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- LIBER LXV
-
- I
-
- 1. I am the Heart; and the Snake is entwined
- About the invisible core of the mind.
- Rise, O my snake! It is now is the hour
- Of the hooded and holy ineffable flower.
- Rise, O my snake, into brilliance of bloom
- On the corpse of Osiris afloat in the tomb!
- O heart of my mother, my sister, mine own,
- Thou art given to Nile, to the terror Typhon!
- Ah me! but the glory of ravening storm
- Enswathes thee and wraps thee in frenzy of form.
- Be still, O my soul! that the spell may dissolve
- As the wands are upraised, and the aeons revolve.
- Behold! in my beauty how joyous Thou art,
- O Snake that caresses the crown of mine heart!
- Behold! we are one, and the tempest of years
- Goes down to the dusk, and the Beetle appears.
- O Beetle! the drone of Thy dolorous note
- Be ever the trance of this tremulous throat!
- I await the awaking! The summons on high
- From the Lord Adonai, from the Lord Adonai!
-
- 2. Adonai spake unto V.V.V.V.V., saying: There must ever be division in the
- word.
-
- 3. For the colours are many, but the light is one.
-
- 4. Therefore thou writest that which is of mother of emerald, and of lapis-
- lazuli, and of turquoise, and of alexandrite.
-
- 5. Another writeth the words of topaz, and of deep amethyst, and of gray
- sapphire, and of deep sapphire with a tinge as of blood.
-
- 6. Therefore do ye fret yourselves because of this.
-
- 7. Be not contented with the image.
-
- 8. I who am the Image of an Image say this.
-
- 9. Debate not of the image, saying Beyond! Beyond!
- One mounteth unto the Crown by the moon and by the Sun, and by the
- arrow, and by the Foundation, and by the dark home of the stars from the black
- earth.
-
- 10. Not otherwise may ye reach unto the Smooth Point.
-
- 11. Nor is it fitting for the cobbler to prate of the Royal matter. O cobbler!
- mend me this shoe, that I may walk. O king! if I be thy son, let us speak of
- the Embassy to the King thy Brother.
-
- 12. Then was there silence. Speech had done with us awhile.
- There is a light so strenuous that it is not perceived as light.
-
- 13. Wolf's bane is not so sharp as steel; yet it pierceth the body more
- subtly.
-
- 14. Even as evil kisses corrupt the blood, so do my words devour the spirit of
- man.
-
- 15. I breathe, and there is infinite dis-ease in the spirit.
-
- 16. As an acid eats into steel, as a cancer that utterly corrupts the body; so
- am I unto the spirit of man.
-
- 17. I shall not rest until I have dissolved it all.
-
- 18. So also the light that is absorbed. One absorbs little and is called white
- and glistening; one absorbs all and is called black.
-
- 19. Therefore, O my darling, art thou black.
-
- 20. O my beautiful, I have likened thee to a jet Nubian slave, a boy of
- melancholy eyes.
-
- 21. O the filthy one! the dog! they cry against thee.
- Because thou art my beloved.
-
- 22. Happy are they that praise thee; for they see thee with Mine eyes.
-
- 23. Not aloud shall they praise thee; but in the night watch one shall steal
- close, and grip thee with the secret grip; another shall privily cast a crown
-
- of violets over thee; a third shall greatly dare, and press mad lips to thine.
-
- 24. Yea! the night shall cover all, the night shall cover all.
-
- 25. Thou wast long seeking Me; thou didst run forward so fast that I was
- unable to come up with thee.
- O thou darling fool! what bitterness thou didst crown thy days withal.
-
- 26. Now I am with thee; I will never leave thy being.
-
- 27. For I am the soft sinuous one entwined about thee, heart of gold!
-
- 28. My head is jewelled with twelve stars; My body is white as milk of the
- stars; it is bright with the blue of the abyss of stars invisible.
-
- 29. I have found that which could not be found; I have found a vessel of
- quicksilver.
-
- 30. Thou shalt instruct thy servant in his ways, thou shalt speak often with
- him.
-
- 31. (The scribe looketh upwards and crieth) Amen! Thou hast spoken it, Lord
- God!
-
- 32. Further Adonai spake unto V.V.V.V.V. and said:
-
- 33. Let us take our delight in the multitude of men!
- Let us shape unto ourselves a boat of mother-of-pearl from them, that
- we may ride upon the river of Amrit!
-
- 34. Thou seest yon petal of amaranth, blown by the wind from the low sweet
- brows of Hathor?
-
- 35. (The Magister saw it and rejoiced in the beauty of it.) Listen!
-
- 36. (From a certain world came an infinite wail.)
- That falling petal seemed to the little ones a wave to engulph their
- continent.
-
- 37. So they will reproach thy servant, saying: Who hath set thee to save us?
-
- 38. He will be sore distressed.
-
- 39. All they understand not that thou and I are fashioning a boat of mother-
- of-pearl. We will sail down the river of Amrit even to the yew-groves of Yama,
- where we may rejoice exceedingly.
-
- 40. The joy of men shall be our silver gleam, their woe our blue gleam -- all
- in the mother-of-pearl.
-
- 41. (The scribe was wroth thereat. He spake:
- O Adonai and my master, I have borne the inkhorn and the pen without
- pay, in order that I might search this river of Amrit, and sail thereon as one
- of ye. This I demand for my fee, that I partake of the echo of your kisses.)
-
- 42. (And immediately it was granted unto him.)
-
- 43. (Nay; but not therewith was he content. By an infinite abasement unto
- shame did he strive. Then a voice:)
-
- 44. Thou strivest ever; even in thy yielding thou strivest to yield -- and lo!
- thou yieldest not.
-
- 45. Go thou unto the outermost places and subdue all things.
-
- 46. Subdue thy fear and thy disgust. Then -- yield!
-
- 47. There was a maiden that strayed among the corn, and sighed; then grew a
- new birth, a narcissus, and therein she forgot her sighing and her loneliness.
-
- 48. Even instantly rode Hades heavily upon her, and ravished her away.
-
- 49. (Then the scribe knew the narcissus in his heart; but because it came not
- to his lips, therefore was he shamed and spake no more.)
-
- 50. Adonai spake yet again with V.V.V.V.V. and said:
- The earth is ripe for vintage; let us eat of her grapes, and be drunken
- thereon.
-
- 51. And V.V.V.V.V. answered and said: O my lord, my dove, my excellent one,
- how shall this word seem unto the children of men?
-
- 52. And He answered him: Not as thou canst see.
- It is certain that every letter of this cipher hath some value; but who
- shall determine the value? For it varieth ever, according to the subtlety of
- Him that made it.
-
- 53. And He answered Him: Have I not the key thereof?
- I am clothed with the body of flesh; I am one with the Eternal and
- Omnipotent God.
-
- 54. Then said Adonai: Thou hast the Head of the Hawk, and thy Phallus is the
- Phallus of Asar. Thou knowest the white, and thou knowest the black, and thou
- knowest that these are one. But why seekest thou the knowledge of their
- equivalence?
-
- 55. And he said: That my Work may be right.
-
- 56. And Adonai said: The strong brown reaper swept his swathe and rejoiced.
- The wise man counted his muscles, and pondered, and understood not, and was
- sad.
- Reap thou, and rejoice!
-
- 57. Then was the Adept glad, and lifted his arm.
- Lo! an earthquake, and plague, and terror on the earth!
- A casting down of them that sate in high places; a famine upon the
- multitude!
-
- 58. And the grape fell ripe and rich into his mouth.
-
- 59. Stained is the purple of thy mouth, O brilliant one, with the white glory
- of the lips of Adonai.
-
- 60. The foam of the grape is like the storm upon the sea; the ships tremble
- and shudder; the shipmaster is afraid.
-
- 61. That is thy drunkenness, O holy one, and the winds whirl away the soul of
- the scribe into the happy haven.
-
- 62. O Lord God! let the haven be cast down by the fury of the storm! Let the
- foam of the grape tincture my soul with Thy light!
-
- 63. Bacchus grew old, and was Silenus; Pan was ever Pan for ever and ever more
- throughout the aeons.
-
- 64. Intoxicate the inmost, O my lover, not the outermost!
-
- 65. So was it -- ever the same! I have aimed at the peeled wand of my God, and
- I have hit; yea, I have hit.
-
-
- II
-
- 1. I passed into the mountain of lapis-lazuli, even as a green hawk between
- the pillars of turquoise that is seated upon the throne of the East.
-
- 2. So came I to Duant, the starry abode, and I heard voices crying aloud.
-
- 3. O Thou that sittest upon the Earth! (so spake a certain Veiled One to me)
- thou art not greater than thy mother! Thou speck of dust infinitesimal!
- Thou art the Lord of Glory, and the unclean dog.
-
- 4. Stooping down, dipping my wings, I came unto the darkly-splendid abodes.
- There in that formless abyss was I made a partaker of the Mysteries Averse.
-
- 5. I suffered the deadly embrace of the Snake and of the Goat; I paid the
- infernal homage to the shame of Khem.
-
- 6. Therein was this virtue, that the One became the all.
-
- 7. Moreover I beheld a vision of a river. There was a little boat thereon;
- and in it under purple sails was a golden woman, an image of Asi wrought in
- finest gold. Also the river was of blood, and the boat of shining steel.
- Then I loved her; and, loosing my girdle, cast myself into the stream.
-
- 8. I gathered myself into the little boat, and for many days and nights did I
- love her, burning beautiful incense before her.
-
- 9. Yea! I gave her of the flower of my youth.
-
- 10. But she stirred not; only by my kisses I defiled her so that she turned to
- blackness before me.
-
- 11. Yet I worshipped her, and gave her of the flower of my youth.
-
- 12. Also it came to pass, that thereby she sickened, and corrupted before me.
- Almost I cast myself into the stream.
-
- 13. Then at the end appointed her body was whiter than the milk of the stars,
- and her lips red and warm as the sunset, and her life of a white heat like the
- heat of the midmost sun.
-
- 14. Then rose she up from the abyss of Ages of Sleep, and her body embraced
- me. Altogether I melted into her beauty and was glad.
-
- 15. The river also became the river of Amrit, and the little boat was the
- chariot of the flesh, and the sails thereof the blood of the heart that
- beareth me, that beareth me.
-
- 16. O serpent woman of the stars! I, even I, have fashioned Thee from a pale
- image of fine gold.
-
- 17. Also the Holy One came upon me, and I beheld a white swan floating in the
- blue.
-
- 18. Between its wings I sate, and the aeons fled away.
-
- 19. Then the swan flew and dived and soared, yet no whither we went.
-
- 20. A little crazy boy that rode with me spake unto the swan, and said:
-
- 21. Who art thou that dost float and fly and dive and soar in the inane?
- Behold, these many aeons have passed; whence camest thou? Whither wilt thou
- go?
-
- 22. And laughing I chid him, saying: No whence! No whither!
-
- 23. The swan being silent, he answered: Then, if with no goal, why this
- eternal journey?
-
- 24. And I laid my head against the Head of the Swan, and laughed, saying: Is
- there not joy ineffable in this aimless winging? Is there not weariness and
- impatience for who would attain to some goal?
-
- 25. And the swan was ever silent. Ah! but we floated in the infinite Abyss.
- Joy! Joy!
- White swan, bear thou ever me up between thy wings!
-
- 26. O silence! O rapture! O end of things visible and invisible! This is all
- mine, who am Not.
-
- 27. Radiant God! Let me fashion an image of gems and gold for Thee! that the
- people may cast it down and trample it to dust! That Thy glory may be seen of
- them.
-
- 28. Nor shall it be spoken in the markets that I am come who should come; but
- Thy coming shall be the one word.
-
- 29. Thou shalt manifest Thyself in the unmanifest; in the secret places men
- shall meet with thee, and Thou shalt overcome them.
-
- 30. I saw a pale sad boy that lay upon the marble in the sunlight, and wept.
- By his side was the forgotten lute. Ah! but he wept.
-
- 31. Then came an eagle from the abyss of glory and overshadowed him. So black
- was the shadow that he was no more visible.
-
- 32. But I heard the lute lively discoursing through the blue still air.
-
- 33. Ah! messenger of the beloved One, let Thy shadow be over me!
-
- 34. Thy name is Death, it may be, or Shame, or Love.
- So thou bringest me tidings of the Beloved One, I shall not ask thy
- name.
-
- 35. Where is now the Master? cry the little crazy boys.
- He is dead! He is shamed! He is wedded! and their mockery shall ring
- round the world.
-
- 36. But the Master shall have had his reward.
- The laughter of the mockers shall be a ripple in the hair of the
- Beloved One.
-
- 37. Behold! the Abyss of the Great Deep. Therein is a mighty dolphin, lashing
- his sides with the force of the waves.
-
- 38. There is also an harper of gold, playing infinite tunes.
-
- 39. Then the dolphin delighted therein, and put off his body, and became a
- bird.
-
- 40. The harper also laid aside his harp, and played infinite tunes upon the
- Pan-pipe.
-
- 41. Then the bird desired exceedingly this bliss, and laying down its wings
- became a faun of the forest.
-
- 42. The harper also laid down his Pan-pipe, and with the human voice sang his
- infinite tunes.
-
- 43. Then the faun was enraptured, and followed far; at last the harper was
- silent, and the faun became Pan in the midst of the primal forest of Eternity.
-
- 44. Thou canst not charm the dolphin with silence, O my prophet!
-
- 45. Then the adept was rapt away in bliss, and the beyond of bliss, and
- exceeded the excess of excess.
-
- 46. Also his body shook and staggered with the burden of that bliss and that
- excess and that ultimate nameless.
-
- 47. They cried He is drunk or He is mad or He is in pain or He is about to
- die; and he heard them not.
-
- 48. O my Lord, my beloved! How shall I indite songs, when even the memory of
- the shadow of thy glory is a thing beyond all music of speech or of silence?
-
- 49. Behold! I am a man. Even a little child might not endure Thee. And lo!
-
- 50. I was alone in a great park, and by a certain hillock was a ring of deep
- enamelled grass wherein green-clad ones, most beautiful, played.
-
- 51. In their play I came even unto the land of Fairy Sleep.
- All my thoughts were clad in green; most beautiful were they.
-
- 52. All night they danced and sang; but Thou art the morning, O my darling, my
- serpent that twinest Thee about this heart.
-
- 53. I am the heart, and Thou the serpent. Wind Thy coils closer about me, so
- that no light nor bliss may penetrate.
-
- 54. Crush out the blood of me, as a grape upon the tongue of a white Doric
- girl that languishes with her lover in the moonlight.
-
- 55. Then let the End awake. Long hast thou slept, O great God Terminus! Long
- ages hast thou waited at the end of the city and the roads thereof.
- Awake Thou! wait no more!
-
- 56. Nay, Lord! but I am come to Thee. It is I that wait at last.
-
- 57. The prophet cried against the mountain; come thou hither, that I may speak
- with thee!
-
- 58. The mountain stirred not. Therefore went the prophet unto the mountain,
- and spake unto it. But the feet of the prophet were weary, and the mountain
- heard not his voice.
-
- 59. But I have called unto Thee, and I have journeyed unto Thee, and it
- availed me not.
-
- 60. I waited patiently, and Thou wast with me from the beginning.
-
- 61. This now I know, O my beloved, and we are stretched at our ease among the
- vines.
-
- 62. But these thy prophets; they must cry aloud and scourge themselves; they
- must cross trackless wastes and unfathomed oceans; to await Thee is the end,
- not the beginning.
-
- 63. Let darkness cover up the writing! Let the scribe depart among his ways.
-
- 64. But thou and I are stretched at our ease among the vines; what is he?
-
- 65. O Thou beloved One! is there not an end? Nay, but there is an end. Awake!
- arise! gird up thy limbs, O thou runner; bear thou the Word unto the mighty
- cities, yea, unto the mighty cities.
-
-
- III
-
- 1. Verily and Amen! I passed through the deep sea, and by the rivers of
- running water that abound therein, and I came unto the Land of No Desire.
-
- 2. Wherein was a white unicorn with a silver collar, whereon was graven the
- aphorism Linea viridis gyrat universa.
-
- 3. Then the word of Adonai came unto me by the mouth of the Magister mine,
- saying: O heart that art girt about with the coils of the old serpent, lift up
- thyself unto the mountain of initiation!
-
- 4. But I remembered. Yea, Than, yea, Theli, yea, Lilith! these three were
- about me from of old. For they are one.
-
- 5. Beautiful wast thou, O Lilith, thou serpent-woman!
-
- 6. Thou wast lithe and delicious to the taste, and thy perfume was of musk
- mingled with ambergris.
-
- 7. Close didst thou cling with thy coils unto the heart, and it was as the
- joy of all the spring.
-
- 8. But I beheld in thee a certain taint, even in that wherein I delighted.
-
- 9. I beheld in thee the taint of thy father the ape, of thy grandsire the
- Blind Worm of Slime.
-
- 10. I gazed upon the Crystal of the Future, and I saw the horror of the End of
- thee.
-
- 11. Further, I destroyed the time Past, and the time to Come -- had I not the
- Power of the Sand-glass?
-
- 12. But in the very hour I beheld corruption.
-
- 13. Then I said: O my beloved, O Lord Adonai, I pray thee to loosen the coils
- of the serpent!
-
- 14. But she was closed fast upon me, so that my Force was stayed in its
- inception.
-
- 15. Also I prayed unto the Elephant God, the Lord of Beginnings, who breaketh
- down obstruction.
-
- 16. These gods came right quickly to mine aid. I beheld them; I joined myself
- unto them; I was lost in their vastness.
-
- 17. Then I beheld myself compassed about with the Infinite Circle of Emerald
- that encloseth the Universe.
-
- 18. O Snake of Emerald, Thou hast no time Past, no time To Come. Verily Thou
- art not.
-
- 19. Thou art delicious beyond all taste and touch, Thou art not-to-be-beheld
- for glory, Thy voice is beyond the Speech and the Silence and the Speech
- therein, and Thy perfume is of pure ambergris, that is not weighed against the
- finest gold of the fine gold.
-
- 20. Also Thy coils are of infinite range; the Heart that Thou dost encircle is
- an Universal Heart.
-
- 21. I, and Me, and Mine were sitting with lutes in the market-place of the
- great city, the city of the violets and the roses.
-
- 22. The night fell, and the music of the lutes was stilled.
-
- 23. The tempest arose, and the music of the lutes was stilled.
-
- 24. The hour passed, and the music of the lutes was stilled.
-
- 25. But Thou art Eternity and Space; Thou art Matter and Motion; and Thou art
- the negation of all these things.
-
- 26. For there is no Symbol of Thee.
-
- 27. If I say Come up upon the mountains! the celestial waters flow at my word.
- But thou art the Water beyond the waters.
-
- 28. The red three-angled heart hath been set up in Thy shrine; for the priests
- despised equally the shrine and the god.
-
- 29. Yet all the while Thou wast hidden therein, as the Lord of Silence is
- hidden in the buds of the lotus.
-
- 30. Thou art Sebek the crocodile against Asar; thou art Mati, the Slayer in
- the Deep. Thou art Typhon, the Wrath of the Elements, O Thou who transcendest
- the Forces in their Concourse and Cohesion, in their Death and their
- Disruption. Thou art Python, the terrible serpent about the end of all things!
-
- 31. I turned me about thrice in every way; and always I came at the last unto
- Thee.
-
- 32. Many things I beheld mediate and immediate; but, beholding them no more, I
- beheld Thee.
-
- 33. Come thou, O beloved One, O Lord God of the Universe, O Vast One, O Minute
- One! I am Thy beloved.
-
- 34. All day I sing of Thy delight; all night I delight in Thy song.
-
- 35. There is no other day or night than this.
-
- 36. Thou art beyond the day and the night; I am Thyself, O my Maker, my
- Master, my Mate!
-
- 37. I am like the little red dog that sitteth upon the knees of the Unknown.
-
- 38. Thou hast brought me into great delight. Thou hast given me of Thy flesh
- to eat and of Thy blood for an offering of intoxication.
-
- 39. Thou hast fastened the fangs of Eternity in my soul, and the Poison of the
- Infinite hath consumed me utterly.
-
- 40. I am become like a luscious devil of Italy; a fair strong woman with worn
- cheeks, eaten out with hunger for kisses. She hath played the harlot in divers
- palaces; she hath given her body to the beasts.
-
- 41. She hath slain her kinsfolk with strong venom of toads; she hath been
- scourged with many rods.
-
- 42. She hath been broken in pieces upon the Wheel; the hands of the hangman
- have bound her unto it.
-
- 43. The fountains of water have been loosed upon her; she hath struggled with
- exceeding torment.
-
- 44. She hath burst in sunder with the weight of the waters; she hath sunk into
- the awful Sea.
-
- 45. So am I, O Adonai, my lord, and such are the waters of Thine intolerable
- Essence.
-
- 46. So am I, O Adonai, my beloved, and Thou hast burst me utterly in sunder.
-
- 47. I am shed out like spilt blood upon the mountains; the Ravens of
- Dispersion have borne me utterly away.
-
- 48. Therefore is the seal unloosed, that guarded the Eighth abyss; therefore
- is the vast sea as a veil; therefore is there a rending asunder of all things.
-
- 49. Yea, also verily Thou art the cool still water of the wizard fount. I have
- bathed in Thee, and lost me in Thy stillness.
-
- 50. That which went in as a brave boy of beautiful limbs cometh forth as a
- maiden, as a little child for perfection.
-
- 51. O Thou light and delight, ravish me away into the milky ocean of the
- stars!
-
- 52. O Thou Son of a light-transcending mother, blessed be Thy name, and the
- Name of Thy Name, throughout the ages!
-
- 53. Behold! I am a butterfly at the Source of Creation; let me die before the
- hour, falling dead into thine infinite stream!
-
- 54. Also the stream of the stars floweth ever majestical unto the Abode; bear
- me away upon the Bosom of Nuit!
-
- 55. This is the world of the waters of Maim; this is the bitter water that
- becometh sweet. Thou art beautiful and bitter, O golden one, O my Lord Adonai,
- O thou Abyss of Sapphire!
-
- 56. I follow Thee, and the waters of Death fight strenuously against me. I
- pass unto the Waters beyond Death and beyond Life.
-
- 57. How shall I answer the foolish man? In no way shall he come to the
- Identity of Thee!
-
- 58. But I am the Fool that heedeth not the Play of the Magician. Me doth the
- Woman of the Mysteries instruct in vain; I have burst the bonds of Love and of
- Power and of Worship.
-
- 59. Therefore is the Eagle made one with the Man, and the gallows of infamy
- dance with the fruit of the just.
-
- 60. I have descended, O my darling, into the black shining waters, and I have
- plucked Thee forth as a black pearl of infinite preciousness.
-
- 61. I have gone down, O my God, into the abyss of the all, and I have found
- Thee in the midst under the guise of No Thing.
-
- 62. But as Thou art the Last, Thou art also the Next, and as the Next do I
- reveal Thee to the multitude.
-
- 63. They that ever desired Thee shall obtain Thee, even at the End of their
- Desire.
-
- 64. Glorious, glorious, glorious art Thou, O my lover supernal, O Self of
- myself.
-
- 65. For I have found Thee alike in the Me and the Thee; there is no
- difference, O my beautiful, my desirable One! In the One and the Many have I
- found Thee; yea, I have found Thee.
-
-
- IV
-
- 1. O crystal heart! I the Serpent clasp Thee; I drive home mine head into the
- central core of Thee, O God my beloved.
-
- 2. Even as on the resounding wind-swept heights of Mitylene some god-like
- woman casts aside the lyre, and with her locks aflame as an aureole, plunges
- into the wet heart of the creation, so I, O Lord my God!
-
- 3. There is a beauty unspeakable in this heart of corruption, where the
- flowers are aflame.
-
- 4. Ah me! but the thirst of Thy joy parches up this throat, so that I cannot
- sing.
-
- 5. I will make me a little boat of my tongue, and explore the unknown rivers.
- It may be that the everlasting salt may turn to sweetness, and that my life
- may be no longer athirst.
-
- 6. O ye that drink of the brine of your desire, ye are nigh to madness! Your
- torture increaseth as ye drink, yet still ye drink. Come up through the creeks
- to the fresh water; I shall be waiting for you with my kisses.
-
- 7. As the bezoar-stone that is found in the belly of the cow, so is my lover
- among lovers.
-
- 8. O honey boy! Bring me Thy cool limbs hither! Let us sit awhile in the
- orchard, until the sun go down! Let us feast on the cool grass! Bring wine, ye
- slaves, that the cheeks of my boy may flush red.
-
- 9. In the garden of immortal kisses, O thou brilliant One, shine forth! Make
- Thy mouth an opium-poppy, that one kiss is the key to the infinite sleep and
- lucid, the sleep of Shi-loh-am.
-
- 10. In my sleep I beheld the Universe like a clear crystal without one speck.
-
- 11. There are purse-proud penniless ones that stand at the door of the tavern
- and prate of their feats of wine-bibbing.
-
- 12. There are purse-proud penniless ones that stand at the door of the tavern
- and revile the guests.
-
- 13. The guests dally upon couches of mother-of-pearl in the garden; the noise
- of the foolish men is hidden from them.
-
- 14. Only the inn-keeper feareth lest the favour of the king be withdrawn from
- him.
-
- 15. Thus spake the Magister V.V.V.V.V. unto Adonai his God, as they played
- together in the starlight over against the deep black pool that is in the Holy
- Place of the Holy House beneath the Altar of the Holiest One.
-
- 16. But Adonai laughed, and played more languidly.
-
- 17. Then the scribe took note, and was glad. But Adonai had no fear of the
- Magician and his play.
- For it was Adonai who had taught all his tricks to the Magician.
-
- 18. And the Magister entered into the play of the Magician. When the Magician
- laughed he laughed; all as a man should do.
-
- 19. And Adonai said: Thou art enmeshed in the web of the Magician. This He
- said subtly, to try him.
-
- 20. But the Magister gave the sign of the Magistry, and laughed back on Him: O
- Lord, O beloved, did these fingers relax on Thy curls, or these eyes turn away
- from Thine eye?
-
- 21. And Adonai delighted in him exceedingly.
-
- 22. Yea, O my master, thou art the beloved of the Beloved One; the Bennu Bird
- is set up in Philae not in vain.
-
- 23. I who was the priestess of Ahathoor rejoice in your love. Arise, O
- Nile-God, and devour the holy place of the Cow of Heaven! Let the milk of
- the stars be drunk up by Sebek the dweller of Nile!
-
- 24. Arise, O serpent Apep, Thou art Adonai the beloved one! Thou art my
- darling and my lord, and Thy poison is sweeter than the kisses of Isis the
- mother of the Gods!
-
- 25. For Thou art He! Yea, Thou shalt swallow up Asi and Asar, and the children
- of Ptah. Thou shalt pour forth a flood of poison to destroy the works of the
- Magician. Only the Destroyer shall devour Thee; Thou shalt blacken his
- throat, wherein his spirit abideth. Ah, serpent Apep, but I love Thee!
-
- 26. My God! Let Thy secret fang pierce to the marrow of the little secret bone
- that I have kept against the Day of Vengeance of Hoor-Ra. Let Kheph-Ra sound
- his sharded drone! let the jackals of Day and Night howl in the wilderness of
- Time! let the Towers of the Universe totter, and the guardians hasten away!
- For my Lord hath revealed Himself as a mighty serpent, and my heart is the
- blood of His body.
-
- 27. I am like a love-sick courtesan of Corinth. I have toyed with kings and
- captains, and made them my slaves. To-day I am the slave of the little asp
- of death; and who shall loosen our love?
-
- 28. Weary, weary! saith the scribe, who shall lead me to the sight of the
- Rapture of my master?
-
- 29. The body is weary and the soul is sore weary and sleep weighs down their
- eyelids; yet ever abides the sure consciousness of ecstacy, unknown, yet known
- in that its being is certain. O Lord, be my helper, and bring me to the bliss
- of the Beloved!
-
- 30. I came to the house of the Beloved, and the wine was like fire that flieth
- with green wings through the world of waters.
-
- 31. I felt the red lips of nature and the black lips of perfection. Like
- sisters they fondled me their little brother; they decked me out as a bride;
- they mounted me for Thy bridal chamber.
-
- 32. They fled away at Thy coming; I was alone before Thee.
-
- 33. I trembled at Thy coming, O my God, for Thy messenger was more terrible
- than the Death-star.
-
- 34. On the threshold stood the fulminant figure of Evil, the Horror of
- emptiness, with his ghastly eyes like poisonous wells. He stood, and the
- chamber was corrupt; the air stank. He was an old and gnarled fish more
- hideous than the shells of Abaddon.
-
- 35. He enveloped me with his demon tentacles; yea, the eight fears took hold
- upon me.
-
- 36. But I was anointed with the right sweet oil of the Magister; I slipped
- from the embrace as a stone from the sling of a boy of the woodlands.
-
- 37. I was smooth and hard as ivory; the horror gat no hold. Then at the
- noise of the wind of Thy coming he was dissolved away, and the abyss of the
- great void was unfolded before me.
-
- 38. Across the waveless sea of eternity Thou didst ride with Thy captains and
- Thy hosts; with Thy chariots and horsemen and spearmen didst Thou travel
- through the blue.
-
- 39. Before I saw Thee Thou wast already with me; I was smitten through by Thy
- marvellous spear.
-
- 40. I was stricken as a bird by the bolt of the thunderer; I was pierced as
- the thief by the Lord of the Garden.
-
- 41. O my Lord, let us sail upon the sea of blood!
-
- 42. There is a deep taint beneath the ineffable bliss; it is the taint of
- generation.
-
- 43. Yea, though the flower wave bright in the sunshine, the root is deep in
- the darkness of earth.
-
- 44. Praise to thee, O beautiful dark earth, thou art the mother of a million
- myriads of myriads of flowers.
-
- 45. Also I beheld my God, and the countenance of Him was a thousandfold
- brighter than the lightning. Yet in his heart I beheld the slow and dark One,
- the ancient one, the devourer of His children.
-
- 46. In the height and the abyss, O my beautiful, there is no thing, verily,
- there is no thing at all, that is not altogether and perfectly fashioned for
- Thy delight.
-
- 47. Light cleaveth unto Light, and filth to filth; with pride one contemneth
- another. But not Thou, who art all, and beyond it; who art absolved from the
- Division of the Shadows.
-
- 48. O day of Eternity, let Thy wave break in foamless glory of sapphire upon
- the laborious coral of our making!
-
- 49. We have made us a ring of glistening white sand, strewn wisely in the
- midst of the Delightful Ocean.
-
- 50. Let the palms of brilliance flower upon our island; we shall eat of their
- fruit, and be glad.
-
- 51. But for me the lustral water, the great ablution, the dissolving of the
- soul in that resounding abyss.
-
- 52. I have a little son like a wanton goat; my daughter is like an unfledged
- eaglet; they shall get them fins, that they may swim.
-
- 53. That they may swim, O my beloved, swim far in the warm honey of Thy being,
- O blessed one, O boy of beatitude!
-
- 54. This heart of mine is girt about with the serpent that devoureth his own
- coils.
-
- 55. When shall there be an end, O my darling, O when shall the Universe and
- the Lord thereof be utterly swallowed up?
-
- 56. Nay! who shall devour the Infinite? who shall undo the Wrong of the
- Beginning?
-
- 57. Thou criest like a white cat upon the roof of the Universe; there is none
- to answer Thee.
-
- 58. Thou art like a lonely pillar in the midst of the sea; there is none to
- behold Thee, O Thou who beholdest all!
-
- 59. Thou dost faint, thou dost fail, thou scribe; cried the desolate Voice;
- but I have filled thee with a wine whose savour thou knowest not.
-
- 60. It shall avail to make drunken the people of the old gray sphere that
- rolls in the infinite Far-off; they shall lap the wine as dogs that lap the
- blood of a beautiful courtesan pierced through by the Spear of a swift rider
- through the city.
-
- 61. I too am the Soul of the desert; thou shalt seek me yet again in the
- wilderness of sand.
-
- 62. At thy right hand a great lord and a comely; at thy left hand a woman clad
- in gossamer and gold and having the stars in her hair. Ye shall journey far
- into a land of pestilence and evil; ye shall encamp in the river of a foolish
- city forgotten; there shall ye meet with Me.
-
- 63. There will I make Mine habitation; as for bridal will I come bedecked and
- anointed; there shall the Consummation be accomplished.
-
- 64. O my darling, I also wait for the brilliance of the hour ineffable, when
- the universe shall be like a girdle for the midst of the ray of our love,
- extending beyond the permitted end of the endless One.
-
- 65. Then, O thou heart, will I the serpent eat thee wholly up; yea, I will eat
- thee wholly up.
-
-
- V
-
- 1. Ah! my Lord Adonai, that dalliest with the Magister in the Treasure-House
- of Pearls, let me listen to the echo of your kisses.
-
- 2. Is not the starry heaven shaken as a leaf at the tremulous rapture of your
- love? Am not I the flying spark of light whirled away by the great wind of
- your perfection?
-
- 3. Yea, cried the Holy One, and from Thy spark will I the Lord kindle a great
- light; I will burn through the great city in the old and desolate land; I will
- cleanse it from its great impurity.
-
- 4. And thou, O prophet, shalt see these things, and thou shalt heed them not.
-
- 5. Now is the Pillar established in the Void; now is Asi fulfilled of Asar;
- now is Hoor let down into the Animal Soul of Things like a fiery star that
- falleth upon the darkness of the earth.
-
- 6. Through the midnight thou art dropt, O my child, my conqueror, my sword-
- girt captain, O Hoor! and they shall find thee as a black gnarl'd glittering
- stone, and they shall worship thee.
-
- 7. My prophet shall prophesy concerning thee; around thee the maidens shall
- dance, and bright babes be born unto them. Thou shalt inspire the proud ones
- with infinite pride, and the humble ones with an ecstasy of abasement; all
- this shall transcend the Known and the Unknown with somewhat that hath no
- name. For it is as the abyss of the Arcanum that is opened in the secret Place
- of Silence.
-
- 8. Thou hast come hither, O my prophet, through grave paths. Thou hast eaten
- of the dung of the Abominable Ones; thou hast prostrated thyself before the
- Goat and the Crocodile; the evil men have made thee a plaything; thou hast
- wandered as a painted harlot, ravishing with sweet scent and Chinese
- colouring, in the streets; thou hast darkened thine eyepits with Kohl; thou
- hast tinted thy lips with vermilion; thou hast plastered thy cheeks with ivory
- enamels. Thou hast played the wanton in every gate and by-way of the great
- city. The men of the city have lusted after thee to abuse thee and to beat
- thee. They have mouthed the golden spangles of fine dust wherewith thou
- didst bedeck thine hair; they have scourged the painted flesh of thee with
- their whips; thou hast suffered unspeakable things.
-
- 9. But I have burnt within thee as a pure flame without oil. In the midnight
- I was brighter than the moon; in the daytime I exceeded utterly the sun; in
- the byways of of thy being I inflamed, and dispelled the illusion.
-
- 10. Therefore thou art wholly pure before Me; therefore thou art My virgin
- unto eternity.
-
- 11. Therefore I love thee with surpassing love; therefore they that despise
- thee shall adore thee.
-
- 12. Thou shalt be lovely and pitiful toward them; thou shalt heal them of the
-
- unutterable evil.
-
- 13. They shall change in their destruction, even as two dark stars that crash
- together in the abyss, and blaze up in an infinite burning.
-
- 14. All this while did Adonai pierce my being with his sword that hath four
- blades; the blade of the thunderbolt, the blade of the Pylon, the blade of the
- serpent, the blade of the Phallus.
-
- 15. Also he taught me the holy unutterable word Ararita, so that I melted the
- sixfold gold into a single invisible point, whereof naught may be spoken.
-
- 16. For the Magistry of this Opus is a secret magistry; and the sign of the
- master thereof is a certain ring of lapis-lazuli with the name of my master,
- who am I, and the Eye in the Midst thereof.
-
- 17. Also He spake and said: This is a secret sign, and thou shalt not disclose
- it unto the profane, nor unto the neophyte, nor unto the zelator, nor unto the
- practicus, nor unto the philosophus, nor unto the lesser adept, nor unto the
- greater adept.
-
- 18. But unto the exempt adept thou shalt disclose thyself if thou have need of
- him for the lesser operations of thine art.
-
- 19. Accept the worship of the foolish people, whom thou hatest. The Fire is
- not defiled by the altars of the Ghebers, nor is the Moon contaminated by the
- incense of them that adore the Queen of Night.
-
- 20. Thou shalt dwell among the people as a precious diamond among cloudy
- diamonds, and crystals, and pieces of glass. Only the eye of the just merchant
- shall behold thee, and plunging in his hand shall single thee out and glorify
- thee before men.
-
- 21. But thou shalt heed none of this. Thou shalt be ever the heart, and I the
- serpent will coil close about thee. My coil shall never relax throughout the
- aeons. Neither change nor sorrow nor unsubstantiality shall have thee; for
- thou art passed beyond all these.
-
- 22. Even as the diamond shall glow red for the rose, and green for the rose-
- leaf; so shalt thou abide apart from the Impressions.
-
- 23. I am thou, and the Pillar is 'stablished in the void.
-
- 24. Also thou art beyond the stabilities of Being and of Consciousness and of
- Bliss; for I am thou, and the Pillar is 'stablished in the void.
-
- 25. Also thou shalt discourse of these things unto the man that writeth them,
- and he shall partake of them as a sacrament; for I who am thou am he, and the
- Pillar is 'stablished in the void.
-
- 26. From the Crown to the Abyss, so goeth it single and erect. Also the
- limitless sphere shall glow with the brilliance thereof.
-
- 27. Thou shalt rejoice in the pools of adorable water; thou shalt bedeck thy
- damsels with pearls of fecundity; thou shalt light flame like licking tongues
-
- of liquor of the Gods between the pools.
-
- 28. Also thou shalt convert the all-sweeping air into the winds of pale water,
- thou shalt transmute the earth into a blue abyss of wine.
-
- 29. Ruddy are the gleams of ruby and gold that sparkle therein; one drop shall
- intoxicate the Lord of the Gods my servant.
-
- 30. Also Adonai spake unto V.V.V.V.V. saying: O my little one, my tender one,
- my little amorous one, my gazelle, my beautiful, my boy, let us fill up the
- pillar of the Infinite with an infinite kiss!
-
- 31. So that the stable was shaken and the unstable became still.
-
- 32. They that beheld it cried with a formidable affright: The end of things is
- come upon us.
-
- 33. And it was even so.
-
- 34. Also I was in the spirit vision and beheld a parricidal pomp of atheists,
- coupled by two and by two in the supernal ecstasy of the stars. They did laugh
- and rejoice exceedingly, being clad in purple robes and drunken with purple
- wine, and their whole soul was one purple flower-flame of holiness.
-
- 35. They beheld not God; they beheld not the Image of God; therefore were they
- arisen to the Palace of the Splendour Ineffable. A sharp sword smote out
- before them, and the worm Hope writhed in its death-agony under their feet.
-
- 36. Even as their rapture shore asunder the visible Hope, so also the Fear
- Invisible fled away and was no more.
-
- 37. O ye that are beyond Aormuzdi and Ahrimanes! blessed are ye unto the ages.
-
- 38. They shaped Doubt as a sickle, and reaped the flowers of Faith for their
- garlands.
-
- 39. They shaped Ecstasy as a spear, and pierced the ancient dragon that sat
- upon the stagnant water.
-
- 40. Then the fresh springs were unloosed, that the folk athirst might be at
- ease.
-
- 41. And again I was caught up into the presence of my Lord Adonai, and the
- knowledge and Conversation of the Holy One, and Angel that Guardeth me.
-
- 42. O Holy Exalted One, O Self beyond self. O Self-Luminous Image of the
- Unimaginable Naught, O my darling, my beautiful, come Thou forth and follow
- me.
-
- 43. Adonai, divine Adonai, let Adonai initiate refulgent dalliance! Thus I
- concealed the name of Her name that inspireth my rapture, the scent of whose
- body bewildereth the soul, the light of whose soul abaseth this body unto the
- beasts.
-
- 44. I have sucked out the blood with my lips; I have drained Her beauty of its
- sustenance; I have abased Her before me, I have mastered Her, I have possessed
- Her, and Her life is within me. In Her blood I inscribe the secret riddles of
- the Sphinx of the Gods, that none shall understand, -- save only the pure and
- voluptuous, the chaste and obscene, the androgyne and the gynander that have
- passed beyond the bars of the prison that the old Slime of Khem set up in the
- Gates of Amennti.
-
- 45. O my adorable, my delicious one, all night will I pour out the libation on
- Thine altars; all night will I burn the sacrifice of blood; all night will I
- swing the thurible of my delight before Thee, and the fervour of the orisons
- shall intoxicate Thy nostrils.
-
- 46. O Thou who camest from the land of the Elephant, girt about with the
- tiger's pell, and garlanded with the lotus of the spirit, do Thou inebriate my
-
- life with Thy madness, that She leap at my passing.
-
- 47. Bid Thy maidens who follow Thee bestrew us a bed of flowers immortal, that
- we may take our pleasure thereupon. Bid Thy satyrs heap thorns among the
- flowers, that we may take our pain thereupon. Let the pleasure and pain be
- mingled in one supreme offering unto the Lord Adonai!
-
- 48. Also I heard the voice of Adonai the Lord the desirable one concerning
- that which is beyond.
-
- 49. Let not the dwellers in Thebai and the temples thereof prate ever of the
- Pillars of Hercules and the Ocean of the West. Is not the Nile a beautiful
- water?
-
- 50. Let not the priest of Isis uncover the nakedness of Nuit, for every step
- is a death and a birth. The priest of Isis lifted the veil of Isis, and was
- slain by the kisses of her mouth. Then was he the priest of Nuit, and drank of
- the milk of the stars.
-
- 51. Let not the failure and the pain turn aside the worshippers. The
- foundations of the pyramid were hewn in the living rock ere sunset; did the
- king weep at dawn that the crown of the pyramid was yet unquarried in the
- distant land?
-
- 52. There was also an humming-bird that spake unto the horned cerastes, and
- prayed him for poison. And the great snake of Khem the Holy One, the royal
- Uraeus serpent, answered him and said:
-
- 53. I sailed over the sky of Nu in the car called Millions-of-Years, and I saw
- not any creature upon Seb that was equal to me. The venom of my fang is the
- inheritance of my father, and of my father's father; and how shall I give it
- unto thee? Live thou and thy children as I and my fathers have lived, even
- unto an hundred millions of generations, and it may be that the mercy of the
- Mighty Ones may bestow upon thy children a drop of the poison of eld.
-
- 54. Then the humming-bird was afflicted in his spirit, and he flew unto the
- flowers, and it was as if naught had been spoken between them. Yet in a little
- while a serpent struck him that he died.
-
- 55. But an Ibis that meditated upon the bank of Nile the beautiful god
- listened and heard. And he laid aside his Ibis ways, and became as a serpent,
- saying Peradventure in an hundred millions of millions of generations of my
- children, they shall attain to a drop of the poison of the fang of the Exalted
- One.
-
- 56. And behold! ere the moon waxed thrice he became an Uraeus serpent, and the
- poison of the fang was established in him and his seed even for ever and for
- ever.
-
- 57. O thou Serpent Apep, my Lord Adonai, it is a speck of minutest time, this
- travelling through eternity, and in Thy sight the landmarks are of fair white
- marble untouched by the tool of the graver. Therefore thou art mine, even now
- and for ever and for everlasting. Amen.
-
- 58. Moreover, I heard the voice of Adonai: Seal up the book of the Heart and
- the Serpent; in the number five and sixty seal thou the holy book.
- As fine gold that is beaten into a diadem for the fair queen of
- Pharaoh, as great stones that are cemented together into the Pyramid of the
- ceremony of the Death of Asar, so do thou bind together the words and the
- deeds, so that in all is one Thought of Me thy delight Adonai.
-
- 59. And I answered and said: It is done even according unto Thy word. And it
- was done. And they that read the book and debated thereon passed into the
- desolate land of Barren Words. And they that sealed up the book into their
- blood were the chosen of Adonai, and the Thought of Adonai was a Word and a
- Deed; and they abode in the Land that the far-off travellers call Naught.
-
- 60. O land beyond honey and spice and all perfection! I will dwell therein
- with my Lord for ever.
-
- 61. And the Lord Adonai delighteth in me, and I bear the Cup of His gladness
- unto the weary ones of the old grey land.
-
- 62. They that drink thereof are smitten of disease; the abomination hath hold
- upon them, and their torment is like the thick black smoke of the evil abode.
-
- 63. But the chosen ones drank thereof, and became even as my Lord, my
- beautiful, my desirable one. There is no wine like unto this wine.
-
- 64. They are gathered together into a glowing heart, as Ra that gathereth his
- clouds about Him at eventide into a molten sea of Joy; and the snake that is
- the crown of Ra bindeth them about with the golden girdle of the death-kisses.
-
- 65. So also is the end of the book, and the Lord Adonai is about it on all
- sides like a Thunderbolt, and a Pylon, and a Snake, and a Phallus, and in the
- midst thereof he is like the Woman that jetteth out the milk of the stars from
- her paps; yea, the milk of the stars from her paps.
-
-