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-
- XXXI Hymns --- by Fr. Achad (Charles Stansfield Jones)
-
- Key entry by Fr. Nachash
- Uræus-Hadit Camp, OTO
- Completed 11-21-90 e.v.
-
- *******************************************************************************
-
-
-
- XXXI HYMNS
-
- TO THE STAR GODDESS
-
- Who is Not
-
-
- BY XIII: which is ACHAD
-
-
-
- I .∙. Invocation
-
- Mother of the Sun, Whose Body is White with the Milk of the Stars, bend
- upon Thy servant and impart unto him Thy Secret Kiss!
-
- Enkindle within him the Holy Ecstasy Thou hast promised unto them that
- love Thee; the Ecstasy which redeemeth from all pain.
-
- Hast thou not proclaimed: All the sorrows are but shadows, they pass
- and are done, but there is that which remains? That the Universe is
- Pure Joy-that Thou givest unimaginable Joys on Earth--that Thou
- demandest naught in sacrifice?
-
- Let me then rejoice, for therein may I serve Thee most fully. Let it
- be Thy Joy to see my joy; even as Thou hast promised in Thy Holy Book!
-
- Now, therefore, am I Joyful in Thy Love.
-
-
- AUMN
-
- II .∙. The Brook
-
- I wandered beside the running stream, and mine eyes caught the glint of
- Thy Starry Orbs in the swirling waters.
-
- So is it with my mind; it flows on towards the Great Sea of
- Understanding wherein I may come to know Thee more fully.
-
- Sometimes, as it journeys, it threatens to overflow its banks in its
- eagerness to reflect a wider image of Thine Infinite Body.
-
- Ah! How the very stones, over which flow the life of my being, thrill
- at the tender caress of Thy reflected Image.
-
- Thou, too, art Matter; it is I---Thy Complement---who am motion!
- Therefore these very stones are of Thee, but the Spirit---the Life---is
- the very Self of me; mine Inmost Being.
-
- Flow on, O Stream! Flow on, O Life! Towards the Great Sea of
- Understanding, the Great Mother.
-
-
- III .∙. The Rose Garden
-
- Long have I lain and waited for Thee in the Rose Garden of Life; yet
- ever Thou withholdest Thyself from mine Understanding.
-
- As I lay I contemplated Thy nature as that of an Infinite Rose.
-
- Petals, petals, petals.. but where, O Beauteous One, is Thy Heart?
-
- Hast Thou no Heart? Are Thy petals Infinite so that I may never reach
- the Core of Thy Being?
-
- Yet, Thou hast said: "I love you! I yearn to you! Pale or purple,
- veiled or voluptuous, I who am all pleasure and purple, and drunkeness
- of the innermost sense, desire you: Come unto me!"
-
- Yea! Mine innermost sense is drunken; it is intoxicated upon the Dew of
- the Rose. Thy Heart is my Heart; there is no difference, O Beloved.
-
- When I shall have penetrated to the Heart of Thine Infinite Rose, there
- shall I find Myself.
-
- But I shall never come to myself---only to Thee.
-
-
- IV .∙. The Fox Glove
-
- Tall and straight as a Fox Glove do I stand before Thee, Mother of
- Heaven.
-
- The flower of my being is given over to a strange conceit; I grow up
- towards the Stars and not towards the Sun.
-
- Art Thou not Mother of the Sun?
-
- Thus have I blasphemed the Lord and Giver of Life for Thy sake. Yet am
- I not ashamed, for in forgetting the Sun I am become the Sun--Thy
- Son--yet a thousand times more Thy Lover.
-
- The foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but now I
- have nowhere to lay my head; for tall and straight as a Fox Glove do
- I stand before Thee. My resting place is the Womb of the Stars.
-
- Yet all that I may comprehend of Thine Infinite Body is but as the
- Glove upon one of Thy soft sweet hands, touching the Earth, not hurting
- the little flowers.
-
-
- V .∙. The Storm
-
- A Dark Night and the Storm. The lightening flashes between Thee and me.
- I am dazzled so that I see Thee not.
-
- So in the depths of my being flash the fires of life; they blind me
- to the Understanding of Thee and Thine Infinite Body of Stars.
-
- Yet I see Thee reflected in the body of her I love, as we lie with
- quivering limbs awaiting the coming of the sound of thunder.
-
- She fears the thunder, and turns within herself for consolation.
-
- But even there the Lightning flameth, for I have loosed the fires of my
- being within the dark recess---in honour of the Storm and of Thine
- Infinite Body which I see not.
-
-
- VI .∙. The Hole in The Roof
-
- Once I knew an ancient serpent. He delighted to bask in the Sunshine
- which penetrated through a tiny hole in the roof of the cave.
-
- He was old and very wise.
-
- He said: "Upon me is concentrated the Light of the whole Universe."
-
- But a little brown beetle, who had long lived in the cave with him,
- looked up, and spreading his wings passed out through the hole in
- roof---into the Infinite Beyond.
-
- Thus, forsaking wisdom, would I come to Thee, Beloved Lady of the
- Starry Heavens.
-
-
- VII .∙. The Design
-
- Strange curves: and every Curve a Number woven into a Musical and
- Harmonious Pattern.
-
- Such was the design showed me by my friend when first we met.
-
- It was like an exchange of greetings by means of an inward recognition.
-
- Oh! Could I but grasp the Ever-changing Design of Thy Star Body,
- Mother of Heaven!
-
- Yet, it is written: "Every man and every woman is a star. Every number
- is infinite, there is no difference."
-
- Such then is Life, for those who love Thee: Strange Curves, and every
- Curve a Number woven into a Musical and Harmonious Design.
-
-
- VIII .∙. The Snow Drift
-
- My body was blue as Thine, O Beloved, when they found me. I was stiff
- as if held in a close embrace. Nor was I conscious of aught but Thee,
- till the small fires of Earth brought me back with an agony of tingling
- pain.
-
- How came I to be lost in the snow-drift?
-
- I remember how I had taken shelter from the blinding storm. The snow
- fell about me, and I waited, turning my thought to Thee.
-
- Then did I realize how every snow-flake is built as a tiny star. I
- looked closer, burying my face in the white pile, as in Thy Bosom.
- Mine arms embraced the snow-drift; I clung to it in a mad ecstacy.
-
- Thus would I have pressed Thy Body to mine, wert Thou not Infinite and
- I but as tiny as a star-flake.
-
- So was my body frozen---as by the utmost cold of inter-stellar space.
-
- It was blue as Thine when they found me locked in Thine embrace.
-
-
- IX .∙. Daylight
-
- In the Daylight I see not Thy Body of Stars, O Beloved.
-
- The little light of the Sun veils the Great Light of the Stars, for
- to-day Thou seemest distant.
-
- The Sun burns like a great Torch, and Earth seems as one of His little
- Spheres, filled with life.
-
- I am but a tiny spermatozoon, but within me is the fiery and concen-
- trated essence of Life.
-
- Draw me up into Thyself, O Sun! Project me into the Body of Our Lady
- Nuit!
-
- Thus shall a new Star be born, and I shall see Thee even in the
- Daylight, O Beloved.
-
-
- X .∙. The Bird
-
-
- Once I bought a little bird; his cage was very small; it had only one
- perch. He was so young he had not even learned to sing, but he chirped
- gladly when I brought him home.
-
- Then I raised the bars of his cage, and without a moment's hesitation
- he flew out into the room, and spying the cage of the love-birds,
- perched upon it and examined it carefully.
-
- Not long afterwards another and stronger cage was obtained for the
- love-birds, for they had pecked through some of the frail bars. When
- the little bird was offered the discarded cage, he quickly hopped from
- his tiny one to theirs.
-
- Now he has three perches and room for his tail, and when we open the
- door of his cage he refuses to come out. Perhaps he fears to lose what
- he had once coveted and then obtained.
-
- Herein lies the secret of Government. Give the people what will make
- them reasonably comfortable; let them have three perches and room for
- their tails; and forgetting their slavery and restrictions, they will
- be content.
-
- Hast Thou not said "The slaves shall serve." Lady of the Starry Heaven?
-
-
- XI .∙. The Moral
-
- There is another moral to the story of the little bird. Having gained
- his desire for a larger cage, he forgot his longing for Freedom.
-
- The door remained open; the room was before him, wherein he could
- stretch his wings and fly.
-
- Yet he preferred his cage.
-
- The wide world might have been his had he known how to use it, but he
- was not ready for that; he would have perished of cold had I let him
- out into the wintry snow.
-
- Let those who would travel the Mystic Path remember this: Earth
- Consciousness is an illusion and limitation. When it frets us, like a
- little cage, our chance for greater freedom comes.
-
- But when a larger cage is offered---when we obtain Dhyana---let us not
- rest there thinking ourselves free. The door is open, Samadhi lies
- beyond, and beyond that, when we are ready for it, the Real Freedom,
- Nirvana.
-
- O Lady of the Stars, let me not content till I penetrate the ultimate
- bars and am Free---One with the Infinitely Great as with the Infinitely
- Small.
-
- XII .∙. The Invisible Foot Prints
-
- Long have I roamed the Earth delighting in the Good, the Beautiful and
- the True; ever seeking the spots where these seem to be most Perfect.
-
- There is joy in this wandering among the flowers of life, but Thy Joy,
- O Beloved, is to be desired above all.
-
- Now I seek a resting place, I am set upon a new Quest, to Worship at
- Thy feet.
-
- For it is written of Thee: "Bending down, a lambent flame of blue,
- all touching, all penetrant, her lovely hands upon the black earth, and
- her lithe body arched for love, and her soft feet not hurting the
- little flowers."
-
- Oh! That I might discover Thine Invisible Footprints upon the Earth and
- there come to the Understanding of Thy Being, O Beloved.
-
-
- XIII .∙. The Finger Tips
-
- Or, it may be, O Beloved, I shall discover the imprints of Thy finger
- tips amid the flowers or upon the Black Earth.
-
- Hath not Nemo a Garden that he tendeth? Doth he not also labour in the
- Black Earth?
-
- Who knoweth when Thy hands may grasp me and draw me up into Thine arms,
- there to nestle at Thy breast, to feed upon the Milk of the Stars?
-
- Beloved, verily this tending of the Garden of the World---although the
- labor may seem heavy---leadeth to a Great Reward. As Thou hast said:
- "Certainty, not faith, while in life upon death, rest, ecstasy." Nor
- dost Thou demand aught in sacrifice.
-
- What do the Bhaktis know of Love? They see the Beloved everywhere.
-
- But when I am one with Thee, O Beloved, I shall not see Thee, for I
- shall know Theee as Thou art.
-
-
- XIV .∙. The Well of Stars
-
- I know a hidden well of clearest water. Naught but the coping of
- delicate pink onyx is visible until the secret spring be touched.
-
- Then beware! For above the entrance hangs a fiery sword.
-
- Few find this Well or know its Secret; there are but two roads leading
- thereto.
-
- From the broad Mountain summit we may search the slopes for a vision of
- the Woodland Delta where grow the Trees of Eternity, or we may journey
- through the Valley between the Ivory Hills---if we fear not the purple
- shadows and the black pit-fall.
-
- From Thee we came; to Thee may we return, O Well of Living Stars!
-
-
- XV .∙. The Icicles of Isis
-
- It hath been written how the Old King dreamed of his banished peacock,
- entombed in a palace of ice, who cried: "The Icicles of Isis are
- falling on my head."
-
- Thus it is with those who are banished to the Palace of the Moon---for
- the Word of Sin is Restriction.
-
- Oh! Lady of the Starry Heavens, let me not become frozen at the touch
- of the cold Veil of Isis. For the Moon is but the dead reflector of the
- Sun, and He but the youngest of Thy Children of Light.
-
- Let me lift Thy Peacock Veil of a Million Starry Eyes, O Beloved!
-
- Show Thy Star Splendour, O Nuit; bid me within Thine house to dwell!
-
-
- XVI .∙. Purple Mill
-
- The delicate purple mist streams up from the hills: I watch and wait
- for the meaning of it all.
-
- Sometimes it seems like the incense smoke of Aspiration ascending
- towards the Sun---giver of Light, Life, Love and Liberty to the
- Children of Earth.
-
- But the Sun is going down behind the Mountains, and Thy Starry Lamps
- glow in the Sky.
-
- Is not the Lamp above the Altar a symbol of the Desire of the Higher to
- draw up the lower to Itself?
-
- So, O Lady of Heaven, I liken the Mist to the life-breath of Souls who
- pant for Thee here below.
-
- And I remember Thy words:
-
- Above, the gemmed azure is
- The naked splendour of Nuit;
- She bends in ecstacy to kiss
- The secret ardours of Hadit.
- The winged globe, the starry blue,
- Are mine, O Ankh-af-na-khonsu!
-
- I, too, would ascend as a delicate purple mist that steams up from the
- Hills. Art Thou not all Pleasure and Purple?
-
-
- XVII .∙. The Infinite Within
-
- I would that I were as the feminine counterpart of Thee, O Beloved;
- then would I draw the Infinite within.
-
- Yet since Thy Pure Being must ever be more refined than this body of
- mine I should interpenetrate every part of Thee with my living flesh.
-
- Thus, O Beloved, should we enter into a new and more complete embrace:
- not as of earth wherein the male uniteth with the female by means of
- the physical organs of love, but with every atom of my being close
- pressed to every atom of Thine---within and without.
-
- Then, O beloved, would I cry unto the Lord of the Primum Mobile to
- teach me the Art of the Whirling Motion of Eternity.
-
- Thus, whirling within Thee, our never-ending nuptial feast shall be
- celebrated, and a new System of Revolving Orbs be brought to birth.
-
- Ah! the shrill cry of Ecstacy of that Refined Rapture---the Orgasm of
- the Infinite Within.
-
-
- XVIII .∙. The Rainbow
-
- As I sat in the shelter of the forest glade, my eye caught the multi-
- coloured gleam of diamonds. I looked again; the Sun rays were playing
- upon the dew which clung to a little curved twig.
-
- It seemed like a tiny rainbow of promise.
-
- Then, while I watched in wonder, a small grey spider bridged the arch
- of the bow with his silken thread.
-
- Ah! My Beloved, thus, too, hath the Spider of Destiny woven his silken
- rope from extreme to extreme of the Great Rainbow of Promise.
-
- Fate hath fitted me as an Arrow to the String of Destiny in the bow of
- the Sun.
-
- But Whose Hand shall draw that Mighty Bow, O Beloved, and send me upon
- fleet wings to my resting place within Thine Heart?
-
-
- XIX .∙. Dropped Dew
-
- As I came from tending the Rose Garden and was about to return to my
- humble shelter, my eyes caught the gleam of dropped dew like a tiny
- trail along the path.
-
- It was very early; the Sun had not yet re-arisen; the Stars still
- twinkled faintly in the sky.
-
- Who could have come before me to the Garden?
-
- I followed the trail of dew, stooping down so that I saw in each
- crystal drop the reflection of a tiny star.
-
- Thus came I to my lady's chamber; she it was who carrying roses had
- left this silvery thread as a clue to her hiding place.
-
- When I found her, her eyes were closed, as she pressed the fragrant the
- pink blossoms to her white breast.
-
- Then did I bury my face in the blossoms and I saw not her eyes when
- she opened them in wonder.
-
- Thus, too, would I follow the Star-trail of Dropped Dew, ere the
- re-arisen Sun hides Thee from me, O My Beloved!
-
- Thus would I come to Thee and bury my face in Thy Breast amid the Roses
- of Heaven.
-
- Nor should I dare to look into Thine eyes, having discovered Thy
- secret---the Dew of Love---the Elixir of Life.
-
-
- XX .∙. Twilight
-
- Twilight... and in a few brief moments the Stars will begin to peep. I
- will await Thee, here amid the heather, O Beloved.
-
- I wait... no stars appear for a mist has stolen up from the foot of the
- mountains.
-
- Thus I waited for a sight of Thy Star Body till the cold damp mist of
- suppresed emotion chilled my being and my reason returned.
-
- The woman stood girt with a sword before me. Emotion was overcome by
- clarity of perception. Then did I remember Thy words: "The Khabs is in
- the Khu not the Khu in the Khabs. Worship then the Khabs and behold my
- light shed over ye."
-
- Thus turned I my thoughts within, so that I became concentrated upon
- the Khabs---the Star of mine inmost being. Then did Thy Light arise as
- a halo of rapture, and I came a little to lie in Thy bosom.
-
- But I offered one particle of dust---and I lost all in that hour.
-
- Such is the Mystery of Her who demandest naught in sacrifice.
-
- The twilight is returned.
-
-
- XXI .∙. The Dog Star
-
- Wisdom hath said: "Be not animal; refine thy rapture! The canst thou
- bear more joy!"
-
- I have been like an unleashed hound before Thee, O Beloved. I have
- striven towards Thee and Thou seest in me only the Dog Star.
-
- Yet will I not fall into the Pit called Because, there to perish with
- the dogs of reason. There is no reason in me; I seek Understanding, O
- Mother of Heaven.
-
- Thus, with my face buried in the black earth, do I turn my back upon
- Thee. I will refine my rapture.
-
- So Thou mayest behold me as I am, and so Thou shalt Understand at last,
- O Beloved; for in reverse Thou readest this DOG aright.
-
- Hast Thou not said: "There is none other?"
-
-
- XXII .∙. Pot-pouri
-
- The roses are falling. This is the night of the full moon whereon the
- children of Sin attend the Sacred Circle.
-
- Therein they will sit divided---but not for love's sake---for they know
- Thee not---O Beloved. Into the Elements, the fiery, the watery, the
- airy and the earthly Signs are they divided when they gather at the
- Full Moon within the forest.
-
- I wandered down the deep shadowy glade, there I espied a tiny sachet
- of pot-pouri, dropped---maybe---from the streaming girdle of one of the
- maidens.
-
- Tenderly I raised it. Its perfume is like unto the perfume of her I
- love. She, too, perhaps, has heard the call of the moon and is even
- now on her way to the secret tryst.
-
- But hast Thou not said: "Let there be no difference made among you
- between any one thing and any other thing; for thereby cometh hurt."
- What matter then the name of the maiden? What matter the flowers of
- which it is composed?
-
- Yet dare I not burn this incense unto Thee, O Beloved, because of Thine
- hair, the Trees of Eternity.
-
- Oh! Little sachet of pot-pouri, thou hast reminded me of her I love,
- for the roses are falling, it is the night of the Full Moon and the
- children of Sin gather to attend the Sacred Circle.
-
-
- XXIII .∙. Red Swansdown
-
- It hath been told how Parzival shot and brought down the Swan of
- Ecstacy as it winged over the Mountain of the Grail.
-
- But there is within the archives another story, unheard by the ears of
- men.
-
- From the breast of the Eternal Swan floated one downy feather, steeped
- in blood. This did the youngest and least worthy of the Knights hide
- tenderly in his bosom till he concealed it within the hard pillow of
- his lonely couch.
-
- Night after night that holy pillow became softer; sweeter and sweeter
- were his dreams. And one night---the night of the crowning of
- Parzival---he was granted the Great Vision wherein the Stars became
- like flecks of Swansdown upon the Breast of Heaven, each living and
- throbbing, for they were steeped in Blood.
-
- Then did every atom of his being become a Star racing joyfully through
- the Great Body of the Lady of Heaven. Thus in sweet sleep came he into
- the Great Beyond.
-
- Grant unto me Thy Pillow of Blood and Ecstacy, O Beloved!
-
-
- XXIV .∙. Passing Clouds
-
- A dark night: Not a star is visible, but presently the moon shines
- out through a rift in the clouds. And I remember, "The sorrows are but
- shadows, they pass and are done, but there is that which remains."
-
- Yet is the moon but illusion.
-
- A dull day: but presently the Sun is seen as the clouds are dispelled by
- His light.
-
- Is He that which remains?
-
- Night once more: the Sun is lost to sight, only the moon reminds me of
- His presence. The clouds scud swiftly across the Sky and disappear.
-
- Thy Star Body is visible, O Beloved; all the sorrows and shadows have
- passed and there is that which remains.
-
- When clouds gather, let me never forget Thee, O Beloved!
-
-
- XXV .∙. The Coiled Serpent
-
- Thus have I heard:
-
- The ostrich goeth swiftly; with ease could he outstrip those who covet
- his tail-feathers, yet when danger cometh he burieth his head in the
- sand.
-
- The tortoise moveth slowly and when embarrased he stoppeth, withdrawing
- into his own shell; yet he passeth the hare.
-
- The hare sleepeth when he should be swiftly moving; he runneth in his
- dreams thinking himself at the goal.
-
- But the Coiled Serpent hath wisdom, for he hideth his tail and it is not
- coveted; he raiseth his head and fears not; he moveth slowly like the
- tortoise, yet withdraweth not; he nestles close to the hare, darting his
- tongue with swiftness, yet falleth not asleep by the wayside.
-
- Would that I had the Wisdom of the Coiled Serpent, O Beloved, for Thou
- hast said: "Put on the wings, arouse the coiled splendour within you:
- come unto me!"
-
-
- XXVI .∙. Love and Unity
-
- Twenty-six is the numeration of the Inneffable Name, but It concealeth
- Love and Unity.
-
- The Four-lettered Name implieth Law, yet it may be divided for love's
- sake; for Love is the law.
-
- The Four-lettered Name is that of the elements, but it may be divided
- for the chance of Union; for there is Unity therein.
-
- There is but One Substance and One Love and while these be twenty-six
- they One through thirteen which is but a half thereof.
-
- Thus do I play with numbers who would rather play with One and that One
- Love.
-
- For Thou hast said: "There is naught that can unite the divided but
- love!"
-
- And is not Achad Ahebah?
-
-
- XXVII .∙. The Riddle
-
- What is that which cometh to a point yet goeth in a circle?
-
- This, O Beloved, is a dark saying, but Thou hast said: "My colour is
- black to the blind, but the blue and gold are seem of the seeing. Also
- I have a secret glory for them that love me."
-
- And Hadit hath declared: "There is a veil; that veil is black."
-
- I would that I could tear aside the veil, O Beloved, for seeing Thee as
- Thou art, I might see Thee everywhere, even in the darkness that cometh
- to a point yet goeth in a circle.
-
- For Hadit, the core of every star, says "It is I that go," and Thou,
- Mother of the Stars, criest "To me! To me!"
-
- Resolve me the Riddle of Life, O Beloved, for loving Thee I would
- behold Thy Secret Glory.
-
-
- XXVIII .∙. Sayings
-
- Isis hath said: "I am all that was and that is and that shall be, and
- no mortal hath lifted my veil."
-
- Who cares what is back of the moon?
-
- Jehovah showed his back unto Moses, saying: "No man hath seen my face
- at any time."
-
- Who cares to face the elements?
-
- Hadit hath said: "I am life and the giver of life; therefore is the
- knowledge of me the knowledge of death."
-
- Who cares to know death?
-
- But Thou, O Beloved, hath said: "I give unimaginable joys on earth,
- certainty, not faith, while in life upon death, peace unutterable,
- rest, ecstacy; nor do I demand aught in sacrifice."
-
- Who would not long to invoke Thee under Thy Stars, O Beloved?
-
-
- XXIX .∙. The Falling Star
-
- Falling, falling, falling! Thus fall the Rays from Thy Body of Stars
- upon this tiny planet, O Beloved! Innumerable streams of Light like
- Star-rain upon the black earth.
-
- Since every man and every woman is a star, their lives are like unto
- streams of light concentrated upon every point in Space.
-
- As I lay with arms out-stretched, my bare body shining like ivory in
- the darkness. my scarlet abbai flung wide, mine eyes fixed upon the
- star-lit Heaven; I felt that I, too, was falling, falling, falling, in
- an ecstacy of fear and love into the void abyss of space.
-
- Then did I remember that Thou art continuous. Beneath, above, around me
- art Thou. And lo, from a falling star I became as a comet wheeling in
- infinite Circles, each at a different angle, till my course traced out
- the Infinite Sphere that is the Symbol of Thee, O Beloved.
-
- Then did I aspire to find the Centre of All.
-
- And even now I am falling, falling, falling.
-
-
- XXX .∙. Justice
-
- I am a Fool, O Beloved, and therefore am I One or Nought as the fancy
- takes me.
-
- Now am I come to Justice, so that I may be All or Naught according to
- the direction of vision.
-
- No Breath may stir the Feather of Truth, therefore is Justice ALone in
- L. Yet the Ox-goad is Motion and Breath Matter if it be called the
- Ox which is also A.
-
- How foolish are these thoughts, which are but as the Sword in the hand
- of Justice. They are as unbalanced as the Scales that stir not, being
- fixed in the figure of Law above the Court House of a great City.
-
- But Thou hast said: "Love is the law, love under will."
-
- And Love is the Will to Change and Change is the Will to Love.
-
- Even in the stern outline of the Scales of Justice do I perceive
- the Instrument of Love, and in the Life Sentence, the Mystery of
- Imprisonment in Thy Being, O Beloved!
-
-
- XXXI .∙. Not
-
- Three Eternities are passed... I have outstripped a million Stars in my
- race across Thy Breast---The Milky Way.
-
- When shall I come to the Secret Centre of Thy Being?
-
- Time, thou thief, why dost thou rob the hungry babe? Space, thou hadst
- almost deceived me.
-
- O Lady Nuit, let me not confound the space-marks!
-
- Then, O Beloved, Thy Word came unto me, as it is written: "All
- touching; All penetrant."
-
- Thus left I Time and Space and Circumstance, and every Star became as
- an atom in my Body, when it became Thy Body. Now never shall I be
- known, for it is I that go.
-
- But Thou, O Beloved, though Thou art infinitely Great, art Thou not
- energized by the Invisible Point---the Infinitely Small?
-
- A Million Eternities are Present, Deem
- not of Change; This is the
- Here and Now,
- and I am
- NOT
-
-
- -oOo-
-
-
- * Origin: O winged snake of light, Hadit! @ (901) 373-4188 (1:123/15.0)
-
-