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-
- THE EQUINOX Vol. I. No. V 2nd part
-
- June 20, 1990 e.v. key entry by Rusty Sporer and
- Bill Heidrick, T.G. of O.T.O. --- needs further proof reading
- (c) O.T.O. disk 2 of 2
-
- 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
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LIBER XXX AERUM
-
- VEL SAECVLI
-
- SVB FIGVRA
-
- CCCCXVIII
-
- BEING OF THE ANGELS OF THE 30 AETHYRS
-
- THE VISION AND THE VOICE
-
-
-
-
- A.'. A.'. Publication in Class A B.
- D.D.S. 7° = 4 ° Praemonstrator
- O.S.V. 6° = 5 ° Imperator
- N.S.F. 5° = 6 ° Cancellarius
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE VISION AND THE VOICE
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE THIRTIETH OR INMOST AIRE OR AETHYR,
- WHICH IS CALLED TEX
-
- I AM in a vast crystal cube in the form of the Great God Harpocrates. This
- cube is surrounded by a sphere. About me are four archangels in black robes,
- their wings and armour lined out in white.
- In the North is a book on whose back and front are A.M.B.Z. in Enochian
- characters.
- Within it is written:
- I AM, the surrounding of the four.
- Lift up your heads, O Houses of Eternity: for my Father goeth forth to
- judge the World. One Light, let it become a thousand, and one sword ten
- thousand, that no man hide him from my Father's eye in the Day of Judgment of
- my God. Let the Gods hide themselves: let the Angels be troubled and flee
- away: for the Eye of My Father is open, and the Book of the Aeons is fallen.
- Arise! Arise! Arise! Let the Light of the Sight of Time be extinguished:
- let the Darkness cover all things: for my Father goeth forth to seek a spouse
- to replace her who is fallen and defiled.
- Seal the book with the seals of the Stars Concealed: for {3} the Rivers
- have rushed together and the Name HB:Heh HB:Vau HB:Heh HB:Yod is broken in a thousand
- pieces (against the Cubic Stone).
- Tremble ye, O Pillars of the Universe, for Eternity is in travail of a
- Terrible Child; she shall bring forth an universe of Darkness, whence shall
- leap forth a spark that shall put his father to flight.
- The Obelisks are broken; the stars have rushed together: the Light hath
- plunged into the Abyss: the Heavens are mixed with Hell.
- My Father shall not hear their Noise: His ears are closed: His eyes are
- covered with the clouds of Night.
- The End! the End! the End: For the Eye of Shiva He hath opened: the
- Universe is naked before Him: for the Aeon of Saturn leaneth toward the Bosom
- of Death.
-
- {Illustration on page 4 described:
-
- This is an isosceles triangle with height about 7 times the base. It
- extends with base on a true vertical from the left. A line extends vertically
- upward from the apex, equal to the length of the base. A trefoliate of three
- isosceles triangles of base slightly smaller than the first triangle and sides
- equal to the first triangle is created at the upper tip of the line. The tree
- component triangles of the terfolate meet the upper tip of the line with their
- apices --- one vertically and two to right and left.}
-
- The Angel of the East hath a book of red written in letters of Blue
- A.B.F.M.A. in Enochian. The Book grows before my eyes and filleth the Whole
- Heaven.
- Within: "It is Written, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord Thy God."
- I see above the Book a multitude of white-robed Ones from whom droppeth a
- great rain of Blood; but above them is a Golden Sun, having an eye, whence a
- great Light.
-
-
- I turned me to the South: and read therein:
- Seal up the Book! Speak not that which thou seest and {4} reveal it unto
- none: for the ear is not framed that shall hear it: nor the tongue that can
- speak it!
- O Lord God, blessed, blessed, blessed be Thou for ever!
- Thy Shadow is as great Light.
- Thy Name is as the Breath of Love across all Worlds.
-
- {Illustration on page 5 approximated:
-
- ████ ████████████
- ████ ████████████
- ████ ████
- ████ ████
- ████████████████████
- ████████████████████
- ████ ████
- ████ ████
- ████████████ ████
- ████████████ ████
- }
-
- (A vast Svastika is shewn unto me behind the Angel with the Book.)
- Rend your garments, O ye clouds! Uncover yourselves! for the Love of My
- Son!
- Who are they that trouble thee?
- Who are they that slew thee?
- O Light! Come thou, who art joined with me to bruise the Dragon's head.
- We, who are wedded, and the Earth perceiveth it not!
- O that Our Bed were seen of Men, that they might rejoice in My Fertility:
- that My Sister might partake of My Great Light.
- O Light of God, when wilt thou find the heart of man --- write not! I
- would not that men know the Sorrow of my Heart, Amen!
-
- I turned me to the West, and the Archangel bore a flaming Book, on which
- was written AN in Enochian. Within was drawn a fiery scorpion, yet cold
- withal.
- Until the Book of the East be opened!
- Until the hour sound! {5}
- Until the Voice vibrate!
- Until it pierce my Depth;
- Look not on High!
- Look not Beneath!
- For thou wilt find a life which is as Death: or a Death which should be
- infinite.
- For Thou art submitted to the Four: Five thou shalt find, but Seven is lone
- and far.
- O Lord God, let Thy Spirit hither unto me!
- For I am lost in the night of infinite pain: no hope: no God: no
- resurrection: no end: I fall: I fear.
- O Saviour of the World, bruise Thou my Head with Thy foot to save the
- world, that once again I touch Him whom I slew, that in my death I feel the
- radiance and the heat of the moving of Thy Robes!
- Let us alone! What have we to do with Thee, Thou Jesus of Nazareth?
- Go! Go!
- If I keep silence --- Or if I speak each word is anguish without hope.
-
- And I heard the Aethyr cry aloud "Return! Return! Return! For the work
- is ended; and the Book is shut; and let the glory be to God the Blessed for
- ever in the Aeons, Amen." Thus far is the voice of TEX and no more.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE TWENTY AND NINTH AIRE OR AETHYR,
- WHICH IS CALLED RII
-
- The sky appears covered with stars of gold; the background is of green.
- But the impression is also of darkness. {6}
- An immense eagle-angel is before me. His wings seem to hide all the
- Heaven.
- He cried aloud saying: The Voice of the Lord upon the Waters: the Terror
- of God upon Mankind. The voice of the Lord maketh the Skies to tremble: the
- Stars are troubled: the Aires fall. The First Voice Speaketh and saith:
- Cursed, cursed be the Earth, for her iniquity is great. Oh Lord! Let Thy
- Mercy be lost in the great Deep! Open thine eyes of Flame and Light, O God,
- upon the wicked! Lighten thine Eyes! The Clamour of Thy Voice, let it smite
- down the Mountains!
- Let us not see it! Cover we our eyes, lest we see the End of Man.
- Close we our ears, lest we hear the cry of Woman.
- Let none speak of it: let none write it: I, I am troubled, my eyes are
- moist with dews of terror: surely the Bitterness of Death is past.
-
- And I turned me to the South and lo! a great lion as wounded and perplexed.
- He cried: I have conquered! Let the Sons of Earth keep silence; for my
- Name is become as That of Death!
- When will men learn the Mysteries of Creation?
- How much more those of the Dissolution (and the Pang of Fire)?
-
- I turned me to the West and there was a great Bull; White with horns of
- White and Black and Gold. His mouth was scarlet and his eyes as Sapphire
- stones. With a great sword he shore the skies asunder, and amid the silver
- flashes of the steel grew lightnings and deep clouds of Indigo. {7}
- He spake: It is finished! My mother hath unveiled herself!
- My sister hath violated herself! The life of things hath disclosed its
- Mystery.
- The work of the Moon is done! Motion is ended for ever!
- Clipped are the eagle's wings: but my Shoulders have not lost their
- strength.
- I heard a Great Voice from above crying: Thou liest! For the Volatile
- hath indeed fixed itself; but it hath arisen above thy sight. The World is
- desert: but the Abodes of the House of my Father are peopled; and His Throne
- is crusted over with white Brilliant Stars, a lustre of bright gems.
- In the North is a Man upon a Great Horse, having a Scourge and Balances in
- his hand (or a long spear glitters at his back or in his hand). He is clothed
- in black velvet and his face is stern and terrible.
- He spake saying: I have judged! It is the end: the gate of the beginning.
- Look in the Beneath and thou shalt see a new world!
-
- I looked and saw a great abyss and a dark funnel of whirling waters or
- fixed airs, wherein were cities and monsters and trees and atoms and mountains
- and little flames (being souls) and all the material of an universe.
- And all are sucked down one by one, as necessity hath ordained. For below
- is a glittering jewelled globe of gold and azure, set in a World of Stars.
- And there came a Voice from the Abyss, saying: "Thou seest the Current of
- Destiny! Canst thou change one atom in {8} its path? I am Destiny. Dost
- thou think to control me? for who can move my course?"
- And there falleth a thunderbolt therein: a catastrophe of explosion: and
- all is shattered. And I saw above me a Vast Arm reach down, dark and
- terrible, and a voice cried: I AM ETERNITY.
- And a great mingled cry arose: "No! no! no! All is changed; all is
- confounded; naught is ordered: the white is stained with blood: the black is
- kissed of the Christ! Return! Return! It is a new chaos that thou findest
- here: chaos for thee: for us it is the skeleton of a New Truth!"
-
- I said: Tell me this truth: for I have conjured ye by the Mighty Names of
- God, the which ye cannot but obey.
- The voice said:
- Light is consumed as a child in the Womb of its Mother to develop itself
- anew. But pain and sorrow infinite, and darkness are invoked. For this child
- riseth up within his Mother and doth crucify himself within her bosom. He
- extendeth his arms in the arms of his Mother and the Light becometh fivefold1.
- Lux in Luce,
- Christus in Cruce;
- Deo Duce
- Sempiterno.
- And be the glory for ever and ever unto the Most High God, Amen!
-
- Then I returned within my body, giving glory unto the Lord of Light and of
- the Darkness. In Saecula Saeculorum. Amen!
-
- (On composing myself to sleep, I was shewn an extremely brilliant HB:Dalet in
- the Character of the Passing of the River, in an egg of white light. And I
- take this as the best of Omens. The letter was extremely vivid and indeed
- apparently physical. Almost a Dhyana.)
-
- "November 17, 1900, Die."
-
-
- A NOTE
- Concerning the thirty Aethyrs:
- The Visions of the 29th and 30th Aethyrs were given to me in Mexico in
- August, 1900, and I am now (23.11.9) trying to get the rest. It is to be
- remarked that the last three aethyrs have ten angels attributed to them, and
- they therefore represent the ten Sephiroth. Yet these ten form but one, a
- Malkuth-pendant to the next three, and so on, each set being, as it were,
- absorbed in the higher. The last set consists, therefore, of the first three
- aethyrs with the remaining twenty-seven as their Malkuth. And the letters of
- the first three aethyrs are the key-sigils of the most exalted interpretation
- of the Sephiroth.
- I is therefore Kether;
- L, Chokmah and Binah;
- A, Chesed;
- N, Geburah; {10}
- R, Tiphereth;
- Z, Netzach;
- N, Hod;
- O, Jesod.
- The geomantic correspondences of the Enochian alphabet form a sublime
- commentary.
- Note that the total angels of the aethyrs are 91, the numeration of Amen.
-
-
- The Cry of the 28th Aethyr, Which is Called BAG
-
- There cometh an Angel into the stone with opalescent shining garments like
- a wheel of fire on every side of him, and in his hand is a long flail of
- 1 The LVX Cross hidden in the Svastika is probably the Arcanum
- here connoted.
- Svastika itself adds to 231 = 0 + 1 + 2 + ... + 21, the 21
- Keys. The cubical Svastika regarded as composed of this LVX
- Cross and the arms has a total of 78 Faces --- Tarot and Mezla.
- scarlet lightning; his face is black, and his eyes white without any pupil or
- iris. The face is very terrible indeed to look upon. Now in front of him is
- a wheel, with many spokes, and many tyres; it is like a fence in front of him.
- And he cries: O man, who art thou that wouldst penetrate the Mystery? for
- it is hidden unto the End of Time.
- And I answer him: Time is not, save in the darkness of Her womb by whom
- evil came.
- And now the wheel breaks away, and I see him as he is. His garment is
- black beneath the opal veils, but it is lined with white, and he has the
- shining belly of a fish, and enormous wings of black and white feathers, and
- innumerable little legs and claws like a centipede, and a long tail like a
- scorpion. The breasts are human, but they are all scored with blood; and he
- cries: O thou who hast broken down the veil, knowest thou not that who cometh
- where I am must be scarred by many sorrows? {11}
- And I answer him: Sorrow is not, save in the darkness of the womb of Her by
- whom came evil.
- I pierce the Mystery of his breast, and therein is a jewel. It is a
- sapphire as great as an ostrich egg, and thereon is graven this sigil:
-
- {Illustration on page 12 described:
-
- This is in the form of two "U" shapes, very elongated in the risers. The
- one to the right is lower than the first, and its left riser extends 2/3's of
- the way up inside the center of the one to the left. The left "U" turns back
- down to the far left, ending 1/5th the way down in a tiny circle. The right
- bends abruptly horizontally left across the other and also ends there in a
- tiny circle.}
-
- But there is also much writing on the stone, very minute characters carved.
- I cannot read them. He points with his flail to the sapphire, which is now
- outside him and bigger than himself; and he cries: Hail! warden of the Gates
- of Eternity who knowest not thy right hand from thy left; for in the aeon of
- my Father is a god with clasped hands wherein he holdeth the universe,
- crushing it into the dust that ye call stars.
- Hail unto thee who knowest not thy right eye from thy left; for in the aeon
- of my Father there is but one light.
- Hail unto thee who knowest not thy right nostril from thy left; for in the
- aeon of my Father there is neither life nor death.
- Hail unto thee who knowest not thy right ear from thy left; for in the aeon
- of my Father there is neither sound nor silence.
- Whoso hath power to break open this sapphire stone shall find therein four
- elephants having tusks of mother-of-pearl, and upon whose backs are castles,
- those castles which ye call the watch-towers of the Universe.
- Let me dwell in peace within the breast of the Angel that is warden of the
- aethyr. Let not the shame of my Mother be {12} unveiled. Let not her be put
- to shame that lieth among the lilies that are beyond the stars.
- O man, that must ever be opening, when wilt thou learn to seal up the
- mysteries of the creation? to fold thyself over thyself as a rose in the
- embrace of night? But thou must play the wanton to the sun, and the wind must
- tear thy petals from thee, and the bee must rob thee of thy honey, and thou
- must fall into the dusk of things. Amen and Amen.
- Verily the light is hidden, therefore he who hideth himself is like unto
- the light; but thou openest thyself; thou art like unto the darkness that
- bindeth the belly of the great goddess2.
-
- OLAHO VIRUDEN MAHORELA ZODIREDA! ON PIREDA EXENTASER; ARBA PIRE GAH GAHA
- GAHAL GAHALANA VO ABRA NA GAHA VELUCORSAPAX.
- 2 In the light of the cry of LOE, this passage seems to mean
- precisely the
- opposite of its apparent meaning.
-
- And the voice of the aeon cried: Return, return, return! the time
- sickeneth, and the space gapeth, and the voice of him that is, was and shall
- be crowned rattles in the throat of the mighty dragon of eld. Thou canst not
- pass by me, except thou have the mystery of the word of the abyss.
- Now the angel putteth back the sapphire stone into his breast; and I spake
- unto him and said, I will fight with thee and overcome thee, except thou
- expound unto me the word of the abyss.
- Now he makes as if to fight with me. (It is very horrible, all the
- tentacles moving and the flail flashing, and the fierce {13} eyeless face,
- strained and swollen. And with the Magic sword I pierce through his armour to
- his breast. He fell back, saying: Each of these my scars was thus made, for I
- am the warden of the aethyr. And he would have said more; but I cut him
- short, saying: expound the word of the Abyss. And he said: Discipline is
- sorrowful and ploughing is laborious and age is weariness.
- Thou shalt be vexed by dispersion.
- But now, if the sun arise, fold thou thine arms; then shall God smite thee
- into a pillar of salt.
- Look not so deeply into words and letters; for this Mystery hath been
- hidden by the Alchemists. Compose the sevenfold into a fourfold regimen; and
- when thou hast understood thou mayest make symbols; but by playing child's
- games with symbols thou shalt never understand. Thou hast the signs; thou
- hast the words; but there are many things that are not in my power, who am but
- the warden of the 28th Aethyr.
- Now my name thou shalt obtain in this wise. Of the three angels of the
- Aethyr, thou shalt write the names from right to left and from left to right
- and from right to left, and these are the holy letters:
- The first 1, the fifth 2, the sixth 3, the eleventh 4, the seventh 5, the
- twelfth 6, the seventeenth 7.
- Thus hast thou my name who am above these three, but the angels of the 30th
- Aethyr are indeed four, and they have none above them; wherefore dispersion
- and disorder.
- Now cometh from every side at once a voice, terribly great, crying: Close
- the veil; the great blasphemy hath been uttered; the face of my Mother is
- scarred by the nails of the devil. Shut the book, destroy the breaker of the
- seal! {14}
- And I answered: Had he not been destroyed he had not come hither, for I am
- not save in the darkness in the womb of Her by whom came evil into the world.
- And this darkness swallows everything up, and the angel is gone from the
- stone; and there is no light therein, save only the light of the Rose and of
- the Cross.
-
- AUMALE, ALGERIA.
- "November" 23, 1909, between 8 and 9 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 27TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ZAA
-
- There is an angel with rainbow wings, and his dress is green with silver, a
- green veil over silver armour. Flames of many-coloured fire dart from him in
- all directions. It is a woman of some thirty years old, and she has the moon
- for a crest, and the moon is blazoned on her heart, and her sandals are curved
- silver, like the moon.
- And she cries: Lonely am I and cold in the wilderness of the stars. For I
- am the queen of all them that dwell in Heaven, and the queen of all them that
- are pure upon earth, and the queen of all the sorcerers of hell.
- I am the daughter of Nuit, the lady of the stars. And I am the Bride of
- them that are vowed unto loneliness. And I am the mother of the Dog Cerberus.
- One person am I, and three gods.
- And thou who hast blasphemed me shalt suffer knowing me. For I am cold as
- thou art cold, and burn with thy fire. Oh, when shall the war of the Aires
- and the elements be accomplished?
- Radiant are these falchions of my brothers, invisibly about me, but the
- might of the aethyrs beneath my feet beareth me {15} down. And they avail not
- to sever the Kamailos. There is one in green armour, with green eyes, whose
- sword is of vegetable fire. That shall avail me. My son is he, --- and how
- shall I bear him that have not known man?
- All this time intolerable rays are shooting forth to beat me back or
- destroy me; but I am encased in an egg of blue-violet, and my form is the form
- of a man with the head of a golden hawk. While I have been observing this,
- the goddess has kept up a continuous wail, like the baying of a thousand
- hounds; and now her voice is deep and guttural and hoarse, and she breathes
- very rapidly words that I cannot hear. I can hear some of them now.
-
- UNTU LA LA ULULA UMUNA TOFA LAMA LE LI NA AHR IMA TAHARA ELULA ETFOMA UNUNA
- ARPETI ULU ULU ULU MARABAN ULULU MAHATA ULU ULU LAMASTANA.
-
- And then her voice rises to a shriek, and there is a cauldron boiling in
- front of her; and the flames under the cauldron are like unto zinc flames, and
- in the cauldron is the Rose, the Rose of 49 petals, seething in it. Over the
- cauldron she has arched her rainbow wings; and her face is bent over the
- cauldron, and she is blowing opalescent silvery rings on to the Rose; and each
- ring as it touches the water bursts into flame, and the Rose takes new
- colours.
- And now she lifts her head, and raises her hands to heaven, and cries: O
- Mother, wilt thou never have compassion on the children of earth? Was it not
- enough that the Rose should be red with the blood of thine heart, and that its
- petals should be by 7 and by 7? {16}
- She is weeping, weeping. And the tears grow and fill the whole stone with
- moons. I can see nothing and hear nothing for the tears, though she keeps on
- praying. "Take of these pearls, treasure them in thine heart. Is not the
- Kingdom of the Abyss accurst?" She points downward to the cauldron; and now
- in it there is the head of a most cruel dragon, black and corrupted. I watch,
- and watch; and nothing happens.
- And now the dragon rises out of the cauldron, very long and slim (like
- Japanese Dragons, but infinitely more terrible), and he blots out the whole
- sphere of the stone.
- Then suddenly all is gone, and there is nothing in the stone save brilliant
- white light and flecks like sparks of golden fire; and there is a ringing, as
- if bells were being used for anvils. And there is a perfume which I cannot
- describe; it is like nothing that one can describe, but the suggestion is like
- lignum aloes. And now all these things are there at once in the same place
- and time.
- Now a veil of olive and silver is drawn over the stone, only I hear the
- voice of the angel receding, very sweet and faint and sorrowful, saying: Far
- off and lonely in the secret stone is the unknown, and interpenetrated is the
- knowledge with the will and the understanding. I am alone. I am lost,
- because I am all and in all; and my veil is woven of the green earth and the
- web of stars. I love; and I am denied, for I have denied myself. Give me
- those hands, put them against my heart. Is it not cold? Sink, sink, the
- abyss of time remains. It is not possible that one should come to ZAA. Give
- me thy face. Let me kiss it with my cold kisses. Ah! Ah! Ah! Fall back
- from me. The word, the word of the aeon is MAKHASHANAH. And these words
- shalt thou say backwards: {17} ARARNAY OBOLO MAHARNA TUTULU NOM LAHARA EN
- NEDIEZO LO SAD FONUSA SOBANA ARANA BINUF LA LA LA ARPAZNA UOHULU when thou
- wilt call my burden unto appearance, for I who am the Virgin goddess am the
- pregnant goddess, and I have cast down my burden even unto the borders of the
- universe. They that blaspheme me are stoned, and my veil is fallen about me
- even unto the end of time.
- Now there arises a great raging of thousands and thousands of mighty
- warriors flashing through the aethyr so thickly that nothing is to be seen but
- their swords, which are like blue-gray plumes. And the noise is confused,
- thousands of battle-cries harmonizing to a roar, like the roar of a monstrous
- river in flood. And all the stone is dull, dull gray. The life is gone from
- it.
- There is no more to see.
-
- SIDI AISSA, ALGERIA.
- "November" 24, 1909, 8-9 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 26TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED DES
-
- There is a very bright pentagram: and now the stone is gone, and the whole
- heaven is black, and the blackness is the blackness of a mighty angel. And
- though he is black (his face and his wings and his robe and his armour are all
- black), yet is he so bright that I cannot look upon him. And he cries: O ye
- spears and vials of poison and sharp swords and whirling thunderbolts that are
- about the corners of the earth, girded with wrath and justice, know ye that
- His name is Righteousness in Beauty? Burnt out are your eyes, for that ye
- have seen me in my majesty. And broken are the drum-heads of {18} your ears,
- because my name is as two mountains of fornication, the breasts of a strange
- woman; and my Father is not in them.
- Lo! the pools of fire and torment mingled with sulphur! Many are their
- colours, and their colour is as molten gold, when all is said. Is not He one,
- one and alone, in whom the brightness of your countenance is as 1,728 petals
- of fire.
- Also he spake the curse, folding his wings across and crying: Is not the
- son the enemy of his father? And hath not the daughter stolen the warmth of
- the bed of her mother? therefore is the great curse irrevocable. Therefore
- there is neither wisdom nor understanding nor knowledge in this house, that
- hangeth upon the edge of hell. Thou art not 4 but 2, O thou blasphemy spoken
- against 1!
- Therefore whoso worshippeth thee is accursed. He shall be brayed in a
- mortar and the powder thereof cast to the winds, that the birds of the air may
- eat thereof and die; and he shall be dissolved in strong acid and the elixir
- poured into the sea, that the fishes of the sea may breathe thereof and die.
- And he shall be mingled with dung and spread upon the earth, so that the herbs
- of the earth may feed thereof and die; and he shall be burnt utterly with
- fire, and the ashes thereof shall calcine the children of flame, that even in
- hell may be found an overflowing lamentation.
- And now on the breast of the Angel is a golden egg between the blackness of
- the wings, and that egg grows and grows all over the aethyr. And it breaks,
- and within there is a golden eagle.
- And he cries: Woe! woe! woe! Yea, woe unto the world! For there is no
- sin, and there is no salvation. My plumes are {19} like waves of gold upon
- the sea. My eyes are brighter than the sun. My tongue is swifter than the
- lightning.
- Yet am I hemmed in by the armies of night, singing, singing prases unto Him
- that is smitten by the thunderbolt of the abyss. Is not the sky clear behind
- the sun? These clouds that burn thee up, these rays that scorch the brains of
- men with blindness; these are heralds before my face of the dissolution and
- the night.
- Ye are all blinded by my glory; and though ye treasure in your heart the
- sacred word that is the last lever of the key to the little door beyond the
- abyss, yet ye gloss and comment thereupon; for the light itself is but
- illusion. Truth itself is but illusion. Yea, these be the great illusions
- beyond life and space and time.
- Let thy lips blister with my words! Are they not meteors in thy brain?
- Back, back from the face of the accursed one, who am I; back into the night of
- my father, into the silence; for all that ye deem right is left, forward is
- backward, upward is downward.
- I am the great god adored of the holy ones. Yet am I the accursed one,
- child of the elements and not their father.
- O my mother! wilt thou not have pity upon me? Wilt thou not shield me?
- For I am naked, I am manifest, I am profane. O my father! wilt not thou
- withdraw me? I am extended, I am double, I am profane.
- Woe, woe unto me! These are they that hear not prayer. It is I that have
- heard all prayer alway, and there is none to answer "me." Woe unto me! Woe
- unto me! Accursed am I unto the aeons!
- All this time this brilliant eagle-headed god has been {20} attacked,
- seemingly, by invisible people, for he is wounded now and again, here and
- there; little streams of fresh blood come out over the feathers of his breast.
- And the smoke of the blood is gradually filling the Aethyr with a crimson
- veil. There is a scroll over the top, saying: "Ecclesia abhorret a sanguine;"
- and there is another scroll below it in a language of which I do not know the
- sounds. The meaning is, Not as they have understood.
- The blood is thicker and darker now, and it is becoming clotted and black,
- so that everything is blotted out; because it coagulates, coagulates. And
- then at the top there steals a dawn of pure night-blue, --- Oh, the stars, the
- stars in it deeply set! --- and drives the blood down; so that all round the
- top of the oval gradually dawns the figure of our Lady Nuit, and beneath her
- is the flaming winged disk, and below the altar of Ra-Hoor-Khuit, even as it
- is upon the Stele of Revealing. But below is the supine figure of Seb, into
- whom is concentrated all that clotted blood.
- And there comes a voice: It is the dawn of the aeon. The aeons of cursing
- are passed away. Force and fire, strength and sight, these are for the
- servants of the Star and the Snake.
- And now I seem to be lying in the desert, exhausted.
-
- THE DESERT, NEAR SIDI AISSA.
- "November" 25, 1909. 1.10 - 2 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 25TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED VTI
-
- There is nothing in the stone but the pale gold of the Rosy Cross.
- Now there comes an Angel with bright wings, that is the Angel of the 25th
- Aire. And all the aire is a dark olive about {21} him, like an alexandrite
- stone. He bears a pitcher or amphora. And now there comes another Angel upon
- a white horse, and yet again another Angel upon a black bull. And now there
- comes a lion and swallows the two latter angels up. The first angel goes to
- the lion and closes his mouth. And behind them are arrayed a great company of
- Angels with silver spears, like a forest. And the Angel says: Blow, all ye
- trumpets, for I will loose my hands from the mouth of the lion, and his
- roaring shall enkindle the worlds.
- Then the trumpets blow, and the wind rises and whistles terribly. It is a
- blue wind with silver specks; and it blows through the whole Aethyr. But
- through it one perceives the lion, which has become as a raging flame.
- And he roareth in an unknown tongue. But this is the interpretation
- thereof: Let the stars be burnt up in the fire of my nostrils! Let all the
- gods and the archangels and the angels and the spirits that are on the earth,
- and above the earth, and below the earth, that are in all the heavens and in
- all the hells, let them be as motes dancing in the beam of mine eye!
- I am he that swalloweth up death and victory. I have slain the crownèd
- goat, and drunk up the great sea. Like the ash of dried leaves the worlds are
- blown before me. Thou hast passed by me, and thou hast not known me. Woe
- unto thee, that I have not devoured thee altogether!
- On my head is the crown, 419 rays far-darting. And my body is the body of
- the Snake, and my soul is the soul of the Crowned Child. Though an Angel in
- white robes leadeth me, who shall ride upon me but the Woman of Abominations?
- Who is the Beast? Am not I one more than he? In {22} his hand is a sword
- that is a book. In his hand is a spear that is a cup of fornication. Upon
- his mouth is set the great and terrible seal. And he hath the secret of V.
- His ten horns spring from five points, and his eight heads are as the
- charioteer of the West. Thus doth the fire of the sun temper the spear of
- Mars, and thus shall he be worshipped, as the warrior lord of the sun. Yet in
- him is the woman that devoureth with her water all the fire of God.
- Alas! my lord, thou art joined with him that knoweth not these things.
- When shall the day come that men shall flock to this my gate, and fall into
- my furious throat, a whirlpool of fire? This is hell unquenchable, and all
- they shall be utterly consumed therein. Therefore is that asbestos
- unconsumable made pure.
- Each of my teeth is a letter of the reverberating name. My tongue is a
- pillar of fire, and from the glands of my mouth arise four pillars of water.
- TAOTZEM is the name by which I am blasphemed. My name thou shalt not know,
- lest thou pronounce it and pass by.
- And now the Angel comes forward again and closes his mouth.
- All this time heavy blows have been raining upon me from invisible angels,
- so that I am weighed down as with a burden greater than the world. I am
- altogether crushed. Great millstones are hurled out of heaven upon me. I am
- trying to crawl to the lion, and the ground is covered with sharp knives. I
- cut myself at every inch.
- And the voice comes: Why art thou there who art here? Hast thou not the
- sign of the number, and the seal of the name, and the ring of the eye? Thou
- wilt not. {23}
- And I answered and said: I am a creature of earth, and ye would have me
- swim.
- And the voice said: Thy fear is known; thine ignorance is known; thy
- weakness is known; but thou art nothing in this matter. Shall the grain which
- is cast into the earth by the hand of the sower debate within itself, saying,
- am I oats or barley? Bond-slave of the curse, we give nothing, we take all.
- Be thou content. That which thou art, thou art. Be content.
- And now the lion passeth over through the Aethyr with the crowned beast
- upon his back, and the tail of the lion goes on instead of stopping, and on
- each hair of the tail is something or other --- sometimes a little house,
- sometimes a planet, at other times a town. Then there is a great plain with
- soldiers fighting upon it, and an enormously high mountain carved into a
- thousand temples, and more houses and fields and trees, and great cities with
- wonderful buildings in them, statues and columns and public buildings
- generally. This goes on and on and on and on and on and on and on all on the
- hairs of this lion's tail.
- And then there is the tuft of his tail, which is like a comet, but the head
- is a new universe, and each hair streaming away from it is a Milky Way.
- And then there is a pale stern figure, enormous, enormous, bigger than all
- that universe is, in silver armour, with a sword and a pair of balances. That
- is only vague. All has gone into stone-gray, blank.
- There is nothing.
-
- AIN EL HAJEL.
- "November" 25, 1909. 8.40-9.40 p.m. {24}
-
- (There were two voices in all this Cry, one behind the other --- or, one
- was the speech, and the other the meaning. And the voice that was the speech
- was simply a roaring, one tremendous noise, like a mixture of thunder and
- water-falls and wild beasts and bands and artillery. And yet it was
- articulate, though I cannot tell you what a single word was. But the meaning
- of the voice --- the second voice --- was quite silent, and put the ideas
- directly into the brain of the Seer, as if by touch. It is not certain
- whether the millstones and the sword-strokes that rained upon him were not
- these very sounds and ideas.)
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 24TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED NIA
-
- An angel comes forward into the stone like a warrior clad in chain-armour.
- Upon his head are plumes of gray, spread out like the fan of a peacock. About
- his feet a great army of scorpions and dogs, lions, elephants, and many other
- wild beasts. He stretches forth his arms to heaven and cries; In the
- crackling of the lightning, in the rolling of the thunder, in the clashing of
- the swords and the hurling of the arrows: be thy name exalted!
- Streams of fire come out of the heavens, a pale brilliant blue, like
- plumes. And they gather themselves and settle upon his lips. His lips are
- redder than roses, and the blue plumes gather themselves into a blue rose, and
- from beneath the petals of the rose come brightly coloured humming-birds, and
- dew falls from the rose-honey-coloured dew. I stand in the shower of it.
- And a voice proceeds from the rose: Come away! Our chariot is drawn by
- doves. Of mother-of-pearl and ivory is {25} our chariot and the reins thereof
- are the heart-strings of men. Every moment that we fly shall cover an aeon.
- And every place on which we rest shall be a young universe rejoicing in its
- strength; the meadows thereof shall be covered with flowers. There shall we
- rest but a night, and in the morning we shall flee away, comforted.
- Now, to myself, I have imagined the chariot of which the voice spake, and I
- looked to see who was with me in the chariot. It was an Angel of golden hair
- and golden skin, whose eyes were bluer than the sea, whose mouth was redder
- than the fire, whose breath was ambrosial air. Finer than a spider's web were
- her robes. And they were of the seven colours.
- All this I saw; and then the hidden voice went on low and sweet: Come away!
- The price of the journey is little, though its name be death. Thou shalt die
- to all that thou fearest and hopest and hatest and lovest and thinkest and
- art. Yea! thou shalt die, even as thou must die. For all that thou hast,
- thou hast not; all that thou art, thou art not!
-
- NENNI OFEKUFA ANANAEL LAIADA I MAELPEREJI NONUKA AFAFA ADAREPEHETA PEREGI
- ALADI NIISA NIISA LAPE OL ZODIR IDOIAN.
-
- And I said: ODO KIKALE QAA. Why art thou hidden from me, whom I hear?
- And the voice answered and said unto me: Hearing is of the spirit alone.
- Thou art a partaker of the five-fold mystery. Thou must roll up the ten
- divine ones like a scroll, and fashion therefrom a star. Yet must thou blot
- out the star in the heart of Hadit. {26}
- For the blood of my heart is like a warm bath of myrrh and ambergris; bathe
- thyself therein. The blood of my heart is all gathered upon my lips if I kiss
- thee, burns in my fingertips if I caress thee, burns in my womb when thou art
- caught up into my bed. Mighty are the stars; mighty is the sun; mighty is the
- moon; mighty is the voice of the ever-living one, and the echoes of his
- whisper are the thunders of the dissolution of the worlds. But my silence is
- mightier than they. Close up the worlds like unto a weary house; close up the
- book of the recorder, and let the veil swallow up the shrine, for I am arisen,
- O my fair one, and there is no more need of all these things.
- If once I put thee apart from me, it was the joy of play. Is not the ebb
- and flowing of the tide a music of the sea? Come, let us mount unto Nuit our
- mother and be lost! Let being be emptied in the infinite abyss! For by me
- only shalt thou mount; thou hast none other wings than mine.
- All this while the Rose has been shooting out blue flames, coruscating like
- snakes through the whole Aire. And the snakes have taken shapes of sentences.
- One of them is: "Sub umbra alarum tuarum Adonai quies et felicitas." And
- another: "Summum bonum, vera sapientia, magnanima vita, sub noctis nocte sunt."
- And another is: "Vera medicina est vinum mortis." And another is: "Libertas"
- "evangelii per jugum legis ob gloriam dei intactam ad vacuum nequaquam tendit."
- And another is: "Sub aquâ lex terrarum." And another is: "Mens edax rerum, cor"
- "umbra rerum; intelligentia via summa." And another is: "Summa via lucis: per"
- "Hephaestum undas regas." And another is: "Vir introit tumulum regis, invenit
- oleum lucis.
- And all round the whole of these things are the letters {27} TARO; but the
- light is so dreadful that I cannot read the words. I am going to try again.
- All these serpents are collected together very thickly at the edges of the
- wheel, because there are an innumerable number of sentences. One is: "tres"
- "annos regimen oraculi." And another is: "terribilis ardet rex"
- HB:Nun-final HB:Vau HB:Yod HB:Lamed HB:Ayin . And another is: "Ter amb (amp?)" (can't see it) "rosam"
- "oleo (?)." And another is: "Tribus annulis regna olisbon." And the marvel is
- that with those four letters you can get a complete set of rules for doing
- everything, both for white magic and black.
- And now I see the heart of the rose again. I see the face of him that is
- the heart of the rose, and in the glory of that face I am ended. My eyes are
- fixed upon his eyes; my being is sucked up through my eyes into those eyes.
- And I see through those eyes, and lo! the universe, like whirling sparks of
- gold, blown like a tempest. I seem to swell out again into him. My
- consciousness fills the whole Aethyr. I hear the cry NIA, ringing again and
- again from within me. It sounds like infinite music, and behind the sound is
- the meaning of the Aethyr. Again there are no words.
- All this time the whirling sparks of gold go on, and they are like blue
- sky, with a lot of rather thin white clouds in it, outside. And now I see
- mountains round, far blue mountains, purple mountains. And in the midst is a
- little green dell of moss, which is all sparkling with dew that drips from the
- rose. And I am lying on that moss with my face upwards, drinking, drinking,
- drinking, drinking, drinking of the dew.
- I cannot describe to you the joy and the exhaustion of everything that was,
- and the energy of everything that is, for it is only a corpse that is lying on
- the moss. I am the soul of the Aethyr. {28}
- Now it reverberates like the swords of archangels, clashing upon the armour
- of the damned; and there seem to be the blacksmiths of heaven beating the
- steel of the worlds upon the anvils of hell, to make a roof to the Aethyr.
- For if the great work were accomplished and all the Aethyrs were caught up
- into one, then would the vision fail; then would the voice be still.
- Now all is gone from the stone.
-
- AIN EL HAJEL.
- "November" 26, 1909. 2-3.25 p.m.
-
-
- The Cry of the 23rd Aethyr, Which is Called TOR.
-
- In the brightness of the stone are three lights, brighter than all, which
- revolve ceaselessly. And now there is a spider's web of silver covering the
- whole of the stone. Behind the spider's web is a star of twelve rays; and
- behind that again, a black bull, furiously pawing up the ground. The flames
- from his mouth increase and whirl, and he cries: Behold the mystery of toil,
- O thou who art taken in the toils of mystery. For I who trample the earth
- thereby make whirlpools in the air; be comforted, therefore, for though I be
- black, in the roof of my mouth is the sign of the Beetle. Bent are the backs
- of my brethren, yet shall they gore the lion with their horns. Have I not the
- wings of the eagle, and the face of the man?
- And now he is turned into one of those winged Assyrian bull-men.
- And he sayeth: The spade of the husbandman is the sceptre of the king.
- All the heavens beneath me, they serve me. They are my fields and my gardens
- and my orchards and my pastures. {29}
- Glory be unto thee, who didst set thy feet in the North; whose forehead is
- pierced with the sharp points of the diamonds in thy crown; whose heart is
- pierced with the spear of thine own fecundity.
- Thou art an egg of blackness, and a worm of poison. But thou hast
- formulated thy father, and made fertile thy mother.
- Thou art the basilisk whose gaze turns men to stone, and the cockatrice at
- the breast of an harlot that giveth death for milk. Thou art the asp that has
- stolen into the cradle of the babe. Glory unto thee, who art twined about the
- world as the vine that clingeth to the bare body of a bacchanal.
- Also, though I be planted so firmly upon the earth, yet is my blood wine
- and my breath fire of madness. With these wings, though they be but little, I
- lift myself above the crown of the yod, and being without fins I yet swim in
- the inviolate fountain.
- I disport myself in the ruins of Eden, even as Leviathan in the false sea,
- being whole as the rose at the crown of the cross. Come ye unto me, my
- children, and be glad. At the end of labour is the power of labour. And in
- my stability is concentrated eternal change.
- For the whirlings of the universe are but the course of the blood in my
- heart. And the unspeakable variety thereof is but my divers hairs, and
- plumes, and gems in my tall crown. The change which ye lament is the life of
- my rejoicing, and the sorrow that blackeneth your hearts is the myriad deaths
- by which I am renewed. And the instability which maketh ye to fear, is the
- little waverings of balance by which I am assured.
- And now the veil of silver tissue-stuff closes over him, and above that, a
- purple veil, and above that, a golden veil, {30} so that now the whole stone
- is like a thick mat of woven gold wires; and there come forth, one from each
- side of the stone, two women, and grasp each other by both hands, and kiss,
- and melt into one another; and melt away.3 And now the veils open again, the
- gold parts, and the purple parts, and the silver parts, and there is a crowned
- eagle, also like the Assyrian eagles.
- And he cries: All my strength and stability are turned to the use of
- flight. For though my wings are of fine gold, yet my heart is the heart of a
- scorpion.
- Glory unto thee, who being born in a stable didst make thee mirth of the
- filth thereof, who didst suck in iniquity from the breast of thy mother the
- harlot; who didst flood with iniquity the bodies of thy concubines.
- Thou didst lie in the filth of the streets with the dogs; thou wast tumbled
- and shameless and wanton in a place where four roads meet. There wast thou
- defiled, and there wast thou slain, and there wast thou left to rot. The
- charred stake was thrust through thy bowels, and thy parts were cut off and
- thrust into thy mouth for derision.
- All my unity is dissolved; I live in the tips of my feathers. That which I
- think to be myself is but infinite number. Glory unto the Rose and the Cross,
- for the Cross is extended unto the uttermost end beyond space and time and
- being and knowledge and delight! Glory unto the Rose that is the minute point
- of its center! Even as we say; glory unto the Rose that is Nuit the
- circumference of all, and glory unto the Cross that is the heart of the Rose!
- {31}
- Therefore do I cry aloud, and my scream is the treble as the bellowing of
- the bull is the bass. Peace in the highest and peace in the lowest and peace
- in the midst thereof! Peace in the eight quarters, peace in the ten points of
- the Pentagram! Peace in the twelve rays of the seal of Solomon, and peace in
- the four and thirty whirlings of the hammer of Thor! Behold! I blaze upon
- thee. (The eagle is gone; it is only a flaming Rosy Cross of white
- brilliance.) I catch thee up into rapture. FALUTLI, FALUTLI!
- ... O it dies, it dies.
-
- BOU SAADA.
- 3 These are intended to show symbolically that the Bull is the
- same as the Eagle.
- "November" 28, 1909. 9.30-10.15 A.M.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 22ND AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED LIN
-
- There comes first into the stone the mysterious table of forty-nine
- squares. It is surrounded by an innumerable company of angels; these angels
- are of all kinds, --- some brilliant and flashing as gods, down to elemental
- creatures. The light comes and goes on the tablet; and now it is steady, and
- I perceive that each letter of the tablet is composed of forty-nine other
- letters, in a language which looks like that of Honorius; but when I would
- read, the letter that I look at becomes indistinct at once.
- And now there comes an Angel, to hide the tablet with his mighty wing.
- This Angel has all the colours mingled in his dress; his head is proud and
- beautiful; his headdress is of silver and red and blue and gold and black,
- like cascades of water, and in his left hand he has a pan-pipe of the seven
- holy metals, upon which he plays. I cannot tell you how wonderful {32} the
- music is, but it is so wonderful that one only lives in one's ears; one cannot
- see anything any more.
- Now he stops playing and moves with his finger in the air. His finger
- leaves a trail of fire of every colour, so that the whole Aire is become like
- a web of mingled lights. But through it all drops dew.
- (I can't describe these things at all. Dew doesn't represent what I mean
- in the least. For instance, these drops of dew are enormous globes, shining
- like the full moon, only perfectly transparent, as well as perfectly
- luminous.)
- And now he shows the tablet again, and he says: As there are 49 letters in
- the tablet, so are there 49 kinds of cosmos in every thought of God. And
- there are 49 interpretations of every cosmos, and each interpretation is
- manifested in 49 ways. Thus also are the calls 49, but to each call there are
- 49 visions. And each vision is composed of 49 elements, except in the 10th
- Aethyr, that is accursèd, and that hath 42.
- All this while the dewdrops have turned into cascades of gold finer than
- the eyelashes of a little child. And though the extent of the Aethyr is so
- enormous, one perceives each hair separately, as well as the whole thing at
- once. And now there is a mighty concourse of angels rushing toward me from
- every side, and they melt upon the surface of the egg in which I am standing
- in the form of the god Kneph, so that the surface of the egg is all one
- dazzling blaze of liquid light.
- Now I move up against the tablet, --- I cannot tell you with what rapture.
- And all the names of God, that are not known even to the angels, clothe me
- about.
- All the seven senses are transmuted into one sense, and that sense is
- dissolved in itself ... (Here occurs Samadhi.) {33} ... Let me speak, O God;
- let me declare it ... all. It is useless; my heart faints, my breath stops.
- There is no link between me and P . . . I withdraw myself. I see the table
- again.
- (He was behind the table for a very long time. O.V.)
- And all the table burns with intolerable light; there has been no such
- light in any of the Aethyrs until now. And now the table draws me back into
- itself; I am no more.
- My arms were out in the form of a cross, and that Cross was extended,
- blazing with light into infinity. I myself am the minutest point in it. This
- is "the birth of form."
- I am encircled by an immense sphere of many-coloured bands; it seems it is
- the sphere of the Sephiroth projected in the three dimensions. This is "the"
- "birth of death."
- Now in the centre within me is a glowing sun. That is "the birth of hell."
- Now all that is swept away, washed away by the table. It is the virtue of
- the table to sweep everything away. It is the letter I in this Aethyr that
- gives this vision, and L is its purity, and N is its energy. Now everything
- is confused, for I invoked the Mind, that is disruption. Every Adept who
- beholds this vision is corrupted by mind. Yet it is by virtue of mind that he
- endures it, and passes on, if so be that he pass on. Yet there is nothing
- higher than this, for it is perfectly balanced in itself. I cannot read a
- word of the holy Table, for the letters of the Table are all wrong. They are
- only the shadows of shadows. And whoso beholdeth this Table with this
- rapture, is light. The true word for light hath seven letters. They are the
- same as ARARITA, transmuted. {34}
- There is a voice in this Aethyr, but it cannot be spoken. The only way one
- can represent it is as a ceaseless thundering of the word Amen. It is not a
- repetition of Amen, because there is no time. It is one Amen continuous.
- Shall mine eye fade before thy glory? I am the eye. That is why the eye
- is seventy. You can never understand why, except in this vision.
- And now the table recedes from me. Far, far it goes, streaming with light.
- And there are two black angels bending over me, covering me with their wings,
- shutting me up into the darkness; and I am lying in the Pastos of our Father
- Christian Rosenkreutz, beneath the Table in the Vault of seven sides. And I
- hear these words:
- The voice of the Crowned Child, the Speech of the Babe that is hidden in
- the egg of blue. (Before me is the flaming Rosy Cross.) I have opened mine
- eye, and the universe is dissolved before me, for force is mine upper eye-lid
- and matter is my lower eye-lid. I gaze into the seven spaces, and there is
- naught.
- The rest of it comes without words; and then again:
- I have gone forth to war, and I have slain him that sat upon the sea,
- crowned with the winds. I put forth my power and he was broken. I withdrew
- my power and he was ground into fine dust.
- Rejoice with me, O ye Sons of the Morning; stand with me upon the Throne of
- Lotus; gather yourselves up unto me, and we shall play together in the fields
- of light. I have passed into the Kingdom of the West after my Father.
- Behold! where are now the darkness and the terror and the lamentation?
- For ye are born into the new Aeon; ye shall {35} not suffer death. Bind up
- your girdles of gold! Wreathe yourselves with garlands of my unfading
- flowers! In the nights we will dance together, and in the morning we will go
- forth to war; for, as my Father liveth that was dead, so do I live and shall
- never die.
- And now the table comes rushing back. It covers the whole stone, but this
- time it pushes me before it, and a terrible voice cries: Begone! Thou hast
- profaned the mystery; thou hast eaten of the shew-bread; thou hast spilt the
- consecrated wine! Begone! For the Voice is accomplished. Begone! For that
- which was open is shut. And thou shalt not avail to open it, saving by virtue
- of him whose name is one, whose spirit is one, whose individuum is one, and
- whose permutation is one; whose light is one, whose life is one, whose love is
- one. For though thou art joined to the inmost mystery of the heaven, thou
- must accomplish the sevenfold task of the earth, even as thou sawest the
- Angels from the greatest unto the least. And of all this shalt thou take back
- with thee but a little part, for the sense shall be darkened, and the shrine
- re-veiled. Yet know this for thy reproof, and for the stirring up of
- discontent in them whose swords are of lath, that in every word of this vision
- is concealed the key of many mysteries, even of being, and of knowledge, and
- of bliss; of will, of courage, of wisdom, and of silence, and of that which,
- being all these, is greater than all these. Begone! For the night of life is
- fallen upon thee. And the veil of light hideth that which is.
- With that, I suddenly see the world as it is, and I am very sorrowful.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "November" 28, 1909. 4-6 p.m. {36}
-
- ("Note." --- You do not come back in any way dazed; it is like going from one
- room into another. Regained normal consciousness completely and immediately.)
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 21ST AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ASP.
-
- A mighty wind rolls through all the Aethyr; there is a sense of absolute
- emptiness; no colour, no form, no substance. Only now and then there seem as
- it were, the shadows of great angels, swept along. No sound; there is
- something very remorseless about the wind, passionless, that is very terrible.
- In a way, it is nerve-shaking. It seems as if something kept on trying to
- open behind the wind, and just as it is about to open, the effort is
- exhausted. The wind is not cold or hot; there is no sense of any kind
- connected with it. One does not even feel it, for one is standing in front of
- it.
- Now, the thing opens behind, just for a second, and I catch a glimpse of an
- avenue of pillars, and at the end a throne, supported by sphinxes. All this
- is black marble.
- Now I seem to have gone through the wind, and to be standing before the
- throne; but he that sitteth thereon is invisible. Yet it is from him that all
- this desolation proceeds.
- He is trying to make me understand by putting tastes in my mouth, very
- rapidly one after the other. Salt, honey, sugar, assafoetida, bitumen, honey
- again, some taste that I don't know at all; garlic, something very bitter like
- nux vomica, another taste, still more bitter; lemon, cloves, rose-leaves,
- honey again; the juice of some plant, like a dandelion, I think; honey again,
- salt, a taste something like phosphorus, honey, laurel, a very unpleasant
- taste which I don't know, {37} coffee, then a burning taste, then a sour taste
- that I don't know. All these tastes issue from his eyes; he "signals" them.
- I can see his eyes now. They are very round, with perfectly black pupils,
- perfectly white iris, and the cornea pale blue. The sense of desolation is so
- acute that I keep on trying to get away from the vision.
- I told him that I could not understand his taste-language, so instead he
- set up a humming very much like a big electric plant with dynamos going.
- Now the atmosphere is deep night-blue; and by the power of that atmosphere,
- the pillars kindle to a dull glowing crimson, and the throne is a dull, ruddy
- gold. And now, through the humming, come very clear, bell-like notes, and
- farther still a muttering, like that of a gathering storm.
- And now I hear the meaning of the muttering: I am he who was before the
- beginning, and in my desolation I cried aloud, saying, let me behold my
- countenance in the concave of the abyss. And I beheld, and lo! in the
- darkness of the abyss my countenance was black, and empty, and distorted, that
- was (once) invisible and pure.
- Then I closed mine eye, that I might not behold it, and for this was it
- fixed. Now it is written that one glance of mine eye shall destroy it. And
- mine eye I dare not open, because of the foulness of the vision. Therefore do
- I gaze with these two eyes throughout the aeon. Is there not one of all my
- adepts that shall come unto me, and cut off mine eyelids, that I may behold
- and destroy?
- Now I take a dagger, and, searching out his third eye, seek to cut off the
- eye-lids, but they are of adamant. And the edge of the dagger is turned. {38}
- And tears drop from his eyes, and there is a mournful voice: So it hath
- been ever: so must it ever be! Though thou hast the strength of five bulls,
- thou shalt not avail in this.
- And I said to him: Who shall avail? And he answered me: I know not. But
- the dagger of penance thou shalt temper seven times, afflicting the seven
- courses of thy soul. And thou shalt sharpen its edge seven times by the seven
- ordeals.
- (One keeps on looking round to try to find something else because of the
- terror of it. But nothing changes at all. Nothing but the empty throne, and
- the eyes, and the avenue of pillars!)
- And I said to him: O thou that art the first countenance before time; thou
- of whom it is written that "He, God, is one; He is the eternal one, without
- equal, son or companion. Nothing shall stand before His face"; all we have
- heard of thine infinite glory and holiness, of thy beauty and majesty, and
- behold! there is nothing but this abomination of desolation.
- He speaks; I cannot hear a word; something about the Book of the Law. The
- answer is written in the Book of the Law, or something of that sort.
- This is a long speech; all that I can hear is: From me pour down the fires
- of life and increase continually upon the earth. From me flow down the rivers
- of water and oil and wine. From me cometh forth the wind that beareth the
- seed of trees and flowers and fruits and all herbs upon its bosom. From me
- cometh forth the earth in her unspeakable variety. Yea! all cometh from me,
- naught cometh to me. Therefore am I lonely and horrible upon this
- unprofitable throne. Only those who accept nothing from me can bring anything
- to me. {39}
- (He goes on speaking again: I cannot hear a word. I may have got about a
- twentieth of what he said.) And I say to him: It was written that his name
- is Silence, but thou speakest continually.
- And he answers: Nay, the muttering that thou hearest is not my voice. It
- is the voice of the ape.
- (When I say that he answers, it means that it is the same voice. The being
- on the throne has not uttered a word.) I say: O thou ape that speakest for
- Him whose name is Silence, how shall I know that thou speakest truly His
- thought? And the muttering continues: Nor speaketh He nor thinketh, so that
- which I say is true, because I lie in speaking His thoughts.
- He goes on, nothing stops him; and the muttering comes so fast that I
- cannot hear him at all.
- Now the muttering has ceased, or is overwhelmed by the bells, and the bells
- in their turn are overwhelmed by the whirring, and now the whirring is
- overwhelmed by the silence. And the blue light is gone, and the throne and
- the pillars are returned to blackness, and the eyes of him that sitteth upon
- the throne are no more visible.
- I seek to go up close to the throne, and I am pushed back, because I cannot
- give the sign. I have given all the signs I know and am entitled to, and I
- have tried to give the sign that I know and am not entitled to, but have not
- the necessary appurtenance; and even if I had, it would be useless; for there
- are two more signs necessary.
- I find that I was wrong in suggesting that a Master of the Temple had a
- right to enter the temple of a Magus or an Ipsissimus. On the contrary, the
- rule that holds below, holds {40} also above. The higher you go, the greater
- is the distance from one grade to another.
- I am being slowly pushed backwards down the avenue, out into the wind. And
- this time I am caught up by the wind and whirled away down it like a dead
- leaf.
- And a great Angel sweeps through the wind, and catches hold of me, and
- bears me up against it; and he sets me down on the hither side of the wind,
- and he whispers in my ear: Go thou forth into the world, O thrice and four
- times blessed who hast gazed upon the horror of the loneliness of The First.
- No man shall look upon his face and live. And thou hast seen his eyes, and
- understood his heart, for the voice of the ape is the pulse of his heart and
- the labouring of his breast. Go, therefore, and rejoice, for thou art the
- prophet of the Aeon arising, wherein He is not. Give thou praise unto thy
- lady Nuit, and unto her lord Hadit, that are for thee and thy bride, and the
- winners of the ordeal X.
- And with that we are come to the wall of the Aethyr, and there is a little
- narrow gate, and he pushes me through it, and I am suddenly in the desert.
-
-
- THE DESERT, NEAR BOU SAADA.4
- "November" 29, 1909. 1.30 - 2.50 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 20TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED KHR
-
- The dew that was upon the face of the stone is gone, and it is become like
- a pool of clear golden water. And now the light is come into the Rosy Cross.
- Yet all that I see is the night, with the stars therein, as they appear
- through a telescope. {41} And there cometh a peacock into the stone, filling
- the whole Aire. It is like the vision called the Universal Peacock, or,
- rather, like a representation of that vision. And now there are countless
- clouds of white angels filling the Aire as the peacock dissolves.
- Now behind the angels are archangels with trumpets. These cause all things
- to appear at once, so that there is a tremendous confusion of images. And now
- I perceive that all these things are but veils of the wheel, for they all
- gather themselves into a wheel that spins with incredible velocity. It hath
- many colours, but all thrilled with white light, so that they are transparent
- and luminous. This one wheel is forty-nine wheels, set at different angles,
- so that they compose a sphere; each wheel has forty-nine spokes, and has
- forty-nine concentric tyres at equal distances from the centre. And wherever
- the rays from any two wheels meet, there is a blinding flash of glory. It
- must be understood that though so much detail is visible in the wheel, yet at
- the same time the impression is of a single, simple object.
- It seems that this wheel is being spun by a hand. Though the wheel fills
- the whole Aire, yet the hand is much bigger than the wheel. And though this
- vision is so great and splendid, yet there is no seriousness with it, or
- solemnity. It seems that the hand is spinning the wheel merely for pleasure,
- it would be better to say amusement.
- A voice comes: For he is a jocund and a ruddy god, and his laughter is the
- vibration of all that exists, and the earthquakes of the soul.
- One is conscious of the whirring of the wheel thrilling one, like an
- electric discharge passing through one. {42}
- Now I see the figures on the wheel, which have been interpreted as the
- sworded Sphinx, Hermanubis and Typhon. And that is wrong. The rim of the
- wheel is a vivid emerald snake; in the centre of the wheel is a scarlet heart;
- and, impossible to explain as it is, the scarlet of the heart and the green of
- the snake are yet more vivid than the blinding white brilliance of the wheel.
- The figures on the wheel are darker than the wheel itself; in fact, they
- are stains upon the purity of the wheel, and for that reason, and because of
- the whirling of the wheel, I cannot see them. But at the top seems to be the
- Lamb and Flag, such as one sees on some Christian medals, and one of the lower
- things is a wolf, and the other a raven. The Lamb and Flag symbol is much
- brighter than the other two. It keeps on growing brighter, until now it is
- brighter than the wheel itself, and occupies more space than it did.
- It speaks: I am the greatest of the deceivers, for my purity and innocence
- shall seduce the pure and innocent, who but for me should come to the centre
- of the wheel. The wolf betrayeth only the greedy and the treacherous; the
- raven betrayeth only the melancholy and the dishonest. But I am he of whom it
- is written: He shall deceive the very elect.
- For in the beginning the Father of all called forth lying spirits that they
- might sift the creatures of the earth in three sieves, according to the three
- impure souls. And he chose the wolf for the lust of the flesh, and the raven
- for the lust of the mind; but me did he choose above all to simulate the pure
- prompting of the soul. Them that are fallen a prey to the wolf and the raven
- I have not scathed; but them that have rejected me, I have given over to the
- 4 This night I took the shew-stone to my breast to sleep, and
- immediately a Dhyana arose of the sun, seen more clearly
- afterwards as the Star. Exceeding was its brilliance.
- wrath of the raven and the wolf. And the jaws of the one have torn them, and
- the {43} beak of the other has devoured the corpse. Therefore is my flag
- white, because I have left nothing upon the earth alive. I have feasted
- myself on the blood of the saints, but I am not suspected of men to be their
- enemy, for my fleece is white and warm, and my teeth are not the teeth of one
- that teareth flesh; and mine eyes are mild, and they know me not the chief of
- the lying spirits that the Father of all sent forth from before his face in
- the beginning.
- (His attribution is salt; the wolf mercury, and the raven sulphur.)
- Now the lamb grows small again, there is again nothing but the wheel, and
- the hand that whirleth it.
- And I said: "By the word of power, double in the voice of the Master; by
- the word that is seven, and one in seven; and by the great and terrible word
- 210, I beseech thee, O my Lord, to grant me the vision of thy glory." And all
- the rays of the wheel stream out at me, and I am blasted and blinded with the
- light. I am caught up into the wheel. I am one with the wheel. I am greater
- than the wheel. In the midst of a myriad lightnings I stand, and I behold his
- face. (I am thrown violently back on to the earth every second, so that I
- cannot quite concentrate.)
- All one gets is a liquid flame of pale gold. But its radiant force keeps
- hurling me back.
- And I say: By the word and the will, by the penance and the prayer, let me
- behold thy face. (I cannot explain this, there is confusion of
- personalities.) I who speak to you, see what I tell you; but I, who see him,
- cannot communicate it to me, who speak to you.
- If one could gaze upon the sun at noon, that might be like {44} the
- substance of him. But the light is without heat. It is the vision of Ut in
- the Upanishads. And from this vision have come all the legends of Bacchus and
- Krishna and Adonis. For the impression is of a youth dancing and making
- music. But you must understand that he is not doing that, for he is still.
- Even the hand that turns the wheel is not his hand, but only a hand energized
- by him.
- And now it is the dance of Shiva. I lie beneath his feet, his saint, his
- victim. My form is the form of the God Phtah, in my essence, but the form of
- the god Seb in my form. And this is the reason of existence, that in this
- dance which is delight, there must needs be both the god and the adept. Also
- the earth herself is a saint; and the sun and the moon dance upon her,
- torturing her with delight.
- This vision is not perfect. I am only in the outer court of the vision,
- because I have undertaken it in the service of the Holy One, and must retain
- sense and speech. No recorded vision is perfect, of high visions, for the
- seer must keep either his physical organs or his memory in working order. And
- neither is capable. There is no bridge. One can only be conscious of one
- thing at a time, and as the consciousness moves nearer to the vision, it loses
- control of the physical and mental. Even so, the body and the mind must be
- very perfect before anything can be done, or the energy of the vision may send
- the body into spasms and the mind into insanity. This is why the first
- visions give Ananda, which is a shock. When the adept is attuned to Samadhi,
- there is but cloudless peace.
- This vision is particularly difficult to get into, because he is I. And
- therefore the human ego is being constantly excited, {45} so that one comes
- back so often. An acentric meditation practice like mahasatipatthana ought to
- be done before invocations of the Holy Guardian Angel, so that the ego may be
- very ready to yield itself utterly to the Beloved.
- And now the breeze is blowing about us, like the sighs of love unsatisfied
- --- or satisfied. His lips move. I cannot say the words at first.
- And afterwords: "Shalt thou not bring the children of men to the sight of
- my glory? 'Only thy silence and thy speech that worship me avail.' 'For as I
- am the last, so am I the next, and as the next shalt thou reveal me to the
- multitude.' Fear not for aught; turn not aside for aught, eremite of Nuit,
- apostle of Hadit, warrior of Ra Hoor Khu! The leaven taketh, and the bread
- shall be sweet; the ferment worketh, and the wine shall be sweet. My
- sacraments are vigorous food and divine madness. Come unto me, O ye children
- of men; come unto me, in whom I am, in whom ye are, were ye only alive with
- the life that abideth in Light."
- All this time I have been fading away. I sink. The veil of night comes
- down a dull blue-gray with one pentagram in the midst of it, watery and dull.
- And I am to abide there for a while before I come back to the earth. (But
- shut me the window up, hide me from the sun. Oh, shut the window!)5
- Now, the pentagram is faded; black crosses fill the Aethyr gradually
- growing and interlacing, until there is a network.
- It is all dark now. I am lying exhausted, with the sharp edge of the shew-
- stone cutting into my forehead.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "November" 30, 1909. 9.15 - 10.50 a.m. {46}
-
- 5 It was done. --- O.V.
- {Illustration plate facing page 47 partly approximated and partly described:
-
- This is as shown below. The words in the top row are enclosed in bands (not
- scrolls) set at a 45° angle upward from near lower left to upper right in each
- of the four sections. The lower part of each band curves slightly upward
- behind the band and the upper part curves slightly downward behind the band.
- Each of the daggers is composed of four triangles having sides equal and
- longer than the base; three small with apexes meeting from the handle and hilt
- and one longer the blade with apex as the point. The handle and hilt are
- represented here by "+" or "X", the latter showing diagonal daggers. The
- blade, hilts and handle all are set at right angles. Sizes vary to
- accommodate the configurations within the panels.
-
- ╔-----------╤-----------╤-----------╤-----------╤-----------╗
- ║ │ │ + │ │ ║
- ║ │ │ + | + │ │ ║
- ║ The │ Alphabet │ | | | │ of │ Daggers ║
- ║ │ │ | | | │ │ ║
- ║ │ │A | | │ │ ║
- ╟___________┼___________┼___________┼___________┼___________╢
- ║ │ + │ ------+ │ X │ | | ║
- ║ ------+ │ | │ +------ │ / X │ | | | ║
- ║ │ | │ ------+ │ / / X │ | | | ║
- ║ ------+ │ | │ │ / / │ + | + ║
- ║B │C │D │E / │F + ║
- ╟___________┼___________┼___________┼___________┼___________╢
- ║ + │ + │ + │ X │ X X ║
- ║ | + │ | │ | │ / │ \ / ║
- ║ | │ | │ +-- │ | │ | ║
- ║ + │ + │ | │ + │ + ║
- ║G | │H │I + │J │K ║
- ╟___________┼___________┼___________┼___________┼___________╢
- ║ + + + │ | │ │ X + X │ + ║
- ║ | | | │ + │ +-- | │ \ | / │ +--|-- ║
- ║ | | | │ /|\ │ +-- | │ \ / │ | ║
- ║ +----- │ X + X │ +-- + │ / \ │ --|--+ ║
- ║L │M │N │O X X │P | ║
- ╟___________┼___________┼___________┼___________┼___________╢
- ║ │ + X │ | │ + + + │ X ║
- ║ X X │ \| / │ | │ | | | │ / / ║
- ║ X \/ │ |\/ │ | │ | | | │ / / X ║
- ║ \/ │ | \ │ | │ | | | │ X / ║
- ║Q / │R + X │S + │T │U / ║
- ╟___________┼___________┼___________┼___________┼___________╢
- ║ + │ + + + │ \ / │ X X │ +----- ║
- ║ +|+ │ ||||||| │ X X │ / + \ │ ║
- ║ ||| │ ||||||| │ X X │ / | \ │ +----- ║
- ║ ||| │ + + + + │ / \ │ | │ ║
- ║V | │W │X │Y │Z +----- ║
- ╚-----------╧-----------╧-----------╧-----------╧-----------╝}
-
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 19TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED POP
-
- At first there is a black web over the face of the stone. A ray of light
- pierces it from behind and above. Then cometh a black cross, reaching across
- the whole stone; then a golden cross, not so large. And there is a writing in
- an arch that spans the cross, in an alphabet in which the letters are all
- formed of little daggers, cross-hilted, differently arranged. And the writing
- is: Worship in the body the things of the body; worship in the mind the things
- of the mind; worship in the spirit the things of the spirit.
- (This holy alphabet must be written by sinners, that is, by those who are
- impure.)
- "Impure" means those whose every thought is followed by another thought, or
- who confuse the higher with the lower, the substance with the shadow. Every
- Aethyr is truth, though it be but a shadow, for the shadow of a man is not the
- shadow of an ape.
- ("Note." --- All this has come to me without voice, without vision, without
- thought.)
- (The shew-stone is pressed upon my forehead and causes intense pain; as I
- go on from Aethyr to Aethyr, it seems more difficult to open the Aethyr.
- The golden cross has become a little narrow door, and an old man like the
- Hermit of the Taro has opened it and come out. I ask him for admission: and
- he shakes his head kindly, and says: It is not given to flesh and blood to
- unveil the mysteries of the Aethyr, for therein are the chariots of fire. and
- the tumult of the horsemen; whoso entereth here may never look on life again
- with equal eyes. I insist. {47}
- The little gate is guarded by a great green dragon. And now the whole wall
- is suddenly fallen away; there is a blaze of the chariots and the horsemen; a
- furious battle is raging. One hears nothing but the clash of steel and the
- neighing of the chargers and the shrieks of the wounded. A thousand fall at
- every encounter and are trampled under foot. Yet the Aethyr is always full;
- there are infinite reserves.
- No; that is all wrong, for this is not a battle between two forces, but a
- "mêlée" in which each warrior fights for himself against all the others. I
- cannot see one who has even one ally. And the least fortunate, who fall
- soonest, are those in the chariots. For as soon as they are engaged in
- fighting, their own charioteers stab them in the back.
- And in the midst of the battlefield there is a great tree, like a chinar-
- tree. Yet it bears fruits. And now all the warriors are dead, and they are
- the ripe fruits that are fallen -- the ground is covered with them.
- There is a laugh in my right ear: "This is the tree of life."
- And now there is a mighty god, Sebek, with the head of a crocodile. His
- head is gray, like river mud, and his jaws fill the whole Aire. And he
- crunches up the whole tree and the ground and everything.
- Now then at last cometh forth the Angel of the Aethyr, who is like the
- Angel of the fourteenth key of Rota, with beautiful blue wings, blue robes,
- the sun in her girdle like a brooch, and the two crescents of the moon shapen
- into sandals for her feet. Her hair is of flowing gold, each sparkle as a
- star. In her hands are the torch of Penelope and the cup of Circe. {48}
- She comes and kisses me on the mouth, and says: Blessed art thou who hast
- beheld Sebek my Lord in his glory. Many are the champions of life, but all
- are unhorsed by the lance of death. Many are the children of the light, but
- their eyes shall all be put out by the Mother Darkness. Many are the servants
- of love, but love (that is not quenched by aught but love) shall be put out,
- as the child taketh the wick of a taper between his thumb and finger, by the
- god that sitteth alone.
- And on her mouth, like a chrysanthemum of radiant light, is a kiss, and on
- it is the monogram I.H.S. The letters I.H.S. mean In Homini Salus and Instar
- Hominis Summus, and Imago Hominis deuS. And there are many, many other
- meanings, but they all imply this one thing; that nothing is of any importance
- but man; there is no hope or help but in man.
- And she says: Sweet are my kisses, O wayfarer that wanderest from star to
- star. Sweet are my kisses, O householder that weariest within four walls.
- Thou art pent within thy brain, and my shaft pierceth it, and thou art free.
- Thine imagination eateth up the universe as the dragon that eateth up the
- moon. And in my shaft is it concentrated and bound up. See how all around
- thee gather my warriors, strong knights in goodly armour ready for war. Look
- upon my crown; it is above the stars. Behold the glow and the blush thereof!
- Upon thy cheek is the breeze that stirs those plumes of truth. For though I
- am the Angel of the fourteenth key, I am also the Angel of the eighth key.
- And from the love of these two have I come, who am the warden of Popé and the
- servant of them that dwell therein. Though all crowns fall, mine shall {49}
- not fall; for my plumes reach up unto the Knees of Him that sitteth upon the
- holy throne, and liveth and reigneth for ever and ever as the balance of
- righteousness and truth. I am the Angel of the moon. I am the veiled one
- that sitteth between the pillars veiled with a shining veil, and on my lap is
- the open Book of the mysteries of the ineffable light. I am the aspiration
- unto the higher; I am the love of the unknown. I am the blind ache within the
- heart of man. I am the minister of the sacrament of pain. I swing the censer
- of worship, and I sprinkle the waters of purification. I am the daughter of
- the house of the invisible. I am the Priestess of the Silver Star.
- And she catches me up to her as a mother catches her babe, and holds me up
- in her left arm, and sets my lips to her breast. And upon her breast is
- written: "Rosa Mundi est Lilium Coeli."
- And I look down upon the open Book of the mysteries, and it is open at the
- page on which is the Holy Table with the twelve squares in the midst. It
- radiates a blaze of light, too dazzling to make out the characters, and a
- voice says: "Non haec piscis omnium."
- (To interpret that, we must think of 'Iota chi theta upsilon sigma , which does not
- conceal "Iesous Christos Theon Uios Soter" as traditionally asserted, but is a
- mystery of the letter Nun and the letter Qoph, as may be seen by adding it up.
- 'Iota chi theta upsilon sigma is only connected with Christianity because it was a
- hieroglyph of syphilis, which the Romans supposed to have been brought from
- Syria; and it seems to have been confounded with leprosy, which also they
- thought was caused by fish-eating. {50}
- One important meaning of 'Iota chi theta upsilon sigma : it is formed of the
- initials of five Egyptian deities and also of five Greek deities: in both
- cases a magic formula of tremendous power is concealed.
- As to the Holy Table itself, I cannot see it for the blaze of light; but I
- am given to understand that it appears in another Aethyr, of which it forms
- practically the whole content. And I am bidden to study the Holy Table very
- intently so as to be able to concentrate on it when it appears.
- I have grown greater, so that I am as great as the Angel. And we are
- standing, as if crucified, face to face, our hands and lips and breasts and
- knees and feet together, and her eyes pierce into my eyes like whirling shafts
- of steel, so that I fall backwards headlong through the Aethyr --- and there
- is a sudden and tremendous shout, absolutely stunning, cold and brutal:
- Osiris was a black god!6 And the Aethyr claps its hands, greater than the
- peal of a thousand mighty thunders.
- I am back.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "November" 30, 1909 10-11.45 p.m.
-
-
- The Cry of the 18th Aethyr, Which is Called ZEN
-
- A Voice comes before any vision: Accursed are they who enter herein if
- they have nails, for they shall be pierced therewith; or if they have thorns,
- for they shall be crowned withal; or if they have whips, for with whips they
- shall be scourged: or if they bear wine, for their wine shall be turned to
- bitterness; or if they have a spear, for with a spear shall they be pierced
- unto the heart. And the nails are desires, of which {51} there are three; the
- desire of light, the desire of life, the desire of love.
- 6 The Doctrine implied is that one must not be the child, but the
- Mother.
- (And the thorns are thoughts, and the whips are regrets, and the wine is
- ease, or perhaps unsteadiness, especially in ecstasy, and the spear is
- attachment.)
- And now there dawns the scene of the Crucifixion; but the Crucified One is
- an enormous bat, and for the two thieves are two little children. It is
- night, and the night is full of hideous things and howlings.
- And an angel cometh forth, and saith: Be wary, for if thou change so much
- as the style of a letter, the holy word is blasphemed. But enter into the
- mountain of the Caverns, for that this (how much more then that Calvary which
- mocks it, as his ape mocks Thoth?) is but the empty shell of the mystery of
- ZEN. Verily, I say unto thee, many are the adepts that have looked upon the
- back parts of my father, and cried, "our eyes fail before the glory of thy
- countenance."
- And with that he gives the sign of the rending of the veil, and tears down
- the vision. And behold! whirling columns of fiery light, seventy-two. Upon
- them is supported a mountain of pure crystal. The mountain is a cone, the
- angle of the apex being sixty degrees. And within the crystal is a pyramid of
- ruby, like unto the Great Pyramid of Gizeh.
- I am entered in by the little door thereof, and I am come into the chamber
- of the king, which is fashioned like unto the vault of the adepts, or rather
- it is fitting to say that the vault of the adepts is a vile imitation of it.
- For there are four sides to the chamber, which with the roof and the floor and
- the chamber itself makes seven. So also is the pastos seven, {52} for that
- which is within is like unto that which is without. And there is no
- furniture, and there are no symbols.
- Light streams from every side upon the pastos. This light is that blue of
- Horus which we know, but being refined it is brilliance. For the light of
- Horus only appears blue because of the imperfection of our eyes. But though
- the light pours from the pastos, yet the pastos remains perfectly dark, so
- that it is invisible. It hath no form: only, at a certain point in the
- chamber, the light is beaten back.
- I lie prostate upon the ground before this mystery. Its splendour is
- impossible to describe. I can only say that its splendour is so great that my
- heart stops with the terror and the wonder and the rapture of it. I am almost
- mad. A million insane images chase each other through my brain... A voice
- comes: (it is my own voice -- I did not know it). "When thou shalt know me, O
- thou empty God, my little flame shall utterly expire in thy great N.O.X."
- There is no answer. ... (20 minutes. O.V.) ...
- And now, after so long a while, the Angel7 lifts me, and takes me from the
- room, and sets me in a little chamber where is another Angel like a fair youth
- in shining garments, who makes me partake of the sacraments; bread, that is
- labour; and fire, that is wit; and a rose, that is sin; and wine, that is
- death. And all about us is a great company of angels in many-coloured robes,
- rose and spring-green, and sky-blue, and pale gold, and silver, and lilac,
- solemnly chanting without words. It is music wonderful beyond all that can be
- thought.
- And now we go out of the chamber; on the right is a pylon, and the right
- figure is Isis, and the left figure {53} Nephthys, and they are folding their
- wings over, and supporting Ra.
- I wanted to go back to the King's Chamber. The Angel pushed me away,
- saying: "Thou shalt see these visions from afar off, but thou shalt not
- partake of them save in the manner prescribed. For if thou change so much as
- the style of a letter, the holy word is blasphemed."
- And this is the manner prescribed:
- Let there be a room furnished as for the ritual of passing through the
- Tuat. And let the aspirant be clad in the robes of, and let him bear the
- insignia of his grade. And at the least he shall be a neophyte.
- Three days and three nights shall he have been in the tomb, vigilant and
- fasting, for he shall sleep no longer than three hours at any one time, and he
- 7 No Angel has been mentioned. The Seer was lost to being.
- shall drink pure water, and eat little sweet cakes consecrated unto the moon,
- and fruits, and the eggs of the duck, or of the goose, or of the plover. And
- he shall be shut in, so that no man may break in upon his meditation. But in
- the last twelve hours he shall neither eat nor sleep.
- Then shall he break his fast, eating rich food, and drinking sweet wines,
- and wines that foam; and he shall banish the elements and the planets and the
- signs and the sephiroth; and then shall he take the holy table that he hath
- made for his altar, and he shall take the call of the Aethyr of which he will
- partake, which he hath written in the angelic character, or in the character
- of the holy alphabet that is revealed in Popé, upon a fair sheet of virgin
- vellum; and therewith shall he conjure the Aethyr, chanting the call. And in
- the lamp that is hung above the altar shall he burn the call that he hath
- written. {54}
- Then shall he kneel before the holy table, and it shall be given him to
- partake of the mystery of the Aethyr.
- And concerning the ink with which he shall write; for the first Aethyr let
- it be gold, for the second scarlet, for the third violet, for the fourth
- emerald, for the fifth silver, for the sixth sapphire, for the seventh orange,
- for the eighth indigo, for the ninth gray, for the tenth black, for the
- eleventh maroon, for the twelfth russet, for the thirteenth green-gray, for
- the fourteenth amber, for the fifteenth olive, for the sixteenth pale blue,
- for the seventeenth crimson, for the eighteenth bright yellow, for the
- nineteenth crimson adorned with silver, for the twentieth mauve, for the
- twenty-first pale green, for the twenty-second rose-madder, for the twenty-
- third violet cobalt, for the twenty-fourth beetle-brown, blue-brown colour,
- for the twenty-fifth a cold dark gray, for the twenty-sixth white flecked with
- red, blue, and yellow; the edges of the letters shall be green, for the
- twenty-seventh angry clouds of ruddy brown, for the twenty-eighth indigo, for
- the twenty-ninth bluish-green, for the thirtieth mixed colours.
- This shall be the form to be used by him who would partake of the mystery
- of any Aethyr. And let him not change so much as the style of a letter, lest
- the holy word be blasphemed.
- And let him beware, after he hath been permitted to partake of this
- mystery, that he await the completion of the 91st hour of his retirement,
- before he open the door of the place of his retirement; lest he contaminate
- his glory with uncleanness, and lest they that behold him be smitten by his
- glory unto death.
- For this is a holy mystery, and he that did first attain to {55} reveal the
- alphabet thereof, perceived not one ten-thousandth part of the fringe that is
- upon its vesture.
- Come away! for the clouds are gathered together, and the Aire heaveth like
- the womb of a woman in travail. Come away! lest he loose the lightnings from
- his hand, and unleash his hounds of thunder. Come away! For the voice of the
- Aethyr is accomplished. Come away! For the seal of His loving-kindness is
- made sure. And let there be praise and blessing unspeakable unto him that
- sitteth upon the Holy Throne, for he casteth down mercies as a spendthrift
- that scattereth gold. And he hath shut up judgment and hidden it away as a
- miser that hoardeth coins of little worth.
- All this while the Angel hath been pushing me backwards, and now he is
- turned into a golden cross with a rose at its heart, and that is the red cross
- wherein is set the golden shewstone.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 1, 1909. 2.30 - 4.10 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 17TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED TAN
-
- Into the stone there first cometh the head of a dragon, and then the Angel
- Madimi. She is not the mere elemental that one would suppose from the account
- of Casaubon. I enquire why her form is different.
- She says: Since all things are God, in all things thou seest just so much
- of God as thy capacity affordeth thee. But behold! Thou must pierce deeply
- into this Aethyr before true images appear. For TAN is that which
- transformeth {56} judgment into justice. BAL is the sword, and TAN the
- balances.
- A pair of balances appears in the stone, and on the bar of the balance is
- written: Motion about a point is iniquity.
- And behind the balances is a plume, luminous, azure. And somehow connected
- with the plume, but I cannot divine how, are these words: Breath is iniquity.
- (That is, any wind must stir the feather of truth.)
- And behind the plume is a shining filament of quartz, suspended vertically
- from the abyss to the abyss. And in the midst is a winged disk of some
- extremely delicate, translucent substance, on which is written in the "dagger"
- alphabet: Torsion is iniquity. (This means, that the Rashith Ha-Gilgalim is
- the first appearance of evil.)
- And now an Angel appears, like as he were carven in black diamonds. And he
- cries: Woe unto the Second, whom all nations of men call the First. Woe unto
- the First, whom all grades of Adepts call the First. Woe unto me, for I, even
- as they, have worshipped him. But she is whose paps are the galaxies, and he
- that never shall be known, in them is no motion. For the infinite Without
- filleth all and moveth not, and the infinite Within goeth indeed; but it is no
- odds, else were the space-marks confounded.
- And now the Angel is but a shining speck of blackness in the midst of a
- tremendous sphere of liquid and vibrating light, at first gold, then becoming
- green, and lastly pure blue. And I see that the green of Libra is made up of
- the yellow of air and the blue of water, swords and cups, judgment and mercy.
- And this word TAN meaneth mercy. And the feather of Maat is blue because the
- truth of justice is mercy. And a {57} voice cometh, as it were the music of
- the ripples of the surface of the sphere: Truth is delight. (This means that
- the Truth of the universe is delight.)
- Another voice cometh; it is the voice of a mighty Angel, all in silver; the
- scales of his armour and the plumes of his wings are like mother-of-pearl in a
- framework of silver. And he sayeth: Justice is the equity that ye have made
- for yourselves between truth and falsehood. But in Truth there is nothing of
- this, for there is only Truth. Your falsehood is but a little falser than
- your truth. Yet by your truth shall ye come to Truth. Your truth is your
- troth with Adonai the Beloved one. And the Chymical Marriage of the
- Alchemists beginneth with a Weighing, and he that is not found wanting hath
- within him one spark of fire, so dense and so intense that it cannot be moved,
- through all the winds of heaven should clamour against it, and all the waters
- of the abyss surge against it, and all the multitude of the earths heap
- themselves upon it to smother it. Nay, it shall not be moved.
- And this is the fire of which it is written: "Hear thou the voice of fire!"
- And the voice of fire is the second chapter of the Book of the Law, that is
- revealed unto him that is a score and half a score and three that are scores,
- and six, by Aiwass, that is his guardian, the mighty Angel that extendeth from
- the first unto the last, and maketh known the mysteries that are beyond. And
- the method and the form of invocation whereby a man shall attain to the
- knowledge and conversation of his Holy Guardian Angel shall be given unto thee
- in the proper place, and seeing that the word is deadlier than lightning, do
- thou meditate straitly thereupon, solitary, in a place where is no living
- thing visible, but only the light of the sun. And {58} thy head shall be
- bare.8 Thus mayest thou become fitted to receive this, the holiest of the
- Mysteries. And it is the holiest of the Mysteries because it is the Next
- Step. And those Mysteries which lie beyond, though they be holier, are not
- 8 This I performed in a sort of cave upon the ridge of a great
- mountain in the Desert near Bou-Sâada at 12-3 p.m. on December 2.
- holy unto thee, but only remote. (The sense of this passage seems to be, that
- the holiness of a thing implies its personal relation with one, just as one
- cannot blaspheme an unknown god, because one does not know what to say to
- annoy him. And this explains the perfect inefficiency of those who try to
- insult the saints; the most violent attacks are very often merely clumsy
- compliments.)
- Now the Angel is spread completely over the globe, a dewy film of silver
- upon that luminous blue.
- And a great voice cries: Behold the Queen of Heaven, how she hath woven her
- robes from the loom of justice. For as that straight path of the Arrow
- cleaving the Rainbow became righteousness in her that sitteth in the hall of
- double truth, so at last is she exalted unto the throne of the High Priestess,
- the Priestess of the Silver Star, wherein also is thine Angel made manifest.
- And this is the mystery of the camel that is ten days in the desert, and is
- not athirst, because he hath within him that water which is the dew distilled
- from the the night of Nuit. Triple is the cord of silver, that it may be not
- loosed; and three score and half a score and three is the number of the name
- of my name, for that the ineffable wisdom, that also is of the sphere of the
- stars, informeth me. Thus am I crowned with the triangle that is about the
- eye, and therefore is my number three. And in me there is no {59}
- imperfection, because through me descendeth the influence of TARO. And that
- is also the number of Aiwass the mighty Angel, the Minister of Silence.
- And even as the shew-stone burneth thy forehead with its intolerable flame,
- so he who hath known me, though but from afar, is marked out and chosen among
- men, and he shall never turn back or turn aside, for he hath made the link
- that is not to be broken, nay, not by the malice of the Four Great Princes of
- evil of the world, nor by Chorozon, that mighty Devil, nor by the wrath of
- God, nor by the affliction and feebleness of the soul.
- Yet with this assurance be not thou content; for though thou hast the wings
- of the Eagle, they are vain, except they be joined to the shoulders of the
- Bull. Now, therefore, I send forth a shaft of my light, even as a ladder let
- down from the heaven upon the earth, and by this black cross of Themis that I
- hold before thine eyes, do I swear unto thee that the path shall be open
- henceforth for evermore.
- There is a clash of a myriad silver cymbals, and silence. And then three
- times a note is struck upon a bell, which sounds like my holy Tibetan bell,
- that is made of electrum magicum.
- I am happily returned unto the earth.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 2, 1909. 12.15 - 2 a.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 16TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED LEA
-
- There are faint and flickering images in a misty landscape, all very
- transient. But the general impression is of moonrise at midnight, and a
- crowned virgin riding upon a bull. {60}
- And they come up into the surface of the stone. And she is singing a chant
- of praise: Glory unto him that hath taken upon himself the image of toil. For
- by his labour is my labour accomplished. For I, being a woman, lust ever to
- mate myself with some beast. And this is the salvation of the world, that
- always I am deceived by some god, and that my child is the guardian of the
- labyrinth that hath two-and-seventy paths.
- Now she is gone.
- And now there are Angels, walking up and down in the stone. They are the
- Angels of the Holy Sevenfold Table. It seems that they are waiting for the
- Angel of the Aethyr to come forth.
- Now at last he appears in the gloom. He is a mighty King, with crown and
- orb and sceptre, and his robes are of purple and gold. And he casts down the
- orb and sceptre to the earth, and he tears off his crown, and throws it on the
- ground, and tramples it. And he tears out his hair, that is of ruddy gold
- tinged with silver, and he plucks at his beard, and cries with a terrible
- voice: Woe unto me that am cast down from my place by the might of the new
- Aeon. For the ten palaces are broken, and the ten kings are carried away into
- bondage, and they are set to fight as the gladiators in the circus of him that
- hath laid his hand upon eleven. For the ancient tower is shattered by the
- Lord of the Flame and the Lightning. And they that walk upon their hands
- shall build the holy place. Blessed are they who have turned the Eye of Hoor
- unto the zenith, for they shall be filled with the vigour of the goat.
- All that was ordered and stable is shaken. The Aeon of {61} Wonders is
- come. Like locusts shall they gather themselves together, the servants of the
- Star and of the Snake, and they shall eat up everything that is upon the
- earth. For why? Because the Lord of Righteousness delighteth in them.
- The prophets shall prophesy monstrous things, and the wizards shall perform
- monstrous things. The sorceress shall be desired of all men, and the
- enchanter shall rule the earth.
- Blessing unto the name of the Beast, for he hath let loose a mighty flood
- of fire from his manhood, and from his womanhood hath he let loose a mighty
- flood of water. Every thought of his mind is as a tempest that uprooteth the
- great trees of the earth, and shaketh the mountains thereof. And the throne
- of his spirit is a mighty throne of madness and desolation, so that they that
- look upon it shall cry: Behold the abomination!
- Of a single ruby shall that throne be built, and it shall be set upon a
- high mountain, and men shall see it afar off. Then will I gather together my
- chariots and my horsemen and my ships of war. By sea and land shall my armies
- and my navies encompass it, and I will encamp round about it, and besiege it,
- and by the flame thereof shall I be utterly devoured. Many lying spirits have
- I sent into the world that my Aeon might be established, and they shall be all
- overthrown.
- Great is the Beast that cometh forth like a lion, the servant of the Star
- and of the Snake. He is the Eternal one; He is the Almighty one. Blessed are
- they upon whom he shall look with favour, for nothing shall stand before his
- face. Accursed are they upon whom he shall look with derision, for nothing
- shall stand before his face.
- And every mystery that hath not been revealed from the {62} foundation of
- the world he shall reveal unto his chosen. And they shall have power over
- every spirit of the Ether; and of the earth and under the earth; on dry land
- and in the water; of whirling air and of rushing fire. And they shall have
- power over all the inhabitants of the earth, and every scourge of God shall be
- subdued beneath their feet. The angels shall come unto them and walk with
- them, and the great gods of heaven shall be their guests.
- But I must sit apart, with dust upon my head, discrowned and desolate. I
- must lurk in forbidden corners of the earth. I must plot secretly in the by-
- ways of great cities, in the fog, and in marshes of the rivers of pestilence.
- And all my cunning shall not serve me. And all my undertakings shall be
- brought to naught. And all the ministers of the Beast shall catch me and tear
- out my tongue with pincers of red-hot iron, and they shall brand my forehead
- with the word of derision, and they shall shave my head, and pluck out my
- beard, and make a show of me.
- And the spirit of prophecy shall come upon me despite me ever and anon, as
- even now upon my heart and upon my throat; and upon my tongue seared with
- strong acid are the words: "Vim patior." For so must I give glory to him that
- hath supplanted me, that hath cast me down into the dust. I have hated him,
- and with hate my bones are rotten. I would have spat upon him, and my spittle
- hath befouled my beard. I have taken up the sword against him, and I am
- fallen upon it, and mine entrails are about my feet.
- Who shall strive with his might? Hath he not the sword and the spear of
- the Warrior Lord of the Sun? Who shall contend with him? Who shall lift
- himself up against him? {63} For the latchet of his sandal is more than the
- helmet of the Most High. Who shall reach up to him in supplication, save
- those that he shall set upon his shoulders? Would God that my tongue were
- torn out by the roots, and my throat cut across, and my heart torn out and
- given to the vultures, before I say this that I must say: Blessing and Worship
- to the Prophet of the Lovely Star!
- And now he is fallen quite to the ground, in a heap, and dust is upon his
- head; and the throne upon which he sat is shattered into many pieces.
- And dimly dawning in this unutterable gloom, far, far above, is the face
- that is the face of a man and of a woman, and upon the brow is a circle, and
- upon the breast is a circle, and in the palm of the right hand is a circle.
- Gigantic is his stature, and he hath the Uraeus crown, and the leopard's skin,
- and the flaming orange apron of a god. And invisibly about him is Nuit, and
- in his heart is Hadit, and between his feet is the great god Ra Hoor Khuit.
- And in his right hand is a flaming wand, and in his left a book. Yet is he
- silent; and that which is understood between him and me shall not be revealed
- in this place. And the mystery shall be revealed to whosoever shall say, with
- ecstasy of worship in his heart, with a clear mind, and a passionate body: It
- is the voice of a god, and not of a man.
- And now all that glory hath withdrawn itself; and the old King lies
- prostate, abject.
- And the virgin that rode upon the bull cometh forth, led by all those
- Angels of the Holy Sevenfold Table, and they are dancing round her with
- garlands and sheaves of flowers, loose robes and hair dancing in the wind.
- And she smiles upon me {64} with infinite brilliance, so that the whole Aethyr
- flushes warm, and she says with a subtle sub-meaning, pointing downwards: By
- this, that.
- And I took her hand and kissed it, and I say to her: Am I not nearly purged
- of the iniquity of my forefathers?
- With that she bends down, and kisses me on the mouth, and says: "Yet a
- little, and on thy left arm shalt thou carry a man-child, and give him to
- drink of the milk of thy breasts. But I go dancing."
- And I wave my hand, and the Aethyr is empty and dark, and I bow myself
- before it in the sign that I, and only I, may know. And I sink through waves
- of blackness, poised on an eagle, down, down, down.
- And I give the sign that only I may know.
- And now there is nothing in the stone but the black cross of Themis, and on
- it these words: Memento: Sequor. (These words probably mean that the
- Equinox of Horus is to be followed by that of Themis.)
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 2, 1909. 4.50 - 6.5 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 15TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED OXO
-
- There appears immediately in the Aethyr a tremendous column of scarlet
- fire, whirling forth, rebounding, crying aloud. And about it are four columns
- of green and blue and gold and silver, each inscribed with writings in the
- character of the dagger. And the column of fire is dancing among the pillars.
- Now it seems that the fire is but the skirt of the dancer, and the dancer is a
- mighty god. The vision is overpowering. {65}
- As the dancer whirls, she chants in a strange, slow voice, quickening as
- she goes: Lo! I gather up every spirit that is pure, and weave him into my
- vesture of flame. I lick up the lives of men, and their souls sparkle from
- mine eyes. I am the mighty sorceress, the lust of the spirit. And by my
- dancing I gather for my mother Nuit the heads of all them that are baptized in
- the waters of life. I am the lust of the spirit that eateth up the soul of
- man. I have prepared a feast for the adepts, and they that partake thereof
- shall see God.
- Now it is clear what she has woven in her dance; it is the Crimson Rose of
- 49 Petals, and the Pillars are the Cross with which it is conjoined. And
- between the pillars shoot out rays of pure green fire; and now all the pillars
- are golden. She ceases to dance, and dwindles, gathering herself into the
- centre of the Rose.
- Now it is seen that the Rose is a vast ampitheatre, with seven tiers, each
- tier divided into seven partitions. And they that sit in the Amphitheatre are
- the seven grades of the Order of the Rosy Cross. This Amphitheatre is built
- of rose-coloured marble, and of its size I can say only that the sun might be
- used as a ball to be thrown by the players in the arena. But in the arena
- there is a little altar of emerald, and its top has the heads of the Four
- Beasts, in turquoise and rock-crystal. And the floor of the arena is ridged
- like a grating of lapis lazuli. And it is full of pure quicksilver.
- Above the altar is a veiled Figure, whose name is Pan. Those in the outer
- tier adore him as a Man; and in the next tier they adore him as a Goat; and in
- the next tier they adore him as a Ram; and in the next tier they adore him as
- a Crab; {66} and in the next tier they adore him as an Ibis; and in the next
- tier they adore him as a Golden Hawk; and in the next tier they adore him not.
- And now the light streameth out from the altar, splashed out by the feet of
- him that is above it. It is the Holy Twelve-fold Table of OIT.
- The voice of him that is above the altar is silence, but the echo thereof
- cometh back from the walls of the circus, and is speech. And this is the
- speech: Three and four are the days of a quarter of the moon, and on the
- seventh day is the sabbath, but thrice four is the Sabbath of the Adepts
- whereof the form is revealed in the Aethyr ZID; that is the eighth of the
- Aires. And the mysteries of the Table shall not be wholly revealed, nor shall
- they be revealed herein. But thou shalt gather of the sweat of thy brow a
- pool of clear water wherein this shall be revealed. And of the oil that thou
- burnest in the midnight shall be gathered together thirteen rivers of
- blessing; and of the oil and the water I will prepare a wine to intoxicate the
- young men and the maidens.
- And now the Table is become the universe; every star is a letter of the
- Book of Enoch. And the Book of Enoch is drawn therefrom by an inscrutable
- Mystery, that is known only to the Angels and the Holy Sevenfold Table. While
- I have been gazing upon this table, an Adept has come forth, one from each
- tier, except the inmost Tier.
- And the first drove a dagger into my heart, and tasted the blood, and said:
- chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma , chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma ,
- chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma , chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma ,
- chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma , chi alpha theta alpha rho omicron sigma .
- And the second Adept has been testing the muscles of my right arm and
- shoulder, and he says: fortis, fortis, fortis, fortis, fortis. {67}
- And the third Adept examines the skin and tastes the sweat of my left arm,
- and says:
- TAN, TAN, TAN, TAN.
- And the fourth Adept examines my neck, and seems to approve, though he says
- nothing; and he hath opened the right half of my brain, and he makes some
- examination, and says: "Samajh, samajh, samajh."
- And the fifth Adept examines the left half of my brain, and then holds up
- his hand in protest, and says "PLA . . ." (I cannot get the sentence, but the
- meaning is: In the thick darkness the seed awaiteth spring.)
- And now am I again rapt in contemplation of that universe of letters which
- are stars.
- The words ORLO, ILRO, TULE are three most secret names of God. They are
- Magick names, each having an interpretation of the same kind as the
- interpretation of I.N.R.I., and the name OIT, RLU, LRL, OOE are other names of
- God, that contain magical formulae, the first to invoke fire; the second,
- water; the third, air; and the fourth, earth.
- And if the Table be read diagonally, every letter, and every combination of
- letters, is the name of a devil. And from these are drawn the formulae of
- evil magick. But the holy letter I above the triad LLL dominateth the Table,
- and preserveth the peace of the universe.
- And in the seven talismans about the central Table are contained the
- Mysteries of drawing forth the letters. And the letters of the circumference
- declare in glory of Nuit, that beginneth from Aries9. {68}
- All this while the Adepts must have been chanting as it were an oratorio
- for seven instruments. And this oratorio hath one dominant theme of rapture.
- Yet it applieth to every detail of the universe as well as to the whole. And
- herein is Choronzon brought utterly to ruin, that all his work is against his
- will, not only in the whole, but in every part thereof, even as a fly that
- walketh upon a beryl-stone.
- And the tablet blazeth ever brighter till it filleth the whole Aire. And
- behold! there is is one God therein, and the letters of the stars in his
- crown, Orion, and the Pleiades, and Aldebaran, and Alpha Centauri, and Cor
- Leonis, and Cor Scorpionis, and Spica, and the pole-star, and Hercules, and
- Regulus, and Aquila, and the Ram's Eye.
- And upon a map of the stars shalt thou draw the sigil of that name; and
- because also some of the letters are alike, thou shalt know that the stars
- also have tribes and nations. The letter of a star is but the totem thereof.
- And the letter representeth not the whole nature of the star, but each star
- must be known by itself in the wisdom of him that hath the Cynocephalus in
- leash.
- And this pertaineth unto the grade of a Magus --- and that is beyond thine.
- (All this is communicated not by voice, or by writing; and there is no form in
- the stone, but only the brilliance of the Table. And now I am withdrawn from
- all that, but the Rosy Cross of 49 petals is set upright upon the summit of a
- pyramid, and all is dark, because of the exceeding light behind.)
- And there cometh a voice: The fly cried unto the ox, "Beware! Strengthen
- thyself. Set thy feet firmly upon the earth, for it is my purpose to alight
- between thy shoulders, {69} and I would not harm thee." So also are they who
- wish well unto the Masters of the Pyramid.
- And the bee said unto the flower: "Give me of thine honey," and the flower
- gave richly thereof; but the bee, though he wit it not, carried the seed of
- the flower into many fields of sun. So also are they that take unto
- themselves the Masters of the Pyramid for servants.
- Now the exceeding light that was behind the Pyramid, and the Rosy Cross
- that is set thereon, hath fulfilled the whole Aire. The black Pyramid is like
- the back of a black diamond. Also the Rosy Cross is loosened, and the petals
- of the Rose are the mingled hues of sunset and of dawn; and the Cross is the
- Golden light of noon, and in the heart of the Rose there is the secret light
- that men call midnight.
- And a voice: "Glory to God and thanksgiving to God, and there is no God but
- God. And He is exalted; He is great; and in the Sevenfold Table is His Name
- writ openly, and in the Twelvefold Table is His Name concealed."
- And the Pyramid casts a shadow of itself into the sky, and the shadow
- spreads over the whole stone. And an angel clad in blue and scarlet, with
- golden wings and plumes of purple fire, comes forth and scatters disks of
- green and gold, filing all the Aire. And they become swiftly-whirling wheels,
- singing together.
- And the voice of the angel cries: Gather up thy garments about thee10, O
- thou that hast entered the circle of the Sabbath; for in thy grave-clothes
- shouldest thou behold the resurrection. {70}
- The flesh hangeth upon thee like his rags upon a beggar that is a pilgrim
- to the shrine of the Exalted One. Nevertheless, bear them bravely, and
- rejoice in the beauty thereof, for the company of the pilgrims is a glad
- company, and they have no care, and with song and dance and wine and fair
- 9 Note that the corner letters in this table are all B = Leo.
- 10 Since the examination in the amphitheatre I have been a naked
- spirit without garments or anything; by garments he means the
- body.
- women do they make merry. And every hostel is their place, and every maid
- their queen.
- Gather up thy garments about thee, I say, for the voice of the Aethyr, that
- is the voice of the Aeon, is ended, and thou art absorbed into the lesser
- night, and caught in the web of the light of thy mother in the word
- ABRADAHARBA.
- And now the five and the six are divorced, and I am come again within my
- body.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 3, 1909. 9.15 to 11.10 a.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 14TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED UTI
-
- There come into the stone a white goat, a green dragon, and a tawny bull.
- But they pass away immediately. There is a veil of such darkness before the
- Aethyr that it seems impossible to pierce it. But there is a voice saying:
- Behold, the Great One of the Night of Time stirreth, and with his tail he
- churneth up the slime, and of the foam thereof shall he make stars. And in
- the battle of the Python and the Sphinx shall the glory be to the Sphinx, but
- the victory to the Python.
- Now the veil of darkness is formed of a very great number of exceedingly
- fine black veils, and one tears them off one at a time. And the voice says,
- There is no light or knowledge or beauty or stability in the Kingdom of the
- Grave, whither {71} thou goest. And the worm is crowned. All that thou wast
- hath he eaten up, and all that thou art is his pasture until to-morrow. And
- all that thou shalt be is nothing. Thou who wouldst enter the domain of the
- Great One of the Night of Time, this burden must thou take up. Deepen not a
- superficies.
- But I go on tearing down the veil that I may behold the vision of UTI, and
- hear the voice thererof. And there is a voice: He hath drawn the black bean.
- And another voice answers it: Not otherwise could he plant the Rose. And the
- first voice: He hath drunk of the waters of death. The answer: Not otherwise
- could he water the Rose. And the first voice: He hath burnt himself at the
- Fires of life. And the answer: Not otherwise could he sun the Rose. And the
- first voice is so faint that I cannot hear it. But the answer is: Not
- otherwise could he pluck the Rose.
- And still I go on, struggling with the blackness. Now there is an
- earthquake. The veil is torn into thousands of pieces that go flying away in
- a whirling wind. And there is an all-glorious Angel before me, standing in
- the sign of Apophis and Typhon. On his Forehead is a star, but all about him
- is darkness, and the crying of beasts. And there are lamps moving in the
- darkness.
- And the Angel says: Depart! For thou must invoke me only in the darkness.
- Therein will I appear, and reveal unto thee the Mystery of UTI. For the
- Mystery thereof is great and terrible. And it shall not be spoken in sight of
- the sun.
- Therefore I withdraw myself. (Thus far the vision upon Da'leh Addin, a
- mountain in the desert near Bou-Sâada.)
-
- December 3, 2.50-3.15 p.m.
-
- "The Angel re-appears."
-
- The blackness gathers about, so thick, so clinging, so penetrating, so
- oppressive, that all the other darkness that I have ever conceived would be
- like bright light beside it.
- His voice comes in a whisper: O thou that art master of the fifty gates of
- Understanding, is not my mother a black woman? O thou that art master of the
- Pentagram, is not the egg of spirit a black egg? Here abideth terror, and the
- blind ache of the Soul, and lo! even I, who am the sole light, a spark shut
- up, stand in the sign of Apophis and Typhon.
- I am the snake that devoureth the spirit of man with the lust of light. I
- am the sightless storm in the night that wrappeth the world about with
- desolation. Chaos is my name, and thick darkness. Know thou that the
- darkness of the earth is ruddy, and the darkness of the air is grey, but the
- darkness of the soul is utter blackness.
- The egg of the spirit is a basilisk egg, and the gates of the understanding
- are fifty, that is the sign of the Scorpion. The pillars about the neophyte
- are crowned with flame, and the vault of the Adepts is lighted by the Rose.
- And in the abyss is the eye of the hawk. But upon the great sea shall the
- Master of the Temple find neither star nor moon.
- And I was about to answer him: "The light is within me." But before I
- could frame the words, he answered me with the great word that is the Key of
- the Abyss. And he said: Thou hast entered the night; dost thou yet lust for
- day? Sorrow is my name, and affliction. I am girt about with tribulation.
- Here still hangs the Crucified One, and here the Mother weeps over the
- children that she hath not borne. Sterility is {73} my name, and desolation.
- Intolerable is thine ache, and incurable thy wound. I said, Let the darkness
- cover me; and behold, I am compassed about with the blackness that hath no
- name. O thou, who hast cast down the light into the earth, so must thou do
- for ever. And the light of the sun shall not shine upon thee, and the moon
- shall not lend thee of her lustre, and the stars shall be hidden, because thou
- art passed beyond these things, beyond the need of these things, beyond the
- desire of these things.
- What I thought were shapes of rocks, rather felt than seen, now appear to
- be veiled Masters, sitting absolutely still and silent. Nor can any one be
- distinguished from the others.
- And the Angel sayeth: Behold where thine Angel hath led thee! Thou didst
- ask fame, power and pleasure, health and wealth and love, and strength, and
- length of days. Thou didst hold life with eight tentacles, like an octopus.
- Thou didst seek the four powers and the seven delights and the twelve
- emancipations and the two and twenty Privileges and the nine and forty
- Manifestations, and lo! thou art become as one of These. Bowed are their
- backs, whereon resteth the universe. Veiled are their faces, that have beheld
- the glory Ineffable.
- These adepts seem like Pyramids --- their hoods and robes are like
- Pyramids.
- And the Angel sayeth: Verily is the Pyramid a Temple of Initiation. Verily
- also is it a tomb. Thinkest thou that there is life within the Masters of the
- Temple, that sit hooded, encamped upon the Sea? Verily, there is no life in
- them.
- Their sandals were the pure light, and they have taken {74} them from their
- feet and cast them down through the abyss, for this Aethyr is holy ground.
- Herein no forms appear, and the vision of God face to face, that is
- transmuted in the Athanor called dissolution, or hammered into one in the
- forge of meditation, is in this place but a blasphemy and a mockery.
- And the Beatific Vision is no more, and the glory of the Most High is no
- more. There is no more knowledge. There is no more bliss. There is no more
- power. There is no more beauty. For this is the Palace of Understanding: for
- thou art one with the Primeval things.
- Drink in the myrrh of my speech, that is bruised with the gall of the roc,
- and dissolved in the ink of the cuttle-fish, and perfumed with the deadly
- nightshade.
- This is thy wine, who wast drunk upon the wine of Iacchus. And for bread
- shalt thou eat salt, O thou on the corn of Ceres that didst wax fat! For as
- pure being is pure nothing, so is pure wisdom pure ---,11 and so is pure
- understanding silence, and stillness, and darkness. The eye is called
- 11 I suppose that only a Magus could have heard this word.
- seventy, and the triple Aleph whereby thou perceivest it, divideth into the
- number of the terrible word that is the Key of the Abyss.
- I am Hermes, that am sent from the Father to expound all things discreetly
- in these the last words that thou shalt hear before thou take thy seat among
- these, whose eyes are sealed up, and whose ears are stopped, and whose mouths
- are clenched, who are folded in upon themselves, the liquor of whose bodies is
- dried up, so that nothing remains but a little pyramid of dust.
- And that bright light of comfort, and that piercing sword {75} of truth,
- and all that power and beauty that they have made of themselves, is cast from
- them, as it is written, "I saw Satan like lightning fall from Heaven." And as
- a flaming sword is it dropt through the abyss, where the four beasts keep
- watch and ward. And it appeareth in the heaven of Jupiter as a morning star,
- or as an evening star. And the light thereof shineth even unto the earth, and
- bringeth hope and help to them that dwell in the darkness of thought, and
- drink of the poison of life. Fifty are the gates of understanding, and one
- hundred and six are the seasons thereof. And the name of every season is
- Death.
- During all this speech, the figure of the Angel has dwindled and flickered,
- and now it is gone out.
- And I come back in the body, rushing like a flame in a great wind. And the
- shew-stone has become warm, and in it is its own light.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 3, 1909 9.50-11.15 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 13TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ZIM
-
- Into the Stone there cometh an image of shining waters, glistening in the
- sun. Unfathomable is their beauty, for they are limpid, and the floor is of
- gold. Yet the sense thereof is of fruitlessness.
- And an Angel cometh forth, of pure pale gold, walking upon the water.
- Above his head is a rainbow, and the water foams beneath his feet. And he
- saith: Before his face am I come that hath the thirty-three thunders of
- increase in his hand. From the golden water shalt thou gather corn. {76}
- All the Aire behind him is gold, but it opens as it were a veil. There are
- two terrible black giants, wrestling in mortal hatred. And there is a little
- bird upon a bush, and the bird flaps its wings. Thereat the strength of the
- giants snaps, and they fall in heaps to the earth, as though all their bones
- were suddenly broken.
- And now waves of light roll through the Aethyr, as if they were playing.
- Therefore suddenly I am in a garden, upon a terrace of a great castle, that is
- upon a rocky mountain. In the garden are fountains and many flowers. There
- are girls also in the garden, tall, slim, delicate and pale. And now I see
- that the flowers are the girls, for they change from one to another; so
- varied, and lucent, and harmonious is all this garden, that it seems like a
- great opal.
- A voice comes: This water which thou seest is called the water of death.
- But NEMO hath filled therefrom our springs.
- And I said: Who is NEMO?
- And the voice answered: A dolphin's tooth, and a ram's horns, and the hand
- of a man that is hanged, and the phallus of a goat. (By this I understand
- that nun is explained by shin, and hé by resh, and mem by yod, and ayin by
- tau. NEMO is therefore called 165 = 11 x 15; and is in himself 910 = 91 Amen
- x 10; and 13 x 70 = The One Eye, "Achad Ayin.")
- And now there cometh an Angel into the garden, but he hath not any of the
- attributes of the former Angels, for he is like a young man, dressed in white
- linen robes.
- And he saith: No man hath beheld the face of my Father. Therefore he that
- hath beheld it is called NEMO. And know thou that every man that is called
- NEMO hath a garden that he tendeth. And every garden that is and flourisheth
- hath {77} been prepared from the desert by NEMO, watered with the waters that
- were called death.
- And I say unto him: To what end is the garden prepared?
- And he saith: First for the beauty and delight thereof; and next because it
- is written, "And Tetragrammaton Elohim planted a garden eastward in Eden."
- And lastly, because though every flower bringeth forth a maiden, yet is there
- one flower that shall bring forth a man-child. And his name shall be called
- NEMO, when he beholdeth the face of my Father. And he that tendeth the garden
- seeketh not to single out the flower that shall be NEMO. He doeth naught but
- tend the garden.
- And I said: Pleasant indeed is the garden, and light is the toil of tending
- it, and great is the reward.
- And he said: Bethink thee that NEMO hath beheld the face of my Father. In
- Him is only Peace.
- And I said: Are all gardens like unto this garden?
- And he waved his hand, and in the Aire across the valley appeared an island
- of coral, rosy, with green palms and fruit-trees, in the midst of the bluest
- of the seas.
- And he waved his hand again, and there appeared a valley shut in by mighty
- snow mountains, and in it were pleasant streams of water, rushing through, and
- broad rivers, and lakes covered with lilies.
- And he waved his hand again, and there was a vision, as it were of an oasis
- in the desert.
- And again he waved his hand, and there was a dim country with grey rocks,
- and heather, and gorse, and bracken.
- And he waved his hand yet again, and there was a park, and a small house
- therein, surrounded by yews. This time {78} the house opens, and I see in it
- an old man, sitting by a table. He is blind. Yet he writeth in a great book,
- constantly. I see what he is writing: "The words of the Book are as the
- leaves of the flowers in the garden. Many indeed of these my songs shall go
- forth as maidens, but there is one among them, which one I know not, that
- shall be a man-child, whose name shall be NEMO, when he hath beheld the face
- of the Father, and become blind."
- (All this vision is most extraordinarily pleasant and peaceful, entirely
- without strength or ecstasy, or any positive quality, but equally free from
- the opposites of any of those qualities.) And the young man seems to read my
- thought, which is, that I should love to stay in this garden and do nothing
- for ever; for he sayeth to me: Come with me, and behold how NEMO tendeth his
- garden.
- So we enter the earth, and there is a veiled figure, in absolute darkness.
- Yet it is perfectly possible to see in it, so that the minutest details do not
- escape us. And upon the root of one flower he pours acid so that that root
- writhes as if in torture. And another he cuts, and the shriek is like the
- shriek of a mandrake, torn up by the roots. And another he chars with fire,
- and yet another he anoints with oil.
- And I said: Heavy is the labour, but great indeed is the reward.
- And the young man answered me: He shall not see the reward, he tendeth the
- garden.
- And I said: What shall come unto him?
- And he said: This thou canst not know, nor is it revealed by the letters
- that are the totems of the stars, but only by the stars.
- And he says to me, quite disconnectedly: The man of earth {79} is the
- adherent. The lover giveth his life unto the work among men. The hermit
- goeth solitary, and giveth only of his light unto men.
- And I ask him: Why does he tell me that?
- And he says: I tell thee not. Thou tellest thyself, for thou hast pondered
- thereupon for many days, and hast not found light. And now that thou art
- called NEMO, the answer to every riddle that thou hast not found shall spring
- up in thy mind, unsought. Who can tell upon what day a flower shall bloom?
- And thou shalt give thy wisdom unto the world, and that shall be thy
- garden. And concerning time and death, thou hast naught to do with these
- things. For though a precious stone be hidden in the sand of the desert, it
- shall not heed for the wind of the desert, although it be but sand. For the
- worker of works hath worked thereupon; and because it is clear, it is
- invisible; and because it is hard, it moveth not.
- All these words are heard by everyone that is called NEMO. And with that
- doth he apply himself to understanding. And he must understand the virtue of
- the waters of death, and he must understand the virtue of the sun and the
- wind, and of the worm that turneth the earth, and the stars that roof in the
- garden. And he must understand the separate nature and property of every
- flower, or how shall he tend his garden?
- And I said to him: Concerning the Vision and the Voice, I would know if
- these things be of the essence of the Aethyr, or of the essence of the seer.
- And he answers: It is of the essence of him that is called NEMO, combined
- with essence of the Aethyr, for from {80} the 1st Aethyr to the 15th Aethyr,
- there is no vision and no voice, save for him that is called NEMO. And he
- that seeketh the vision and the voice therein is led away by dog-faced demons
- that show no sign of truth, seducing from the Sacred Mysteries, unless his
- name be NEMO.
- And hadst thou not been fitted, thou too hadst been led away, for before
- the gate of the 15th Aethyr, is this written: He shall send them strong
- delusion, that they should believe a lie. And again it is written: The Lord
- hardened Pharaoh's heart. And again it is written that God tempteth man. But
- thou hadst the word and the sign, and thou hadst authority from thy superior,
- and licence. And thou hast done well in that thou didst not dare, and in that
- thou dost dare. For daring is not presumption.
- And he said moreover: Thou dost well to keep silence, for I perceive how
- many questions arise in thy mind; yet already thou knowest that the answering,
- as the asking, must be vain. For NEMO hath all in himself. He hath come
- where there is no light or knowledge, only when he needeth them no more.
- And then we bow silently, giving a certain sign, called the Sign of Isis
- Rejoicing. And then he remaineth to ward the Aethyr, while I return unto the
- bank of sand that is the bed of the river near the desert.
-
- THE RIVER-BED NEAR BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 4, 1909. 2.10-3.45 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 12TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED LOE.
-
- There appear in the stone two pillars of flame, and in the midst is a
- chariot of white fire.
- This seems to be the chariot of the Seventh Key of {81} Tarot. But it is
- drawn by four sphinxes, diverse, like the four sphinxes upon the door of the
- vault of the adepts, counterchanged in their component parts.
- The chariot itself is the lunar crescent, waning. The canopy is supported
- by eight pillars of amber. These pillars are upright, and yet the canopy
- which they support is the whole vault of the night.
- The charioteer is a man in golden armour, studded with sapphires, but over
- his shoulders is a white robe, and over that a red robe. Upon his golden
- helmet he beareth for his crest a crab. His hands are clasped upon a cup,
- from which radiates a ruddy glow, constantly increasing, so that everything is
- blotted out by its glory, and the whole Aire is filled with it.
- And there is a marvelous perfume in the Aire, like unto the perfume of Ra
- Hoor Khuit, but sublimated, as if the quintessence of that perfume alone were
- burnt. For it hath the richness and voluptuousness and humanity of blood, and
- the strength and freshness of meal, and the sweetness of honey, and the purity
- of olive-oil, and the holiness of that oil which is made of myrrh, and
- cinnamon, and galangal.
- The charioteer speaks in a low, solemn voice, awe-inspiring, like a large
- and very distant bell: Let him look upon the cup whose blood is mingled
- therein, for the wine of the cup is the blood of the saints. Glory unto the
- Scarlet Woman, Babalon the Mother of Abominations, that rideth upon the Beast,
- for she hath spilt their blood in every corner of the earth and lo! she hath
- mingled it in the cup of her whoredom.
- With the breath of her kisses hath she fermented it, and it hath become the
- wine of the Sacrament, the wine of the {82} Sabbath; and in the Holy Assembly
- hath she poured it out for her worshippers, and they had become drunken
- thereon, so that face to face they beheld my Father. Thus are they made
- worthy to become partakers of the Mystery of this holy vessel, for the blood
- is the life. So sitteth she from age to age, and the righteous are never
- weary of her kisses, and by her murders and fornications she seduceth the
- world. Therein is manifested the glory of my Father, who is truth.
- (This wine is such that its virtue radiateth through the cup, and I reel
- under the intoxication of it. And every thought is destroyed by it. It
- abideth alone, and its name is Compassion. I understand by "Compassion," the
- sacrament of suffering, partaken by the true worshippers of the Highest. And
- it is an ecstasy in which there is no trace of pain. Its passivity (=passion)
- is like the giving-up of the self to the beloved.)
- The voice continues: This is the Mystery of Babylon, the Mother of
- abominations, and this is the mystery of her adulteries, for she hath yielded
- up herself to everything that liveth, and hath become a partaker in its
- mystery. And because she hath made herself the servant of each, therefore is
- she become the mistress of all. Not as yet canst thou comprehend her glory.
- Beautiful art thou, O Babylon, and desirable, for thou hast given thyself
- to everything that liveth, and thy weakness hath subdued their strength. For
- in that union thou didst "understand." Therefore art thou called Understanding,
- O Babylon, Lady of the Night!
- This is that which is written, "O my God, in one last rapture let me attain
- to the union with the many." For she is {83} Love, and her love is one, and
- she hath divided the one love into infinite loves, and each love is one, and
- equal to The One, and therefore is she passed "from the assembly and the law
- and the enlightenment unto the anarchy of solitude and darkness. For ever
- thus must she veil the brilliance of Her Self."
- O Babylon, Babylon, thou mighty Mother, that ridest upon the crownèd beast,
- let me be drunken upon the wine of thy fornications; let thy kisses wanton me
- unto death, that even I, thy cup-bearer, may "understand."
- Now, through the ruddy glow of the cup, I may perceive far above, and
- infinitely great, the vision of Babylon. And the Beast whereon she rideth is
- the Lord of the City of the Pyramids, that I beheld in the fourteenth Aethyr.
- Now that is gone in the glow of the cup, and the Angel saith: Not as yet
- mayest thou understand the mystery of the Beast, for it pertaineth not unto
- the mystery of this Aire, and few that are new-born unto Understanding are
- capable thereof.
- The cup glows ever brighter and fierier. All my sense is unsteady, being
- smitten with ecstasy.
- And the Angel sayeth: Blessed are the saints, that their blood is mingled
- in the cup, and can never be separate any more. For Babylon the Beautiful,
- the Mother of abominations, hath sworn by her holy cteis, whereof every point
- is a pang, that she will not rest from her adulteries until the blood of
- everything that liveth is gathered therein, and the wine thereof laid up and
- matured and consecrated, and worthy to gladden the heart of my Father. For my
- Father is weary with the stress of eld, and cometh not to her bed. Yet shall
- {84} this perfect wine be the quintessence, and the elixir, and by the draught
- thereof shall he renew his youth; and so shall it be eternally, as age by age
- the worlds do dissolve and change, and the universe unfoldeth itself as a
- Rose, and shutteth itself up as the Cross that is bent into the cube.
- And this is the comedy of Pan, that is played at night in the thick forest.
- And this is the mystery of Dionysus Zagreus, that is celebrated upon the holy
- mountain of Kithairon. And this is the secret of the brothers of the Rosy
- Cross; and this is the heart of the ritual that is accomplished in the Vault
- of the Adepts that is hidden in the Mountain of the Caverns, even the Holy
- Mountain Abiegnus.
- And this is the meaning of the Supper of the Passover, the spilling of the
- blood of the Lamb being a ritual of the Dark Brothers, for they have sealed up
- the Pylon with blood, lest the Angel of Death should enter therein. Thus do
- they shut themselves off from the company of the saints. Thus do they keep
- themselves from compassion and from understanding. Accursed are they, for
- they shut up their blood in their heart.
- They keep themselves from the kisses of my Mother Babylon, and in their
- lonely fortresses they pray to the false moon. And they bind themselves
- together with an oath, and with a great curse. And of their malice they
- conspire together, and they have power, and mastery, and in their cauldrons do
- they brew the harsh wine of delusion, mingled with the poison of their
- selfishness.
- Thus they make war upon the Holy One, sending forth their delusion upon
- men, and upon everything that liveth. So that their false compassion is
- called compassion, and their {85} false understanding is called understanding,
- for this is their most potent spell.
- Yet of their own poison do they perish, and in their lonely fortresses
- shall they be eaten up by Time that hath cheated them to serve him, and by the
- mighty devil Choronzon, their master, whose name is the Second Death, for the
- blood that they have sprinkled on their Pylon, that is a bar against the Angel
- Death, is the key by which he entereth in.12
- The Angel sayeth: And this is the word of double power in the voice of the
- Master, wherein the Five interpenetrateth the Six. This is its secret
- interpretation that may not be understood, save only of "them that understand."
- And for this is the Key of the Pylon of Power, because there is no power that
- may endure, save only the power that descendeth in this my chariot from
- Babylon, the city of the Fifty Gates, the Gate of the God On
- [HB:Nun-final HB:Ayin HB:Lamed HB:Aleph HB:Bet HB:Aleph HB:Bet ]. Moreover is On the Key of the Vault that is
- 120. So also do the Majesty and the Beauty derive from the Supernal Wisdom.
- But this is a mystery utterly beyond thine understanding. For Wisdom is
- the Man, and Understanding the Woman, and not until thou hast perfectly
- understood canst thou begin to be wise. But I reveal unto thee a mystery of
- the Aethyrs, that not only are they bound up with the Sephiroth, but also with
- the Paths. Now, the plane of the Aethyrs interpenetrateth and surroundeth
- the universe wherein the Sephiroth are established, and therefore is the order
- of the Aethyrs not the order of the Tree of Life. And only in a few places do
- they coincide. {86} But the knowledge of the Aethyrs is deeper than the
- knowledge of the Sephiroth, for that in the Aethyrs is the knowledge of the
- Aeons, and of Theta epsilon lambda eta mu alpha .13 And to each shall it be given
- according to his capacity. (He has been saying certain secret things to the
- unconscious mind of the seer, of a personal nature.)
- Now a voice comes from without: And lo! I saw you to the end.
- 12 (I think the trouble with these people was, that they wanted to
- substitute the blood of someone else for their own blood, because
- they wanted to keep their personalities.)
- 13 WEH NOTE: This is exactly the case in Merkabah Qabalah. These
- visions of Crowley's are beyond the Sephiroth as are the visions
- of the Merkabah or chariot that is a part of them. Traditional
- Qabalah is very much in accord with his experience at this point.
- The Sephiroth of the Tree of Life, as depicted in the standard
- Tree and the Golden Dawn material, are not compatible with the
- visions approaching and beyond the Abyss. There are other
- configurations, some including modified conceptions of the
- Sephiroth, that do apply in some degree. See the "Thelema Lodge"
- "Calendar", issues for May and June of 1990 e.v.
- And a great bell begins to toll. And there come six little children out of
- the floor of the chariot, and in their hands is a veil so fine and transparent
- that it is hardly visible. Yet, when they put it over the Cup, the Angel
- bowing his head reverently, the light of the Cup goes out entirely. And as
- the light of the Cup vanishes, it is like a swift sunset in the whole Aire,
- for it was from the light of that Cup alone that it was lighted.
- And now the light is all gone out of the stone, and I am very cold.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 4 - 5, 1909. 11.30 p.m. - 1.20 a.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 11TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED IKH
-
- There appears in the stone immediately the Kamea of the Moon. And it is
- rolled up; and behind it there appeareth a great Host of Angels. Their backs
- are turned towards me, but I can see how tremendous are their arms, which are
- swords and spears. They have wings upon their helmets and their heels: they
- are clad in complete armour, and the least of their swords is like the
- breaking forth of a tremendous {87} storm of lightning. The least of their
- spears is like a great water-spout. On their shields are the eyes of
- Tetragrammaton, winged with flame, --- white, red, black, yellow and blue. On
- their flanks are vast squadrons of elephants, and behind them is their meteor-
- artillery. They that sit upon the elephants are armed with the thunderbolt of
- Zeus.
- Now in all that host there is no motion. Yet they are not resting upon
- their arms, but tense and vigilant. And between them and me is the God Shu,
- whom before I did not see, because his force filleth the whole Aethyr. And
- indeed he is not visible in his form. Nor does he come to the seer through
- any of the senses; he is understood, rather than expressed.
- I perceive that all this army is defended by fortresses, nine mighty towers
- of iron upon the frontier of the Aethyr. Each tower is filled with warriors
- in silver armour. It is impossible to describe the feeling of tension; they
- are like oarsmen waiting for the gun.
- I perceive that an Angel is standing on either side of me; nay, I am in the
- midst of a company of armed angels, and their captain is standing in front of
- me. He too is clad in silver armour; and about him, closely wrapped to his
- body, is a whirling wind, so swift that any blow struck against him would be
- broken.
- And he speaketh unto me these words:
- Behold, a mighty guard against the terror of things, the fastness of the
- Most High, the legions of eternal vigilance; these are they that keep watch
- and ward day and night throughout the aeons. Set in them is all force of the
- Mighty One, yet there sirreth not one plume of the wings of their helmets.
- {88}
- Behold, the foundation of the Holy City, the towers and the bastions
- thereof! Behold the armies of light that are set against the outermost Abyss,
- against the horror of emptiness, and the malice of Choronzon. Behold how
- worshipful is the wisdom of the Master, that he hath set his stability in the
- all-wandering Air and in the changeful Moon. In the purple flashes of
- lightning hath He written the word Eternity, and in the wings of the swallow
- hath He appointed rest.
- By three and by three and by three hath He made firm the foundation against
- the earthquake that is three. For in the number nine is the changefulness of
- the numbers brought to naught. For with whatsoever number thou wilt cover it,
- it appeareth unchanged.
- These things are spoken unto him that understandeth, that is a breastplate
- unto the elephants, or a corselet unto the angels, or a scale upon the towers
- of iron; yet is this mighty host set only for a defense, and whoso passeth
- beyond their lines hath no help in them.
- Yet must he that understandeth go forth unto the outermost Abyss, and there
- must he speak with him that is set above the four-fold terror, the Princes of
- Evil, even with Choronzon, the mighty devil that inhabiteth the outermost
- Abyss. And none may speak with him, or understand him, but the servants of
- Babylon, that understand, and they that are without understanding, his
- servants.
- Behold! it entereth not into the heart, nor into the mind of man to
- conceive this matter; for the sickness of the body is death, and the sickness
- of the heart is despair, and the sickness of the mind is madness. But in the
- outermost Abyss is sickness of the aspiration, and sickness of the will, and
- sickness {89} of the essence of all, and there is neither word nor thought
- wherein the image of its image is reflected.
- And whoso passeth into the outermost Abyss, except he be of them that
- understand, holdeth out his hands, and boweth his neck, unto the chains of
- Choronzon. And as a devil he walketh about the earth, immortal, and he
- blasteth the flowers of the earth, and he corrupteth the fresh air, and he
- maketh poisonous the water; and the fire that is the friend of man, and the
- pledge of his aspiration, seeing that it mounteth ever upward as a pyramid,
- and seeing that man stole it in a hollow tube from Heaven, even that fire he
- turneth unto ruin, and madness, and fever, and destruction. And thou, that
- art an heap of dry dust in the city of the pyramids, must understand these
- things.
- And now a thing happens, which is unfortunately sheer nonsense; for the
- Aethyr that is the foundation of the universe was attacked by the Outermost
- Abyss, and the only way that I can express it is by saying that the universe
- was shaken. But the universe was "not" shaken. And that is the exact truth; so
- that the rational mind which is interpreting these spiritual things is
- offended; but, being trained to obey, it setteth down that which it doth not
- understand. For the rational mind indeed reasoneth, but never attaineth unto
- Understanding; but the Seer is of them that understand.
- And the Angel saith:
- Behold, He hath established His mercy and His might, and unto His might is
- added victory, and unto his Mercy is added splendour. And all these things
- hath He ordered in beauty, and He hath set them firmly upon the Eternal Rock,
- and therefrom He hath suspended His kingdom as one pearl that {90} is set in a
- jewel of threescore pearls and twelve. And He hath garnished it with the Four
- Holy Living Creatures for Guardians, and He hath graven therein the seal of
- righteousness,14 and He hath burnished it with the fire of His Angel, and the
- blush of His loveliness informeth it, and with delight and with wit hath He
- made it merry at the heart, and the core thereof is the Secret of His being,
- and therein is His name Generation. And this His stability had the number 80,
- for that the price thereof is War.15
- Beware, therefore, O thou who art appointed to understand the secret of the
- Outermost Abyss, for in every Abyss thou must assume the mask and form of the
- Angel thereof. Hadst thou a name, thou wert irrevocably lost. Search,
- therefore, if there be yet one drop of blood that is not gathered into the cup
- of Babylon the Beautiful, for in that little pile of dust, if there could be
- one drop of blood, it should be utterly corrupt; it should breed scorpions and
- vipers, and the cat of slime.16
- And I said unto the Angel:
- Is there not one appointed as a warden?
- And he said:
- Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani.
- 14 Full title of Jesod is Tzedeq Jesod Olahm, "The Righteous is the
- Foundation of the World."
- 15 I.S.V.D., Jesod, = 80, the number of pé, the letter of Mars.
- 16 WEH NOTE: This drop of blood is an attachment to the images of
- mortal life, the sensoria and that derived from it in the mind.
- To pass Choronzon one must abandon interpretation and identity of
- the elements of the vision.
- Such an ecstasy of anguish racks me that I cannot give it voice, yet I know
- it is but as the anguish of Gethsemane. And that is the last word of the
- Aethyr. The outposts are passed, and before the seer extends the outermost
- Abyss.
- I am returned.
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 5, 1909. 10.10-11.35 p.m.
-
-
- In nomine BABALON
- Amen.
-
- Restriction unto Choronzon.
-
- THE TENTH AETHYR IS CALLED ZAX.
-
- This Aethyr being accursèd, and the seer forewarned, he taketh these
- precautions for the scribe.
-
- First let the scribe be seated in the centre of the circle in the desert
- sand, and let the circle be fortified by the Holy Names of God ---
- Tetragrammaton and Shaddai El Chai and Ararita.
- And let the Demon be invoked within a triangle, wherein is inscribed the
- name of Choronzon, and about it let him write ANAPHAXETON --- ANAPHANETON ---
- PRIMEUMATON, and in the angles MI-CA-EL: and at each angle the Seer shall slay
- a pigeon, and having done this, let him retire to a secret place, where is
- neither sight nor hearing, and sit within his black robe, secretly invoking
- the Aethyr. And let the Scribe perform the Banishing Rituals of the Pentagram
- and Hexagram, and let him call upon the Holy Names of God, and say the
- Exorcism of Honorius, and let him beseech protection and help of the Most
- High.
- And let him be furnished with the Magick Dagger, and let him strike
- fearlessly at anything that may seek to break through the circle, were it the
- appearance of the Seer himself. And if the Demon pass out of the triangle,
- let him threaten him with the Dagger, and command him to return. And let him
- beware lest he himself lean beyond the circle. And {92} since he reverenceth
- the Person of the Seer as his Teacher, let the Seer bind him with a great Oath
- to do this.
- Now, then, the Seer being entered within the triangle, let him take the
- Victims and cut their throats, pouring the blood within the Triangle, and
- being most heedful that not one drop fall without the Triangle; or else
- Choronzon should be able to manifest in the universe.17
- And when the sand hath sucked up the blood of the victims, let him recite
- the Call of the Aethyr apart secretly as aforesaid. Then will the Vision be
- revealed, and the Voice heard.
- " "The Oath"
- I, Omnia Vincam, a Probationer of A.'. A.'., hereby solemnly promise
- upon my magical honour, and swear by Adonai the angel that guardeth me, that I
- will defend this magic circle of Art with thoughts and words and deeds. I
- promise to threaten with the Dagger and command back into the triangle the
- spirit incontinent, if he should strive to escape from it; and to strike with
- a Dagger at anything that may seek to enter this Circle, were it in appearance
- the body of the Seer himself. And I will be exceeding wary, armed against
- force and cunning; and I will preserve with my life the inviolability of this
- Circle, Amen.
-
- The Cry of the 10th Aethyr, Which is Called ZAX
- 17 WEH NOTE: Perhaps the joke here is that the manifest universe is
- itself, in a sense, Choronzon.
- There is no being in the outermost Abyss, but constant forms come forth
- from the nothingness of it. {93}
- Then the Devil of the Aethyr, that mighty devil Choronzon, crieth aloud,
- Zazas, Zazas, Nasatanada Zasas.
- I am the Master of Form, and from me all forms proceed.
- I am I. I have shut myself up from the spendthrifts, my gold is safe in my
- treasure-chamber, and I have made every living thing my concubine, and none
- shall touch them, save only I. And yet I am scorched, even while I shiver in
- the wind. He hateth me and tormenteth me. He would have stolen me from
- myself, but I shut myself up and mock at him, even while he plagueth me. From
- me come leprosy and pox and plague and cancer and cholera and the falling
- sickness. Ah! I will reach up to the knees of the Most High, and tear his
- phallus with my teeth, and I will bray his testicles in a mortar, and make
- poison thereof, to slay the sons of men.
- (Here the Spirit stimulated the voice of Frater P., which also appeared to
- come from his station and not from the triangle.)
- I don't think I can get any more; I think that's all there is.
- (The Frater was seated in a secret place covered completely by a black
- robe, in the position called the "Thunderbolt". He did not move or speak
- during the ceremony.)
- Next the Scribe was hallucinated, believing that before him was a beautiful
- courtesan whom previously he had loved in Paris. Now, she wooed him with soft
- words and glances, but he knew these things for delusions of the devil, and he
- would not leave the circle.
- The demon then laughed wildly and loud.
- (Upon the Scribe threatening him, the Demon proceeded, after a short
- delay.)
- They have called me the God of laughter, and I laugh when I will slay. And
- they have thought that I could not {94} smile, but I smile upon whom I would
- seduce. O inviolable one, that canst not be tempted. If thou canst command
- me by the power of the Most High, know that I did indeed tempt thee, and it
- repenteth me. I bow myself humbly before the great and terrible names whereby
- thou hast conjured and constrained me. But thy name is mercy, and I cry aloud
- for pardon. Let me come and put my head beneath thy feet, that I may serve
- thee. For if thou commandest me to obedience in the Holy names, I cannot
- swerve therefrom, for their first whispering is greater than the noise of all
- my temptests. Bid me therefore come unto thee upon my hands and knees that I
- may adore thee, and partake of thy forgiveness. Is not thy mercy infinite?
- (Here Choronzon attempts to seduce the Scribe by appealing to his pride.
- But the Scribe refused to be tempted, and commanded the demon to continue
- with the Aethyr.
- There was again a short delay.)
- Choronzon hath no form, because he is the maker of all form; and so rapidly
- he changeth from one to the other as he may best think fit to seduce those
- whom he hateth, the servants of the Most High.
- Thus taketh he the form of a beautiful woman, or of a wise and holy man, or
- of a serpent that writheth upon the earth ready to sting.
- And, because he is himself, therefore he is no self; the terror of
- darkness, and the blindness of night, and the deafness of the adder, and the
- tastelessness of stale and stagnant water, and the black fire of hatred, and
- the udders of the Cat of slime; not one thing, but many things. Yet, with all
- that, his torment {95} is eternal. The sun burns him as he writhes naked upon
- the sands of hell, and the wind cuts him bitterly to the bone, a harsh dry
- wind, so that he is sore athirst. Give unto me, I pray thee, one drop of
- water from the pure springs of Paradise, that I may quench my thirst.
- (The Scribe refused.)
- Sprinkle water upon my head. I can hardly go on.
- (This last was spoken from the triangle in the natural voice of the Frater,
- which Choronzon again simulated. But he did not succeed in taking the
- Frater's form --- which was absurd!
- The Scribe resisted the appeal to his pity, and conjured the demon to
- proceed by the names of the Most High. Choronzon attempted also to seduce the
- faithfulness of the Scribe. A long colloquy ensued. The Scribe cursed him by
- the Holy Names of God, and the power of the Pentagram.)
- I feed upon the names of the Most High. I churn them in my jaws, and I
- void them from my fundament. I fear not the power of the Pentagram, for I am
- the Master of the Triangle. My name is three hundred and thirty and three,
- and that is thrice one. Be vigilant, therefore, for I warn thee that I am
- about to deceive thee. I shall say words that thou wilt take to be the cry of
- the Aethyr, and thou wilt write them down, thinking them to be great secrets
- of Magick power, and they will be only my jesting with thee.
- (Here the Scribe invoked the Angels, and the Holy Guardian Angel of the
- Frater P. . . . The demon replied:)
- I know the name of the Angel of thee and thy brother P. . . ., and all thy
- dealings with him are but a cloak for thy filthy sorceries.
- (Here the Scribe averred that he knew more than the {96} demon, and so
- feared him not, and ordered the demon to proceed.)
- Thou canst tell me naught that I know not, for in me is all Knowledge:
- Knowledge is my name. Is not the head of the great Serpent arisen into
- Knowledge?
- (Here the Scribe again commanded Choronzon to continue with the call.)
- Know thou that there is no Cry in the tenth Aethyr like unto the other
- Cries, for Choronzon is Dispersion, and cannot fix his mind upon any one thing
- for any length of time. Thou canst master him in argument, O talkative one;
- thou wast commanded, wast thou not, to talk to Choronzon? He sought not to
- enter the circle, or to leave the triangle, yet thou didst prate of all these
- things.
- (Here the Scribe threatened the demon with anger and pain and hell. The
- demon replied:)
- Thinkest thou, O fool, that there is any anger and any pain that I am not,
- or any hell but this my spirit?
-
- Images, images, images, all without control, all without reason. The
- malice of Choronzon is not the malice of a being; it is the quality of malice,
- because he that boasteth himself "I am I", hath in truth no self, and these
- are they that are fallen under my power, the slaves of the Blind One that
- boasted himself to be the Enlightened One. For there is no centre, nay,
- nothing but Dispersion.
- Woe, woe, woe, threefold to him that is led away by talk, O talkative One.
- O thou that hast written two-and-thirty books of Wisdom, and art more
- stupid than an owl, by thine own talk is thy {97} vigilance wearied, and by my
- talk art thou befooled and tricked, O thou that sayest that thou shalt endure.
- Knowest thou how nigh thou art to destruction? For thou that art the Scribe
- hast not the understanding18 that alone availeth against Choronzon. And wert
- thou not protected by the Holy Names of God and the circle, I would rush upon
- thee and tear thee. For when I made myself like unto a beautiful woman, if
- thou hadst come to me, I would have rotted thy body with the pox, and thy
- liver with cancer, and I would have torn off thy testicles with my teeth. And
- if I had seduced thy pride, and thou hadst bidden me to come into the circle,
- I would have trampled thee under foot, and for a thousand years shouldst thou
- have been but one of the tape-worms that is in me. And if I had seduced thy
- pity, and thou hadst poured one drop of water without the circle, then would I
- have blasted thee with flame. But I was not able to prevail against thee.
- How beautiful are the shadows of the ripples of the sand!
- 18 Originally, for "understanding" was written "power". Choronzon
- was always using some word that did not represent his thought,
- because there is no proper link between his thought and speech.
- Note that he never seems able to distinguish between the Frater
- and the Scribe, and addresses first one, then the other, in the
- same sentence.
- Would God that I were dead.
- For know that I am proud and revengeful and lascivious, and I prate even as
- thou. For even as I walked among the Sons of God, I heard it said that P. . .
- . could both will and know, and might learn at length to dare, but that to
- keep silence he should never learn. O thou that art so ready to speak, so
- slow to watch, thou art delivered over unto my power for this. And now one
- word was necessary unto me, and I could not speak it. I behold the beauty of
- the earth in {98} her desolation, and greater far is mine, who sought to be my
- naked self. Knowest thou that in my soul is utmost fear? And such is my
- force and my cunning, that a hundred times have I been ready to leap, and for
- fear have missed. And a thousand times am I baulked by them of the City of
- the Pyramids, that set snares for my feet. More knowledge have I than the
- Most High, but my will is broken, and my fierceness is marred by fear, and I
- must speak, speak, speak, millions of mad voices in my brain.
-
- With a heart of furious fancies,
- Whereof I am Commander,
- With a burning spear
- And a horse of Air
- To the wilderness I wander.
-
- (The idea was to keep the Scribe busy writing, so as to spring upon him.
- For, while the Scribe talked, Choronzon had thrown sand into the circle, and
- filled it up. But Choronzon could not think fast and continuously, and so
- resorted to the device of quotation.
- The Scribe had written two or three words of "Tom o'Bedlam," when Choronzon
- sprang within the circle (that part of the circumference of which that was
- nearest to him he had been filling up with sand all this time), and leaped
- upon the Scribe, throwing him to the earth. The conflict took place within
- the circle. The Scribe called upon Tetragrammaton, and succeeded in
- compelling Choronzon to return into his triangle. By dint of anger and of
- threatening him with the Magick Staff did he accomplish this. He then
- repaired the circle. The discomfited demon now continued:)
- All is dispersion. These are the qualities of things. {99}
- The tenth Aethyr is the world of adjectives, and there is no substance
- therein.
- (Now returneth the beautiful woman who had before tempted the Scribe. She
- prevailed not.)
- I am afraid of sunset, for Tum is more terrible than Ra, and Khephra the
- Beetle is greater than the Lion Mau.
- I am a-cold.
- (Here Choronzon wanted to leave the triangle to obtain wherewith to cover
- his nakedness. The Scribe refused the request, threatening the demon. After
- a while the latter continued:)
- I am commanded, why I know not, by him that speaketh. Were it thou, thou
- little fool, I would tear thee limb from limb. I would bite off thine ears
- and nose before I began with thee. I would take thy guts for fiddle-strings
- at the Black Sabbath.
- Thou didst make a great fight there in the circle; thou art a goodly
- warrior!
- (Then did the demon laugh loudly. The Scribe said: Thou canst not harm one
- hair of my head.)
- I will pull out every hair of thy head, every hair of thy body, every hair
- of thy soul, one by one.
- (Then said the Scribe: Thou hast no power.)
- Yea, verily I have power over thee, for thou hast taken the Oath, and art
- bound unto the White Brothers, and therefore have I the power to torture thee
- so long as thou shalt be.
- (Then said the Scribe unto him: Thou liest.)
- Ask of thy brother P. . . ., and he shall tell thee if I lie!
- (This the Scribe refused to do, saying that it was no concern of the
- demon's.) {100}
- I have prevailed against the Kingdom of the Father, and befouled his beard;
- and I have prevailed against the Kingdom of the Son, and torn off his Phallus;
- but against the Kingdom of the Holy Ghost shall I strive and not prevail. The
- three slain doves are my threefold blasphemy against him; but their blood
- shall make fertile the sand, and I writhe in blackness and horror of hate, and
- prevail not.
- (Then the demon tried to make the Scribe laugh at Magick, and to think that
- it was all rubbish, that he might deny the names of God that he had invoked to
- protect him; which, if he had doubted but for an instant, he had leapt upon
- him, and gnawed through his spine at the neck.
- Choronzon succeed not in his design.)
- In this Aethyr is neither beginning nor end, for it is all hotch-potch,
- because it is of the wicked on earth and the damned in hell. And so long as
- it be hotch-potch, it mattereth little what may be written by the sea-green
- incorruptible Scribe.
- The horror of it will be given in another place and time, and through
- another Seer, and that Seer shall be slain as a result of his revealing. But
- the present Seer, who is not P. . . ., seeth not the horror, because he is
- shut up, and hath no name.
- (Now was there some further parleying betwixt the demon and the Scribe,
- concerning the departure and the writing of the word, the Scribe not knowing
- if it were meet that the demon should depart.
- Then the Seer took the Holy Ring, and wrote the name BABALON, that is
- victory over Choronzon, and he was no more manifest.) {101}
- (This cry was obtained on Dec. 6, 1909, between 2 and 4.15 p.m., in a
- lonely valley of fine sand, in the desert near Bou-Sâada. The Aethyr was
- edited and revised on the following day.)
-
- After the conclusion of the Ceremony, a great fire was kindled to purify
- the place, and the Circle and Triangle were destroyed.
-
-
- NOTE BY SCRIBE
-
- Almost from the beginning of the ceremony was the Scribe overshadowed, and
- he spoke as it were in spite of himself, remembering afterwards scarcely a
- word of his speeches, some of which were long and seemingly eloquent.
- All the time he had a sense of being protected from Choronzon, and this
- sense of security prevented his knowing fear.
- Several times did the Scribe threaten to put a curse upon the demon; but
- ever, before he uttered the words of the curse, did the demon obey him. For
- himself, he knoweth not the words of the curse.
- Also is it meet to record in this place that the Scribe several times
- whistled in a Magical manner, which never before had he attempted, and the
- demon was apparently much discomforted thereat.
- Now knoweth the Scribe that he was wrong in holding much converse with the
- demon; for Choronzon, in the confusion and chaos of his thought, is much
- terrified by silence. And by silence can he be brought to obey. {102}
- For cunningly doth he talk of many things, going from subject to subject,
- and thus he misleadeth the wary into argument with him. And though Choronzon
- be easily beaten in argument, yet, by disturbing the attention of him who
- would command him, doth he gain the victory.
- For Choronzon feareth of all things concentration and silence: he therefore
- who would command him should will in silence: thus is he brought to obey.
- This the Scribe knoweth; for that since the obtaining of the Accursèd Tenth
- Aethyr, he hath held converse with Choronzon. And unexpectedly did he obtain
- the information he sought after having long refused to answer the demon's
- speeches.
- Choronzon is dispersion; and such is his fear of concentration that he will
- obey rather than be subjected to it, or even behold it in another.
- The account of the further dealings of Choronzon with the Scribe will be
- found in the Record of Omnia Vincam.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 9TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ZIP
-
- (The terrible Curse that is the Call of the Thirty Aethyrs sounds like a
- song of ecstasy and triumph; every phrase in it has a secret meaning of
- blessing.)
-
- The Shew-stone is of soft lucent white, on which the Rose-Cross shows a
- brilliant yet colourless well of light.
- And now the veil of the stone is rent with as clap of thunder, and I am
- walking upon a razor-edge of light suspended over the Abyss, and before me and
- above me are ranged the terrible armies of the Most High, like unto those in
- the 11th Aethyr, {103} but there is one that cometh forth to meet me upon the
- ridge, holding out his arms to me and saying:
-
- (v. I.) Who is this that cometh forth from the Abyss from the place of rent
- garments, the habitation of him that is only a name? Who is this that
- walketh upon a ray of the bright, the evening star?
-
- "Refrain." Glory unto him that is concealed, and glory unto her that
- beareth the cup, and glory unto the one that is the child and the father
- of their love. Glory unto the star, and glory unto the snake, and glory
- unto the swordsman of the sun. And worship and blessing throughout the
- Aeon unto the name of the Beast, four-square, mystic, wonderful!
-
- (v. II.) Who is this that travelleth between the hosts, that is poised upon
- the edge of the Aethyr by the wings of Maut? Who is this that seeketh
- the House of the Virgin? "(Refrain.)"
-
- (v. III.) This is he that hath given up his name. This is he whose blood
- hath been gathered into the cup of BABALON.This is he that sitteth, a
- little pile of dry dust, in the city of the Pyramids.
- "(Refrain.)"
-
- (v. IV.) Until the light of the Father of all kindle that death. Until the
- breath touch that dry dust. Until the Ibis be revealed unto the Crab,
- and the sixfold Star become the radiant Triangle. "(Refrain.)"
-
- (v. V.) Blessed is not I, not thou, not he, Blessed without name or number
- who hath taken the azure of night, and {104) crystallized it into a pure
- sapphire-stone, who hath taken the gold of the sun, and beaten it into an
- infinite ring, and hath set the sapphire therein, and put it upon his
- finger. "(Refrain.)"
-
- (v. VI.) Open wide your gates, O City of God, for I bring No-one with me.
- Sink your swords and your spears in salutation, for the Mother and the
- Babe are my companions. Let the banquet be prepared in the palace of the
- King's daughter. Let the lights be kindled; Are not we the children of
- the light? "(Refrain.)"
-
- (v. VII.) For this is the key-stone of the palace of the King's daughter.
- This is the Stone of the Philosophers. This is the Stone that is hidden
- in the walls of the ramparts. Peace, Peace, Peace unto Him that is
- throned therein! "(Refrain.)"
-
- Now then we are passed within the lines of the army, and we are come unto a
- palace of which every stone is a separate jewel, and is set with millions of
- moons.
- And this palace is nothing but the body of a woman, proud and delicate, and
- beyond imagination fair. She is like a child of twelve years old. She has
- very deep eye-lids, and long lashes. Her eyes are closed, or nearly closed.
- It is impossible to say anything about her. She is naked; her whole body is
- covered with fine gold hairs, that are the electric flames that are the spears
- of mighty and terrible Angels who breast-plates are the scales of her skin.
- And the hair of her head, that flows down to her feet, is the very light of
- God himself. Of all the glories beheld by the seer in the Aethyrs, there is
- {105} not one which is worthy to be compared with her littlest finger-nail.
- For although he may not partake of the Aethyr, without the ceremonial
- preparations, even the beholding of this Aethyr from afar is like the
- partaking of all the former Aethyrs.
- The Seer is lost in wonder, which is peace.
- And the ring of the horizon above her is a company of glorious Archangels
- with joined hands, that stand and sing: This is the daughter of BABALON the
- Beautiful, that she hath borne unto the Father of All. And unto all hath she
- borne her.
- This is the Daughter of the King. This is the Virgin of Eternity. This is
- she that the Holy One hath wrested from the Giant Time, and the prize of them
- that have overcome Space. This is she that is set upon the Throne of
- Understanding. Holy, Holy, Holy is her name, not to be spoken among men.
- For Koré they have called her, and Malkuth, and Betulah, and Persephone.
- And the poets have feigned songs about her, and the prophets have spoken
- vain things, and the young men have dreamed vain dreams; but this is she, that
- immaculate, the name of whose name may not be spoken. Thought cannot pierce
- the glory that defendeth her, for thought is smitten dead before her presence.
- Memory is blank, and in the most ancient books of Magick are neither words to
- conjure her, nor adorations to praise her. Will bends like a reed in the
- temptests that sweep the borders of her kingdom, and imagination cannot figure
- so much as one petal of the lilies whereon she standeth in the lake of
- crystal, in the sea of glass.
- This is she that hath bedecked her hair with seven stars, {106} the seven
- breaths of God that move and thrill its excellence. And she hath tired her
- hair with seven combs, whereupon are written the seven secret names of God
- that are not known even of the Angels, or of the Archangels, or of the Leader
- of the armies of the Lord.
- Holy, Holy, Holy art thou, and blessed be Thy name for ever, unto whom the
- Aeons are but the pulsings of thy blood.
- I am blind and deaf. My sight and hearing are exhausted.
- I know only by the sense of touch. And there is a trembling from within
- me.
- Images keep arising like clouds, or veils, exquisite Chinese ivories, and
- porcelains, and many other things of great and delicate beauty; for such
- things are informed by Her spirit, for they are cast off from her into the
- world of the Qliphoth, or shells of the dead, that is earth. For every world
- is the shell or excrement of the world above it.
- I cannot bear the Vision.
- A voice comes, I know not whence: Blessed art thou, who hast seen, and yet
- hast not believed. For therefore is it given unto thee to taste, and smell,
- and feel, and hear, and know by the inner sense, and by the inmost sense, so
- that sevenfold is thy rapture.
- (My brain is so exhausted that fatigue-images appear, by pure physical
- reflex action; they are not astral things at all.
- And now I have conquered the fatigue by will. And by placing the shew-
- stone upon my forehead, it sends cool electric thrills through my brain, so as
- to refresh it, and make it capable of more rapture.
- And now again I behold Her.) {107}
- And an Angel cometh forth, and behind him whirls a black swastika, made of
- fine filaments of light that has been "interfered" with, and he taketh me
- aside into a little chamber in one of the nine towers. This chamber is
- furnished with maps of many mystical cities. There is a table, and a strange
- lamp, that gives light by jetting four columns of vortex rings of luminous
- smoke. And he points to the map of the Aethyrs, that are arranged as a
- flaming Sword, so that the thirty Aethyrs go into the ten Sephiroth. And the
- first nine are infinitely holy. And he says, It is written in the Book of the
- Law, "Wisdom says: be strong! Then canst thou bear more joy." "If thou
- drink, drink by the eight and ninety rules of art:" And this shall signify
- unto thee that thou must undergo great discipline; else the Vision were lost
- or perverted. For these mysteries pertain not unto thy grade. Therefore must
- thou invoke the Highest before thou unveil the shrines thereof.
- And this shall be thy rule: A thousand and one times shalt thou affirm the
- unity, and bow thyself a thousand and one times. And thou shalt recite thrice
- the call of the Aethyr. And all day and all night, awake or asleep, shall thy
- heart be turned as a lotus-flower unto the light. And thy body shall be the
- temple of the Rosy Cross. Thus shall thy mind be open unto the higher; and
- then shalt thou be able to conquer the exhaustion, and it may be find the
- words --- for who shall look upon His face and live?
- Yea, thou tremblest, but from within; because of the holy spirit that is
- descended into thy heart, and shaketh thee as an aspen in the wind.
- They also tremble that are without, and they are shaken {108} from without
- by the earthquakes of his judgement. They have set their affections upon
- the earth, and they have stamped with their feet upon the earth, and cried: It
- moveth not.
- Therefore hath earth opened with strong motion, like the sea, and swallowed
- them. Yea, she hath opened her womb to them that lusted after her, and she
- hath closed herself upon them. There lie they in torment, until by her
- quaking the earth is shattered like brittle glass, and dissolved like salt in
- the waters of his mercy, so that they are cast upon the air to be blown about
- therein, like seeds that shall take root in the earth; yet turn they their
- affections upward to the sun.
- But thou, be thou eager and vigilant, performing punctually the rule. Is
- it not written, "Change not so much as the style of a letter"?
- Depart therefore, for the Vision of the Voice of the ninth Aethyr that is
- called ZIP is passed.
- Then I threw back myself into my body by my will
-
- BOU-SAADA.
- "December" 7th, 1909. 9.30-11.10 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 8TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ZID
-
- There appears in the stone a tiny spark of light. It grows a little, and
- seems almost to go out, and grows again, and it is blown about the Aethyr, and
- by the wind that blows it is it fanned, and now it gathers strength, and darts
- like a snake or a sword, and now it steadies itself, and is like a Pyramid of
- light that filleth the whole Aethyr.
- And in the Pyramid is one like unto an Angel, yet at the same time he "is"
- the Pyramid, and he hath no form because he is of the substance of light, and
- he taketh not form upon him, {109} for though by him is form visible, he
- maketh it visible only to destroy it.
- And he saith: The light is come to the darkness, and the darkness is made
- light. Then is light married with light, and the child of their love is that
- other darkness, wherein they abide that have lost name and form. Therefore
- did I kindle him that had not understanding, and in the Book of the Law did I
- write the secrets of truth that are like unto a star and a snake and a sword.
- And unto him that understandeth at last do I deliver the secrets of truth
- in such wise that the least of the little children of the light may run to the
- knees of the mother and be brought to understand.
- And thus shall he do who will attain unto the mystery of the knowledge and
- conversation of his Holy Guardian Angel:
- First, let him prepare a chamber, of which the walls and the roof shall be
- white, and the floor shall be covered with a carpet of black squares and
- white, and the border thereof shall be blue and gold.
- And if it be in a town, the room shall have no window, and if it be in the
- country, then it is better if the window be in the roof. Or, if it be
- possible, let this invocation be performed in a temple prepared for the ritual
- of passing through the Tuat.
- From the roof he shall hang a lamp, wherein is a red glass, to burn olive
- oil. And this lamp shall he cleanse and make ready after the prayer of
- sunset, and beneath the lamp shall be an altar, foursquare, and the height
- shall be thrice half of the breadth or double the breadth.
- And upon the altar shall be a censor, hemispherical, supported {110} upon
- three legs, of silver, and within it an hemisphere of copper, and upon the top
- a grating of gilded silver, and thereupon shall he burn incense made of four
- parts of olibanum and two parts of stacte, and one part of lignum aloes, or of
- cedar, or of sandal. And this is enough.
- And he shall also keep ready in a flask of crystal within the altar, holy
- anointing oil made of myrrh and cinnamon and galangal.
- And even if he be of higher rank than a Probationer, he shall yet wear the
- robe of the Probationer, for the star of flame showeth forth Ra Hoor Khuit
- openly upon the breast, and secretly the blue triangle that descendeth is
- Nuit, and the red triangle that ascendeth is Hadit. And I am the golden Tau
- in the midst of their marriage. Also, if he choose, he may instead wear a
- close-fitting robe of shot silk, purple and green, and upon it a cloak without
- sleeves, of bright blue, covered with golden sequins, and scarlet within.
- And he shall make himself a wand of almond wood or of hazel cut by his own
- hands at dawn at the Equinox, or at the Solstice, or on the day of Corpus
- Christi, or on one of the feast-days that are appointed in the Book of the
- Law.
- And he shall engrave with his own hand upon a plate of gold the Holy
- Sevenfold Table, or the Holy Twelvefold Table, or some particular device. And
- it shall be foursquare within a circle, and the circle shall be winged, and he
- shall attach it about his forehead by a ribbon of blue silk.
- Moreover, he shall wear a fillet of laurel or rose or ivy or rue, and every
- day, after the prayer of sunrise, he shall burn it in the fire of the censor.
- Now he shall pray thrice daily, about sunset, and at midnight, {111} and at
- sunrise. And if he be able, he shall pray also four times between sunrise and
- sunset.
- The prayer shall last for the space of an hour, at the least, and he shall
- seek ever to extend it, and to inflame himself in praying. Thus shall he
- invoke his Holy Guardian Angel for eleven weeks, and in any case he shall pray
- seven times daily during the last week of the eleven weeks.
- And during all this time he shall have composed an invocation suitable,
- with such wisdom and understanding as may be given him from the Crown, and
- this shall he write in letters of gold upon the top of the altar.
- For the top of the altar shall be of white wood, well polished, and in the
- centre thereof he shall have placed a triangle of oak-wood, painted with
- scarlet, and upon this triangle the three legs of the censor shall stand.
- Moreover, he shall copy his invocation upon a sheet of pure white vellum,
- with Indian ink, and he shall illuminate it according to his fancy and
- imagination, that shall be informed by beauty.
- And on the first day of the twelfth week he shall enter the chamber at
- sunrise, and he shall make his prayer, having first burnt the conjuration that
- he had made upon the vellum in the fire of the lamp.
- Then, at his prayer, shall the chamber be filled with light insufferable
- for splendour, and a perfume intolerable for sweetness. And his Holy Guardian
- Angel shall appear unto him, yea, his Holy Guardian Angel shall appear unto
- him, so that he shall be wrapt away into the Mystery of Holiness.
- All that day shall he remain in the enjoyment of the knowledge and
- conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel. {112}
- And for three days after he shall remain from sunrise unto sunset in the
- temple, and he shall obey the counsel that his Angel shall have given unto
- him, and he shall suffer those things that are appointed.
- And for ten days thereafter shall he withdraw himself as shall have been
- taught unto him from the fullness of that communion, for he must harmonize the
- world that is within with the world that is without.
- And at the end of the ninety-one days he shall return into the world, and
- there shall he perform that work to which the Angel shall have appointed him.
- And more than this it is not necessary to say, for his Angel shall have
- entreated him kindly, and showed him in what manner he may be most perfectly
- involved. And unto him that hath this Master there is nothing else that he
- needeth, so long as he continue in the knowledge and conversation of the
- Angel, so that he shall come at last into the City of the Pyramids.
- Lo! two and twenty are the paths of the Tree, but one is the Serpent of
- Wisdom; ten are the ineffable emanations, but one is the Flaming Sword.
- Behold! There is an end to life and death, an end to the thrusting forth
- and the withdrawing of the breath. Yea, the House of the Father is a mighty
- tomb, and in it he hath buried everything whereof ye know.
- All this while there hath been no vision, but only a voice, very slow and
- clear and deliberate. But now the vision returns, and the voice says: Thou
- shalt be called Danae, that art stunned and slain beneath the weight of the
- glory of the vision that as yet thou seest not. For thou shalt suffer many
- {113} things, until thou art mightier than all the Kings of the earth, and all
- the Angels of the Heavens, and all the gods that are beyond the Heavens. Then
- shalt thou meet me in equal conflict, and thou shalt see me as I am. And I
- will overcome thee and slay thee with the red rain of my lightnings.
- I am lying underneath this pyramid of light. It seems as if I had the
- whole weight of it upon me, crushing me with bliss. And yet I know that I am
- like the prophet that said: I shall see Him, but not nigh.
- And the Angel sayeth: So shall it be until they that wake are asleep, and
- she that sleepeth be arisen from her sleep. For thou art transparent unto the
- vision and the voice. And therefore in thee they manifest not. But they
- shall be manifest unto them unto whom thou dost deliver them, according unto
- to the word which I spake unto thee in the Victorious City.
- For I am not only appointed to guard thee, but we are of the blood royal,
- the guardians of the Treasure-house of Wisdom. Therefore am I called the
- Minister of Ra Hoor Khuit: and yet he is but the Viceroy of the unknown King.
- For my name is called Aiwass, that is eight and seventy. And I am the
- influence of the Concealed One, and the wheel that hath eight and seventy
- parts, yet in all is equivalent to the Gate that is the name of my Lord when
- it is spelt fully. And that Gate is the Path that joineth the Wisdom with the
- Understanding.
- Thus hast thou erred indeed, perceiving me in the path that leadeth from
- the Crown unto the Beauty. For that path bridgeth the abyss, and I am of the
- supernals. Nor I, nor Thou, nor He can bridge the abyss. It is the Priestess
- of the Silver Star, and the Oracles of the gods, and the Lord of the {114}
- Hosts of the Mighty. For they are the servants of Babalon, and of the Beast,
- and of those others of whom it is not yet spoken. And, being servants, they
- have no name, but we are of the blood royal, and serve not, and therefore are
- we less than they.
- Yet, as a man may be both a mighty warrior and a just judge, so may we also
- perform this service if we have aspired and attained thereto. And yet, with
- all that, they remain "themselves," who have eaten of the pomegranate in Hell.
- But thou, that art new-born to understanding, this mystery is too great for
- thee; and of the further mystery I will not speak one word.
- Yet for this cause am I come unto thee as the Angel of the Aethyr, striking
- with my hammer upon thy bell, so that thou mightest understand the mysteries
- of the Aethyr, and of the vision and the voice thereof.
- For behold! he that understandeth seeth not and heareth not in truth,
- because of his understanding that letteth him. But this shall be unto thee
- for a sign, that I will surely come unto thee unawares and appear unto thee.
- And it is no odds, ("i.e.", that at this hour I appear not as I am), for so
- terrible is the glory of the vision, and so wonderful is the splendour of the
- voice, that when thou seest it and hearest it in truth, for many hours shalt
- thou be bereft of sense. And thou shalt lie between heaven and earth in a
- void place, entranced, and the end thereof shall be silence, even as it was,
- not once nor twice, when I have met with thee, as it were, upon the road to
- Damascus.
- And thou shalt not seek to better this my instruction; but thou shalt
- interpret it, and make it easy, for them that seek {115} understanding. And
- thou shalt give all that thou hast unto them that have need unto this end.
- And because I am with thee, and in thee, and of thee, thou shalt lack
- nothing. But who lack me, lack all. And I swear unto thee by Him that
- sitteth upon the Holy Throne, and liveth and reigneth for ever and ever, that
- I will be faithful unto this my promise, as thou art faithful unto this thine
- obligation.
- Now another voice sounds in the Aethyr, saying: And there was darkness over
- all the earth unto the ninth hour.
- And with that the Angel is withdrawn, and the pyramid of light seems very
- far off.
- And now I am fallen unto the earth, exceeding weary. Yet my skin trembles
- with the impact of the light, and all my body shakes. And there is a peace
- deeper than sleep upon my mind. It is the body and the mind that are weary,
- and I would that they were dead, save that I must bend them to my work.
- And now I am in the tent, under the stars.
-
- THE DESERT BETWEEN BOU-SAADA AND BISKRA.
- "December" 8, 1909. 7.10-9.10 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 7TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED DEO
-
- The stone is divided, the left half dark, the right half light, and at the
- bottom thereof is a certain blackness, of three divergent columns. And it
- seems as if the black and white halves are the halves of a door, and in the
- door is a little key-hole, in the shape of the Astrological symbol of Venus.
- And from the key-hole issue flames, blue and green and {116} violet, but
- without any touch of yellow or red in them. It seems as if there were a wind
- beyond the door, that is blowing the flame out.
- And a voice comes: "Who is he that hath the key to the gate of the evening
- star?"
- And now an Angel cometh and seeketh to open the door by trying many keys.
- And they are none of any avail. And the same voice saith: "The five and the
- six are balanced in the word Abrahadabra, and therein is the mystery
- disclosed. But the key unto this gate is the balance of the seven and the
- four; and of this thou hast not even the first letter. Now there is a word of
- four letters that containeth in itself all the mystery of the Tetragrammaton,
- and there is a word of seven letters which it concealeth, and that again
- concealeth the holy word that is the key of the abyss.19 And this thou shalt
- find, revolving it in thy mind.
- 19 These words are probably BABALON, C"h"AOS, TARO.
- Hide therefore thine eyes. And I will set my key in the lock, and open it.
- Yet still let thine eyes be hidden, for thou canst not bear the glory that is
- within.
- So, therefore, I covered mine eyes with my hands. Yet through my hands
- could I perceive a little of those bowers of azure flame.
- And a voice said: It is kindled into fire that was the blue breast of
- ocean; because this is the bar of heaven, and the feet of the Most High are
- set thereon.
- Now I behold more fully: Each tongue of flame, each leaf of flame, each
- flower of flame, is one of the great love-stories of the world, with all its
- retinue of "mise-en-scène." And now there is a most marvelous rose formed from
- the flame, and a {117} perpetual rain of lilies and passion-flowers and
- violets. And there is gathered out of it all, yet identical with it, the form
- of a woman like the woman in the Apocalypse, but her beauty and her radiance
- are such that one cannot look thereon, save with sidelong glances. I enter
- immediately into trance. It seems that it is she of whom it is written, "The
- fool hath said in his heart 'there is no God.'" But the words are not Ain
- Elohim, but La (=nay!) and Elohim contracted from 86 to 14, because La is 31,
- which x 14 is 434, Daleth, Lamed, Tau. This fool is the fool of the Path of
- Aleph, and sayeth, which is Chokmah, in his heart, which is Tiphereth, that
- she existeth, in order first that the Wisdom may be joined with the
- Understanding; and he affirmeth her in Tiphereth that she may be fertile.
- It is impossible to describe how this vision changeth from glory unto
- glory, for at each glance the vision is changed. And this is because she
- transmitteth the Word to the Understanding, and therefore hath she many forms,
- and each goddess of love is but a letter of the alphabet of love.
- Now, there is a mystery in the word Logos, that containeth the three
- letters whose analogy hath been shown in the lower heavens, Samech, and Lamed,
- and Gimel, that are 93, which is thrice 31, and in them are set the two eyes
- of Horus. (Ayin means an eye.) For, if it were not so, the arrow could not
- pierce the rainbow, and there could be no poise in the balance, and the Great
- Book should never be unsealed. But this is she that poureth the Water of Life
- upon her head, whence it floweth to fructify the earth. But now the whole
- Aethyr is the most brilliant peacock blue. It "is" the Universal Peacock that I
- behold. {118}
- And there is a voice: Is not this bird the bird of Juno, that is an
- hundred, and thirty, and six? And therefore is she the mate of Jupiter.20
- And now the peacock's head is again changed into a woman's head sparkling
- and coruscating with its own light of gems.
- But I look upwards, seeing that she is called the footstool of the Holy
- One, even as Binah is called His throne. And the whole Aethyr is full of the
- most wonderful bands of light, --- a thousand different curves and whorls,
- even as it was before, when I spake mysteries of the Holy Qabalah, and so
- could not describe it.
- Oh, I see vast plains beneath her feet, enormous deserts studded with great
- rocks; and I see little lonely souls, running helplessly about, minute black
- creatures like men. And they keep up a very curious howling, that I can
- compare to nothing that I have ever heard; yet it is strangely human.
- And the voice says: These are they that grasped love and clung thereto,
- praying ever at the knees of the great goddess. These are they that have shut
- themselves up in fortresses of Love.
- Each plume of the peacock is full of eyes, that are at the same time 4 x 7.
- And for this is the number 28 reflected down into Netzach; and that 28 is Kaph
- Cheth (Kach), power. For she is Sakti, the eternal energy of the Concealed
- One. And it is her eternal energy that hath made this eternal change. And
- this explaineth the call of the Aethyrs, the curse that was pronounced in the
- beginning being but the creation of Sakti. And this mystery is reflected in
- the legend of the {119} Creation, where Adam represents the Concealed One, for
- Adam is Temurah of MAD, the Enochian word for God, and Eve, whom he created
- 20 The fourth of the mystic numbers of Jupiter is 136.
- for love, is tempted by the snake, Nechesh, who is Messiah her child. And the
- snake is the magical power, which hath destroyed the primordial equilibrium.
- And the garden is the supernal Eden, where is Ayin, 70, the Eye of the
- Concealed One, and the creative Lingam; and Daleth, love; and Nun the serpent.
- And therefore this constitution was implicitly in the nature of Eden ("cf."
- Liber L., I., 29, 30), so that the call of the Aethyrs could not have been any
- other call than that which it is.
- But they that are without understanding have interpreted all this askew,
- because of the Mystery of the Abyss, for there is no Path from Binah unto
- Chesed; and therefore the course of the Flaming Sword was no more a current,
- but a spark. And when the Stooping Dragon raised his head unto Däath in the
- course of that spark, there was, as it were, an explosion, and his head was
- blasted. And the ashes thereof were dispersed throughout the whole of the
- 10th Aethyr. And for this, all knowledge is piecemeal, and it is of no value
- unless it be co-ordinated by Understanding.
- And now the form of the Aethyr is the form of a mighty Eagle of ruddy
- brass. And the plumes are set alight, and are whirled round and round until
- the whole heaven is blackness with these flying sparks therein.
- Now it is all branching streams of golden fire tipped with scarlet at the
- edges.
- And now She cometh forth again, riding upon a dolphin. Now again I see
- those wandering souls, that have sought {120} restricted love, and have not
- understood that "the word of sin is restriction."
- It is very curious; they seem to be looking for one another or for
- something, all the time, constantly hurrying about. But they knock up against
- one another and yet will not see one another, or cannot see one another,
- because they are so shut up in their cloaks.
- And a voice sounds: It is most terrible for the one that hath shut himself
- up and made himself fast against the universe. For they that sit encamped
- upon the sea in the city of the Pyramids are indeed shut up. But they have
- given their blood, even to the last drop, to fill the cup of BABALON.
- These that thou seest are indeed the Black Brothers, for it is written: "He
- shall laugh at their calamity and mock when their fear cometh." And therefore
- hath he exalted them unto the plane of love.
- And yet again it is written: He desireth not the death of a sinner, but
- rather that he should turn from his wickedness. Now, if one of these were to
- cast off his cloak he should behold the brilliance of the lady of the Aethyr;
- but they will not.
- And yet again there is another cause wherefore He hath permitted them to
- enter thus far within the frontiers of Eden, so that His thought should never
- swerve from compassion. But do thou behold the brilliance of Love, that
- casteth forth seven stars upon thine head from her right hand, and crowneth
- thee with a crown of seven roses. Behold! She is seated upon the throne of
- turquoise and lapis lazuli, and she is like a flawless emerald, and upon the
- pillars that support the canopy {121} of her throne are sculptured the Ram,
- and the Sparrow, and the Cat, and a strange fish. Behold! How she shineth!
- Behold! How her glances have kindled all these fires that have blown about
- the heavens! Yet remember that in every one there goeth forth for a witness
- the justice of the Most High. Is not Libra the House of Venus? And there
- goeth forth a sickle that shall reap every flower. Is not Saturn exalted in
- Libra? Daleth, Lamed, Tau.
- And therefore was he a fool who uttered her name in his heart, for the root
- of evil is the root of breath, and the speech in the silence was a lie.
- Thus is it seen from below by them that understand not. But from above he
- rejoiceth, for the joy of dissolution is ten thousand, and the pang of birth
- but a little.
- And now thou shalt go forth from the Aethyr, for the voice of the Aethyr is
- hidden and concealed from thee because thou hadst not the key of the door
- thereof, and thine eyes were not able to bear the splendour of the vision.
- But thou shalt meditate upon the mysteries thereof, and upon the lady of the
- Aethyr; and it may be by the wisdom of the Most High that the true voice of
- the Aethyr, that is continual song, may be heard of thee.
- Return therefore instantly unto the earth, and sleep not for a while; but
- withdraw thyself from this matter. And it shall be enough.
- Thus then was I obedient unto the voice, and returned into my body.
-
- W'AIN-T-AISSHA, ALGERIA.
- "December" 9, 1909. 8.10-10 p.m.
-
- {122)
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 6TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED MAZ
-
- There cometh into the stone the great Angel whose name is Avé, and in him
- there are symbols which strive for mastery, --- Sulphur and the Pentagram, and
- they are harmonized by the Swastika. These symbols are found both in the name
- of Avé and in the name of the Aethyr. Thus he is neither Horus nor Osiris.
- He is called the radiance of Thoth; and this Aethyr is very hard to
- understand, for the images form and dissolve more rapidly than lightning.
- These images are the illusions made by the Ape of Thoth. And this I
- understand, that I am not worthy to receive the mysteries of this Aethyr. And
- all this which I have seen (being all the thoughts that I have ever thought)
- is, as it were, a guardian of the Aethyr.
- I seem quite helpless. I am trying all sorts of magical methods of
- piercing the veil: and the more I strive, the farther away I seem to get from
- success. But a voice comes now: Must not understanding lie open unto wisdom
- as the pyramids lie open to the stars?
- Accordingly, I wait in a certain magical posture which it is not fitting to
- disclose, and above me appears the starry heaven of night, and one star
- greater than all the other stars. It is a star of eight rays. I recognize it
- as the star in the seventeenth key of the Tarot, as the Star of Mercury. And
- the light of it cometh from the path of Aleph. And the letter Cheth is also
- involved in the interpretation of this star, and the paths of hé and vau are
- the separations which this Star unites. And in the heart of the star is an
- exceeding splendour, --- a god standing upon the moon, brilliant beyond
- imagining. {123} It is like unto the vision of the Universal Mercury. But
- this is the Fixed Mercury, and hé and vau are the perfected sulphur and salt.
- But now I come into the centre of the maze, and whirling dust of stars and
- great forgotten gods. It is the whirling Svastika which throws off all these
- things, for the Svastika is in aleph by its shape and number, and in beth by
- the position of the arms of the Magician, and in gimel because of the sign of
- the Mourning of Isis, and thus is the Crown defended by these three
- thunderbolts. Is not thrice seventeen fifty-one, that is, failure and pain?
- Now I am shut out again by this black Svastika with a corona of fire about
- it.
- And a voice cries: Cursed be he that shall uncover the nakedness of the
- Most High, for he is drunken upon the wine that is the blood of the adepts.
- And BABALON hath lulled him to sleep upon her breast, and she hath fled away,
- and left him naked, and she hath called her children together, saying: Come up
- with me, and let us make a mock of the nakedness of the Most High.
- And the first of the adepts covered His shame with a cloth, walking
- backwards; and was white. And the second of the adepts covered His shame with
- a cloth, walking sideways and was yellow. And the third of the adepts made a
- mock of His nakedness, walking forwards; and was black. And these are three
- great schools of the Magi, who are also the three Magi that journeyed unto
- Bethlehem; and because thou hast not wisdom, thou shalt not know which school
- prevaileth, or if the three schools be not one. For the Black Brothers lift
- not up their heads thus far into the Holy Chokmah, for they were all drowned
- in the great flood, which is Binah, {124} before the true vine could be
- planted upon the holy hill of Zion.
- Now again I stand in the centre, and all things whirl by with incessant
- fury. And the thought of the god entereth my mind, and I cry aloud: Behold,
- the volatile is become fixed; and in the heart of eternal motion is eternal
- rest. So is the Peace beneath the sea that rageth with her storms; so is the
- changeful moon, the dead planet that revolveth no more. So the far-seeing,
- the far-darting hawk is poised passionless in the blue; so also the ibis that
- is long of limb meditateth solitary in the sign of Sulphur. Behold, I stand
- ever before the Eternal One in the sign of the Enterer. And by virtue of my
- speech is he wrapped about in silence, and he is wrapped in mystery by me, who
- am the Unveiler of the Mysteries. And although I be truth, yet do they call
- me rightly the God of Lies, for speech is two-fold, and truth is one. Yet I
- stand at the centre of the spider's web, whereof the golden filaments reach to
- infinity.
- But thou that art with me in the spirit-vision art not with me by right of
- Attainment, and thou canst not stay in this place to behold how I run and
- return, and who are the flies that are caught in my web. For I am the inmost
- guardian that is immediately before the shrine.
- None shall pass by me except he slay me, and this is his curse, that,
- having slain me, he must take my office and become the maker of Illusions, the
- great deceiver, the setter of snares; he who baffleth even them that have
- understanding. For I stand on every path, and turn them aside from the truth
- by my words, and by my magick arts.
- And this is the horror that was shown by the lake that was {125} nigh unto
- the City of the Seven Hills, and this is the Mystery of the great prophets
- that have come unto mankind. Moses, and Buddha, and Lao Tan, and Krishna, and
- Jesus, and Osiris, and Mohammed; for all these attained unto the grade of
- Magus, and therefore were they bound with the curse of Thoth. But, being
- guardians of the truth, they have taught nothing but falsehood, except unto
- such as understood; for the truth may not pass the Gate of the Abyss.
- But the reflection of the truth hath been shown in the lower Sephiroth.
- And its balance is in Beauty, and therefore have they who sought only beauty
- come nearest to the truth. For the beauty receiveth directly three rays from
- the supernals, and the others no more than one. So, therefore, they that have
- sought after majesty and power and victory and learning and happiness and
- gold, have been discomfited. And these sayings are the lights of wisdom that
- thou mayst know thy Master, for he is a Magus. And because thou didst eat of
- the Pomegranate in hell, for half the year art thou concealed, and half the
- year revealed.
- Now I perceive the Temple that is the heart of this Aethyr; it is an Urn
- suspended in the air, without support, above the centre of a well. And the
- well hath eight pillars, and a canopy above it, and without there is a circle
- of marble paving-stones, and without them a great outer circle of pillars.
- And beyond there is the forest of the stars. But the Urn is the wonderful
- thing in all this; it is made of fixed Mercury; and within it are the ashes of
- the Book Tarot, which hath been utterly consumed.
- And this is that mystery which is spoken of in the Acts of the Apostles;
- that Jupiter and Mercury (Kether and Chokmah) {126} visited (that is,
- inspired), Ephesus, the City of Diana, Binah --- was not Diana a black stone?
- --- and they burnt their books of magick.
- Now it seems that the centre of infinite space is that Urn, and Hadit is
- the fire that hath burnt up the book Tarot. For in the book Tarot was
- preserved all of the wisdom (for the Tarot was called the Book of Thoth), of
- the Aeon that is passed. And in the Book of Enoch was first given the wisdom
- of the New Aeon. And it was hidden for three hundred years, because it was
- wrested untimely from the Tree of Life by the hand of a desperate magician.
- For it was the Master of that Magician who overthrew the power of the
- Christian church; but the pupil rebelled against the master, for he foresaw
- that the New ("i.e.", the Protestant) would be worse than the Old. But he
- understood not the purpose of his Master, and that was, to prepare the way for
- the overthrowing of the Aeon.
- There is a writing upon the Urn of which I can but read the (two) words:
- Stabat Crux juxta Lucem. Stabat Lux juxta Crucem.
- And there is writing in Greek above that. The word "nox" written in Greek,
- and a circle with a cross in the centre of it, a St. Andrew's cross.
- Then above that is a sigil("?"), hidden by a hand.
- And a voice proceedeth from the Urn: From the ashes of the Tarot who shall
- make the phoenix-wand? Not even he who by his understanding hath made the
- lotus-wand to grow in the Great Sea. Get thee back, for thou art not an
- Atheist, and though thou have violated thy mother, thou hast not slain thy
- father. Get thee back from the Urn; thy ashes are not hidden here. {127}
- Then again arose the God Thoth, in the sign of the Enterer, and he drove
- the seer from before his face. And he fell through the starry night unto the
- little village in the desert.
-
- BENISHRUR, ALGERIA.
- "December" 10, 1909. 7.40-9.40 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 5TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED LIT
-
- There is a shining pylon, above which is set the sigil of the eye, within
- the shining triangle. Light streams through the pylon from before the face of
- Isis-Hathor, for she weareth the lunar crown of cows' horns, with the disk in
- the centre; at her breast she beareth the child Horus.
- And there is a voice: thou knowest not how the Seven was united with the
- Four; much less then canst thou understand the marriage of the Eight and the
- Three. Yet there is a word wherein these are made one, and therein is
- contained the Mystery that thou seekest, concerning the rending asunder of the
- veil of my Mother.
- Now there is an avenue of pylons (not one alone), steep after steep, carved
- from the solid rock of the mountain; and that rock is a substance harder than
- diamond, and brighter than light, and heavier than lead. In each pylon is
- seated a god. There seems an endless series of these pylons. And all the
- gods of all the nations of the earth are shown, for there are many avenues,
- all leading to the top of the mountain.
- Now I come to the top of the mountain, and the last pylon opens into a
- circular hall, with other pylons leading out of it, each of which is the last
- pylon of a great avenue; there seem {128} to be nine such pylons. And in the
- centre is a shrine, a circular table, supported by marble figures of men and
- women, alternate white and black; they face inwards, and their buttocks are
- almost worn away by the kisses of those who have come to worship that supreme
- God, who is the single end of all these diverse religions. But the shrine
- itself is higher than a man may reach.
- But the Angel that was with me lifted me, and I saw that the edge of the
- altar, as I must call it, was surrounded by holy men. Each has in his right
- hand a weapon --- one a sword, one a spear, one a thunderbolt, and so on, but
- each with his left hand gives the sign of silence. I wish to see what is
- within their ring. One of them bends forward so that I may whisper the pass-
- word. The Angel prompts me to whisper: "There is no god." So they let me
- pass, and though there was indeed nothing visible therein, yet there was a
- very strange atmosphere, which I could not understand.
- Suspended in the air there is a silver star, and on the forehead of each of
- the guardians there is a silver star. It is a pentagram, --- because, says
- the Angel, three and five are eight; three and eight are eleven. (There is
- another numerical reason that I cannot hear.)
- And as I entered their ring, they bade me stand in their circle, and a
- weapon was given unto me. And the pass-word that I had given seems to have
- been whispered round from one to the other, for each one nods gravely as if in
- solemn acquiescence, until the last one whispers the same words in my ears.
- But they have a different sense. I had taken them to be a denial of the
- existence of God, but the man who says them to me evidently means nothing of
- the sort: What he {129} does mean I cannot tell at all. He slightly
- emphasized the word "there".
- And now all is suddenly blotted out, and instead appears the Angel of the
- Aethyr. He is all in black, burnished black scales, just edged with gold. He
- has vast wings, with terrible claws on the ends, and he has a fierce face,
- like a dragon's, and dreadful eyes that pierce one through and through.
- And he says: O thou that art so dull of understanding, when wilt thou begin
- to annihilate thyself in the mysteries of the Aethyrs? For all that thou
- thinkest is but thy thought; and as there is no god in the ultimate shrine, so
- there is no I in thine own Cosmos.
- They that have said this are of them that understood. And all men have
- misinterpreted it, even as thou didst misinterpret it. He says some more: I
- cannot catch it properly, but it seems to be to the effect that the true God
- is equally in all the shrines, and the true I in all the parts of the body and
- the soul. He speaks with such a terrible roaring that it is impossible to
- hear the words; one catches a a phrase here and there, or a glimpse of the
- idea. With every word he belches forth smoke, so that the whole Aethyr
- becomes full of it.
- And now I hear the Angel: Every particle of matter that forms the smoke of
- my breath is a religion that hath flourished among the inhabitants of the
- worlds. Thus are they all whirled forth in my breath.
- Now he is giving a demonstration of this Operation. And he says: Know thou
- that all the religions of all the worlds end herein, but they are only the
- smoke of my breath, and I am only the head of the Great Dragon that eateth up
- the Universe; {130} without whom the Fifth Aethyr would be perfect, even as
- the first. Yet unless he pass by me, can no man come unto the perfections.
- And the rule is ended that hath bound thee, and this shall be thy rule:
- that thou shalt purify thyself, and anoint thyself with perfume; and thou
- shalt be in the sunlight, the day being free from clouds. And thou shalt make
- the Call of the Aethyr in silence.
- Now, then, behold how the head of the dragon is but the tail of the Aethyr!
- Many are they that have fought their way from mansion to mansion of the
- Everlasting House, and beholding me at last have returned, declaring, "Fearful
- is the aspect of the Mighty and Terrible One." Happy are they that have known
- me for whom I am. And glory unto him that hath made a gallery of my throat
- for his arrow of truth, and the moon for his purity.
- The moon waneth. The moon waneth. The moon waneth. For in that arrow is
- the Light of Truth that overmastereth the light of the sun, whereby she
- shines. The arrow is fledged with the plumes of Maat, that are the plumes of
- Amoun, and the shaft is the phallus of Amoun, the Concealed One. And the barb
- thereof is the star that thou sawest in the place where was No God.
- And of them that guarded the star, there was not found one worthy to wield
- the Arrow. And of them that worshipped there was not found one worthy to
- behold the Arrow. Yet the star that thou sawest was but the barb of the
- Arrow, and thou hadst not the wit to grasp the shaft, or the purity to divine
- the plumes. Now therefore is he blessed that is born under the sign of the
- Arrow, and blessed is he that hath the sigil {131} of the head of the crowned
- lion and the body of the Snake and the Arrow therewith.
- Yet do thou distinguish between the upward and the downward Arrows, for the
- upward arrow is straitened in its flight, and it is shot by a firm hand, for
- Jesod is Jod Tetragrammaton, and Jod is a hand, but the downward arrow is shot
- by the topmost point of the Jod; and that Jod is the Hermit, and it is the
- minute point that is not extended, that is nigh unto the heart of Hadit.
- And now it is commanded thee that thou withdraw thyself from the Vision,
- and on the morrow, at the appointed hour, shall it be given thee further, as
- thou goest upon thy way, meditating this mystery. And thou shalt summon the
- Scribe, and that which shall be written, shall be written.
- Therefore I withdraw myself, as I am commanded.
-
- THE DESERT BETWEEN BENSHRUR AND TOLGA.
- "December" 12, 1909, 7 - 8.12 p.m.
-
-
- Now then art thou approached unto an august Arcanum; verily thou art come
- unto the ancient Marvel, the winged light, the Fountains of Fire, the Mystery
- of the Wedge. But it is not I that can reveal it, for I have never been
- permitted to behold it, who am but the watcher upon the threshold of the
- Aethyr. My message is spoken, and my mission is accomplished. And I withdraw
- myself, covering my face with my wings, before the presence of the Angel of
- the Aethyr.
- So the Angel departed with bowed head, folding his wings across.
- And there is a little child in a mist of blue light; he hath golden hair, a
- mass of curls, and deep blue eyes. Yea, he is all {132} golden, with a
- living, vivid gold. And in each hand he hath a snake; in the right hand a
- red, in the left a blue. And he hath red sandals, but no other garment.
- And he sayeth: Is not life a long initiation unto sorrow? And is not Isis
- the Lady of Sorrow? And she is my mother. Nature is her name, and she hath a
- twin sister Nephthys, whose name is Perfection. And Isis must be known of
- all, but of how few is Nephthys known! Because she is dark, therefore is she
- feared.
- But thou who hast adored her without fear, who hast made thy life an
- initiation into her Mystery, thou that hast neither mother nor father, nor
- sister nor brother, nor wife nor child, who hast made thyself lonely as the
- hermit crab that is in the waters of the Great Sea, behold! when the sistrons
- are shaken, and the trumpets blare forth the glory of Isis, at the end thereof
- there is silence, and thou shalt commune with Nephthys.
- And having known these, there are the wings of Maut the Vulture. Thou
- mayest draw to an head the bow of thy magical will; thou mayest loose the
- shaft and pierce her to the heart. I am Eros. Take then the bow and the
- quiver from my shoulders and slay me; for unless thou slay me, thou shalt not
- unveil the Mystery of the Aethyr.
- Therefore I did as he commanded; in the quiver were two arrows, one white,
- one black. I cannot force myself to fit an arrow to the bow.
- And there came a voice: It must needs be.
- And I said: No man can do this thing.
- And the voice answered, as it were an echo: "Nemo hoc facere potest." {133}
- Then came understanding to me, and I took forth the Arrows. The white
- arrow had no barb, but the black arrow was barbed like a forest of fish-hooks;
- it was bound round with brass, and it had been dipped in deadly poison. Then
- I fitted the white arrow to the string, and I shot it against the heart of
- Eros, and though I shot with all my force, it fell harmlessly from his side.
- But at that moment the black arrow was thrust through mine own heart. I am
- filled with fearful agony.
- And the child smiles, and says: Although thy shaft hath pierced thee {WEH
- NOTE: sic, may be "me"} not, although the envenomed barb hath struck thee
- through, yet I am slain, and thou livest and triumphest, for I am thou and
- thou art I.
- With that he disappears, and the Aethyr splits with a roar as of ten
- thousand thunders. And behold, The Arrow! The plumes of Maat are its crown,
- set about the disk. It is the Ateph crown of Thoth, and there is the shaft of
- burning light, and beneath there is a silver wedge.
- I shudder and tremble at the vision, for all about it are whorls and
- torrents of tempestuous fire. The stars of heaven are caught in the ashes of
- the flame. And they are all dark. That which was a blazing sun is like a
- speck of ash. And in the midst the Arrow burns!
- I see that the crown of the Arrow is the Father of all Light, and the shaft
- of the Arrow is the Father of all Life, and the barb of the Arrow is the
- Father of all Love. For that silver wedge is like a lotus flower, and the Eye
- within the Ateph Crown crieth: I watch. And the Shaft crieth: I work. And
- the Barb crieth: I wait. And the Voice of the Aethyr echoeth: It beams. It
- burns. It blooms.
- And now there cometh a strange thought; this Arrow is {134} the source of
- all motion; it is infinite motion, yet it moveth not, so that there "is" no
- motion. And therefore there is no matter. This Arrow is the glance of the
- Eye of Shiva. But because it moveth not, the universe is not destroyed. The
- universe is put forth and swallowed up in the quivering of the plumes of Maat,
- that are the plumes of the Arrow; but those plumes quiver not.
- And a voice comes: That which is above is "not" like that which is below.
- And another voice answers it: That which is below is "not" like that which is
- above.
- And a third voice answers these two: What is above and what is below? For
- there is the division that divideth not, and the multiplication that
- multiplieth not. And the One is the many. Behold, this Mystery is beyond
- understanding, for the winged globe is the crown, and the shaft is the wisdom,
- and the barb is the understanding. And the Arrow is one, and thou art lost in
- the Mystery, who art but as a babe that is carried in the womb of its mother,
- that art not yet ready for the light.
- And the vision overcometh me. My sense is stunned; my sight is blasted; my
- hearing is dulled.
- And a voice cometh: Thou didst seek the remedy of sorrow; therefore all
- sorrow is thy portion. This is that which is written: "God hath laid upon him
- the iniquity of us all." For as thy blood is mingled in the cup of BABALON,
- so is thine heart the universal heart. Yet is it bound about with the Green
- Serpent, the Serpent of Delight.
- It is shown me that this heart is the heart that rejoiceth, and the serpent
- is the serpent of Death for herein all the symbols are interchangeable, for
- each one containeth in itself {135} its own opposite. And this is the great
- Mystery of the Supernals that are beyond the Abyss. For below the Abyss,
- contradiction is division; but above the Abyss, contradiction is Unity. And
- there could be nothing true except by virtue of the contradiction that is
- contained in itself.
- Thou canst not believe how marvelous is this vision of the Arrow. And it
- could never be shut out, except the Lords of Vision troubled the waters of the
- pool, the mind of the Seer. But they send forth a wind that is a cloud of
- Angels, and they beat the water with their feet, and little waves splash up
- --- they are memories. For the seer hath no head; it is expanded into the
- universe, a vast and silent sea, crowned with the stars of night. Yet in the
- very midst thereof is the arrow. Little images of things that were, are the
- foam upon the waves. And there is a contest between the Vision and the
- memories. I prayed unto the Lords of Vision, saying: O my Lords, take not
- away this wonder from my sight.
- And they said: It must needs be. Rejoice therefore if thou hast been
- permitted to behold, even for a moment, this Arrow, the austere, the august.
- But the vision is accomplished, and we have sent forth a great wind against
- thee. For thou canst not penetrate by force, who hast refused it; nor by
- authority, for thou hast trampled it under foot. Thou art bereft of all but
- understanding, O thou that art no more than a little pile of dust!
- And the images rise up against me and constrain me, so that the Aethyr is
- shut against me. Only the things of the mind and of the body are open unto
- me. The shew-stone is dull, for that which I see therein is but a memory.
-
- TOLGA, ALGERIA
- "December" 13, 1909. 8.15-10.10 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 4TH AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED PAZ
-
- The Stone is translucent and luminous, and no images enter therein.
- A voice says: Behold the brilliance of the Lord, whose feet are set upon
- him that pardoneth transgression. Behold the six-fold Star that flameth in
- the Vault, the seal of the marriage of the great White King and his black
- slave.
- So I looked into the Stone, and beheld the six-fold Star: the whole Aethyr
- is as tawny clouds, like the flame of a furnace. And there is a mighty host
- of Angels, blue and golden, that throng it, and they cry: Holy, Holy, Holy art
- thou, that art not shaken in the earthquakes, and in the thunders! The end of
- things is come upon us; the day of be-with-us is at hand! For he hath created
- the universe, and overthrown it, that he might take his pleasure thereupon.
- And now, in the midst of the Aethyr, I beheld that god. He hath a thousand
- arms, and in each hand is a weapon of terrible strength. His face is more
- terrible than the storm, and from his eyes flash lightnings of intolerable
- brilliance. From his mouth run seas of blood. Upon his head is a crown of
- every deadly thing. Upon his forehead is the upright tau, and on either side
- of it are the signs of blasphemy. And about him clingeth a young girl, like
- unto the king's daughter that appeareth in the ninth Aethyr. But she is
- become rosy by reason of his force, and her purity hath tinged his black with
- blue.
- They are clasped in a furious embrace, so that she is torn asunder by the
- terror of the god; yet so tightly clingeth she about him, that he is
- strangled. She hath forced back his {137} head, and his throat is livid with
- the pressure of her fingers. Their joint cry is an intolerable anguish, yet
- it is the cry of their rapture, so that every pain, and every curse, and every
- bereavement, and every death of everything in the whole universe, is but one
- little gust of wind in that tempest-scream of ecstasy.
- The voice thereof is not articulate. It is in vain to seek comparison. It
- is absolutely continuous, without breaks or beats. If there seem to be
- vibration therein, it is because of the imperfection of the ears of the seer.
- And there cometh an interior voice, which sayeth to the seer that he hath
- trained his eyes well and can see much; and he hath trained his ears a little,
- and can hear a little; but his other senses hath he trained scarcely at all,
- and therefore the Aethyrs are almost silent to him on those planes. By the
- senses are meant the spiritual correlations of the senses, not the physical
- senses. But this matters little, because the Seer, so far as he is a seer, is
- the expression of the spirit of humanity. What is true of him is true of
- humanity, so that even if he had been able to receive the full Aethyrs, he
- could not have communicated them.
- And an Angel speaks: Behold, this vision is utterly beyond thine
- understanding. Yet shalt thou endeavour to unite thyself with the dreadful
- marriage-bed.
- So I am torn asunder, nerve from nerve and vein from vein, and more
- intimately --- cell from cell, molecule from molecule, and atom from atom, and
- at the same time all crushed together. Write down that the tearing asunder "is"
- a crushing together. All the double phenomena are only two ways of looking at
- a single phenomenon; and the single phenomenon {138} is Peace. There is no
- sense in my words or in my thoughts. "Faces half-formed arose." This is the
- meaning of that passage; they are attempts to interpret Chaos, but Chaos is
- Peace. Cosmos is the War of the Rose and the Cross. That was "a half-formed
- face" that I said then. All images are useless.
- Blackness, blackness intolerable, before the beginning of the light. This
- is the first verse of Genesis. Holy art thou, Chaos, Chaos, Eternity, all
- contradictions in terms!
- Oh, blue! blue! blue! whose reflection in the Abyss is called the Great One
- of the Night of Time; between ye vibrateth the Lord of the Forces of Matter.
- O Nox, Nox qui celas infamiam infandi nefandi, Deo solo sit laus qui dedit
- signum non scribendum. Laus virgini cuius stuprum tradit salutem.
- O Night, that givest suck from thy paps to sorcery, and theft, and rape,
- and gluttony, and murder, and tyranny, and to the nameless Horror, cover us,
- cover us, cover us from the Rod of Destiny; for Cosmos must come, and the
- balance be set up where there was no need of balance, because there was no
- injustice, but only truth. But when the balances are equal, scale matched
- with scale, then will Chaos return.
- Yea, as in a looking-glass, so in thy mind, that is backed with the false
- metal of lying, is every symbol read averse. Lo! everything wherein thou hast
- trusted must confound thee, and that thou didst flee from was thy saviour. So
- therefore didst thou shriek in the Black Sabbath when thou didst kiss the
- hairy buttocks of the goat, when the gnarled god tore thee asunder, when the
- icy cataract of death swept thee away.
- Shriek, therefore, shriek aloud; mingle the roar of the {139} gored lion
- and the moan of the torn bull, and the cry of the man that is torn by the
- claws of the Eagle, and the scream of the Eagle that is strangled by the hands
- of the Man. Mingle all these in the death-shriek of the Sphinx, for the blind
- man hath profaned her mystery. Who is this, Oedipus, Tiresias, Erinyes? Who
- is this, that is blind and a seer, a fool above wisdom? Whom do the hounds of
- heaven follow, and the crocodiles of hell await? Aleph, vau, yod, ayin, resh,
- tau, is his name.
- Beneath his feet is the kingdom, and upon his head the crown. He is spirit
- and matter; he is peace and power; in him is Chaos and Night and Pan, and upon
- BABALON his concubine, that hath made him drunk upon the blood of the saints
- that she hath gathered in her golden cup, hath he begotten the virgin that now
- he doth deflower. And this is that which is written: Malkuth shall be
- uplifted and set upon the throne of Binah. And this is the stone of the
- philosophers that is set as a seal upon the tomb of Tetragrammaton, and the
- elixir of life that is distilled from the blood of the saints, and the red
- powder that is the grinding-up of the bones of Choronzon.
- Terrible and wonderful is the Mystery thereof, O thou Titan that hast
- climbed into the bed of Juno! Surely thou art bound unto, and broken upon,
- the wheel; yet hast thou uncovered the nakedness of the Holy One, and the
- Queen of Heaven is in travail of child, and his name shall be called Vir, and
- Vis, and Virus, and Virtus, and Viridis, in one name that is all these, and
- above all these.
- Desolate, desolate is the Aethyr, for thou must return unto the habitations
- of the Owl and the Bat, unto the Scorpions {140} of the sand, and the blanched
- eyeless beetles that have neither wing nor horn. Return, blot out the vision,
- wipe from thy mind the memory thereof; stifle the fire with green wood;
- consume the Sacrament; cover the Altar; veil the Shrine; shut up the Temple
- and spread booths in the market place; until the appointed time come when the
- Holy One shall declare unto thee the Mystery of the Third Aethyr.
- Yet be thou wake and ware, for the great Angel Hua is about thee, and
- overshadoweth thee, and at any moment he may come upon thee unawares. The
- voice of PAZ is ended.
-
- BISKRA, ALGERIA.
- "December" 16, 1909. 9 - 10.30 a.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 3RD AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ZON
-
- There is an angry light in the stone; now it is become clear.
- In the centre is that minute point of light which is the true Sun, and in
- the circumference is the Emerald Snake. And joining them are the rays which
- are the plumes of Maat, and because the distance is infinite, therefore are
- they parallel from the circumference, although they diverge from the centre.
- In all this is no voice and no motion.
- And yet it seems that the great Snake feedeth upon the plumes of Truth as
- upon itself, so that it contracteth. But ever so little as it contracteth,
- without it gloweth the golden rim, which is that minute point in the centre.
- And all this is the sigil of the Aethyr, gold and azure and green. Yet
- also these are the Severities.
- It is only in the first three Aethyrs that we find the pure {141} essence,
- for all the other Aethyrs are but as Malkuth to complete these three triads,
- as hath before been said. And this being the second reflection, therefore is
- it the palace of two hundred and eighty judgments.
- For all these paths21 are in the course of the Flaming Sword from the side
- of Severity. And the other two paths are Zayin, which is a sword; and Shin,
- which is a tooth. These are then the five severities which are 280.
- All this is communicated to the Seer interiorly.
- "And the eye of His benignancy is closed. Let it not be opened upon the
- Aethyr, lest the severities be mitigated, and the house fall." Shall not the
- house fall, and the Dragon sink? Verily all things have been swallowed up in
- destruction; and Chaos hath opened his jaws and crushed the Universe as a
- Bacchanal crusheth a grape between her teeth. Shall not destruction swallow
- up destruction, and annihilation confound annihilation? Twenty and two are
- the mansions of the House of my Father, but there cometh an ox that shall set
- his forehead against the House, and it shall fall. For all these things are
- the toys of the Magician and the Maker of Illusions, that barreth the
- Understanding from the Crown.
- O thou that hast beheld the City of the Pyramids, how shouldst thou behold
- the House of the Juggler? For he is wisdom, and by wisdom hath he made the
- Worlds, and from that wisdom issue judgements 70 by 4, that are the 4 eyes of
- the double-headed one; that are the 4 devils, Satan, Lucifer, Leviathan,
- Belial, that are the great princes of the evil of the world. {142}
- And Satan is worshipped by men under the name of Jesus; and Lucifer is
- worshipped by men under the name of Brahma; and Leviathan is worshipped by men
- under the name of Allah; and Belial is worshipped by men under the name of
- Buddha.
- (This is the meaning of the passage in Liber Legis, Chap. III.)
- Moreover, there is Mary, a blasphemy against BABALON, for she hath shut
- herself up; and therefore is she the Queen of all those wicked devils that
- walk upon the earth, those that thou sawest even as little black specks that
- stained the Heaven of Urania. And all these are the excrement of Choronzon.
- And for this is BABALON under the power of the Magician, that she hath
- submitted herself unto the work; and she guardeth the Abyss. And in her is a
- perfect purity of that which is above; yet she is sent as the Redeemer to them
- that are below. For there is no other way into the Supernal Mystery but
- through her, and the Beast on which she rideth; and the Magician is set beyond
- her to deceive the brothers of blackness, lest they should make unto
- themselves a crown; for if there were two crowns, then should Ygdrasil, that
- ancient tree, be cast out into the Abyss, uprooted and cast down into the
- Outermost Abyss, and the Arcanum which is in the Adytum should be profaned;
- and the Ark should be touched, and the Lodge spied upon by them that are not
- masters, and the bread of the Sacrament should be the dung of Choronzon; and
- the wine of the Sacrament should be the water of Choronzon; and the incense
- should be dispersion; and the fire upon the Altar should be hate. But lift up
- thyself; stand, {143} play the man, for behold! there shall be revealed unto
- thee the Great Terror, the thing of awe that hath no name.
- And this is the mystery that I declare unto thee: that from the Crown
- itself spring the three great delusions; Aleph is madness, and Beth is
- falsehood, and Gimel is glamour. And these three be greater than all, for
- they are beyond the words that I speak unto thee; how much more therefore are
- they beyond the words that thou transmittest unto men.
- Behold! the Veil of the Aethyr sundereth, and is torn, like a sail by the
- breath of the tempest, and thou shalt see him as from afar off. This is that
- which is written, "Confound her understanding with darkness," for thou canst
- not speak this thing.
- 21 HB:Resh , HB:Lamed and HB:Nun (Sun, Libra and Scorpio), the Sun, the Balance
- or plumes of Maat, and the Snake. Added they make 280.
- It is the figure of the Magus of the Taro; and in his right arm the torch
- of the flames blazing upwards; in his left the cup of poison, a cataract into
- Hell. And upon his head the evil talisman, blasphemy and blasphemy and
- blasphemy, in the form of a circle. That is the greatest blasphemy of all.22
- On his feet hath he the scythes and swords and sickles; daggers; knives; every
- sharp thing, --- a millionfold, and all in one. And before him is the Table
- that is a Table of wickedness, the 42-fold Table. This Table is connected
- with the 42 Assessors of the Dead, for they are the Accursers, whom the soul
- must baffle; and with the 42-fold name of God, for this is the Mystery of
- Iniquity, that there was ever a beginning at all. And this Magus casteth
- forth, by the might of his four weapons, veil after veil; a thousand shining
- colours, ripping and tearing the Aethyr, so that it is like jagged saws, or
- like broken teeth in the face of a young girl, or like disruption, or {144}
- madness. There is a horrible grinding sound, maddening. This is the mill in
- which the Universal Substance, which is ether, was ground down into matter.
- The Seer prayeth that a cloud may come between him and the sun, so that he
- may shut out the terror of the vision. And he is afire; he is terribly
- athirst; and no help can come to him, for the shew-stone blazeth ever with the
- fury and the torment and the blackness, and the stench of human flesh. The
- bowels of little children are torn out and thrust into his mouth, and poison
- is dropped into his eyes. And Lilith, a black monkey crawling with filth,
- running with open sores, an eye torn out, eaten of worms, her teeth rotten,
- her nose eaten away, her mouth a putrid mass of green slime, her dugs dropping
- and cancerous, clings to him, kisses him.
- (Kill me! kill me!)
- There is a mocking voice: Thou art become immortal. Thou wouldst look upon
- the face of the Magician and thou hast not beheld him because of his Magick
- veils.
- (Don't torture me!)
- Thus are all they fallen into the power of Lilith, who have dared to look
- upon his face.
- The shew-stone is all black and corrupt. O filth! filth! filth!
- And this is her great blasphemy: that she hath taken the name of the First
- Aethyr, and bound it on her brow, and added thereunto the shameless yod and
- the tau for the sign of the Cross.
- She it is that squatteth upon the Crucifix, for the nastiness of her
- pleasure. So that they that worship Christ suck up her filth upon their
- tongues, and therefore their breaths stink. {145}
- I was saved from that Horror by a black shining Triangle, with apex
- upwards, that came upon the face of the sun.
- And now the shew-stone is all clear and beautiful again.
- The pure pale gold of a fair maiden's hair, and the green of her girdle,
- and the deep soft blue of her eyes.
- "Note." --- In this the gold is Kether, the blue is Chokmah, the green is
- Binah.
- Thus she appeareth in the Aethyr, adorned with flowers and gems. It seems
- that she hath incarnated herself upon earth, and that she will appear manifest
- in a certain office in the Temple.
- I have seen some picture like her face; I cannot think what picture. It is
- a piquant face, with smiling eyes and lips; the ears are small and pink, the
- complexion is fair, but not transparent; not as fair as one would expect from
- the hair and eyes. It is rather an impudent face, rather small, very pretty;
- the nose very slightly less than straight, well-proportioned, rather large
- nostrils. Full of vitality, the whole thing. Now very tall, rather slim and
- graceful; a good dancer.
- There is another girl behind her, with sparkling eyes, mischievous, a smile
- showing beautiful white teeth; an ideal Spanish girl, but fair. Very
- 22 "I.e.", that the circle should be profaned. This evil circle is
- of three concentric rings.
- vivacious. Only her head is visible, and now it is veiled by a black sun,
- casting forth dull rays of black and gold.
- Then the disk of the sun is a pair of balances, held steady; and twined
- about the central pole of the balance is the little green poisonous snake,
- with a long forked tongue rapidly darting.
- And the Angel that hath spoken with me before, saith to me: The eye of His
- benignancy is opened; therefore veileth {146} he thine eyes from the vision.
- Manfully hast thou endured; yet, hast thou been man, thou hadst not endured;
- and hadst thou been wholly that which thou art, thou shouldst have been caught
- up in the full vision that is unspeakable for Horror. And thou shouldst have
- beheld the face of the Magician that thou hast not been able to behold, --- of
- him from whom issue forth the severities that are upon Malkuth, and his name
- is Misericordia Dei.
- And because he is the dyad, thou mayest yet understand in two ways. Of
- first way, the Mercy of God is that Mercy which Jehovah showed to the
- Amalekites; and the second way is utterly beyond thine understanding, for it
- is the upright, and thou knowest nothing but the averse, --- until Wisdom
- shall inform thine Understanding, and upon the base of the Ultimate triangle
- arise the smooth point.
- Veil therefore thine eyes, for that thou canst not master the Aethyr,
- unless thy Mystery match Its Mystery. Seal up thy mouth also, for thou canst
- not master the voice of the Aethyr, save only by Silence.
- And thou shalt give the sign of the Mother, for BABALON is thy fortress
- against the iniquity of the Abyss, of the iniquity of that which bindeth her
- unto the Crown, and barreth her from the Crown; for not until thou art made
- one with CHAOS canst thou begin that last, that most terrible projection, the
- three-fold Regimen which alone constitutes the Great Work.
- For Choronzon is as it were the shell or excrement of these three paths,
- and therefore is his head raised unto Daath, and therefore have the Black
- Brotherhood declared him to be the child of Wisdom and Understanding, who is
- but the bastard of the Svastika. And this is that which is written in {147}
- the Holy Qabalah, concerning the Whirlpool and Leviathan, and the Great Stone.
- Thus long have I talked with thee in bidding thee depart, that the memory
- of the Aethyr might be dulled; for hadst thou come back suddenly into thy
- mortal frame, thou hadst fallen into madness or death. For the vision is not
- such that any may endure it.
- But now thy sense is dull, and the shew-stone but a stone. Therefore
- awake, and give secretly and apart the sign of the Mother, and call four times
- upon the name of CHAOS, that is the four-fold word that is equal to her seven-
- fold word. And then shalt thou purify thyself, and return into the World.
- So I did that which was commanded me, and returned.
-
- BISKRA.
- "December" 17, 1909. 9.30 - 11.30 a.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 2ND AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED ARN
-
- In the first place, there is again the woman riding on the bull, which is
- the reflection of BABALON, that rideth on The Beast. And also there is an
- Assyrian legend of a woman with a fish, and also there is a legend of Eve and
- the Serpent, for Cain was the child of Eve and the Serpent, and not of Eve and
- Adam; and therefore when he had slain his brother, who was the first murderer,
- having sacrificed living things to his demon, had Cain the mark upon his brow,
- which is the mark of the Beast spoken of in the Apocalypse, and is the sign of
- initiation. {148}
- The shedding of blood is necessary, for God did not hear the children of
- Eve until blood was shed. And that is external religion; but Cain spake not
- with God, nor had the mark of initiation upon his brow, so that he was shunned
- by all men, until he had shed blood. And this blood was the blood of his
- brother. This is a mystery of the sixth key of the Taro, which ought not to
- be called The Lovers, but The Brothers.
- In the middle of the card stands Cain; in his right hand is the Hammer of
- Thor with which he hath slain his brother, and it is all wet with his blood.
- And his left hand he holdeth open as a sign of innocence. And on his right
- hand is his mother Eve, around whom the serpent is entwined with his hood
- spread behind her head; and on his left hand is a figure somewhat like the
- Hindoo Kali, but much more seductive. Yet I know it to be Lilith. And above
- him is the Great Sigil of the Arrow, downward, but it is struck through the
- heart of the child. This Child is also Abel. And the meaning of this part of
- the card is obscure, but that is the correct drawing of the Taro card; and
- that is the correct magical fable from which the Hebrew scribes, who were not
- complete Initiates, stole their legend of the Fall and the subsequent events.
- They joined different fables together to try and make a connected story, and
- they sophisticated them to suit their social and political conditions.
- All this while no image hath come unto the Stone, and no voice hath been
- heard.
- I cannot get any idea of the source of what I have been saying. All I can
- say is, that there is a sort of dew, like mist, upon the Stone, and yet it has
- become hot to the touch. {149}
- All I get is that the Apocalypse was the recension of a dozen or so totally
- disconnected allegories, that were pieced together, and ruthlessly planed down
- to make them into a connected account; and that recension was re-written and
- edited in the interests of Christianity, because people were complaining that
- Christianity could show no true spiritual knowledge, or any food for the best
- minds: nothing but miracles, which only deceived the most ignorant, and
- Theology, which only suited pedants.23
- So a man got hold of this recension, and turned it Christian, and imitated
- the style of John. And this explains why the end of the world does not happen
- every few years, as advertised.
- There is nothing whatever in the Stone but a White Rose. And a voice
- comes: there shall be no more red roses, for she hath crushed all the blood of
- all things into her cup.
- It seemed at one time as if the rose was in the breast of a beautiful
- woman, high-bosomed, tall, stately, yet who danced like a snake. But there
- was no subsistence in this vision.
- And now I see the white Rose, as if it were in the beak of a swan, in the
- picture by Michael Angelo in Venice. And that legend too is the legend of
- BABALON.
- But all this is before the veil of the Aethyr. Now will I go and make
- certain preparations, and I will return and repeat the call of the Aethyr yet
- again.
-
- BISKRA.
- "December" 18, 1909. 9.20 - 10.5 a.m.
-
- {150}
- It is not a question of being unable to get into the Aethyr, and trying to
- struggle through; but one is not anywhere near it.
- A voice comes: When thy dust shall strew the earth whereon She walketh,
- then mayest thou bear the impress of Her foot. And thou thinkest to behold
- Her face!
- The Stone is become of the most brilliant whiteness, and yet, in that
- whiteness, all the other colours are implicit. The colour of anything is but
- its dullness, its obstructiveness. So is it with these visions. All that
- they "are" is falsity. Every idea merely marks where the mind of the Seer was
- too stupid to receive the light, and therefore reflected it. Therefore, as
- the pure light is colourless, so is the pure soul black.
- And this is the Mystery of the incest of CHAOS with his daughter.
- 23 WEH NOTE: See G.R.S.Mead's "Fragments of a Faith Forgot."
- There is nothing whatever visible.
- But I asked of the Angel that is at my side if the ceremony hath been duly
- performed. And he says: Yes, the Aethyr is present. It is thou that canst
- not perceive it, even as I cannot perceive it, because it is so entirely
- beyond thy conception that there is nothing in thy mind on to which it can
- cast a symbol, even as the emptiness of space is not heated by the fire of the
- sun. And so pure is the light that it preventeth the formation of images, and
- therefore have men called it darkness. For with any lesser light, the mind
- responds, and makes for itself divers palaces. It is that which is written:
- "In my Father's house there are many mansions"; and if the house be destroyed,
- how much more the mansions that are therein! For this is the victory of
- BABALON over the Magician that ensorcelled {151} her. For as the Mother she
- is 3 by 52, and as the harlot she is 6 by 26; but she is also 12 by 13, and
- that is the pure unity. Moreover she is 4 by 39, that is, victory over the
- power of the 4, and in 2 by 78 hath she destroyed the great Sorcerer. Thus is
- she the synthesis of 1 and 2 and 3 and 4, which being added are 10, therefore
- could she set her daughter upon her own throne, and defile her own bed with
- her virginity.
- And I ask the Angel if there is any way by which I can make myself worthy
- to behold the Mysteries of this Aethyr.
- And he saith: It is not in my knowledge. Yet do thou make once more in
- silence the Call of the Aethyr, and wait patiently upon the favour of the
- Angel, for He is a mighty Angel, and never yet have I heard the whisper of his
- wing.
-
- This is the translation of the Call of the Aethyr.
- O ye heavens which dwell in the first Aire, and are mighty in the parts of
- the earth, and execute therein the judgment of the highest, to you it is said:
- Behold the face of your God, the beginning of comfort, whose eyes are the
- brightness of the heavens which provided you for the government of the earth,
- and her unspeakable variety, furnishing you with a power of understanding,
- that ye might dispose all things according to the foresight of Him that
- sitteth on the Holy Throne, and rose up in the beginning, saying, The earth,
- let her be governed by her parts (this is the prostitution of BABALON to Pan),
- and let there be division in her (the formation of the Many from the One),
- that her glory may be always ecstasy and irritation of orgasm. Her course let
- it round with the heavens (that is, let her way be always harmonious with
- heaven), and as an {152} handmaid let her serve them (that is, the Virgin of
- Eternity climbing into the bed of CHAOS). One season let it confound another
- (that is, let there be unwearying variety of predicates), and let there be no
- creature upon or within her the same (that is, let there be an unwearying
- variety of subjects). All her members let them differ in their qualities, and
- let there be no one creature equal with another (for if there were any
- duplication or omission, there would be no perfection in the whole). The
- reasonable creatures of the earth and men, let them vex and weed out one
- another (this is, the destruction of reason by internecine conflicts in the
- course of redemption). And their dwelling places, let them forget their
- names. (This is, the arising of Nemo.) The work of man and his pomp, let
- them be defaced. (That is, in the Great Work man must lose his personality.)
- His building, let it be a cave for the Beast of the Field. ("His building"
- means the Vault of the Adepts, and the "Cave" is the Cave of the Mountain of
- Abiegnus, and the "Beast" is he upon whom BABALON rideth, and the "Field" is
- the supernal Eden.) Confound her understanding with darkness. (This sentence
- is explained by what has been said concerning Binah.) For why, it rejoiceth
- me concerning the Virgin and the Man. (Kelly did not understand this Call at
- all, and he would not believe this sentence was written so, for it seemed to
- contradict the rest of the Call, so he altered it.) One while let her be
- known and another while a stranger, (that is, the Mystery of the Holy One
- being at the same time identical with everything and apart from it), because
- she is the bed of an harlot, and the dwelling of him that is fallen. (That is
- that Mystery which was revealed in the last Aethyr; the universe being, as it
- were, a garden wherein the Holy {153} Ones may take their pleasure.) O ye
- heavens, arise; the lower heavens beneath you, let them serve you. (This is a
- command for the whole of things to join in universal rapture.) Govern those
- that govern; cast down such as fall; bring forth those that increase; and
- destroy the rotten. (This means that everything shall take its own pleasure
- in its own way.) No place let it remain in one number. ("No place" is the
- infinite Ain . . . "Let remain in one number"; that is, let it be concentrated
- in Kether.) Add and diminish until the stars be numbered. (It is a mystery
- of the Logos being formulated by the Qabalah, because the stars, are all
- letters of the Holy Alphabet, as it was said in a former Aethyr.) Arise!
- Move! and Appear! before the covenant of his mouth which he hath shewn unto us
- in his justice. ("The Covenant" is the letter Aleph; "His mouth", pé; "His
- Justice", lamed; and these add up again to Aleph, so that it is in the letter
- Aleph, which is zero, thus symbolizing the circles of the Aethyrs, that he
- calleth them forth. But men thought that Aleph was the initial ARR, cursing,
- when it was really the initial of AChD, unity, and AHBH, love. So that it was
- the most horrible and wicked blasphemy of the blackest of all the black
- brothers to begin Barashith with a beth, with the letter of the Magician.
- Yet, by this simple device, hath he created the whole illusion of sorrow.)
- Open the mysteries of your creation, and make us partakers of the undefiled
- knowledge. (The word here is "IADNAMAD" is not the ordinary word for
- knowledge. It is a word of eight letters, which is the secret name of God,
- summarized in the letter cheth; for which see the Aethyr which correspondeth
- to that letter, the twelfth Aethyr.)
- Now from time to time I have looked into the Stone, but {154} never is
- there any image therein, or any hint thereof; but now there are three arrows,
- arranged thus:
-
- {Illustration on page 155 described:
-
- Three arrows intersecting in the common centers of the three shafts. Two are
- diagonal, forming an "X" with points to top and fledging to bottom. The third
- is vertical, bisecting the "X" with point below and fledging to the top. The
- fledging takes the form of the two feathers of Maat, from the Ateph crown.}
-
- This is the letter Aleph in the Alphabet of Arrows.
- (I want to say that while I was doing the translation of the Call of the
- Aethyrs, the soles of my feet were burning, as if I were on red hot steel.)
- And now the fire has spread all over me, and parches me, and tortures me.
- And my sweat is bitter like poison. And all my blood is acrid in my veins,
- like gleet. I seem to be all festering, rotting; and the worms eating me
- while I am yet alive.
- A voice, neither in myself nor out of myself, is saying: Remember
- Prometheus; remember Ixion.
- I am tearing at nothing. I will not heed. For even this dust must be
- consumed with fire.
- And now, although there is no image, at last there is a sense of obstacle,
- as if one were at length drawing near to the frontier of the Aethyr.
- But I am dying.
- I can neither strive nor wait. There is agony in my ears, and in my
- throat, and mine eyes have been so long blind that I cannot remember that
- there ever was such a thing as sight.
- And it cometh to me that I should go away, and await the {155} coming of
- the veil of the Aethyr; not here. I think I will go to the Hot Springs.
- So I put away the Stone upon my breast.
-
- BISKRA
- 10.15-11.52 a.m.
-
-
- Flashes of lightning are playing in the Stone, at the top; and at the
- bottom of the Stone there is a black pyramid, and at the top thereof is a
- vesica piscis. The vesica piscis is of colourless brilliance.
- The two curves of Pisces are thus:
-
- {Illustration on page 156 described:
-
- The Pisces sign without the cross-line. In Essence ") (", but larger with
- thick curves.}
-
- They are the same curves as the curves of vesica piscis, but turned round.
- And a voice comes: How can that which is buried in the pyramids behold that
- which descendeth unto its apex?
- Again it comes to me, without voice: Therefore is motherhood the symbol of
- the Masters. For first they must give up their virginity to be destroyed, and
- the seed must lie hidden in them until the nine moons wax and wane, and they
- must surround it with the Universal Fluid. And they must feed it with blood
- for fire. Then is the child a living thing. And afterwards is much suffering
- and much joy, and after that are they torn asunder, and this is all their
- thank, that they give it to suck.
- All this while the vision in the Shew-Stone stays as it was, save that the
- lightning grows more vehement and clear; {156} and behind the vesica piscis is
- a black cross extending to the top and to the edges of the Stone. And now
- blackness spreads, and swallows up the images.
- Now there is naught but a vast black triangle having the apex downwards,
- and in the centre of the black triangle is the face of Typhon, the Lord of the
- Tempest, and he crieth aloud: Despair! Despair! For thou mayest deceive the
- Virgin, and thou mayest cajole the Mother; but what wilt thou say unto the
- ancient Whore that is throned in Eternity? For if she will not, there is
- neither force nor cunning, nor any wit, that may prevail upon her.
- Thou canst not woo her with love, for she "is" love. And she hath all, and
- hath no need of thee.
- And thou canst not woo her with gold, for all the Kings and captains of the
- earth, and all the gods of heaven, have showered their gold upon her. Thus
- hath she all, and hath no need of thee.
- And thou canst not woo her with knowledge, for knowledge is the thing that
- she hath spurned. She hath it all, and hath no need of thee.
- And thou canst not woo her with wit, for her Lord is Wit. She hath it all,
- and hath no need of thee. Despair! Despair!
- Nor canst thou cling to her knees and ask for pity; nor canst thou cling to
- her heart and ask for love; nor canst thou put thine arms about her neck, and
- ask for understanding; for thou hast all these, and they avail thee not.
- Despair! Despair!
- Then I took the Flaming Sword, and I let it loose against Typhon, so that
- his head was cloven asunder, and the black triangle dissolved in lightnings.
- {157}
- But as he parted his voice broke out again: Nor canst thou win her with the
- Sword, for her eyes are fixed upon the eyes of Him in whose hand is the hilt
- of the Sword. Despair! Despair!
- And the echo of that cry was his word, which is identical, although it be
- diverse: Nor canst thou win her by the Serpent, for it was the Serpent that
- seduced her first. Despair! Despair!
- (Yet he cried thus as he fled:)
- I am Leviathan, the great Lost Serpent of the Sea. I writhe eternally in
- torment, and I lash the ocean with my tail into a whirlpool of foam that is
- vemonous and bitter, and I have no purpose. I go no whither. I can neither
- live nor die. I can but rave and rave in my death agony. I am the Crocodile
- that eateth up the children of men. And through the malice of BABALON I
- hunger, hunger, hunger.
- All this while the Stone is more inert than ever yet; a thousand times more
- lifeless than when it is not invoked. Now, when it kindles, it only kindles
- into its physical beauty. And now upon the face of it is a great black Rose,
- each of whose petals, though it be featureless, is yet a devil-face. And all
- the stalks are the black snakes of hell. It is alive, this Rose; a single
- thought informs it. It comes to clutch, to murder. Yet, because a single
- thought alone informs it, I have hope therein.
- I think the Rose has a hundred and fifty-six petals, and though it be
- black, it has the luminous blush.
- There it is, in the midst of the Stone, and I cannot see anyone who wears
- it.
- Aha! Aha! Aha! Shut out the sight!
- Holy, Holy, Holy art thou! {158}
- Light, Life and Love are like three glow-worms at thy feet: the whole
- universe of stars, the dewdrops on the grass whereon thou walkest!
- I am quite blind.
- Thou art Nuit! Strain, strain, strain my whole soul!
-
- A ka dua
- Tuf ur biu
- Bi a'a chefu
- Dudu ner af an nuteru.
-
- Falutli! Falutli!
- I cling unto the burning Aethyr like Lucifer that fell through the Abyss,
- and by the fury of his flight kindled the air.
- And I am Belial, for having seen the Rose upon thy breast, I have denied
- God.
- And I am Satan! I am Satan! I am cast out upon a burning crag! And the
- sea boils about the desolation thereof. And already the vultures gather, and
- feast upon my flesh.
- Yea! Before thee all the most holy is profane, O thou desolator of
- shrines! O thou falsifier of the oracles of truth! Ever as I went, hath it
- been thus. The truth of the profane was the falsehood of the Neophyte, and
- the truth of the Neophyte was the falsehood of the Zelator! Again and again
- the the fortress must be battered down! Again and again the pylon must be
- overthrown! Again and again must the gods be desecrated!
- And now I lie supine before thee, in terror and abasement. O Purity! O
- Truth! What shall I say? My tongue cleaveth to my jaws, O thou Medusa that
- hast turned me to stone! Yet is that stone the stone of the philosophers.
- Yet is that tongue Hadit. {159}
- Aha! Aha!
- Yea! Let me take the form of Hadit before thee, and sing:
-
- A ka dua
- Tuf ur biu
- Bi a'a chefu
- Dudu ner af an nuteru.
-
- Nuit! Nuit! How art thou manifested in this place! This is a Mystery
- ineffable. And it is mine, and I can never reveal it either to God or to man.
- It is for thee and me !
- Aha! Aha!
-
- A ka dua
- Tuf ur biu
- Bi a'a chefu
- Dudu ner af an nuteru.
-
- . . . My spirit is no more; my soul is no more. My life leaps out into
- annihilation!
-
- A ka dua
- Tuf ur biu
- Bi a'a chefu
- Dudu ner af an nuteru.
-
- It is the cry of my body! Save me! I have come too close. I have come
- too close to that which may not be endured. It must awake, the body; it must
- assert itself.
- It must shut out the Aethyr, or else it is dead.
- Every pulse aches, and beats furiously. Every nerve stings like a serpent.
- And my skin is icy cold.
- Neither God nor man can penetrate the Mystery of the Aethyr.
- (Here the Seer mutters unintelligibly.)
- And even that which understandeth cannot hear its voice. For to the
- profane the voice of the Neophyte is called silence, {160} and to the Neophyte
- the voice of the Zelator is called silence. And so ever is it.
- Sight is fire, and is the first angle of the Tablet; spirit is hearing, and
- is the centre thereof; thou, therefore, who art all spirit and fire, and hast
- no duller elements in thy star; thou art come to sight at the end of thy will.
- And if thou wilt hear the voice of the Aethyr, do thou invoke it in the night,
- having no other light but the light of the half moon. Then mayest thou hear
- the voice, though it may be that thou understandeth it not. Yet shall it be a
- potent spell, whereby thou mayest lay bare the womb of thy understanding to
- the violence of CHAOS.
- Now, therefore, for the last time, let the veil of the Aethyr be torn.
- Aha! Aha! Aha! Aha! Aha! Aha! Aha!
-
- A ka dua
- Tuf ur biu
- Bi a'a chefu
- Dudu ner af an nuteru.
-
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-
- This Aethyr must be left unfinished then until the half moon.
-
- HAMMAM SALAHIN.
- "December" 18, 1909 3.10 - 4.25 p.m.
-
-
- An olvah nu arenu olvah. Diraeseu adika va paretanu poliax poliax in vah
- rah ahum subre fifal. Lerthexanax. Mama ra-la hum fifala maha.
- All this is the melody of a flute, very faint and clear. And there is a
- sort of sub-tinkle of a bell. {161}
- And there is a string instrument, somewhat like a zither. And there is a
- human voice.
- And the voice comes: this is the Song of the Sphinx, which she singeth ever
- in the ears of men.
- And it is the song of the syrens. And whoever heareth it is lost.
-
- I III
- Mu pa telai, O chi balae
- Tu wa melai Wa pa malae: --
- A, a, a Ut! Ut! Ut!
- Tu fu tulu! Ge; fu latrai,
- Tu fu tulu Le fu malai
- Pa, Sa, Ga. Kut! -- Hut! -- Nut.
-
- II IV
- Qwi Mu telai AI OAI
- Ya Pa melai; Rel moai
- u, u, u. Ti -- Ti -- Ti!
- 'Se gu melai; Wa la pelai
- Pe fu telai, Tu fu latai
- Fu tu lu. Wi, Ni, Bi.
-
-
- "Translation of Song."
-
- I
-
- Silence! the moon ceaseth (her motion),
- That also was sweet
- In the air, in the air, in the air!
- Who Will shall attain!
- Who Will shall attain
- By the Moon, and by Myself, and by the Angel of the Lord!
-
- II
-
- Now Silence ceaseth
- And the moon waxeth sweet;
- (It is the hour of) Initiation, Initiation, Initiation.
- The kiss of Isis is honeyed;
- My own Will is ended,
- For Will hath attained. {162}
-
- III
-
- Behold the lion-child swimmeth (in the heaven)
- And the moon reeleth: --
- (It is) Thou! (It is) Thou! (It is) Thou!
- Triumph; the Will stealeth away (like a thief),
- The Strong Will that staggered
- Before Ra Hoor Khuit! -- Hadit! -- Nuit!
-
- IV
-
- To the God OAI
- Be praise
- In the end and the beginning!
- And may none fall
- Who Will attain
- The Sword, the Balances, the Crown!
-
-
- And that which thou hearest is but the dropping of the dew from my limbs,
- for I dance in the night, naked upon the grass, in shadowy places, by running
- streams.
- Many are they who have loved the nymphs of the woods, and of the wells, and
- of the fountains, and of the hills. And of these some were nympholept. For
- it was not a nymph, but I myself that walked upon the earth taking my
- pleasure. So also there were many images of Pan, and men adored them, and as
- a beautiful god he made their olives bear double and their vines increase; but
- some were slain by the god, for it was I that had woven the garlands about
- him.
- Now cometh a song.
- So sweet is this song that no one could resist it. For in it is all the
- passionate ache for the moonlight, and the great hunger of the sea, and the
- terror of desolate places, --- all things that lure men to the unattainable.
- {163}
-
- Omari tessala marax,
- tessala dodi phornepax.
- amri radara poliax
- armana piliu.
- amri radara piliu son';
- mari narya barbiton
- madara anaphax sarpedon
- andala hriliu.
-
- "Translation."
-
- I am the harlot that shaketh Death.
- This shaking giveth the Peace of Satiate Lust.
- Immortality jetteth from my skull,
- And music from my vulva.
- Immortality jetteth from my vulva also,
- For my Whoredom is a sweet scent like a seven-stringed instrument,
- Played unto God the Invisible, the all-ruler,
- That goeth along giving the shrill scream of orgasm.
-
- Every man that hath seen me forgetteth me never, and I appear oftentimes in
- the coals of the fire, and upon the smooth white skin of woman, and in the
- constancy of the waterfall, and in the emptiness of deserts and marshes, and
- upon great cliffs that look seaward; and in many strange places, where men
- seek me not. And many thousand times he beholdeth me not. And at last I
- smite myself into him as a vision smiteth into a stone, and whom I call must
- follow.
- Now I perceive myself standing in a Druid circle, in an immense open plain.
- A whole series of beautiful visions of deserts and sunsets and islands in
- the sea, green beyond imagination . . . . But there is no subsistence in
- them.
- A voice goes on: this is the holiness of fruitless love and aimless toil.
- For in doing the thing for the things's sake is concentration, and this is the
- holiest of them that suit not {164} the means to the end. For therein is
- faith and sympathy and a knowledge of the true Magick.
- Oh my beloved, that fliest in the air like a dove, beware of the falcon! oh
- my beloved, that springest upon the earth like a gazelle, beware of the lion!
- There are hundreds of visions, trampling over one another. In each one the
- Angel of the Aethyr is mysteriously hidden.
- Now I will describe the Angel of the Aethyr until the voice begins again.
- He is like one's idea of Sappho and Calypso, and all seductive and deadly
- things; heavy eye-lids, long lashes, a face like ivory, wonderful barbaric
- jewellery, intensely red lips, a very small mouth, tiny ears, a Grecian face.
- Over the shoulders is a black robe with a green collar; the robe is spangled
- with golden stars; the tunic is a pure soft blue.
- Now the whole Aethyr is swallowed up in a forest of unquenchable fire, and
- fearlessly through it all a show-white eagle flies. And the eagle cries: the
- house also of death. Come away! The volume of the book is open, the Angel
- waiteth without, for the summer is at hand. Come away! For the Aeon is
- measured, and thy span allotted. Come away! For the mighty sounds have
- entered into every angle. And they have awakened the Angels of the Aethyrs
- that slept these three hundred years.
- For in the Holy letter Shin, that is the Resurrection in the Book of Thoth,
- that is the Holy Spirit in the Trinity, that is three hundred in the tale of
- the years, hath the tomb been opened, so that this great wisdom might be
- revealed.
- Come away! For the Second Triad is completed, and there remaineth only the
- Lord of the Aeon, the Avenger, the Child {165} both Crowned and Conquering,
- the Lord of the Sword and the Sun, the Babe in the Lotus, pure from his birth,
- the Child of suffering, the Father of justice, unto whom be the glory
- throughout all the Aeon!24
- Come away! For that which was to be accomplished is accomplished, seeing
- that thou hadst faith unto the end of all.
- In the letter N the Voice of the Aethyr is ended.
-
- BISKRA, ALGERIA.
- "December" 20, 1909. 8.35 - 9.15 p.m.
-
-
- THE CRY OF THE 1ST AETHYR, WHICH IS CALLED LIL
-
- First, let praise and worship and honour and glory and great thank be given
- unto the Holy One, who hath permitted us to come thus far, who hath revealed
- unto us the ineffable mysteries, that they might be disclosed before men. And
- we humbly beseech His infinite goodness that he will be pleased to manifest
- unto us even the Mystery of the First Aethyr.
- (Here followeth the Call of the Aethyr.)
- The veil of the Aethyr is like the veil of night, dark azure, full of
- countless stars. And because the veil is infinite, at first one seeth not the
- winged globe of the sun that burneth in the centre thereof. Profound peace
- filleth me, --- beyond ecstasy, beyond thought, beyond being itself, IAIDA.
- (This word means "I am", but in a sense entirely beyond being.)
- ("Note." --- In Hebrew letters it adds to 26. In Hebrew letters the name of
- the Aethyr is 70, ayin; but by turning the {166} Yetziratic attributions of
- the letters into Hebrew, it gives 66, and 66 is the sum of the numbers from 0
- to 11.)
- Yes; there is peace. There is no "tendency" of any sort, much less any
- observation or feeling or impression. There is only a faint consciousness,
- like the scent of jasmine.
- The body of the Seer is rested in a waking sleep that is deeper than sleep,
- and his mind is still; he seems like a well in the desert, shaded by windless
- palms.
- And it is night; and because the night is the whole night of space, and not
- the partial night of earth, there is no thought of dawn. For the light of the
- Sun maketh illusion, blinding man's eyes to the glory of the stars. And
- unless he be in the shadow of the earth, he cannot see the stars. So, also,
- unless he be hidden from the light of life, he cannot behold Nuit. Here,
- then, do I abide in unalterable midnight, utterly at peace.
- I have forgotten where I am, and who I am. I am hanging in nothing.
- Now the veil opens of itself. (To Scribe. Come nearer; I don't want to
- have to speak so loudly.)
- It is a little child covered with lilies and roses. He is supported by
- countless myriads of Archangels. The Archangels are all the same colourless
- brilliance, and every one of them is blind. Below the Archangels again are
- many, many other legions, and so on far below, so far that the eye cannot
- pierce. And on his forehead, and on his heart, and in his hand, is the secret
- sigil of the Beast. And of all this the glory is so great that all the
- spiritual senses fail, and their reflections in the body fail.
- It is very strange. In my heart is rapture, holy and ineffable, absolutely
- beyond emotion; beyond even that bliss {167} called Ananda, infinitely calm
- 24 The Seer had absolutely forgotten this prophecy, and was amazed
- at the final identification of the Child in LIL with Hoor.
- and pure. Yet at the gates of mine eyes stand tears, like warriors upon the
- watch, that lean on their spears, listening.25
- The great and terrible Angel keeps on looking at me, as if to bar me from
- the vision. There is another blinding my mind. There is another forcing my
- head down in sleep.
- (It's very difficult to talk at all, because an impression takes such an
- immense time to travel from the will to the muscles. Naturally, I've no idea
- of time.)
- I have gone up again to the child, led by two Angels, abasing my head.
- This child seems to be the child that one attempted to describe in "The
- Garden of Janus."
- Every volition is inhibited. I have tried to say a lot, but it has always
- got lost on the way.
- Holy art thou, O more beautiful than all the stars of the Night!
- There has never been such peace, such silence. But these are "positive"
- things. Singing praises of things eternal amid the flames of first glory, and
- every note of every song is a fresh flower in the garland of peace.
- This child danceth not, but it is because he is the soul of the two dances,
- --- the right hand and the left hand, and in him they are one dance, the dance
- without motion.
- There is dew on all the fire. Every drop is the quintessence of the
- ecstasy of stars. {168}
- Yet a third time am I led to him, prostrating myself seven times at every
- step. There is a perfume in the air, reflected down even to the body of the
- seer. That perfume thrills his body with an ecstasy that is like love, like
- sleep.
- And this is the song:
- I am the child of all who am the father of all, for from me come forth all
- things, that I might be. I am the fountain in the snows, and I am the eternal
- sea. I am the lover, and I am the beloved, and I am the first-fruits of their
- love. I am the first faint shuddering of the Light, and I am the loom wherein
- night weaveth her impenetrable veil.
- I am the captain of the hosts of eternity; of the swordsmen and the
- spearmen and the bowmen and the charioteers. I have led the armies of the
- east against the armies of the west, and the armies of the west against the
- armies of the east. For I am Peace.
- My groves of olive were planted by an harlot, and my horses were bred by a
- thief. I have trained my vines upon the spears of the Most High, and with my
- laughter have I slain a thousand men.
- With the wine in my cup have I mixed the lightnings, and I have carved my
- bread with a sharp sword.
- With my folly have I undone the wisdom of the Magus, even as with my
- judgments I have overwhelmed the universe. I have eaten the pomegranate in
- the House of Wrath, and I have crushed out the blood of my mother between
- mill-stones to make bread.
- There is nothing that I have not trampled beneath my feet. There is
- nothing that I have not set a garland on my brow. I have wound all things
- about my waist as a girdle. I {169} have hidden all things in the cave of my
- heart. I have slain all things because I am Innocence. I have lain with all
- things because I am Untouched Virginity. I have given birth to all things
- because I am Death.
- Stainless are my lips, for they are redder than the purple of the vine, and
- of the blood wherewith I am intoxicated. Stainless is my forehead, for it is
- whiter than the wind and the dew that cooleth it.
- I am light, and I am night, and I am that which is beyond them.
- 25 There are long intervals between many of these paragraphs, the
- Seer having been lost to Being. The reader will note that "The
- Great and Terrible Angel" has not been mentioned, but comes in
- suddenly. This was because the Seer's speech was inaudible, or
- never occurred. This angel was the "Higher Genius" of the Seer.
- I am speech, and I am silence, and I am that which is beyond them.
- I am life, and I am death, and I am that which is beyond them.
- I am war, and I am peace, and I am that which is beyond them.
- I am weakness, and I am strength, and I am that which is beyond them.
- Yet by none of these can man reach up to me. Yet by each of them must man
- reach up to me.
- Thou shalt laugh at the folly of the fool. Thou shalt learn the wisdom of
- the Wise. And thou shalt be initiate in holy things. And thou shalt be
- learned in the things of love. And thou shalt be mighty in the things of war.
- And thou shalt be adept in things occult. And thou shalt interpret the
- oracles. And thou shalt drive all these before thee in thy car, and though by
- none of these canst thou reach up to me, yet by each of these must thou attain
- to me. And thou must have the strength of the lion, and the secrecy of the
- hermit. And thou must turn the wheel of life. And thou must hold the
- balances of Truth. Thou must pass through the great Waters, a Redeemer. Thou
- must have the tail of the scorpion, and {170} the poisoned arrows of the
- Archer, and the dreadful horns of the Goat. And so shalt thou break down the
- fortress that guardeth the Palace of the King my son. And thou must work by
- the light of the Star and of the Moon and of the Sun, and by the dreadful
- light of judgment that is the birth of the Holy Spirit within thee. When
- these shall have destroyed the universe, then mayest thou enter the palace of
- the Queen my daughter.
- Blessed, blessed, blessed; yea, blessed; thrice and four times blessed is
- he that hath attained to look upon thy face. For I will hurl thee forth from
- my presence as a whirling thunderbolt to guard the ways, and whom thou smitest
- shall be smitten indeed. And whom thou lovest shall be loved indeed. And
- whether by smiting or by love thou workest, each one shall see my face, a
- glimmer through a thousand veils. And they shall rise up from love's sleep or
- death's, and gird themselves with a girdle of snake-skin for wisdom, and they
- shall wear the white tunic of purity, and the apron of flaming orange for
- will, and over their shoulders shall they cast the panther's skin of courage.
- And they shall wear the nemyss of secrecy and the ateph crown of truth. And
- on their feet shall they put sandals made of the skin of breasts, that they
- may trample upon all they were, yet also that its toughness shall support
- them, and protect their feet, as they pass upon the mystical way that lieth
- through the pylons. And upon their breasts shall be the Rose and Cross of
- light and life, and in their hands the hermit's staff and lamp. Thus shall
- they set out upon the never-ending journey, each step of which is an
- unutterable reward.
- Holy, Holy, Holy, Holy; yea, thrice and four times holy {171} art thou,
- because thou hast attained to look upon my face; not by my favour only, not by
- thy magick only, may this be won. Yet it is written: "Unto the persevering
- mortal the blessed Immortals are swift."
- Mighty, mighty, mighty, mighty; yea, thrice and four times mighty art thou.
- He that riseth up against thee shall be thrown down, though thou raise not so
- much as thy little finger against him. And he that speaketh evil against thee
- shall be put to shame, though thy lips utter not the littlest syllable against
- him. And he that thinketh evil concerning thee shall be confounded in his
- thought, although in thy mind arise not the least thought of him. And they
- shall be brought unto subjection unto thee, and serve thee, though thou
- willest it not. And it shall be unto them a grace and a sacrament, and ye
- shall all sit down together at the supernal banquet, and ye shall feast upon
- the honey of the gods, and be drunk upon the dew of immortality --- FOR I AM
- HORUS, THE CROWNED AND CONQUERING CHILD, WHOM THOU KNEWEST NOT!
- Pass thou on, therefore, O thou Prophet of the Gods, unto the Cubical Altar
- of the Universe; there shalt thou receive every tribe and kingdom and nation
- into the mighty Order that reacheth from the frontier fortresses that guard
- the Uttermost Abyss unto My Throne.
- This is the formula of the Aeon, and with that the voice of LIL, that is
- the Lamp of the Invisible Light, is ended. Amen.
-
- BISKRA, ALGERIA.
- "December" 19, 1909. 1.30 - 3.30 p.m.
-
- {172}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A COMMENT UPON THE NATURES OF THE AETHYRS.
-
- 30. Without the cube --- the material world --- is the sphere-system of the
- spiritual world enfolding it. the Cry seems to be a sort of Exordium, and
- external showing forth of the coming of the new Aeon, the Aeon of Horus the
- crowned child.
-
- 29. The disturbance of Equilibrium caused by the Coming of the Aeon.
-
- 28. Now is a further and clearer shadowing-forth of the Great Mystery of
- the Aeon which is to be led up to by the Aethyrs. Note however that the King
- of the New Aeon never appears until the very first Aethyr.
-
- 27. Hecate appears --- her son, the son of a Virgin, a magus, is to bring
- the Aeon to pass. And she, the herald, her function fulfilled, withdraws
- within her mystic veil.
-
- 26. The death of the past Aeon, that of Jehovah and Jesus; ends with
- adumbraiton of the new, the vision of the Stele of Ankh-f-n-khonsu, whose
- discovery brought about in a human consciousness the knowledge of the Equinox
- of the Gods, 21. 3. 04.
-
- 25. Appearance of the Lion God of Horus, the child of Leo that incarnates
- him.
- The first Angel is Isis its mother. {173}
-
- 24. Now appears his mate, the heavenly Venus, the Scarlet Woman, who by men
- is thought of as Babalon as he is thought of as Chaos.
-
- 23. Here appear the Cherubim, the other officers of the new Temple, the
- earth and water assistants of the fire and air Beast and Scarlet Woman.
-
- 22. Here is the First Key to the formula of Horus, a sevenfold arrangement.
- A shadow of Horus declares his nature.
-
- 21. This seems to be the Vision of God face to face that is the necessary
- ordeal for him who would pass the Abyss, as it were. A commission to be the
- prophet of the Aeon arising is given to the Seer. The God is the Hierophant
- in the Ceremony of Magister Templi.
-
- 20. A guide is given to the Seer, his Holy Guardian Angel. And this is
- attained by a mastery of the Universe conceived as a wheel The Hiereus in the
- Ceremony of Magister Templi.
-
- 19. Now cometh forth the Angel who giveth instruction, in the lowest form.
- The Hegemone in the Ceremony of Magister Templi which the Seer is about to
- undergo.
-
- 18. The Vault of preparation for the Ceremony of M.T.
- The Veil is the Crucifixion, symbol of the dead Aeon. The first ordeal is
- undergone.
-
- 17. The symbol of the Balance is now given unto the Aspirant.
- {174}
-
- 16. The sacrifice is made. The High Priestess (image of Babalon) cometh
- forth upon her Beast and maketh this.
-
- 15. The mystic dance by Salome. The new Temple, the signs of the grades
- are received and the A.E. rejected.
-
- 14. The Shrine of Darkness. Final initiation into grade of M. T.
-
- 13. The emergence of Nemo into the world; his work therein. This is the
- first mystery revealed to a M.T.
-
- 12. The Second Mystery: the cup-bearer of Babalon the beautiful. The Holy
- Grail manifested to the M.T., with the first knowledge of the Black Brothers.
-
- 11. Now cometh the Frontier of the Holy City; the M.T. is taken into the
- Abyss.
-
- 10. The Abyss.
-
- 9. The M.T. hath passed the Abyss, and is let to the Palace of the Virgin
- redeemed from Malkuth unto Binah.
-
- 8. The fuller manifestation of the Holy Guardian Angel.
-
- 7. The Virgin become the Bride, the great Reward of the Ceremony. also an
- adumbration of the Further Progress.
-
- 6. A shadowing-forth of the grade of Magus.
-
- 5. The reception of the M.T. among the Brethren of the A.'. A.'. the
- manifestation of the Arrow.
-
- 4. Further concerning the Magus. The marriage of Chaos with the purified
- Virgin.
- {175}
-
- 3. The Magician. Exhibition of the Guards to the Higher Knowledge.
-
- 2. The understanding of the Curse, that is become a Blessing. The final
- reward of the M.T., his marriage even with Babalon Herself. The paean
- thereof.
-
- 1. The final manifestation. All leads up to the Crowned Child, Horus, the
- Lord of the New Aeon.
-
- ["A further and fuller comment upon this Book is in preparation."]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- {176}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STOP PRESS REVIEWS
-
- THE NEW GOD AND OTHER ESSAYS. By RALPH SHIRLEY.
-
-
- These remarkable essays have much of the depth and lucidity of Huxley,
- with a greater power of sustaining the interest of the casual reader. Mr.
- Shirley has the gift of bringing life into controversies long since dead and
- buried, of showing their importance to us, of restating them in terms of
- actuality. Moreover his standpoint is most sane. he is a questioner and
- critic not obsessed by the microscopic accuracy of the logician, but able to
- see things with human eyes.
- To the metaphysician professed, therefore, he may seem shallow. One may
- quarrel for instance with his attempted disproof of the theory that the
- Universe is a single phenomenon. One may assert that without experience of
- Samadhi it is impossible to understand what is meant by the theory. Mr.
- Shirley cannot realize that Time and Space are accidental forms of our
- consciousness, no more essential to it than a harem skirt to the Venus of
- Milo.
- Suppose a cinematograph show observed by a man on earth and a man on the
- sun (with a devil of a telescope!) at 10.40, and their observations compared.
- The solar will regard the terrestrial as a prophet, for the latter can see at
- 10.40 what the former sees at 10.48 or thereabouts. With space it is the same
- thing. Assumer a fourth dimension, and Calcutta may rub streets with Buenos
- Ayres. The Battle of Waterloo may be merely one name for a phenomenon whose
- other names are John Brown, saucepan, geometry, etc., etc./
- These conceptions are hard to realize intellectually. Mr. Shirley is too
- sane; has never tortured his mind to the point of grasping such whirlwinds and
- making them the breath of his nostrils. But one minute in Samadhi, and he
- would understand the actuality of such imaginations. Not that facts are so
- discovered; it is the attainment of a point of view.
- And were this apex added to the broad pyramid of his common sense, we
- should have another St. John the Divine, an incarnation of the Eagle Kerub, no
- longer as now merely the subtlety of the Serpent and the sharpness of the
- Scorpion.
- LEO.
-
- [We regret that urgency forbids detailed criticism of this admirable
- volume. We should in particular have liked to argue the "Rite" theory of the
- Crucifixion. As it is, we can only refer the author to J. M. Robertson's
- "Pagan Christs." --- ED.]
-
- ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY. By ISADOR H. CORIAT, M.D.
-
-
- "Stage fright is also a condition of pathological fear." To such a
- degree of absurdity can specialization bring an unbalanced mind. Fear is only
- pathological when it has no reasonable basis.
- This is enough to show the worthlessness of this ill-written book.
- It is amusing to find the author quoting Mrs. Verral as conclusive proof
- against any supernormal element in automatic writing, while Mr. Hill quotes
- the same experiments as conclusive proof for it. But Mr. Hill is a student of
- science; Dr. Coriat a flatulent gastrologian.
- ERIC TAIT.
-
- MAN --- KING OF MIND, BODY, AND CIRCUMSTANCE. By JAMES ALLEN.
-
-
- The important disclosures of this unpretentious volume mark a new epoch
- in human thought.
- Good is better than evil. Bad habits should be broken. Health is more
- desirable than disease. Happiness gives more happiness than unhappiness does.
- Work is more useful than idleness. Selfishness is bad; unselfishness is good.
- Suffering is common. Dwelling upon one's petty troubles and ailments is a
- manifestation of weakness of character.
- The reviewer, staggered by revelations so overwhelming, can only fall
- upon his knees and burst into a flood of tears.
- But think of the chagrin of Lord Avebury!
- M. TUPPER.
-
-
-
-
- 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."
-
-
-
-
- OCCULTISM
-
- RAMSEY (William). Astrologie Restored: being an Introduction to the General
- and Chief part of the Language of the Stars, in four Books, folio. "Fine"
- "Portrait by Cross. Calf, rebacked, fine copy." 1654. "£"4 4"s."
- GLANVIL (Joseph). Saducismus Triumphatus: or Full and Plain Evidence
- concerning Witches and Apparitions; with Letter of Dr. More on the same
- Subject, and an authentick, but wonderful story of certain Swedish Witches;
- done into English by ANT. HORNECK. 8vo. "Curious frontispiece in six"
- "compartments by Faithorne. Old calf, rebacked." 1681. "£"1 5"s."
- ALCHEMY. --- SUCHTEN (Alex. Van). Of the Secrets of Antimony; also BASIL
- VALENTINE'S Salt of Antimony, with its use, translated out of High Dutch by
- Daniel Cable, a Person of Great Skill in Chemistry, 1671. --- Treatise
- concerning the Fiez Water of the Philosophers, written in he German tongue,
- and now published in English by J. F. Houpreght, a Student of the wonderful
- Secrets of Hermes, "n.d." --- Marrow of Alchemy, an Experimental Treatise
- discovering the most hidden Mystery of the Philosopher's Elixer, by E. P.
- Philalethes (Lewis du Moulin), 1654-55. In one volume, 8vo. "Being a series"
- "of beautifully written Manuscripts, as legible as copper-plate, in calf."
- "£"4 4"s."
- There is practically no doubt that this very singular volume was entirely
- the work of Daniel Cable, and none of the works appear to have ever been
- printed. Cable published a work entitled "Of Natural and Supernatural
- things," which Lowndes calls an extraordinary book. If its matter is at all
- similar to that of the present volume, there is little wonder that Lowndes
- should call it "extraordinary."
- WAITE (A. E.) The Book of Ceremonial Magic, including the Rites and Mysteries
- of Goëtic Theurgy, Sorcery, and Infernal Necromancy, in two Parts. I. An
- Analytical and Critical Account of the chief Magical Rituals extant. II. A
- complete Grimoire of Black Magic. 4to. "With "180 "illustrations, white cloth"
- "extra, with designs in gold on cover." 1910. "Post free" 15"s. net."
- OCCULT SCIENCE IN INDIA, and among the Ancients, with an account of their
- Initiations, and the History of Spiritism, from the French of LOUIS
- JACOLLIOT, by WILLARD l. FELT. Large 8vo. "Cloth extra, n.d. Recent."
- " " 6"s." 6"d."
- BOOK OF THE SACRED MAGIC (The) OF ABRA-MELIN THE MAGE, as delivered by Abraham
- the Jew unto his Son Lamech, A.D. 1458. Translated from the Original Hebrew
- into French, and now rendered into English. From a unique and valuable MS,
- in the "Bibliothè de l'Arsenal" at Paris; with copious Notes and Magical
- Squares of Letters. By L. S. MACGREGOR-MATHERS. 4to, black cloth, Magical
- Square on side in gold. 1900. (Published at 21s.) Postage free 10s. 6p.
- The Original work, of which this is a translation, is unique, no other
- copy being known, although both Bylwer Lytton and Eliphas Levi were well
- 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.'
- YOGA OR TRANSFORMATION: a Comparative Statement of the various Religious
- Dogmas concerning the Soul and its Destiny, and of Akkadian, Taoist,
- Eguptian, Hebrew, Greek, Christian, Mohammedan, Japanese and other Magic, by
- WM. J. FLAGG. Large 8vo. "Cloth extra." 1898. 6"s." 6"d."
- KNIGHT (J Payne). Discourse on the Worship of Priapus, and its connection
- with the Mystic Theology of the Ancients; with an Essay on the Worship of
- the Generative Organs during the Middle Ages of Western Europe. 4to. "With"
- 40 "curious plates. Half roxvurghe binding. Privately printed, "1865.
- "£"3 3"s."
- PARACELSUS. The Hermetical and Alchemical Writings of Aureopus Phillippus
- Theophrastus Bombast of Hohenheim, called Paracelsus the Great, now for the
- first time translated into English. Edited, with Elucidatory Notes, a
- copious Hermantic Vocabulary and Index, by A. E. WAITE. 2 cols. 4to.
- " "Cloth." 1894. (Published "£"2 12"s." 6"d."
- JENNINGS (Hargrave). The Rosicrucians, their Rites and Mysteries. Thick 8vo,
- 4"th and last edition, revised. Half-morocco, t.e.g., n.d." 7"s." 6"d."
- Portion of Contents: --- Ever-burning Lamps --- The Hermetic Philosophers
- --- The Hermetic Brethren --- Mystic History of the Fleur-de-lis --- Sacred
- Fire --- Fire-Theosophy of the Persians --- Ideas of the Rosicrucians as to
- the Character of Fire --- Monuments Raised to Fire-Worship in all Countries
- --- Druidical Stones and their Worship --- The Round Towers of Ireland ---
- Cabalistic Interpretations by the Gnostics --- Mystic Christian Figures and
- Talismans --- The Rosy Cross in Indian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and
- Mediaeval Monuments --- The Great Pyramid --- Myths of the Scorpion, or the
- Snake in its many Disguises --- Rosicrucians Celestial and Terrestrial ---
- Alchemy --- Rosicrucians in Strange Symbols --- Robert Flood --- Indian
- Mystic Adoration of Forms, etc., etc.
- MYSTERIES OF MAGIC: a Digest of the Writings of Eliphas Lévi, with
- Biographical and Critical Essay by ARTHUR E. WAITE. "Second Edition, revised"
- "and enlarged." 8vo. "Coth." 1897. (Pub. 10"s." 6"d.") 6"s."
- This work fulfils a purpose quite distinct from that of "Transcendental"
- "Magic, "inasmuch as it is not simply translation, but presents in an abridged
- and digested form the entire writings of Eliphas Lévi.
-
-
-
-
-
- A GREEN GARLAND
- By V. B. NEUBURG
- Green paper cover. 2s. 6d. net
- _____________________
- "As far as the verse is concerned there is in this volume something more
- than mere promise; the performance is at times remarkable; there is beauty not
- only of thought and invention --- and the invention is of a positive kind ---
- but also of expression and rhythm. There is a lilt in Mr. Neuburg's poems; he
- has the impulse to sing, and makes his readers feel that impulse." --- "The"
- "Morning Post."
- "There is a certain grim power in some of the imaginings concerning
- death, as 'The Dream' and 'the Recall,' and any reader with a liking for verse
- of an unconventional character will find several pieces after his taste." ---
- "The Daily Telegraph."
- "Here is a poet of promise." --- "The Daily Chronicle."
- "It is not often that energy and poetic feeling are united so happily as
- in this little book." --- "The Morning Leader."
- There is promise and some fine lines in these verses." --- "The Times."
-
-
-
- " ""Ready March 6th. Crown" 8"vo. Cloth Gilt. About " 280 "pp."
- ________________
- "THE NEW GOD" and other Essays.
- BY RALPH SHIRLEY.
- (Editor of the "Occult Review.")
- ________________
- CONTENTS: The New God --- Prophets and Prophecies --- Prophecies and
- Anticipations --- Julian the Apostate --- Mystical Christianity --- The
- Perfect Way --- Relationship of Christianity to Gnostic Faiths --- Early
- Christian Evidences --- New Testament Authorities --- Friedrich Nietzsche ---
- The Strange Case of Lurancy Vennum --- Cagliostro.
- ______________________________________________________________________________
- A MANUAL OF OCCULTISM.
- A complete Exposition of the Occult Arts and Sciences by SEPHARIAL, Author of
- "A Manual of Astrology," "Prognostic Astronomy," "Kabalistic Astrology," etc.
- etc. With numerous diagrams and illustrations. 368 pp., handsomely bound in
- cloth gilt. Gilt tops.
- Crown 8vo. 6"s." net.
- _________________
- CONTENTS: PART I. THE OCCULT SCIENCES, comprising: Astrology --- Palmistry
- --- Thaumaturgy --- Kabalism --- Numerology --- Talismans --- Hypnotism.
-
- PART II. THE OCCULT ARTS, comprising: Divination --- The Tarot Cartomancy
- --- Crystal Gazing --- Clairvoyance --- Geomancy --- Psychometry --- Dowsing
- --- Dreams --- Sortileges --- Alchemy.
- ________________
- The need for a concise and practical exposition of the main tenets of
- Occultism has long been felt. In this manual of Occultism the author has
- dealt in a lucid manner with both the Occult Sciences and the Occult Arts, and
- has added some supplementary matter on the subjects of Hypnotism and Alchemy.
-
- The book is written from the point of view of a practical student, and
- contains many experimental results, which form valuable keys to the study and
- practice of the subjects dealt with. The text is, moreover, illustrated with
- numerous explanatory diagrams and symbols, and the whole work forms a more
- complete compendium of Occultism than any hitherto offered to the public,
- while it is supplied at a price well within the reach of the general reader.
- ____________________________________________________________________________
- 340 "pp. Crown "8"vo. Cloth gilt."
- _________________
- "ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY."
- BY ISADOR H. CORIAT, M.D.,
- Second Assistant Physician for Diseases of the Nervous System, Boston
- City Hospital; Neurologist to the Mt. Sinia Hospital.
- __________________
- CONTENTS: I. THE EXPLORATION OF THE SUBCONSCIOUS. --- What is the
- Subconscious? --- Automatic Writing --- Testing the Emotions --- Analysing the
- Emotions --- Sleep --- Derams --- What is Hypnosis? --- Analysis of the Mental
- life.
- II. DISEASES OF THE SUBCONSCIOUS. --- Losses of Memory --- Restoration of
- Lost Memories --- Illusions of Memory --- The Splitting of a Personality ---
- Hysteria --- Psychasthenia --- Neurasthenia --- Psycho-Epileptic Attacks.
- __________________
- Most of the investigations on Abnormal Psychology are widely scattered
- throughout the pages of Medical publications and psychological literature
- generally. Hence these researches are difficult of access to the general
- reader in any convenient and connected form.
- The present volume is an attempt to bring all this material together
- within the compass of a single work, and some personal observations and
- experiments have been supplied by the Author in illustration of the various
- theories propounded. The book is a valuable study of psychological phenomena
- in the region of the abnormal, and especially of subconscious mental states,
- from the medical standpoint.
- ________________________
-
-
-
- {Illustration on center top third by horizontal:
-
- This is an equilateral triangle circumscribed in a white ring. The
- triangle is of wide and white bars. The field within ring and triangle is
- solid black.
-
- GOETIA vel Clavicula
-
- SALOMONIS REGIS
- (The Lesser Key of Solomon the King.)
-
- The best, simplest, most intelligible and most effective treatise
- extant on
-
- CEREMONIAL MAGIC
-
- Careful and complete instruction; ample illustration; beautiful production.
- This books id very much easier both to understand and to operate than the so-
- called "Greater" Key of Solomon.
-
- __________________________________________________________________________
-
- ONLY A FEW COPIES REMAIN FOR SALE.
-
-
-
-
- "Crown 8vo, Scarlet Buckram, pp. 64."
-
- Less than 100 copies remain. The price will shortly be raised to
- one guinea net.
-
- A.'. A.'. PUBLICATION IN CLASS B.
- -----------------------
- BOOK
- 777
-
- THIS book contains in concise tabulated form a comparative view of all the
- symbols of the great religions of the world; the perfect attributions of the
- Taro, so long kept secret by the Rosicrucians, are now for the first time
- published; also the complete secret magical correspondences of the G.'.
- D.'. and R. R. et A. C. It forms, in short, a complete magical and
- philosophical dictionary; a key to all religions and to all practical occult
- working.
- For the first time Western and Qabalistic symbols have been harmonized
- with those of Hinduism, Buddhism, Mohammedanism, Taoism, &c. By a glance at
- Tables, anybody conversant with any one system can understand perfectly all
- others.
-
- The "Occult Review" says:
-
- "Despite its cumbrous sub-title and high price per page, this work has only
- to come under the notice of the right people to be sure of a ready sale. In
- its author's words, it represents 'an attempt to systematise alike the data of
- mysticism and the results of comparative religion,' and so far as any book can
- succeed in such an attempt, this book does succeed; that is to say, it
- condenses in some sixty pages as much information as many an intelligent
- reader at the Museum has been able to collect in years. The book proper
- consists of a Table of 'Correspondences,' and is, in fact, an attempt to
- reduce to a common denominator the symbolism of as many religious and magical
- systems as the author is acquainted with. The denominator chosen is
- necessarily a large one, as the author's object is to reconcile systems which
- divide all things into 3, 7, 10, 12, as the case may be. Since our expression
- 'common denominator' is used in a figurative and not in a strictly
- mathematical sense, the task is less complex than appears at first sight, and
- the 32 Paths of the Sepher Yetzirah, or Book of Formation of the Qabalah,
- provide a convenient scale. These 32 Paths are attributed by the Qabalists to
- the 10 Sephiroth, or Emanations of Deity, and to the 22 letters of the Hebrew
- alphabet, which are again subdivided into 3 mother letters, 7 double letters,
- and 12 simple letters. On this basis, that of the Qabalistic 'Tree of Life,'
- as a certain arrangement of the Sephiroth and 22 remaining Paths connecting
- them is termed, the author has constructed no less than 183 tables.
- "The Qabalistic information is very full, and there are tables of Egyptian
- and Hindu deities, as well as of colours, perfumes, plants, stones, and
- animals. The information concerning the tarot and geomancy exceeds that to be
- found in some treatises devoted exclusively to those subjects. The author
- appears to be acquainted with Chinese, Arabic, and other classic texts. here
- your reviewer is unable to follow him, but his Hebrew does credit alike to him
- and to his printer. Among several hundred words, mostly proper names, we
- found and marked a few misprints, but subsequently discovered each one of them
- in a printed table of errata, which we had overlooked. When one remembers the
- misprints in 'Agrippa' and the fact that the ordinary Hebrew compositor and
- reader is no more fitted for this task than a boy cognisant of no more than
- the shapes of the Hebrew letters, one wonders how many proofs the
- re were and what the printer's bill was. A knowledge of the Hebrew alphabet
- and the Qabalistic Tree of Life is all that is needed to lay open to the
- reader the enormous mass of information contained in this book. The 'Alphabet
- of Mysticism,' as the author says --- several alphabets we should prefer to
- say --- is here. Much that has been jealously and foolishly kept secret in
- the past is here, but though our author has secured for his work the
- "imprimatur" of some body with the mysterious title of the A.'. A.'., and
- though he remains himself anonymous, he appears to be no mystery-monger.
- Obviously he is widely read, but he makes no pretence that he has secrets to
- reveal. On the contrary, he says, 'an indicible arcanum is an arcanum which
- "cannot" be revealed.' The writer of that sentence has learned at least one
- fact not to be learned from books.
- "G.C.J."
-
-
-
- WILLIAM NORTHAM,
- ROBEMAKER,
-
-
- -----------------------
-
- MR. NORTHAM begs to announce that he has been entrusted with the manufacture
- of all robes and other ceremonial apparel of members of the A.'. A.'. and
- its adepts and aspirants.
-
- No. 0. PROBATIONER'S ROBE . . . . . £5 0 0
- 1. " " superior quality . . 7 0 0
- 2. NEOPHYTE'S . . . . . . . 6 0 0
- 3. ZELATOR Symbol added to No. 2 . . 1 0 0
- 4. PRACTICUS " " 3 . . 1 0 0
- 5. PHILOSOPHUS " " 4 . . 1 0 0
- 6. DOMINUS LIMINIS " " 5 . . 1 0 0
- 7. ADEPTUS (without) " " 0 or 1 . . 3 0 0
- 8. " (Within) . . . . . . 10 0 0
- 9. ADEPTUS MAJOR . . . . . . 10 0 0
- 10. ADEPTUS EXEMPTUS . . . . . . 10 0 0
- 11. MAGISTER TEMPLI . . . . . . 50 0 0
-
- The Probationer's robe is fitted for performance of all general invocations
- and especially for the I. of the H. G. A.; a white and gold nemmes may be
- worn. These robes may also be worn by Assistant Magi in all composite rituals
- of the White.
- The Neophyte's robe is fitted for all elemental operations. A black and
- gold nemmes may be worn. Assistant Magi may wear these in all composite
- rituals of the Black.
- The Zelator's robe is fitted for all rituals involving I O, and for the
- infernal rites of Luna. In the former case an Uraeus crown and purple nemmes,
- in the latter a silver nemmes should be worn.
- The Practicus' robe is fitted for all rituals involving I I, and for the
- rites of Mercury. In the former case an Uraeus crown and green nemmes, in the
- latter a nemyss of shot silk, should be worn.
- The Philosophus' robe is fitted for all rituals involving O O, and for the
- rites of Venus. In the former case an Uraeus crown and azure nemmes, in the
- latter a green nemmes, should be worn.
- The Dominus Liminis' robe is fitted for the infernal rites of Sol, which
- must never be celebrated.
- The Adeptus Minor's robe is fitted for the rituals of Sol. A golden nemmes
- may be worn.
- The Adeptus' robe is fitted for the particular workings of the Adeptus, and
- for the Postulant at the First Gate of the City of the Pyramids.
- The Adeptus Major's Robe is fitted for the Chief Magus in all Rituals and
- Evocations of the Inferiors, for the performance of the rites of Mars, and for
- the Postulant at the Second Gate of the City of the Pyramids.
- The Adeptus Exemptus' robe is fitted for the Chief Magus in all Rituals and
- Invocations of the Superiors, for the performance of the rites of Jupiter, and
- for the Postulant at the Third Gate of the City of the Pyramids.
- The Babe of the Abyss has no robe.
- For the performance of the rites of Saturn, the Magician may wear a black
- robe, close-cut, with narrow sleeves, trimmed with white, and the Seal and
- Square of Saturn marked on breast and back. A conical black cop embroidered
- with the Sigils of Saturn should be worn.
- The Magister Templi Robe is fitted for the great Meditations, for the
- supernal rites of Luna, and for those rites of Babylon and the Graal. But
- this robe should be worn by no man, because of that which is written:
- "Ecclesia abhorret a sanguine."
- ______________________
- "Any of these robes may be worn by a person of whatever grade on"
- "appropriate occasions."
-
-
-
- George Raffalovich's new works
- ____________________
- THE HISTORY OF A SOUL.
- " " Edition strictly limited."
- ____________________
- THE DEUCE AND ALL.
- A COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES.
-
- ____________________
-
- READY.
-
- Through THE EQUINOX and all booksellers.
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
- " "READY SHORTLY."
- "______________"
- THE WHIRLPOOL
-
- BY
- ETHEL ARCHER
-
- WITH A COVER SPECIALLY DESIGNED BY
- E. J. WIELAND;
-
- A DEDICATORY SONNET BY
- VICTOR B. NEUBURG;
-
- AND
-
- AN INTRODUCTION BY
- ALEISTER CROWLEY.
- _____________
-
-
-
- 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 thirteen 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. Price "1"s. net"
- " "Crown "8"vo. Pp. "164.
- May be obtained through THE EQUINOX.
-
-
-
-
- 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, Great Turnstile, 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.