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-
- THE EQUINOX Vol. I. No. IV 3rd part
-
- June 10, 1990 e.v. key entry by
- Bill Heidrick, T.G. of O.T.O. --- needs further proof reading
- (c) O.T.O. disk 3 of 3
-
- O.T.O.
- P.O.Box 430
- Fairfax, CA 94930
- USA
-
- (415) 454-5176 ---- Messages only.
-
- Pages in the original are marked thus at the bottom: {page number}
- Comments and descriptions are also set off by curly brackets {}
- Comments and notes not in the original are identified with the initials of the
- source: AC note = Crowley note. WEH note = Bill Heidrick note, etc.
- Descriptions of illustrations are not so identified, but are simply in curly
- brackets.
-
- (Addresses and invitations below are not current but copied from the original
- text of the early part of the 20th century)
-
-
- ************************************************************************
-
-
-
-
-
- " "SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT"
-
-
- THE HIGH HISTORY OF
-
- GOOD SIR PALAMEDES
-
- THE SARACEN KNIGHT
-
- AND OF HIS FOLLOWING
-
- OF THE QUESTING BEAST
- 1
- BY ALEISTER CROWLEY
-
- RIGHTLY SET FORTH IN RIME
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TO ALLAN BENNETT
-
- "Bhikkhu Ananda Metteyya"
-
- my good knight comrade in the quest, I dedicate this
- imperfect account of it, in some small recognition of
- his suggestion of its form.
-
- MANDALAY, "November" 1905
-
-
-
-
- 1WEH NOTE: This work is read to best effect after Crowley's
- " "Confessions". The sections are metaphoric accounts of Crowley's
- own search for enlightenment, sometimes with changed details or
- settings. "E.g.", the general focus on Arthur that comes in at III
- should be taken to represent Crowley's lasting but frustrated
- desire to serve and save "all the Britains". Acts of killing by
- the principal character represent renunciations of attachment.
-
-
-
-
-
- ARGUMENT
-
- i. Sir Palamede, the Saracen knight, riding on the shore of Syria, findeth
- his father's corpse, around which an albatross circleth. He approveth the
- vengeance of his peers.
- ii. On the shore of Arabia he findeth his mother in the embrace of a loathly
- negro beneath blue pavilions. Her he slayeth, and burneth all that
- encampment.
- iii. Sir Palamede is besieged in his castle by Severn mouth, and his wife
- and son are slain.
- iv. Hearing that his fall is to be but the prelude to an attack of Camelot,
- he maketh a desperate night sortie, and will traverse the wilds of Wales.
- v. At the end of his resources among the Welsh mountains, he is compelled to
- put to death his only remaining child. By this sacrifice he saves the world
- of chivalry.
- vi. He having become an holy hermit, a certain dwarf, splendidly clothed,
- cometh to Arthur's court, bearing tidings of a Questing Beast. The knights
- fail to lift him, this being the test of worthiness.
- vii. Lancelot findeth him upon Scawfell, clothed in his white beard. he
- returneth, and, touching the dwarf but with his finger, herleth him to the
- heaven.
- viii. Sir Palamede, riding forth on the quest, seeth a Druid worship the sun
- upon Stonehenge. He rideth eastward, and findeth the sun setting in the west.
- Furious he taketh a Viking ship, and by sword and whip fareth seaward.
- ix. Coming to India, he learneth that It glittereth. Vainly fighting the
- waves,the leaves, and the snows, he is swept in the Himalayas as by an
- avalanche into a valley where dwell certain ascetics, who pelt him with their
- eyeballs.
- x. Seeking It as Majesty, he chaseth an elephant in the Indian jungle. The
- elephant escapeth; but he, led to Trichinopoli by an Indian lad, seeth an
- elephant forced to dance ungainly before the Mahalingam.
- xi. A Scythian sage declareth that It transcendeth Reason. Therefore Sir
- Palamede unreasonably decapitateth him.
- xii. An ancient hag prateth of It as Evangelical. Her he hewed in pieces.
- {v}
- xiii. At Naples he thinketh of the Beast as author of Evil, because Free of
- Will. The Beast, starting up, is slain by him with a poisoned arrow; but at
- the moment of Its death It is reborn from the knight's own belly.
- xiv. At Rome he meeteth a red robber in a Hat, who speaketh nobly of It as
- of a king-dove-lamb. He chaseth and slayeth it; it proves but a child's toy.
- xv. In a Tuscan grove he findeth, from the antics of a Satyr, that the Gods
- sill dwell with men. Mistaking orgasm for ecstasty, he is found ridiculous.
- xvi. Baiting for It with gilded corn in a moonlit vale of Spain, he findeth
- the bait stolen by bermin.
- xvii. In Crete a metaphysician weaveth a labyrinth. Sir Palamede compelleth
- him to pursue the quarry in this same fashion. Running like hippogriffs, they
- plunge over the precipice; and the hermit, dead, appears but a mangy ass. Sir
- Palamede, sore wounded, is borne by fishers to an hut.
- xviii. Sir Palamede noteth the swiftness of the Beast. He therefore
- climbeth many mountains of the Alps. Yet can he not catch It; It outrunneth
- him easily, and at last, stumbling, he falleth.
- xix. Among the dunes of Brittany he findeth a witch dancing and conjuring,
- until she disappeareth in a blaze of light. He then learneth music, from a
- vile girl, until he is as skilful as Orpheus. In Paris he playeth in a public
- place. The people, at first throwing him coins, soon desert him to follow a
- foolish Egyptian wizard. No Beast cometh to his call.
- xx. He argueth out that there can be but on Beast. Following single tracks,
- he at length findeth the quarry, but on pursuit It eldueth hi by multiplying
- itself. This on the wide plains of France.
- xxi. He gathereth an army sufficient to chase the whole herd. In England's
- midst they rush upon them; but the herd join together, leading on the kinghts,
- who at length rush together into a "mêlée," wherein all but Sir Palamede are
- slain, while the Beast, as ever, standeth aloof, laughing.
- xxii. He argueth Its existence from design of the Cosmos, noting that Its
- tracks form a geometrical figure. But seeth that this depends upon his sense
- of geometry; and is therefore no proof. Meditating upon this likeness to
- himself --- Its subjectivity, in short --- he seeth It in the Blue Lake.
- Thither plunging, all is shattered.
- xxiii. Seeking It in shrines he findeth but a money-box; while they that
- helped him (as they said) in his search, but robbed him.
- xxiv. Arguing Its obscurity, he seeketh It within the bowels of Etna,
- cutting off all avenues of sense. His own thoughts pursue him into madness.
- {vi}
- xxv. Upon the Pacific Ocean, he, thinking that It is not-Self, throweth
- himself into the sea. But the Beast setteth him ashore.
- xxvi. Rowed by Kanakas to Japan, he praiseth the stability of Fuji-Yama.
- But, an earthquake arising, the pilgrims are swallowed up.
- xxvii. Upon the Yang-tze-kiang he contemplateth immortal change. Yet,
- perceiving that the changes themselves constitute stability, he is again
- baulked, and biddeth his men bear him to Egypt.
- xxviii. In an Egyptian temple he hath performed the Bloody Sacrifice, and
- cursed Osiris. Himself suffering that curse, he is still far from the
- Attainment.
- xxix. In the land of Egypt he performeth many miracles. But from the statue
- of Memnon issueth the questing, and he is recalled from that illusion.
- xxx. Upon the plains of Chaldea he descendeth into the bowels of the earth,
- where he beholdeth the Visible Image of the soul of Nature for the Beast. Yet
- Earth belcheth him forth.
- xxxi. In a slum city he converseth with a Rationalist. Learning nothing,
- nor even hearing the Beast, he goeth forth to cleanse himself.
- xxxii. Seeking to imitate the Beast, he goeth on all-fours, questing
- horribly. The townsmen cage him for a lunatic. Nor can he imitate the
- elusiveness of the Beast. Yet at one note of that questing the prison is
- shattered, and Sir Palamede rusheth forth free.
- xxiii. Sir Palamede hath gone to the shores of the Middle Sea to restore his
- health. There he practiseth devotion to the Beast, and becometh maudlin and
- sentimental. His knaves mocking him, he beateth one sore; from whose belly
- issueth the questing.
- xxiv. Being retired into an hermitage in Fenland, he traverseth space upon
- the back of an eagle. He knoweth all things --- save only It. And
- incontinent beseedheth the eagle to set him down again.
- xxxv. He lectureth upon metaphysics --- for he is now totally insane --- to
- many learned monks of Cantabrig. They applaud him and detain him, though he
- hath heard the question and would away. But so feeble is he that he fleeth by
- night.
- xxxvi. It hath often happened to Sir Palamede that he is haunted by a
- shadow, the which he may not recognise. But at last, in a sunlit wood, this
- is discovered to be a certain hunchback, who doubteth whether there be at all
- any Beast or any quest, or if the whole life of Sir Palamede be not a vain
- illusion. Him, without seeing to conquer with words, he slayeth incontinent.
- xxxvii. In a cave by the sea, feeding on limpets androots, Sir Palamede
- abideth, sick unto death. Himseemeth the Beast questeth within his own
- bowels; he is the {vii} Beast. Standing up, that he may enjoy the reward, he
- findeth another answer to the riddle. Yet abideth in the quest.
- xxxviii. Sir Palamede is confronted by a stranger knight, whose arms are his
- own, as also his features. This knight mocketh Sir OPalamede for an impudent
- pretender, and impersonator of the chosen knight. Sir Palamede in all
- humility alloweth that there is no proof possible, and offereth ordeal of
- battle, in which the stranger is slain. Sir Palamede heweth him into the
- smallest dust without pity.
- xxxix. In a green valley he obtaineth the vision of Pan. Thereby he
- regaineth all that he had expended of strength and youth; is gladdened
- thereat, for he now devoteth again his life to the quest; yet more utterly
- cast down than ever, for that this supreme vision is not the Beast.
- xl. Upon the loftiest summit of a great mountain he perceiveth Naught. Even
- this is, however, not the Beast.
- xli. Returning to Camelot to announce his failure, he maketh entrance into
- the King's hall, whence he started out upon the quest. The Beast cometh
- nestling to him. All the knights attain the quest. The voice of Christ is
- heard: "well done." He sayeth that each failure is a step in the Path. The
- poet prayeth success therein for himself and his readers.
-
-
-
-
- {viii}
-
-
-
-
-
- THE HIGH HISTORY
-
- OF GOOD
-
- SIR PALAMEDES
-
- THE SARACEN KNIGHT; AND OF HIS FOLLOWING
-
- OF
-
- THE QUESTING BEAST
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Rode by the marge of many a sea:
- He had slain a thousand evil men
- And set a thousand ladies free.
-
- Armed to the teeth, the glittering kinght
- Galloped along the sounding shore,
- His silver arms one lake of light,
- Their clash one symphony of war.
-
- How still the blue enamoured sea
- Lay in the blaze of Syria's noon!
- The eternal roll eternally
- Beat out its monotonic tune.
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen
- A dreadful vision here espied,
- A sight abhorred of gods and men,
- Between the limit of the tide.
-
- The dead man's tongue was torn away;
- The dead man's throat was slit across;
- There flapped upon the putrid prey
- A carrion, screaming albatross. {3}
-
- So halted he his horse, and bent
- To catch remembrance from the eyes
- That stared to God, whose ardour sent
- His radiance from the ruthless skies.
-
- Then like a statue still he sate;
- Nor quivered nerve, nor muscle stirred;
- While round them flapped insatiate
- The fell, abominable bird.
-
- But the coldest horror drave the light
- From knightly eyes. How pale thy bloom,
- Thy blood, O brow whereon that night
- Sits like a serpent on a tomb!
-
- For Palamede those eyes beheld
- The iron image of his own;
- On those dead brows a fate he spelled
- To strike a Gorgon into stone.
-
- He knew his father. Still he sate,
- Nor quivered nerve, nor muscle stirred;
- While round them flapped insatiate
- The fell, abominable bird.
-
- The knight approves the justice done,
- And pays with that his rowels' debt;
- While yet the forehead of the son
- Stands beaded with an icy sweat. {4}
-
- God's angel, standing sinister,
- Unfurls this scroll --- a sable stain:
- "Who wins the spur shall ply the spur
- Upon his proper heart and brain."
-
- He gave the sign of malison
- On traitor knights and perjured men;
- And ever by the sea rode on
- Sir Palamede the Saracen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- BEHOLD! Arabia's burning shore
- Rings to the hoofs of many a steed.
- Lord of a legion rides to war
- The indomitable Palamede.
-
- The Paynim fly; his troops delight
- In murder of many a myriad men,
- Following exultant into fight
- Sir Palamede the Saracen.
-
- Now when a year and day are done
- Sir Palamedes is aware
- Of blue pavilions in the sun,
- And bannerets fluttering in the air.
-
- Forward he spurs; his armour gleams;
- Then on his haunches rears the steed;
- Above the lordly silk there streams
- The pennon of Sir Palamede!
-
- Aflame, a bridegroom to his spouse,
- He rides to meet with galliard grace
- Some scion of his holy house,
- Or germane to his royal race. {6}
-
- But oh! the eyes of shame! Beneath
- The tall pavilion's sapphire shade
- There sport a band with wand and wreath,
- Languorous boy and laughing maid.
-
- And in the centre is a sight
- Of hateful love and shameless shame:
- A recreant Abyssianian knight
- Sports grossly with a wanton dame.
-
- How black and swinish is the knave!
- His hellish grunt, his bestial grin;
- Her trilling laugh, her gesture suave,
- The cool sweat swimming on her skin!
-
- She looks and laughs upon the knight,
- Then turns to buss the blubber mouth,
- Draining the dregs of that black blight
- Of wine to ease their double drouth!
-
- God! what a glance! Sir Palamede
- Is stricken by the sword of fate:
- His mother it is in very deed
- That gleeful goes the goatish gait.
-
- His mother it his, that pure and pale
- Cried in the pangs that gave him birth;
- The holy image he would veil
- From aught the tiniest taint of earth. {7}
-
- She knows him, and black fear bedim
- Those eyes; she offers to his gaze
- The blue-veined breasts that suckled him
- In childhood's sweet and solemn days.
-
- Weeping she bares the holy womb!
- Shrieks out the mother's last appeal:
- And reads irrevocable doom
- In those dread eyes of ice and steel.
-
- He winds his horn: his warriors pour
- In thousands on the fenceless foe;
- The sunset stains their hideous war
- With crimson bars of after-glow.
-
- He winds his horn; the night-stars leap
- To light; upspring the sisters seven;
- While answering flames illume the deep,
- The blue pavilions blaze to heaven.
-
- Silent and stern the northward way
- They ride; alone before his men
- Staggers through black to rose and grey
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {8}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- THERE is a rock by Severn mouth
- Whereon a mighty castle stands,
- Fronting the blue impassive South
- And looking over lordly lands.
-
- Oh! high above the envious sea
- This fortress dominates the tides;
- There, ill at heart, the chivalry
- Of strong Sir Palamede abides.
-
- Now comes irruption from the fold
- That live by murder: day by day
- The good knight strikes his deadly stroke;
- The vultures claw the attended prey.
-
- But day by day the heathen hordes.
- Gather from dreadful lands afar,
- A myriad myriad bows and swords,
- As clouds that blot the morning star.
-
- Soon by an arrow from the sea
- The Lady of Palamede is slain;
- His son, in sally fighting free,
- Is struck through burgonet and brain. {9}
-
- But day by day the foes increase,
- Though day by day their thousands fall:
- Laughs the unshaken fortalice;
- The good knights laugh no more at all.
-
- Grimmer than heather hordes can scowl,
- The spectre hunger rages there;
- He passes like a midnight owl,
- Hooting his heraldry, despair.
-
- The knights and squires of Palamede
- Stalk pale and lean through court and hall;
- Though sharp and swift the archers speed
- Their yardlong arrows from the wall.
-
- Their numbers thin; their strength decays;
- Their fate is written plain to read:
- These are the dread deciduous days
- Of iron-souled Sir Palamede.
-
- He hears the horrid laugh that rings
- From camp to camp at night; he hears
- The cruel mouths of murderous kings
- Laugh out one menace that he fears.
-
- No sooner shall the heroes die
- Than, ere their flesh begin to rot,
- The heathen turns his raving eye
- To Caerlon and Camelot.
-
- King Arthur in ignoble sloth
- Is sunk, and dalliance with his dame,
- Forgetful of his knightly oath,
- And careless of his kingly name.
-
- Befooled and cuckolded, the king
- Is yet the king, the king most high;
- And on his life the hinges swing
- That close the door of chivalry.
-
- 'Sblood! shall it sink, and rise no more,
- That blaze of time, when men were men?
- That is thy question, warrior
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {11}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- Now, with two score of men in life
- And one fair babe, Sir Palamede
- Resolves one last heroic strife,
- Attempts forlorn a desperate deed.
-
- At dead of night, a moonless night,
- A night of winter storm, they sail
- In dancing dragons to the fight
- With man and sea, with ghoul and gale.
-
- Whom God shall spare, ride, ride! (so springs
- The iron order). Let him fly
- On honour's steed with honour's wings
- To warn the king, lest honour die!
-
- Then to the fury of the blast
- Their fury adds a dreadful sting:
- The fatal die is surely cast.
- To save the king --- to save the king!
-
- Hail! horror of the midnight surge!
- The storms of death, the lashing gust,
- The doubtful gleam of swords that urge
- Hot laughter with high-leaping lust! {12}
-
- Though one by one the heroes fall,
- Their desperate way they slowly win,
- And knightly cry and comrade-call
- Rise high above the savage din.
-
- Now, now they land, a dwindling crew;
- Now, now fresh armies hem them round.
- They cleave their blood-bought avenue,
- And cluster on the upper ground.
-
- Ah! but dawn's dreadful front uprears!
- The tall towers blaze, to illume the fight;
- While many a myriad heathen spears
- March northward at the earliest light.
-
- Falls thy last comrade at thy feet,
- O lordly-souled Sir Palamede?
- Tearing the savage from his seat,
- He leaps upon a coal-black steed.
-
- He gallops raging through the press:
- The affrighted heathen fear his eye.
- There madness gleams, there masterless
- The whirling sword shrieks shrill and high.
-
- The shrink, he gallops. Closely clings
- The child slung at his waist; and he
- Heeds nought, but gallops wide, and sings
- Wild war-songs, chants of gramarye! {13}
-
- Sir Palamded the Saracen
- Rides like a centaur mad with war;
- He sabres many a million men,
- And tramples many a million more!
-
- Before him lies the untravelled land
- Where never a human soul is known,
- A desert by a wizard banned,
- A soulless wilderness of stone.
-
- Nor grass, nor corn, delight the vales;
- Nor beast, nor bird, span space. Immense,
- Black rain, grey mist, white wrath of gales,
- Fill the dread armoury of sense.
-
- NOr shines the sun; nor moon, nor star
- Their subtle light at all display;
- Nor day, nor night, dispute the scaur:
- All's one intolerable grey.
-
- Black llyns, grey rocks, white hills of snow!
- No flower, no colour: life is not.
- This is no way for men to go
- From Severn-mouth to Camelot.
-
- Despair, the world upon his speed,
- Drive (like a lion from his den
- Whom hunger hunts) the man at need,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {14}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath cast his sword and arms aside.
- To save the world of goodly men,
- He sets his teeth to ride --- to ride!
-
- Three days: the black horse drops and dies.
- The trappings furnish them a fire,
- The beast a meal. With dreadful eyes
- Stare into death the child, the sire.
-
- Six days: the gaunt and gallant knight
- Sees hateful visions in the day.
- Where are the antient speed and might
- Were wont to animate that clay?
-
- Nine days; they stumble on; no more
- His strength avails to bear the child.
- Still hangs the mist, and still before
- Yawns the immeasurable wild.
-
- Twelve days: the end. Afar he spies
- The mountains stooping to the plain;
- A little splash of sunlight lies
- Beyond the everlasting rain. {15}
-
- His strength is done; he cannot stir.
- The child complains --- how feebly now!
- His eyes are blank; he looks at her;
- The cold sweat gathers on his brow.
-
- To save the world --- three days away!
- His life in knighthood's life is furled,
- And knighthood's life in his --- to-day! ---
- His darling staked against the world!
-
- Will he die there, his task undone?
- Or dare he live, at such a cost?
- He cries against the impassive sun:
- The world is dim, is all but lost.
-
- When, with the bitterness of death
- Cutting his soul, his fingers clench
- The piteous passage of her breath.
- The dews of horror rise and drench
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen.
- Then, rising from the hideous meal,
- He plunges to the land of men
- With nerves renewed and limbs of steel.
-
- Who is the naked man that rides
- Yon tameless stallion on the plain,
- His face like Hell's? What fury guides
- The maniac beast without a rein? {16}
-
- Who is the naked man that spurs
- A charger into Camelot,
- His face like Christ's? what glory stirs
- The air around him, do ye wot?
-
- Sir Arthur arms him, makes array
- Of seven times ten thousand men,
- And bids them follow and obey
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {17}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- The earth from murder hath released,
- Is hidden from the eyes of men.
-
- Sir Arthur sits again at feast.
- The holy order burns with zeal:
- Its fame revives from west to east.
-
- Now, following Fortune's whirling-wheel,
- There comes a dwarf to Arthur's hall,
- All cased in damnascenèd steel.
-
- A sceptre and a golden ball
- He bears, and on his head a crown;
- But on his shoulders drapes a pall
-
- Of velvet flowing sably down
- Above his vest of cramoisie.
- Now doth the king of high renown
-
- Demand him of his dignity.
- Whereat the dwarf begins to tell
- A quest of loftiest chivalry. {18}
-
- Quod he: "By Goddes holy spell,
- So high a venture was not known,
- Nor so divine a miracle.
-
- A certain beast there runs alone,
- That ever in his belly sounds
- A hugeous cry, a monster moan,
-
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Quested with him. Now God saith
- (I swear it by His holy wounds
-
- And by His lamentable death,
- And by His holy Mother's face!)
- That he shall know the Beauteous Breath
-
- And taste the Goodly Gift of Grace
- Who shall achieve this marvel quest."
- Then Arthur sterte up from his place,
-
- And sterte up boldly all the rest,
- And sware to seek this goodly thing.
- But now the dwarf doth beat his breast,
-
- And speak on this wise to the king,
- That he should worthy knight be found
- Who with his hands the dwarf should bring
-
- By might one span from off the ground.
- Whereat they jeer, the dwarf so small,
- The knights so strong: the walls resound {19}
-
- With laughter rattling round the hall.
- But Arthur first essays the deed,
- And may not budge the dwarf at all.
-
- Then Lancelot sware by Goddes reed,
- And pulled so strong his muscel burst,
- His nose and mouth brake out a-bleed;
-
- Nor moved he thus the dwarf. From first
- To last the envious knights essayed,
- And all their malice had the worst,
-
- Till strong Sir Bors his prowess played ---
- And all his might availèd nought,.
- Now once Sir Bors had been betrayed
-
- To Paynim; him in traitrise caught,
- They bound to four strong stallion steers,
- To tear asunder, as they thought,
-
- The paladin of Arthur's peers.
- But he, a-bending, breaks the spine
- Of three, and on the fourth he rears
-
- His bulk, and rides away. Divine
- the wonder when the giant fails
- To stir the fatuous dwarf, malign
-
- Who smiles! But Boors on Arthur rails
- That never a knight is worth but one.
- "By Goddes death" (quod he), "what ails {20}
-
- Us marsh-lights to forget the sun?
- There is one man of mortal men
- Worthy to win this benison,
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen."
- Then went the applauding murmur round:
- Sir Lancelot girt him there and then
-
- To ride to that enchanted ground
- Where amid timeless snows the den
- Of Palamedes might be found.2 {21}
-
-
-
- 2WEH NOTE: See "Confessions". This refers to that portion of
- Crowley's life spent at Boleskine as Alastor, the "Spirit of
- Solitude".
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- BEHOLD Sir Lancelot of the Lake
- Breasting the stony screes: behold
- How breath must fail and muscle ache
-
- Before he reach the icy fold
- That Palamede the Saracen
- Within its hermitage may hold.
-
- At last he cometh to a den
- Perched high upon the savage scaur,
- Remote from every haunt of men,
-
- From every haunt of life afar.
- There doth he find Sit Palamede
- Sitting as steadfast as a star.
-
- Scarcely he knew the knight indeed,
- For he was compassed in a beard
- White as the streams of snow that feed
-
- The lake of Gods and men revered
- That sitteth upon Caucasus.
- So muttered he a darkling weird, {22}
-
- And smote his bosom murderous.
- His nails like eagles' claws were grown;
- His eyes were wild and dull; but thus
-
- Sir Lancelot spake: "Thy deeds atone
- By knightly devoir!" He returned
- That "While the land was overgrown
-
- With giant, fiend, and ogre burned
- My sword; but now the Paynim bars
- Are broke, and men to virtue turned:
-
- Therefore I sit upon the scars
- Amid my beard, even as the sun
- Sits in the company of the stars!"
-
- Then Lancelot bade this deed be done,
- The achievement of the Questing Beast.
- Which when he spoke that holy one
-
- Rose up, and gat him to the east
- With Lancelot; when as they drew
- Unto the palace and the feast
-
- He put his littlest finger to
- The dwarf, who rose to upper air,
- Piercing the far eternal blue
-
- Beyond the reach of song or prayer.
- Then did Sir Palamede amend
- His nakedness, his horrent hair, {23}
-
- His nails, and made his penance end,
- Clothing himself in steel and gold,
- Arming himself, his life to spend
-
- IN vigil cold and wandering bold,
- Disdaining song and dalliance soft,
- Seeking one purpose to behold,
-
- And holding ever that aloft,
- Nor fearing God, nor heeding men.
- So thus his hermit habit doffed
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {24}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- KNOW ye where Druid dolmens rise
- In Wessex on the widow plain?
- Thither Sir Palamedes plies
-
- The spur, and shakes the rattling rein.
- He questions all men of the Beast.
- None answer. Is the quest in vain?
-
- With oaken crown there comes a priest
- In samite robes, with hazel wand,
- And worships at the gilded East.
-
- Ay! thither ride! The dawn beyond
- Must run the quarry of his quest.
- He rode as he were wood or fond,
-
- Until at night behoves him rest.
- --- He saw the gilding far behind
- Out on the hills toward the West!
-
- With aimless fury hot and blind
- He flung him on a Viking ship.
- He slew the rover, and inclined {25}
-
- The seamen to his stinging whip.
- Accurs'd of God, despising men,
- Thy reckless oars in ocean dip,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {26}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Sailed ever with a favouring wind
- Unto the smooth and swarthy men
-
- That haunt the evil shore of Hind:
- He queried eager of the quest.
- "Ay! Ay!" their cunning sages grinned:
-
- "It shines! It shines! Guess thou the rest!
- For naught but this our Rishis know."
- Sir Palamede his way addressed
-
- Unto the woods: they blaze and glow;
- His lance stabs many a shining blade,
- His sword lays many a flower low
-
- That glittering gladdened in the glade.
- He wrote himself a wanton ass,
- And to the sea his traces laid,
-
- Where many a wavelet on the glass
- His prowess knows. But deep and deep
- His futile feet in fury pass, {27}
-
- Until one billow curls to leap,
- And flings him breathless on the shore
- Half drowned. O fool! his God's asleep,
-
- His armour in illusion's war
- It self illusion, all his might
- And courage vain. Yet ardours pour
-
- Through every artery. The knight
- Scales the Himalaya's frozen sides,
- Crowned with illimitable light,
-
- And there in constant war abides,
- Smiting the spangles of the snow;
- Smiting until the vernal tides
-
- Of earth leap high; the steady flow
- Of sunlight splits the icy walls:
- They slide, they hurl the knight below.
-
- Sir Palamede the mighty falls
- Into an hollow where there dwelt
- A bearded crew of monachals
-
- Asleep in various visions spelt
- By mystic symbols unto men.
- But when a foreigner they smelt
-
- They drive him from their holy den,
- And with their glittering eyeballs pelt
- Sir Palamede the Saracen.3 {28}
-
-
-
- 3WEH NOTE: In other words, when Crowley went searching for an
- eastern master in and about the Indian sub-continent, the local
- teachers just stared at him until he went away.
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- Now findeth he, as all alone
- He moves about the burning East,
- The mighty trail of some unknown,
- But surely some majestic beast.
-
- So followeth he the forest ways,
- Remembering his knightly oath,
- And through the hot and dripping days
- Ploughs through the tangled undergrowth.
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen
- Came on a forest pool at length,
- Remote from any mart of men,
- Where there disported in his strength
-
- The lone and lordly elephant.
- Sir Palamede his forehead beat.
- "O amorous! O militant!
- O lord of this arboreal seat!"
-
- Thus worshipped he, and stalking stole
- Into the presence: he emerged.
- The scent awakes the uneasy soul
- Of that Majestic One: upsurged {29}
-
- The monster from the oozy bed,
- And bounded through the crashing glades.
- --- but now a staring savage head
- Lurks at him through the forest shades.
-
- This was a naked Indian,
- Who led within the city gate
- The fooled and disappointed man,
- Already broken by his fate.
-
- Here were the brazen towers, and here
- the scupltured rocks, the marble shrine
- Where to a tall black stone they rear
- The altars due to the divine.
-
- The God they deem in sensual joy
- Absorbed, and silken dalliance:
- To please his leisure hours a boy
- Compels an elephant to dance.
-
- So majesty to ridicule
- Is turned. To other climes and men
- Makes off that strong, persistent fool
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {30}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath hied him to an holy man,
- Sith he alone of mortal men
-
- Can help him, if a mortal can.
- (So tell him all the Scythian folk.)
- Wherefore he makes a caravan,
-
- And finds him. When his prayers invoke
- The holy knowledge, saith the sage:
- "This Beast is he of whom there spoke
-
- The prophets of the Golden Age:
- 'Mark! all that mind is, he is not.'"
- Sir Palamede in bitter rage
-
- Sterte up: "Is this the fool, 'Od wot,
- To see the like of whom I came
- From castellated Camelot?"
-
- The sage with eyes of burning flame
- Cried: "Is it not a miracle?
- Ay! for with folly travelleth shame, {31}
-
- And thereto at the end is Hell
- Believe! And why believe? Because
- It is a thing impossible."
-
- Sir Palamede his pulses pause.
- "It is not possible" (quod he)
- "That Palamede is wroth, and draws
-
- His sword, decapitating thee.
- By parity of argument
- This deed of blood must surely be."
-
- With that he suddenly besprent
- All Scythia with the sage's blood,
- And laughting in his woe he went
-
- Unto a further field and flood,
- Aye guided by that wizard's head,
- That like a windy moon did scud
-
- Before him, winking eyes of red
- And snapping jaws of white: but then
- What cared for living or for dead
- Sir Palamede the Saracen? {32}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Follows the Head to gloomy halls
- Of sterile hate, with icy walls.
- A woman clucking like a hen
- Answers his lordly bugle-calls.
-
- She rees him in ungainly rede
- Of ghosts and virgins, doves and wombs,
- Of roods and prophecies and tombs ---
- Old pagan fables run to seed!
- Sir Palamede with fury fumes.
-
- So doth the Head that jabbers fast
- Against that woman's tangled tale.
- (God's patience at the end must fail!)
- Out sweeps the sword --- the blade hath passed
- Through all her scraggy farthingale.
-
- "This chatter lends to Thought a zest"
- (Quod he), "but I am all for Act.
- Sit here, until your Talk hath cracked
- The addled egg in Nature's nest!"
- With that he fled the dismal tract. {33}
-
- He was so sick and ill at ease
- And hot against his fellow men,
- He thought to end his purpose then ---
- Nay! let him seek new lands and seas,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!
-
- {34}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE is come anon
- Into a blue delicious bay.
- A mountain towers thereupon,
- Wherein some fiend of ages gone
-
- Is whelmed by God, yet from his breast
- Spits up the flame, and ashes grey.
- Hereby Sir Palamede his quest
- Pursues withouten let or rest.
-
- Seeing the evil mountain be,
- Remembering all his evil years,
- He knows the Questing Beast runs free ---
- Author of Evil, then, is he!
-
- Whereat immediate resounds
- The noise he hath sought so long: appears
- There quest a thirty couple hounds
- Within its belly as it bounds.
-
- Lifting his eyes, he sees at last
- The beast he seeks: 'tis like an hart.
- Ever it courseth far and fast.
- Sir Palamede is sore aghast, {35}
-
- But plucking up his will, doth launch
- A might poison-dippèd dart:
- It fareth ever sure and staunch,
- And smiteth him upon the haunch.
-
- Then as Sir Palamede overhauls
- The stricken quarry, slack it droops,
- Staggers, and final down it falls.
- Triumph! Gape wide, ye golden walls!
-
- Lift up your everlasting doors,
- O gates of Camelot! See, he swoops
- Down on the prey! The life-blood pours:
- The poison works: the breath implores
-
- Its livelong debt from heart and brain.
- Alas! poor stag, thy day is done!
- The gallant lungs gasp loud in vain:
- Thy life is spilt upon the plain.
-
- Sir Palamede is stricken numb
- As one who, gazing on the sun,
- Sees blackness gather. Blank and dumb,
- The good knight sees a thin breath come
-
- Out of his proper mouth, and dart
- Over the plain: he seeth it
- Sure by some black magician art
- Shape ever closer like an hart: {36}
-
- While such a questing there resounds
- As God had loosed the very Pit,
- Or as a thirty couple hounds
- Are in its belly as it bounds!
-
- Full sick at heart, I ween, was then
- The loyal knight, the weak of wit,
- The butt of lewd and puny men,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {37}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- NORTHWARD the good knight gallops fast,
- Resolved to seek his foe at home,
- When rose that Vision of the past,
- The royal battlements of Rome,
- A ruined city, and a dome.
-
- There in the broken Forum sat
- A red-robed robber in a Hat.
- "Whither away, Sir Knight, so fey?"
- "Priest, for the dove on Ararat
- I could not, nor I will not, stay!"
-
- "I know thy quest. Seek on in vain
- A golden hart with silver horns!
- Life springeth out of divers pains.
- What crown the King of Kings adorns?
- A crown of gems? A crown of thorns!
-
- The Questing Beast is like a king
- In face, and hath a pigeon's wing
- And claw; its body is one fleece
- Of bloody white, a lamb's in spring.
- Enough. Sir Knight, I give thee peace." {38}
-
- The Knight spurs on, and soon espies
- A monster coursing on the plain.
- he hears the horrid questing rise
- And thunder in his weary brain.
- This time, to slay it or be slain!
-
- Too easy task! The charger gains
- Stride after stride with little pains
- Upon the lumbering, flapping thing.
- He stabs the lamb, and splits the brains
- Of that majestic-seeming king.
-
- He clips the wing and pares the claw ---
- What turns to laughter all his joy,
- To wondering ribaldry his awe?
- The beast's a mere mechanic toy,
- Fit to amuse an idle boy! {39}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath come to an umbrageous land
- Where nymphs abide, and Pagan men.
- The Gods are nigh, say they, at hand.
- How warm a throb from Venus stirs
- The pulses of her worshippers!
-
- Nor shall the Tuscan God be found
- Reluctant from the altar-stone:
- His perfume shall delight the ground,
- His presence to his hold be known
- In darkling grove and glimmering shrine ---
- O ply the kiss and pour the wine!
-
- Sir Palamede is fairly come
- Into a place of glowing bowers,
- Where all the Voice of Time is dumb:
- Before an altar crowned with flowers
- He seeth a satyr fondly dote
- And languish on a swan-soft goat.
-
- Then he in mid-caress desires
- The ear of strong Sir Palamede. {40}
- "We burn," qouth he, "no futile fires,
- Nor play upon an idle reed,
- Nor penance vain, nor fatuous prayers ---
- The Gods are ours, and we are theirs."
-
- Sir Palamedes plucks the pipe
- The satyr tends, and blows a trill
- So soft and warm, so red and ripe,
- That echo answers from the hill
- In eager and voluptuous strain,
- While grows upon the sounding plain
-
- A gallop, and a questing turned
- To one profound melodious bay.
- Sir Palamede with pleasure burned,
- And bowed him to the idol grey
- That on the altar sneered and leered
- With loose red lips behind his beard.
-
- Sir Palamedes and the Beast
- Are woven in a web of gold
- Until the gilding of the East
- Burns on the wanton-smiling wold:
- And still Sir Palamede believed
- His holy quest to be achieved!
-
- But now the dawn from glowing gates
- Floods all the land: with snarling lip
- The Beast stands off and cachinnates.
- That stings the good knight like a whip, {41}
- As suddenly Hell's own disgust
- Eats up the joy he had of lust.
-
- The brutal glee his folly took
- For holy joy breaks down his brain.
- Off bolts the Beast: the earth is shook
- As out a questing roars again,
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Are in its belly as it bounds!
-
- The peasants gather to deride
- The knight: creation joins in mirth.
- Ashamed and scorned on every side,
- There gallops, hateful to the earth,
- The laughing-stock of beasts and men,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {42}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- WHERE shafts of moonlight splash the vale,
- Beside a stream there sits and strains
- Sir Palamede, with passion pale,
-
- And haggard from his broken brains.
- Yet eagerly he watches still
- A mossy mound where dainty grains
-
- Of gilded corn their beauty spill
- To tempt the quarry to the range
- Of Palamede his archer skill.
-
- All might he sits, with ardour strange
- And hope new-fledged. A gambler born
- Aye things the luck one day must change,
-
- Though sense and skill he laughs to scorn.
- so now there rush a thousand rats
- In sable silence on the corn.
-
- They sport their square or shovel hats,
- A squeaking, tooth-bare brotherhood,
- Innumerable as summer gnats {43}
-
- Buzzing some streamlet through a wood.
- Sir Palamede grows mighty wroth,
- And mutters maledictions rude,
-
- Seeing his quarry far and loth
- And thieves despoiling all the bait.
- Now, careless of the knightly oath,
-
- The sun pours down his eastern gate.
- The chase is over: see ye then,
- Coursing afar, afoam at fate
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {44}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE hath told the tale
- Of this misfortune to a sage,
- How all his ventures nought avail,
-
- And all his hopes dissolve in rage.
- "Now by thine holy beard," quoth he,
- "And by thy venerable age
-
- I charge thee this my riddle ree."
- Then said that gentle eremite:
- "This task is easy unto me!
-
- Know then the Questing Beast aright!
- One is the Beast, the Questing one:
- And one with one is two, Sir Knight!
-
- Yet these are one in two, and none
- disjoins their substance (mark me well!),
- Confounds their persons. Rightly run
-
- Their attributes: immeasurable,
- Incomprehensibundable,
- Unspeakable, inaudible, {45}
-
- Intangible, ingustable,
- Insensitive to human smell,
- Invariable, implacable,
-
- Invincible, insciable,
- Irrationapsychicable,
- Inequilegijurable,
-
- Immamemimomummable.
- Such is its nature: without parts,
- Places, or persons, plumes, or pell,
-
- Having nor lungs nor lights nor hearts,
- But two in one and one in two.
- Be he accursèd that disparts
-
- Them now, or seemeth so to do!
- Him will I pile the curses on;
- Him will I hand, or saw him through,
-
- Or burn with fire, who doubts upon
- This doctrine, hotototon spells
- The holy word otototon."
-
- The poor Sir Palamedes quells
- His rising spleen; he doubts his ears.
- "How may I catch the Beast?" he yells.
-
- The smiling sage rebukes his fears:
- "'Tis easier than all, Sir Knight!
- By simple faith the Beast appears. {46}
-
- By simple faith, not heathen might,
- Catch him, and thus achieve the quest!"
- Then quoth that melancholy wight:
-
- "I will believe!" The hermit blessed
- His convert: on the horizon
- Appears the Beast. "To thee the rest!"
-
- He cries, to urge the good knight on.
- But no! Sir Palamedes grips
- The hermit by the woebegone
-
- Bear of him; then away he rips,
- Wood as a maniac, to the West,
- Where down the sun in splendour slips,
-
- And where the quarry of the quest
- Canters. They run like hippogriffs!
- Like men pursued, or swine possessed,
-
- Over the dizzy Cretan cliffs
- they smash. And lo! it comes to pass
- He sees in no dim hieroglyphs,
-
- In knowledge easy to amass,
- This hermit (while he drew his breath)
- Once dead is like a mangy ass.
-
- Bruised, broken, but not bound to death,
- He calls some passing fishermen
- To bear him. Presently he saith: {47}
-
- "Bear me to some remotest den
- To Heal me of my ills immense;
- For now hath neither might nor sense
- Sir Palamede the Saracen." {48}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- SIR PALAMEDES for a space
- Deliberates on his rustic bed.
- "I lack the quarry's awful pace"
-
- (Quod he); "my limbs are slack as lead."
- So, as he gets his strength, he seeks
- The castles where the pennons red
-
- Of dawn illume their dreadful peaks.
- There dragons stretch their horrid coils
- Adown the winding clefts and creeks:
-
- From hideous mouths their venom boils.
- But Palamede their fury 'scapes,
- Their malice by his valour foils,
-
- Climbing aloft by bays and capes
- Of rock and ice, encounters oft
- The loathly sprites, the misty shapes
-
- Of monster brutes that lurk aloft.
- O! well he works: his youth returns
- His heart revives: despair is doffed {49}
-
- And eager hope in brilliance burns
- Within the circle of his brows
- As fast he flies, the snow he spurns.
-
- Ah! what a youth and strength he vows
- To the achievement of the quest!
- And now the horrid height allows
-
- His mastery: day by day from crest
- To crest he hastens: faster fly
- His feet: his body knows not rest,
-
- Until with magic speed they ply
- Like oars the snowy waves, surpass
- In one day's march the galaxy
-
- Of Europe's starry mountain mass.
- "Now," quoth he, "let me find the quest!"
- The Beast sterte up. Sir Knight, Alas!
-
- Day after day they race, nor rest
- Till seven days were fairly done.
- Then doth the Questing Marvel crest
-
- The ridge: the knight is well outrun.
- Now, adding laughter to its din,
- Like some lewd comet at the sun,
-
- Around the panting paladin
- It runs with all its splendid speed.
- Yet, knowing that he may not win, {50}
-
- He strains and strives in very deed,
- So that at last a boulder trips
- The hero, that he bursts a-bleed,
-
- And sanguine from his bearded lips
- The torrent of his being breaks.
- The Beast is gone: the hero slips
-
- Down to the valley: he forsakes
- The fond idea (every bone
- In all his body burns and aches)
-
- By speed to attain the dear Unknown,
- By force to achieve the great Beyond.
- Yet from that brain may spring full-grown
- Another folly just as fond. {51}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- THE knight hath found a naked girl
- Among the dunes of Breton sand.
- She spinneth in a mystic whirl,
-
- And hath a bagpipe in her hand,
- Wherefrom she draweth dismal groans
- The while her maddening saraband
-
- She plies, and with discordant tones
- Desires a certain devil-grace.
- She gathers wreckage-wood, and bones
-
- Of seamen, jetsam of the place,
- And builds therewith a fire, wherein
- She dances, bounding into space
-
- Like an inflated ass's skin.
- She raves, and reels, and yells, and whirls
- So that the tears of toil begin
-
- To dew her breasts with ardent pearls.
- Nor doth she mitigate her dance,
- The bagpipe ever louder skirls, {52}
-
- Until the shapes of death advance
- And gather round her, shrieking loud
- And wailing o'er the wide expanse
-
- Of sand, the gibbering, mewing crowd.
- Like cats, and apes, they gather close,
- Till, like the horror of a cloud
-
- Wrapping the flaming sun with rose,
- They hide her from the hero's sight.
- Then doth he must thereat morose,
-
- When in one wild cascade of light
- The pageant breaks, and thunder roars:
- Down flaps the loathly wing of night.
-
- He sees the lonely Breton shores
- Lapped in the levin: then his eyes
- See how she shrieking soars and soars
-
- Into the starless, stormy skies.
- Well! well! this lesson will he learn,
- How music's mellowing artifice
-
- May bid the breast of nature burn
- And call the gods from star and shrine.
- So now his sounding courses turn
-
- To find an instrument divine
- Whereon he may pursue his quest.
- How glitter green his gleeful eyne {53}
-
- When, where the mice and lice infest
- A filthy hovel, lies a wench
- Bearing a baby at her breast,
-
- Drunk and debauched, one solid stench,
- But carrying a silver lute.
- 'Boardeth her, nor doth baulk nor blench,
-
- And long abideth brute by brute
- Amid the unsavoury denzens,
- Until his melodies uproot
-
- The oaks, lure lions from their dens,
- Turn rivers back,and still the spleen
- Of serpents and of Saracens.
-
- Thus then equipped, he quits the quean,
- And in a city fair and wide
- Calls up with music wild and keen
-
- The Questing Marvel to his side.
- Then do the sportful city folk
- About his lonely stance abide:
-
- Making their holiday, they joke
- The melancholy ass: they throw
- Their clattering coppers in his poke.
-
- so day and night they come and go,
- But never comes the Questing Beast,
- Nor doth that laughing people know {54}
-
- How agony's unleavening yeast
- Stirs Palamede. Anon they tire,
- And follow an Egyptian priest
-
- Who boasts him master of the fire
- To draw down lightning, and invoke
- The gods upon a sandal pyre,
-
- And bring up devils in the smoke.
- Sir Palamede is all alone,
- Wrapped in his misery like a cloak,
-
- Despairing now to charm the Unknown.
- So arms and horse he takes again.
- Sir Palamede hath overthrown
-
- The jesters. Now the country men,
- Stupidly staring, see at noon
- Sir Palamede the Saracen
-
- A-riding like an harvest moon
- In silver arms, with glittering lance,
- With plumèd helm, and wingèd shoon,
- Athwart the admiring land of France. {55}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- SIR PALAMEDE hat reasoned out
- Beyond the shadow of a doubt
- That this his Questing Beast is one;
- For were it Beasts, he must suppose
- An earlier Beast to father those.
- So all the tracks of herds that run
-
- Into the forest he discards,
- And only turns his dark regards
- On single prints, on marks unique.
- Sir Palamede doth now attain
- Unto a wide and grassy plain,
- Whereon he spies the thing to seek.
-
- Thereat he putteth spur to horse
- And runneth him a random course,
- The Beast a-questing aye before.
- But praise to good Sir Palamede!
- 'Hath gotten him a fairy steed
- Alike for venery and for war,
-
- So that in little drawing near
- The quarry, lifteth up his spear
- To run him of his malice through. {56}
- With that the Beast hopes no escape,
- Dissolveth all his lordly shape,
- Splitteth him sudden into two.
-
- Sir Palamede in fury runs
- Unto the nearer beast, that shuns
- The shock, and splits, and splits again,
- Until the baffled warrior sees
- A myriad myriad swarms of these
- A-questing over all the plain.
-
- The good knight reins his charger in.
- "Now, by the faith of Paladin!
- The subtle quest at last I hen."
- Rides off the Camelot to plight
- The faith of many a noble knight,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {57}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- Now doth Sir Palamede advance
- The lord of many a sword and lance.
- in merrie England's summer sun
- Their shields and arms a-glittering glance
-
- And laugh upon the mossy mead.
- Now winds the horn of Palamede,
- As far upon the horizon
- He spies the Questing Beast a-feed.
-
- With loyal craft and honest guile
- They spread their ranks for many a mile.
- for when the Beast hat heard the horn
- he practiseth his ancient wile,
-
- And many a myriad beasts invade
- The stillness of that armèd glade.
- Now every knight to rest hath borne
- His lance, and given the accolade,
-
- And run upon a beast: but they Slip from the fatal point away
- And course about, confusing all
- That gallant concourse all the day, {58}
-
- Leading them ever to a vale
- With hugeous cry and monster wail.
- then suddenly their voices fall,
- And in the park's resounding pale
-
- Only the clamour of the chase
- is heard: oh! to the centre race
- The unsuspicious knights: but he
- The Questing Beast his former face
-
- Of unity resumes: the course
- Of warriors shocks with man and horse.
- In mutual madness swift to see
- They shatter with unbridled force
-
- One on another: down they go
- Swift in stupendous overthrow.
- Out sword! out lance! Curiass and helm
- Splinter beneath the knightly blow.
-
- they storm, they charge, they hack and hew,
- They rush and wheel the press athrough.
- The weight, the murder, over whelm
- One, two, and all. Nor silence knew
-
- His empire till Sir Palamede
- (The last) upon his fairy steed
- Struck down his brother; then at once
- Fell silence on the bloody mead, {59}
-
- Until the questing rose again.
- For there, on that ensanguine plain
- Standeth a-laughing at the dunce
- The single Beast they had not slain.
-
- There, with his friends and followers dead,
- His brother smitten through the head,
- Himself sore wounded in the thigh,
- Weepeth upon the deed of dread,
-
- Alone among his murdered men,
- The champion fool, as fools were then,
- Utterly broken, like to die,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen. {60}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE his wits doth rally,
- Nursing his wound beside a lake
- Within an admirable valley,
-
- Whose walls their thirst on heaven slake,
- And in the moonlight mystical
- Their countless spears of silver shake.
-
- Thus reasons he: "In each and all
- Fyttes of this quest the quarry's track
- Is wondrous geometrical.
-
- In spire and whorl twists out and back
- The hart with fair symmetric line.
- And lo! the grain of wit I lack ---
-
- This Beast is Master of Design.
- So studying each twisted print
- In this mirific mind of mine,
-
- My heart may happen on a hint."
- Thus as the seeker after gold
- Eagerly chases grain or glint, {61}
-
- The knight at last wins to behold
- The full conception. Breathless-blue
- The fair lake's mirror crystal-cold
-
- Wherein he gazes, keen to view
- The vast Design therein, to chase
- The Beast to his last avenue.
-
- then --- O thou gosling scant of grace!
- The dream breaks, and Sir Palamede
- Wakes to the glass of his fool's face!
-
- "Ah, 'sdeath!" (quod he), "by thought and deed
- This brute for ever mocketh me.
- The lance is made a broken reed,
-
- The brain is but a barren tree ---
- For all the beautiful Design
- Is but mine own geometry!"
-
- With that his wrath brake out like wine.
- He plunged his body in, and shattered
- The whole delusion asinine.
-
- All the false water-nymphs that flattered
- He killed with his resounding curse ---
- O fool of God! as if it mattered!
-
- So, nothing better, rather worse,
- Out of the blue bliss of the pool
- Came dripping that inveterate fool! {62}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
-
- NOW still he holdeth argument:
- "So grand a Beast must house him well;
- hence, now beseemeth me frequent
- Cathedral, palace, citadel."
-
- So, riding fast among the flowers
- Far off, a Gothic spire he spies,
- That like a gladiator towers
- Its spear-sharp splendour to the skies.
-
- The people cluster round, acclaim:
- "Sir Knight, good knight, thy quest is won.
- Here dwells the Beast in orient flame,
- Spring-sweet, and swifter than the sun!"
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen
- Spurs to the shrine, afire to win
- The end; and all the urgent men
- Throng with him eloquently in.
-
- Sir Palamede his vizor drops;
- He lays his loyal lance in rest;
- He drives the rowels home --- he stops!
- Faugh! but a black-mouthed money-chest! {63}
-
- He turns --- the friendly folk are gone,
- gone with his sumpter-mules and train
- Beyond the infinite horizon
- Of all he hopes to see again!
-
- His brain befooled, his pocket picked ---
- How the Beast cachinnated then,
- Far from that doleful derelict
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {64}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
-
- "ONE thing at least" (quoth Palamede),
- "Beyond dispute my soul can see:
- This Questing Beast that mocks my need
- Dwelleth in deep obscurity."
-
- So delveth he a darksome hole
- Within the bowels of Etna dense,
- Closing the harbour of his soul
- To all the pirate-ships of sense.
-
- And now the questing of the Beast
- Rolls in his very self, and high
- Leaps his while heart in fiery feast
- On the expected ecstasy.
-
- But echoing from the central roar
- Reverberates many a mournful moan,
- And shapes more mystic than before
- Baffle its formless monotone!
-
- Ah! mocks him many a myriad vision,
- Warring within him masterless,
- Turning devotion to derision,
- Beatitude to beastliness. {65}
-
- They swarm, they grow, they multiply;
- The Strong knight's brain goes all a-swim,
- Paced by that maddening minstrelsy,
- Those dog-like demons hunting him.
-
- The last bar breaks; the steel will snaps;
- The black hordes riot in his brain;
- A thousand threatening thunder-claps
- Smite him --- insane --- insane --- insane!
-
- His muscles roar with senseless rage;
- The pale knight staggers, deathly sick;
- Reels to the light that sorry sage,
- Sir Palamede the Lunatick. {66}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXV
-
- A SAVAGE sea without a sail,
- Grey gulphs and green a-glittering,
- Rare snow that floats --- a vestal veil
- Upon the forehead of the spring.
-
- Here in a plunging galleon
- Sir Palamede, a listless drone,
- Drifts desperately on --- and on ---
- And on --- with heart and eyes of stone.
-
- The deep-scarred brain of him is healed
- With wind and sea and star and sun,
- The assoiling grace that God revealed
- For gree and bounteous benison.
-
- Ah! still he trusts the recreant brain,
- Thrown in a thousand tourney-justs;
- Still he raves on in reason-strain
- With senseless "oughts" and fatuous "musts."
-
- "All the delusions" (argueth
- The ass), "all uproars, surely rise
- From that curst Me whose name is Death,
- Whereas the Questing beast belies {67}
-
- The Me with Thou; then swift the quest
- To slay the Me should hook the Thou."
- With that he crossed him, brow and breast,
- And flung his body from the prow.
-
- An end? Alas! on silver sand
- Open his eyes; the surf-rings roar.
- What snorts there, swimming from the land?
- The Beast that brought him to the shore!
-
- "O Beast!" quoth purple Palamede,
- "A monster strange as Thou am I.
- I could not live before, indeed;
- And not I cannot even die!
-
- Who chose me, of the Table Round
- By miracle acclaimed the chief?
- Here, waterlogged and muscle-bound,
- Marooned upon a coral reef!" {68}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath gotten him a swift canoe,
- Paddled by stalwart South Sea men.
-
- They cleave the oily breasts of blue,
- Straining toward the westering disk
- Of the tall sun; they battle through
-
- Those weary days; the wind is brisk;
- The stars are clear; the moon is high.
- Now, even as a white basilisk
-
- That slayeth all men with his eye,
- Stands up before them tapering
- The cone of speechless sanctity.
-
- Up, up its slopes the pilgrims swing,
- Chanting their pagan gramarye
- Unto the dread volcano-king.
-
- "Now, then, by Goddes reed!" quod he,
- "Behold the secret of my quest
- In this far-famed stability! {69}
-
- For all these Paynim knights may rest
- In the black bliss they struggle to."
- But from the earth's full-flowered breast
-
- Brake the blind roar of earthquake through,
- Tearing the belly of its mother,
- Engulphing all that heathen crew,
-
- That cried and cursed on one another.
- Aghast he standeth, Palamede!
- For twinned with Earthquake laughs her brother
-
- The Questing Beast. As Goddes reed
- Sweats blood for sin, so now the heart
- Of the good knight begins to bleed.
-
- Of all the ruinous shafts that dart
- Within his liver, this hath plied
- The most intolerable smart.
-
- "By Goddes wounds!" the good knight cried,
- "What is this quest, grown daily dafter,
- Where nothing --- nothing --- may abide?
-
- Westward!" They fly, but rolling after
- Echoes the Beast's unsatisfied
- And inextinguishable laughter! {70}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXVII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE goes aching on
- (Pox of despair's dread interdict!)
- Aye to the western horizon,
-
- Still meditating, sharp and strict,
- Upon the changes of the earth,
- Its towers and temples derelict,
-
- The ready ruin of its mirth,
- The flowers, the fruits, the leaves that fall,
- The joy of life, its growing girth ---
-
- And nothing as the end of all.
- Yea, even as the Yang-tze rolled
- Its rapids past him, so the wall
-
- Of things brake down; his eyes behold
- The mighty Beast serenely couched
- Upon its breast of burnished gold.
-
- "Ah! by Christ's blood!" (his soul avouched),
- "Nothing but change (but change!) abides.
- Death lurks, a leopard curled and crouched, {71}
-
- In all the seasons and the tides.
- But ah! the more it changed and changed" ---
- (The good knight laughed to split his sides!)
-
- "What? Is the soul of things deranged?
- The more it changed, and rippled through
- Its changes, and still changed, and changed,
-
- The liker to itself it grew.
- Bear me," he cried, "to purge my bile
- To the old land of Hormakhu,
-
- That I may sit and curse awhile
- At all these follies fond that pen
- My quest about --- on, on to Nile!
-
- Tread tenderly, my merry men!
- For nothing is so void and vile
- As Palamede the Saracen." {72}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath clad him in a sable robe;
- Hath curses, writ by holy men
- From all the gardens of the globe.
-
- He standeth at an altar-stone;
- The blood drips from the slain babe's throat;
- His chant rolls in a magick moan;
- His head bows to the crownèd goat.
-
- His wand makes curves and spires in air;
- The smoke of incense curls and quivers;
- His eyes fix in a glass-cold stare:
- The land of Egypt rocks and shivers!
-
- "Lo! by thy Gods, O God, I vow
- To burn the authentic bones and blood
- Of curst Osiris even now
- To the dark Nile's upsurging flood!
-
- I cast thee down, oh crowned and throned!
- To black Amennti's void profane.
- Until mine anger be atoned
- Thou shalt not ever rise again." {73}
-
- With firm red lips and square black beard,
- Osiris in his strength appeared.
-
- He made the sign that saveth men
- On Palamede the Saracen.
-
- 'Hath hushed his conjuration grim:
- The curse comes back to sleep with him.
-
- 'Hath fallen himself to that profane
- Whence none might ever rise again.
-
- Dread torture racks him; all his bones
- Get voice to utter forth his groans.
-
- The very poison of his blood
- Joins in that cry's soul-shaking flood.
-
- For many a chiliad counted well
- His soul stayed in its proper Hell.
-
- Then, when Sir Palamedes came
- Back to himself, the shrine was dark.
- Cold was the incense, dead the flame;
- The slain babe lay there black and stark.
-
- What of the Beast? What of the quest?
- More blind the quest, the Beast more dim.
- Even now its laughter is suppressed,
- While his own demons mock at him! {74}
-
- O thou most desperate dupe that Hell's
- Malice can make of mortal men!
- Meddle no more with magick spells,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {75}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXIX
-
- HA! but the good knight, striding forth
- From Set's abominable shrine,
- Pursues the quest with bitter wrath,
- So that his words flow out like wine.
-
- And lo! the soul that heareth them
- Is straightway healed of suffering.
- His fame runs through the land of Khem:
- They flock, the peasant and the king.
-
- There he works many a miracle:
- The blind see, and the cripples walk;
- Lepers grow clean; sick folk grow well;
- The deaf men hear, the dumb men talk.
-
- He casts out devils with a word;
- Circleth his wand, and dead men rise.
- No such a wonder hath been heard
- Since Christ our God's sweet sacrifice.
-
- "Now, by the glad blood of our Lord!"
- Quoth Palamede, "my heart is light.
- I am the chosen harpsichord
- Whereon God playeth; the perfect knight, {76}
-
- The saint of Mary" --- there he stayed,
- For out of Memnon's singing stone
- So fierce a questing barked and brayed,
- It turned his laughter to a groan.
-
- His vow forgot, his task undone,
- His soul whipped in God's bitter school!
- (He moaned a mighty malison!)
- The perfect knight? The perfect fool!
-
- "Now, by God's wounds!" quoth he, "my strength
- Is burnt out to a pest of pains.
- Let me fling off my curse at length
- In old Chaldea's starry plains!
-
- Thou blessèd Jesus, foully nailed
- Unto the cruel Calvary tree,
- Look on my soul's poor fort assailed
- By all the hosts of devilry!
-
- Is there no medicine but death
- That shall avail me in my place,
- That I may know the Beauteous Breath
- And taste the Goodly Gift of Grace?
-
- Keep Thou yet firm this trembling leaf
- My soul, dear God Who died for men;
- Yea! for that sinner-soul the chief,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!" {77}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXX
-
- STARRED is the blackness of the sky;
- Wide is the sweep of the cold plain
- Where good Sir Palamede doth lie,
- Keen on the Beast-slot once again.
-
- All day he rode; all night he lay
- With eyes wide open to the stars,
- Seeking in many a secret way
- The key to unlock his prison bars.
-
- Beneath him, hark! the marvel sounds!
- The Beast that questeth horribly.
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Are in his belly questeth he.
-
- Beneath him? Heareth he aright?
- He leaps to'sfeet --- a wonder shews:
- Steep dips a stairway from the light
- To what obscurity God knows.
-
- Still never a tremor shakes his soul
- (God praise thee, knight of adamant!);
- He plungers to that gruesome goal
- Firm as an old bull-elephant! {78}
-
- The broad stair winds; he follows it;
- Dark is the way; the air is blind;
- Black, black the blackness of the pit,
- The light long blotted out behind!
-
- His sword sweeps out; his keen glance peers
- For some shape glimmering through the gloom:
- Naught, naught in all that void appears;
- More still, more silent than the tomb!
-
- Ye now the good knight is aware
- Of some black force, of some dread throne,
- Waiting beneath that awful stair,
- Beneath that pit of slippery stone.
-
- Yea! though he sees not anything,
- Nor hears, his subtle sense is 'ware
- That, lackeyed by the devil-king,
- The Beast --- the Questing Beast --- is there!
-
- So though his heart beats close with fear,
- Though horror grips his throat, he goes,
- Goes on to meet it, spear to spear,
- As good knight should, to face his foes.
-
- Nay! but the end is come. Black earth
- Belches that peerless Paladin
- Up from her gulphs --- untimely birth!
- --- Her horror could not hold him in! {79}
-
- White as a corpse, the hero hails
- The dawn, that night of fear still shaking
- His body. All death's doubt assails
- Him. Was it sleep or was it waking?
-
- "By God, I care not, I!" (quod he).
- "Or wake or sleep, or live or dead,
- I will pursue this mystery.
- So help me Grace of Godlihead!"
-
- Ay! with thy wasted limbs pursue
- That subtle Beast home to his den!
- Who know but thou mayst win athrough,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen? {80}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXI
-
- FROM God's sweet air Sir Palamede
- Hath come unto a demon bog,
- A city where but rats may breed
-
- In sewer-stench and fetid fog.
- Within its heart pale phantoms crawl.
- Breathless with foolish haste they jog
-
- And jostle, all for naught! They scrawl
- Vain things all night that they disown
- Ere day. They call and bawl and squall
-
- Hoarse cries; they moan, they groan. A stone
- Hath better sense! And these among
- A cabbage-headed god they own,
-
- With wandering eye and jabbering tongue.
- He, rotting in that grimy sewer
- And charnel-house of death and dung,
-
- Shrieks: "How the air is sweet and pure!
- Give me the entrails of a frog
- And I will teach thee! Lo! the lure {81}
-
- Of light! How lucent is the fog!
- How noble is my cabbage-head!
- How sweetly fragrant is the bog!
-
- "God's wounds!" (Sir Palamedes said),
- "What have I done to earn this portion?
- Must I, the clean knight born and bred,
-
- Sup with this filthy toad-abortion?"
- Nathless he stayed with him awhile,
- Lest by disdain his mention torsion
-
- Slip back, or miss the serene smile
- Should crown his quest; for (as onesaith)
- The unknown may lurk within the vile.
-
- So he who sought the Beauteous Breath,
- Desired the Goodly Gift of Grace,
- Went equal into life and death.
-
- But oh! the foulness of his face!
- Not here was anything of worth;
- He turned his back upon the place,
-
- Sought the blue sky and the green earth,
- Ay! and the lustral sea to cleanse
- That filth that stank about his girth, {82}
-
- The sores and scabs, the warts and wens,
- The nameless vermin he had gathered
- In those insufferable dens,
-
- The foul diseases he had fathered.
- So now the quest slips from his brain:
- "First (Christ!) let me be clean again!" {83}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXII
-
- "HA!" cries the knight, "may patient toil
- Of brain dissolve this cruel coil!
- In Afric they that chase the ostrich
- Clothe them with feathers, subtly foil
-
- Its vigilance, come close, then dart
- Its death upon it. Brave my heart!
- Do thus!" And so the knight disguises
- Himself, on hands and knees doth start
-
- His hunt, goes questing up and down.
- So in the fields the peasant clown
- Flies, shrieking, from the dreadful figure.
- But when he came to any town
-
- They caged him for a lunatic.
- Quod he: "Would God I had the trick!
- The beast escaped from my devices;
- I will the same. The bars are thick,
-
- But I am strong." He wrenched in vain;
- Then --- what is this? What wild, sharp strain
- Smites on the air? The prison smashes.
- Hark! 'tis the Questing Beast again! {84}
-
- Then as he rushes forth the note
- Roars from that Beast's malignant throat
- With laughter, laughter, laughter, laughter!
- The wits of Palamedes float
-
- In ecstasy of shame and rage.
- "O Thou!" exclaims the baffled sage;
- "How should I match Thee? Yet, I will so,
- Though Doomisday devour the Age.
-
- Weeping, and beating on his breast,
- Gnashing his teeth, he still confessed
- The might of the dread oath that bound him:
- He would not yet give up the quest.
-
- "Nay! while I am," quoth he, "though Hell
- Engulph me, though God mock me well,
- I follow as I sware; I follow,
- Though it be unattainable.
-
- Nay, more! Because I may not win,
- Is't worth man's work to enter in!
- The Infinite with mighty passion
- Hath caught my spirit in a gin.
-
- Come! since I may not imitate
- The Beast, at least I work and wait.
- We shall discover soon or late
- Which is the master --- I or Fate!" {85}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXIII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath passed unto the tideless sea,
- That the keen whisper of the wind
- May bring him that which never men
- Knew --- on the quest, the quest, rides he!
- So long to seek, so far to find!
-
- So weary was the knight, his limbs
- Were slack as new-slain dove's; his knees
- No longer gripped the charger rude.
- Listless, he aches; his purpose swims
- Exhausted in the oily seas
- Of laxity and lassitude.
-
- The soul subsides; its serious motion
- Still throbs; by habit, not by will.
- And all his lust to win the quest
- Is but a passive-mild devotion.
- (Ay! soon the blood shall run right chill
- --- And is not death the Lord of Rest?)
-
- There as he basks upon the cliff
- He yearns toward the Beast; his eyes
- Are moist with love; his lips are fain {86}
- To breathe fond prayers; and (marry!) if
- Man's soul were measured by his sighs
- He need not linger to attain.
-
- Nay! while the Beast squats there, above
- Him, smiling on him; as he vows
- Wonderful deeds and fruitless flowers,
- He grows so maudlin in his love
- That even the knaves of his own house
- Mock at him in their merry hours.
-
- "God's death!" raged Palamede, not wroth
- But irritated, "laugh ye so?
- Am I a jape for scullions?"
- His curse came in a flaky froth.
- He seized a club, with blow on blow
- Breaking the knave's unreverent sconce!
-
- "Thou mock the Questing Beast I chase,
- The Questing Beast I love? 'Od's wounds!"
- Then sudden from the slave there brake
- A cachinnation scant of grace,
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Were in his belly! Knight, awake!
-
- Ah! well he woke! His love an scorn
- Grapple in death-throe at his throat.
- "Lead me away" (quoth he), "my men!
- Woe, woe is me was ever born
- So blind a bat, so gross a goat,
- As Palamede the Saracen!" {87}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXIV
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath hid him in an hermit's cell
- Upon an island in the fen
-
- Of that lone land where Druids dwell.
- There came an eagle from the height
- And bade him mount. From dale to dell
-
- They sank and soared. Last to the light
- Of the great sun himself they flew,
- Piercing the borders of the night,
-
- Passing the irremeable blue.
- Far into space beyond the stars
- At last they came. And there he knew
-
- All the blind reasonable bars
- Broken, and all the emotions stilled,
- And all the stains and all the scars
-
- Left him; sop like a child he thrilled
- With utmost knowledge; all his soul,
- With perfect sense and sight fulfilled, {88}
-
- Touched the extreme, the giant goal!
- Yea! all things in that hour transcended,
- All power in his sublime control,
-
- All felt, all thought, all comprehended ---
- "How is it, then, the quest" (he saith)
- "Is not --- at last! --- achieved and ended?
-
- Why taste I not the Bounteous Breath,
- Receive the Goodly Gift of Grace?
- Now, kind king-eagle (by God's death!),
-
- Restore me to mine ancient place!
- I am advantaged nothing then!"
- Then swooped he from the Byss of Space,
-
- And set the knight amid the fen.
- "God!" quoth Sir Palamede, "that I
- Who have won nine should fail at ten!
-
- I set my all upon the die:
- There is no further trick to try.
- Call thrice accursèd above men
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!" {89}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXV
-
- "YEA!" quoth the knight, "I rede the spell.
- This Beast is the Unknowable.
- I seek in Heaven, I seek in Hell;
-
- Ever he mocks me. Yet, methinks,
- I have the riddle of the Sphinx.
- For were I keener than the lynx
-
- I should not see within my mind
- One thought that is not in its kind
- In sooth That Beast that lurks behind:
-
- And in my quest his questing seems
- The authentic echo of my dreams,
- The proper thesis of my themes!
-
- I know him? Still he answers: No!
- I know him not? Maybe --- and lo!
- He is the one sole thing I know!
-
- Nay! who knows not is different
- From him that knows. Then be content;
- Thou canst not alter the event! {90}
-
- Ah! what conclusion subtly draws
- From out this chaos of mad laws?
- An I, the effect, as I, the cause?
-
- Nay, the brain reels beneath its swell
- Of pompous thoughts. Enough to tell
- That He is known Unknowable!"
-
- Thus did that knightly Saracen
- In Cantabrig's miasmal fen
- Lecture to many learned men.
-
- So clamorous was their applause ---
- "His mind" (said they) "is free of flaws:
- The Veil of God is thin as gauze!" ---
-
- That almost they had dulled or drowned
- The laughter (in its belly bound)
- Of that dread Beast he had not found.
-
- Nathless --- although he would away ---
- They forced the lack-luck knight to stay
- And lecture many a weary day.
-
- Verily, almost he had caught
- The infection of their costive thought,
- And brought his loyal quest to naught.
-
- It was by night that Palamede
- Ran from that mildewed, mouldy breed,
- Moth-eathen dullards run to seed! {91}
-
- How weak Sir Palamedes grows!
- We hear no more of bouts and blows!
- His weapons are his ten good toes!
-
- He that was Arthur's peer, good knight
- Proven in many a foughten fight,
- Flees like a felon in the night!
-
- Ay! this thy quest is past the ken
- Of thee and of all mortal men,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {92}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXVI
-
- OFT, as Sir Palamedes went
- Upon the quest, he was aware
- Of some vast shadow subtly bent
- With his own shadow in the air.
-
- It had no shape, no voice had it
- Wherewith to daunt the eye or ear;
- Yet all the horror of the pit
- Clad it with all the arms of fear.
-
- Moreover, though he sought to scan
- Some feature, though he listened long,
- No shape of God or fiend or man,
- No whisper, groan, shriek, scream, or song
-
- Gave him to know it. Now it chanced
- One day Sir Palamedes rode
- Through a great wood whose leafage danced
- In the thin sunlight as it flowed
-
- From heaven. He halted in a glade,
- Bade his horse crop the tender grass;
- Put off his armour, softly laid
- Himself to sleep till noon should pass. {93}
-
- He woke. Before him stands and grins
- A motley hunchback. "Knave!" quoth he,
- "Hast seen the Beast? The quest that wins
- The loftiest prize of chivalry?"
-
- Sir Knight," he answers, "hast thou seen
- Aught of that Beast? How knowest thou, then,
- That it is ever or hath been,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen?"
-
- Sir Palamede was well awake.
- "Nay! I deliberate deep and long,
- Yet find no answer fit to make
- To thee. The weak beats down the strong;
-
- The fool's cap shames the helm. But thou!
- I know thee for the shade that haunts
- My way, sets shame upon my brow,
- My purpose dims, my courage daunts.
-
- Then, since the thinker must be dumb,
- At least the knight may knightly act:
- The wisest monk in Christendom
- May have his skull broke by a fact."
-
- With that, as a snake strikes, his sword
- Leapt burning to the burning blue;
- And fell, one swift, assured award,
- Stabbing that hunchback through and through. {94}
-
- Straight he dissolved, a voiceless shade.
- "Or scotched or slain," the knight said then,
- "What odds? Keep bright and sharp thy blade,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!" {95}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXVII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE is sick to death!
- The staring eyen, the haggard face!
- God grant to him the Beauteous breath!
- god send the Goodly Gift of Grace!
-
- There is a white cave by the sea
- Wherein the knight is hid away.
- Just ere the night falls, spieth he
- The sun's last shaft flicker astray.
-
- All day is dark. There, there he mourns
- His wasted years, his purpose faint.
- A million whips, a million scorns
- Make the knight flinch, and stain the saint.
-
- For now! what hath he left? He feeds
- On limpets and wild roots. What odds?
- There is no need a mortal needs
- Who hath loosed man's hope to grasp at God's!
-
- How his head swims! At night what stirs
- Above the faint wash of the tide,
- And rare sea-birds whose winging whirrs
- About the cliffs? Now good betide! {96}
-
- God save thee, woeful Palamede!
- The questing of the Beast is loud
- Within thy ear. By Goddes reed,
- thou has won the tilt from all the crowd!
-
- Within thy proper bowels it sounds
- Mighty and musical at need,
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Quested within thee, Palamede!
-
- Now, then, he grasps the desperate truth
- He hath toiled these many years to see,
- Hath wasted strength, hath wasted youth --0-
- He was the Beast; the Beast was he!
-
- He rises from the cave of death,
- Runs to the sea with shining face
- To know at last the Bounteous Breath,
- To taste the Goodly Gift of Grace.
-
- Ah! Palamede, thou has mistook!
- Thou art the butt of all confusion!
- Not to be written in my book
- Is this most drastic disillusion!
-
- so weak and ill was he, I doubt
- if he might hear the royal feast
- Of laughter that came rolling out
- Afar from that elusive Beast. {97}
-
- Yet, those white lips were snapped, like steel
- Upon the ankles of a slave!
- That body broken on the wheel
- Of time suppressed the groan it gave!
-
- "Not there, not here, my quest!" he cried.
- "Not thus! Not now! do how and when
- Matter? I am, and I abide,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!" {98}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXVIII
-
- SIR PALAMEDE of great renown
- rode through the land upon the quest,
- His sword loose and his vizor down,
- His buckler braced, his lance in rest.
-
- Now, then, God save thee, Palamede!
- Who courseth yonder on the field?
- Those silver arms, that sable steed,
- The sun and rose upon his shield?
-
- The strange knight spurs to him. disdain
- Curls that proud lip as he uplifts
- His vizor. "Come, an end! In vain,
- Sir Fox, thy thousand turns and shifts!"
-
- Sir Palamede was white with fear.
- Lord Christ! those features were his own;
- His own that voice so icy clear
- That cuts him, cuts him to the bone.
-
- "False knight! false knight!" the stranger cried.
- "Thou bastard dog, Sir Palamede?
- I am the good knight fain to ride
- Upon the Questing Beast at need. {99}
-
- Thief of my arms, my crest, my quest,
- My name, now meetest thou thy shame.
- See, with this whip I lash thee back,
- Back to the kennel whence there came
-
- So false a hound." "Good knight, in sooth,"
- Answered Sir Palamede, "not I
- Presume to asset the idlest truth;
- And here, by this good ear and eye,
-
- I grant thou art Sir Palamede.
- But --- try the first and final test
- If thou or I be he. Take heed!"
- He backed his horse, covered his breast,
-
- Drove his spurs home, and rode upon
- That knight. His lance-head fairly struck
- The barred strength of his morion,
- And rolled the stranger in the muck.
-
- "Now, by God's death!" quoth Palamede,
- His sword at work, "I will not leave
- So much of thee as God might feed
- His sparrows with. As I believe
-
- The sweet Christ's mercy shall avail,
- so will I not have aught for thee;
- Since every bone of thee may rail
- Against me, crying treachery. {100}
-
- Thou hast lied. I am the chosen knight
- To slay the Questing beast for men;
- I am the loyal son of light,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen!
-
- Thou wast the subtlest fiend that yet
- hath crossed my path. to say thee nay
- I dare not, but my sword is wet
- With thy knave's blood, and with thy clay
-
- fouled! Dost thou think to resurrect?
- O sweet Lord Christ that savest men!
- From all such fiends do thou protect
- Me, Palamede the Saracen!" {101}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XXXIX
-
- GREEN and Grecian is the valley,
- Shepherd lads and shepherd lasses
- Dancing in a ring
- Merrily and musically.
- How their happiness surpasses
- The mere thrill of spring!
-
- "Come" (they cry), "Sir Knight, put by
- All that weight of shining armour!
- Here's a posy, here's a garland, there's a chain of daisies!
- Here's a charmer! There's a charmer!
- Praise the God that crazes men, the God that raises
- All our lives toe ecstasy!"
-
- Sir Palamedes was too wise
- To mock their gentle wooing;
- He smiles into their sparkling eyes
- While they his armour are undoing.
- "For who" (quoth he) "may say that this
- Is not the mystery I miss?"
-
- Soon he is gathered in the dance,
- And smothered in the flowers. {102}
- A boy's laugh and a maiden's glance
- Are sweet as paramours!
- Stay! is thee naught some wanton wight
- May do to excite the glamoured knight?
-
- Yea! the song takes a sea-wild swell;
- The dance moves in a mystic web;
- Strange lights abound and terrible;
- The life that flowed is out at ebb.
-
- The lights are gone; the night is come;
- The lads and lasses sink, awaiting
- Some climax --- oh, how tense and dumb
- The expectant hush intoxicating!
- Hush! the heart's beat! Across the moor
- Some dreadful god rides fast, be sure!
-
- the listening Palamede bites through
- his thin white lips --- what hoofs are those?
- Are they the Quest? How still and blue
- The sky is! Hush --- God knows --- God knows!
-
- Then on a sudden in the midst of them
- is a swart god, from hoof to girdle a goat,
- Upon his brow the twelve-star diadem
- And the King's Collar fastened on this throat.
-
- Thrill upon thrill courseth through Palamede.
- Life, live, pure life is bubbling in his blood.
- All youth comes back, all strength, all you indeed
- Flaming within that throbbing spirit-flood! {103
- Yet was his heart immeasurably sad,
- For that no questing in his ear he had.
-
- Nay! he saw all. He saw the Curse
- That wrapped in ruin the World primaeval.
- He saw the unborn Universe,
- And all its gods coeval.
- He saw, and was, all things at once
- In Him that is; he was the stars,
- The moons, the meteors, the suns,
- All in one net of triune bars;
- Inextricably one, inevitably one,
- Immeasurable, immutable, immense
- Beyond all the wonder that his soul had won
- By sense, in spite of sense, and beyond sense.
- "Praise God!" quoth Palamede, "by this
- I attain the uttermost of bliss. ...
-
- God's wounds! but that I never sought.
- The Questing Beast I sware to attain
- And all this miracle is naught.
- Off on my travels once again!
-
- I keep my youth regained to foil
- Old Time that took me in his toil.
- I keep my strength regained to chase
- The beast that mocks me now as then
- Dear Christ! I pray Thee of Thy grace
- Take pity on the forlorn case
- Of Palamede the Saracen!" {104}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XL
-
- SIR PALAMEDE the Saracen
- Hath see the All; his mind is set
- To pass beyond that great Amen.
-
- Far hath he wandered; still to fret
- His soul against that Soul. He breaches
- The rhododendron forest-net,
-
- His body bloody with its leeches.
- Sternly he travelleth the crest
- Of a great mountain, far that reaches
-
- Toward the King-snows; the rains molest
- The knight, white wastes updriven of wind
- In sheets, in torrents, fiend-possessed,
-
- Up from the steaming plains of Ind.
- They cut his flesh, they chill his bones:
- Yet he feels naught; his mind is pinned
-
- To that one point where all the thrones
- Join to one lion-head of rock,
- Towering above all crests and cones {105}
-
- That crouch like jackals. Stress and shock
- Move Palamede no more. Like fate
- He moves with silent speed. They flock,
-
- The Gods, to watch him. Now abate
- His pulses; he threads through the vale,
- And turns him to the mighty gate,
-
- The glacier. Oh, the flowers that scale
- those sun-kissed heights! The snows that crown
- The quarts ravines! The clouds that veil
-
- The awful slopes! Dear God! look down
- And see this petty man move on.
- Relentless as Thine own renown,
-
- Careless of praise or orison,
- Simply determined. Wilt thou launch
- (this knight's presumptuous head upon)
-
- The devastating avalancehe?
- He knows too much, and cares too little!
- His wound is more than Death can staunch.
-
- He can avoid, though by one tittle,
- Thy surest shaft! And now the knight,
- Breasting the crags, may laugh and whittle
-
- Away the demon-club whose might
- Threatened him. Now he leaves the spur;
- And eager, with a boy's delight, {106}
-
- Treads the impending glacier.
- Now, now he strikes the steep black ice
- That leads to the last neck. By Her
-
- That bore the lord, by what device
- May he pass there? Yet still he moves,
- Ardent and steady, as if the price
-
- Of death were less than life approves,
- As if on eagles' wings he mounted,
- Or as on angels' wings --- or love's!
-
- So, all the journey he discounted,
- Holding the goal. Supreme he stood
- Upon the summit; dreams uncounted,
-
- Worlds of sublime beatitude!
- He passed beyond. The All he hath touched,
- And dropped to vile desuetude.
-
- What lay beyond? What star unsmutched
- By being? His poor fingers fumble,
- And all the Naught their ardour clutched,
-
- Like all the rest, begins to crumble.
- Where is the Beast? His bliss exceeded
- All that bards sing of or priests mumble;
-
- No man, no God, hath known what he did.
- Only this baulked him --- that he lacked
- Exactly the one thing he needed. {107}
-
- "Faugh!" cried the knight. "Thought, word, and act
- Confirm me. I have proved the quest
- Impossible. I break the pact.
-
- Back to the gilded halls, confessed
- A recreant! Achieved or not,
- This task hath earned a foison --- rest.
-
- In Caerlon and Camelot
- Let me embrace my fellow-men!
- To buss the wenches, pass the pot,
- Is now the enviable lot
- Of Palamede the Saracen!" {108}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- XLI
-
- SIR ARTHUR sits again at feast
- Within the high and holy hall
- Of Camelot. From West to East
-
- The Table Round hath burst the thrall
- Of Paynimrie. The goodliest gree
- Sits on the gay knights, one and all;
-
- Till Arthur: "Of your chivalry,
- Knights, let us drink the happiness
- Of the one knight we lack" (quoth he);
-
- "For surely in some sore distress
- May be Sir Palamede." Then they
- Rose as one man in glad liesse
-
- To honour that great health. "god's way
- Is not as man's" (quoth Lancelot).
- "Yet, may god send him back this day,
-
- His quest achieve, to Camelot!"
- "Amen!" they cried, and raised the bowl;
- When --- the wind rose, a blast as hot {109}
-
- As the simoom, and forth did roll
- A sudden thunder. Still they stood.
- Then came a bugle-blast. The soul
-
- Of each knight stirred. With vigour rude,
- The blast tore down the tapestry
- That hid the door. All ashen-hued
-
- The knights laid hand to sword. But he
- (Sir Palamedes) in the gap
- Was found --- God knoweth --- bitterly
-
- Weeping. Cried Arthur: "Strange the hap!
- My knight, my dearest knight, my friend!
- What gift had Fortune in her lap
-
- Like thee? Em,brace me!" "Rather end
- Your garments, if you love me, sire!"
- (Quod he). "I am come unto the end.
-
- All mine intent and my desire,
- My quest, mine oath --- all, all is done.
- Burn them with me in fatal fire!
-
- Fir I have failed. All ways, each one
- I strove in, mocked me. If I quailed
- Or shirked, God knows. I have not won:
-
- That and no more I know. I failed."
- King Arthur fell a-weeping. Then
- Merlin uprose, his face unveiled; {110}
-
- Thrice cried he piteously then
- Upon our Lord. Then shook this head
- Sir Palamede the Saracen,
-
- As knowing nothing might bestead,
- When lo! there rose a monster moan,
- A hugeous cry, a questing dread,
-
- As if (God's death!) there coursed alone
- The Beast, within whose belly sounds
- That marvellous music monotone
-
- As if a thirty couple hounds
- Quested within him. Now, by Christ
- And by His pitiful five wounds! ---
-
- Even as a lover to his tryst,
- That Beast came questing in the hall,
- One flame of gold and amethyst,
-
- Bodily seen then of them all.
- then came he to Sir Palamede,
- Nestling to him, as sweet and small
-
- As a young babe clings at its need
- To the white bosom of its mother,
- As Christ clung to the gibbet-reed!
-
- Then every knight turned to his brother,
- Sobbing and signing for great gladness;
- And, as they looked on one another, {111}
-
- Surely there stole a subtle madness
- Into their veins, more strong than death:
- For all the roots of sin and sadness
-
- Were plucked. As a flower perisheth,
- So all sin died. And in that place
- All they did know the Beauteous Breath
-
- And taste the Goodly Gift of Grace.
- Then fell the night. Above the baying
- Of the great Beast, that was the bass
-
- To all the harps of Heaven a-playing,
- There came a solemn voice (not one
- But was upon his knees in praying
-
- And glorifying God). The Son
- Of God Himself --- men thought --- spoke then.
- "Arise! brave soldier, thou hast won
-
- The quest not given to mortal men.
- Arise! Sir Palamede Adept,
- Christian, and no more Saracen!
-
- On wake or sleeping, wise, inept,
- Still thou didst seek. Those foolish ways
- On which thy folly stumbled, leapt,
-
- All led to the one goal. Now praise
- Thy Lord hat He hat brought thee through
- To win the quest!" The good knight lays {112}
-
- His hand upon the Beast. Then blew
- Each angel on his trumpet, then
- All Heaven resounded that it knew
-
- Sir Palamede the Saracen
- Was master! Through the domes of death,
- Through all the mighty realms of men
-
- And spirits breathed the Beauteous Breath:
- They taste the Goodly Gift of Grace.
- --- Now 'tis the chronicler that saith:
-
- Our Saviour grant in little space
- That also I, even I, be blest
- Thus, though so evil is my case ---
-
- Let them that read my rime attest
- The same sweet unction in my pen ---
- That writes in pure blood of my breast;
-
- For that I figure unto men
- The story of my proper quest
- As thine, first Eastern in the West,
- Sir Palamede the Saracen! {113}
-
-
-
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- aware of its existence; the former having based part of his description on
- the sage Rosicrucian, Mejnour, on that of Abra-Melin, while the account of
- the so-called Observatory of Sir Philip Derval in the "Strange Story" was, to
- some extent, copied from that of the Magical Oratory and Terrace given in
- the present work. There are also other interesting points too numerous to
- be given here in detail. It is felt therefore that by its publication a
- service is rendered to lovers of rare and curious Books, and to Students of
- Occultism, by placing within their reach a magical work of so much
- importance, and one so interestingly associated with the respective authors
- of "Zanoni" and of the "Dogma and Ritual of Transcendental Magie." The Magical
- Squares or combination of letters, placed in a certain manner, are said to
- possess a peculiar species of automatic intelligent vitality, apart from any
- of the methods given for their use; and students are recommended to make no
- use of these whatever unless this higher Divine Knowledge is approached in a
- frame of mind worthy of it.
- TRANSCENDENTAL MAGIC: Its Doctrine and Ritual. By ELIPHAS LÉVI (a complete
- Translation of "Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie"), with a Biographical
- Preface by ARTHUR E. WAITE, author of "Devil Worship in France," etc. etc.
- Portrait of the Author, and all the original engravings. 8vo, 406 pp.,
- cloth, 1896. Published 15s Offered at 7s. 6p.
- The Pillars of the Temple, Triangle of Solomon, The Tetragram, The
- Pentagram, Magical Equilibrium, The Fiery Sword, Realisation, Imitation, The
- Kabbalah, The Magic Chain, Necromancy, Transmutations, Black Magic,
- Bewitchments, Astrology, Charms and Philtres, The Stone of the Philosophers,
- The Universal Medicine, Divination, The Triangle of Pantacles, The
- Conjuration of the Four, The Blazing Pentagram,. Medium and Mediator, The
- Septenary of Talismans, A Warning to the Imprudent, The Ceremonial of
- Initiates, The Key of Occultism, The Sabbath of the Sorcerers, Witchcraft
- and Spells, The Writing of the Stars, Philtres and Magnetism, The Mastery of
- the Sun, The Thaumaturge, The Science of the Prophets, The Book of Hermes,
- etc.
- "Occult Philosophy seems to have been the Nurse, or godmother of all
- intellectual forces, the key of all divine obscurities, and the absolute
- queen of society in those ages when it was reserved exclusively for the
- education of priests and of kings. It reigned in Persia with Magi, who at
- length perished, as perish all masters of the world, because they abused
- their power; it endowed India with the most wonderful traditions, and with
- an incredible wealth of poesy, grace, and terror in its emblems; it
- civilized Greece to the music of Orpheus; it concealed the principles of all
- the sciences and of all human intellectual progress in the bold calculations
- of Pythagoras; fable abounded in its miracles, and history, attempting to
- appreciate this unknown power, became confused with fable; it shook or
- strengthened empires by its oracles, caused tyrants to tremble on their
- thrones, and governed all minds, either by curiosity, or by fear.'
-
-
- FRANK HOLLINGS, 7 GREAT TURNSTILE, HOLBORN (near the Inns of Court Hotel).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PHOTOGRAPHS.
-
- To be had of THE EQUINOX. Price Ten Shillings each. Neatly framed in
- gold. The original panel Photographs:
-
- THE STUDENT. (A reproduction faces "Aha!" in No. III.)
-
- THE INTERPRETER. (Reproduced on p. 279 of No. IV.)
-
- THE GUARDIAN OF THE FLAME.
-
- THE GODDESS.
-
- No student of the mysteries should be without one at least of these
- remarkable and beautiful studies. Their presence serves to remind the
- possessor of the constant quest and to stimulate to more persistent Effort.
-
-
-
-
- Essay of Prentice Mulford
- ______________________________
- " "Crown 8vo. Crimson cloth extra, "3"s." 6"d. net per volume."
-
- THE GIFT OF THE SPIRIT. A Selection from the Essays of PRENTICE MULFORD.
- Reprinted from the "White Cross Library." With an Introduction by ARTHUR
- EDWARD WAITE. Third Edition.
- CONTENTS. ___ God in the Trees; or the Infinite Mind in Nature. The God in
- Yourself. The Doctor within. Mental Medicine. Faith; or, Being Led of the
- Spirit. The Material Mind "v." The Spiritual Mind. What are Spiritual Gifts?
- Healthy and Unhealthy Spirit Communion. Spells; or, the Law of Change.
- Immortality in the Flesh. Regeneration; or, Being Born again. The Process of
- Re-Embodiment. Re-Embodiment Universal in Nature. The mystery of Sleep.
- Where you Travel when you Sleep. Prayer in all ages. The Church of Silent
- Demand.
- "The Essays of Prentice Mulford embody a peculiar philosophy, and represent
- a peculiar phase of insight into the mystery which surrounds man. The essays
- were the work, as the insight was the gift, of a man who owed nothing to
- books, perhaps not much to what is ordinarily meant by observation, and
- everything or nearly everything to reflection nourished by contact with
- nature." ___ "A. E. Waite, in the Introduction."
- Under the title "Your Forces and How to Use Them," the Essays ofPrentice
- Mulford have obtained the greatest popularity in America.
- THE GIFT OF UNDERSTANDING. A further Selection from the Works of PRENTICE
- MULFORD. Reprinted from the "White Cross Library." With an Introduction
- by ARTHUR EDWARD WAITE.
- CONTENTS. ___ Introduction. Force, and How to Get it. The Source of your
- Strength. About Economising our Forces. The Law of Marriage. Marriage and
- Resurrection. Your Two Memories. The Drawing Power of Mind. Consider the
- Lilies. Cultivate Repose. Look Forward. The Necessity of Riches. Love
- Thyself. What is Justice? How Thoughts are born. Positive and Negative
- Thought. The Art of Forgetting. The Attraction of Aspiration. God's
- Commands are Man's Demands.
- "This further selection has been prepared in consequence of the great
- popularity attained by the first series of Prentice Mulford's Essays,
- published under the title of "the Gift of the Spirit."
- ESSAYS OF PRENTICE MULFORD. THIRD SERIES.
- CONTENTS. ___ the Law of Success. How to Keep Your Strength. The Art of
- Study. Profit and Loss in Associates. The Slavery of Fear. Some Laws of
- Health and Beauty. Mental Interference. Co-operation of Thought. The
- Religion of Dress. Use your Riches. The Healing and Renewing force of
- Spring. The Practical Use of Reverie. Self-Teaching: or the Art of Learning
- How to Learn. How to Push your Business. The Religion of the Drama. The
- Uses of Sickness. Who are our Relations? The Use of a Room. Husband and
- Wife.
- The third and fourth series of Prentice Mulford's Essays have been prepared
- in response to a large demand for the complete works of the "White Cross
- Library" at a more reasonable price than that of the American edition in six
- volumes.
- ESSAYS OF PRENTICE MULFORD. FOURTH SERIES. Completing the entire set of
- Essays published in America under the title of "Your Forces and How to
- Use Them."
- CONTENTS. ___ The Use of Sunday. A Cure for Alcoholic Intemperance through
- the Law of Demand. Grace Before Meat; or the Science of Eating. what we need
- Strength for. One Way to Cultivate Courage. Some Practical Mental Recipes.
- The Use and Necessity of Recreation. Mental Tyranny: or, How We Mesmerise
- Each Other. thought Currents. Uses of Diversion. "Lies breed Disease;
- Truths being Health." Woman's Real Power. Good and Ill Effects of Thought.
- Buried Talents. The Power of Honesty. Confession. The Accession of New
- Thought.
- These four volumes constitute the cheapest and best edition of the Essays
- of Prentice Mulford published in the English language. Special care has been
- taken to eliminate the errors and mistakes with which the American edition
- abounds.
- ______________________
-
-
-
- A. COLIN LUNN,
-
- Cigar Importer and Cigarette Merchant.
-
-
- Sole Agent for Loewe & Co.,s Celebrated Straight Grain Briar Pipes.
-
- YEVIDYEH CIGARETTES, No. 1 A. ___ "A CONNOISSEUR'S CIGARETTE." These are
- manufactured from the finest selected growths of 1908 crop, and are of
- exceptional quality. They can be inhaled without causing any irritation of
- the throat.
-
- sole Manufacturer: A. COLIN LUNN, Cambridge.
-
-
-
- MESSRS. LOWE AND CO.,
-
- beg to announce that they have been entrusted for twelve years past
- with the preparation of the
- OILS, PERFUMES, UNGUENTS, ESSENCES, INCENSES,
- and other chemical products useful to members of all the lesser grades
- of the A.'. A.'.
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
- MR. GEORGE RAFFLOVICH'S charming volume of Essays and Sketches
- entitled
-
- ON THE LOOSE:
-
- PLANETARY JOURNEYS AND EARTHLY SKETCHES.
- " ""A new popular edition."
- " "Crown "8"vo. Pp. "164.
- May be obtained through THE EQUINOX.
-
-
-
- " "The Photograph in this number of"
- """The Equinox" is by the"
-
- DOVER STREET STUDIOS,
-
-
-
- KONX OM PAX
-
- THE MOST REMARKABLE TREATISE ON THE MYSTIC PATH EVER WRITTEN
-
- Contains an Introduction and Four Essays; the first an account of the progress
- of the soul to perfect illumination, under the guise of a charming fairy tale;
- The second, an Essay on Truth, under the guise of a Christmas pantomime;
- The third, an Essay on Magical Ethics, under the guise of the story of a
- Chinese philosopher;
- The fourth, a Treatise on many Magical Subjects of the profoundest
- importance, under the guise of a symposium, interspersed with beautiful
- lyrics.
- No serious student can afford to be without this delightful volume. The
- second edition is printed on hand-made paper, and bound in white buckram, with
- cover-design in gold.
- PRICE TEN SHILLINGS
- WALTER SCOTT PUBLISHING CO., LTD., and through "THE EQUINOX"
- * *
- Some Press Opinions
-
- "Dr. M. D. EDER in "The New Age"
- "Yours also is the Reincarnation and the Life, O laughing lion that is to
- be!
- "Here you have distilled for our delight the inner spirit of the Tulip's
- form, the sweet secret mystery of the Rose's perfume: you have set them free
- from all that is material whilst preserving all that is sensual. 'So also the
- old mystics were right who saw in every phenomenon a dog-faced demon apt only
- to seduce the soul from the sacred mystery.' Yes, but the phenomenon shall it
- not be as another sacred mystery; the force of attraction still to be
- interpreted in terms of God and the Psyche? We shall reward you by
- befoulment, by cant, but misunderstanding, and by understanding. This to you
- who wear the Phrygian cap, not as symbol of Liberty, O ribald ones, but of
- sacrifice and victory, of Inmost Enlightenment, of the soul's deliverance from
- the fetters of the very soul itself --- fear not; you are not 'replacing truth
- of thought by mere expertness of mechanical skill.'
- "You who hold more skill and more power than your great English
- predecessor, Robertus de Fluctibus, you have not feared to reveal 'the Arcana
- which are in he Adytum of God-nourished Silence' to those who, abandoning
- nothing, will sail in the company of the Brethren of the Rosy Cross towards
- the Limbus, that outer, unknown world encircling so many a universe."
- ":John Bull," in the course of a long review by Mr. HERBERT VIVIAN"
- "The author is evidently that rare combination of genius, a humorist and a
- philosopher. For pages he will bewilder the mind with abstruse esoteric
- pronouncements, and then, all of a sudden, he will reduce his readers to
- hysterics with some surprisingly quaint conceit. I was unlucky to begin
- reading him at breakfast and I was moved to so much laughter that I watered my
- bread with my tears and barely escaped a convulsion."
- "The Times"
- "The Light wherein he writes is the .V.X., of that which, first mastering
- and then transcending the reason, illumines all the darkness cause by the
- interference of the opposite waves of thought. ... It is one of the most
- suggestive definitions of KONX --- the LVX of the Brethren of the Rosy Cross
- --- that it transcends all the possible pairs of opposites. Nor does this
- sound nonsensical to those who are acquainted with that LVX. But to those who
- do not it must remain as obscure and ridiculous as spherical trigonometry to
- the inhabitants of Flatland."
- "The Literary Guide"
- "He is a lofty idealist. He sings like a lark at the gates of heaven.
- 'Konx Om Pax' is the apotheosis of extravagance. the last word in
- eccentricity. A prettily told fairy-story 'for babes and sucklings' has
- 'explanatory notes in Hebrew and Latin for the wise and prudent --- --- which
- notes, as far as we can see, explain nothing --- together with a weird preface
- in scraps of twelve or fifteen languages. The best poetry in the book is
- contained in the last section --- 'The Stone of the Philosophers.' Here is
- some fine work."
-
-
-
- A. CROWLEY'S WORKS
-
- The volumes here listed are all of definite occult and mystical interest
- and importance.
- "The trade may obtain them from"
- "The Equinox," 124 Victoria Street, S. W. Tel.: 3210 Victoria;
- and Messrs. Simpklin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co.,
- 23 Paternoster Row, E.C.
- "The Public may obtain them from"
- "The Equinox," 124 Victoria Street, S. W.
- Mr. Elkin Matthews, Vigo Street, W.
- The Walter Scott Publishing Co., Paternoster Square, E.C.
- Mr. F., Hollings, Grat Trunstile, Holborn.
- And through all Booksellers.
- ACELDAMA. Crown 8vo, 29 pp., £2 2s. net. Of this rare pamplet less than 10
- copies remain. It is Mr. Crowley's earliest and in some ways most striking
- mystical work.
- JEPHTHAH AND OTHER MYSTERIES, LYRICAL AND DRAMATIC. Demy 8vo, boards, pp.
- xxii. + 223, 7s. 6d. net.
- SONGS OF THE SPIRIT. Pp. x. + 109. A new edition. 3s. 6d. net.
- These two volumes breathe the pure semi-conscious aspiration of the soul,
- and express the first glimmerings of the light.
- THE SOUL OF OSIRIS. Medium 8vo, pp. ix. + 129, 5s. net.
- A collection of lyrics, illustrating the progress of the soul from corporeal
- to celestial beatitude.
- TANNHAUSER. Demy 4to, pp. 142, 15s. net.
- The progress of the soul in dramatic form.
- BERASHITH. 4to, china paper, pp. 24, 5s. net. Only a few copies remain. An
- illuminating essay on the universe, reconciling the conflicting systems of
- religion.
- THE GOD-EATER. Crown 4to, pp. 32, 2s. 6d. net.
- A striking dramatic study of the origin of religions.
- THE SWORD OF SONG. Post 4to, pp. ix + 194, printed in red and black,
- decorative wrapper, 20s. net.
- this is the author's first most brilliant attempt to base the truths of
- mysticism on the truths of scepticism. It contains also an enlarged amended
- edition of "Berashith," and an Essay showing the striking parallels and
- identities between the doctrines of Modern Science and those of Buddhism.
- GARGOYLES. Pott 8vo, pp. vi. + 113, 5s. net.
- ORACLES. Demy 8vo, pp. viii. + 176, 5s. net.
- Some of Mr. Crowley's finest mystical lyrics are in these collections.
- KNOX OM PAX. See advt.
- Collected Works (Travellers' Edition). Extra crown 8vo, India paper, 3 vols.
- in one, pp. 808 + Appendices. Vellum, green ties, with protraits, £3 3s.;
- white buckram, without portraits, £2 2s. This edition contains "Qabalistic
- Dogma," "Time," "The Excluded Middle," "Eleusis," and other matter of the
- highest occult importance which are not printed elsewhere.
- AMBERGRIS. Medium 8vo, pp. 200, 3s 6d. (Elkin Mathews.)
- A selection of lyrics, containing some of great mystical beauty.