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LIBER ALEPH VEL CXI
THE BOOK OF WISDOM OR FOLLY
in the Form of an Epistle of
666
THE GREAT WILD BEAST
to his Son 777
being
THE EQUINOX VOLUME III No. vi
by
THE MASTER THERION
(Aleister Crowley)
An LVII Sol in O° O' O"
September 23 1961 e.v. 6:19 a.m.
A.·. A.·.
Publication in Class B.
Imprimatur
N. Fra: A.·. A.·.
O.M. 7 = 4 R.R. et A.C.
Φ 6 = 5 Imperator
In Hastings
(with little left but pipe and wit)
ENGLISH LIST OF CHAPTERS
- APOLOGIA
- ON THE QABALISTIC ART
- ON CORRECTING ONE'S LIFE
- FABLES OF LOVE
- OF LOVE IN HISTORY
- A FINAL THESIS ON LOVE
- ON PERCEIVING ONE'S OWN NATURE
- MORE ON THE WAY OF NATURE
- HOW ONE SHOULD CONSIDER ONE'S NATURE
- ON DREAMS (ACCIDENTAL)
- ON DREAMS (NATURAL)
- ON DREAMS (CLOTHED WITH HORROR)
- ON DREAMS (CONTINUATION)
- ON DREAMS (THE KEY)
- ON ASTRAL TRAVEL
- ON THELEMIC CULT
- ON THE KEY OF DREAMS
- ON THE SLEEP OF LIGHT
- ON POISONS
- ON THE MOTION OF LIFE
- ON DISEASES OF THE BLOOD
- ON THE WAY OF LOVE
- ON THE MYSTICAL MARRIAGE
- ON THE JOY OF SORROWS
- ON THE ULTIMATE WILL
- ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THINGS
- ON THE HIDDEN WILL
- ON THE SUPREME FORMULA
- ON THE WAY OF INERTIA
- ON THE WAY OP FREEDOM
- ON THE LAW OF MOTION
- ON THE LAWS AGAINST MOTION
- ON THE COMMON NEED
- ON THE FREEDOM OF THE BODY
- ON THE FREEDOM OF THE MIND
- ON THE FREEDOM OP CHILDREN
- ON CULTIVATING STRENGTH THROUGH DISCWLINE
- ON THE ORDER OF THINGS
- ON THE FUNDAMENTALS OF THE STATE
- ON THE WILL OF CHILDREN
- ON HOW TO TEACH
- ON LEARNING TO KNOW THE WILL OF A CHILD
- ON THE RED GOLD
- ON WISDOM IN SEXUAL AFFAIRS
- ON THE RIGHT GAIN OF KNOWLEDGE
- ON THE VIRTUE OF DARING
- ON THE ART OF TRAINING THE MIND (MATHEMATICS)
- CONTINUED (THE CLASSICS)
- CONTINUED ((SCIENCE)
- HOW MAGICKAL LAW WORKS
- ON THE MECHANISM OF MAGICK
- ON THE HARMONY OF SOUL WITH BODY
- ON THE MYSTERY OF CECONOMY
- ON THE ALCHEMICAL ART
- ON THE MOST SUBTLE SECRET
- ON THE MEDIUM OF THE ART
- ON THE NECESSITY OF THE WILL
- ON THE UNIVERSAL COMEDY WHICH IS CALLED PAN
- ON THE BLINDNESS OF MEN
- AN ALLEGORY ON CHESS
ON THE TRUTH OF FALSEHOOD
ON THE RELATIONS OF ILLUSIONS
ON PRUDENCE
ON THE3?.ATIONALITY OF THE LIFE OF THE MAGICIAN
ON THE PURE HEART
ON THE CONFORMITY OF THE MAGICIAN
ON THE POETS
ON THE MAGI OF THE A.. A.. IN WHOM THE TAKES FLESH
ON THE MAGI OF OLD; FIRST. OF LAO-TZE 7O. ON GAUTAMA
ON SRI KRISHNA AND DIONYSUS
ON TAHUTI
ON THAT EGYPTIAN MAGUS WHOM THE JEWS MOSHEH
ON THE ARABIAN MAGUS MOHAMMED
ON THE GREAT BEAST HIMSELF, THE LOGOS OF AEON, WHOSE WORD IS THELEMA
A COMMAND TO HIS SON
WHEREFORE HE BEGAT HIS SON: SO THAT THERE FREEDOM
ON HIS FRAILTY
ON THE HAND THAT UPHOLDS THE MAGUS 8O. ON HIS SIN
ON HIS VICTORY THROUGH THE NAME BABALON
ON THE FORBIDDEN SECRET
ON THE SECRET THROUGH WHICH ANY SPIRIT IS R- CEIVED IN THE BODY
ON THE QABALISTIC KEY OF THIS ART
ON THE MASS OF THE HOLY GHOST
ON THE COMPLETE FORMULA
QABALISTIC CONSIDERATIONS ON THIS FORMULA
ON CERTAIN ARTS MAGICK
ON THE GREAT WORK
9O ON THE STEPS TO THE GREAT WORK
91 ON THE FORMULA OF THE MOON
ON TAKING THE EAGLE
ON CHEMICAL AGENTS ACCORDING TO THE FOUR RI MENTS
ON THE VIRTUE OF EXPERIENCE IN THIS ART
ON THE TRUE SACRAMENT
ON DIRECTING DISCIPLES
ON CERTAIN DISEASES OF DISCIPLES
ON WATCHING FOR FAULTS IN THE HOUSE
ON THE BODY, THAT IS THE SHADOW OF MAN 1OO. ON SIRENS
1O1. ON A CERTAIN WOMAN
1O2. ON HER VIRTUE
1O3. ON SEEKING FOR CERTAIN TYPES OF ORACLE
1O4. ON THE BLACK BROTHERS, SONS OF INIQUITY
1O5. ON THE VIRTUE OF SURGERY
1O6. ON THE FOUR LESSER OPERATIONS OF THE MICROCOSMIC STAR
1O7. ON THE FOUR MAJOR OPERATIONS OF THE MICROCOSMIC STAR
1O8. ON THE MACROCOSMIC STAR
1O9. ON HIS WOMAN OLUN AND ON THE ECSTASY THAT SURPASSES ALL
11O. ON THE NAME OLUN
111.
ON GREAT MEN, FAMOUS IN LOVE
112.
ON CHASTITY
113.
ON THE CEREMONY OF THE EQUINOX
114.
ON THE LIG4HT OF THE STARS
115.
ON SONG
116.
ON HUMAN STUPIDITY
117.
ON HIS STRUGGLE
118.
ON THE NEED FOR DECLARING THE WORD
119.
ON THE MYSTERY OF THE UNIVERSAL SACRAMENT
12O.
ON THE RIGHTNESS OF THINGS
121.
ON THE BLESSED VIRGIN
122.
ON THE SPORT OF HIS MISTRESS
123.
ON A DANGER IN THE SPORTS OF' LOVE
124.
ON THE UNCONSCIOUS, OR LIBIDO
125.
ON THE ORGANIZATION OF COMMUNITIES
126.
ON THE METHOD OF SCIENCE
127.
ON MONSTERS
128.
ON THE HIDDEN PALACE OF WISDOM
129.
ON THE DEFECTS OF THE HIDDEN WILL
13O.
ON REASON, THE MINISTER OF THE WILL
131.
ON THE WAY OF' WISDOM
132.
ON REASON, SOURCE OF' MADNESS WHEN NOT UNDER WILL
133.
ON TRUTH, WHICH MAY NOT BE TOLD TO A WOMAN
134.
ON THE NATURE OF WOMAN
135.
ON THE TWO REWARDS OF' THE PATH
136.
ON THE ECSTASY OF SAMADHI AND HOW IT DIFFERS FROM OTHERS
137.
ON THE ART OF LOVE AND THE PLEASURES OF THE MYSTIC
138.
ON THE HIGHEST REWARD, TRUE WISDOM AND PERFECT HAPPINESS
139.
ON THE HELL OF THE SLAVES
14O.
A RHAPSODY TO OUR LADY
141.
A RHAPSODY TO HIS STAR
142.
ON THE HARMONY OF WILL AND FATE
143.
A PARENTHESIS ON A CERTAIN VIRGIN
144.
ON CONSTANCY IN LOVE, TO A WHITE RAVEN
145.
ON THE MYSTERY OF EVIL
146.
ON THE VIRTUE OF TOLERANCE
147.
ON THE FORMULA OF THE DYING GODS
148.
ON MALIGN FOOLS
149.
AN APOLOGY FOR HIS WRITINGS
15O.
IN PRAISE OF THE LAW OF THELEMA
151.
ON THE SPHINX OF THE EGYPTIANS
152.
ON THE NATURE OF THE SPHINX
153.
ON THE BULL
154.
ON THE LION
155.
FURTHER ON THE LION
156.
ON THE MAN
157.
ON THE DRAGON, WHICH IS EAGLE, SERPENT AND SCORPION
158.
ON THE FOUR VIRTUES OF THE SPHINX
159.
ON THE BALANCE IN WHICH THE FOUR VIRTUES GATHER POWER
16O.
ON THE PYRAMID
161.
CONCERNING SILENCE
162.
ON THE NATURE OF OUR SILENCE
163.
ON THE CORRECT FORMULA OF THE DRAGON
164.
ON HIS HOROSCOPE
165.
ON HIS WORK
166.
ON THE BLACK BROTHERS
ON THE ALCHEMICAL ART
ON WOMAN. WHO IS FIT FOR A TEST
ON THE FORMULA OF WOMAN 17O. HIS MASTER'S WORDS ON WOMAN
ON THE PROPER CONDUCT OF WOMAN
FURTHER CONCERNING THIS
ON THE KEYS OF DEATH AND THE DEVIL, ARCANA OF THE TAROT OF THE R. C. BROTHERHOOD
FURTHER ON THESE PATHS
ON THE EYE OF HOOR
ON HIS INITIATION
ON THE MOST HOLY GRASS OF THE ARABS
ON CERTAIN MYSTERIES THAT I HAVE SEEN
ON A CERTAIN METHOD OF MEDITATION 18O. FURTHER ON THIS
FURTHER ON THIS
CONCLUSION ON THIS METHOD OF HOLINESS
ON THE ONE WAY OF THE SUN
ON THE PRUDENCE OF THE A.. A..
FURTHER ON THIS PATH
OF PRUDENCE IN THE ART OF TEACHING
ON THE MIND ENEMY OF THE SOUL
ON DIFFERENT WORKS OF THE ILLUMINATORS
FURTHER WORDS ON THIS
19O. ON PERFECT PEACE WITH LIGHT
ON PERFECT PEACE
ON DEATH
ON THE ESCHATOLOGY OF THE R. C. ADEPTS
ON THE SUPREME MARRIAGE
ON A CERTAIN PROBLEM IN THE ART OF PLEASURE
AN UNRAVELLING OF THIS KNOT
ON THE COMEDY WHICH IS CALLED PAN
ON THE GAME OF LOVE
ON THE PLEASURE OF DEBAUCHERY
2OO. ON THE BLINDNESS OF THE ANTIENT PHILOSOPHERS
2O1. ON THE MANICHAEAN HERESY
2O2. ON THE TRUTH OF THINGS
2O3. ON MY APHORISM: ALL ARE
2O4. ON THE REASON FOR WRITING THIS LETTER
2O5. ON THE NATURE OF THIS LETTER
2O6. HOW I WROTE THIS LETTER
2O7. ON WISDOM AND FOLLY
2O8. ON THE LAST ORACLE
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.
1.
APOLOGIA (Apology)
I have begotten thee, o my Son, and that strangely, as thou knowest,
upon the Scarlet Woman called Hilarion, as it was mysteriously
foretold unto me in The Book of the Law. Now therefore that thou art
come to the Age of Understanding, do thou give ear unto my Wisdom,
for that therein lieth a simple and direct Way for every Man that he
may attain to the End.
Firstly, then, I would have thee to know that Spiritual Experience
and Perfection have no necessary connection with Advancement in our
Holy Order. But for each Man is a Path: there is a Constant, and
there is a Variable. Seek ever therefore in thy Work of the
Promulgation of the Law to discover in each Man his own true Nature,
that he may in due Season accomplish it not only for himself, but
for all who are bound unto him. There are very many for whom in
their present Incarnations this Great Work may be impossible; since
their appointed Work may be in Satisfaction of some Magical Debt, or
in Adjustment of some Balance, or in Fulfillment of some Defect. As
is written: Suum Cuique.
Now because thou art the Child of my Bowels, I yearn greatly towards
thee, o my Son, and I strive strongly with my Spirit that by my
Wisdom I may make plain thy Way before thee; and thus in many
Chapters will I write for thee those things that may profit thee.
Sis benedictus.
2.
DE ARTE KABBALISTICA. (On the Qabalistic Art)
Do thou study most constantly, my Son, in the Art of the Holy
Qabalah. Know that herein the Relations between Numbers, though they
be mighty in Power and prodigal of Knowledge, are but lesser Things.
For the Work is to reduce all other conceptions to these of Number,
because thus thou wilt lay bare the very Structure of thy Mind,
whose rule is Necessity rather than Prejudice. Not until the
Universe is thus laid naked before thee canst thou truly anatomize
it. The Tendencies of thy Mind lie deeper far than any Thought, for
they are the Conditions and the Laws of Thought; and it is these
that thou must bring to Naught.
This Way is most sure; most sacred; and the Enemies thereof most
awful, most sublime. It is for the Great Souls to enter on this
Rigour and Austerity. To them the Gods themselves do Homage; for it
is the Way of Utmost Purity.
3.
DE VITA CORRIGENDA. (On Correcting One’s Life)
Know, son, that the true Principle of Self-Control is Liberty. For
we are born into a World which is in Bondage to Ideals; to them we
are perforce fitted, even as his Enemies to the Bed of Procrustes.
Each of us, as he grows, learns Repression of himself and his true
Will. "It is a lie, this folly against self.": these Words are
written in The Book of the Law. So therefore these Passions in
ourselves which we understand to be Hindrances are not part of our
True Will, but diseased Appetites, manifest in us through false
early Training. Thus the Tabus of savage Tribes in such matter as
Love constrain that True Love which is born in us; and by this
Constraint come ills of Body and Mind. Either the Force of
Repression carries it, and creates Neuroses and Insanities; or the
Revolt against that Force, breaking forth with Violence, involves
Excesses and Extravagances. All these Things are Disorders, and
against Nature. Now then learn of me the testimony of History and
literature as a great Scroll of Learning. But the Vellum of the
Scroll is of Man's Skin, and its Ink of his Heart's Blood.
4. LEGENDA DE AMORE. (Fables of Love)
The Fault, that is Fatality, in Love, as in every other Form of
Will, is Impurity. It is not the Spontaneity thereof which worketh
Woe, but some Repression in the Environment.
In the Fable of Adam and Eve is this great Lesson taught by the
Masters of the Holy Qabalah. For Love were to them the eternal Eden,
save for the Repression signified by the Tree of the Knowledge of
Good and Evil. Thus their Nature of Love was perfect; it was their
Fall from that Innocence which drove them from the Garden.
In the Love of Romeo and Juliet was no Flaw; but family Feud, which
imported nothing to that Love, was its Bane; and the Rashness and
Violence of their Revolt against that Repression, slew them.
In the pure Outrush of Love in Desdemona for Othello was no Flaw;
but his Love was marred by his consciousness of his Age and his
Race, of the Prejudices of his Fellows and of his own Experience of
Woman-Frailty.
5. GESTA DE AMORE. (Of Love in History)
Now as Literature overfloweth with the Murders of Love, so also
doeth History, and the Lesson is ever the same.
Thus the Loves of Abelard and of Heloise were destroyed by the
System of Repression in which they chanced to move.
Thus Beatrice was robbed of Dante by social Artificialities; and
Paolo slain on account of Things external to his Love of Francesca.
Then, per contra, Martin Luther, being a Giant of Will, and also the
Eighth Henry of England, as a mighty King, bent them to overturn the
whole World that they might have satisfaction of their Loves.
And who shall follow them? For even now we find great Churchmen,
Statesmen, Princes, Dramamakers, and many lesser Men, overwhelmed
utterly and ruined by the conflict between their Passions and the
Society about them. Wherein which Party errs is no matter of Moment
for our Thought; but the Existence of the War is Evidence of Wrong
done to Nature.
6. ULTIMA THESIS DE AMORE. (A Final Thesis on Love)
Therefore, o my Son, be thou wary, not bowing before the false Idols
and ideals, yet not flaming forth in Fury against them, unless that
be thy Will.
But in this Matter be prudent and be silent, discerning subtly and
with acumen the nature of the Will within thee; so that thou mistake
not Fear for Chastity, or Anger for Courage. And since the fetters
are old and heavy, and thy Limbs withered and distorted by reason of
their Compulsion, do thou, having broken them, walk gently for a
little while, until the ancient Elasticity return, so that thou
mayst walk, run, and leap naturally and with Rejoicing.
Also, since these Fetters are as a Bond almost universal, be instant
to declare the Law of Liberty, and the full Knowledge of all Truth
that appertaineth to this Matter; for if in this only thou overcome,
then shall all Earth be free, taking its Pleasure in Sunlight
without Fear or Phrenzy. Amen.
7. DE NATURA SUA PERCIPIENDA. (On Perceiving One’s Own Nature)
Understand, o my Son, in thy Youth, these Words which some wise One,
now nameless, spake of old; except ye become as little Children ye
shall in no wise enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. This is to say
that thou must first comprehend thine original Nature in every
Point, before thou wast forced to bow before the Gods of Wood and
Stone that Men have made, not comprehending the Law of Change, and
of Evolution Through Variation, and the independent Value of every
living Soul.
Learn this also, that even the Will to the Great Work may be
misunderstood of Men; for this Work must proceed naturally and
without Overstress, as all true Works. Right also is that Word that
the Kingdom of Heaven suffereth Violence, and the violent take it by
Force. But except thou be violent by Virtue of thy true Nature, how
shalt thou take it? Be not as the Ass in the Lion's Skin; but if
thou be born Ass, bear patiently thy Burdens, and enjoy thy
Thistles; for an Ass also, as in the Fables of Apuleius and
Matthias, may come to Glory in the Path of his own Virtue.
8. ALTERA DE VIA
NATURAE. (More on the Way of Nature)
Sayest thou (methinks) that here is a great Riddle, since by Reason
of much Repression thou hast lost the Knowledge of thine original
Nature?
My son, this is not so; for by a peculiar Ordinance of Heaven, and a
Disposition occult within his Mind, is every Man protected from this
Loss of his own Soul, until and unless he be by Choronzon
disintegrated and dispersed beyond power of Will to repair; as when
the Conflict within him, rending and burning, hath made his Mind
utterly desert, and his Soul Madness.
Give Ear, give Ear attentively; the Will is not lost; though it be
buried beneath a life-old Midden of Repressions, for it persisteth
vital within thee (is it not the true Motion of thine inmost Being?)
and for all thy conscious Striving cometh forth by Night and by
Stealth in Dream and Phantasy. Now is it naked and brilliant, now
clothed in rich Robes of Symbol and Hieroglyph; but always
travelleth it with thee upon thy Path, ready to acquaint thee with
thy true Nature, if thou attend unto its Word, its Gesture, or its
Show of Imagery.
9. QUO MODO NATURA SUA EST LEGENDA. (How One Should Consider One’s Nature)
Deem not therefore that thy lightest Fancy is witless: it is a Word
to thee, a Prophecy, a Sign or Signal from thy Lord. Thy most
unconscious Acts are Keys to the Treasure-Chamber of thine own
Palace, which is the House of the Holy Ghost. Consider well thy
conscious Thoughts and Acts, for they are under the Dominion of thy
Will, and moved in Accord with the Operation of thy Reason; this
indeed is a necessary work, enabling to comprehend in what manner
thou mayst adjust thyself to thine Environment. Yet is this
Adaptation but Defence for the most Part, or at the best Subterfuge
and Stratagem in the Tactics of thy Life, with but an accidental and
subordinate Relation to thy true Will, whereof by Consciousness and
by Reason thou mayst be ignorant, unless by Fortune great and rare
thou be already harmonized in thyself, the Outer with the Inner,
which Grace is not common among Men, and is the Reward of previous
Attainment.
Neglect not simple Introspections, therefore; but give yet greater
Heed unto those Dreams and Phantasies, those Gestures and Manners
unconscious, and of undiscovered Cause, which betoken thee.
10. DE SOMNIIS. (On Dreams) CAUSA PER ACCIDENS. (Accidental)
As all diseases have two conjunct causes, one immediate, external
and exciting, the other constitutional, internal, and predisposing,
so it is with Dreams, which are Dis-Eases, or unbalanced States of
Consciousness, Disturbers of Sleep as Thoughts are of Life.
This exciting Cause is commonly of two kinds: videlicet, imprimis,
the physical Condition of the Sleeper, as a Dream of Water caused by
a shower without, or a Dream of Strangulation caused
by a Dyspnoea, or a Dream of Lust caused by the seminal Congestions
of an unclean Life, or a Dream of falling or flying caused by some
unstable Equilibrium of Body.
Secundo, the psychic condition of the Sleeper, the Dream being
determined by recent Events in his Life, usually those of the Day
previous, and especially such Events as have caused Excitement of
Anxiety, the more so if they be unfinished or unfulfilled.
But this exciting Cause is of a superficial Nature, as it were a
Cloke or a Mask; and thus it but lendeth Aspect to the other Cause,
which lieth in the Nature of the Sleeper himself.
11.
DE SOMNIIS. CAUSA PER NATURAM. (Natural)
The deep, constitutional, or predisposing Cause of Dreams lieth
within the Jurisdiction of the Will itself. For that Will, being
alway present, albeit (it may be) latent, discovereth himself when
no longer inhibited by that conscious Control which is determined by
Environment, and therefore of times contrary to himself. This being
so, the Will declareth himself, as it were in a Pageant, and showeth
himself thus apparelled, unto the Sleeper, for a Warning or
Admonition. Every Dream, or Pageant of Fancy, is therefore a Shew of
Will; and Will being no more prevented by Environment or by
Consciousness, cometh as a Conqueror. Yet even so he must come for
the most Part throned upon the Chariot of the exciting Cause of the
Dream, and therefore is his Appearance symbolic, like a Writing in
Cipher, or like a Fable, or like a Riddle in Pictures. But alway
does he triumph and fulfil himself therein, for the Dream is a
natural Compensation in the inner World for any Failure of
Achievement in the outer.
DE SOMNIIS.VESTIMENTA HORRORIS. (Clothed with Horror)
Now then if in a Dream the Will be always triumphant, how cometh it
that a Man may be ridden of the Nightmare? And of this the true
Explanation is that in such a case the Will is in Danger, having
been attacked and wounded or corrupted by the Violence of some
Repression. Thus the Consciousness of the Will is directed to the
sore Spot, as in Pain, and seeketh comfort in an Externalization, or
Shew, of that Antagonism. And because the Will is sacred, such
dreams excite an Ecstasy or Phrenzy of Horror, Fear or Disgust. Thus
the true Will of Oedipus was toward the bed of Jocasta, but the
Tabu, strong both by Inheritance and by Environment, was so attached
to that Will that his Dream concerning his Destiny was a Dream of
Fear and of Abhorrence, his Fulfilment thereof (even in Ignorance) a
spell to stir up all the subconscious Forces of all the People about
him, and his Realization of the Act a madness potent to drive him to
self-inflicted Blindness and fury-haunted Exile.
DE SOMNIIS. SEQUENTIA. (Continuation)
Know firmly, o my son, that the true Will cannot err; for this is
thine appointed course in Heaven, in whose order is Perfection.
A Dream of Horror is therefore the most serious of all Warnings; for
it signifieth that thy Will, which is Thy Self in respect of its
Motion, is in Affliction and Danger. Thus thou must instantly seek
out the Cause of that subconscious Conflict, and destroy thine Enemy
utterly by bringing thy conscious Vigour as an Ally to that true
Will. If then there be a Traitor in the Consciousness, how much the
more is it necessary for thee to arise and extirpate him before he
wholly infect thee with the divided Purpose which is the first
Breach in that Fortress of the Soul whose Fall should bring it to
the shapeless Ruin whose Name is Choronzon!
DE SOMNIIS. CLAVICULA. (The Key)
The Dream delightful is then a Pageant of the Fulfilment of the true
Will, and the Nightmare a symbolic Battle between it and its
Assailants in thyself. But there can be only one true Will, even as
there can be only one proper Motion in any Body, no matter of how
many Forces that Motion be the Resultant. Seek therefore this Will,
and conjoin with it thy conscious Self; for this is that which is
written; "Thou hast no right but to do thy Will. Do that, and no
other shall say nay." Thou seest, o my Son, that all conscious
Opposition to thy Will, whether in Ignorance, or by Obstinacy, or
through Fear of others, may in the end endanger even thy true Self,
and bring thy Star into Disaster.
And this is the true Key to Dreams; see that thou be diligent in its
Use, and unlock therewith the secret Chambers of thine Heart.
DE VIA PER EMPYRAEUM. (On Astral Travel)
Concerning thy Travellings in thy Body of Light, or Astral journeys
and Visions so-called, do thou lay this Wisdom to thy Heart, o my
Son, that in this Practice, whether Things Seen and Heard be Truth
and Reality, or whether they be Phantoms in the Mind, abideth this
Supreme Magical Value, namely: Whereas the Direction of such
Journeys is consciously willed, and determined by Reason, and also
unconsciously willed, by the true Self, since without It no
Invocation were possible, we have here a Cooperation of Alliance
between the Inner and the Outer Self, and thus an Accomplishment, at
least partial, of the Great Work.
And therefore is Confusion or Terror in any such Practice an Error
fearful indeed, bringing about Obsession, which is a temporary or
even it may be a permanent Division of the Personality, or Insanity,
and therefore a defeat most fatal and pernicious, a Surrender of the
Soul to Choronzon.
DE CULTU. (On Thelemic Cult)
Now, o my Son, that thou mayst be well guarded against thy ghostly
Enemies, do thou work constantly by the Means prescribed in our Holy
Books.
Neglect never the fourfold Adorations of the Sun in his four
Stations, for thereby thou doest affirm thy Place in Nature and her
Harmonies.
Neglect not the Performance of the Ritual of the Pentagram, and of
the Assumption of the Form of Hoor-pa-Kraat.
Neglect not the daily Miracle of the Mass, either by the Rite of the
Gnostic Catholic Church, or that of the Phoenix.
Neglect not the Performance of the Mass of the Holy Ghost, as Nature
herself prompteth thee.
Travel also much in the Empyrean in the Body of Light, seeking ever
Abodes more fiery and lucid.
Finally, exercise constantly the Eight Limbs of Yoga. And so shalt
thou come to the End.
DE CLAVICULA SOMNIORUM. (On the Key of Dreams)
And now concerning Meditation let me disclose unto thee more fully
the Mystery of the Key of Dreams and Phantasies.
Learn first that as the Thought of the Mind standeth before the Soul
and hindereth its Manifestation in consciousness, so also the gross
physical Will is the Creator of the Dreams of common Men, and as in
Meditation thou doest destroy every Thought by mating it with its
Opposite, so must thou cleanse thyself by a full and perfect
Satisfaction of that bodily will in the Way of Chastity and Holiness
which has been revealed unto thee in thy Initiation.
This inner Silence of the Body being attained, it may be that the
true Will may speak in True Dreams; for it is written that He giveth
unto His Beloved in Sleep.
Prepare thyself therefore in this Way, as a good Knight should do.
DE SOMNO LUCIDO. (On the Sleep of Light)
Now know this also that at the End of that secret Way lieth a Garden
wherein is a Rest House prepared for thee.
For to him whose physical Needs of whatever Kind are not truly
satisfied cometh a Lunar or physical Sleep appointed to refresh and
recreate by Cleansing and Repose; but on him that is bodily pure the
Lord bestoweth a Solar or Lucid Sleep, wherein move Images of pure
Light fashioned by the True Will. And this is called by the
Qabalists the Sleep of Shiloam, and of this doeth also Porphyry make
mention, and Cicero, with many other Wise Men of Old Time.
Compare, o my Son, with this Doctrine that which was taught thee in
the Sanctuary of the Gnosis concerning the Death of the Righteous;
and learn moreover that these are but particular Cases of an
Universal Formula.
DE VENENIS. (On Poisons)
My Son, if thou fast awhile, there shall come unto thee a second
State of physiological Being, in which is a delight passive and
equable, without Will, a contentment of Weakness, with a Feeling of
Lightness and of Purity. And this is because the Blood hath
absorbed, in its Need of Nutriment, all foreign Elements. Such also
is the Case with the Mind which hath not fed itself on Thought.
Consider the placid and ruminant Existence of such Persons as read
little, are removed from worldly Struggle by some sufficient
Property of small and unexciting Value, stably invested, and by Age
and Environment are free from Passion. They live, according to their
own Nature, without Desire, and they oppose no Resistance to the
Operations of Time. Such are called Happy, and in their Way of
Vegetable Life it is so; for they are free of any Poison.
DE MOTU VITAE. (On the Motion of Life)
Learn then, o my Son, that all Phenomena are the effect of Conflict,
even as the Universe itself is a Nothing expressed as the Difference
of two Equalities, or, an thou wilt, as the Divorce of Nuit and
Hadit. So therefore every Marriage dissolveth a more material, and
createth a less material Complex; and this is our Way of Live,
rising ever from Ecstasy to Ecstasy. So then all high Violence, that
is to say, all Consciousness, is the spiritual Orgasm of a Passion
between two lower and grosser Opposites. Thus Light and Heat result
from the Marriage of Hydrogen and Oxygen; Love from that of Man and
Woman, Dhyana or Ecstasy from that of the Ego and the non-Ego.
But be thou well grounded in this Thesis corollary, that one or two
such Marriages do but destroy for a Time the Exacerbation of any
Complex; to deracinate such is a Work of long Habit and deep Search
in Darkness for the Germ thereof. But this once accomplished, that
particular Complex is destroyed, or sublimated for ever.
DE MORBIS SANGUINIS. (On Diseases of the Blood)
Now then understand that all Opposition to the Way of Nature
createth Violence. If thine excretory System do its Function not at
its fullest, there come Poisons in the Blood, and the Consciousness
is modified by the conflicts or Marriages between the elements
heterogeneous. Thus if the Liver be not efficient, we have
Melancholy; if the Kidneys, Coma; if the Testes or Ovaries, loss of
Personality itself. Also, an we poison the Blood directly with
Belladonna, we have Delirium vehement and furious; with Hashish,
Visions phantastic and enormous; with Anhalonium, Ecstasy of colour
and what not; with diverse Germs of Disease, Disturbances of
Consciousness varying with the Nature of the Germ. Also with Ether,
we gain the Power of analysing the Consciousness into its Planes;
and so for many others.
But all these are, in our mystical Sense, Poisons; that is, we take
two Things diverse and opposite, binding them together so that they
are compelled to unite; and the Orgasm of each Marriage is an
Ecstasy, the Lower dissolving in the Higher.
DE CURSU AMORIS. (On the Way of Love)
I continue then, o my son, and reiterate that this Formula is
general to all Nature. And thou wilt note that by repeated Marriage
cometh Toleration, so the Ecstasy appeareth no more. Thus his half
grain of Morphia, which first opened his Gates of Heaven, is nothing
worth to the Self- poisoner after a Year of daily Practice. So too
the Lover findeth no more Joy in Union with his Mistress, so soon as
the original Attraction between them is satisfied by repeated
Conjunctions. For this Attraction is an Antagonism; and the greater
this Antinomy, the more fierce the Puissance of the Magnetism, and
the Quality of Energy disengaged by the Coition.
Thus in the Union of Similars, as of Halogens with each other, is no
strong Passion of explosive Force, and the Love between two Persons
of the like Character and Taste is placid and without Transmutation
to higher Planes.
DE NUPTIIS MYSTICIS. (On the Mystical Marriage)
O my Son, how wonderful is the Wisdom of this Law of Love! How vast
are the Oceans of uncharted Joy that lie before the Keel of thy
Ship! Yet know this, that every Opposition is in its Nature named
Sorrow, and the Joy lieth in the Destruction of the Dyad. Therefore,
must thou seek ever those Things which are to thee poisonous, and
that in the highest Degree, and make them thine by Love. That which
repels, that which disgusts, must thou assimilate in this Way of
Wholeness. Yet rest not in the Joy of the Destruction of each
complex in thy Nature, but press on to that ultimate Marriage with
the Universe whose Consummation shall destroy thee utterly, leaving
only that Nothingness which was before the Beginning.
So then the Life of Non-Action is not for thee; the Withdrawal from
Activity is not the Way of the Tao; but rather the Intensification
and making universal every Unit of thine Energy on every Plane.
DE VOLUPTATE POENARUM. (On the Joy of Sorrows)
Go forth, o my Son, o Son of the Sun, rejoicing in thy Strength, as
a Warrior, as a Bridegroom, to take thy Pleasure upon the Earth, and
in every Palace of the Mind, moving ever from the crass to the
subtle, from the coarse to the fine. Conquer every Repulsion in thy
self, subdue every Aversion. Assimilate all Poison, for therein only
is there Profit. Seek constantly therefore to know what is painful
and to cleave thereunto, for by Pain cometh true Pleasure. Those who
avoid Pain physical or mental remain little Men, and there is no
Virtue in them. Yet be thou ware lest thou fall into the Heresy
which maketh Pain, and Self-sacrifice as it were Bribes to corrupt
God, to secure some future Pleasure in an imagined After-life. Nay,
also of the other Part, fear not to destroy thy Complexes, thinking
dreadfully thereby to lose the Power of creating Joy by their
Distinction. Yet in each Marriage be thou bold to affirm the
spiritual Ardour of the Orgasm, fixing it in some Talisman, whether
it be Art, or Magick, or Theurgy.
DE VOLUNTATE ULTIMA. (On the Ultimate Will)
Say not then that this Way is contrary to Nature, and that in
Simplicity of Satisfaction of thy Needs is perfection of thy Path.
For to thee, who hast aspired, it is thy Nature to perform the Great
Work, and this is the final Dissolution of the Cosmos. For though a
Stone seem to lie still on a Mountain Top, and have no care, yet
hath it an hidden Nature, a Task Ineffable and Stupendous; namely,
to force its Way to the Centre of Gravity of the Universe, and also
to burn up its Elements into the final Homogeneity of Matter.
Therefore the Way of Quiet is but an Illusion of Ignorance. Whoever
thou mayst be now, thy Destiny is that which I have declared unto
thee; and thou art most fixed in the true Way when, accepting his
consciously as thy Will, thou gathereth up thy Powers to move thy
Self mightily within it.
DE DIFFERENTIA RERUM. (On the Difference Between Things)
But, o my Son, although thine ultimate Nature be Universal, thine
immediate Nature is Particular. Thy Way to the Centre is not
oriented as that of any other Being, and thine elements are no kin,
but alien, to his. For Shame! Is it not the most transcendent of all
the Wisdoms of this Cosmos, that no two Beings are alike? Lo! This
is the Secret of all Beauty, and maketh Love not only possible, but
necessary, between every Thing and every other Thing. So then, lest
thou in thine Ignorance take the false Way, and divagate, must thou
learn thine own particular and peculiar Nature in its Relation to
all others. For though it be Illusion, it is by the true Analysis of
Falsehoods that we are able to destroy them, just as the Physician
must understand the Disease of his Patient if he is to choose the
fitting Remedy. Now therefore will I make yet more clear unto thee
the Value of thy Dreams and Phantasies and Gestures of thine
unconscious Body and Mind, as Symptoms of thy particular Will, and
show thee how thy mayst come to their Interpretation.
DE VOLUNTATE TACITA. (On the Hidden Will)
All Disturbances, o my Son, are Variations from Equilibrium; and
just as thy conscious Thoughts, Words, and Acts are Effects of the
Displacement of the conscious Will, so is it in the Unconscious. For
the most Part, therefore, all Dreams, Phantasies, and Gestures
represent that Will subliminal; and if the physical Part of that
Will be unsatisfied, its Utterance will predominate in all these
automatic Expressions. Do thou then note what Modifications thereof
follow such Changes in the conscious Foundation of that Part of thy
Will as thou mayst make in thy Experiments herewith, and thus
separate, as sayeth Trismegistus, the fine from the coarse, Fire
from Earth, or, as we may say, assign each Effect to its true Cause.
Seek then to perfect a conscious Satisfaction of every Part of that
Will, so that the unconscious Disturbances be at last brought to
Silence. Then will the Residuum be as an Elixir clarified and
perfected, a true Symbol of that other hidden Will which is the
Vector of thy Magical Self.
DE FORMULA SUMMA. (On the Supreme Formula)
Learn moreover that thy Self includeth the whole Universe of thy
Knowledge, so that every increase upon every Plane is an
Aggrandisement of that Self. Yet the greater Part of this Universe
is common Knowledge, so that thy Self is interwoven with other
Selves, save for that Part peculiar to thy Self. And as thou
growest, so also this peculiar Part is ever of less Proportion to
the Whole, until when thou becomest infinite, it is a Quantity
infinitesimal and to be neglected. Lo! When the All is absorbed
within the I, it is as if the I were absorbed within the All; for if
two Things become wholly and indissolubly One Thing, there is no
more Reason for Names, since Names are given to mark off one Thing
from another. And this is that which is written in The Book of the
Law: Let there be no difference made among you between any one thing
& any other thing; for thereby there cometh hurt. But whoso availeth
in this, let him be the chief of all!
DE VIA INERTIAE. (On the Way of Inertia)
Of the Way of the Tao I have already written to thee, o my Son, but
I further instruct thee in this Doctrine of doing everything by
doing nothing. I will first have thee to understand that the
Universe being as above said an Expression of Zero under the Figure
of the Dyad, its Tendency is continually to release itself from that
strain by the Marriage of Opposites whenever they are brought into
Contact. Thus thy true Nature is a Will to Zero, or an Inertia, or
Doing Nothing; and the Way of Doing Nothing is to oppose no Obstacle
to the free Function of that true Nature. Consider the Electrical
Charge of a Cloud, whose Will is to discharge itself in Earth, and
so release the Strain of its Potential. Do this by free conduction,
there is Silence and Darkness; oppose it, there is Heat and Light,
and the Rending asunder of that which will not permit free Passage
to the Current.
DE VIA LIBERTATIS. (On the Way of Freedom)
Do not think then that by Non-Action thou doest follow the Way of
the Tao, for thy Nature is Action, and by hindering the Discharge of
thy Potential thou doest perpetuate and aggravate the Stress. If
thou ease not Nature, she will being thee to Dis-Ease. Free thereof
every Function of thy Body and of every other Part of thee according
to its true Will. This also is most necessary, that thou discover
that true Will in every Case, for thou art born into Dis-Ease; where
are many false and perverted Wills, monstrous Growths, Parasites,
Vermin are they, adherent to thee by Vice of Heredity, or of
Environment or of evil Training. And of all these Things the
subtlest and most terrible, Enemies without Pity, destructive to thy
will, and a Menace and Tyranny even to thy self, are the Ideals and
Standards of the Slave-gods, false Religion, false Ethics, even
false Science.
DE LEGE MOTUS. (On the Law of Motion)
Consider, o my Son, that Word in the Call or Key of the Thirty
Aethyrs: Behold the Face of your God, the Beginning of comfort,
whose Eyes are the Brightness of the heavens, which
provided you for the Government of the Earth, and her unspeakable
Variety! And again: Let there be no Creature upon her or within her
the same. All her Members let them differ in their Qualities, and
let there be no Creature equal with another. Here also is the Voice
of true Science, crying aloud: Variation is the Key of Evolution.
Thereunto Art cometh the third, perceiving Beauty in the Harmony of
the Diverse. Know then, o my Son, that all Laws, all Systems, all
Customs, all Ideals and Standards which tend to produce Uniformity,
being in direct Opposition to Nature's Will to change and to develop
through Variety, are accursed. Do thou with all thy Might of Manhood
strive against these Forces, for they resist Change, which is Life:
and thus they are of Death.
DE LEGIBUS CONTRA MOTUM. (On the Laws Against Motion)
Say not, in thine Haste, that such Stagnations are Unity even as the
last Victory of thy Will is Unity. For thy Will moveth through free
Function, according to its particular Nature, to that End of
Dissolution of all Complexities, and the Ideals and Standards are
Attempts to halt thee on that Way. Although for thee some certain
Ideal be upon thy Path; yet for thy Neighbour it may not be so. Set
all Men a- horseback: thou speedest the Foot-soldier on his Way,
indeed: but what hast thou done to the Bird-Man? Thou must have
simple Laws and Customs to express the general Will, and so prevent
the Tyranny of Violence of a few; but multiply them not! Now then
herewith I will declare unto thee the Limits of the Civil Law upon
the rock of the Law of Thelema.
DE NECESSITATE COMMUNI. (On the Common Need)
Understand first that the Disturbers of the Peace of Mankind do so
by Reason of their Ignorance of their own true Wills. Therefore as
this Wisdom of mine increaseth among Mankind, the false Will to
Crime must become constantly more rare. Also, the Exercise of our
Freedom will cause Men to be born with less and ever less Affliction
from that Dis-Ease of Spirit, which breedeth these false Wills. But,
in the while of waiting for this Perfection, thou must by Law assure
to every Man a Means of satisfying his bodily and his mental Needs,
leaving him free to develop any Super-Structure in Accordance with
his Will, and protecting him from any that may seek to deprive him
of these vertebral Rights. There shall be therefore a Standard of
Satisfaction, though it must vary in Detail with Race, Climate, and
other such Conditions. And this Standard shall be based upon a large
Interpretation of Facts biological, physiological, and the like.
DE LIBERTATE CORPORIS. (On the Freedom of the Body)
There shall be no Property in Human Flesh. Every Man and every Woman
hath Right Indefeasable to give the Body for the Enjoyment of any
other. The Exercise of this Right shall not be punished either by
Law or by Custom; there shall be no Penalty either by Loss or
Curtailment of Liberty, of Rights, of Wealth, or of Social Esteem;
but this Freedom shall be respected of all, seeing that it is the
Right of the Bodily Will. For this same Reason thou shalt cause full
Restriction and Punishment of any who may seek to limit that Freedom
for the sake of
his own Profit, or Desire, or Ideal. Every Man and every Woman has
full right either to grant or to deny the Body, as the Will speaketh
within. This being made Custom, the Evils of Love, which are many,
extending to the Disturbance not only of Body but of Mind, and that
in obscure Paths, shall little by little disappear from the Face of
His unspeakable Glory.
DE LIBERTATE MENTIS. (On the Freedom of the Mind)
There shall be no Property in Human Thought. Let each think as he
will concerning the Universe; but let none seek to impose that
Thought upon another by any Threat of Penalty in this World or any
other World. Look now, though I enkindle thee to Effort in thy Way,
yet it is the Way of thy Will, and I say not even that thou dost
well to hasten therein, for the whole Matter lieth in thy Will, and
to force thyself against thy Nature would be an Obstacle to thy
Passage. But if I urge thee to run well this Race as an Athlete, it
is because I have perceived in thy Nature that fierce Lust and
mighty Concentration in that Will, and I write this Letter unto
thee, knowing well that thou wilt rejoice exceedingly therein, since
it is an Expression of thine own Will, and it may be a Discovery
thereof, which Thing thou vehemently seekest. I charge thee
therefore that thou permit none to tyrannize any other in Thought,
or to threaten, or in any other Wise to blaspheme the great Liberty
of our Father the Sun in the Great Cosmos, or of His Vice-Regent in
the Little.
DE LIBERATATE JUVENUM. (On the Freedom of Children)
O thou that art the Child of mine own Bowels, how shall I write to
thee concerning Children? For herein is the Gordian Knot in our
whole Rope of Wisdom, and it may not be severed by Sword, no, not of
a Greater than Alexander the Two-Horned. And it is a Balance like
that of the Egg, and the Violence of a Columbus will but crack the
tender Shell which we must first of all preserve.
Now Sentinel to this Fortress standeth a certain Paradox of general
Application, and in this large Order I will declare it, so that its
particular Sense may enlighten thee hereafter. And this is the
Paradox, that there are Bonds which lead to Slavery, and Bonds which
lead to Freedom. All we are bound in many Fetters by Environment,
and it is for ourselves in great Part to determine whether they
shall enslave us or emancipate us. And I will make clear this Thesis
to thee by the Way of Illustration.
DE VI PER DISCIPLINAM COLENDA. (On Cultivating Strength Through
Discipline)
Consider the Bond of a cold Climate, how it maketh Man a Slave; he
must have Shelter and Food with fierce Toil. Yet thereby he becometh
strong against the Elements, and his moral Force waxeth, so that he
is Master of such Men as live in Lands of Sun where bodily Needs are
satisfied without Struggle.
Consider also him that willeth to exceed in Speed or in Battle, how
he denieth himself the Food he craveth, and all Pleasures natural to
him, putting himself under the harsh Order of a Trainer. So by this
Bondage he hath, at the last, his Will.
Now then the one by natural, and the other by voluntary, Restriction
have come each to greater Liberty. This is also a general Law of
Biology, for all Development is Structuralization; that is, a
Limitation and Specialization of an originally indeterminate
Protoplasm, which latter may therefore be called free, in the
Definition of a Pedant.
DE ORDINE RERUM. (On the Order of Things)
In the Body every Cell is subordinated to the general physiological
Control, and we who will that Control do not ask whether each
individual Unit of that Structure be consciously happy. But we do
care that each fulfil its Function, and the Failure of even a few
Cells, or their Revolt, may involve the Death of the whole Organism.
Yet even here the Complaint of a few, which we call Pain, is a
Warning of general Danger. Many Cells fulfil their Destiny by swift
Death, and this being their Function, they in no wise resent it.
Should Haemoglobin resist the Attack of Oxygen, the Body would
perish, and the Haemoglobin would not even save itself. How, o my
Son, do thou then consider deeply of these Things in thine Ordering
of the World under the Law of Thelema. For every Individual in the
State must be perfect in his own Function, with Contentment,
respecting his own Task as necessary and holy, not envious of
another's. For so only mayst thou build up a Free State, whose
directing Will shall be singly directed to the Welfare of all.
DE FUNDAMENTIS CIVITATIS. (On the Fundamentals of the State)
Say not, o my Son, that in this Argument I have set Limits to
individual Freedom. For each Man in this State which I purpose is
fulfilling his own true Will by his eager Acquiescence in the Order
necessary to the Welfare of all, and therefore of himself also. But
see thou well to it that thou set high the Standard of Satisfaction,
and that to everyone there be a surplus of Leisure and of Energy, so
that, his Will of Self-Preservation being fulfilled by the
Performance of his Function in the State, he may devote the
remainder of his Powers to the Satisfaction of the other Parts of
his Will. And because the People are oft times unlearned, not
understanding Pleasure, let them be instructed in the Art of Life;
to prepare Food palatable and wholesome, each to this own Taste, to
make Clothes according to Fancy, with Variety of Individuality and
to practice the manifold Crafts of Love. There Things being first
secured, thou mayst afterward lead them into the Heavens of Poesy
and Tale, of Music, Painting, and Sculpture, and into the Lore of
the Mind itself, with its insatiable Joy of all knowledge. Thence
let them soar!
DE VOLUNTATE JUVENUM. (On the Will of Children)
Long, o my Son, hath been this Digression from the plain Path of my
Word concerning Children; but it was most needful that thou shouldst
understand the Limits of true Liberty. For that is not the Will of
any Man which ultimateth in his own Ruin and that of all his
Fellows; and
that is not Liberty whose Exercise bringeth him to Bondage. Thou
mayst therefore assume that it is always an essential Part of the
Will of any Child to grow to Manhood or to Womanhood in Health, and
his Guardians may therefore prevent him from ignorantly acting in
Opposition thereunto, Care being always taken to remove the Cause of
the Error, namely, Ignorance, as aforesaid. Thou mayst also assume
that it is Part of the Child's Will to train every Function of the
Mind; and the Guardians may therefore combat the inertia which
hinders its Development. Yet here is much Caution necessary, and it
is better to work by exciting and satisfying any natural Curiosity
than by forcing Application to set Tasks, however obvious this
Necessity may appear.
DE MODO DISPUTANDI. (On How to Teach)
Now in this Training of the Child there is one most dear
Consideration, that I shall impress upon thee as in Conformity with
our holy Experience in the Way of Truth. And it is this, that since
that which can be thought is not true, every Statement is in some
Sense false. Even on the Sea of pure Reason, we may say that every
Statement is in some Sense disputable, there fore in every Case,
even the simplest, the Child should be taught not only the Thesis,
but also its opposite, leaving the Decision to the Child's own
Judgment and good Sense, fortified by Experience. And this Practice
will develop its Power of Thought, and its Confidence in itself, and
its Interest in all Knowledge. But most of all beware against any
Attempt to bias its Mind on any point that lieth without the Square
of ascertained and undisputed Fact. Remember also, even when thou
art most sure, that so were they sure who gave instruction to the
young Copernicus. Pay Reverence also to the Unknown unto whom thou
presumeth to impart the Knowledge; for he may be one greater than
thou.
DE VOLUNTATE JUVENIS COGNOSCENDA. (On Learning How to Know the Will
of a Child)
It is important that thou shouldst understand as early as may be
what is the true Will of the Child in the Matter of his Career. Be
thou well ware of all Ideals and Day-dreams; for the Child is
himself, and not thy Toy. Recall the comic Tragedy of Napoleon and
the King of Rome; build not an House for a wild Goat, nor plant a
Forest for the Domain of a Shark. But be thou vigilant for every
Sign, conscious or unconscious of the Will of the Child, giving him
then all Opportunity to pursue the Path which he thus indicates.
Learn this, that he, being young, will weary quickly of all false
Ways, however pleasant they may be to him at the Outset; but of the
true Way he will not weary. This being in this Manner discovered,
thou mayst prepare it for him perfectly; for no Man can keep open
all Roads for ever. And to him making his Choice explain how one may
not travel far on any Road without a general Knowledge of Things
apparently irrelevant. And with that he will understand, and bend
him wisely to his Work.
DE AURO RUBEO. (On the Red Gold)
I would have thee to consider, o my son, that Word of Publius
Vergilius Maro, that was the greatest of all the Magicians of his
time: in medio tutissimus ibis. Which Thing has also been said by
many wise Men in other Lands; and the Holy Qabalah confirmeth the
same, placing Tiphereth, which is the Man, and the Beauty and
Harmony of Things, and Gold in the Kingdom of the Metals, and the
Sun among the Planets, in the Midst of the Tree of Life. For the
Centre is the Point of Balance of all Vectors. So then if thy wilt
live wisely, learn that thou must establish this Relation of Balance
with every Thing soever, not omitting one. For there is nothing so
alien from thy Nature that it may not be brought into harmonious
Relation therewith; and thy Stature of Manhood waxeth great even as
thou comest to the Perfection of this Art. And there is nothing so
close Kin to thee it may not be hurtful to thee if this Balance is
not truly adjusted. Thou hast need of the whole Force of the
Universe to work with thy Will; but this Force must be disposed
about the Shaft of that Will so that there is no Tendency to
Hindrance or to Deflection. And in my Love of thee I will adorn this
Thesis with Example following.
DE SAPIENTIA IN RE SEXUALI. (On Wisdom in Sexual Affairs)
Consider Love. Here is a Force destructive and corrupting where by
many Men have been lost. Yet without Love Man were not Man.
Therefore thine Uncle Richard Wagner made of our Doctrine a musical
Fable, wherein we see Amfortas, who yielded himself to Seduction,
wounded beyond Healing; Klingsor, who withdraw himself from a like
Danger, cast out for ever from the Mountain of Salvation; and
Parsifal, who yielded not, able to exercise the true Power of Love,
and thereby to perform the Miracle of Redemption. Of this also have
I myself written in my Poema called Adonis. It is the same with Food
and Drink, with Exercise, with Learning itself, the Problem is ever
to bring the Appetite into right Relation with the Will. Thus thou
mayst fast or feast; there is no Rule than that of Balance. And this
Doctrine is of general Acceptation among the better Sort of Men;
therefore on thee will I rather impress more carefully the other
Part of my Wisdom, namely, the Necessity of extending constantly thy
Nature to new Mates upon every Plane of Being, so that thou mayst
become the perfect Microcosm, an Image without Flaw of all that is.
DE GRADIBUS AEQUIS SCIENTIAE. (On the Right Gain of Knowledge)
I say in sooth, my son, that this Extension of thy Nature is not in
Violation thereof; for it is the Nature of thy Nature to grow
continually. Now there is no Part of Knowledge which is foreign to
thee; yet Knowledge itself is of no avail unless it be assimilated
and co-ordinated into Understanding. Grow therefore, easily and
spontaneously, developing all Parts equally, lest thou become a
Monster. And if one Thing tempt thee overmuch, correct it by
Devotion to its Opposite until Equilibrium be re-established. But
seek not to grow by sudden Determination toward Things that be far
from thee; only, if such a Thing come into thy Thought, construct a
Bridge thereunto, and take firmly the first Step upon the Bridge. I
shall explain this. Dost thou speculate upon the Motives of the
Stars, and on their Elements, their Size and Weight? Then thou must
first gain Knowledge of Doctrine mathematical, of Laws physical and
chemical. So then first, that thou mayst understand clearly the
Nature of thine whole Work, map out thy Mind, and extend its Powers
from the essential outwards, from the near to the far, always with
Firmness and great Thoroughness, making every Link in thy Chain
equal and perfect.
DE VIRTUTE AUDENDI. (On the Virtue of Daring)
Yet this I charge thee with my Might: Live Dangerously. Was not this
the Word of thine Uncle Friedrich Nietzsche? Thy meanest Foe is the
Inertia of the Mind. Men do hate most those things which touch them
closely, and they fear Light, and persecute the Torchbearers. Do
thou therefore analyse most fully all those Ideas which Men avoid;
for the Truth shall dissolve Fear. Rightly indeed Men say that the
Unknown is terrible; but wrongly do they fear lest it become the
Known. Moreover, do thou all Acts of which the common Sort beware,
save where thou hast already full knowledge, that thou mayst learn
Use and Control, not falling into Abuse and Slavery. For the Coward
and the Foolhardy shall not live out their Days. Every Thing has its
right Use; and thou art great as thou hast Use of Things. This is
the Mystery of all Art Magick, and thine Hold upon the Universe. Yet
if thou must err, being human, err by excess of courage rather than
of Caution, for it is the Foundation of the Honour of Man that he
dareth greatly. What saith Quintus Horatius Flaccus in the third Ode
of his First Book? Die thou standing!
DE ARTE MENTIS COLENDI. (On the Training of the Mind)
MATHEMATICA.
Now concerning the first Foundation of thy Mind I will say somewhat.
Thou shalt study with Diligence in the mathematics, because thereby
shall be revealed unto thee the Laws of thine own Reason and the
Limitations thereof. This Science manifesteth unto thee thy true
Nature in respect of the Machinery whereby it worketh; and showeth
in pure Nakedness, without Clothing of Personality or Desire, the
Anatomy of thy conscious Self. Furthermore, by this thou mayst
understand the Essence between the Relation of all Things, and the
Nature of Necessity, and come to the Knowledge of Form. For this
Mathematics is as it were the last Veil before the Image of Truth,
so that there is no Way better than our Holy Qabalah, which
analyseth all Things soever, and reduceth them to pure Number; and
thus their Natures being no longer coloured and confused, they may
be regulated and formulated in Simplicity by the Operation of Pure
Reason, to thy great Comfort in the Work of our Transcendental Art,
whereby the Many become One.
SEQUITUR. (Continued) (2) CLASSICA. (Classics)
My son, neglect not in any wise the Study of the Writings of
Antiquity, and that in the original Language. For by this thou shalt
discover the History of the Structure of thy Mind, that is, its
Nature regarded as the last term in a Sequence of Causes and
Effects. For thy Mind hath been built up of these Elements, so that
in these Books thou mayst bring into the Light thine own
subconscious Memories. And thy Memory is as it were the Mortar in
the House of thy Mind, without which is no Cohesion or Individuality
possible, so that the Lack thereof is called Dementia. And these
Books have lived long and become famous because they are the Fruits
of
ancient Trees whereof thou art directly the Heir, wherefrom (say I)
they are more truly germane to thine own Nature than Books of
Collateral Offshoots, though such were in themselves better and
wiser. Yes, o my Son, in these Writings thou mayst study to come to
the true Comprehension of thine own Nature, and that of the whole
Universe, in the Dimension of Time, even as the Mathematic declareth
it in that of Space: That is, of Extension. Moreover, by this Study
shall the Child comprehend the Foundation of Manners: the which, as
sayeth one of the Sons of Wisdom, maketh Man.
SEQUITUR. (Continued) (3) SCIENTIFICA. (Science)
Since Time and Space are the Conditions of Mind, these two Studies
are fundamental. Yet there remaineth Causality, which is the Root of
the Actions and Reactions of Nature. This also shalt thou seek
ardently, that thou mayst comprehend the Variety of the Universe,
its Harmony and its Beauty, with the Knowledge of that which
compelleth it. Yet this is not equal to the former two in Power to
reveal thee to thy Self; and its first Use is to instruct thee in
the true Method of Advancement in Knowledge, which is fundamentally,
the Observation of the Like and the Unlike. Also, it shall arouse in
thee the Ecstasy of Wonder; and it shall bring thee to a proper
Understanding of Art Magick. For our Magick is but one of the powers
that lie within us undeveloped and unanalysed; and it is by the
Method of Science that it must be made clear, and available to the
Use of Man. Is not this a Gift beyond Price, the Fruit of a Tree not
only of knowledge by to Life? For there is that in Man which is God,
and there is that also which is Dust; and by our Magick we shall
make these twain one Flesh, to the Obtaining of the Empery of the
Universe.
DE MODO QUO OPERET LEX MAGICA. (How Magickal Law Works)
Give Ear attentively, o my Son, while I expound unto thee the true
Doctrine of Magick. Every force acteth, in due Proportion, on all
Things with which it is connected. Thus a burning Forest causes
chemical Change by Combustion, and giveth Heat and Motion to the Air
about it by the Operation of physical Laws, and exciteth thought and
Emotion in the Man whom it reacheth through his Organs of
Perception. Consider (even though it were by Legend) the Fall of the
apple of Isaac Newton, its Effect upon the Spiritual Destinies of
Man! Consider also that no Force cometh ever to the end of its work!
The Air that is moved by my Breath is a Disturbance or Change of
Equilibrium that cannot be fully compensated and brought to naught,
though the Aeons be endless. Who then shall deny the Possibility of
Magick? Well said Frazer, the most learned Doctor of the College of
the Holy Trinity in the University of Cambridge, that Science was
but the Name of any Magick which failed not of its intended Effect.
DE MACHINA MAGICA. (On the Mechanism of Magick)
Lo! I put forth my Will, and my Pen moveth upon the Paper, by Cause
that my will mysteriously hath Power upon the Muscle of my Arm, and
these do Work at a mechanical Advantage against the Inertia of the
Pen. I cannot break down the Wall opposite me by Cause that I cannot
come into mechanical Relation with it; or the Wall at my Side, by
Cause that I am
not strong enough to overcome its Inertia. To win that Battle I must
call Time and Pick-axe to mine aid. But how could I retard the
Motion of the Earth in Space? I am myself Party of its Momentum. Yet
every Stroke of my Pen affecteth that Motion by changing the
Equilibrium thereof. The Problem of every Act of Magick is then
this: to exert a Will sufficiently powerful to cause the required
Effect, through a Menstruum or Medium of Communication. By the
common Understanding of the Word Magick, we however exclude such
Media as are generally known and understood. Now then, o my Son,
will I declare unto thee first the Nature of the Power, and
afterward that of the Medium.
DE HARMONIA ANIMAE CUM CORPORE. (On the Harmony of the Soul with the
Body)
All Things are interwoven. The most spiritual Thought in thy Soul (I
speak as a Fool) is also a most material Change in Blood or Brain.
Anger maketh the Blood acid; Hate poisoneth Mother's milk; even as I
showed formerly in reverse, how Disturbance of physical Function
altereth the States of Consciousness. Now no Man doubteth the Power
of the Will of Man, whether it be his love that begetteth Children
or causes wars wherein many Men be slain, whether it be his
Eloquence that moveth a Mob or his Vanity that destroyeth a People.
Only in all such Cases we understand how Nature worketh, through
known Laws physical or psychical. That is, there is a State of
unstable Equilibrium, so that one Machine setteth another in Motion
as soon as the first Disturbance ariseth. Therefore, it is not
proper to regard all Consequence of a Will as its Effect. Without
the Revolution there could have been no great Effect of the Will of
Napoleon; and moreover his Will was broken in the End, to the
present Misfortune (as it seems to many beside myself) of Mankind.
This Magick therefore, dependeth greatly on the Art to set many
other Wills in sympathetic Motion; and the greatest Magus may not be
the most successful in a mean conception of a Limit of Time. He may
need to strike many Blows before he breaketh down his Wall, if that
be strong, while a Child may push over one that is ready to crumble.
DE MYSTERIO PRUDENTIAE.(On the mystery of Economy)
Behold now nature, how prodigal is She of her Forces! The evident
Will of every Acorn is to become an Oak; yet nigh all fail of that
Will. Therefore one Secret of Magick is Oeconomy of thy Force; to do
no Act unless secure of its Effect. And if every Act has an Effect
on every Plane, how canst thou do this unless thou be connected with
all Planes? For this Reason must thou know thoroughly not only thy
Body and thy Mind, but thy Body of Light and all its subtler
Principles soever. But I will have thee consider most especially
what powers thou hast within thee which are certainly capable of
great Effects, yet which are constantly wasted. Think then whether,
if these Powers, frustrate of their End upon one Plane, might not be
turned to high Purpose and assured Success upon another. For an
hundred Acorns, rightly set in Conditions fit for their true Growth,
will become an hundred Oaks, while otherwise they make but one Meal
for one Hog, and their subtile Nature is wholly lost to them. Learn
then, o my Son, this Mystery of Oeconomy, and apply it faithfully
and with Diligence in thy Work.
DE ARTE ALCHEMICA. (On the Alchemical Art)
Here then I must write concerning Talismans for thine Instruction.
Know first that there are certain Vehicles proper for the
Incarnation of the Will. I instance Paper, whereon by thine Art thou
writest a symbolic Representation of thy Will, so that when thou
next seest it, thou are reminded of that Will, or it may be that
another, seeing it, will obey that Will. Here then is a case of
Incarnation and Assumption, which, before it was understood, was
rightly considered Gramarye or Magick. Again, thy Will to live
causeth thee to plant Corn, which in due Season being eaten is again
transmuted into Will. Thus thou mayst in many Ways impress any
particular Will upon the proper Substance, so that by due Use thou
comest at last to its Accomplishment. So general is this Formula, in
Truth, that all conscious Actions may be included within its scope.
There is also the Converse, as when external Objects create
Appetite, whose Satisfaction again reacteth upon the physical Plane.
Praise thou the wonder of the Mystery of Nature, rising and falling
with every Breath, so that there is no Part which is not mystically
Partaker of the Whole.
DE ARCANO SUBTILISSIMO. (On the Most Subtle Secret)
O my Son, there is that within thee of marvellous Puissance which is
by its own Nature the Incarnation of thy Will, most ready to receive
the Seal thereof. Therein lie hidden all Powers, all Memories, more
than thou hast ten thousand fold! Learn then to draw from that great
Treasure- House the Jewel of which thou art in any present Need. For
all things that are possible to thy Nature are already hidden within
thee; and thou hast but to name them, and to bring them back into
the Light of thy Consciousness. Then squander not this Gold of
thine, but put it to most fruitful Usury. Now then of the Art and
Craft of this most Holy Mystery I write not, for a Reason that thou
already knowest. Moreover, in this Matter, thou shalt best learn by
thine own Experience, and thine Observation in true Science shall
guide thee. For this Secret is still of Magick, and Occult, so that
I know not certainly if thy Will lieth with my Way or no.
DE MENSTRUO ARTIS. (On the Medium of the Art)
But concerning the Medium by whose sensitive Nature our Magick Force
is transmitted to the Object of our Working, doubt not. For already
in other Galaxies of Physics have we been compelled to postulate an
Aethyr wholly hypothetical in order to explain the Phenomena of
Light, Electricity, and the like; nor doeth any Man demand
Demonstration of the Existence of that Aethyr other than its
Conformity with general Law. Thou therefore, Creator and Transmitter
of thine own Energy, needest not to ask whether by this or by some
other Means thou performest thy Work. Yet I know not why this Aethyr
of the Mathematicians and the Physicians should not be one with the
Astral Light, or Plastic Medium or Aub, Aud, Aur (these three being
a Trinity) of which our own Sages have spoken. And this Meditation
may bring forth much Knowledge physical, which is good, for that
which is above is like that which is beneath, and the Study of any
Law leadeth to the Understanding of all Law. So mayst thou learn in
the End that there is no Law beyond Do what thou wilt.
DE NECESSITATE VOLUNTATIS. (On the Necessity of the Will)
And how then (sayest thou) shall I reconcile this Art Magick with
that Way of the Tao which achieveth all Things by doing nothing? But
this have I already declared to thee in Part, showing that thou
canst do no Magick save it be thy Nature to do Magick and so the
true Nothing for thee. For to do nothing signifieth to interfere
with nothing so that for a Magician to do no Magick is to commit
Violence on himself. Yet learn also that all Action is in some sense
Magick, being an essential Part of that Great Magical Work which we
call Nature. Then thou hast no free Will? Verily, thou hast said.
Yet nevertheless it is thy necessary Destiny to act with that free
Will. Thou canst do nothing save in accordance with that true Nature
of thine and of all Things, and every Phenomenon is the Resultant of
the Totality of Forces; Amen. Then thou needest take no Thought and
make no Effort? Thou sayest sooth; yet, art thou not compelled to
Thought and Effort in the Way of Nature? Yea, I, thy Father, work
for thee solicitously, and also I laugh at thy Perplexities; for so
was it foreordained that I should do, by Me, from the Beginning.
DE COMEDIA UNIVERSA, QUAE DICTUR PAN. (On the Universal Comedy which
is called Pan)
So, therefore, o my Son, count thyself happy when thou understandest
all these Things, being one of those Beings (or By-comings) whom we
call Philosophers. All is a never ending Play of Love wherein our
Lady Nuit and her Lord Hadit rejoice; and every Part of the Play is
Play. All pain is but sharp Sauce to the Dish of Pleasure; for it is
the Nature of the Universe that hath devised this everlasting
Banquet of Joy. And he that knoweth not this is necessary as an
Ingredient even as thou art; wouldst thou change all and spoil the
Dish? Art thou the Master- Cook? Yea, for thy Palate is become fine
with thy great Dalliance with the Food of Experience; therefore thou
art one of them that rejoice. Also it is thy Nature as it is mine, o
my Son, to will that all Men share our Mirth and Jollity; wherefore
have I proclaimed my Law to Man, and thou continuest in that Work of
Joyaunce.
DE CAECITIA HOMINUM. (On the Blindness of Men)
Learn also of my wisdom that this Vision of the Cosmos whereof I
have written unto thee is not given unto thy Sight at all Times; for
in that Vision is all Will fulfilled. Thou seest the Universe as
None, and as One, and as many, and the Play thereof; and therewith
art thou (who art no longer thou) content. For in one Phase art thou
also None, in another One, and in the third an organised and
necessary Part of that great Structure, so that there is no more
conflict at all in thy whole By-coming. But now will I make Light
for thine Eyes in this Matter as thou gropest, asking: but of them
that see not this, what sayst thou, o my Father? But in that Vision
thou sayst not thus, my Son! Learn then of me the Secret Mystery of
Illusion, and how it Worketh, and other Holy Law that is its Nature,
and of thine Action therein; for this is an Arcanum of the Wisdom of
the Magi, and proper unto thee that dwellest in the Land of
Understanding.
ALLEGORIA DE CAISSA. (An Allegory on Chess)
Consider for an Example the Game and Play of the Chess, which is a
Pastime of Man, and worthy to exercise him in Thought, yet by no
means necessary to his Life, so that he sweepeth away Board and
Pieces at the least Summons of that which is truly dear to him. Thus
unto him this Game is as it were an Illusion. But insofar as he
entereth into the Game he abideth by the Rules thereof, though they
be artificial and in no wise proper to his Nature; for in this
Restriction is all this Pleasure. Therefore, though he hath
All-Power to move the Pieces at his own Will, he doth it not,
enduring Loss, Indignity, and Defeat rather than destroy that
Artifice of Illusion. Think then that thou hast thyself created this
Shadow-world the Universe, and that it pleasureth thee to watch or
to actuate its Play according to the Law that thou hast made, which
yet bindeth thee not save only by Virtue of thine own Will to do
thine own Pleasure therein.
DE VERITATE FALSI. (On the Truth of Falsehood)
Moreover this Matter touches the Nature of Truth. For although to
thee in thy True Self, absolute and without Conditions, all this
Universe, which is relative and conditioned is an Illusion; yet to
that Part of Thee by which thou perceivest it, the Law of its Being
(or By- coming) is a Law of Truth. Learn then that all Relations are
true upon their own Plane, and that it would be a Violation of
Nature to adjust them skew-wise. Thus, albeit thou hast found thy
Self, and knowest Thy Self immortal and immutable beyond Time and
Space, free of Causality, so thoroughly that even thy Mind partaketh
constantly thereof, thou hast in no wise altered the Relations of
thy Body with its Syndromics in the World whereof it is a Part.
Wouldst thou lengthen the Life of thy Body? Then accommodate thou
the Conditions of thy Body to its Environment by giving it Light,
Air, Food, and Exercise as its Nature requireth. So also, mutatis
mutandis, do thou cherish the Health of thy Mind.
DE RELATIONE ILLUSIONUM. (On the Relations of Illusion)
Of this will I speak further with thee, for here behold a great Rock
of Ignorance on the one Hand, and on the other a Whirlpool of Error;
in this Strait are many Wrecks of Magick Ships. Knowest thou not
that Riddle of old, whether it be lawful to pay Tribute to Caesar or
no? Give therefore to the Body the Things of the Body, and to the
Mind the Things of the Mind. Yet because of the interior Harmony of
all Things that proceedeth from their Original One Nature, there is
Action and Reaction of the one upon the other, as I have already set
forth in this mine Epistle. But Law is universal, and between these
two Kinds of Illusion there is an ordered Proportion, and it is
proper to thy Science to delimit and describe this Law of
Interaction, for to deny it wholly (as to extend it to Infinity) is
Folly, born of Ignorance, Idleness, and Incapacity to observe Fact.
DE PRUDENTIA. (On Prudence)
Consider Drunkenness, how by Variation of bodily Conditions thou
mayst alter its Effect upon the Mind, and the Contrary, remembering
the Discipline of Theophrastus Paracelsus, how,
opposing Wine to bodily Exercise, he obtained a certain Purification
and Exaltation. Yet, were he seven times greater, he had not done
this with Oil of Vitriol. Learn then that there are certain definite
Channels of Action and Reaction between Body and Mind; sound these,
and trim thy Sails accordingly, not thinking that thou art in the
open Sea. And if so be that thou in thy sounding findest new
Channels, rejoice and map them for the Profit of thy Fellows; But
remember always that to find a new Way up a Precipice removeth not
the Precipice. For where thou, o Angel and yet Man, hast trod
delicately albeit without Fear, Fools will rush in to their
Destruction.
DE RATIONE MAGI VITAE.
(On the Rationality of the Life of the Magician)
Study Logic, which is the Code of the Laws of Thought. Study the
Method of Science, which is the Application of Logic to the Facts of
the Universe. Think not that thou canst ever abrogate these Laws,
for though they be Limitations, they are the rules of thy Game which
thou dost play. For in thy Trances though thou becomest That which
is not subject to those Laws, they are still final in respect of
these Things which thou hast set them to govern. Nay, o my son, I
like not this Word, govern, for a Law is but a Statement of the
nature of the Thing to which it applieth. Nor nothing is compelled
save only by Nature of its own true Will. So therefore human Law is
a Statement of the Will and of the Nature of Man, or else it is a
Falsity contrary thereunto, and becometh null and of none Effect.
DE CORDE CANDIDO. (On the Pure Heart)
Think also, o my Son, of this Image, that if two States be at Peace,
a Man goeth between them without Let; but if there be War, all
Gateways are forthwith closed, save only for a few, and these are
watched and guarded, so that the Obstacles are many. This then is
the Case of Magick; for if thou have brought to Harmony all
Principles within thee, thou mayst work easily to transmute a Force
into its semblable upon another Plane, which is the essential
Miracle of our Art; but if thou be at War within thyself, how canst
thou work? For our Master Hermes Trismegistus hath written at the
Head of His Tablet of Emerald this Word: That which is above is like
that which is below, and that which is below is like that which is
above, for the Performance of the Miracle of the One Substance. How
then, if these be not alike? If the Substance of Thee be Two, and
not One? And herein is the Need of the Confession of a pure Heart,
as is written in the Book of the Dead.
DE CONFORMITATE MAGI. (On the Conformity of the Magician)
See to it therefore, o my Son, that thou in thy Working dost no
Violence to the whole Will of the All, or to the Will common to all
those Beings (or By-comings) that are of one general Nature with
thee, or to thine own particular Will. For first of all thou art
necessarily moved toward the One End from thine own Station, but
secondly thou art moved toward the End proper to thine own Race, and
Caste, and Family, as by Virtue of thy Birth. And these are, I may
say it, Conditions or limits, of thine own individual Will. Thou
dost laugh? Err not, my Son! The
Magus, even as the Poet is the Expression of the true Will of his
Fellows, and his Success is his Proof, as it is written in The Book
of the Law. For his Work is to free Men from the Fetters of a false
or a superannuated Will, revealing unto them, in Measure attuned to
their Needs, their true Natures.
DE POETIS. (On the Poets)
For this Reason is the Poet called an Incarnation of the Zeitgeist,
that is, of the Spirit or Will of his Period. So every Poet is also
a Prophet, because when that which he sayeth is recognized as the
Expression of their own Thought by Men, they translate this into
Act, so that, in the Parlance of he Folk vulgar and ignorant, "that
which he foretold is come to pass". Now then the Poet is Interpreter
of the Hieroglyphs of the Hidden Will of Man in many a matter, some
light, some deep, as it may be given unto him to do. Moreover, it is
not altogether in the Word of any Poem, but in the quintessential
Flavour of the Poet, that thou mayst seek this Prophecy. And this is
an Art most necessary to every Statesman. Who but Shelley foretold
the Fall of Christianity, and the Organisation of Labour, and the
Freedom of Woman; who by Nietzsche declared the Principle at the
Root of the World-War? See thou clearly then that in these Men were
the Keys of the Dark Gates of the Future; Should not the Kings and
their Ministers have taken heed thereto, fulfilling their Word
without Conflict.
DE MAGIS ORDINIS A.·. A.·. QUIBUS CARO FIT VERBUM. (On the Magi of
the A.·. A.·. in whom the Word takes Flesh)
Now, o my Son, the Incarnation of a Poet is particular and not
Universal; he sayeth indeed true Things but not the Things of
All-Truth. And that these may be said it is necessary that One take
human Flesh, and become a Magus in our Holy Order. He then is called
the Logos, or Logos Aionos, that is to say, he Word of the Aeon or
Age, because he is verily that Word. And thus may He be known,
because He hath it given unto Him to prepare the Quintessence of the
Will of God, that is, of Man, in its Fullness and Wholeness,
comprehending all Planes, so that his Law is simple, and radical,
penetrating all Space from its single Light. For though His Words be
many, yet is His Word One, One and Alone; and by this Word he
createth Man anew, in an essential Form of Life, so that he is
changed in his inmost Knowledge of himself. And this Change worketh
outwards, little by little, unto its visible Effect.
DE MAGIS TEMPORI ANTIQUI: IMPRIMIS, DE LAO-TZE. (On the Magi of Old,
First, Lao-Tze)
It may be unto thy Profit, o my Son, if I relate unto thee the
secret History of those who have gone before me in this Grade of
Magus, so far as their Memory hath remained among Mankind. For what
would it avail thee should I recount the deeds of those whom I
indeed may know, but thou not? Thou knowest well how I keep me from
all Taint of Fable, or any Word unproven and undemonstrable. First
then I speak of Lao-Tze, whose word was the TAO. Hereof have I
already written much unto thee, because His Doctrine has been lost
or misinterpreted, and it is most needful to restore it. For this
Tao is the true Nature of Things, being itself a Way or Going, that
is, a kinetic and not a static Conception. Also He taught this Way
of Harmony in Will, which I myself have thought to show thee in this
little book. So then this Tao is Truth, and the Way of Truth, and
therefore was He Logos of His Aeon, and His true Name or Word was
TAO.
DE GAUTAMA. (On Gautama)
Whom Men call Gautama, or Siddartha, or the Buddha, was a Magus of
our Holy Order. And His Word was ANATTA; for the Root of His whole
Doctrine was that there is no Atman, or Soul, as Men ill translate
it, meaning a Substance incapable of Change. Thus, He, like Lao-Tze,
based all upon a Movement, instead of a fixed Point. And His Way of
Truth was Analysis, made possible by great Intention of the Mind
toward itself, and that well fortified by certain tempered Rigour of
Life. And He most thoroughly explored and Mapped out the Fastnesses
of the Mind, and gave the Keys of its Fortresses into the Hand of
Man. But of all this the Quintessence is in this one Word ANATTA,
because this is not only the foundation and the Result of his whole
Doctrine, but the Way of its Work.
DE SRI KRISHNA ET DE DIONYSO. (On Sri Krishna and Dionysus)
Krishna has Names and Forms innumerable, and I know not His true
Human Birth, for His Formula is of the Major Antiquity. But His Word
hath spread into many Lands, and we know it to-day as INRI with the
secret IAO concealed therein. And the Meaning of this Word is the
Working of Nature in Her Changes; that is, it is the Formula of
Magick whereby all Things reproduce and recreate themselves. Yet
this Extension and Specialisation was rather the Word of Dionysus;
for the true Word of Krishna was AUM, importing rather a Statement
of the Truth of Nature than a practical Instruction in detailed
Operations of Magick. But Dionysus, by the Word INRI, laid the
Foundation of all Science, as We say Science to-day in a particular
Sense, that is, of causing external Nature to change in Harmony with
our Wills.
DE TAHUTI. (On Tahuti)
Tahuti, or Thoth, confirmed the Word of Dionysus by continuing it;
for he showed how by the Mind it was possible to direct the
Operations of the Will. By Criticism and by recorded Memory Man
avoideth Error. But the true Word of Tahuti was AMOUN, whereby He
made Men to understand their secret Nature, that is, their Unity
with their true Selves, or, as they then phrased it, with God. And
He discovered unto them the Way of this Attainment, and its Relation
with the Formula of INRI. Also by His Mystery of Number He made
plain the Path for His Successor to declare the Nature of the whole
Universe in its Form and in its Structure, as it were an Analysis
thereof, doing for Matter what the Buddha was decreed to do for
Mind.
DE QUODAM MAGO AEGYPTIORUM, QUEM APPELUNT JUDAEI MOSHEH. (On that
Egyptian Magus whom the Jews called Mosheh)
The Follower of Tahuti was an Egyptian whose Name is lost; but the
Jews called Him Mosheh, or Moses, and their Fabulists made Him the
Leader of their Legendary Exodus. Yet they preserved His Word, and
it is IHVH, which thou must understand also as that Secret Word
which thou hast seen and heard in Thunders and Lightnings in thine
Initiation to the Degree thou wottest of. But this Word is itself a
Plan of the Fabrick of the Universe, and upon it hath been
elaborated the Holy Qabalah, whereby we have Knowledge of the Nature
of all Things soever upon every Plane of By-coming, and of their
Forces and Tendencies and Operations, with the Keys to their
Portals. Nor did He leave any Part of His Work unfinished, unless it
be that accomplished three hundred Years ago by Sir Edward Kelly, of
whom I also come, as thou knowest.
DE MAGO ARABICO MOHAMMED. (On the Arabian Magus Mohammed)
Behold! In these Chapters have I, thy Father, restricted myself, not
speaking of any immediate Echo of a Word in the World, because,
there Men being long since withdrawn into their Silence, it is their
One Word, and that Alone, that resoundeth undiminished through Time.
How Mohammed, who followeth, is darkened and confused by His
Nearness to our own Time, so that I say not save with Diffidence
that His Word ALLH may mean this or that. But I am bold concerning
His Doctrine of the Unity of God, for God is Man, and he said
therefore: Man is One. And His Will was to unite all Men in One
reasonable Faith: to make possible international Co- operation in
Science. Yet, because He arose in the Time of the greatest possible
Corruption and Darkness, when every Civilization and Every Religion
had fallen into Ruin, by the malice of the great Sorcerer of
Nazareth, as some say, He is still hidden in the Dust of the Simoom,
and we may not perceive Him in His true Self of Glory.
Nevertheless, behold, o My Son, this Mystery. His true Word was LA
ALLH, that is to say: (there is) No God, and LA AL is that Mystery
of Mysteries which thine own Eye pierced in thine Initiation. And of
that Truth have the Illusion and Falsehood enslaved the Souls of
Men, as is written in the Book of the Magus.
DE SE IPSO
CUJUS VERBUM EST
(On the Great Beast Himself, the Logos of the Aeon, whose word is
Thelema)
O my son! me seemeth in certain Hours that I am myself fallen on a
Time even more fearful and fatal than did Mohammed, peace be upon
Him! But I read clearly the Word of the Aeon, that is ABRAHADABRA,
wherein is the whole Mystery of the great Work, as thou knowest. And
I
have The Book of the Law, that was given unto me by Him thou wottest
of; and it is the Interpretation of the Secret Will of Man on every
Plane of his By-coming; and the Word of the Law is THELEMA. 'Do what
thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law." Now because "Love is the
law, love under will." do I write this Epistle for thee, that thou
mayst fulfil this inmost Will of Mankind, making them capable of
Light, Live, Love and Liberty by the Acceptance of this Law. And the
Hindrance thereunto is but as the Shell of its Egg to an Eaglet, a
Thing foreign to itself, a Protection till the Hour strike, and then
--- no more!
MANDATUM AD FILIUM SUUM. (A Command to His Son)
Here I reach forth mine Hands against thee in the Sign of the
Enterer, o son of my Bowels, for with all my Magical Might I will
that thou fight manfully and labour with Diligence (with Sword and
Trowel; say I) in this Work. For this is the first and last of all,
that thou bid every Man do What he will, in accord with his own true
Nature. Therefore also blast thou that Lie that Man is of a fallen
and evil Nature. For the Word of Sin is Restriction, the Doubt of
his own Godhead, the Suppression of, which is the Blasphemy against,
his own Holy Spirit. Saith not "The Book of the Law" that "...It is
a lie, this folly against self. ..."? Therefore to every Man, in
every Circumstance, say thou: Do what thou wilt; and teach him, if
he yet waver, how to discover his true Nature, earnestly and with
Ardour, even as I have striven to each thee --- yea, and more also!
QUARE FILIUM CREAVIT: UT FIAT LIBERTAS. (Wherefore he Begat his Son:
So That There Be Freedom)
Do what thou wilt! be this our Slogan of Battle in every Act; for
every Act is Conflict. There Victory leapeth shining before us; for
who may thwart true Will, which is the Order of Nature Herself?
"...thou hast no right but to do thy will. Do that, and no other
shall say nay." For if that Will be true, its Fulfilment is of a
Surety as Daylight following Sunrise. It is as certain as the
Operation of any other Law of Nature; it is Destiny. Then, if that
Will be obscured, if thou turn from it to Wills diseased or
perverse, how canst thou hope? Fool! Even thy Turns and Twists are
in the Path to thine appointed End. But thou art not sprung of a
Slave's Loins; thou standest firm and straight; thou dost thy Will;
and thou are Chosen, nay, for this Work wast thou begotten in a
Magick Bed, that thou shouldst make Man free.
DE SUA DEBILITATE. (On His Frailty)
Listen attentively, my Son, while I with heavy Heart make Confession
to thee of mine own Frailty. Thou knowest that I made Renunciation
of my Wage, taking this Body immediately after my Death, the Death
of Eliphas Levi Zahed, as Men say, that I might attain to this great
Work. It is now twenty Years, as Men count years, that I came to my
first Understanding of my true Nature, and aspired to that Work. Now
then at first I made no Error. I abandoned my chosen Career; I
poured out my whole Fortune without one Thought; I gave my Life
utterly to the Work, without keeping back the least imaginable
Thing. So then I made swift Strides along the Path.
But in the Dhyanas that were granted unto me in Kandy, in the Island
of Lanka, I used up my whole Charge of Magical Energy; and for two
Years I fell away from the Work.
DE MANU QUAE MAGUM SUSTINET. (On the Hand that Upholds the Magus)
Now it may be well that such Periods of Recuperation are necessary
to such souls as mine; and so no Ill. But I fell from my Will, and
sought other Ends in Life; and so the Hand came upon me, and tore
away that which I desired, as thou knowest; also it is written in
the Temple of Solomon the King. Yet consider also these two Years as
a necessary Preparation for that greatest of all Events which befell
me in El-Kahira, in the Land of Khem, the Choice of me as the Word
of the Aeon. Now then for a while I worked with my Will, though not
wholly; and again the Hand reached forth and smote me. This, albeit
my Slackness was but as a Boy playing Truant, not a revolt against
my Self. Wherefore, despite all, I made much Progress in short Time.
DE SUO PECCATO. (On His Sin)
Now then, well schooled, I strove no more against my Nature, and
worked with all my Will. Thou knowest well how greatly I was
rewarded. Yet in this last Initiation to the Grade of Magus, wherein
three-and-seventy Days, as Men count Days, is but One Day, the
Ordeal grew so fierce and intolerable that I gave back a Step. I did
not utterly renounce the Work, but I swore not to continue unless
mine Agony were abated. But after fifteen Days, I came to myself in
a certain Ordeal, wherein I knew myself finally, that I could do no
other than take up that fearful Burden that had broken my Spirit.
And for these fifteen Days have I not suffered infinite Things? Was
not the Tree of my Work frozen, one Branch withered, and on blasted?
Look no more, o my son, upon thy Father's Shame!
DE SUA VICTORIA PER NOMEN BABALON. (On His Victory Through the Name
Babalon)
And after? This Dawn (for I have toiled through the Night in my
great Love and Care of thee) how is it with me? it is well. For I
have found myself; I have found my Will; the Obstacles that daunted
me are seen to be by the Shadows of Shadows. Grace be unto Lady
BABALON.
Thus it is written in "The Book of the Law": "Remember all ye that
existence is pure joy; that all the sorrows are but as shadows; they
pass & are done; but there is that which remains." Learn then that
it is in the contemplation of Division that Sorrow is, for Division
is the Formula of Choronzon. It is herefore discreet for thee to
unite each element of Sorrow with its Opposite; in whose Triumph of
Hymen is Ecstacy, until by Apprehension of the new great Opposite
the Idea is again seen as Sorrow. This then is the Issue from
Sorrow; and thou mayst understand that I now also am confident in
the Necessity of this my Fall to prepare the formula of my
Exaltation. Therefore, my Son, thus Hail Me: Blessing and worship to
the Beast, the Prophet of the Lovely Star.
DE ARCANO NEFANDO. (On the Forbidden Secret)
O my Son, learn this concerning Magick, that the Yang moveth, and
thus giveth itself up Eternally; but the Yin moveth not, seeking
ever to enclose or restrict, reproducing in its own likeness what
Impressions soever it made thereon, yet without Surrender. Now the
Tao absorbeth all without Reproduction; so then let the Yang turn
thereto, and not unto he Yin. And that thou mayst understand this, I
say: It is a Mystery of O.T.O. For the Sun ariseth not and entereth
to strike upon the High Altar of the Minister by the Great Western
Gates, but by the Rose Oriel doth he make Way and Progress in His
Pageant. O my Son, the Doors of Silver are wide open, and hey tempt
thee with their Beauty: but by the narrow Portal of Pure Gold shalt
thou come nobly to thy Sanctuary. Behold! Thou knowest not how
perfect is this Magick; it is the dearest- bought and holiest of our
Arcana. What then is like unto my Love toward Thee, that bestoweth
upon thee this Treasure of my Wisdom? My Son, neglect it not; for it
is the Exorcism of Exorcisms, and the Enchantment of Enchantments.
DE ARCANO, PER QUOD SPIRITUS QUIDAM IN CORPORE RECIPIATUR.
(On the Secret through which any Spirit is Received in the Body)
Here now is another Formula of Power, good to invoke any Being to
manifest in thyself. First, invoke him by the Power of all thy
Spells and conjurations, with Mind concentrated and Will vehement,
toward him, as I have written in many Books. But because thou are
NEMO, thou mayst safely invoke him, no matter of what Nature, within
thy Circle. Now then do thou confer on him as a Guerdon of his
Obedience the Dignity of a Soul seeking Incarnation, and so precede
to consecrate thine Act by performing the Mass of the Holy Ghost.
Then shall that Spirit make himself Body from those Elements, and
thou partaking thereof makest thine own Body his Machinery of
Manifestation, and thus mayst thou work with any Spirit soever; yet
this shall serve thee most in common Life. Also he Qualities are
well defined in the Cards of the Tarot, so hat thou hast a clear-cut
Means of developing thy Powers according to the Needs of the Time.
But learn also this, to work constantly under the Guidance of thine
Holy Guardian Angel, so that thy Workings be alway in Harmony and
Accord with thy true Will.
DE CLAVE KABBALISTICA HUJUS ARTIS. (On the Qabalistic Key of this
Art)
Now then to thee who art long since Master of High Magick, it will
be easy to shew how the Mass of the Holy Ghost, sung even in
Ignorance, may work many a Wonder by Virtue of the Force generated
being compelled to manifest on other than its own Plane. Here then
is a Theory of the Mystery of the Aeon, that I, being the Logos
appointed thereunto, did create an Image of my little Universe in
the Mind of the Woman of Scarlet; that is, I manifested my whole
Magical Self in her Mind. Thus then in Her, as in a Mirror, have I
been able to interpret myself to myself. Thou also in thine own Way
hast he Power to create such an Image; but be thou sure and alert,
testing constantly the Persons in that Image by the Holy Qabalah and
by the true Signs of
Brotherhood. For each Person herein shall be a Part of thyself, made
individual and perfect, able to instruct thee in thy Path. Yet often
there shall be others, that are to aid thee in thy Working, or to
oppose it. And in this Matter thou shalt read especially the Record
of thy Father His Workings with Soror Ahita (blessed be Her Name
unto the Ages) and certain others to Boot.
DE MISSA SPIRITUS SANCTI. (On the Mass of the Holy Ghost)
Now at last, o my son, may I being thee to understand the Truth of
this Formula that is hidden in the Mass of the Holy Ghost. For Horus
that is Lord of the Aeon is the Child crowned and conquering. The
formula of Osiris was, as thou knowest, a Word of Death, that is,
the Force lay long in Darkness, and by Putrefaction came to
Resurrection. But we take living Things, and pour in Life and Nature
of our own Will, so that instantly and without Corruption the Child
(as it were the Word of that Will) is generated; and again
immediately taketh up his Habitation among us to manifest in Force
and Fire. This Mass of the Holy Ghost is then the true Formula of
the Magick of the Aeon of Horus, blessed by He in His Name
Ra-Hoor-Khuit! And thou shalt bless also the Name of our Father
Merlin, Frater Superior of the O.T.O., for that by seven Years of
Apprenticeship in His School did I discover his most excellent Way
of Magick. Be thou diligent, o my son, for in this wondrous Art is
no more Toil, Sorrow, and Disappointment, as it was in the dead Aeon
of the Slain Gods.
DE FORMULA TOTA. (On the Complete Formula)
Here then is the Schedule for all the Operations of Magick. First,
thou shalt discover thy true Will, as I have already aught thee, and
that Bud thereof which is the Purpose of this Operation.
Next, formulate this Bud-Will as a Person, seeking or constructing
it, and naming it according to thine Holy Qabalah, and its
infallible Rule of Truth.
Third, purify and consecrate this Person, concentrating upon him and
against all else. This Preparation shall continue in all thy daily
Life. Mark well, make ready a new Child immediately after every
Birth.
Fourth, make an especial and direct Invocation at thy Mass, before
the Introit, formulating a visible Image of this Child, and offering
the Right of Incarnation.
Fifth, perform the Mass, not omitting the Epiklesis, and let there
be a Golden Wedding Ring at the Marriage of thy Lion with thine
Eagle.
Sixth, at the Consumption of the Eucharist accept this Child, losing
thy Consciousness in him, until he be well assimilated with thee.
Now then do this continuously, for by Repetition cometh forth both
Strength and Skill, and the Effect is cumulative, if thou allow no
Time to dissipate itself.
DE HAC FORMULA CONSIDERATIONES KABBALISTICAE. (Qabalistic
Considerations on this Formula)
Behold moreover, my Son, the Oeconomy of this Way, how it is
according to the Tao, fulfilling itself wholly within thine own
Sphere. And it is utterly in Tune with thine own Will on every
Plane, so that every Part of thy Nature rejoiceth with every other
Part, communicating Praise. Now then learn also how this Formula is
that of the Word ABRAHADABRA. First, HAD is the Triangle erect upon
twin Squares. Of Hadit need I not o write, for He hath hidden
Himself in "The Book of the Law". This Substance is the Father, the
Instrument is the Son, and he Metaphysical Ekstacy is the Holy
Ghost, whose Name is HRILIU. These are then the Sun, Mercury, and
Venus, whose sacred letters are R, B, and D. But the last of the
Diverse Letters is H , which in the Tarot is the Star whose Eidolon
is D; and herein is that Arcanum concerning the Tao of which I have
already written. Of this will I not write more plainly. But mark
this, that our Trinity is our Path inwards in the Solar System, and
that H being of our Lady Nuit starry, is an Anchor to this Magick
which else were apt to deny our wholeness of Relation to the Outer
as to the Inner. My son, ponder these Words, and profit by them; for
I have wrought cunningly to conceal or to reveal, according to thine
Intelligence, o my Son!
DE QUIBUSDAM ARTIBUS MAGICIS. (On Certain Arts Magick)
Now of those Operations of Magick by which thou seekest to display
unto some other Person the Righteousness of thy Will I make haste to
instruct thee. First, if thou have a reasonable Link with him by
Word or Letter, it is most natural simply to create in thyself, as I
have taught, a Child or Bud-Will, and let that radiate from thee
through the Channels aforesaid. But if thou have no Link, the Case
is otherwise and is not easy. Here thou mayst make Communication
through others, as it were by Relays; or thou mayst act directly
upon his Aura by Magical Means, such as the Projection of the
Scin-Laeca. But unless he be sensitive and well-attuned, thou mayst
fare but ill. Yet even in this Case thou mayst attain much Skill by
Practice with Intelligence. In the End it is better altogether to
work wholly within thine own Universe, slowly and with firm Steps
advancing from the Centre, and dealing, one by one, with those
unharmonized Parts of the Not-Self which lie close to thee. This
therefore closeth the Circle of my Speech, for now I am returned to
that which I spake aforetime concerning the general Method of love,
and thy Development by that Way.
DE MAGNO OPERE. (On the Great Work)
But now give Ear most eagerly, thou Son of my Loins, for I will now
discourse unto thee of thine Own Attainment, without which all is
but Idleness. Know first that conscious Thought is but phenomenal,
the Noise of thy Machine. Now Chemistry, or Al-Chem-y meaneth the
Egyptian Science, and the true Magick of Egypt hath this for its
Foundation. We have in our House many Substances which act directly
upon the Blood, and many Practices of Virtue similar, to simulate,
compose, purify, analyse, direct, or concentrate the Thought. Confer
"CCXX". 11,
22. But this Action is subtle and of many Modes, and dependeth
heavily on the Conditions of the Experiment, whereof the first is
thine own Will therein. Therefore I say unto thee that his is thy
Work immediate and necessary, to discover openly thy Will unto
thyself, and to fortify and enkindle it by all One-Pointedness of
Thought and Action, so that thou mayst direct it inwards unto its
Core, that is Thyself in thy Name HADIT. For thereby is thy Will
made white with Heat, so that no Dross may cling to it. But this
Work is the Great Work, and standeth alone.
DE GRADIBUS AD MAGNUM OPUS. (On the Steps to the Great Work)
This Great Work is the Attainment of the Knowledge and Conversation
of thine Holy Guardian Angel. In the Eight Aethyr is the Way thereof
revealed. But I say: prepare thyself most heartily and well for that
Battle of Love by all means of Magick. Make thyself puissant, wise,
radiant in every System, and balance thyself well in thine Universe.
Then with a pure Will tempered in the thousand Furnaces of thy
Trials, burn up thyself within thy Self. In the Preparation thou
shalt have learnt how thou mayst still all Thoughts, and reach
Ekstacy of Trance in many Modes. But in these Marriages thy
conscious Self is Bridegroom, and the not-Self Bride, while in this
Great Work thou givest up that conscious Self as Bride to thy true
Self. This Operation is then radically alien from all others. And it
is hard, because it is a total Reversal of the Current of the Will,
and a Transmutation of its Formula and Nature. Here, o my son, is
the One Secret of Success in this Great Work: Invoke often.
DE FORMULA LUNAE. (On the Formula of the Moon)
Thus then concerning Operations of the Tao with the Yang and the Yin
is there enough; for thine own Art of Beauty shall divine for thee,
and devise new Heavens. But in all these is the Formula of the
Serpent with the Head of the Lion, and all his Magick is wrought by
the Radiance and Creative Force thereof. And this Force leapeth
continually from Plane to Plane, and breaketh forth from his Bonds,
so that Constraint is Labour. Now then learn that the Yin hath also
a Formula of Force. And the Nature of the Yin is to be still, and to
encircle of limit, and it is as a Mirror, reflecting diverse Images
without Change in its own Kind. So then it seeketh never to overlap
the Barriers of its Plane; for this Reason it is well to use it in
Operations of a very definite and restricted Type. But although it
be inert, yet is it most subject to Change; for its Number is four
Score and one, which is the Moon; and these are ALIM, the Gods
elemental before H descending in their midst made them Creative. So
then thou mayst use constantly this Formula to rearrange Things in
their own Planes; and this is a most pragmatick Consideration.
DE AQUILAE SUMENDA. (On the Taking of the Eagle)
Take in this Work the Eagle all undefiled and virginal for thy
Sacrament. And thy Technick is the Magick of Water, so that thine
Act is of Nourishment, and not of Generation. Therefore the Prime
Use of this Art is to build up thine own Nature. But if thou hast
Skill to control the Mood of the Eagle, then mayst thou work many an
admirable Effect upon thine Environment. Thou knowest how great is
the Fame of Witch-Women (old and without Man) to cause Events,
although hey create nothing. It is this Straitness of the Channel
which giveth Force to the Stream. Beware, o my Son, lest thou cling
overmuch to this Mode of Magick; for it is lesser than that
Other, and if thou neglect That Other, then is thy Danger fearful
and imminent, for it is the Edge of the Abyss of Choronzon, where
are the lonely Towers of the Black Brothers. Also the Formulation of
the Object in the Eagle is by a Species of Intoxication, so that His
Nature is of Dream or Delirium, and thus there may be Illusion. For
this Cause I deem it not wholly unwise if thou use this Way of
Magick chiefly as a Cordial; that is for the Fortifying of thine own
Nature.
DE MEDICINIS SECUNDUM QUATTUOR ELEMENTA. (On the Chemical Agents
According to the Four Elements)
Concerning the Use of chemical Agents, and be mindful that thou
abuse them not, learn that the Sacrament itself relateth to Spirit,
and the Four Elements balanced thereunder in its Perfection. So also
thy Lion himself hath a fourfold Menstruum for his Serpents. Now to
Fire belong Cocaine, which fortifieth the Will, loosing him from
bodily Fatigue, Morphine, which purifieth the Mind, making the
Thought safe, and slow, and single, Heroin which partaketh as it
seemeth, of he Nature of these twain aforesaid albeit in Degree less
notable than either of them, and Alcohol, which is Food, that is,
Fuel, for the whole Man. To Water, attribute Hashish and Mescal, for
they make Images, and they open the hidden Springs of Pleasure and
of Beauty. Morphine, for its Ease, hath also part in Water. Air
ruleth Ethyl Oxide, for it is as a Sword, dividing asunder ever Part
of thee, making easy the Way of Analysis, so that thou comest to
learn thyself of what Elements thou art compact. Lastly, of the
Nature of Earth are the direct Hypnotics, which operate by Repose,
and restore thy Strength by laying thee as a Child in the Arms of
the Great Mother, I say rather of Her material and physiological
Vicegerent.
DE VIRTUTE EXPERIMENTIAE IN HOC ARTE. (On the Virtue of Experience
in this Art)
Not Sleep, not Rest, not Contentment are of the Will of the Hero,
but these Things he hateth, and consenteth to enjoy them only with
Same of his weak Nature. But he will analyse himself without Pity,
and he will do all Things soever that may free and fortify his Mind
and Will. Know that the Technick of the Right Use of this Magick
with Poisons is subtle; and since the Nature of every Man differeth
from that of his Fellow, there entereth Idiosyncrasy, and thine
Experience shall be thy Master in this Art. Heed also this Word
following: The Right Use of these Agents is to gain a Knowledge
preliminary of thine own Powers, and of High States, so that thou
goest not altogether blindly and without Aim in thy Quest, ignorant
of the Ways of thine own inner Being. Also, thou must work always
for a definite End, never for Pleasure or for Relaxation, except thy
wilt, as a good Knight is sworn to do. And thou being Hero and
Magician art in Peril of abusing the fiery Agents only, not those of
Earth, Air or Water; because these do really work with thee in
Purity, making thee wholly what thou wouldst be, an Engine
indefatigable, a Mind clear, calm, and concentrated, and a Heart
fierce aglow.
DE SACRAMENTO VERO. (On the True Sacrament)
But in the Sacrament of the Gnosis, which is of the Spirit, is there
naught hurtful, for its Elements are not only Food, but a true
Incarnation and Quintessence of Life, Love, and Liberty,
and at its Manifestation thy Lion is consecrated by pure Light of
Ecstasy. Also, as this is the strongest so also it is the most
sensitive of all Things soever, and both proper and ready to take
Impress of Will, not as a Seal passively but with true Recreation in
a Microcosm thereof. And this is a God alive and puissant to create,
and He is a Word of Magick wherein thou mayst read Thyself with all
thine History and all thy Possibility. Also as to thine Eagle, is
not this chosen by Nature Herself by Her Way of Attraction, without
which harmony Aesthetic and Magnetic thy Lion is silent, and inert,
even as Achilles before his Rage in his Tent. Now also herefore I
charge thee, o my Son, to partake constantly of his Sacrament for it
is proper to all Virtue, and as thou dost learn to us it in
Perfection, thou wilt surpass all other Modes of Magick. Yea, in
good Sooth, no Herb or Potion is like unto this, supreme in every
Case, for it is the True Stone of Philosophers, and the Elixir and
Medicine of all Things, the Universal Tincture or Menstruum of thine
own Will.
DE DISCIPULIS REGENDIS. (On Directing Disciples)
I will have thee to know, moreover, my dear Son, the right Art of
Conduct with them whom I shall give thee for Initiation. And the
Rule thereof is one Rule; Do that thou wilt shall be the whole of
the Law. See thou constantly to it that this be not broken;
especially in the Section thereof (if I dare say so) which readeth
Mind Thine Own Business. This is of Application equally to all, and
the most dangerous Man (or Woman, as has occurred, or I err) is the
Busy- body. Oh how ashamed are we, and moved to Indignation, seeing
the Sins and Follies of our Neighbours! Of all the Occasions of this
Grievance the most common is the Desire of Sex unsatisfied; and thou
knowest already, even in thy young Experience, how in that Delirium
the Weal of the Whole Universe appeareth of no Account. Do thou wean
thy Babes from that Simplicity, and instill the Sense of true
Proportion. For verily this is a Way of Madness, Love, unless it be
under Will. And the Cure of his Madness is not so good as its
Prevention, so that thou shouldst be beforehand with these Children,
shewing them the right Importance of Love, how it should be a sacred
Rite, exalted above Personality, and a Fire to enlighten and serve
Man, not to devour him.
DE QUIBUSDAM MORBIS DISCIPULORUM. (On Certain Diseases of Disciples)
And thus, if any Babe of thine be ill at ease, look closely first
whether this Love be not the Root of his Distemper. Watch also
Idleness, for whoso presseth eagerly forward in Will heedeth little
the Affairs of this Fellows. O my Son, if every Man doth his own
Will, there is no more to Say! But the Busy-body nor mindeth his own
Business, nor leaveth others to mind theirs. Be thou instant
therefore with such an one, to cure him by enlightening his Will,
and speeding him therein. Remember also that if one speak ill of
another, the Fault is first of all in himself, for we know naught
but that which is within us. Did not the great Witch-Finder end by
confessing that he also was a Sorcerer? We become that which
obsesseth us, either through extreme Hate or Extreme Love. Knowest
thou not how the one is a Symbol of the other? For this Reason,
since Love is the Formula of Life, we are under Bond to assimilate
(in the End) that which we fear or hate. So then we shall be wise to
mould all Things within ourselves in Quietness and
Modulation. But above all must we use all to our own End, adapting
with Adroitness even our Weakness to the Work.
DE CULPIS DOMI PETENDIS. (On Watching for Faults in the House)
Therefore, watch heedfully the Fault of another, that thou mayst
correct it in thyself. For if it were not in thee, thou couldst not
perceive it or understand it. Lo, in thine Ecstacy of Love, thou
callest upon the Universe to bear Witness that to this End alone was
it created; it is unthinkable that thou shouldst love another, and
incomprehensible that any Man should grieve. Yet ere the Moon change
her Quarter, thou art free of thy Lunes, and lovest another, and it
may be grievest in thyself while he that amazed thee hath joined the
Company of the Rejoicing. Watch then, and heed thyself; and pay no
Heed to thy Fellows, insofar as they impede thee not. And let this
be the Rule. For every Will is pure and every Orbit free; but Error
bringeth Confusion. See therefore that none leave his Path, lest he
foul that of his Brother; and remember also that with Speed cometh
Ease of Control. Let each Man therefore urge briskly his Chariot in
a right Line toward the Centre; for two Radii cannot cross. And
beware most of this Love, because it lieth so close to Will that
Dis-ease thereof easily imparteth his Error to the Whole Way of the
Magician.
DE CORPORE UMBRA HOMINIS. (On the Body, that is the Shadow of Man)
Concerning the Aeon, o my Son, learn that the Sun and His Vicegerent
are in all Aeons, of Necessity, Father, Centre, Creator, each in His
Sphere of Operation. But the Formula of the past Aeon was of the
Dying god, and was based upon Ignorance. For Men thought that the
Sun died and was reborn alike in the Day and in the Year; and so
also was the Mystery of Man. Now already are we well assured by
Science how the Death of the Sun is in Truth but the Shifting of a
Shadow; and in this Aeon (o my son, I lift up my Voice and I make
Prophecy!) so shall it be proven as to Death. For the Body of Man is
but his Shadow, it cometh and goeth even as the tides of Ocean; and
he only is in Darkness who is hidden by that Shadow from the Light
of his true Self. Now therefore understand thou the Formula of
Horus, the Lion God, the Child crowned and conquering that cometh
forth in Force and Fire! For thy Changes are not Phases of thee, but
of the Phantoms which thou mistakest for thy Self.
DE SIRENIS. (On Sirens)
Concerning the Love of women, o my Son, it is written in "The Book
of the Law" that all is Freedom, if it be done unto our Lady Nuit.
Yet also there is this Consideration, that for every Parsifal there
is a Kundry. Thou mayst eat a thousand Fruits of the Garden; but
there is one Tree whose name for thee is Poison. In every great
Initiation is an Ordeal, wherein appeareth a Siren or Vampire
appointed to destroy the Candidate. I have myself witnessed the
Blasting of not less than ten of my own Flowers, that I tended when
I was Nemo, and that although I saw the Cankerworm, and knew it, and
gave urgent Warning. How then consider deeply in thyself if I were
rightly governed in this Action, according to the Tao. For we that
are Magicians work without Fear or Haste, being omnipotent in
Eternity, and each Star must go his Way; and who
am I that should save this People? "Wilt thou smite me as thou
smotest the Egyptian yesterday?" Yes, although mine were he Might to
save these Ten, I reached not forth mine Arm against Iniquity, I
spake and I was silent; and that which was appointed came to pass.
As it is written, the Pregnant Goddess hath let down Her Burden upon
the Earth.
DE FEMINA QUADAM. (On a Certain Woman)
Knowest thou for what Cause I am moved to write this unto thee, my
Son only-begotten, Child of Magick and of Mystery? It is that I thy
Father am also in this Ordeal of Initiation at this Hour. For the
Sun is nigh unto the End of the Sign of the Fishes in the Thirteenth
Year of the Aeon, and the New Current of High Magick leapeth forth
as a Flood from the Womb of my True Lady BABALON. And a Word hath
come to me by he Mouth of the Scarlet Woman, whose Name is EVE, or
AHITHA, concerning the Temple of JUPPITER that is builded for me.
And therein is a Woman appointed to a certain Office. Now this Woman
appeared to me in a Vision when I was in the House of the Juggler by
the Lake among the Mountains, the Sun being in Cancer in the
Eleventh Year of the Aeon, even in the Week after thy Birth. And I
think this Woman to be Her whom I call WESRUN. But even while with a
pure Heart I did invoke Her, there came unto me another like unto
Her, so that I am confused in my Mind and bewildered. And this other
Woman stirreth my true Nature in its Depth, so that I will not call
it Love. For the Voice of Love I know of old; but this other Woman
speaketh in a tongue whereof I have no Understanding.
DE SUA VIRTUTE. (On Her Virtue)
What then shall I do therein? For the Scarlet Woman adjureth me by
the great Name of God ITHUPHALLOS that I deal with the Other Woman
as with any Woman, according to my Will. But this I fear for that
she is not as any Woman, and I deem her to be the Vampire of this
Ordeal. Now then? Shall I fear? Said I not long since, when I was
called of Men Eliphaz Levi Zahed, that the Error of Oedipus was that
he should have tamed the Sphinx, and ridden her into Thebes? Shall I
not take this Vampire, if she be such, and master her and turn her o
the Great End? "Am I such a Man as should flee?" Is not all Fear the
Word of Failure? Shall I distrust my Destiny? Am I that am the Word
of the Aeon of so little avail that even he whole Powers of
Choronzon can disperse me? Nay, o my Son, here is Courage of
Ignorance and Discretion of Knowledge, and by no less Virtue will I
win through unto mine End. As it is written: with Courage conquering
Fear will I approach thee.
DE ALIQUIBUS MODIS ORACULI PETENDI. (On Seeking for Certain Types of
Oracle)
My Son, in all Judgment and Decision is great Delicacy, but most in
these Matters of the Will. For thou art Advocate as well as Judge,
and unless thou have well organized thy Mind thou art Bondslave of
Prejudice. For this Cause it is adjuvant to thy Wisdom to call
Witnesses that are not of thine own Nature, and to ask Oracles whose
Interpretation is bound by fixed rule. This is the Use of the Book
TAROT, of the Divination by Earth, or by the other Elements, or by
the Book "Yi-King", and many another Mode of Truth. Thou knowest by
thine Experience that these Arts
deceive thee not, save insofar as thou deceivest thyself. So then to
thee that art NEMO is no Siege Perilous at this Table, but to them
that are yet below he Abyss is very notable Danger of Error. Yet
must they train themselves constantly in these Modes, for Experience
itself shall teach them how their Bias toward their Desires reacteth
in the End against themselves, and hindereth them in he Execution of
their Wills. Nevertheless, as thou well knowest, the best Mode is
the Creation of an Intelligible Image by Virtue of the Mass of the
Holy Ghost, declaring the rue Will unto thee in Terms of thy
Qabalah!
DE FRATRIBUS NIGRIS FILIIS INIQUITATIS. (On the Black Brothers, Sons
of Iniquity)
Of the Black Brothers, o my Son, will I write these Things
following. I have told thee already concerning Change, how it is the
Law, because every Change is an Act of Love under will. So then He
that is Adept Exempt, whether in our Holy Order or another, may not
remain in the Pillar of Mercy, because it is not balanced, but is
unstable. Therefore is the Choice given unto him, whether he will
destroy his Temple, and give up his Life, extending it to Universal
Life, or whether he will make a Fortress about that Temple, and
abide therein, in the false Sphere of Daath, which is in the Abyss.
And to the Adepts of our Holy Order this Choice is terrible; by
Cause that they must abandon even Him whose Knowledge and
Conversation they have attained. Yet, o my Son, they have much Help
of our Order in this Aeon, because the general Formula is Love, so
that their habit itself urges them to the Bed of our Lady BABALON.
Know then the Black Brothers by this true Sign of their Initiation
of iniquity, that that they resist Change, restrict and deny Love,
fear Death. Percutiantur.
DE VIRTUTE CHIRURGICA. (On the Virtue of Surgery)
Know that the Cult of the Slave-Gods is a Device of those Black
Brothers. All that stagnateth is thereof, and thence cometh not
Stability, but Putrefaction. Endure not thou the static Standards
either in Thought or in Action Resist not even the Change that is
the Rottenness of Choronzon, but rather speed it, so that the
elements may combine by Love under Will. Since the Black Brothers
and their Cults set themselves against Change, do thou break them
asunder. Yea, though of bad come worse, continue in that Way; for it
is as if thou didst open an Abscess, the first Effect being noisome
exceedingly, but the last Cleanness. Heed not then, whoso crieth
Anarchy, and Immorality, and Heresy against thee, and feareth to
destroy Abuse lest worse Things come of it. For the Will of the
Universe in its Wholeness is to Truth, and thou dost well to purge
it from its Costiveness. For it is written that there is no bond
that can unite the Divided by Love, so that only those Complexes
which are in Truth Simplicities, being built Cell by Cell unto an
Unity by Virtue of Love under Will, are worthy to endure in their
Progression.
DE OPERIBUS STELLAE MICROCOSMI. QUORUM SUNT QUATTOUR MINORES.
(On the Four Lesser Operations of the Microcosmic Star)
I have already written unto thee, my Son, of the Paradox of Liberty,
how the Freedom of thy Will dependeth upon the Bending of all thy
forces to that one End. But now also learn how great is the Economy
of our Magick, and this will I declare unto thee in a Figure of the
Holy Qabalah, to wit, the Formula of the Tetragrammaton. Firstly,
the Operation of Yod and He is not Vau only, but with Vau appeareth
also a new He, as a By-Product, and She is mysterious, being at once
the Flower of the three others, and their Poison. Now by the
Operation of Vau upon that He is no new Creation, but the Daughter
is set upon the Throne of Her Mother, and by this is rekindled the
Fire of Yod, which, consuming that Virgin, doth not add a Fifth
Person, but balanceth and perfecteth all. For this Shin, that is the
Holy Spirit, pervadeth these, and is immanent. Thus in three
Operations is the Pentagram formulated. But in the Figure of that
Star these Operations are not indicated, for the five Lines of Force
connect not according to any of them; but five new Operations are
made possible; and these are the Works proper to the perfected man.
First, the Work which lieth level, the Vau with the He, is of he
Yang and the Yin, and maketh One the Human with the Divine, as in
the Attainment of the Master of the Temple. Yet this Work hath his
Perversion, which is of Death. Thus then for thee four Works, they
pertain all to the Natural Formula of the Cross and Rose.
DE OPERIBUS STELLAE MICROCOSMI. QUORUM SUNT QUATTUOR MAJORES.
(On the Four Major Operations of the Microcosmic Star)
O my Son, behold now the Virtue and Mystery of the Silver Star! For
of these four Works not one leadeth to the Crown, because
Tetragrammaton hath his Root only in Chokmah. So herefore the
Formula of the Rosy Cross availeth no more in he Highest. Now then
in the Pentagram are two Lines that invoke Spirit, though they lead
not thereunto, and they are he Works of He with He, and of Yod with
Vau. Of thee twain he former is a Work Magical of the Nature of
Music, and it draweth down the Fire of the HIGHER by Seduction or
Bewitchment. And the latter is a Work opposite thereunto, whose
Effect formulateth itself by direct Creation in the Sphere of its
Purpose and Intent. But there remain yet two of the Eight Works,
namely, the straight Aspiration of the Chiah or Creator in thee to
the Crown, and the Surrender of the Nephesch or Animal soul to the
Possession thereof; and these be he twin principal Formulae of the
Final Attainment, being Archetypes of the Paths of Magick (the one)
and Mysticism (the other) unto the End. From each of these Eight
Works is derived a separate Mode of practical Use, each after his
Kind; and it should be well for thine Instruction if thou study upon
these my Words, and found upon them a System. O my son, forget not
therein the Arcanum of their Balance and Proportion; for herein
lieth the Mystery of their Holiness.
DE STELLA MACROCOSMI. (On the Macrocosmic Star)
Thus far then concerning the Pentagram, how it is of the Cross, and
its Virtue of the Highest; but the Hexagram is for he most Part a
Detail of the Formula of the Rose and Cross. Already have I shewed
unto thee how the Most Holy Trinity is the Yang; but the Spirit, and
the Water (or
Fluid) and the Blood, that bear Witness in the Inferior, are of the
Yin. Thus the Operation of the Hexagram lieth wholly within the
Order of our Plane, uniting indeed any soul with its Image, but not
transcendentally, for its Effect is Cosmos, the Vau that springeth
from the Union of the Yod and the He. Thus is it but a Glyph of that
first Formula, not of the others. But of all these Things shalt thou
thyself make Study with ardent Affection; for therein lie many
Mysteries of practical Wisdom in our Magick Art. And this is the
Wonder and Beauty of this Work, that for every Man is his own
Palace. Yea, this is Life, that the Secrets of our Order are not
fixed and dead, as are the Formulae of the Outer. Know that in the
many thousand Times that I have performed the Ritual of the
Pentagram or the Invocation of the Heart girt with a Serpent, or the
Mass of he Phoenix, or of the Holy Ghost, there has not been one
Time wherein I did not win new Light, or Knowledge or Power or
Virtue, save through mine own Weakness or Error.
DE SUA FEMINA OLUN, ET DE ECSTASIA PRAETER OMNIA. (On His Woman Olun
and on the Ecstasy that Surpasses All)
My Son, I am enflamed with Love. I burn up eagerly in the Passion
that thus mightily consumeth me. Yet in myself I know not at all
That which constraineth me, and enkindleth my Soul in Ecstacy. There
is Silence in my Soul, and the Fear round about me, as I were Syrinx
in the Night of the Forest. This is a great Mystery that I endure, a
Mystery too great for the mortal Part of me. For but now, when I
cried out upon the Name Olun, which is the secret Name of my Lady
that hath come o me --- most strangely! --- then I was rapt away
altogether subtly yet fiercely into a Trance that hath transformed
me with Attainment, yet without Trace in Mind. O my son! there is
the Transfiguration of Glory, and there is the Jewel in the
Lotus-flower; yea, also is many other whereof I am Partaker. But
this last Passion, that my Lady Olun hath brought unto me upon this
last Day of the Winter of the thirteenth Year of the Aeon, even as I
wrote these Words unto thee, is a Mystery of Mysteries beyond all
these. Oh my son, thou knowest well the Perils and the Profit of our
Path; continue thou therein. Olun! MAPIE! BABALON! Adsum.
DE NOMINE OLUN. (On the Name Olun)
Four Seasons, or it may be night five, ago, I thy Father was in the
City called New Orleans, and being in Travail of Spirit I did invoke
the God that giveth Wisdom, bearing the Word of the All- Father by
his Caduceus. Then, suddenly, as I began (as it were a Gust of Fire
whirled forth against that Idea) came the Wit of mine utter
Identity, so that I ceased crying Mercurius Sum. Also instantly I
knew in myself that here was a Mystery hidden, and translating into
the Greek Tongue, exclaimed 'EPMHE EIMI', whose Numeration did I
make in my Mind forthwith, and it is Four Hundred and Eighteen, like
unto the Word of the Aeon. So by this I knew that my Work was well
wrought in Truth. Thus hen also was it with this my Lady; for after
many Questions I obtained from the wizard Amalantrah that Name Olun,
that is One Hundred and Fifty and Six even as that of our Lady
BABALON; and then, being inspired, I wrote down Her Earth-name in
Greek, MAPIE, which is also that this Name (as I have learned) is in
the Phoenician Tongue, wh6lon; which by Interpretation is That which
is Infinite, and Space; so that all is consonant with Nuit Our Lady
of the Stars. Thus, o my Son, is the Word of Truth echoed throughout
all Worlds; and thus have the Wise mighty Assurance in their Way.
See, o my Son, that thou work not without this Guard inflexible,
lest thou err in thy Perceptions.
DE VIRIS MAGNANIMIS, AMORE PRAECLARISSIMIS. (On Great Men, Famous in
Love)
Know that in the Mind of Man is much Wisdom that is hidden, being
the Treasure of his Sire that he inheriteth. Thus, nigh all of his
moral Nature is unknown to him until his Puberty; that is, this
Nature pertaineth not unto the Recording and Judging Apparatus of
his Brain until it is put herein by the Stirring of that deeper
Nature within him. Thou wilt mark also that great Men are commonly
great Lovers; and this is in Part also because (consciously or not)
they are ware of that Secret following, that every Act of Love
communicateth somewhat of the Wisdom stored within him to his
percipient Mind. Yet must such Act be done rightly, according o Art;
and unless such Act is of Profit alike to Mind and Body, it is an
Error. This then is true Doctrine; which if it be understanded
aright of thee, shall make diamond-clear thy Path in Love, which (to
them that know not this) is so obscure and perilous that I believe
there is not one Man in Ten Thousand that cometh not to Misadventure
therein.
DE CASTITATE. (On Chastity)
My son, be fervent! Be firm! Be stable! Be quick to make Impurity,
how one Course of Ideas seeketh to infringe upon another, to quell
the Virtue thereof. Gold is pure, but to drink molten Gold were
Impurity to thy Body, and its Destruction. Law is a Code of the
Customs of a People; if it intrude thereon to alter them, it is an
Impurity of Oppression. So also Diet is to be in Accord with
Digestion; Ethics were an Impurity therein. Love is an Expression of
the Will of the Body, yea, and more also, of That which created he
Body; and its Operation is commonly between One and One, so that the
Interference of a Third Person is Impurity, and not to be endured.
Nay, even the thought of Third Person hath but ordinary not Part in
Love; so that, as thou seest constantly in thy Life, Love being
strong, taketh no heed of others, and some after Interference
bringeth Misfortune. Now then shall we therefore cast out Love, or
accept Impurity herein? God forbid. And for this Cause see thou well
to it that in thy Kingdom there be no Interference there with, nor
Hindrance from any. For it is perfect in itself.
DE CEREMONIO EQUINOXI. (On the Ceremony of the Equinox)
My Son, our Father in Heaven hath passed into the Sign of he Ram. I
have performed the Rite of Union with Him according to the ancient
Manner, and I know the Word that shall rule the Semester. Also it is
given unto my Spirit to write unto thee concerning the Virtue of
this Rite, and many another of Antiquity. And it is this, that our
Forefathers made of these Ceremonies an Epitome Mnemonic, wherein
certain Truths, or true Relations, should be communicated in a
magical Manner. Now therefore by the Practice of these mayst thou
awaken thy Wisdom, that it may manifest in thy conscious Mind. And
this Way is of Use even when the Ceremonies, as those of he
Christians, are corrupt and deformed; but in such a Case thou shalt
seek out the true ancient Significance thereof. For there is that
within thee which remembereth Truth, and is ready to communicate the
same unto thee when thou hast Wit to evoke it from the Adytum and
Sanctuary of thy Being. And this is to be done by this Repetition of
the Formula of that Truth.
Note thou further that this which I tell thee is the Defence of
Formalism; and indeed thou must work upon a certain Skeleton, but
clothe it with live Flesh.
DE LUCE STELLARUM. (On the Light of the Stars)
It was that most Holy Prophet, thine Uncle, called upon Earth
William O'Neill, or Blake, who wrote for our Understanding these
Eleven Sacred Words! ---
If the Sun and Moon should doubt They'd immediately go out.
O my Son, our Work is to shine by Fore and Virtue of our own Natures
without Consciousness or consideration. Now, notwithstanding that
our Radiance is constant and undimmed, it may be that Clouds
gathering about us conceal our Glory from he Vision of other Stars.
These Clouds are our Thoughts; not those true Thoughts which are but
conscious Expressions of our Will, such as manifest in our Poesy, or
our Music, or other Flower-Ray of our Life quintessential. Nay, the
Cloud-Thought is born of Division and of Doubt; for all Thoughts,
except they be creative emanations, are Witnesses to Conflict within
us. Our settled Relations with the Universe do not disturb our
Minds, as, by Example, our automatic Functions, which speak to us
only in the Sign of Distress. Thus all consideration is
Demonstration of Doubt, and Doubt of Duality, which is the Root of
Choronzon.
DE CANTU. (On Song)
So then, o my Son, there is my Wisdom, that the Voice of he Soul in
its true Nature Eternal and Unchangeable, comprehending all Change,
is Silence; and the Voice of the Soul, dynamic, in the Way of its
Will, is song. Nor is there any Form of utterance that is not, as
song is, the Music proper to that Motion, according to the Law.
Thus, as thy Cousin Arthur Machen hath rejoiced to make plain unto
Men in his Book called "Hieroglyphics", the first Quality of Art is
its Ecstacy. So, night to all Men at one Time or other, cometh Joy
of Creation, with the Belief that their Utterance is holy and
beautiful, glorious with Banners. This would indeed be he Case, an
we could discern their Thought from their Words; but because they
have no technical Skill to express themselves, they do not enable
others to reproduce or recreate the original Passion which inspired
them, or even any Memory hereof. Understand then what is the Agony
of the Great Soul who hath every Key of Paradise at his Girdle, when
he would open the Gate of Holiness, or of Beauty, or any Virtue
soever, o the Men of his Age!
DE STULTITIA HUMANA. (On Human Stupidity)
Know that a Mind can only apprehend those Things with which it is
already familiar, at least in Part. Moreover, it will ever interpret
according to the Distortion of its own Lenses. Thus, in a great War,
all Speech soever may be understood as if it were of Reference
thereunto; also, a Guilty Person, or a Melancholic may see in every
Stranger an Officer of Justice, or one of them that are banded
together to persecute him, as the Case may be. But consider moreover
that the
Mysterious is always the Terrible, for Vulgar Minds. How then when a
New Word is spoken? Either it is not heard, or it is misunderstood;
and it evoketh Fear and Hate as a Reaction against Fear. Then Men
take him and set him at naught, and spit upon him and scourge him,
and lead him away to crucify him; and the third Day he riseth from
among the Dead, and ascendeth into Heaven, and sitteth at the right
Hand of God, and cometh to judge the Quick and the Dead. This, o my
son, is the History of Every Man unto whom is given a Word.
DE SUO PROELIO. (On His Struggle)
Now therefore thou seest how Men take the Son of Science, and burn
him for a Sorcerer or a Heretic; the Poet and cast him out as
Reprobate; the Painter, as deforming Nature, the Musician, as
denying Harmony; and so for every New Word. How much more, then, if
the Word be of Universal Import, a Word of Revolution and of
Revelation in the Deep of the Soul? A new Star; that is for the
Astronomers, and maybe setteth them by he Ears. But a new Sun! That
were for all Men; and a Seed of Tumult and Upheaval in every Land.
consider in thyself, herefore, what is the Might of the Adepts, the
Energy of the Sanctuary, that can endow one Man with the Word of an
Aeon, and bring him to the End in Victory, with his Chariot wreathed
in Flowers, and his Head bound round with a Fillet of Blood-
honoured Laurel! My Son, thou are entered into the Battle; and the
Men of our Race and our Clan return not save in Glory.
DE NECESSITATE VERBI CLAMANDI. (On the Need for Declaring the Word)
He that striveth against his own Nature is witless, and wotteth not
his Will, darkening Counsel in himself, and denying his own God, and
giving Place to Choronzon. So then his Work becometh Hotchpot, and
he is shattered and dispersed in the Abyss. Nor is it better for him
if he do this for the supposed Good of another, and for that other
is it Evil also in the End of the Matter. For to manifest thine own
Division to another, and to deceive him, is but to confirm him in
blindness, or Illusion, and to hinder or to deflect him in his Way.
Now to do thine own Will is to leave him free to do his own Will,
but to mask thy Will is to falsify one of the Beacons by which he
may steer his Ship. My son, all division of Soul, that begetteth
Neurosis and Insanity, cometh from wrong Adjustment to Reality, and
to Fear thereof. Wilt thou then hide Truth from thy Brother, lest he
suffer? Thou dost not well, but confirmest him in Iniquity, and in
Illusion, and in Infirmity of Spirit.
DE MYSTERIO EUCHARISTICO UNIVERSALI. (On the Mystery of the
Universal Sacrament)
My son, heed also this Word of thine Uncle William O'Neill;
Everything that lives is holy. Yea, and more also, every Act is
holy, being essential to the Universal Sacrament. Knowing his, thou
mayst conform with that which is written in "The Book of the Law":
to make no Distinction between any one Thing and any other Thing.
Learn well to apprehend this Mystery, for it is the Great Gate of
the College of Understanding, whereby each and all of thy Senses
become constant and perpetual Witnesses of the One Eucharist,
whereunto also they are Ministers. So then to thee
every Phenomenon soever is the Body of Nuit in her Passion; for it
is an Event; that is, the Marriage of some one Point of view with
some One Possibility. And this State of Mind is notably an
Appurtenance of thy Grade of Master of the Temple, and the Unveiling
of the Arcanum of Sorrow, which is thy Work, as it is written in
Liber Magi. Moreover, this State, assimilated in the very Marrow of
thy Mind, is the first Stop toward the comprehension of the Arcanum
of Change, which is the Root of the Work of a Magus of Our Holy
Order. O my Son, bind this within thine Heart, for its Name is the
Beatific Vision.
DE RECTO IN RECTO. (On the Rightness of Things)
Now also then I bid thee use all filial Diligence, and attend to
this same Word in the Mouth of thine earliest Ancestor (except we
adventure to invoke the Name FU---HSI) in our known Genealogy, the
Most Holy, the True Man, Lao-Tze, that gave His Light unto the
Kingdom of Flowers. For being questioned concerning the abode of the
Tao, he gave Answer that It was in the Dung. Again, the Tathagata,
the Buddha, most blessed, most perfect and most enlightened, added
His Voice, that there is no Grain of Dust which shall not attain to
the Arhan. Keep therefore in just Balance the Relation of Illusion
to Illusion in that Aspect of Illusion, neither confusing the
Planes, nor confounding the Stars, nor denying the Laws of their
Reaction, yet with Eagle's Vision beholding the One Sun of the True
Nature of the Whole. Verily, his is the Truth, and unto it did also
Dionysus and Tahuti and Sri Krishna set the seal of their Witness.
Cleanse herefore thine Heart, o my son, in the Waters of the Great
Sea, and enkindle it with the Fire of the Holy Ghost. For his is His
peculiar Work of Sanctification.
DE VIRGINE BEATA. (On the Blessed Virgin)
Understand then well this Mystery of Universal Godliness; for it is
the naked Beauty of the Virgin of the World. Lo! Since the End is
Perfection, as I have already shewn unto thee, and since also every
Event is inexorably and ineluctably interwoven in the Web of that
Fate, as it is certain that every Phenomenon is (as thou art sworn
to understand) "a particular Dealing of God with thy Soul". Yea, and
more also, it is a necessary Rubric in this Ritual of Perfection.
Turn not therefore away thine Eyes, for that they are too pure to
behold Evil; but look upon Evil with Joy, comprehending it in the
Fervour of this Light that I have enkindled in thy Mind. Learn also
that every Thing soever is Evil, if thou consider it as apart,
static and in Division; and thus in a Degree must thou apprehend the
Mystery of Change, for it is by Virtue of Change that this Truth of
Beauty and Holiness is made steadfast in the Universe. O my son,
there is no Delight sweeter than the continuous Contemplation of
this Marvel and Pageant that is ever about thee; it is the Beatitude
of the Beatitudes.
DE JOCO SUAE MOECHAE. (On the Sport of His Mistress)
Resist not Change, therefore, but act constantly according o thy
True Nature, for here only thou standest in Sorrow, if here be a
Division conscious of itself, and hindered from its Way (whose Name
is Love) unto its Dissolution. It is written in "The Book of the
Law" that the Pain of Division is as nothing, and the Joy of
Dissolution all. Now then here is an Art and Device of
Magick that I will declare unto thee, albeit it is a Peril if thou
be not fixed in that Truth and in that Beatific Vision whereof I
have written in the three Chapters foregoing. And it is this, to
create by Artifice a Conflict in thyself, that thou mayst take thy
Pleasure in its Resolution. Of this Play is thy sweet Stepmother, my
concubine, the Holy and Adulterous Olun, sublimely Mistress; for she
invoketh in her Fancy a thousand Obstacles to Love, so hat she
shuddereth at a Touch, swooneth at a Kiss, and suffereth Death and
Hell in the Ekstacy of her Body. And this is her Art, and it is of
Nuit Our Lady, for it is the Drama of Commemoration of the whole
mystery of By-coming.
DE PERICULO JOCORUM AMORIS. (On a Danger in the Sports of Love)
Yet be thou heedful, o my son, for this Art is set upon a Razor's
Edge. In our Blood is this great Pox of Sin, whose Word is
Restriction, as Inheritance of our Sires that served he Slave-Gods.
Thou must be free in the Law of Thelema, perfectly one with thy true
Self, singly and wholly bound in thy true Will, before thou durst
(in Prudence) invoke the Name of Choronzon, even for thy good Sport
and Phantasy. It is but to pretend, thou sayst; and that is Sooth;
yet thou must make Pretence so well as to deceive thyself, albeit
for a Moment; else were thy Sport savourless. Then, and thou have
one point of Weakness in thee, that Thought of thine may incarnate,
and destroy thee. Verily, the wise Enchanter is sure beyond Doubt of
his Charm ere he toy with a Fanged Cobra; and thou will knowest that
this Peril of Division in thy Self is the only one that can touch
thee. For all other Evil is but Elaboration of this Theme of
Choronzon. Praise therefore thy sweet Stepmother my concubine, the
Holy and Adulterous Olun; and thine own Mother Hilarion, for in this
Art was she also pre-eminent.
DE LIBIDINE SECRETA. (On the Unconscious, or Libido)
It is said among Men that the Word Hell deriveth from the Word
helan, to hele or conceal, in the Tongue of the Anglo- Saxons. That
is, it is the concealed Place, which, since all things are in thine
own Self, is the Unconscious. How then? Because Men were already
aware how this Unconscious, or Libido, is opposed, for the most Part
, to the conscious Will. In the Slave-Ages this is a Truth
Universal, or well nigh to it; for in such Times are Men compelled
to Uniformity by the Constraint of Necessity herself. Yea, of old it
was a continual Siege of every Man of every Clan, of every
Environment; and to relax guard was then Self-murder, or also
Treachery. So then no Man might chose his way, until he were Hunter,
Fighter, Builder; not any Woman, but she must first be Breeder. Now
in the Growth of States by Organization came, stepping stealthily, a
certain Security against the grossest Perils, so that a few Men
could be spared from Toil to cultivate Wisdom, and this was first
provided by the Selection of a caste Pontifical. By this Device came
the Alliance of King and Priest, Strength and Cunning fortifying
each the other through the Division of Labour.
DE ORDINE CIVITATUM. (On the Organization of Communities)
So presently, O my son, this first Organization among Men, by a
Procedure parallel to that of the Differentiation of Protoplasm,
made the State competent to explore and to control Nature; and every
Profit of this sort released more energy, and enlarged the class of
the Learned, until, as it is this day, only a small proportion of
any man's work must needs go o the satisfaction of first will
essential and common, the provision of shelter, food, and
protection. Verily, also thou seest many women made free to live as
they will, even o the admiration and delight of the Sage whose eye
laugheth to contemplate mischief. Thus the duty of every Unit
towards the whole is diminished, and also the necessity to conform
with hose narrow laws which preserve primitive tribes in their
struggle against environment. Thus the State need suppress only such
heresies as directly threaten its political stability, only such
modes of life as work manifest and proven hurt to others, or cause
general disorder by their scandal. Therefore save and except he
interferes thereby with the root laws of common weal, a man is free
to develop as he will according to his true nature.
DE SCIENTIAE MODO. (On the Method of Science)
To the Mind of the Philosopher, therefore, in the Youth of an Age,
any variation in type must appear as a Disaster; yea, intelligence
itself must perforce prove its value to the Brute in Terms of its
Brutishness or he distrusteth it and destroyeth it. Yet as thou
knowest, that variation which is fitted to the environment is the
Salvation of the Species. Only among Men, his Fellows turn ever upon
the Saviour, and rend him, until those who follow him in secret, and
it may be unconsciously, prove their Virtue and his Wisdom by their
survival when his Persecutors perish in their Folly. But we, being
secure against all primary enemies to the individual, or the common
Weal, may, nay, we must, if we would attain the Summit for our race,
devote all spare Leisure, Wealth, and Energy to he creation of
variation from the Norm, and thus by clear Knowledge bought of
Experiment and of Experience, move with eyes well open upon our True
Path. So therefore Our Law of Thelema is justified also of Biology
and of Social Science. It is the true Way of Nature, the Right
Strategy in the War of man with his Environment, it is the life of
his Soul.
DE MONSTRIS. (On Monsters)
Sayst thou, o my son, that not thus, but by forced Training, one
cometh to Perfection. This indeed is sooth, that by artificial
Selection and well-watched Growth and Environment, one hath dogs,
horses, pigeons, and the like, which excel their forebears in
strength, in Beauty, in Speed, as one will. Yet is this Work but a
false Magical Artifice, temporary and of Illusion; for thy
Masterpieces are but Monsters, not True Variations, and if thou
leave them, they revert swiftly to their own proper and authentic
Type, because that type was fitted by Experience to its Environment.
So every Variation must be left free to perpetuate itself of perish,
not cherished for its Beauty, or guarded for its Appeal to thine
Ideal, or cut off in thy Fear thereof. For the Proof of its Virtue
lieth in the Manifestation of its Power to survive, and to reproduce
itself after its Kind. Nurse not the Weakness of any Man, nor
swaddle and cosset him, not though he were poet or
artist because of his Value to thy Fancy, for if thou do this, he
shall grow in his Infirmity, so that even his Work for which thou
lovest him, shall be enfeebled also.
DE INFERNO PALATIO SAPIENTIAE. (On the Hidden Place of Wisdom)
Now then thou seest that this Hell, or Concealed Place within thee,
is no more a Fear or Hindrance to men of a Free Race, but the
Treasure-House of the Assimilated Wisdom of the Ages, and the
Knowledge of the True Way. Thus are we Just and Wise to discover
this Secret in ourselves, to conform the conscious Mind therewith.
For that Mind is compact solely (until it be illuminated) of
Impressions and Judgments, so that its Will is but directed by the
Sum of the shallow Reactions of a most limited Experience. But thy
True Will is the Wisdom of the Ages of thy Generations, the
Expression of hat which hath fitted thee exactly to thine
Environment. Thus thy conscious Mind is oftentimes foolish, as when
thou admirest an Ideal, and wouldst attain it, but thy true Will
letteth thee, so that there is Conflict, and the Humiliation of that
Mind. Here will I call to Witness the common event of "Good
Resolutions" that defy the lightning of destiny, being puffed up by
the mind of an indigestible ideal putrefying within thee. Thence
cometh Colic, and presently the Poison is expelled, or else thou
diest. But Resolutions of True Will are mighty against Circumstance.
DE VITIIS VOLUNTATIS SECRETAE. (On the Defects of the Hidden Will)
Learn moreover concerning this Hell, or Hidden Wisdom, that is
within thee, that it is modified, little by little, through the
Experience of the Conscious Mind, which feedeth it. For that Wisdom
is the Expression, or rather Symbol and Hieroglyph, of the true
Adjustment of thy Being to its Environment. Now, then, this
environment being eroded by Time, this Wisdom is no more perfect,
for it is not absolute, but standeth in Relation to the Universe. So
then a Part thereof may become useless, and atrophy as (I will
instance his case) Man's Wit of Smell; and the bodily Organ
corresponding degeneratheth therewith. But this is an Effect of much
Time, so that in thy Hell thou art like to find elements vain, or
foolish, or contrary to thy present Weal. Yet, o my Son, this hidden
wisdom is not thy True Will, but only the Levers (I may say so)
thereof. Notwithstanding, here lieth therein a Faculty of Balance,
whereby it is able to judge whether any Element in itself is
presently useful and benign, or idle and malignant. Here then is a
Root of Conflict between the Conscious and the Unconscious, and a
Debate concerning the Right Order of Conduct, how the Will may be
accomplished.
DE RATIONE PRAESIDIO VOLUNTATIS. ( On Reason, the Minister of the
Will)
O my Son, in this Case is there Darkness, yet this Comfort as a Lamp
therein, that there is no Error in the Will, but only Doubt as to
the Means of Success, else were we as Children afeared of Night.
Thus we have need of naught but to consider the Matter by Wit of
Reason, and of Prudence, and of Common Sense, and of Experience, and
of Science, adjusting ourselves so far
as we may. Here is the Key of Success, and its Name is the Skill to
make right Use of Circumstance. This, then is the Virtue of the
Mind, to be the Wazir of the will, a true Counsellor, through
Intelligence of the Universe. But o, my Son, do thou lay this Word
beneath thine Heart, that the Mind hath no Will, nor Right thereto,
so the Usurpation bringeth forth a fatal Conflict in thyself. For
the Mind is sensitive, unstable as Air, and may be led foolishly in
Leash by a stronger Mind that worketh as the cunning Tool of a will.
Therefore thy Safety and Defence is to hold thy mind to his right
Function, a faithful Minister to thine own True Will, that is King
of that Star whose name is Thy Self, by Election of Nature. Heed
well this, o my Son, for thy Mind Passive is rightly a Mirror to
reflect all Things clearly without Prejudice, and to remain
unstained by them.
DE CURSU SAPIENTIS. (On the Way of Wisdom)
Therefore consider this again in a Figure, that thy Mind is as the
Marshal of an Army, to observe the Dispositions of the Enemy, and to
order his own Forces rightly, according to that Information; but he
hath no Will, only Obedience to the Word of his King to outwit and
to overcome the Opposite. Nor doth that king make War by his own
Whim, if he be wise and true, but solely because of the Necessity of
his Country, and its Nature, whereof he is but Executive Officer and
Interpreter, its Voice as the Marshal is its Arm. Thus then do thou
understand thyself, not giving Place to thy Mind to dispute thy
Will, nor through Ignorance and Carelessness allowing the Enemy to
deceive thee, nor by Fear, by Imprudence and Foolhardiness, by
Hesitation and Vacillation, by Disorder and the lack of Firm
Correctness, by Failure in Elasticity or in Obstinacy, each at its
Moment, suffering defeat in the Hour of Shock. So, then, o my Son,
this is thy Work, to know the Word of thy Will without Error, and to
make perfect every Faculty of thy Mind, in right order and Readiness
to impose that Word as Law upon the Universe. So mote it be!
DE RATIONE QUAE SINE VOLUNTATE EST FONS MANIAE. (On Reason, Source
of Madness When Not under Will)
Is it not a Marvel how he that worketh with his Will and is in
constant Touch with the Reality external, maketh his mind to serve
him? How eagerly runneth it and returneth, gathering, arranging,
clarifying, classifying, organizing, comparing, setting in array,
with Skill and Might and Energy that faileth never! Nay, my son, in
this Way thou canst be pitiless with thy Mind, and it will not rebel
against thee, or neglect thine Ordinance. But now consider him that
worketh not with his Will, how his Mind is idle, not reaching out
after Reality, but debating within itself of its own Affairs, like a
Democracy, introspective. Then this Mind, not reacting equably and
with Elasticity to the World, is lost in its own Anarchy and Civil
War, so that although it work not, it is overcome by Weakness of
Division, and becometh Choronzon. And unto these words I call to my
witness the madness of the soul of Muscovy, in this year XIII, of
our Aeon that is ended. Therefore behold how this our Law of Thelema,
Do what thou wilt, is the first foundation of Health, whether in the
Body or in the Mind, either of a simple, or a complex Organism.
DE VERITATE QUEM FEMINAE NON DICERE LICET. (On Truth, Which May Not
Be Told to a Woman)
My Son, I charge thee, however thou beest provoked hereunto, tell
not the Truth to any Woman. For this is that which is written: Cast
not thy Pearls before Swine, lest they turn again and rend thee.
Behold, in the Nature of Woman is no Truth, nor Apprehension of
Truth, nor Possibility of Truth, only, if thou entrust this Jewel
unto them, they forthwith use it to thy Loss and Destruction. But
they are ware of thine own Love of Truth, and thy Respect thereunto,
so therefore they tempt thee, flattering with their Lips, that thou
betray thyself to them. And they feign falsely, with every Wile, and
cast about for thy soul, until either in Love or in Wrath or in some
other folly thereof, thou speak truth, profaning thy Sanctuary. So
was it ever, and herein I call to my witness Samson of Timnath, that
was lost by this Error. Now for any woman, any lie sufficeth; and
think not in thine extremity that Truth is mighty, and shall
prevail, as it does with any Man, for with a Woman her whole Craft
and Device is to persuade thee of this, so that thou utter the
Secret of thy Soul, and become her Prey. But so long as thou feed
her with her own Food of Falsity, thou art secure.
DE NATURA FEMINAE. (On the Nature of Woman)
The nature of woman, o my Son, is as thou hast learned in Our most
Holy Qabalah; and she is the Clothing in Sex of Man, the magical
image of his will to love. Therefore was it said by thine Uncle
Wolfgang von Goethe: Das Ewigweibliche zieht uns hinan. But
therefore also hath she no Nature of Truth, because she is but the
Eidolon of an Excitement and a going of thy star, and appertaineth
not unto its Essence and Stability. So then to thee she is but
Matter and to her thou art but Energy, and neither is competent to
the Formula of the other. Therefore also as thy Will is itself
Imperfection, as I have shewed thee aforetime, thou art not in the
Way of Love except thou be dressed in that Robe of thine which thou
callest woman. And thou canst not lure her to this Action proper to
her by thy Truth; but thou shalt, as our Grammar sayeth, assume the
Mask of the Spirit, that thou mayst evoke it by Sympathy. But thou
shalt appear in thy glory only when she is in thy power, and
bewildered utterly by ecstasy. This is a mystery, o my Son, and of
old Time it was declared in the Fable of Scylla and Charybdis, which
are the Formula of the Rock and the Whirlpool. Now then meditate
thou strictly upon his most worthy and adorable Arcanum, to thy
Profit and Enlightenment.
DE DUOBUS PRAEMIIS VIAE. (On the Two Rewards of the Path)
Let it be a Treasure in thine Heart, o my Son, this Mystery that I
shall next unveil before thine Eyes, O Eagle that art undazzled by
the Brilliance of Light, that soarest continually with virile flight
to thine august inheritance. Behold the Beatific Vision is of two
Orders, and in the Formula of the Rosy Cross it is of the Heart and
is called Beauty; but in the Formula of the Silver Star (id est, of
the Eye within the Triangle) it is of the Mind, and is called
Wonder. Otherwise spoken, the former is of Art, a sensuous and
creative Perception; but the latter of Science, and intellectual and
intelligible Insight. Or again, in our Holy Qabalah, the one is of
Tiphereth, the other of Binah, and in pure Philosophy, this is a
Contemplation of the Cosmos, causal and dynamic, and
that of its effect in Static Presentation. Now this Rapture of Art
is a Virtue or Triumph of Love in his most universal Comprehension,
but the Ecstasy of Science is a continual Orgasm of Light; that is,
of the mind. Thou sayest: o my Father, how may I attain to this
Fulness and Perfection? Art thou there, o my Son? It is well, and
blessed be the Bed wherein thou was begotten, and the womb of thy
sweet Mother, Hilarion my concubine, holy and adulterous, the
Scarlet Woman! Amen!
DE ECSTASIA SAMADHI, QUO ILLIS DIFFERIT. (On the Ecstasy of Samadhi,
and How it Differs from Others)
Confuse thou not this Beatific Vision with the Trances called
Samadhi; yet is Samadhi the Pylon of the Temple hereof. For Samadhi
is the Orgasm of the Coition of the Unlike, and is commonly violent,
even as the Lightning cometh of the discharge between two Vehicles
of extreme difference of Potential. But, as I shewed formerly
concerning Love, how each such Discharge bringeth either Component
more nigh to Equilibrium, so is it in this other Matter, and by
Experience thou comest constantly to Integration of Love (or what
not) within thyself, just as all Effort becometh harmonious and easy
by Virtue of Practice. Rememberest thou the first time thou was
thrown into Water, thy Fear and thy Struggles, and the Vehemence of
thy Joy when first thou didst swim without Support? Then, little by
little all Violence dieth away, because thou art adjusted to that
Condition. Therefore the Fury of thine early Victory in these Arts
Magical and Sciences is but the sign of thine own Baseness and
Unworthiness, since the Contrast or Differential is so overwhelming
to thee; but, becoming expert and Adept, thou art balanced in the
Glory, and calm, even as the Stars.
DE ARTE AMORIS ET DELICIARUM MYSTICI. (On the Art of Love and the
Pleasures of the Mystic)
The Path therefore unto this Beatific Vision of beauty, o my Son, is
that practice of Bhakti Yoga which is written in he book called
Eight Score and Fifteen, or Astarte, by this mine Hand when I was in
Gaul the beloved, at Montigny that is hard by the Forest of the Blue
Fountain, with Agatha my Concubine, the very soul of Love and of
Musick, that had ventured herself from beneath the Cross Austral
that she might seek me, to inspire and comfort me, and this was my
Reward from the Masters, and consolation in the years of my sorrow.
But the Way that leadeth to the other Form of this Vision of
Beatitude, to with, science is Gňana Yoga or Raja Yoga, of which I
have written only here and there, as one who should throw great
Stones upon the Earth in Disorder, by Default of building them nobly
into a Pyramid. And of this do I heartily repent me, and ask of the
God Thoth that he may give me (albeit at the Eleventh Hour) Virtue
and Wit that I may compose a True Book upon these ways of Union. Thy
first Step, therefore, o my Son, is to attain unto Samadhi, and to
urge thyself perpetually to Repetition of thy Success therein, for
it that been said by Philosophers of old that Practice maketh
perfect, and that Manners, being the constant Habit of Life, maketh
Man.
DE PRAEMIO SUMMO, VERA SAPIENTIA ET BEATITUDINE PERFECTA.
(On the Highest Reward, True Wisdom and Perfect Happiness)
Now then presently shall it some to pass, as by Dint of each
Experience that Component thereof which is within thee is attuned to
it, a slight Effort shall suffice to unite thee therewith, and this
without Shock, so that thou art no longer thrown back from the
Trance, as exhausted, but abidest therein, almost without Knowledge
of thy State. So then at last this Samadhi shall become normal to
thy common Consciousness, as it were a Point of View. Thus all
Things shall appear to thee very continually as to one in his first
Love, by the Vision of Beauty, and by the Vision of Science thou
shalt marvel constantly with Joy unfathomable at the Mystery of the
Laws whereby the Universe is upheld. This is that which is written:
True Wisdom and Perfect Happiness. O my Son, it is in this
Contemplation that on hath the reward of the Path; it is by this
that the Tribulations are rolled away as a Stone from thy Tomb; it
is with this that thou art wholly freed from the Illusions of
Distinction, being absorbed into the Body of our Lady Nuit. May She
grant thee this Beatitude; yea, not to thee only, but to all that
are.
DE INFERNO SERVORUM. (On the Hell of the Slaves)
Now, o my Son, having understood the Heaven that is within thee,
according to thy Will, learn this concerning the Hell of the Slaves
of the Slave-Gods, that it is a true place of Torment. For they,
restricting themselves, and being divided in Will, are indeed the
Servants of Sin, and they suffer, because, not being united in Love
with the whole Universe, they perceive not Beauty, but Ugliness and
Deformity, and, not being united in Understanding thereof, conceive
only of Darkness and Confusion, beholding Evil therein. Thus at last
they come, as did the Manichaeans, to find, to their Terror, a
Division even in the one, not that Division which we know for the
Craft of Love, but a Division of Hate. And this, multiplying itself,
Conflict upon Conflict, endeth in Hotchpot, and in the Impotence and
Envy of Choronzon, and in the Abominations of the Abyss. And of such
the Lords are the Black Brothers, who seek by their Sorceries to
confirm themselves in Division. Yet in this even is no true Evil,
for Love conquereth all, and their Corruption and Disintegration is
also the Victory of BABALON.
RHAPSODIA DE DOMINA NOSTRA. (A Rhapsody to Our Lady)
Blessed be She, ay, blessed unto the Ages be our Lady BABALON, that
plieth her scourge upon me, , to compel me to Creation
and to Destruction, which are One, in Birth and in Death, being
Love! Blessed be She, uniting the Egg with the Serpent, and
restoring Man unto his Mother, the Earth! Blessed be She, that
offereth Beauty and Ecstasy in the Orgasm of every Change, and that
exciteth thy Wonder and thy Worship by the Contemplation of Her Mind
many-wiled! Blessed be She, that hath filled her Cup with every Drop
of my Blood, so that my Life is lost wholly in the Wine of her
Rapture! Behold, how She is drunken thereon, and staggereth about
the heavens, wallowing in Joy, crying aloud the Song of uttermost
Love! Is not She thy true Mother among the Stars, o my Son, and hast
Thou not embraced Her in the Madness of Incest and Adultery? Yea,
blessed be She, blessed be Her Name, and the Name of her Name, unto
the Ages!
RHAPSODIA DE ASTRO SUO (A Rhapsody to His Star)
O my Son, knowest thou not the Joy to lie in the Wilderness and to
behold the Stars, in their Majesty of Motion calm and irresistible?
Hast thou thought there that thou art also as star, free because
consciously in Accord with the Law and Determination of thy Being?
It was thine own True Will that bound thee in thine Orbit; therefore
thou speedest on thy Path from Glory unto Glory in continual Joy. O
Son, o Reward of my Work, o Harmony and Completion of my Nature, o
Token of my Toil, o Witness of my Love for thy sweet Mother, the
holy and adulterous Hilarion, my Concubine, adorable in thine
Innocence as she in her Perfection, is not this verily Intoxication
of the Spirit in the Innermost, to be free absolutely and eternally,
to run and to return upon the Course in the Play of Love, to fulfil
Nature constantly in Light and Life? "Afloat in the Air, O my God, O
my God!" Without Support, without Constraint, wing thine own Way, o
Swan, o Bliss of Brightness!
DE HARMONIA VOLUNTATIS CUM DESTINIA. (On the Harmony of Will and
Fate)
This is the evident and final Solvent of the Knot Philosophical
concerning Fate and Freewill, that it is thine own Self, omniscient
and omnipotent, sublime in eternity, that first didst order the
Course of thine own Orbit, so that the which befalleth thee by Fate
is indeed the necessary Effect of thine own Will. These two, then,
that like Gladiators have made War in Philosophy through these many
Centuries, are One by the Love under Will which is the Law of
Thelema. O my son, there is no Doubt that resolveth not in certainty
and rapture at the touch of the Wand of our Law, an thou apply it
with Wit. Do thou grow constantly in the Assimilation of the Law,
and thou shalt be made perfect. Behold, there is a Pageant of
Triumph as each star, free from Confusion, sweepeth free in his
right Orbit; all Heaven acclaimeth thee as thou goest,
transcendental in Joy and in Splendour; and thy Light is as a Beacon
to them that wander afar, strayed in the Night. Amoun.
PARANTHESIS DE QUADAM VIRGINE. (A Parenthesis on a Certain Virgin)
Now, o my Son, I will declare unto thee the Virtue of that Part of
Love which receiveth and draweth, being the Counterpart of thine
own. For behold! I am moved in myself by the Absence of the Virgin
that is appointed for me. And her Eagerness of Purity doth encompass
me with its soft Tenderness, and twineth about me with sweet Scent
so that my Mind is enkindled with a gentle Flame, luminous and
subtle, and I write unto thee as in a Dream; for in this Enchantment
of her Devotion I am caught up cunningly into Beatitude, with great
Joy of the Gods that have bestrewn my way with Flowers, ay, many
Flowers and Herbs of Magick and of Holiness withal to match their
Beauty. Nay, o my son, I will cease from this mine Epistle unto thee
for awhile, that I may rest in the Pleasure of this Contemplation,
for it is Solace ineffable, and Recreation like unto Sleep among the
Mountains. Yea, can I wish thee more than this, that, coming to mine
Age, thou mayst find a Virgin like unto this to draw thee with her
Simplicity, and her embroidered Silence?
DE CONSTANTIA AMORIS, CORVO CANDIDO. (On Constancy in Love, To a
White Raven)
Think it not strange, my Son, that I, praising Adultery, should
praise also Constancy and Delight therein. For this is to state ill
thy Question. Herein is Truth and Wisdom concerning this matter,
that so long as Love be not wholly satisfied, and equilibrated by
entire Fulfilment and Exchange, Constancy is a Point of thy
Concentration and Adultery a Division in thy Will. But when thou
hast attained the Summit and Perfection in any Work, of what Worth
is it to continue herein? Hast thou two Stomachs, as has a Cow, to
chew the Cud of a digested Love? Yet, o my Son, this Constancy is
not of Necessity a Stagnation. Nay, behold the body of Our Lady Nuit,
therein are found certain twin Suns, that revolve constantly about
each other. So also it may be in Love, that two Souls, meeting,
discover each in the other such Wealth and Richness of Light and
Love, and in One Phase of Life (or Incarnation) or even in many,
they exhaust not that Treasure. Nor will I say that such are not in
their Degree and Quality thrice fortunate. But to persist in
Dullness, in Satiety, and in mutual Irritation and Abhorrence, is
contrary to the way of nature. So therefore there is no Rule in any
such Case, but the Law shall give Light to every one that hath it in
his Heart, and by that Wisdom let him govern himself.
DE MYSTERIO MALI. (On the Mystery of Evil)
Moreover, say not thou in thy Syllogism that, since every Change
soever, be it the Creation of a Symphony, or a Poem, or the
Putrefaction of a Carcass, is an Act of Love, and since we are to
make no Difference between any Thing and any other Thing, therefore
all Changes are equal in Respect of our Praise. For though this be a
right Conclusion in the term of thy comprehension as a Master of the
Temple, yet it is false in the Eyes of him that hath not attained
this Understanding. So therefore any Change (or Phenomenon)
appeareth noble or base to the imperfect Mind, according to its
Consonance and Harmony with the Will that governeth the Mind. Thus
if it be thy will to delight in Rhythm and Economy of words, the
Advertisement of a Commodity may offend thee; but if thou art in
need of that Merchandise, thou wilt rejoice therein. Praise then or
blame aught, as seemeth good unto thee; but with this Reflexion,
that thy Judgment is relative to thine own Condition, and not
absolute. This also is a Point of Tolerance, whereby thy shalt avoid
indeed those Things that are hateful or noxious to thee, unless thou
canst (in Our Mode) win them by Love, by withdrawing thine Attention
from them; but thou shalt not destroy them, for that they are
without Doubt the Desire of another.
DE VIRTUTE TOLERANTIA. (On the Virtue of Tolerance)
Understand then heartily, o my Son, that in the Light of this my
Wisdom all Things are one, being of the body or our Lady Nuit,
proper, necessary and perfect. There is then none superfluous or
harmful, and there is none honourable or dishonourable more than
another. Lo! In thine own body, the vile Intestine is of more Worth
to thee than the noble Hand or the proud Eye, for thou canst lose
these and live, but not that. Esteem therefore a Thing in Relation
to thine own Will, preferring the Ear if thou love Musick, and the
Palate if thou love Wine, but the essential Organs of Life above
these. Have Respect also to the Will of thy Fellow, not hindering
him in his
Way save as he may overly jostle thee in thine. For by the Practice
of this Tolerance thou shalt come sooner to the Understanding of
this Equality of all Things in Our Lady Nuit, and so the high
Attainment of Universal Love. Yet in thy partial and particular
Action, as thou art a Creature of Illusion, do thou maintain the
right Relation of one Thing to another; fighting if thou be a
Soldier, or building if thou be a Mason. For if thou hold not fast
this Discipline and Proportion, which alloweth its true Will to
every Part of thy Being, the Error of one shall draw all after it
into Ruin and Dispersion.
DE FORMULA DEORUM MORIENTIUM. (On the Formula of the Dying Gods)
Alas, my son! this hath been fatal constantly to many a Man of noble
Aspiration, that these Words were hidden from his Understanding. For
there is a Balance in all Things and the Body hath Charter to fulfil
his Nature, even as the Mind hath. So to repress one Function is to
destroy that Proportion which is wholesome, and wherein indeed all
Health and Sanity have Consistency. Verily, it is the Art of Life to
develop each Organ of Body and Mind, or, as I may say, each Weapon
of the Will to its perfection, neither distorting any Use, nor
suffering the Will of one Part to tyrannize over that of another.
And this Doctrine (be it accursed!) that Pain and Repression are
wholesome and profitable in themselves is a lie born of Sin and of
Ignorance, the false Vision of the Universe and of its Laws that is
the Basis of the Averse Formula of the Slain God. It is true that on
Occasion one Limb must be sacrificed to save the whole Body, as when
one cutteth away one Hand that is bitten by a Viper, or as when a
Man giveth his Life to save his City. But this is a right and
natural Subordination of the superficial and particular to the
fundamental and general Will, and moreover it is a Case
extraordinary, relating to Accident or Extremity, not in any Wise a
Rule of Life, or a Virtue in its Absolute Nature.
DE STULTIS MALIGNIS. (On Malign Fools)
My Son, there are Afflictions many and Woes many, that come of the
Errors of Men in Respect of the Will; but there is none greater than
this, the Interference of the Busy-Body. For they make Pretence to
know a man's Thought better than he doth himself, and to direct his
Will with more Wisdom than he, and to make Plans for his Happiness.
And of all these the worst is he that sacrificeth himself for the
Weal of his Fellows. He that is so foolish as not to follow his own
Will, how shall he be so wise as to pursue that of another? If mine
Horse balk at a Fence, should some Varlet come behind him, and
strike at his Hoofs? Nay, Son, pursue thy Path in Peace, that thy
Brother beholding thee may take Courage from thy Bearing, and
Comfort from his Confidence that thou wilt not hinder him by thy
Superfluity of Compassion. Let me not begin to tell thee of the
Mischiefs that I have seen, whose Root was in Kindness, whose Flower
was in Self-Sacrifice, and whose Fruit in Catastrophe. Verily, I
think there should be no End thereof. Strike, rob, slay thy
Neighbour, but comfort him not unless he ask it of thee, and if he
ask it, be wary.
APOLOGIA PRO SUIS LITERIS. (An Apology for His Writings)
How then, sayest thou, concerning this my Counsel unto thee? I say
Sooth, it is of my Will to bring up this my Wisdom from its Silence
into my conscious Mind, that I may the more easily reflect thereon.
Thou art but a Pretext for my Action, and a Focus for my Light.
Nevertheless heed these my Words, for they shall profit thee, thou
being of Age responsible in Judgment, and free in the law of Thelema.
Thus thou mayst read or no, concur or no, as thou wilt. Have I not
tutored thee in the Way of the Balance, or of Antithesis, shewing
thee the Art of Contradiction, whereby thou dost accept no Word save
as the Victor in thy Mind over its Opposite, nay more, as the Child
Transcendental of a Marriage of Opposites? This book then shall
serve thee but as a Food for thy Meditation, as a Wine to excite thy
Mind to Love and War. It shall be unto thee as a Chariot to carry
thee whither thou wilt; for I have seen in thee Independence and
Sobriety of Judgment, with that Faculty (most rare, most noble) to
examine freely, neither obsequious nor rebellious to Authority.
LAUS LEGIS THELEMA. (In Praise of the Law of Thelema)
This Property of thy Mind, my Son, is verily of sublime Virtue; for
the Vulgar are befogged, and their Judgment made null, by their
emotional Reaction. They are swayed by the Eloquence of a Numscull,
or overpowered by a Name or an Office, or the Magic of a Tailor;
else, it may be, they, being made Fools too often, reject without
Reflection even as at first they accepted. Again, they are wont to
believe the best of the worst, as Hope or Fear predominateth in them
at the Moment. Thus, they lose Touch of the Blade of Reality, and it
pierceth them. Then they in Delirium of their Wounds increase
Delusion fortifying themselves in Belief of those Phantasies created
by their Emotions or impressed upon their Silliness, so that their
Minds have no Unity, or Stability, or Discrimination, but become
Hotchpot, and the ordure of Choronzon. O my Son, against this the
Law of Thelema is a Sure Fortress, for through the Quest of thy True
Will the Mind is balanced about it, and confirmeth its Flight, as
the Feathers upon an Arrow, so that thou hast a Touchstone of Truth,
Experience holding thee to Reality, and to Proportion. Now therefore
see from yet another Airt of Heaven the Absolute Virtue of Our Law.
DE SPHINGE AEGYPTIORUM. (On the Sphinx of the Egyptians)
It is now expedient that I instruct thee concerning the Four Powers
of the Sphinx, the Strangler, and firstly, that this most arcane of
the Mysteries of Antiquity was never at any Period the Tool of the
slave-gods, but a Witness of Horus through the dark Aeon of Osiris
to His Light and Truth, His Force and Fire. Thou canst by no means
interpret the Sphinx in Terms of the Formula of the Slain God. This
did I comprehend even when as Eliphas Levi Zahed I walked up and
down the Earth, seeking a Reconciliation of these Antagonisms, which
was a Task impossible, for in that Plane they have Antipathy. (Even
so may no Man form a Square Magical of Four Units.) But the Light of
the New Aeon revealeth this Sphinx as the true Symbol of this our
Holy Art of Magick under the Law of Thelema. In Her is the equal
Development and Disposition of the Forces of Nature, each in its
Balanced Strength; also Her True Name is Soul of NU, having the
Digamma for Phi, and endeth in Upsilon, not in Xi, so that Her
Orthography is
whose Numeration is Six Hundred and Three Score and Six. But therein
is my Riddle of Riddles. For the Root thereof is SF, which
signifieth the Incarnation of the Spirit; and of Kin are not only
the Sun, Our Father, but Sumer, where Man knew himself Man, and
Soma, the Divine Potion that giveth Men Enlightenment, and Scin,
Light Astral, and Scire also, by a far Travelling. But especially is
this Root hidden in Sus, hat is of the Sow, Swine, because the Most
Holy must needs take its Delight under the Omphalos of the Unclean.
But this was hidden by Wisdom in Order that the Arcanum should not
be profaned during the Aeon of the Slain God. But now it hath been
given unto me to understand the Heart of Her Mystery, wherefore, o
my Son, by Right of the Great Love that I bear unto thee, I will
inform thee thereof.
DE NATURA . (Of the Nature of the Sphinx)
Firstly, this Sphinx is a Symbol of the Coition of Our Lady BABALON
with me THE BEAST in its Wholeness. For as I am of the Lion and the
Dragon, so is She of the Man and the Bull, in our Natures, but the
Converse thereof in our Offices, as thou mayst understand by the
Study of the Book of The Vision and The Voice. It is thus a Glyph of
the Satisfaction and Perfection of the Will and of the Work, the
completion of the True Man as the Reconciler of the Highest with the
Lowest, so for our Convenience conventionally to distinguish them.
This then is the Adept, who doth Will with solid Energy as the Bull,
doth Dare with fierce Courage as the Lion, doth Know with swift
Intelligence as the Man, and doth keep Silence with soaring Subtlety
as the Eagle or Dragon. Moreover, this Sphinx is an Eidolon of the
Law, for the Bull is Life, the Lion is Light, the Man is Liberty,
the Serpent Love. Now then his Sphinx, being perfect in true
Balance, yet taketh the Aspect of the Feminine Principle that so She
may be partner of the Pyramid, that is the Phallus, pure Image of
Our Father the Sun, the Unity Creative. The Signification of this
Mystery is that the Adept must be Whole, Himself, containing all
Things in true Proportion, before he maketh himself Bride of the One
Universal Transcendental, in its most Secret Virtue. And now
herefore, o my Son, comprehending this Mystery by thine
Intelligence, I will write further unto thee of these Four Beasts or
Powers.
DE TAURO. (On the Bull)
Concerning the Bull, this is thy Will, constant and unwearied, whose
Letter is Vau, which is Six, the Number of he Sun. He is therefore
the Force and the Substance of thy Being; but besides this, he is
the Hierophant in the Taro, as if this were said: that thy Will
leadeth thee unto the Shrine of Light. And in the Rites of Mithras
the Bull is slain, and his Blood poured upon the Initiate, to endow
him with that Will and that Power of Work. Also in the land of Hind
is the Bull sacred to Shiva, that is God among that Folk, and is
unto them the Destroyer of all Things that be opposed to Him. And
his God is also the Phallus, for this Will operateth through Love
even as it is written in our Own Law. Yet again, Apis the Bull of
Khem hath Khephra the Beetle upon His tongue, which signifieth that
it is by this Will, and by this Work, that the Sun cometh unto Dawn
from Midnight. All these Symbols are most similar in their Nature,
save as the Slaves of the Slave- gods have read their own Formula
into the Simplicity of Truth. For there is Naught so plain that
Ignorance and Malice may not confuse and misinterpret it, even as
the Bat is dazzled and bewildered by the Light of the Sun. See then
that thou understand this Bull in Terms of the Law of this our Aeon
of Life.
DE LEONE. (On the Lion)
Of this, Lion, o my Son, be it said that this is the Courage of thy
Manhood, leaping upon all Things, and seizing them for thy Prey. His
letter is Teth, whose Implication is a Serpent, and the Number
thereof Nine, whereof is Aub, the secret Fire of Obeah. Also Nine is
of Jesod, uniting Change with Stability. But in the "Book of Thoth"
He is the Atu called Strength, or more truly, Lust, whose Number is
ELEVEN which is Aud, the Light Odic of Magick. And therein is
figured the Lion, even THE BEAST, and Our Lady BABALON astride of
Him, that with her Thighs She may strangle Him. Here I would have
thee to mark well how these our Symbols are cognate, and flow forth
the one into the other, because each Soul partaketh in proper
Measure of the Mystery of Holiness, and is kin with his Fellow. But
now let me show how this Lion of Courage is more especially the
Light in thee, as Leo is the House of the Sun that is the Father of
Light. And it is thus: that thy Light, conscious of itself, is the
Source and Instigator of thy Will, enforcing it to spring forth and
conquer. Therefore also is his Nature strong with hardihood and Lust
of Battle, else shouldst thou fear that which is unlike thee, and
avoid it, so that thy Separateness should increase upon thee. For
this Cause he hat is defective in Courage becometh a Black Brother,
and to Dare is the Crown of all thy Virtue, the Root of the Tree of
Magick.
ALTERA DE LEONE. (Further on the Lion)
Lo! In the first of thine Initiations, when first the Hoodwink was
uplifted from before thine Eyes, thou wast brought unto the Throne
of Horus, the Lord of the Lion, and by Him enheartened against Fear.
Moreover, in Minutum Mundum, the Map of the Universe, it is the Path
of the Lion that bindeth he two Highest Faculties of thy Mind.
Again, it is Mau, the Sun at Brightness of high Noon, that is called
the Lion, very lordly, in our Holy Invocation. Sekhet our Lady is
figured as a lioness, for that She is that Lust of Nuit toward Hadit
which is the Fierceness of the Night of the Stars, and their
Necessity; whence also is She true Symbol of thine own Hunger of
Attainment, the Passion of thy Light to dare all for its Fulfilling.
It is then the Possession of this Quality which determineth thy
Manhood; for without it thou art not impelled o Magick, and thy Will
is but the Slave's Endurance and Patience under the Lash. For this
Cause, the Bull being of Osiris, was it necessary for the Masters of
the Aeons to incarnate me as more especially a lion, and my Word is
first of all a Word of Enlightenment and of Emancipation of the
Will, shewing to every Man a Spring within Himself to determine His
Will, that he may do that Will, and no more another's. Arise
therefore, o my son, arm thyself, haste to the Battle!
DE VIRO. (On the Man)
Learn now that this Lion is a natural Quality in Man, and secret, so
that he is not ware thereof, except he be Adept. Therefore is it
necessary for thee also to know, by the Head of thy Sphinx. This
then is thy Liberty, that the Impulse of the Lion should become
conscious by means of the Man; for without this thou art but an
Automaton. This Man moreover maketh thee to understand and to adjust
thyself with Environment, else being devoid of Judgment, thou goest
blindly upon an headlong Path. For every Star in his Orbit holdeth
not his Way obstinately, but is sensitive to every other Star, and
his true Nature is to do this. Oh how many are they whom I have seen
persisting in a fatal Course, in Sway of the Belief that their dead
Rigidity was Exercise of Will. And the Letter of the Man is Tzaddi,
whose Number is Ninety; which is Maim, the Water that conformeth
itself perfectly with its Vessel, that seeketh constantly its Level,
that penetrateth and dissolveth Earth, that resisteth Pressure
maugre its Adaptability, that being heated is the Force to drive
great Engines, and being frozen breaketh the Mountains in Pieces. O
my Son, seek well to know!
DE DRACONE, QUAE EST AQUILA, SERPENS, SCORPION. (On the Dragon,
which is Eagle, Serpent and Scorpion)
Threefold is the Nature of Life, Eagle, Serpent, and Scorpion. And
of these the Scorpion is the that, having no Lion of Light and of
Courage within him, seemeth to himself encircled by Fire, and,
driving his Sting into himself, he dieth. Such are the Black
Brothers, that cry: I am I; they that deny Love, restricting it to
their own Nature. But the Serpent is the secret Nature of Man, that
is Life and Death, and maketh his Way through the Generations in
Silence. And the Eagle is that Might of Love which is the Key of
Magick, uplifting the Body and its Appurtenance unto high Ecstacy
upon his Wings. It is by Virtue thereof that the Sphinx beholdeth
the Sun unwinking, and confronteth the Pyramid without Shame. Our
Dragon, therefore, combining the Natures of the Eagle and the
Serpent, is our Love, the Organ of our Will, by whose Virtue we
perform the Work and Miracle of the One Substance, as saith thine
Ancestor Hermes Trismegistus, in his Tablet of Smaragda. And this
Dragon, is called thy Silence, because in he Hour of his Operation
that within thee which saith "I" is abolished in its Conjunction
with the Beloved. For this Cause also is its Letter Nun, which in
our Rota is the Trump Death; and Nun hath the value of Fifty, the
Number of the Gates of Understanding.
DE QUATTUOR VIRTUTIS
(On the Four Virtues of the Sphinx)
See now our Sphinx, with what Subtility and Art is She made Whole!
Here is thy Light, the Lion, the Necessity of thy Nature, fortified
by thy Life, the Bull, the Power of Work, and guided by thy Liberty,
the Man, the Wit to adapt Action to Environment. These are three
Virtues in One, necessary to all proper Motion, as I may say in a
Figure, the Lust of the Archer, the propulsive Force of his Arm, and
the equilibrating and directing Control of his Eye. Of these three
if one fail, the Mark is not hit. But hold! Is not a Fourth Element
essential in the Work? Yea, soothly, all were vain without the
Engine, Arrow and Bow. This Engine is thy Body, possessed by thee
and used by thee for thy Work, yet not Part of thee, even so as are
his Weapons to this Archer in my Similitude. Thus is thy Dragon to
be cherished of thy Lion, but if thou lack Energy and Endurance of
thy Bull, thy Tools lie idle, and if Cunning and Intelligence, with
Experience also of thy Man, thy Shaft flieth crooked. So then, o my
son, do thou perfect thyself in these Four Powers, and that with
Equity.
DE LIBRA, IN QUA QUATTUOR VIRTUTES AEQUIPOLLENT. (On the Balance in
which the Four Virtues Gather Power)
By Gnana Yoga cometh thy Man to Knowledge; by Karma Yoga thy Bull to
Will; by Raja Yoga is thy Lion brought to his Light; and to make
perfect thy Dragon, thou hast Bhakta Yoga for the Eagle therein, and
Hatha Yoga for the Serpent. Yet mark thou well how all these
interfuse, so that thou mayst accomplish no one of the Works
separately. As to make Gold thou must have Gold (it is the Word of
the Alchemists), so to become the Sphinx thou must first be a
Sphinx. For naught may grow save to the Norm of its own Nature, and
in the Law of its own Law, or it is but Artifice, and endureth not.
So therefore is it Folly, and a Rape wrought upon Truth to aim at
aught but the Fulfilment of thine own True Nature. Order then thy
Workings in Accord with thy Knowledge of that Norm as best thou
mayst, not heeding the Importunity of them that prate of the Ideal.
For this Rule, this Uniformity, is proper only to a Prison, and a
Man liveth by Elasticity, nor endureth Rigor save in Death. But
whoso groweth bodily by a Law foreign to his own Nature, he hath a
Cancer, and his whole Oeconomy shall be destroyed by that small
Disobedience.
DE PYRAMIDE. (On the Pyramid)
Now then at last art thou made ready to confront the Pyramid, when
thou art established as a Sphinx. For it also hath the four square
Base of Law, and the Four Triangles of Light, Life, Love and Liberty
for its Sides, that meet in a Point of Perfection that is Hadit,
poised to the Kiss of Nuit. But in this Pyramid there is no
Difference of Form between the Sides, as it is in thy Sphinx, for
these are wholly One, save in Direction. Thou art then an Harmony of
the Four by Right of thy Attainment of Adeptship, the Crown of thy
Manhood, but not an Identity, as in Godhead. Therefore may it be
said from one Point of Sight that thine Achievement is but a
Preparation, an Adornment of the Bride for the Temple of Hymen, and
his Rite. Verily, o my Son, I deem in my Wisdom that this whole Work
of thy Development to Sphinx-hood cometh before the Work of Theurgy,
for the Lord descendeth not upon a Temple ill-conceived, and builded
wry, nor abideth in a Shrine unworthy. Accomplish then this Task in
Patience, with Assiduity, not hasting furiously after Godliness. For
this is most sure, that to the Beauty of a Maiden answereth the Lust
of her Lord, spontaneous and without Effort or Appeal of her
Contriving.
PROLEGOMENA DE SILENTIO. (Concerning Silence)
But now concerning Silence, o my Son, I will have a further Word
with thee. For thereby we mean not the Muteness of him that hath a
Dumb Devil. This Silence is the Dragon of thine unconscious Nature,
not only the Ecstacy or Death of thine Ego in the Operation of its
Organ, but also, in its Unity with thy Lion, the Truth of thy Self.
Thus is thy Silence the Way of he Tao, and all Speech a deviation
therefrom. This Lion and Dragon are therefore of thy Self, and the
Man and the Bull the Feminine Counterparts thereof, being the Grace
of Our Lady BABALON that She bestoweth upon thee in thine Adultery
with Her. They are then as a Vesture of Honour,
and a Reward, that are won by the Intensity of thy Light and of thy
Love. So properly we esteem Men by the Measure of their Intelligence
and their Strength, since they are equal in their essential Godhead,
so far as concerneth the Quiddity thereof. See thou closely moreover
unto it, that if thou be well favoured of Our Lady, thy Lion and thy
Dragon grow in like Measure, for the Excess of the Feminine is Dead
Weight. The Intellectual without Virility is a Dreamer of Follies,
and the laborious Giant without Courage is a Slave.
DE NATURA SILENTII NOSTRI. (On the Nature of Our Silence)
The Nature of this Silence is shewn also by the God Harpocrates, the
Babe in the Lotus, who is also the Serpent and the Egg, that is, the
Holy Ghost. This is the most secret of all Energies, the Seed of all
being, and therefore must He be sealed up in an Ark from the Malice
of the Devourers. If then by thine Art thou canst conceal thyself in
thine own Nature, this is Silence, this, and not Nullity of
Consciousness, else were a Stone more perfect in Adeptship that
thou. But, abiding in thy Silence, thou art in a City of Refuge, and
the Waters prevail not against the Lotus that enfoldeth thee. This
Ark or Lotus is then the Body of Our Lady BABALON, without which
thou wert the Prey of Nile and of the Crocodiles that are therein.
Now, o my Son, mark thou well this that I will write for thine
Advertisement and Behoof, that this Silence, though it be Perfection
of Delight, is but the Gestation of thy Lion, and in thy Season thou
must dare, and come forth to the Battle. Else, were not this
Practice of Silence akin to the Formula of Separateness of the black
Brothers?
DE FORMULA RECTA DRACONIS. (On the Correct Formula of the Dragon)
Verily, o my Son, herein lieth the Danger and the Treason of thy
Scorpion. For his Nature is against himself, being the deepest Ego,
that is, a Being separate from the Universe; and his is the Root of
the while Mystery of Evil. For he hath in him the Magick Power,
which if he use not, he is self- poisoned, even as any Organ of the
Body that refuseth its Function. So then his Cure is in his Ally the
Lion, that feareth not the Crocodiles, nor hideth himself, but
leapeth eagerly forward. The Path of the Mystic hath this Pitfall;
for though he unite himself with his God, his Mode is to withdraw
from that which him seemeth is not God. Whereby he affirmeth and
confirmeth the Demon, that is Duality. Be thou instant therefore, o
my Son, to turn from every Act of Love at the Moment of full
satisfaction, flinging the invoked Might thereof against a new
Opposite; for the Formula of every Dragon is Perpetual Motion or
Change, and therefore to dwell in the Satisfaction of thy Nature is
a Stagnation, and a Violation thereof, making the Duality of
Conflict, which is he Falling Away to Choronzon.
DE SUA CARTA COELORUM. (On His Horoscope)
I pray thee to mark, o my Son, how the Grace of Nature was benignant
at my Nativity, to the right Balance and Formulation of my Sphinx.
For Neptune was in the Sign of the Bull, giving Strength and
Stability to my Spiritual Essence. Uranus was ascending in the Lion,
to fortify my Magical Will with Courage, and to turn it to the
Salvation of Man. In the Waterman was
Saturnus, to make mine Intelligence sober, profound, and capable of
Labour. Jupiter, with Mercury His Herald, was in Scorpio,
harmonizing me and my Word according o the Essence of my Nature.
Then of the others, Mars was exalted in the Goat, for physical
Endurance of Toil; Sol was conjoined with Venus in the Balance, for
judgment in Art and in Life, and for Equability of Temple. Lastly,
the Moon was in the Sign of the Fishes, her loved abode, for a Gift
of Sensitiveness and of Glamour. What then am I? I am a transient
Effect of infinite Causes, a Child of Changes. There is no I, o thou
that art not thou, else were I segregated, a Stagnation, a Thing of
Hate and of Fear. But ever-moving, ever-changing, there is a Star in
the Body of Our Lady Nuit, whose Word is None and Two.
DE OPERE SUO. (On His Work)
I am not I. Then, sayst thou, why is this Word? Know o my Son, that
this first Person is but the common Figure of the Speech of Men
whereof the Magus may avail himself without Implication of
Metaphysick. Yet in the Mystery of Illusion, which is the Instrument
of the Universal Will, I will not say the Harlot of its Pleasure,
are manifested these many Stars, and amongst them that Logos of the
Aeon of Horus whom thou callest and thy Father. And
this is by-come through Virtue of the Intensity of the Will to
Change, through many a Serpent-Phase of Life and Death, until in the
Play of the Game its Manifestation is the Utterance of this Word of
he Aeon, this Law of Thelema, that shall be for a Season the Formula
of the Magick of the Earth. Who then should inquire of the further
Destiny of that Star, or of another? It is the Play of the Game, and
the Operation of its Function shall suffice it. Rid thyself
therefore of this Thought of "I" apart from all, but, attaining to
Consciousness of All by Our True Way, contemplate the Play of
Illusion by thine Instrument of Mind and Sense, leaving it without
Care to continue in its own Path of Change.
DE FRATRIBUS NIGRIS. (On the Black Brothers)
O my Son, know this concerning the Black Brothers, that cry: I am I.
This is Falsity and Delusion, for the Law endureth not Exception. So
then these Brethren are not apart, as they vainly think being
wrought by Error; but are peculiar Combinations of Nature in Her
Variety. Rejoice then even in the Contemplation of these, for they
are proper to Perfection, and Adornments of Beauty, like a Mole upon
the Cheek of a Woman. Shall I then say that were it of thine own
Nature, even thine, to compose so sinister a Complex, thou shouldst
not strive therewith, destroying it by Love, but continue in that
Way? I deny not this hastily, nor affirm; nay, shall I even utter a
Hint of that which I may foresee? For it is in mine own Nature to
think that in this Matter the Sum of Wisdom is Silence. But this I
say, and that boldly, that thou shalt not look upon this Horror with
Fear, or with Hate, but accept all this as thou dost all else, as a
Phenomenon of Change, that is, of Love. For in a swift Stream thou
mayst behold a Twig held steady for a while by the Play of the
Water, and by his Analogue thou mayst understand the Nature of this
Mystery of the Path of Perfection.
DE ARTE ALCHEMISTICA. (On the Alchemical Art)
Wilt thou acquaint thyself now further at my Reproof concerning this
Arcanum of Alchymia, the Art Egyptian, how to make Gold? Of a Surety
this is already in thy Knowledge, if thou examine by Our Holy
Qabalah, what be the Forces that are the Influx upon Tiphereth,
which is the Harmony and Beauty, or Sol, in every Kingdom of the
Universe, so then also among Metals. Now this Influx is Fivefold.
First, from the Crown descendeth the High Priestess in the Path of
the Moon, for Inspiration, and Imagination, and Idea: see to it that
this Virgin be Pure, for herein Error is Illusion. Next, from the
Father floweth the Power of the Emperor in the Path of the Ram, for
Initiative, and Energy, and Determination. Third, from the Mother
are the Lovers in the Path of the Twins, for Intellectual Wholeness,
and for Adjustment to Environment. These Three are from this
Supernals and complete the Theorick of thy Work. After this, in the
Praxis and Executive thereof thou hast the Hermit as an Influence
from the Sphere of Jupiter in the Path of the Virgin, for Secrecy,
and for Concentration, and for Prudence. Lastly, from the Sphere of
Mars, travelleth Justice in the Path of the Balance, for good
Judgment, and Tact, and Art. O my Son, in this Chapter is more
wisdom than in Ten Thousand Folios of the Alchemists! Study
therefore to acquire Skill in this Method, and Experience; for this
Gold is not only of the Metals, but of every Sphere, and this Key is
of virtue to enter every Palace of Perfection.
DE FEMINA: QUAE EST PROPRIA JOCO. (On Woman, who is fit for a Jest)
O my Son, hear this Wisdom of Experience, how at thy first Sight,
when I put thee into the Arms of Ahitha, thy sweet Stepmother my
concubine, such was thy Beauty that she became enamoured of thee,
crying aloud; Ay me, an such be the Fruit of thy Magick, o my
Master, then let me, me also, even me, give myself utterly to this
Holy Art! Then did I, becoming heavy in Spirit, make Question of
her, saying: To what End? And at this was she confounded and brought
into Bewilderment; but after a great While, fumbling in her Mind,
made Answer, like a Scarecrow in a Field, so was it for Rags and
Tatters of Thought. Thus yet more Atrabilious and Sluggard was this
Liver of thy Father, so that I fell into a Gloom night unto Weeping.
Then she beholding me with Amazement cried upon me thus: Art thou
not glad in Heart, o my Master? At this I gave a Sigh even as one
nigh unto Death. And She: if this be so, then is no need anymore for
me to give myself to Magick. Thereat, perceiving yet again the Jest
Universal of Our Lord Pan, was I swallowed up (like unto Jonah of
the Old Fable) in the Belly of the Whale called Laughter, and it
seemeth to me at this present Writing that I am like to abide
therein for he Time that remaineth to me in this Body.
DE FORMULA FEMINAE. (On the Formula of Woman)
Now this is the right Power and Property of a Woman, to arrange and
to adjust all Things that exist in their proper Sphere, but not to
create or to transcend. Therefore in all practical Matters is she of
Might and of Wit to produce an Effect consonant with her Mood. And
her Symbol is Water, that seeketh the Level, whether for Wrath,
eating away the Mountains (yet even in this making smooth the
Plains) or for Love, in Fecundity of Earth. But it is the Fire of
Man that hath
heaved up those Mountains, in huge Turmoil. Man then maketh Mischief
and Trouble by his Violence, be his Will convenient to His
Environment, or antipathetic; but Woman disturbeth by Manipulation,
adroit or sinister as her Mood may be of Order or of Disorder. For
any Man to meddle in her Affair is Folly, for he comprehendeth not
Quiet; so also for her to emulate him in his Office is Fatuity.
Therefore in Magick though a Woman excel all men in every Quality
that is profitable for her for Attainment, yet she is Naught in that
Work, even as a Man without Hands in the Shop of a Carpenter; for
She hath not the Organism that might make Use of this Opportunity.
Of all this is she aware by her Instinct, for her Nature is to
Understand, even without Knowledge; and if thou doubt herein the
Wisdom of thy Sire, do thou seek out a Woman (but with Precaution)
and affirm these my Words. So shall she wax woundily wrath, and look
grisly upon thee, proclaiming in a shrill Voice her manifold
Excellences, which she hath, and concern the Matter not a Whit.
VERBA MAGISTRI SUI DE FEMINA. (His Master’s Words on Woman)
Of a Thousand Years it is nigh unto the Fiftieth Part, o my Son,
since I obtained Favour in the Light of a great Master of he Truth,
whom Men call Allan Bennett, so that he received me for his
Discipulus in Magick. And he was instant with me in his Matter, and
vehement, adjuring his Gods that this (which I have myself here
above declared unto thee) was the Truth concerning the Nature of
Woman. But I being but a Youth, and Headstrong, and being enraptured
in Love of Women, and Admiration of Them, and Worship, delighting in
them eagerly, and learning constantly from them, nourished by the
Milk of their Mystery, as it should be for all true Men, did resist
angrily the Doctrine of that most holy Man of God. And because, (as
it was written) he was a vowed Virgin from his Birth, and had no
Commerce with any in the Way of Carnality, I disabled his Judgment
herein, as if he, being a Fish, had disallowed the Flight of Birds.
But I, o my Son, am not wholly ignorant of Women, save as all Men
must be in the Limitation of their Nature, for the Number of my
Concubines is not notably or shamefully exceeded by that of the
Phases of he Moon since my Birth. Many also have been my Disciples
in Magick that were Women; and (more also) I do owe, acknowledging
the same with open Gladness, the greater Part of mine own Initiation
and Advancement to the Operation of Women. Notwithstanding all these
Things, I bow humbly before Allan Bennett, and repent mine
Insolence, for his Saying was Sooth.
DE VIA PROPRIA FEMINIS. (On the Proper Conduct of Woman)
It is indeed easy for a Woman to obtain the Experience of Magick, in
a certain Sort, as Visions, Trances, and the like; yet they take not
Hold upon Her, to transform Her, as with Men, but pass only as
Images upon a Speculum. So then a Woman advanceth never in Magick,
but remaineth the same, rightly or wrongly ordered according to the
Force that moveth Her. Here therefore is the Limit of Her Aspiration
in Magick, to abide joyous and obedient beneath the Man that her
Instinct shall divine so that by Habit becoming a Temple
well-ordered, comely and consecrated, she may in her next
Incarnation attract by her Fitness a Man-soul. For this Cause hath
Man esteemed Constancy and Patience as Qualities preeminent in Good
women, because by these she gaineth her Going toward Our Godliness.
Her Ordeal therefore is principally to resist Moods,
which make Disorder, that is of Choronzon. Also, let her be content
in this Way, for verily she hath a noble and an excellent Portion in
Our Holy Banquet, and escapeth many a Peril that is proper to us
others. Only, be she in Awe and Wariness, for in her is no Principle
of Resistance to Choronzon, so that if she become disordered in her
Moods, as by Lust, or by Drunkenness, or by Idleness, she hath no
Standard whereunto she may rally her Forces. In this see thou her
Need of a well-guarded Life, and of a True Man for her God.
DE HAC RE ALTERA INTELLIGENDA. (Further Concerning This)
Mark then, o my Son, how in the Antient Books of Magick it is Man
that selleth his Soul unto the Devil, but Woman that maketh Pact
with him. For she hath constantly the Wit and Power to arrange
Things at his Bidding, and she payeth this Price of his Alliance.
But a Man hath one Jewel, and, bartering this, he becometh the
Mockery of Satanas. Let then his tutor thee in thine own Art of
Magick, that thou employ Women in all Practical Matters, to order
them with Cunning, but Men in thy Need of Transfiguration or
Transmutation. In a Trope, let the Woman direct the Chess-Play of
Life, but the Man alter the Rules, if he so will. Lo! in ill Play is
Mischief and Disorder, but in a New Law is Earthquake, and
Destruction of the Root of Things. Therefore is Fear of any Man that
is in Commerce with his Genius, for none knoweth if his Law shall
amend the Game or do it Hurt; and of this the Proof is in
Experience, won after the Victory of his Will, when there is no Way
of Return; as saith the Poet, Vestigia Nulla Retrorsum. Nor do thou
fear to create: for, even as I have written in The Book of Lies
(falsely so-called), thou canst create nothing that is not God. But
beware of false Creations wrought by Women in whom is no Function
thereof; for they are Phantoms, poisonous Vapours, bred of the Moon
in her Witchcraft of Blood.
DE CLAVIBUS MORTIS ET DIABOLI, ARCANIS TOU TAROT FRATERNITATIS R. C.
(On the Keys of Death and the Devil, Arcana of the Tarot of the R.
C. Brotherhood)
It shall profit thee much, o my Son, or I err, that I instruct thee
in the Mysteries of the Paths of Nun and of Ayin, that in our Rota
are figured in the Atu called Death, and that called the Devil. Of
these Nun joineth the Sun with Venus, and is referred to Scorpio in
the Zodiac. This Path is perilous, for it seeketh the Level, and may
abase thee, except thou take Heed unto the Going. Of its three
Modes, the Scorpio destroyeth himself, as if it were a Type of
animal Pleasure. Next, the Serpent is proper to Works of Change, or
Magick; yet is he poisonous also unless thou hast Wit to enchant
him. Lastly the Eagle is subtlest in this Sort, so that this Path is
proper to a Transcendental Labour. Yet all these are in the Way of
Death, so that thy Wand is dissolved and corroded in the Waters of
the Cup, and must be renewed by Virtue of thy Nature in its Course.
For Fire is extinguished by Water; but upon Earth it burneth freely,
and is inflamed by the Wind. Understand also that which is written
concerning the Vesica, that it is the Mother, giving Ease, Sleep,
and Death, which Consolations are eschewed by the True Man or Hero.
SEQUITUR DE HIS VIIS. (Further on these Paths)
Now the Path of Ayin is a Link between Mercury and the Sun, and in
the Zodiac importeth the Goat. This Goat is called also Strength,
and standeth in the Meridian at the Sunrise of Spring;
and it is His Nature to leap upon the Mountains. So therefore he is
a Symbol of true Magick, and his Name is Baphomet, wherefore did I
design him as an Atu of Thoth, the Fifteenth, and put his Image in
the Front of my Book, the "Ritual of High Magick", which was the
second Part of my Thesis for the Grade of Major Adept, when I was
clothed about with he Body called Alphonse Louis Constant. Now the
Goat flieth not as doth the Eagle; but consider this also that it is
the rue Nature of Man to dwell upon the Earth, so that his Flights
are oft but Phantasy; yea, the Eagle also is bound to his Eyrie, nor
feedeth upon Air. Therefore this goat, making each Leap with Fervour,
yet all Times secure in his own Element, is a true Hieroglyph of the
Magician. Mark also, his Path sheweth One continuous in Exaltation
upon a Throne, and so is it the Formula of the Man, as the other was
of the Woman.
DE OCULO HOOR. (On the Eye of Hoor)
I say furthermore that this Path is of the Circle, and of the Eye of
Horus that sleepeth not, but is vigilant. The Circle is all-perfect,
equal every Way, but the Vesica hath bitter Need, and seeketh thy
Medicine, that is of right compounded for High Purpose, to ease her
Infirmity. Thus is thy Will frustrated, and thy Mind distracted, and
thy Work lamed, if it be not brought to Naught. Also thy Puissance
in thine Art is minished, by a full Moiety, as I do esteem it. But
the Eye of Horus hath no Need, and is free in his Will, not seeking
a Level, or requiring a Medicine, and is fit and worthy to be the
Companion and the Ally of thee in thy Work, as a Friend to thee, not
Mistress and not Slave, that seek ever with Slyness and Deceit to
encompass their own Ends. There is moreover a Reason in Physics for
my Word; study thou his matter in the Laws of the Changes of Nature.
For Things Unlike do in their Marriage produce a Child which is
relatively Stable, and resisteth Change; but Things like increase
mutually the Potential of their particular Natures. Howbeit, each
Path hath his own Use; and thou, being instructed in all Ways,
choose thine with Discretion.
DE SUA INITIATIONE. (On His Initiation)
My son, my Delight, Honey of the Comb of my Life, I will say also
this concerning the Odds of the Formulae of Male and Female, that
mine Initiation was ordered as followeth. First, unto the Middle of
the Way, the Attainment of the Knowledge and Conversation of the
Holy Guardian Angel, were these Men appointed to mine Aid, Jerome
Politt of Kendal, Cecil Jones of Basingstoke, Allan Bennett of the
Border, and Oscar Eckenstein of the Mountain with no Woman. But
after that Attainment hath Word come to me only through Women,
Ouarda the Seer, and Virakam, and in mine Initiation into the Degree
of Magus, the Cat ' thy Mother, Helen the Play Actress the
Serpent, with Myriamne the Drunkard, and Rita the Harlot to bear
Dagger and Poison; then these others Alice the Singing Woman for an
Owl; then Catherine the Dog of Anubis, and Ahitha the Camel that
renewed the Work of Virakam, with Olun the Dragon and --- but here I
do restrict myself in Speech, for the End is wrapped about with a
Veil, as the Face of a Virgin. But do thou meditate strictly upon
these Things, distinguishing the right Property, Order, and Use of
the one and the other in the Relative, even as thou makest them All-
One, that is None, in the Absolute.
DE HERBO SANCTISSIMO ARABICO. (On the Most Holy Grass of the
Arabs)
Recall, o my Son, the Fable of the Hebrews, which they brought from
the City Babylon, how Nebuchadnezzar the Great King, being afflicted
in his Spirit, did depart from among Men for Seven Years' Space,
eating Grass as doth an Ox. Now this Ox is the Letter Aleph, and is
that Atu of Thoth whose Number is Zero, and whose name is Maat,
Truth, or Maut, the Vulture, the All- Mother, being an Image of Our
Lady Nuit, but also it is called the Fool, who is Parsifal, 'der
reine Tor', and so referreth to him that walketh in the Way of the
Tao. Also, he is Harpocrates, the Child Horus, walking, (as saith
Daood, the Badawi that became King in his Psalms) upon the Lion and
the Dragon; that is, he is in Unity with his own Secret Nature, as I
have shewn thee in my Word concerning the Sphinx. O my Son, yester
Eve came the Spirit upon me that I also should eat the Grass of the
Arabs, and by Virtue of the Bewitchment thereof behold that which
might be appointed for the Enlightenment of mine Eyes. Now then of
this may I not speak, seeing that it involveth the Mystery of the
Transcending of Time, so that in One Hour of our terrestrial Measure
did I gather the Harvest of an Aeon, and in Ten Lives I could not
declare it.
DE QUIBUSDAM MYSTERIIS, QUAE VIDI. (On Certain Mysteries I Have
Seen)
Yet even as a Man may set up a Memorial or Symbol to import Ten
Thousand Times Ten Thousand, so may I strive to inform thine
Understanding by Hieroglyph. And here shall thine own Experience
serve us, because a Token of Remembrance sufficeth him that is
familiar with a Matter, which to him that knoweth it not should not
be made manifest, no, not in a Year of Instruction. Here first then
is one amid the uncounted Wonders of that Vision; upon a field
blacker and richer than Velvet was the Sun of all Being, alone. Then
about Him were little Crosses, Greek, over-running the Heaven. These
changed from Form to Form geometrical, Marvel devouring Marvel, a
Thousand Times a Thousand in their Course and Sequence, until by
their Movement was the Universe churned into the Quintessence of
Light. Moreover at another Time did I behold All Things as Bullae,
iridescent and luminous, self-shining in every Colour, Myriad
pursuing Myriad until by their perpetual Beauty they exhausted the
Virtue of my Mind to receive them, and whelmed it, so that I was
fain to withdraw myself from the Burden of that Brilliance. Yet, o
my Son, the Sun of all this amounteth not to the Worth of one
Dawn-Glimmer of Our True Vision of Holiness.
DE QUORUM MODO MEDITATIONES. (On a Certain Method of Meditation)
Now for the Chief of that which was granted unto me, it was he
Apprehension of those willed Changes or Transmutations of he Mind
which lead into Truth, being as Ladders unto Heaven, or so I called
them at that Time, seeking for a Phrase to admonish the Scribe that
attended on my Words, to grave a Balustre upon the Stele of my
Working. But I make Effort in vain, o my Son, to record this matter
in Detail; for it is the quality of the Grass to quicken the
Operation of Thought it may be Thousandfold, and moreover to figure
each Step in Images complex and
overpowering in Beauty, so that one hath no Time wherein to
conceive, much less to utter, any Word for a Name or any of them.
Also, such was the multiplicity of these Ladders, and their
Equivalence, that the Memory holdeth no more any one of them, but
only a certain Comprehension of the Method, wordless by Reason of
its Subtility. Now therefore must I make by my Will a Concentration
mighty and terrible of my Thought, that I may bring forth this
Mystery in Expression. For this Method is of Virtue and Profit, by
it mayst thou come easily and with Delight to the Perfection of
Truth, it is no Odds from what Thought thou makest the first Leap in
thy Meditation, so that thou mayst know how every Road endeth in
Monsalvat, and the Temple of the Sangraal.
SEQUITUR DE HAC RE. (Further on This)
I believe generally, on Ground both of Theory and Experience, so
little as I have, that a Man must first be initiate, and established
in Our Law, before he may use this Method. For in it is an
Implication of our Secret Enlightenment, concerning the Universe,
how its Nature is utterly Perfection. Now every Thought is a
Separation, and the Medicine of that is to marry Each One with its
Contradiction, as I have shewed formerly in many Writings. And thou
shalt clap the one to the other with Vehemence of Spirit, swiftly as
Light itself, that the Ecstasy be spontaneous. So therefore it is
Expedient that thou have travelled already in this Path of
Antithesis, knowing perfectly the Answer to every Glyph or Problem,
and thy Mind ready therewith. For by the Property of this Grass all
passeth with Speed incalculable of Wit, and an Hesitation should
confound thee, breaking down thy ladder, and throwing back thy Mind
to receive Impression from Environment, as at thy first beginning.
Verily; the nature of this Method is Solution, and the Destruction
of every Complexity by Explosion of Ecstasy, as every Element
thereof is fulfilled by its Correlative, and is annihilated (since
it loseth separate Existence) in the Orgasm that is consummated
within the Bed of thy Mind.
SEQUITUR DE HAC RE. (Further on This)
Thou knowest right well, o my Son, how a Thought is imperfect in two
Dimensions, being separate from its Contradiction, but also
constrained in its Scope, because by hat Contradiction we do not
(commonly) complete the Universe, save only that of its Discourse.
Thus if we contrast Health with Sickness, we include in their Sphere
of Union no more than one Quality that may be predicated of all
Things. Furthermore, it is for the most Part not easy to find or to
formulate the true Contradiction of any Thought as a positive Idea,
but only as a Formal Negation in vague Terms, so that the ready
Answer is but the Antithesis. Thus to "White" one putteth not the
Phrase "all that which is not white", for this is void, formless,
neither clear, simple, nor positive in conception; but one answereth
"Black", for this hath an Image of his Significance. So the Cohesion
of Antitheticals destroyeth them only in Part, and one becometh
instantly conscious of the Residue that is unsatisfied or
unbalanced, whose Eidolon leapeth in thy Mind with Splendour and Joy
unspeakable. Let not this deceive thee, for its Existence proveth
its Imperfection, and thou must call forth its Mate, and destroy
them by Love, as with the former. This Method is continuous and
proceedeth ever from the Gross to the Fine, and from the Particular
to the General, dissolving all Things into the One Substance of
Light.
CONCLUSIO DE HAC MODO SANCTITATIS. (Conclusion on this Method of
Holiness)
Learn now that Impression of Sense have Opposites readily conceived,
as long to short, or light to dark; and so with Emotions and
Perceptions, as Love to Hate, or false to true; but the more violent
is the Antagonism, the more is it bound in Illusion, determined by
Relation. Thus the Word "Long" hath no Meaning save it be referred
to a Standard; but Love is not thus obscure, because Hate is its
Twin, partaking bountifully of a Common Nature therewith. Now, hear
this; it was given unto me in my Visions of the Aethyrs, when I was
in the Wilderness of Sahara, by Tolga, that above the Abyss,
contradiction is Unity, and that Nothing could be true save by
Virtue of the Contradiction that is contained in itself. Behold,
therefore, in this method thou shalt come presently to Ideas of this
Order, that include in themselves their own Contradiction, and have
no Antithesis. Here then is thy Lever of Antinomy broken in thine
Hand; yet, being in true Balance, thou mayst soar, passionate and
eager, from Heaven to Heaven, by the Expansion of thine Idea, and
its Exaltation, of Concentration as thou understandest by thy
Studies in the Book of the Law, the Word thereof concerning Our Lady
Nuit and Hadit that is the Core of every Star. And this last Going
upon thy Ladder is easy, if thou be truly Initiate, for the Momentum
of thy Force in Transcendental Antithesis serveth to propel thee,
and the Emancipation from the Fetters of Thought that thou hast won
in that Praxis of Art maketh the Whirlpool and Gravitation of Truth
of Competence to Draw thee unto itself.
DE VIA SOLA SOLIS. (On the Way of the Sun)
This is the Profit of mine Intoxication of this Holy Herb, the Grass
of the Arab, that it has shewed me this Mystery (with many others)
not as a new Light, for I had that aforetime, but by its swift
Synthesis and Manifestation of a Long Sequence of Events in a
Moment, I had Wit to analyse this Method, and to discover its
Essential Law, which before had escaped the Focus of the Lens of
mine Understanding. Yea, o my Son, there is no true Path of Light,
save that which I have formerly made plain; yet in every Path is
Profit, if thou be cunning to perceive it and to clasp it. For we
win Truth oftentimes by Reflection or by the Composition and
Selection of an Artist in his Presentation thereof, when else we
were blind thereunto; lacking his Mode of Light. Yet were that Art
of none avail unless we had already the Root of that Truth in our
Nature, and a Bud ready to flower at the Summoning of that Sun. In
Witness, nor a Boy nor a Stone hath Knowledge of the Sections of a
Cone, and their Properties; but thou mayst teach these to the Boy by
right Presentation, because he hath in his Nature those laws of Mind
that are consonant with our Art Mathematical, and hath Need only of
the Fledging (I may say his) so that he apply them consciously to
the Work, when all being in Truth, that is, in the necessary
Relations that rule our Illusion, he cometh in Course to
Apprehension.
DE PRUDENTIA ORDINIS AA (On the Prudence of the AA)
Here then, O my Son, that shall be mightier than all the Kings of
the Earth, as it is prophesied, --
-an thou be He! - because thou shalt establish the Law which I have
given, even the Law of Thelema, here in this which I have written is
a Point of Judgment in they Work to bring into the Light of
Initiation such as come unto thee, affirming their Will to his
Attainment. For every One hath his own Path and his own Law, and
there is no Art in Magick but to seek out that Path and that Law,
that he may pursue the one by the right Use of the Other. It shall
be that one cometh unto thee, desiring Amen-Ra (I speak in a Figure
or Exemplar) another Asi, a third Hoor-Pa- Kraat; or again, one
seeketh Instruction in Obeah, and his Fellow in Wanga; and of all
these not one in Ten Thousand shall be aware of his true Way. For
albeit our last step is one for all, yet his Next Stem is particular
to each. Therefore is the Preparation of a Student that seeketh Our
Holy Order of A.·. A.·. most general, informing his Mind of all
known Methods, so that his Will may select among these by Instinct;
then after, as a Probationer, he practiseth those which he hath
preferred, and by the Examination of his Record after the Period
appointed thou mayst have Wisdom concerning him, to confirm him in
those Ways which are shewed thereby to be germane to his True
Nature.
ALTERA DE SUA VIA. (Further on this Path)
Thus I was brought unto the Knowledge of myself in a certain secret
Grace, and as a Poet, by Jerome Politt of Kendal; Oscar Eckenstein
of the Mountain discovered Manhood in me, teaching me to endure
Hardship, and to dare many Shapes of Death; also he nurtured me in
Concentration, the Art of the Mystics, but without Lumber of
Theology. Allan Bennett bestowed upon me the right Art of Magic, and
Our Holy Qabalah, with a great Treasure of Learning in many Matters,
but especially concerning Egypt, and Asia, the Mysteries of their
Arcane Wisdom. But of Cecil Jones had I the Great Gift of the Holy
Magick of Abramelin, and he inducted me into that Order which we
name not, because of the Silliness of the Profane that pretend
thereto, and he brought me to the Knowledge and conversation of the
Holy Guardian Angel; also, he was the Herald of the Masters of the
Temple when They bade me welcome to their Order, appointing a Siege
for me in the City of the Pyramids, under the Night of Pan; but for
three Years I was not willing to avail myself thereof. Now mark well
this, o my Son, that this Path was peculiar to the law of my Star,
and none other should follow me herein, or seek to follow me, for he
hath his own proper Orbit. O my Son, err not by Generalization and
Conformity, for this is the Very Idleness, and breedeth Ideals and
Standards that are Death.
DE PRUDENTIA ARTIS DOCENDI. (On Prudence in the Art of Teaching)
Nevertheless, this one Affliction shall touch nigh all that come to
thee, and that is this great Pox of Sin, that is our Bane inherited
of the Aeon of Slain Gods. Look the first of all, when any Postulant
boweth before thee, whether there be not Conflict and Restriction in
his Mind, and in his Will. If he deem Good and Evil to be absolute,
instead of as relative to the Health of this Body, or the Weal of
the Society of which he is a Member, or what not, as it may be,
instruct
him. Or, if he will say that he will sacrifice all for Initiation,
correct him, as it is written: "but whoso gives one Particle of Dust
shall lose all in that Hour." For it is Conflict if he weigh one
Thing with another; and Renunciation, being sorrowful, is not worthy
of Acceptance. But he must with Joy unite all he is and hath,
heaping the Whole into one Billow of Love, under Will. Yea, o my
son, until thou hast brought the Postulant into our Freedom from
Sin, and the Sense and Conviction thereof, he is not ready for the
Path of our Magick and Illumination; because every Way soever is a
Going, and his Sin is an obstacle and a Fetter and an Hoodwink on
every one of them, for it is Restriction, whether he set out by the
Meditations of the Dhamma, or by Our Qabalah, or by Vision or
Theurgy, or how else soever.
DE MENTE INIMICA ANIMO. (On the Mind, Enemy of the Soul)
How shall a Man attain to the Trance where All is One, if he yet
debate within his Mind concerning Virtue as a Thing Absolute? Thus,
o my Son, there be those that are fuddled with Doubt whether Meat is
to be eaten (I choose this as a Reference), which Habit is proper to
the Lion, as Grass to the Horse, so that his right Problem is solely
thus, what is fitting to his own Nature. Or again, I suppose that he
is in Vision, and an Angel, visiting him, imparteth a Truth contrary
to his Prejudice, as it fell out in mine own Case, when I inhabited
the Body of Sir Edward Kelly, or so do I in Part remember, as it
seemeth dimly. This nevertheless is sure (or the learned Casaubon,
publishing the Record of that Word with the Magician Dee, sayeth
falsely) that an Angel did declare unto Kelly the very Axiomata of
our Law of Thelema, in good Measure, and plainly; but Dee, afflicted
by the Fixity of his Tenets that were of the Salve-Gods, was wroth,
and by his Authority prevailed upon the other, who was indeed not
wholly perfected as an Instrument, or the World ready for that
Sowing. Consider also how in this very Life I was the Enemy of mine
own Law, and wrote down the Book of the Law contrary to my conscious
Will by the Virtue of Obedience as a Scribe, and strove constantly
to escape mine own Work, and the Utterance of my Word, until by
Initiation I was made All-One.
DE ILLUMINATUM OPERIBUS DIVERSIS. (On Different Works of the
Illuminators)
Do thou understand how few be they whose Work in this their present
Lives is our Way of Initiation. Yet it is written in "The Book of
the Law" that the Law is for all, so that thou shalt in no wise err
if thou establish it as the formula of he Aeon, universal among Men.
Also, ever for them that are fitted to advance in our Light, there
is Order and Diversity in Function, as regardeth their Work in our
Sublime Brotherhood. Thus, it might well be that, in a Profess-House
of the Temple, or College of the Holy Ghost, each Knight or Brother
might severally attain Experience of every Trance, unto the
Perfection of all Illumination; yet by this there ought not
Confusion to be confected, one usurping the appointed Office of
another. For the Abbot, although he be not enlightened wholly, is
yet Abbot; and the Place of the Cook, were he Saint, Arhan, and
Paramahamsa in one Person, is in his Kitchen. Confound not thou in
any wise therefore the Degree of Attainment of any Man with his
right Function in our Holy Order; for although by initiation cometh
the Light, and the Right, and the Might to accomplish all Works
soever, yet these are inoperative save as they are able to use a
Machine which is of the same Order of Things as the Effect required.
As the best Swordsman hath Need of a Sword, so hath
every magician of a Body and Mind capable to the Work that he
willeth; and he can do nothing, save it be proper to his Nature.
DE EADEM RE ALTERA VERBA. (Further Words on This)
By this Understanding be they rebuked that make a Reproach to our
Art, saying in their Insolence that if we have all Power, why are we
betimes in Stress of Poverty, and in Contempt of men, and in Pain of
Disease, and so forth, mocking us, and holding our Magick for
Delusion. But they behold not our Light, how it guideth us in our
Path unto a Goal that is not in their Comprehension, so that we
crave not that which seemeth to them the Sole Food and Comfort of
Life. Also, this which we attain, though it be the Essence of
Omniscience and Omnipotence, informeth and moveth the Material World
(so to call it) only according to the Nature of that which is
therein. For the Light of the Sun (by His very Wholeness itself)
sheweth a Rose Red, but a Leaf Green; and His Heat gathereth the
Clouds, and disperseth them also. So I then, though I were perfect
in Magick, might not work in Metals as a Smith, or become rich by
Commerce as a Merchant; for I have not in my Nature the Engines
proper to these Capacities, and therefore it is not of my will to
seek to exercise them. Here then is my Case, that I can not because
I will not, and it were Conflict, should I turn thither. But let
every man become perfect in his own Work, not heeding the Rebuke of
another, that some Way not his own is more Noble, or Profitable, but
being constant in mindfulness concerning his Business.
DE PACE PERFECTA LUCE. (On the Perfect Peace with Light)
How shall the measure our Statue and our Success by that Canon of
Relation and Illusion, and their ignorance of our Nature? Time is
but Sequence, and a moment of Light outweigheth an Age of Darkness.
What is Happiness but the Issue of the Harmony of our Consciousness
with our Truth, and the Conformity of Will with Action? To the
Initiate is Certainty of his Fulfilment, which to the Profane is but
the Effect of Hazard, and he feareth to lose what he loveth, or
thinketh he loveth. But we, loving only in Light, suffer not by Fear
or by Bereavement, because to us every Event is Welcome, being
right, necessary and proper to our particular Path. The Knowledge of
this one Matter is the End of Dread and of Regret; make thou it the
Governor of thy Mind, to rule its Pace, lest it hasten or lag by
Stress of thine Environment. How this Attainment is possible for all
Mankind, since it asketh but Resolution of Complexities that already
exist; so that this true Wisdom and Happiness cometh by the
Acceptance of our Law, and its Use is the Key to all locked Doors of
the Mind, and the Reconcilement of every Contention. O my Son, in
the Promulgation of the Law lieth the Reward of our Chief Work, the
making whole of Mankind from the Conscience of Sin which divideth
him, and afflicteth his Spirit.
DE PACE PERFECTA. (On Perfect Peace)
O my Son, is it not a marvel, this Light whereof we are the
Quintessence and the Seed? By it are we made Whole, dissolved in the
Body and in the Soul of Our Lady Nuit even as Her Lord Hadit, so
that the Gnostic Sacrament of the Cosmos is perpetually Elevated
before us. We behold all that is and comprehend its Mystery, and its
Order in this High Mass eternally celebrated
among us, acknowledging the Perfection of the Rite, neither
confusing the Parts thereof, nor discriminating in Worship between
them. So unto us is every Phenomenon a Shew of Godliness, proceeding
continually in a Pageant that returneth unto itself, identical in
the Phase of Naught as of Many, but whirling in the Orgia of
Ineffable Holiness as it were a Dance that weaveth Figures of Beauty
in Variety inexhaustible. Shall the Initiate bestir him, to better
so prime a Perfection? Nay, this Will that was his is accomplished;
he hath attained the Summit; so without Hope or Fear he abideth, and
leaveth his Vehicle of Illusion and Magical Engine, that is, as Man
say, his Body and Mind, to work out their Ritual of Change without
his interference. O my son, ask not to what End! As it is written in
the Book of the Heart Girt with the Serpent, concerning the Boy and
the Swan: is there not joy ineffable in this aimless Winging?
DE MORTE. (On Death)
Thou hast made Question of me concerning Death, and this is my
Opinion, of which I say not: This is the Truth. First in the Temple
called Man is the God, his Soul, or Star, individual and eternal,
but also inherent in the Body of Our Lady Nuit. Now this Soul, as an
Officer in the High Mass of he Cosmos, taketh on the Vesture of his
Office, that is, inhabiteth a Tabernacle of Illusion, a Body and
Mind. And this Tabernacle is Subject to the Law of Change, for it is
complex, and diffuse reacting to every Stimulus or Impression. If
then the mind be attached constantly to the Body, Death hath no
Power to decompose it wholly, but a decaying Shell of he dead Man,
his Mind holding together for a little his Body of Light, haunteth
the Earth, seeking a new Tabernacle (in its Error that feareth
Change) in some other Body. These Shells are broken away utterly
from the Star that did enlighten them, and they are Vampires,
obsessing them that adventure themselves into the Astral World
without Magical Protection, or invoke them, as do the Spiritists.
For by Death is Man released only from the Gross Body, at the first,
and is complete otherwise upon the Astral Plane, as he was in his
Life. But this Wholeness suffereth Stress, and its Girders are
loosened, the weaker first and after that the stronger.
DE ADEPTIS R. C. ESCATOLOGIA. (On the Eschatology of the R. C.
Adepts)
Consider now in this Light what shall come to the Adept, to him that
hath aspired constantly and firmly to his Star, attuning the Mind
unto the Musick of its Will. In him, if his Mind be knit perfectly
together in itself, and conjoined with the Star, is so strong a
Confection that it breaketh away easily not only from the Gross
Body, but the fine. It is this Fine Body which bindeth it to the
Astral, as did the Gross to the Material World so then it
accomplisheth willingly the Sacrament of a second Death and leaveth
the Body of Light. But the Mind, cleaveth closely, by Right of its
Harmony, and Might of its Love, to its Star, resisteth the Ministers
of Disruption, for a Season, according to its Strength. Now, if this
Star be of those that are bound by the Great Oath, incarnating
without Remission because of Delight in the Cosmic Sacrament, it
seeketh a new Vehicle in the appointed Way, and indwelleth the
Foetus of a Child, and quickeneth it. And if at this Time the mind
of its Former Tabernacle yet cling to it, then is there Continuity
of Character, and it may be Memory between the two Vehicles. This
is, briefly and without Elaboration, the Way of Asar in Amenti,
according to mine Opinion, of which I say not: This is the Truth.
DE NUPTIIS SUMMIS. (On the Supreme Marriage)
Now then to this Doctrine, o my Son, add thou that which thou hast
learned in the Book of the Law, that Death is the Dissolution in the
Kiss of Our Lady Nuit. This is a true Consonance as of Bass with
Treble; for here is the Impulse that setteth us to Magick, the Pain
of the Conscious Mind. Having then Wit to find the Cause of this
Pain in the Sense of Separation, and its Cessation by the Union of
Love, it is the Summit of our Holy Art to present the whole Being of
our Star to Our Lady in the Nuptial of our Bodily Death. We are then
to make our whole Engine the true and real Appurtenance of our
Force, without Leak, or Friction, or any other Waste or Hindrance to
its Action. Thou knowest well how an Horse, or even a Machine
propelled by a Man's feet, becometh as it were as Extension of the
Rider, though his Skill and Custom. Thus let thy Star have profit of
thy Vehicle, assimilating it, and sustaining it, so that it be
healed of its Separation, and this even in Life, but most especially
in Death. Also thou oughtest to increase thy Vehicle in Mass by true
Growth in Balance, that thou be a Bridegroom comely and well-
favoured, a Man of Might, and a Warrior worthy of the Bed of so
divine a Dissolution.
DE ARTE VOLUPTATE DILEMMA QUAEDAM. (On a Certain Problem in the Art
of Pleasure)
There is a certain Objection, o my Son, to our Thesis concerning
Will that it should flow freely in its Way; vide licet, that for
such as I am it is well, because I am endowed by Nature with a Lust
insatiable in every Kind, so that the Universe itself seemeth
incapable to appease it. For I have poured myself out unceasingly,
in Bodily Passion, and in Battles with Men, and with Wild Beasts,
and with Mountains and Deserts, and in Poetry and other Writings of
the Musick of mine Imagination, and in Books of our own Mysteries,
and in Works Magical, and in Arts Plastic, and so forth, so that in
mine Age I am become verily a Slave to mine own Genius; and my Law
is that unless I sleep or create, my Soul is sick, and fain to claim
the Reward and the Recreation of my Death. But (I hear thee say it)
this is not the Case of All, or even of many Men; but their Ort of
Will is satisfied easily at its first Guerdon. Should not then their
Wisdom be to resist themselves for a Space, as Water heaped up by a
Dam gathereth Force, and Hunger feedeth upon Abstinence? Also, there
is that which I have written in a former Chapter of the right Use of
Discipline; and thirdly, this Free Flowing is without Subtility of
Art, as it were an Harlot that plucketh Men by the Sleeve.
DE HOC MODO DISSOLUTIO. (On Unraveling of this Knot)
Here therefore will I write down the Answer to this Indictment of
our Wisdom; that every Act of Will is to be made in its Perfection,
which State is to be attained according to these Conditions: first,
those of its own Law; second, those of its Environment. Judge thine
own Case individually, each as it pleadeth; for there is no Canon or
Code, since every Star hath its own Law diverse from every other.
Now there is the Restraint of Conflict which is Impotence and
Disruption; but the Restraint of Discipline is a Fortification of
the Will by Repose and by Preparation, as a Conqueror resteth his
Armies, and feedeth them, and looketh to their Furniture and to
their Spirit, before he joineth the Battle. Also, there is the
Restraint of Art, which
includeth that other of Discipline, and its Nature is to adorn the
Will and to admire its Strength and its Beauty, and to enjoy its
Victory by Anticipation in full Confidence, not fearful of Time that
robbeth them that are ignorant concerning him, how he is but Mirage
and Illusion, incapable to besiege the Fortress of the Soul. Work
thou thy Will (as I said aforetime by the Mouth of Eliphas Levi
Zahed,) knowing thyself Omnipotent, and thine Habitation Eternity. O
my Son, attend well this Word, for it is an Heirloom, and a Ring of
Ruby and Emerald in thine Inheritance.
DE COMEDIA, QUAE DICTUR. (On the Comedy which is Called Pan)
Subtler than the Serpent of Hermes, o my Son, is this Way of
Restraint of Art, and thou shalt meet therein with the God Pan, and
have him to thy Playmate. So shalt thou devise Comedy and Tragedy,
as it were Settings for the Jewel of thy Will, to enhance the Beauty
thereof, and to refine thy Pleasures. This is that which is written
in "The Book of the Law": "... Wisdom says: be strong! Then canst
thou bear more joy. Be not animal; refine thy rapture! If thou
drink, drink by the eight and ninety rules of art: if thou love,
exceed by delicacy; and if thou do aught joyous, let there be
subtlety herein! But exceed! exceed!" Thus thou mayst even toy with
thy tamed Devil of Sin, and use the Pain thereof to sharpen the
taste of thy Meat, being Adult, and thy Tongue keen to the Olive,
and cloyed by the Sweet, while a Child is opposite to his in his
Preference; or as a skilled Match of Love aboundeth in Pinchings,
Slappings, Bitings and the like, to intensify the Bout and to
prolong it. But this is Risk and Peril unless thou be wholly Master,
one in thy Will; for there is Poison in these dead Snakes, to
destroy thee if thou lend them of thy Life by so little as one Doubt
of thyself, as a Seed of Division.
DE LUDO AMORIS. (On the Game of Love)
In this Mystery of the Restraint of Art is also the Secret of
Illusion. Why, sayest thou, hath not Our Lady Nuit her Will of Her
Lord Hadit, and He of Her, and so all ended? But this is the Play of
Her Love, that She veileth Her Beauty in he Robe of Illusion many-coloured,
and evadeth Him in Sport, yea, and divorceth Him from the Embrace,
weaving new Modesties and allurements in Her Dance. Now, o my Son,
the full Comprehension of this Arcanum is the Fruit of
Contemplation, if this be prepared by the Experience of this Art in
thine own Case. But to them that understand not, and have Grief of
Separation, being deceived by this Play so that they deem it the
Division of Hate, She can but speak in Simplicity by that Word
written in the Book of the Law: "To me!" For until thou love, the
Play of Love is but Emptiness; and its cruelty is Cruelty indeed,
except thou know it to be but a Sauce to whet Appetite, and to give
Emphasis of Contrast, as a Painter limneth the Light by Cunning of
his Shadows. But all this Delight that thou mayst have of the
Universe both in its Veils and in its Nakedness is a Reward of thine
Attainment of Truth, and followeth after it. Nor canst thou
comprehend this Doctrine by Mind, for the Division in thee crieth
aloud in its Agony, denying it, unless thou be wholly Initiate.
DE GAUDIO STUPRI. (On the Pleasures of Debauchery)
O my Son, this Sin itself that is our Disease is but
Misunderstanding of the Art of Love of Our Lady Nuit. Yea, verily,
it is all a Trick of Her Wit, and a Device of Her Delight, that Sin
should appear, and also (mark thou well!) the Misapprehension of its
Nature. Therefore the Pain of any Sinner in his Division and His
Separation is to Her a little Spasm of Pleasure. But as for him, let
him apprehend this Doctrine, and dissolve himself in Her Love. Thou
then, being Initiate and Illuminated in this Truth, mayst accept
thine own Sorrow, or rather that of thy Vehicle, as Lackey to the
Joy hat thou hast in thy True Self, the Star among the Stars of Her
Body. The Adept of our Art is not compassionate concerning Sin, in
his own Vehicle or another's, unless the Healing thereof were proper
to his Will, for he is aware of the whole Truth of the Matter. So
goeth he upon his Way, and tighteneth not a Rein upon the Horses of
the Universe, but is content, beholding the Speed of their Course.
Verily, o my Son, it is well written in the Book of the Magus that
it is the Curse of my Grade that I must needs preach my Law unto
Men. For I am afflicted in my Tabernacle on this Count, but in my
Self, I rejoice, and join in the Laughter of Her love.
DE CAECITIA PHILOSOPHORUM ANTIQUORUM. (On the Blindness of the
Ancient Philosophers)
Behold, how comfortable is this my Wisdom, wherein I have resolved
every Conflict soever that is or that can be, even in all
dimensions, that Antagonism of Things no less than their
Limitations. I have said: Evil be thou my Good; for it is the
Magical Mirror of Our Astarte, and the Caduceus of our Hermes. Now
this was the Error of Elder Philosophers, that perceiving Changeful
Duality as the Cause of Sorrow, they sought the Reconcilement in
Unity and in Stability. But I shew thee the Universe as the Body of
Our Lady Nuit, who is None and Two, with Hadit Her Lord as the
Alternator of those Phases. This Universe is then a perpetual By-
coming, the Vessel of every Permutation of Infinity, wherein every
Phenomenon is a Sacrament, Change being the act of Love, and Duality
the Condition prodromal to that Act even as an Axe must be taken
back from a Cedar that it may deliver its Stroke. The Error herefore
of thee Philosophers lay in their false Assumption that Bliss,
Knowledge and Being (the Qualities of their Changeless Unity) could
be States. O my Son, how pitiful is their Beggary, these Paupers of
Sense and of Experience and of Observation! The Emptiness of their
Bellies was it that bred Phantoms of Ideal, so that they sought Joy
by a crude Denial of what Truth (or rather, Fact) they had perceived
concerning the Universe, so that they set up an Idol of Death for
their God, in very Rage of Hatred against the Sum of their own
Selves.
DE HERESIA MANICHAEA. (On the Manichean Heresy)
These Philosophers, or shall I not say Misosophers and
Pseudo-Sophists, have been hard put to it to explain the Mystery of
the Existence of their Evil. They have cried, frothing with Words,
that Evil is Illusion. But if so, that Illusion is Evil, whence came
it, and to what End? If their Devil created it, who created that
Devil? All their contention resolveth to this Dilemma of Change in a
Changeless, Falsity in a True, Hate in a Loving, Weakness in an
Almighty, Duality
in a Simple, Being as they define their God. Nor do they see that
they restrict their God (whom yet they would have to be All) by
admitting Opposites to this Nature, ever when they sum these
Opposites as Illusion, since Illusion is the Denial of His Truth.
But the Indians, seeing this, seek Escape by denying all Duality
soever to their God, or True State, I speak of Parabrahaman and of
Nibbana, thus in any Reality of Thought rather denying Him or It
than destroying Illusion. But in our Light we have no Need of any
Denial, and accept All, yea Illusion itself, discriminating only in
our Minds between Phenomena by Comparison with some convenient
Standard, for the Purpose of maintaining the Order of our
Conceptions in Respect of the Relation of any Being with its
Environment.
DE VERITATE RERUM. (On the Truth of Things)
So do thou apprehend this Wisdom, o my Son, laying it to thine
Heart, as a Mistress, and hiding it in the Treasury of thy Mind as a
Jewel of Enlightenment. Consider a Dream, how it is unreal in
Respect of thine Experience of the Objects of thy Waking Sense, but
real also, both as it did in Fact impress thy Mind, and as it did
express some Hunger of thy Secret Nature, as I have already shewed
in this Letter. Consider the Play of the Chess, how its Law hath
made for itself a Language and a Literature, yet it is but an
arbitrary invention; without impinging (save as it operateth though
Pleasure and interest upon Minds) on any other Sphere soever of the
Universe. Equally, Things called (vulgarly) Real and Material exist
in the Universe of our Consciousness only by he Apprehension of
their Images in mind through Sense; as, how is Colour Real or
Material to a blind may or a Law mathematical true to a man that is
imbecile or demented? All things therefore exist in one form or
another; but the Reality of any, though in itself absolute, is in
regard of its Relation with any other thing dependent upon the
Intercourse and Language between them, conscious or unconscious.
Consider Azote, that hath nigh Four Parts in Five of the Air, how it
is not real to the Perception of any human Sense, but yet most real
to our Lungs, diluting the Oxygen, by whose Love we were else
violently combust. This is the Measure of Reality.
DE APHORISMO UBI DICO: OMNIA SUNT. (On My Aphorism: All Are)
My son, long did I await thee, yearning, and with Price and Great
Gladness did I bid thee Welcome to my City of the Pyramids, under
the Night of Pan. Now then in my dear Love of thee will I reveal
this Secret of Wisdom which I wrote occultly in my last Chapter, in
these Words: All Things Exist. Considered by right Understanding,
this is to deny that there is anything imaginable or unimaginable
which doth not exist. That is, the Body of Our Lady Nuit hath no
Limit, and there is no void that She filleth not with the Variety
and Beauty of Her Stars in Her Space. Nor is there any one Law of
her Nature, but in Her are all Laws, so that each Thing or each
Truth that thou perceiveth is as it were one Gesture of Her Dance.
Shut up the Book of thy Questions, o my Son, concerning nature, Her
Way, Her Origin, or Her Purpose, except in those Matters which
concern thee and thine own Orbit, o thou Star, begotten of my Loins
in my Lust of Hilarion, the Golden Rose, mystic and Joyous, the Lily
of a Thousand Petals and One Petal, subtle and perverse, that thou
mightest fulfil his Work of a Magus which I cam to accomplish,
robing myself in Flesh of man, as was my Nature and the Will of my
Nature, the Name of my Star that flameth in the Body of Nuit our
Lady.
DE RATIONE HUJUS EPISTOLAE SCRIBENDAE. (On the Reason for Writing
this Letter)
Behold, I draw unto the End of this Discourse of Wisdom, as a Ship
that hath adventured upon Ocean, from whose mast the Watcher espieth
in the Dimness of the Horizon a Point of Snow, being the Peak of a
great Mountain that is Guardian of the Harbour, the Term of that
Voyage. So now do I commit thee wholly unto thyself, for I exist not
in thine Universe, save in my Relation with thee, wherefore this
Part of me is in Truth thou rather than I. Yet do thou treasure this
Letter, for it is mine especial Gift, and hath Radiance of the Light
of my Wisdom, and flameth, being the Blood of my Love of thee and of
Mankind. Also, it is the Word of my Will, the Charter of the Liberty
of my Soul, and thine, and that of every Man, and every Woman; for
we are Stars, O my Son, for many Days was I silent, until thou wast
fearful lest thou hadst, by Ignorance or by Inadvertence, enkindled
the Fire of my Wrath. But I spake not, because I knew in my Wisdom
that thou must pass a certain Ordeal of thine Initiation by thine
own Virtue. For this Cause I held aloof; but in my Love I made a
Beginning of this Letter, beholding thy triumph beforehand; and with
Prescience, divining thy next Need, that is to say, this Book of the
Words of my Wisdom.
DE NATURA HUJUS EPISTOLAE. (On the Nature of this Letter)
O my Son, in this Letter have I written the Name of my own Nature,
its Law, its Quality, its Will and its Appurtenance or Ornament. For
it is the Child of my Love toward thee, and the Expression through
mine Art of my Will so far as that regardeth thee. Now every Child
is made of the Essence of his Father, so that every Creation is a
Likeness or image of the Creator, but modified by the Mother, that
is to say, the Material whereon he begetteth it. So then this Letter
is a Projection of mine own Star in a Mirror, to wit, mine Idea in
thy Regard; and it shall be unto thee as a clear Vision of thy
Father, and of the Word of the Aeon that he hath uttered unto Man.
But also, because this Word is the Formula of the Aeon, that is the
Law of its Changes or Phenomena, the Equation that expresseth its
Energy and its Motion, it shall serve every Man in his Measure as a
Text-Book or Comment upon the Theorick and Praxis of Magick. By it
may he discover his true Nature, and its Will, and apply his Force
and his Intelligence to the Right Fulfilment thereof. It shall be a
beacon to enlighten him, to comfort him, and to direct him; and it
shall be a Witness and Memorial of my Word and of my Work, as of
mine Attainment unto Wisdom.
DE MODO QUO HAEC EPISTOLAM SCRIPSI. (How I wrote this Letter)
There is not one Word in this Letter that is not writ with mine own
Hand and Style, slowly and heedfully (as is contrary with my custom)
being the Fruit of the Tree of my Mediation, well- ripened by the
Sun of mine Illumination. With much Toil have I done this, being
oftentimes seated without Motion save of the Hands, while Earth
rolled from Twilight unto Twilight, so that
my Body became cold and rigid, even as is a Corpse. Also, in the
Intervals of this Scripture, have I been given to Contemplation and
to Works of High Magick, notably the Mass of he Holy Ghost, in the
Concentration of my Will to impart this Wisdom unto thee, and to
reveal the Mysteries of Truth. Now of all these this is the Root,
that Truth is not fixed with the Rigour of Death, but vital with
Lust of Change, and enflamed with the Love of its opposite. Thus
even Falsehood is not alien to Truth, for the Perfection of Nature
comprehendeth all. But all these Things are written in the Book of
the Law, after which do I limp painfully; afar off, upon the poor
Crutch of mine Understanding of its Word; yea, I am well assured
that in that Book are writ all Things soever; but we, being mostly
without Wit are not able to distinguish hem. For the Stature of
Aiwass is beyond our Measure, seeing hat he was able to comprehend
the whole Mystery of Nuit and of Hadit, and yet to declare Their
Message in the Language of Man.
DE SAPIENTIA ET STULTITIA. (On Wisdom and Folly)
O my Son, in this the Colophon of my Epistle will I recall he Title
and Superscription thereof; that is, the Book of Wisdom or Folly. I
proclaim Blessing and Worship to Nuit Our Lady and Her Lord Hadit,
for the Miracle of the Anatomy of he Child Ra-Hoor-Khuit, as it is
shewn in the Design Minutum Mundum, the Tree of Life. For though
Wisdom be the Second Emanation of his Essence, there is a Path to
separate and to join them, the Reference thereof being Aleph, that
is One indeed, but also an Hundred and Eleven in his full
Orthography; to signify the Most Holy Trinity, and by Metathesis it
is Thick Darkness, and Sudden Death. This is also the Number of AUM,
which is AMOUN, and the Root-Sound of OMNE, or, in Greek, PAN, and
it is a Number of the Sun. Yet is the Atu of Thoth that
correspondeth thereunto marked with ZERO, and its Name is MAT,
whereof I have spoken formerly, and its Image is the Fool. O my Son,
gather thou all these Limbs together in One Body, and breathe upon
it with thy Spirit, that it may live; then do thou embrace it with
Lust of they Manhood, and go in unto it, and know it; so shall ye be
One Flesh. Now at last in the Reinforcement and Ecstasy of this
Consummation thou shalt with by what Inspiration thou didst choose
thy Name in the Gnosis, I mean PARZIVAL, "der reine Thor", the True
Knight that won Kingship in Monsalvat, and made whole the Wound of
Amfortas, and ordered Kundry to right Service, and regained the
Lance, and revived the Miracle of he Sangraal; yea also upon himself
did he accomplish his Work in the End: "Hochsten Heiles Wunder!
Erlosung dem Erloser !" This is the last Word of the Song that thine
Uncle Richard Wagner made for Worship of this Mystery. Understand
thou this, o my son, as I take leave of thee in this Epistle, that
the Summit of Wisdom is the opening of the Way that leadeth unto the
Crown and Essence of all, to the Soul of the Child Horus, the Lord
of the Aeon. This Way is the Path of the Pure Fool. Amoun.
DE ORACULO SUMMO (On the Last Oracle)
And who is this Pure Fool? Lo, in the Sagas of Old Time, Legend of
Scald, of Brad, of Druid, cometh He not in Green Like Spring? O thou
Great Fool, thou Water that art Air, in whom all Complex is
resolved! Yes, thou in ragged Raiment, with the Staff of Priapus and
the Wineskin! thou standest up on the Crocodile, like Hoor-pa-Kraat;
and the Great Cat leapeth upon thee! Yea, and more also I have known
Thee who Thou art, Bacchus Diphues, none and two, in thy Name IAO !
Now at the End of all do I come to the Being of Thee, beyond
By-coming, and I cry aloud my Word, as it was given unto Man by
thine Uncle Alcofribas Masior, the Oracle of the Bottle of
BACBUC, and this Word is TRINC.
But in the antient right Spelling this is TRINU whereof the Number
is the Number of the Name of Me thy Father! To wit, Six Hundred and
Three Score and Six.
Love is the law, love under will.
666
AN XIV
Sol in Aries
Luna in Aries
This page last updated: 03/01/2018