Yoga for Yellowbellies Fourth Lecture
Salutation to the Sons of the Morning!
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
1. I should like to begin this evening by recapitulating very
briefly what has been said in the previous three lectures, and
this would be easier if I had not completely forgotten everything
I said. But there is a sort of faint glimmering to the effect
that the general subject of the series was the mental exercises
of the Yogi; and the really remarkable feature was that I found
it impossible to discuss them at all thoroughly without touching
upon, first of all, ontology; secondly, ordinary science; and
thirdly, the high Magick of the true initiates of the light.
2. We found that both Ontology and Science, approaching the
question of reality from entirely different standpoints, and pursuing
their researches by entirely different methods, had yet arrived
at an identical 'impasse.' And the general conclusion was that
there could be no reality in any intellectual concept of any kind,
that the only reality must lie in direct experience of such a
kind that it is beyond the scope of the critical apparatus of
our minds. It cannot be subject to the laws of Reason; it cannot
be found in the fetters of elementary mathematics; only transfinite
and irrational conceptions in that subject can possibly shadow
forth the truth in some such paradox as the identity of contradictories.
We found further that those states of mind which result from
the practice of Yoga are properly called trances, because they
actually transcend the conditions of normal thought.
3. At this point we begin to see an almost insensible drawing
together of the path of Yoga which is straight (and in a sense
arid) with that of Magick, which may be compared with the Bacchic
dance or the orgies of Pan. It suggests that Yoga is ultimately
a sublimation of philosophy, even as Magick is a sublimation of
science. The way is open for a reconciliation between these lower
elements of thought by virtue of their tendency to flower into
these higher states beyond thought, in which the two have become
one. And that, of course, is Magick; and that, of course, is
Yoga.
4. We may now consider whether, in view of the final identification
of these two elements in their highest, there may not be something
more practical than sympathy in their lower elements-I mean mutual
assistance.
I am glad to think that the Path of the Wise has become much
smoother and shorter than it was when I first trod it; for this
very reason that the old antinomies of Magick and Yoga have been
completely resolved.
You all know what Yoga is. Yoga means union. And you all
know how to do it by shutting off the din of the intellectual
boiler factory, and allowing the silence of starlight to reach
the ear. It is the emancipation of the exalted from the thrall
of the commonplace expression of Nature.
5. Now what is Magick? Magick is the science and art of causing
change to occur in conformity with the Will. How do we achieve
this? By exalting the will to the point where it is master of
circumstance. And how do we do this? By so ordering every thought,
word and act, in such a way that the attention is constantly recalled
to the chosen object.
6. Suppose I want to evoke the 'Intelligence' of Jupiter.
I base my work upon the correspondences of Jupiter. I base my
mathematics on the number 4 and its subservient numbers 16, 34,
136. I employ the square or rhombus. For my sacred animal I
choose the eagle, or some other sacred to Jupiter. For my perfume,
saffron - for my libation some preparation of opium or a generous
yet sweet and powerful wine such as port. For my magical weapon
I take the sceptre; in fact, I continue choosing instruments
for every act in such a way that I am constantly reminded of my
will to evoke Jupiter. I even constrain every object. I extract
the Jupiterian elements from all the complex phenomena which surround
me. If I look at my carpet, the blues and purples are the colours
which stand out as Light against an obsolescent and indeterminate
background. And thus I carry on my daily life, using every moment
of time in constant self-admonition to attend to Jupiter. The
mind quickly responds to this training; it very soon automatically
rejects as unreal anything which is not Jupiter. Everything else
escapes notice. And when the time comes for the ceremony of invocation
which I have been consistently preparing with all devotion and
assiduity, I am quickly inflamed. I am attuned to Jupiter, I
am pervaded by Jupiter, I am absorbed by Jupiter, I am caught
up into the heaven of Jupiter and wield his thunderbolts. Hebe
and Ganymedes bring me wine; the Queen of the Gods is throned
at my side, and for my playmates are the fairest maidens of the
earth.
7. Now what is all this but to do in a partial (and if I may
say so, romantic) way what the Yogi does in his more scientifically
complete yet more austerely difficult methods? And here the advantage
of Magick is that the process of initiation is spontaneous and,
so to speak, automatic. You may begin in the most modest way
with the evocation of some simple elemental spirit; but in the
course of the operation you are compelled, in order to attain
success, to deal with higher entities. Your ambition grows, like
every other organism, by what it feeds on. You are very soon
led to the Great Work itself; you are led to aspire to the Knowledge
and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel, and this ambition
in turn arouses automatically further difficulties the conquest
of which confers new powers. In the Book of the Thirty Aethyrs,
commonly called 'The Vision and the Voice', it becomes progressively
difficult to penetrate each Aethyr. In fact, the penetration
was only attained by the initiations which were conferred by
the Angel of each Aethyr in its turn. There was this further
identification with Yoga practices recorded in this book. At
times the concentration necessary to dwell in the Aethyr became
so intense that definitely Samadhic results were obtained. We
see then that the exaltation of the mind by means of magical practices
leads (as one may say, in spite of itself) to the same results
as occur in straightforward Yoga.
I think I ought to tell you a little more about these visions.
The method of obtaining them was to take a large topaz beautifully
engraved with the Rose and Cross of forty-nine petals, and this
topaz was set in a wooden cross of oak painted red. I called
this the shew-stone in memory of Dr. Dee's famous shew-stone.
I took this in my hand and proceeded to recite in the Enochian
or Angelic language the Call of the Thirty Aethyrs, using in each
case the special name appropriate to the Aethyr. Now all this
went very well until about the 17th, I think it was, and then
the Angel, foreseeing difficulty in the higher or remoter Aethyrs,
gave me this instruction. I was to recite a chapter from the
Q'uran: what the Mohammedans call the 'Chapter of the Unity.'
'Qol: Hua Allahu achad; Allahu assamad:
lam yalid walam yulad; walam yakun lahu kufwan achad.' I was
to say this, bowing myself to the earth after each chapter, a
thousand and one times a day, as I walked behind my camel in the
Great Eastern Erg of the Sahara. I do not think that anyone will
dispute that this was pretty good exercise; but my point is that
it was certainly very good Yoga.
From what I have said in previous lectures you will all recognise
that this practice fulfils all the conditions of the earlier stages
of Yoga, and it is therefore not surprising that it put my mind
in such a state that I was able to use the Call of the Thirty
Aethyrs with much greater efficacy than before.
8. Am I then supposed to be saying that Yoga is merely the
hand-maiden of Magick, or that Magick has no higher function than
to supplement Yoga? By no means. it is the co-operation of lovers;
which is here a symbol of the fact. The practices of Yoga are
almost essential to success in Magick-at least I may say from
my own experience that it made all the difference in the world
to my magical success, when I had been thoroughly grounded in
the hard drill of Yoga. But I feel absolutely certain that I
should never have obtained success in Yoga in so short a time
as I did had I not spent the previous three years in the daily
practice of magical methods.
9. I may go so far as to say that just before I began Yoga
seriously, I had almost invented a Yogic method of practising
Magick in the stress of circumstances. I had been accustomed
to work with full magical apparatus in an admirably devised temple
of my own. Now I found myself on shipboard, or in some obscure
bedroom of Mexico City, or camped beside my horse among the sugar
canes in lonely tropical valleys, or couched with my rucksack
for all pillow on bare volcanic heights. I had to replace my
magical apparatus. I would take the table by my bed, or stones
roughly piled, for my altar. My candle or my Alpine Lantern was
my light. My ice-axe for the wand, my drinking flask for the
chalice, my machete for the sword, and a chapati or a sachet of
salt for the pantacle of art! Habit soon familiarised these rough
and ready succedanea. But I suspect that it may have been the
isolation and the physical hardship itself that helped, that more
and more my magical operation became implicit in my own body and
mind, when a few months later I found myself performing in full
operations involving the Formula of the Neophyte (for which see
my treatise 'Magick') without any external apparatus at all.
10. A pox on all these formalistic Aryan sages! Unless one
wants to be very pedantic, it is rather absurd to contend that
this form of ritual forced upon me, first by external and next
by internal circumstances, was anything else but a new form of
Asana, Pranayama, Mantra-Yoga, and Pratyahara in something very
near perfection; and it is therefore not surprising that the Magical
exaltation resulting from such ceremonies was in all essential
respects the equivalent of Samyama.
On the other hand, the Yoga training was an admirable aid
to that final concentration of the Will which operates the magical
ecstasy.
11. This then is reality: direct experience. How does it
differ from the commonplace every-day experience of sensory impressions
which are so readily shaken by the first breath of the wind of
intellectual analysis?
Well, to answer first of all in a common-sense way, the difference
is simply that the impression is deeper, is less to be shaken.
Men of sense and education are always ready to admit that they
may have been mistaken in the quality of their observation of
any phenomenon, and men a little more advanced are almost certain
to attain to a placid kind of speculation as to whether the objects
of sense are not mere shadows on a screen.
I take off my glasses. Now I cannot read my manuscript.
I had two sets of lenses, one natural, one artificial. If I had
been looking through a telescope of the old pattern I should have
had three sets of lenses, two artificial. If I go and put on
somebody else's glasses I shall get another kind of blur. As
the lenses of my eyes change in the course of my life, what my
sight tells me is different. The point is that we are quite unable
to judge what is the truth of the vision. Why then do I put on
my glasses to read? Only because the particular type of illusion
produced by wearing them is one which enables me to interpret
a prearranged system of hieroglyphics in a particular sense
which I happen to imagine I want. It tells me nothing whatever
about the object of my vision-what I call the paper and the ink.
Which is the dream? The clear legible type or the indecipherable
blur?
12. But in any case any man who is sane at all does make a
distinction between the experience of daily life and the experience
of dream. It is true that sometimes dreams are so vivid, and
their character so persistently uniform that men are actully deceived
into believing that places they have seen in dreams repeatedly
are places that they have known in a waking life. But they are
quite capable of criticising this illusion by memory, and they
admit the deception. Well, in the same way the phenomena of high
Magick and Samadhi have an authenticity, and confer an interior
certainty, which is to the experience of waking life as that is
to a dream.
But, apart from all this, experience is experience; and the
real guarantee that we have of the attainment of reality is its
rank in the hierarchy of the mind.
13. Let us ask ourselves for a moment what is the characteristic
of dream impressions as judged by the waking mind. Some dreams
are so powerful that they convince us, even when awake, of their
reality. Why then do we criticise and dismiss them? Because
their contents are incoherent, because the order of nature to
which they belong does not properly conform with the kind of experience
which does hang together-after a fashion. Why do we criticise
the reality of waking experience? On precisely similar grounds.
Because in certain respects it fails to conform with our deep
instinctive consciousness of the structure of the mind. Tendency!
We happen to be that kind of animal.
14. The result is that we accept waking experience for what
it is within certain limits. At least we do so to this extent,
that we base our action upon the belief that, even if it is not
philosophically real, it is real enough to base a course of action
upon it.
What is the ultimate practical test of conviction? Just this,
that it is our standard of conduct. I put on these glasses in
order to read. I am quite certain that the blurred surface will
become clear when I do so. Of course, I may be wrong. I may
have picked up some other body's glasses by mistake. I might
go blind before I could get them into position. Even such confidence
has limits; but it is a real confidence, and this is the explanation
of why we go ahead with the business of life. When we think it
over, we know that there are all sorts of snags, that it is impossible
to formulate any proposition which is philosophically unassailable,
or even one which is so from a practical standpoint. We admit
to ourselves that there are all sorts of snags; but we take our
chance of that, and go ahead in the general principles inculcated
by our experience of nature. It is, of course, quite easy to
prove that experience is impossible. To begin with, our consciousness
of any phenomenon is never the thing itself, but only a hieroglyphic
symbol of it.
Our position is rather that of a man with a temperamental
motor-car; he has a vague theory that it ought to go, on general
principles; but he is not quite sure how it will perform in any
given circumstances. Now the experience of Magick and Yoga is
quite above all this. The possibility of criticising the other
types of experience is based upon the possibility of expressing
our impressions in adequate terms; and this is not at all the
case with the results of Magick and Yoga. As we have already
seen, every attempt at expression in ordinary language is futile.
Where the hero of the adventure is tied up with a religious theory,
we get the vapid and unctuous bilgewater of people like St. John
of the Cross. All Christian Mystics are tarred with the same
brush. Their abominable religion compels them to every kind of
sentimentality; and the theory of original sin vitiates their
whole position, because instead of the noble and inspiring Trance
of Sorrow they have nothing but the miserable, cowardly, and selfish
sense of guilt to urge them to undertake the Work.
15. I think we may dismiss altogether from our minds every
claim to experience made by any Christian of whatever breed of
spiritual virus as a mere morbid reflection, the apish imitation
of the true ecstasies and trances. All expressions of the real
thing must partake of the character of that thing, and therefore
only that language is permissible which is itself released from
the canon of ordinary speech, exactly as the trance is unfettered
by the laws of ordinary consciousness. In other words, the only
proper translation is in poetry, art and music.
16. If you examine the highest poetry in the light of common
sense, you can only say that it is rubbish; and in actual fact
you cannot so examine it at all, because there is something in
poetry which is not in the words themselves, which is not in the
images suggested by the words 'O windy star blown sideways up
the sky!' True poetry is itself a magic spell which is a key to
the ineffable.
With music this thesis is so obvious as hardly to need stating.
Music has no expressed intellectual content whatever, and the
sole test of music is its power to exalt the soul. It is then
evident that the composer is himself attempting to express in
sensible form some such sublimities as are attained by those who
practise Magick and Yoga as they should.
17. The same is true of plastic art, but evidently in much
less degree; and all those who really know and love art are well
aware that classical painting and sculpture are rarely capable
of producing these transcendent orgasms of ecstasy, as in the
case of the higher arts. One is bound to the impressions of the
eye; one is drawn back to the contemplation of a static object.
And this fact has been so well understood in modern times by
painters that they have endeavoured to create an art within an
art; and this is the true explanation of such movements as 'surrealisme.'
I want to impress upon you that the artist is in truth a very
much superior being to the Yogi or the Magician. He can reply
as St. Paul replied to the centurion who boasted of his Roman
citizenship 'With a great sum obtained I this freedom'; and Paul,
fingering the Old School Tie, sneered: 'But I was free born.'
18. It is not for us here to enquire as to how it should happen
that certain human beings possess from birth this right of intimacy
with the highest reality, but Blavatsky was of this same opinion
that the natural gift marks the acquisition of the rank in the
spiritual hierarchy to which the student of Magick and Yoga aspires.
He is, so to speak, an artist in the making; and it is perhaps
not likely that his gifts will have become sufficiently automatic
in his present incarntion to produce the fruits of his attainment.
Yet, undoubtedly, there have been such cases, and that within
my own experience.
19. I could quote you the case of a man-a very inferior and
wishy-washy poet-who undertook for a time very strenuously the
prescribed magical practices. He was very fortunate, and attained
admirable results. No sooner had he done so that his poetry itself
became flooded with supernal light and energy. He produced masterpieces.
And then he gave up his Magick because the task of further progress
appalled him. The result was that his poetry fell completely
away to the standard of wet blotting paper.
20. Let me tell you also of one man almost illiterate, a
Lancashire man who had worked in a mill from the age of nine years.
He had studied for years with the Toshophists with no results.
Then he corresponded with me for some time; he had still no results.
He came to stay with me in Sicily. One day as we went down to
bathe we stood for a moment on the brink of the cliff which led
down to the little rocky cove with its beach of marvellous smooth
sand.
I said something quite casually-I have never been able to remember
what it was-nor could he ever remember-but he suddenly dashed
down the steep little path like a mountain goat, threw off his
cloak and plunged into the sea. When he came back, his very body
had become luminous. I saw that he needed to be alone for a week
to complete his experience, so I fixed him up in an Alpine tent
in a quiet dell under broad-spreading trees at the edge of a stream.
From time to time he sent me his magical record, vision after
vision of amazing depth and splendour. I was so gratified with
his attainment that I showed these records to a distinguished
literary critic who was staying with me at the time. A couple
of hours later, when I returned to the Abbey, he burst out upon
me a flame of excitement. 'Do you know what this is?' he cried.
I answered casually that it was a lot of very good visions.
'Bother your visions,' he exclaimed, 'didn't you notice the style?
It's pure John Bunyan!' It was.
21. But all this is neither here nor there. There is only
one thing for anybody to do on a path, and that is to make sure
of the next step. And the fact which we all have to comfort us
is this: that all human beings have capacities for attainment,
each according to his or her present position.
For instance, with regard to the power of vision on the astral
plane, I have been privileged to train many hundreds of people
in the course of my life, and only about a dozen of them were
incapable of success. In one case this was because the man had
already got beyond all such preliminary exercise; his mind immediately
took on the formless condition which transcends all images, all
thought. Other failures were stupid people who were incapable
of making an experiment of any sort. They were a mass of intellectual
pride and prejudice, and I sent them away with an injunction
to go to Jane Austen. But the ordinary man and woman get on very
well, and by this I do not mean only the educated. It is, in
fact, notorious that, among many of the primitive races of mankind,
strange powers of all kinds develop with amazing florescence.
22. The question for each one of us is then: first of all,
to acertain our present positions; secondly, to determine our
proper directions; and, thirdly, to govern ourselves accordingly.
The question for me is also to describe a method of procedure
which will be sufficiently elastic to be useful to every human
being. I have tried to do this by combining the two paths of
Magick and Yoga. If we perform the preliminary practices, each
according to his capacity, the result will surely be the acquisition
of a certain technique. And this will become much easier as we
advance, especially if we bear it well in mind not to attempt
to discriminate between the two methods as if they were opposing
schools, but to use the one to help out the other in an emergency.
23. Of course, nobody understands better than I do that, although
nobody can do your work for you, it is possible to make use --
to a certain very limited extent-of other people's experience,
and the Great Order which I have the honour to serve has appointed
what I think you will agree is a very satisfactory and practical
curriculum.
24. You are expected to spend three months at least on the
study of some of the classics on the subject. The chief object
of this is not to instruct you, but to familiarise you with the
ground work, and in particular to prevent you getting the idea
that there is any right or wrong in matters of opinion. You pass
an examination intended to make sure that your mind is well grounded
in this matter, and you become a Probationer. Your reading will
have given you some indication as to the sort of thing you are
likely to be good at, and you select such practices as seem to
you to promise well. You go ahead with these, and keep a careful
record of what you do, and what results occur. After eleven months
you submit a record to your superior; it is his duty to put you
right where you have gone wrong, and particularly to encourage
you where you think you have failed.
25. I say this because one of the most frequent troubles is
that people who are doing excellent work throw it up because they
find that Nature is not what they thought it was going to be.
But this is the best test of the reality of any experience.
All those which conform with your idea, which flatter you, are
likely to be illusions. So you become a Neophyte; and attack
the Task of a Zelator.
There are further grades in this system, but the general principles
are always the same-the principles of scientific study and research.
26. We end where we began. 'The wheel has come full circle.'
We are to use the experience of the past to determine the experience
of the future, and as that experience increases in quantity it
also improves in quality. And the Path is sure. And the End
is sure. For the End is the Path.
Love is the law, love under will.
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