinox of the Gods
- Vol. III, 4 --- Eight Lectures on Yoga --- the
- deepest book written on the sub-
- ject of Yoga.
- Vol. III, 5 --- The Book of Thoth --- a masterpiece
- on the Egyptian Tarot, with Appen-
- dices, and designs with an entirely
- new pack of Tarot cards, executed
- by Frieda Harris.
-
- GOETIA, The --- The most intelligible of the mediae-
- val rituals of Evocation. Contains
- also the favourite Invocation by the
- Master Therion.
-
- HEART OF THE MASTER, The --- A sublime Masterpiece, describing
- a vision given upon the Holy Hill
- of Sidi Bou Said.
-
- THELEMIC BOOKS
-
- KNOX OM PAX --- Four invaluable treatises and a
- preface on mysticism and Magick.
-
- LIBER ALEPH --- The Book of Wisdom or Folly. This
- book contains some of the deepest
- secrets of initiation, with a
- clear solution of many cosmic
- and ethical problems.
-
- LIBER ARARITA --- This book describes in magical
- language a very secret process
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 56
-
- of initiation.
-
- LIBER CORDIS CINCTI SERPENTE --- The Book of the Heart Girt with
- the Serpent: an account of the
- Aspirant with his Holy Guardian
- Angel.
-
- LIBER 418 --- THE VISION AND --- First published in Equinox I, 5.
- THE VOICE A new publication was issued
- subsequently with the full text, an
- Introduction, and extensive Com-
- mentary by The Master Therion.
-
- LIBER LEGIS --- THE BOOK OF --- This Book is the foundation of
- THE LAW the New Aeon, and thus of the
- whole Work.
-
- LIBER VII --- THE BOOK OF --- Gives in magical language an
- LAPIS LAZULI account of the initiation of a
- Master of the Temple. This is
- the only parallel, for beauty
- of ecstasy, to The Book of the
- Heart Girt with the Serpent.
-
- LIBER TRIGRAMMATON --- Describes the course of Creation
- under the figure of the interplay
- of Three Principles. The book
- corresponding to the Stanzas of
- Dzyan.
-
- LITTLE ESSAYS TOWARD TRUTH --- (Formerly called The Wine of the
- Graal) --- --- --- A collection
- of 17 Essays which constitute in
- themselves a complete system of
- initiation.
-
- MAGICK IN THEORY AND PRACTICE --- A complete work on Magick, with
- Appendices, the more important
- columns from 777, etc.
-
- 777 --- A complete Dictionary of the cor-
- respondences of all magical ele-
- ments. It is to the language of
- occultism what Webster is to the
- English language.
-
- I N D E X
-
-
-
-
- A.'. A.'. xvii, xxiii, xxvii, 46, Alexandria, 36
- 47, 48, 53, 60, 70, 83, 146, Alexandrines, xviii
- 151, 167, 202, 210, 212, 214, Alkali, deposit in S. Africa, 270
- 217, 237, 276, 322, 323, 324, Allah, 311
- 349, 354 Alphabets --- see Ch. LXVIII, pp. 307
- Abano, Pietro di, 98, 379 312, 326
- Abrahadabra, 81 --- Greek, xxiii, xxvii
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 57
-
- Abbey of Cefalù, 128, 180 (see also Amalantrah, 48, 161
- Cefalù) Amennti, xxii, xxiii, 346
- Abramelin, xxvi, 132, 193, 198, 379; American Tourists, 255
- --- demons, 263 --- officer story, 333
- --- scorns astrologers, 100 A.M.O.R.C., 55
- --- Sacred Magic of, 98, 198, Amoun-Ra, 352
- 242, 374 Amrit, 37
- Ab-ul-Diz, 48, 226, 234, 235, 236 Ananda, 283, 284
- Abyss, xxiv, 48, 60, 62, 64, 65, Ananga Ranga, 48, 83
- 66, 67, 69, 120, 194, 214, Angels, 18, 196, 264, 266, 300,
- 342, 379 307, 351
- --- Oath of, 215 Anima, 127
- Achad, 18, 180, 219 Animal Automatism, 301
- Adam Qadmon, 93, 94 Animism, 34
- Adept, 48, 227, 266 Animus, 127
- Adept Minor, 47, 61, 193 Ankh, 155, 286
- Adeptus Exemptus, 60, 228, 229 Ankh-f-n-khonsu, xvi, xxvi, 170,
- Adler, Dr. Alfred, 117 179, 189, 238
- Adonai, 132 Antichrist, 35, 211, 316
- Adonis, xviii, 351 Antinomianism, 39
- Advaitism, 21, 25 Aphrodite, 97, 197
- Advaitist, 21, 23 Apocalypse, 17, 29, 163
- Advent, Second, 177 Apollo and the Fates, (Browning) 36;
- Adytum, 67 --- Invocation of, 193
- Aenead, First Book of, 47 --- God of Music, 287
- Aeon, 49, 216, 228, 346, 365, Apollonius of Tyana, 115, 116, 130
- --- of Isis, Osiris, Horus, 216 Apophis, 63
- Aesopus Island, 161; Hermit of, 166 Apostles, 327
- Agrippa, Cornelius, 98, 379 Apuleius, 83, 338
- Aha! 201 Arabian Nights, 338, 339
- Ahamkara, 191, 192, 284 Arabs, xxiii, 344, 351
- Ahaz, 146 Arahat, 129
- Aheba, 18 Archangels, 18, 351, 352
- Ahriman, 21 Archetypes (Plato), 56, 57
- Aiwass, 48, 218, 237, 351 Ark, 67
- A ka dua, 109 Armada, 98
- Akasha, 116 Armadale, 233
- Alchemy, 40 Arnold, 111
- Alder, 53 Arnold, Mathew, 199
- Aleph, 65 Asana, 92, 121, 213
- I N D E X
-
- Asar, 311 Balzac, 83, 338
- Asankyas, 192 Banishings, 110
- Ascendent, 103 Baphomet, xix
- Asi, 37, 311 Barbey d' Aurevilly, 193
- Asiatic God, 36 Barrett, Elizabeth, 117
- Assyrian, 48 Bartzabel, 180, 226
- Astroth, 197, 311 Basilisk, (Egg), 63
- Astarte, 197, 311 Baudelaire, 163, 361
- Astral Body, xxiii, 167, 324, 378, Beachy Head, dangerous, 243
- --- Plane, xxii, xxvi, 19, 110 Beast, 216
- 231, 260, 263, 264, 272, Beatific Vision, 64
- 287, 300, 377 Beer, 223
- --- Projection, 123, 167 Beerbohm, Max, 199
- --- Travel, xxiii, xxv, 273, 276, Bees, 355
- 287, 310 Belsen, 347
- Astrology, 326 Beni Elohim, 351
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 58
-
- Asuras, 21 Bennett, Allan, 122, 129, 157, 190
- Athanasian Creed, 358, 359 261, 262, 307
- Athanasius, 358 Berashith (Crowley, Coll. Works)
- Athanor, 64 20, 24
- Athene, 193 Berkeley, Bishop, 23, 301
- Atma, 127, 192 Besant, Annie, 42, 55
- Atmadarshana, 22, 23, 62 Bethlehem, 30
- Atman, 23 Bhagavad-Gita, 22
- Atonement, 315 Bhikkhu, xiv, 191
- Attila, 30 Bhikkhu Ananda Metteya: see
- Attis, xviii, 351 Bennett, Allan
- Atziluth, 57 Big Business, 344, 350
- Aucassin et Nicolette, 247 Binah, 77, 78, 91, 222, 358
- Augoeides, 132, 193, 352 Black Brothers, xvi, xvii, 33, 60
- Augustus Caesar, 36 63, 66, 67, 82, 133, 151, 191,
- Aumont, Gérard, 9, 28, 44 193, 230, 342
- Auphanim, 196 --- Dragon, 40
- Auto-Hagiography, 122 --- Lodges, 74, 201
- Autolycus, 204 --- Magician, 60, 71
- Ayin, 18 --- Mass, 358
- --- Prince, 168
- B --- School of Magic, 29 sqq.;
- --- --- defined,
- Ba, 127, 132 33 sqq., 42
- Babalon, 30, 66, 67, 237 --- Star, 224
- Babe of the Abyss, 61 Blake, William, 305, 352
- Babylon, 68 Blavatsky, Helena Petrovna, 41,
- Bach, Joh. Se., (Vision), 90 42, 43, 52, 192, 212, 228,
- Bacchae of Euripides, 70 262
- Bacchus, xviii Blitz (London) episode, 85, 283
- Bacon, Francis, 225 Blougram, Bishop, 359
- Baghdad, xxix Bodleian Library, Oxford, 231
- Bagh-i-Muattar, 83, 372 Boccaccio, 83
- Balfour, Jabez, 105 Bodhisattva, 148
- Baltis, 245 Body of Light, 203, 374
- Bog, 134, 307
- I N D E X
-
- Boleskine, 108, 231 Byzantium, 36
- Book of the Dead, xxiii
- Book 4, details on, 226, 234
- Book 4, Part I, 23, 84, 380, 92 C
- --- II, 97, 107, 108
- --- III, see "Magick" Cabell, James Branch, 73, 342
- --- of Thoth, v, xxvii, 20, 134, Cadiz, 288
- 153, 155, 219, 311, 373 Caesar, Julius, 30, 168
- --- of the Law, xi, xii, xxi, 17, Cairo, 36, 232, 236, 238
- 44, 48, 80, 87, 89, 111, Cairo Working, xi, 189, 234, 345
- 147, 150, 152, 159, 173, Caithness, Lady, 168
- 178, 180, 189, 194, 208, Cakravarti-Rajah, 286
- 209, 227, 248, 251, 258, Caldarazzo, Villa, 236
- 286, 305, 331; difficulties Cambridge, 177, 186
- of, 216, 218 Capri, 221
- --- of Lies, xxiv, 88, 113, 138, Carthage, 93
- 172, 282, 286, 304, 305, Catholic Church, 31
- 314 --- Mysticism, 39
- --- of Heart Girt with Serpent, Cato, xxvii
- (LXV), 347 with quotations Cato, Scipio, 93
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 59
-
- Boulak Museum, 179 Catullus, 6, 79, 83, 153, 191, 284
- Brahma, 192 Caucasians (don't believe in Vedas),
- Brahmacharya, 242 243
- Brahma Lokas, 167, 192 Cefalù, 128, 130, 178, 253, 326
- Brahman, 22, 23, 192 --- Diaries from, 166
- Brahmin (caste), 242, 243, 317 Centaur, 299
- Bralduh, 110 Centuries of Nostradamus, 117
- Brewer's, Dr., Guide, v Ceres, 65
- Brocken, 304 Chamelion, Path of, 47
- Brontë, Emily, 153 Chaldea, School of, 38
- Browning, Robert, 36, 97, 117, 139, Chaldean Square system (Astrol-
- 144, 202, 177, 256, 312 ogy), 104
- Brunton, 55 Chant, Mrs. Ormiston, 199
- Buchari-siddhi, 121 Chaos, 63
- Buchenwald, 347 Charybdis, 151, 338
- Buckmaster, Professor, 355, 368 Chaucer, 342
- Buddha, 33, 34, 38, 52, 122, 129 Chéron, Jane, 238
- 191, 192, 359 Chesterton, J.K., 307
- Buddhahood, xxiv Chiah, 172, 212, 222, 358
- Buddhi, xxii, 127, 192 Chimaera, 90
- Buddhism, connected with Black China, walk across, 157, 214,
- School of Magick, 33, 35, 37, 290, 368
- 111, 113, 129, 228, 361 Chinese system of thought, 25,
- Buddhist, 112, 128, 135, 155, 159, 26, 33, 157, 158
- 165, 284, 285 Chokmah, 46, 77, 78, 358
- Buer, 262, 263 Choronzon, 66, 67, 68, 322
- Bunyan, John, 342 Christ, 21, 119, 241, 260
- Buridan's Ass, 174 Christian - attitude, xv
- Burin, 63 --- path, xvi, 84, 317, 347
- Burma, 299, 368 --- Home, 249
- Business, 344, 345 --- Science, 35, 36, 233
- I N D E X
-
- Christian Scientist, 23 Darshana, 192
- Christianity, xviii, 34, 35-42, 312 Davy, Sir Humphrey, illumination,
- Church of Rome, 275 16
- Churchill, Winston, (reference to), Death, Fear of, 281
- 75 Dee, Dr. John, 98, 231, 379
- Chymical Marriage of C.R., 338 Demiurge, 21
- City of the Pyramids, 68, 71, 224, Democracy, 336
- 245 Demon, Demons, 163, 194, 196;
- Cleopatra, 6, 168 Mercurial, 263
- Cloud upon the Sanctuary, 205 Denikin, General, 243
- Clymer, 55 Descartes, 225
- Collected Works of Aleister Desdemona, 120
- Crowley, 24 Destiny, xxiv, 11
- Collins, Mabel, 338 Devachan, 167, 212
- collins, Wilkie, 223 Devas, 21
- Collon, Mont, 261 Devil(s), 21, 22, 120, 145, 197
- Communism, 289, 368 Dhamma, Three Baskets of, 283
- --- Jewish, 35, 327 Dhammapada, 35, 157
- Co-Masonry, xvi, xvii Dharana, xxvi, 92, 131
- Combes, 317 Dhyana, 92, 152
- Comment/Commentary, 227 Diabolism, 30
- Concentration Camps, 84, 218 Dialogue before eating, xii
- Confucius, xx Diana, 60
- Conrad, 342 Diary, Magical, xii, 203, 281,
- Consols, 356 372, 373
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 60
-
- Contes Cruels, 193 Diary of a Drug Fiend, 154
- Coriolanus, 249 Diez, 73
- Cotytto, 197, 309 Dionysus, 36, 193, 223
- Couéism, 95 Disks (Tarot), 97, 109
- Courtier, Jules, 239 Dittany of Crete, 262
- Crawford, F. Marion, 255 Divine Pymander, 139
- Creative Dyad, 18 Dobson, Austin, 247
- Crippen, 134 Dogme et Rituel (Lévi), 115
- Crucifixion, 39 Dolphin, 67
- Crux Ansata, 155 Domodossola, 352
- Cumaean Sybil, 47 Donne, 83
- Cup, 109 Doodle-Bug, 145
- Curie (s) The, 218 Dostoievsky, 35
- Curtius, 313 Doubt, 303
- Curzon, George Nathaniel, 135 Doughty, Dr., 248
- Czechoslovakia, rape by Hitler, Dover (Browning story), 313
- 183 Draco, 222
- Dracula, 298, 300
- Dragon, 287
- D Drake, 352
- Dreams, analysis of, 189, 190
- Daäth, 62, 66, 77, 229 Drugs, 358, 359, 360, 361
- Daleth, 77 Dryads, 197
- Damascus, 36; Burden of, 177 Dualism, Dualists, 22, 23
- Dante, 6, 116 Dumas, 338
- Daphnis and Chloe, 247 Duns Scotus, 56
- I N D E X
-
- Duranty, Walter, 116 Excalibur, 43
- Dweller of the Threshold, 191 Exempt Adept, see Adept
- Dyad, Creative, 18
- Dying God, xviii, 21
- F
-
- E Fabre, 42
- Fabre d'Olivet, 308
- Eblis, 286 Fama Fraternitatis, 62
- Ecclesiastes, 35 Family system, 250
- Eckenstein, Oscar, 157 Farrèrre, Claude, 302
- Ecstasy, xxv Fascism, 334
- Eden (and the Fall), 210 Fate, xxiv
- Ederle, Gertrud, 318 Faubourg St. Germain Aristocracy,,
- Egyptian Theogony, xxvi; School, 38 61
- Eight Lectures on Yoga, xi, xxii, 84 Ferranti (stove), 108
- 112, 219, 227, 316, 373, 380 Fielding, Henry, 184
- Eight Limbs of Yoga, xxii Fifth Dimension, 53
- Einstein, Albert, 42 Fountainebleau (Morêt), 237
- Eire, 61 Forth Bridge, 219
- Elementals, 163, 262 Fourth Dimension, 155
- Elemental Tablets (Watch Towers), France, Anatole, 127
- 231, 232 Franco, 117
- Elephant, 163 Frater O.I.V.V.I.O., 29
- Elias, 211 Frazer, Sir William, 28, 36, 146
- Elixir of Life, 36 Freemasonry, 74
- Elizabethan period, 367 Free Will, xxiv, 11
- Elohim, xx Freud, Sigmund, xxv, 11, 30, 117
- Eloi, eloi, Iama, sabacthani, 69 132
- Empire State Building, 176 Freudian Forgetfulness, 165
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 61
-
- Empress (Tarot Card), 171 Frobisher, 352
- Encyclopaedists, 30 Fugue, 91
- End (justifies the means), 221, 225 Fu-Hsi-Trigrams, 270
- Endor, Witch of, 116 Fuller, J.F.C., 256, 323
- Engergized Enthusiasm, 42, 83 Fundamentalists, 34
- England, General Election, 348, 449
- Enochian Tablets, see Elemental
- Epicurus, 21 G
- Equinox, The, general, why begun,
- 346 Gabriel, 6, 48, 351
- --- of the Gods, reporter's Gale, Norman, 247
- story quoted, 228 Galileo, 141, 168
- Erdmann, 117 Gallio, 146
- Ethics of Thelema, 208, 209, 218 Gamiani, 83
- 228, 318 Ganges, 289
- Ethyl Oxide, 266 Garret, Garet, 344
- Euclid, 226 Gaulle, Général de, 117
- Euripides, 70 Gebhardi, Otto, 217
- Evangelical (cults), 35 Geburah, 46, 229
- Everest (mystery), 185 Gematria, xxiii, 19
- Evolution and Ethics, 33 Genius, 82, 192, 315, 348, 352, 368
- Exaltation, xxiii Geomancy, 268
- I N D E X
-
- Gertrude, Nun, 359 Hardy, Thomas, 247, 342
- Gestapo, 19, 345 Harpocrates, 90, 95
- Gethsemane, 69 Harte, Bret, 369
- Gilbert, William Schwenk, 150, 200, Haseltine, Philip, 98
- 281 Hashish, 349, 359
- Gillette, William, 196 Hatha Yoga, 121, 222
- Gimel, xx, 222 Hathor, 197
- Gnomes, 261 Hawk, Golden, 123, 124
- Gnostics, 36, 308 Hebrew, Alphabet, 308, 309;
- Goat of Mendez, 35 --- Gods, 311
- Gobineau, de, 217 Heindl, Max, 55
- Goclenian Sorites, xxviii Heinzelmänner, 261
- God, xxvi, xxvii, xxix, 5, 14, 19, Henley, W.E., 14, 148
- 21, 27, 52, 70, 112, 127, 132, Henry VIII, 168
- 134-136, 144, 145, 155, 163, Heraclitus, 159
- 176, 193, 222, 238, 259, 264, Herbert, A.P., 83, 201
- 266, 286, 347, 358 Hereward the Wake, 224
- --- Asiatic Dying, xviii Hermaphrodite of Panormita, 20
- God-form, 90, 95 Hermes, xxiv, xxvi, 65, 140, 352
- Gods, 95, 115, 163, 193, 196-198, Hermes Eimi, xxi, 48
- 206, 231, 237, 264, 287, 309- Hermit, 217
- 311, 336, 347, 351-353, 356, Herod, 347
- 358, 371, 377 Herrick, 83
- Goetia, 73, 262 Hertz, 4, 6, 30; rays, 239
- Golden Bough, 351 Heru-pa-kraath, 171
- Golden Dawn, Order of The,(G.'.D.'.), Hesinger, 355
- 280, 323, 343 Hexagram, Unicursal, 109; of Yi
- Golden Hawk, 123, 124 King, 26, 270, 286
- Good and Evil, 21 Hezekiah, 146
- Gordian Knot, 132 Hierophant, 171
- Grant, Gregor, 261 Higher Manas, 127, 192
- Great Work, xi, xii, xiv, xv, xxv, Higher Self, 132, 192, xxix
- 77, 80-82, 86-89, 148, 149 Hill, Raven, 199
- 151, 204, 212, 223, 229, Hilton, James P., 151
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 62
-
- 241-243, 256, 276, 288, 290, Himalayan Sheep, 300
- 325, 333, 337, 356, 366, 372, Hindu, xxi, 52, 92, 144, 159, 192,
- 379 285, 308, 317, 361, 373, 380;
- Great Work "a tea party," xv Orders, xiv, xxi, 39; Proverb
- Greene, Grahame, 210 about women, 258
- Guernica, 218 Hinton, P., 155
- Gunas, xix Hismael, 117
- Guru, xxv, xxvii, 204, 222, 289 Hitler, 60, 77, 104, 259, 288, 331,
- 336, 347; mag. child of I.W.E.,
- 217
- H Hitler Speaks, 217
- Hod, xx, 18
- Hadit, 74, 169, 171, 212 Hodos Camelionis, 47
- Haeckel, Ernst, 22, 129, 130, 169 Holy Deadlock, 201
- Haldane, J.B.S., 282 Holy Ghost, 359, 360
- Hamilton, Sir William, 265 Holy Guardian Angel, xxiii, 22, 132,
- Hammurabi, 20 193, 196, 222, 348, 252, 375,
- Hanuman, xxvi, xvi, 352 378 (see also K. and C. of
- H.G.A.)
- I N D E X
-
- Holy Man, 316, 317, 318 I.W.E., Soror, 217
- Home, D. D., 117, 184
- Homer, 180
- Hong Kong, 123 J
- Hood, 352
- Hoor-paar-kraat, 182, 351 Jacobs, Indian Rothschild, 255
- H.P.B. --- see Blavatsky Jeans, Sir James, 16
- Horoscope, xii Jechidah --- see Yechidah
- Horus, 174, 180, 216, 250, 318 Jehannum, 286
- Hume, 35 Jehovah, xix
- Huxley, Aldous, 248, 368 Jerusalem, 36
- --- Thomas Henry, 33, 35, 146, Jesuits, 94, 221
- 299, 301 Jesus, xviii, 22, 177, 311, 347
- Huysmans, 338 Jesus Christ, xv, 115
- Hybris, 95 Jew, 289, 344
- Jewish (Communism), 327
- --- Theology, xxvi
- I Jinn, 91, 351
- Johannesburg, 268
- I, 26 John, 311
- Iacchus, 59, 65 Joshua, 146, 310
- IAO, xxvi, xvi, xix Judaism, 34, 35, 38
- Ibsen, 336, 337 Judas, 347
- Iddhi, 290 Jung, 117, 139, 249
- Iehi Aour s. Allan Bennett Jupiter, xix, 198, 352
- "If" (Kipling), 84 Juvenal, 83
- Incarnations, past, xiii, xiv, 281
- Incubi, 300
- India, xxii, 163
- Indifference, 284 K
- Indra, 352
- Inertia (Formula of Nature), 250 Ka, 127
- Initiates, xxii, xxiii, 342 Kama Loka, 167, 212
- Initiation, xxii, 133, 136, 141, Kama Shastra, 83
- 223, 224, 241, 324, 330, 348 Kama Sutra, 83
- Inquisitor, 193 Kandy, 92, 122, 157
- Instinct, 222, 223 Kant, 35, 222
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 63
-
- Interlaken, 233 Kaph, xix
- Invocation, 86, 110, 193, 194, 311, Karma, xv, xxiv, 88, 211, 212, 224,
- 324 228, 244, 245, 346; Lords
- Iophiel, 117 of, 245
- Ipsissimus, 70 Kelly, Edward, 98, 231, 379
- Ireland, 102; Irish, 336 Kephra, xv
- Iroquois, 20 Kether, 108, 222
- Isaacs, Mr., 255 Khabs, 132, 171
- Isis, 35, 174, 204, 219, 250, 344, Khamsin, 61
- 347 Khen, 35
- Islam, 39, 311, 317, 361; parable Khu, 127, 141
- from, 282 Kiblah, 308
- Italians, 336 Kidneys, defective, 280
- Itzatccihuatl, 300 King, The, quoted from AL, II, 171,
- Ivan the Terrible, 368 208, 209
- I N D E X
-
- King Kang Khang, 153 Liber CCCLXX, 83
- Kingsford, anna, 41 --- DCCCXXXI, 83
- King's Scale, 18, 57, 87, 98 --- CLXXV, 83
- Kinks in Time, 124 --- CLVI, 83
- Kipling, Rudyard, 84, 104, 179, 335 --- 418 = The Vision and The Voice, 29
- Kiriloff, 35 --- III vel Jugorum, 92
- Knowledge and Conversation of Holy Lidice, 218
- Guardian Angel, xxiii, 61, 193, Lilith, 60, 299
- 219, 229, 375, 376, 379 Lingam, xix, 287
- Konx Om Pax, 323 Little Essays toward Truth, xiv,
- Krishna, xviii xxii, 166, 211, 284
- Krishnamurti, 42 Lion Serpent, xxvi
- Kwa, 26 Litton, 299
- Logic, xv, 24
- Logos, 358
- L Loki, 352
- London, Jack, 51
- Lafayette, 61 Longfellow, 324
- Lakhs, 142 Longus, 247
- Lamb, 67 Lorraine, 61
- Lamen, xxii Lost Horizon, 151
- Lao Tse, 11, 135, 153, 158, 160 Love under will, xv
- 172 Lovers, The, 222
- Lapis Lazuli, 37 Lower Manas, 192
- La Poule aux Rats, 364 Ludlow, 361
- Laughter, Trance of, 285 Lunn, Colin, 185
- Law of Thelema, 43 Lupin, Arsène, 224
- Laylah, 234 Luxor, 189
- Leech, 366 Lycanthropy, 289
- Left-hand Path, 60, 61, 63, 191 Lynch Law, 335, 337
- Legge, 161, 162 Lytton, 338
- Lehrjahre, 278
- Lenin, 346
- Leo, Alan, 225 M
- Leonardo da Vinci, 2
- Lethe, River of, 167 MacCarthy, Desmond, 334
- Levant, 36 Machen, Arthur, 338
- Lévi, Eliphas, xii, 115-119, 168, Macroprosopus, 17
- 212, 298, 300, 374 Magical Child, 217
- Leviathan, 66 --- Formula, 218, 219
- Levitation, 289 --- Link, 288
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 64
-
- Liber Aleph, 113, 284, 327-330 --- Memory, 372
- --- Legis, xxiii, 76, 80; Find- --- Power, 256, 289
- ing of MS, 212; see also --- Record, see Diary
- Book of the Law --- Theory, 275, 288
- --- OZ, 333 Magick, v, xi, xii, xxii, xxiii,
- --- Resh vel Helios, xii, 92, 281 xxvii, 20, 27, 28, 76, 77,
- --- Thisarb, xii, 129, 165, 211, 84, 85, 165, 200, 209, 226,
- 213, 214, 215, 372 262, 289, 301, 302, 322, 330,
- --- LII, xvii 373, 374, sqq.
- --- LXV, xvii --- Defined, 28
- --- VII, xvii --- History, 288
- --- LXVI, 83 --- Wand, xxviii
- I N D E X
-
- Magick in Theory and Practice, 20, Medici, Catherine de, 105
- 211, 219, 266, 373; genesis, 180 Medicine Man, 34
- Magician, 66, 368 Meinhold, 338
- Magus, Magi, 46, 65, 238, 319 Mein Kampf, 331
- Maha Brahma, 135 Melander's Millions, 185
- Mahaparinibbana Sutta, 52 Melcarth, xviii, 22, 351
- Mahasatipathana, 41, 58, 155 Mendez, Goat of, 35
- Mahatmas, xxix Mercury, xix, xxvi, 98
- Maitland, Edward, 41 Meru, 163
- Malaria, 366 Messiach, 210
- Maliel, 57 Messiah, 42, 210
- Malkuth, xx, 166, 195 Michelet, 352
- Manas, xxii, 127, 192 Mikado, 347
- Mandrake, 65 Milinda, Questions of King, 135
- Manifesto (of O.T.O.), 70 Mill, John Stuart, 222
- Mansoul, 41 Minerval, xxvii
- Mantra, 73 Ministry of Fear, 210
- Mantra Yoga, 311 Minutum Mundum, 97
- Manu, 222 Mirabeau, 61
- Maremma, 93 Mithras, xviii, 22, 351
- Marie Antoinette, 168 Mohammed, 6, 289, 351
- Marlow, Louis, 334 Mohammedan Orders, xiv
- Mars, xx, 352 Molinos, 130
- Marsyas, 351 Money, xv, 251, 252, 253
- Martial, 83 Monist, Monism, 21, 22, 23
- Marx, Karl, 30, 343 Mont Cervin, 352
- Marxism, 35 Monte Carlo, 187
- Mary, blasphemy against Babalon, Monte Silvio, 352
- 66; Inviolate, 82 Montgomery, General, 117
- Mary, Queen of Scots, 168 Moon, salutation, 92; Vision,
- Masoch, Sacher, 83 90; Tarot Card, xx
- Mason, xv Morêt, 237
- Masonry, xi Morningstar, Otto, 272
- Mass (Christian), 39 Morte d'Arthur, 338
- Master, (opposed to Slave), 217 Moses, 52, 127
- --- of the Temple, xvii, 46, Moslem, 37
- 64, 66, 88, 89, 141, 142, Motte Fouqué, de la, 338
- 148, 208, 228, 229, 319, Motto, xviii
- 343, 379 Mozart, 256
- Masters, xxi, 243, 244, 245, 259, Müller, Max, 158
- 345, 346, 347, 348, 350, Munich, 183
- 351, 356 Music Halls, described, 199
- --- Who are not magicians, 99 Musset, Alfred de, 83
- --- "Hidden", xxix Mussolini, 347
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 65
-
- Masturbation, 194 Mystic, 26, 89
- Masucci, 83 --- danger of the path, 193
- Mathematics, 330 Mysticism, xi, 39, 87
- Matriarchy, 216
- Matterhorn, 352 N
- Maya, 22
- Means (does it justify the end?), Nagasena, Arahat, 135
- 221, 225 Naples, 255
- I N D E X
-
- Naples Arrangement, 20 Ommeya, xxix
- Napoleon (Bonaparte) 8, 30, 104, 239 Onanism, opposed to sexual inter-
- 259, 352 course, 193
- Nats, 197 One Star in Sight, xvi, xvii, xxiv
- Nazi (School), 35; party, 289 70, 322
- Nechesch, Serpent, 210 Ontology, 126
- Necromancy, 289 Ophidian Vibrations, 47
- Nelson, 352 Oppenheimer, E. Philips, 187
- Nemo, 66 Opus Lutetianum, 212
- Nemyss, 109 Oradour-sur-Glane, 218
- Neophyte, xxi, 64, 70, 231, 323 Orders, Christian, Monkhood, xiv
- --- ceremony of Golden Dawn, 280 --- Hindu, xiv
- Nephesch, 127, 166, 222, 223, 224 --- Mohammedan, xiv
- Nerciat, André de, 83 --- A.'.A.'. xiv
- Neroda-Sammapatti, 23, 159 Orgasm (s), 78, 152
- Neschamah, 103, 113, 127, 135, Ormzd, 21
- 136, 142, 155, 172, 192, Osiris, xviii, xxii, xxiii, 21,
- 212, 222, 223, 224, 330 36, 59, 174, 175, 319, 344,
- Neschamic, 63, 142 347, 351; in Amennti, xxiii
- Nettles (boyhood exper.), 260 --- Aeon of, 250
- Neuberg, 231, 232 Othello, 120
- New Aeon, 180 O.T.O., xi, xii, xv, xvi, xvii,
- Newman, Cardinal, 338 xxi, xxiii, 47, 124, 125,
- Newman, John Henry, 298 203, 217, 300, 322
- New Orleans, xx, 48 --- Grand Treasurer of, xii
- Newton's Third Law of Motion, 211 --- Rituals, xxiii, 323
- New York Times, 299 --- System of, 70 sqq.
- New York World, 180 Ottilia (vision), 90
- Nibbana, 11, 33, 52 Ouarda, 234, 345
- Neitzsche, Friedrich, 16, 36, 316 Ouspensky, 55
- --- Prophet of Thelema, 217 Owen, Professor, 299
- Nihilist, 21
- Nineveh, Burden of, 177
- Nirmanakaya, 51 P
- Nirvana, 33, 51, 52, 111
- Noah, 29 Paccheka-Budhha, 167
- Nominalists, 56 Padmasana, 122
- Northcliffe, Lord, 104 Paganism, 38
- Nostradamus, 117 Pairs of Opposites, 21
- Nous, 127 Pan, 287
- Nu, Nuit, 62, 142, 165, 169, Pantheism, 36, 39
- 172, 222, 238 Parabrahm, 34
- Nymph, 197 Paramahamsa, 148
- Parananda, Shri, 157
- Parinibbana, 52
- O Paris Working, 212
- Parsimony, Law of, 265
- Oath (of Abyss), 244 Partouse, 355
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- 66
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- Occult (Sciences), 126 Passover, 67
- O.H.O. = Outer Head of O.T.O., xxi Pasteur, 366
- Olcott, Colonel, 224 Pastos, 62
- Olympus, 163 Patanjali, 157
- I N D E X
-
- Path of Ayin, 18 Purana, 157
- Path of Gimel, 222 Purusha, 127, 192
- Path of Samekh, 18 Pylon, 67, 68
- Patriarchy, 216 Pymander, Divine, 139
- Paul, Saint, 222, 305, 327 Pyramid (s), 64, 67, 68, 189, 287;
- Peer Gynt, 249 City of, 214; Ritual of, 214
- Pentagram, 18, 63, 286 Pyramis, xviii, xix, xx
- Pentagram Ritual, xxiii Pythagoras, 31
- Perdurabo, xxiii, 49, 84, 121, 181,
- 184
- Persian, 48 Q
- Petronius Arbiter, 83, 338
- Petuchio, 146 Qabalah, xi, xix, xx, xxiii, xxvi,
- Phallos, xx xxvii, 13, 14, 17, 57, 58, 66,
- Phallus, xix, 119 87, 90, 120, 121, 150, 155,
- Phidias, 256 160, 166, 219, 222, 226, 291, 309,
- Phoenicians, xxiii 323, 339, 351, 356, 361
- Phren, 127 --- Arabic, xxi, 219
- Phryne, 33 --- Greek, 219
- Picasso, 62 Qabalistic Zero, 153, 192
- Pickwickianism, 31 Qedemel, 196
- Plato, 30, 159, 222, 286 Qliphoth, 116, 117, 166
- Platonic concepts, 160 Qoph, xx
- Plymouth Brethren, 94, 260 Queen Scale, 57, 98
- Poe, Edgar Allen, 361 Quincey, 361
- Poincaré, Henrie, 42, 378
- Point Event, 11, 14, 155, 173
- Poirot, 142 R
- Poland, 102
- Politics, 259 Rabelais, Francois, 83, 113, 138
- Polymnia, 287 Raffles, 224
- Pope, 275 Ra Hoor, xv
- Posilippo, 235 Ra Hoor Khuit, 79
- Possessed, The, 35 Rajas, xix
- "Potted Sex Appeal," 120 Raleigh, 352
- Poulain, Father, S.J., 120 Rameses I, 189
- Prana, 115 Raphael, 104
- Pranayama, 121, 122, 152 Rats (story Le Poule aux), 363
- Praxiteles, 204 Ratziel, Archangel, 196
- Price, Harry, 303 Reformation, 39
- Priestess, The, 222 Re-incarnamtion, xxviii, 168
- Prince, 98 Religion, 358, 361, 362
- Princess Scale, 98 Religious Experience, 23
- Probation, xxii Remus, 352
- Probationer, 109, 231, 322 Renaissance, 344, 346
- Propitiation, 39 Reuss, Dr. Theodor, xxi, 71, 124
- Protestant Mysticism, 39 Rhys-Davids, 158, 283
- Protestants, 39 Riddle of the Universe, The, 21,
- Psyche, 127 22, 26
- Psychoanalysis, 281 Riemann, 141
- Psychology of Hashish, 359 Riemann-Christoffel, 179
- Ptolemy, 101 Right-Hand Path, 60
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- I N D E X
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- Rig-Veda, 127 Sand, Georges, 83
- Robbery, breach of Thelema, 224 Sangha, 157
- Robin Hood, 224 Sankhara (tendency), 58, 168, 359
- Rodney, 352 Sankhya, 157
- Rome, 235; Church of, 275 Sanna (perception), 58, 359
- Romulus, 352 Sannyasi, 242, 255
- Röntgen, Professor, 4, 218 Sanskrit, 307, 310
- Rosebery, Lord, 352 Santa Barbara, 180
- Rosencreutz, Christian, 62, 338 Sat, 92
- Rosetta Stone, Equinox to be, 346 Satan, 65, 94, 179, 233
- Rosetti, 153 Sattvas, xix
- Rosicrucians, xxi, 42, 55, 108, 284 Saturn, 90, 91, 233
- Rosicrucian system, 243; custom, 278 Saviour, 243
- Rosicrucianism, 40 Saul, King, 116, 176
- Ross, 366 Scarlet Pimpernel, 224
- Rosy Cross, 109, 155 Scarlet Woman, 216
- Rotterdam, 218 Scented Garden of the Sheikh
- Rousseau, 313 Nefzawi, 83
- RR et AC, 47, 343 Schopehauer, 35, 36, 169
- Ruach, xxi, 77, 101, 115, 116, 118, Science, method of, 10, 85, 151
- 135, 136, 140, 166, 192, 195 Scipio, 93
- 212, 221, 330 Scott, Sir Walter, 260
- Rupert of Hentzau, 185 Scylla, 151, 338
- Russell, Bertrand, xxviii, 42, 51, Sebek, 90
- 57, 129, 266, 344 Secret Chiefs, 231, 233, 234, 237,
- Russia, 116, 368 239, 324
- Ruysbroek, 130 Seele, 127
- Sepher Sephiroth, 18, 19, 91
- Sephira, 229; Sephiroth, 166
- S Set, 21, 179, 311
- Sex, 358, 360, 361
- Sacrament, 45 Sex and Character, 173
- Sade, Marguis de, 83 Sexual Intercourse and Onanism, 193
- Sagittarius, 18 Shaivite, 157
- Sahara, 158 Shakespeare, 168
- Saint Augustine, 359 Shaman, 116
- Saint Elmo's Fire, 299 Shavasana, 283
- Saint Germain, Comte de, 120 Shaw, George Bernard, 179, 256, 366
- Saint John, 133 Sheikh of Mish, 317
- Saint Moritz, 233, 234 Shelley, 153
- Saint Peter's in Rome, 226 Shiva, 153
- Saint Teresa, 359 Shivadarshana, 23, 62
- Salamander, 375 Shri Parananda, 157
- Salt, xix Siberia, 116, 135
- Salvation Army, 34 Sibylline Books, 206
- Samadhi, 23, 79, 121, 193, 281, 283 Sicily, 123
- Samekh, 18 Siddhi, 165, 290
- Sammasati, 129, 130, 131, 191, 198, Sierras (Spain), 158
- 232, 245, 372 Simpson, Mrs., 117
- Samuel, 116 Skeat, xxvii, 119, 127, 132, 134
- San Luis Potosi, story of confidence 146, 191, 313
- trick, 306 Skooshocks, 167
- I N D E X
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- Sludge, Mr., the Medium, 117, 144, T
- 177
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- Socialism, 334, 336 Tahuti, xv, xxvi, 81, 352
- Socialists, 348, 349, 366 Talisman (s), xxii, 71, 98, 178,
- Society for Psych. Research, 239 226, 286, 287
- Socrates, 193, 352 Tamas, xix
- Solar System, xxiii Tantras, 34, 157
- Soldier and the Hunchback, 21, 129, Tao, 25, 88, 135, 136, 149, 155,
- 139, 381 156, 229, 286, 287
- Solomon, xxvii, 36 Taoism, 31
- --- The King, Greater and Taoist doctrine; sectaries, 11;
- Lesser Keys, 98, 379 aspect, 148, 149, 154
- Solon, 222 Tao Teh King, 231, 41, 121, 153
- Soviets, 336 154, 157, 158, 160, 161, 166
- Spain, walk through, 252, 253 Taphthartharath, xvi, xxvi
- Spedalieri, Baron, xii Tarot, 97, 98, 109
- Spelling Bee, 331, 332 Tarquin, 206
- Spencer, Herbert, 14 Tat, 92, 153
- Sphinx, 73, 109; Four Powers of, Tau, path of, xxii
- 155; fully explained, 255 Tau Cross, xxii, 109
- Spinoza, 36 Tcheka, 345
- Spinthria, 355 Teh, 172
- Spiritist, Spiritism, 115, 117, 176 Telekinesis, 239
- Stalag, 218 Telepylus, 180
- Stalin, 224, 259, 336 Telesmata, 97
- Star, The, 222 Templar (position), 283
- Steiner, Rudolph, xvii Temurah, 19
- Stélé of Revealing, 108, 179, 238 Temurah Thash Raq, 119
- Stern, 83 Tengyueh, 140, 299
- Sterne, Laurence, 342 Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 324, 335
- Stingaree, 224 Termite, 352, 355, 365
- Stoker, Bram, 298 Tests, magical, 340, 341
- Straus, Ralph, 334 Tetragrammaton, xxvi, 27, 77, 222,
- Succubi, 300 255
- Sufis, 39, 157, 159 Thai Yang, 26; Thai Yin, 26
- Sukshma-Khumbakam, 121 Thebes, 189
- Sullivan, J.W.N., 193, 355 Theism, 27
- Sulphur, xix Thelema, Law of, 43, 44, 174, 221,
- Sun, Spirit of the, xvi 316
- Sunday, Billy, 34 Theognis, 338
- Supernal Triad, 62, 115, 140, 166, Theoricus, 323
- 195, 197, 211 Theurgy, 38
- Swami, 204 Thomas, J.H., 345
- Swastika, 289 Thomson, James, 111, 342
- Swift, 83 Thor, Hammer of, 289
- Swinburne, Algernon, 6, 300 Thora, 91
- Sword, 109 Thoth, xvi, xxvi, 307, 326, 352
- Sword of Song, 24 Three Baskets of the Dhamma, 283
- Tibet, 91, 221
- Tiger, 149
- Tiphareth, 18, 57, 78, 108, 195
- 212, 222, 229
- I N D E X
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- Titanic, 102 Vatican, 42
- Titian, 256 Veda, Vedas, 34, 130, 157, 243
- Tohu Bohu, 119 Vedana (sensation), 58
- Tom Jones, 184 Vedanta, 157
- Tories, 349 Vedantism, Vedantists, 36, 39, 135
- Totalitarianism, 250 Venus, 196, 197
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- Trance, 23 Venus in Furs (Sacher Masoch), 83
- Trance of Wonder, 130 Vergil, 47, 116
- Transits, 101 Victoria, Queen, 115, 356
- Transmutations, 123 Victorian Period, 367
- Tree of Life, xxiv, 16, 57, 76, Vinci, Leonardo da, 2
- 291 Vinnanam, 359
- Treves, Sir Frederic, 335, 336 Virakam, Soror, 122, 226, 233-236
- Trimurti, 192 Vishnu, 22
- Trinc, 113 Vishvarupadarshana, 22, 101
- Tripitika, 34, 283 Vision and The Voice, xiv, 59, 61,
- Trismegistus, Hermes, 140 63, 65, 120, 229, 230, 287,
- Trotsky, Leon, 243, 244 339, 373; quotations, 63-69
- True Will, xv, 77, 80, 95, 96, 154, Vital Force, 300
- 175, 221, 250, 263, 288, 289, Vivekananda, 157, 201, 318, 373,
- 313, 319, 337, 348, 350, 358 380
- Trusts, 348 Vladivostok, 288
- Truth, of All Truth, 140, 141, Volga Famine, Duranty story, 362
- 142, 330
- Tsar, 116
- Twain, Mark, 336 W
- Tyndall, 4
- Typhon, 63 Waite, A. E., 201
- Wand, 109
- Wanderjahre, 278
- U War of the Roses, 168
- Ward, Kenneth, 231, 232, 237
- U.B., 55 Warren, 283
- Udgitha, 192 Waterloo, 352
- Unicursal Hexagram, 109 Weiniger, 35, 173
- Universe, Force of the, xviii Wells, H.G., 146, 202, 302, 333
- --- Riddle of the, xiv, xix, 10 Werewolves, 123, 300
- Upanishads, 22, 34, 130, 157, 158 Wesley, John, 76
- U.S.W. = German, und so weiter = and Wheel of Fortune, xix
- so forth, 265 Whisky anecdote, 273, 274
- Ut, 132, 192 White School of Magick, 29 sqq.
- Utopia, 367 33 sqq., 40
- Utopia mongers, 367 Whitehall, 75
- Whitehead, 42, 55
- Wilde, Oscar, 104, 201
- V Willett, 146
- Wilson, Woodrow, 104
- Valhalla, 37 Wolfe, Jane, 284
- Vallière, Louise de la, 120 Wonder, Trance of, 284
- Vamacharya Schools, 34 Wren, 19
- Vampirism, 249
- Vannus Iacchi, 245
- I N D E X
-
-
- Y
-
- Yang, xix, 26
- Yechidah, 4, 127, 172, 212, 222
- Yellow School of Magick, 29 sqq.
- 33
- Yesod, xx, 18
- Ygdrasil, 66
- Yi King, xi, xx, 26, 88, 270;
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- 70
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- divination, 237, 238, 239
- Yin, 26
- Yod, xix
- Yoga, 73, 84, 90, 131, 157, 203,
- 209, 222, 226, 227, 262, 283,
- 323, 368, 373, 374, 377 sqq;
- Danger of, 381, 382
- Yoga for Yellowbellies, xxv
- Yogi (s), 122, 135, 289, 316, 368,
- 376
- York, Archbishop of, 105
- Yucatan, 221
- Yun Nan, 158, 299
-
-
- Z
-
- Zancig, 176, 177
- Zelator, xxi
- Zeno, 31
- Zermatt, 352
- Zero, 85, 250
- Zeugnis der Suchenden, 217
- Zeus, 193, 311, 352
- Zola, 203, 247, 248
- Zoroaster, 36, 38, 290
- Zürich, 233
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- BOOKS QUOTED OR REFERRED TO
-
-
- Raphael's Shilling Handbook on Astrology 104
- Barley's 101 "Notable Nativities" 104
- "More Nativities" 104
- City of Dreadful Night, James Thomson 111
- Sir Palamede The Saracen, Equinox I, 4 113
- Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie, Lévi 115
- I Write as I Please, Walter Duranty 17, 116, 362
- Mr. Sludge the Medium, Robert Browning 117, 144, 177
- Lost Horizon, James Hilton 151
- Diary of a Drug Fiend, Aleister Crowley 154, 229
- Bhagavad Gita 157
- Sex and Character, Weiniger 173
- Tom Jones, Fielding 184
- Rupert of Hentzau 185
- John Chilcote, M.P. 185
- Melander's Millions 185
- Contes Cruels, Barbey d'Aureville 193
- Holy Deadlock, A.P.Herbert 201
- J'Accuse, Zola 203
- Cloud on the Sanctuary, Equinox I, 1 205
- Ministry of Fear, Grahame Greene 210
- Hitler Speaks, Herman Rauschning 217
- Armadale, Wilkie Collins 223
- Spirit of Solitude, "Confessions", Crowley 231
- La Terre, Emile Zola 247
- Brave New World, Aldous Huxley 248
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- Mr. Isaacs, F. Marion Crawford 255
- Buddhist Psychology, Mrs, Rhys-Davies 283
- La Maison des Hommes Vivants, Claude Farrèrre 302
- Antichrist, Friedrich Nietzsche 316
- Ouroboros, Garet Garrett 344
- The Psychology of Hashish, Oliver Haddo, Equinox I,2 359
- Mr. Amberthwaite, Louis Marlow 366
- Raja Yoga, Vivekananda 373
- The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, 374
- MacGregor Mathers
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