Rosslyn
Sanctuary
Southern Oregon Thelemic Community and Organic Farm
Rosslyn Coven of the Hawk & Jackal
Merlin - Oregon - USA
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Every Woman Is A Star
Aleister Crowley
(excerpt from The Law is for All, c.1920)
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We of Thelema say that "Every man and every woman is a star." We do not fool and
flatter women; we do not despise and abuse them. To us, a woman is herself,
absolute, original, independent, free, self-justified, exactly as a man is.
We dare not thwart her going, Goddess she! We arrogate no right upon her will;
we claim not to deflect her development, to dispose of her desires, or to
determine her destiny. She is her own sole arbiter; we ask no more than to
supply our strength to her, whose natural weakness else were prey to the world's
pressure. Nay more, it were too zealous even to guard her in her going; for she
were best by her own self-reliance to win her way forth!
We do not want her as a slave; we want her free and royal, whether her love
fight death in our arms by night, or her loyalty ride by day beside us in the
charge of the battle of life.
"Let the woman be girt with a sword before me"!
"In her is all power given."
So sayeth this our Book of the Law. We respect woman in the self of her own
nature; we do not arrogate the right to criticize her. We welcome her as our
ally, come to our camp as her will, free-flashing, sword-swinging, hath told
her. Welcome, thou woman, we hail thee, star shouting to star! Welcome to rout
and to revel! Welcome to fray and to feast! Welcome to vigil and victory!
Welcome to war with its wounds! Welcome to lust and to laughter! Welcome to
peace with its pageants! Welcome to board and to bed! Welcome to trumpet and
triumph; welcome to dirge and to death!
It is we of Thelema who truly love and respect woman, who hold her sinless and
shameless even as we are; and those who say that we despise her are those who
shrink from the flash of our falchion as we strike from her limbs their foul
fetters.
Do we call woman whore? Ay, verily and amen, she is that; the air shudders and
burns as we shout it, exulting and eager.
O ye! Was not this your sneer, your vile whisper that scorned her and shamed
her? Was not "whore" the truth of her, the title of terror that you gave in your
fear of her, coward comforting coward with furtive glances and gesture?
But we fear her not; we cry whore, as her armies approach us. We beat on our
shields with our swords. Earth echoes the clamor!
Is there any doubt of the victory? Your hordes of cringing slaves, afraid of
themselves, afraid of their own slaves, hostile, despised and distrusted, your
only tacticians the ostrich, the opossum, and the cuttle, will you not break and
flee at our first onset, as with leveled lances of lust we ride at the charge,
with our allies, the whores whom we love and acclaim, free friends by our sides
in the battle of life?
The Book of the Law is the charter of woman; the word Thelema has opened the
lock of her "girdle of chastity." Your Sphinx of stone has come to life; to
know, to will, to dare and to keep silence.
Yea I, the Beast, my Scarlet Whore bestriding me, naked and crowned, drunk on
her golden cup of fornication, boasting herself my bedfellow, have trodden her
in the market place, and roared this word that every woman is a star. And with
that word is uttered woman's freedom; the fools and fribbles and flirts have
heard my voice. The fox in woman hath heard the lion in man; fear, fainting,
flabbiness, frivolity, falsehood -- these are no more the mode.
In vain will bully and brute and braggart man, priest, lawyer or social censor
knit his brows to devise him a new tamer's trick; once and for all the tradition
is broken; vanished the vogue of bowstring, sack, stoning, nose-slitting,
belt-buckling, cart's tail-tragging, whipping, pillory posting, walling-up,
divorce court, eunuch, harem, mind-crippling, house-imprisoning,
menial-work-wearying, creed-stultifying, social-ostracism marooning,
divine-wrath-scaring, and even the device of creating and encouraging
prostitution to keep one class of women in the abyss under the heel of the
police, and the other on its brink, at the mercy of the husband's boot at the
first sign of insubordination or even failure to please.
Man's torture chamber had tools inexhaustibly varied; at one end murder crude
and direct to subtler, more callous, starvation; at the other moral agonies,
from tearing her child from her breast to threatening her with a rival when her
service had blasted her beauty.
Most masterful man, yet most cunning, was not thy supreme stratagem to band the
woman's own sisters against her, to use their knowledge of her psychology and
the cruelty of their jealousies to avenge thee on thy slave as thou thyself
hadst neither wit nor spite to do?
And woman, weak in body, and starved in mind; woman, morally fettered by her
heroic oath to save the race, no care of cost, helpless and hard, endured these
things, endured from age to age. Hers was no loud spectacular sacrifice, no
cross on a hill-top, with the world agaze, and monstrous miracles to echo the
applause to heaven. She suffered and triumphed in most shameful silence; she had
no friend, no follower, none to aid or approve. For thanks she had but maudlin
flatteries, and knew what cruel-cold scorn the hearts of men scarce cared to
hide.
She agonized, ridiculous and obscene; gave all her beauty and strength of
maidenhood to suffer sickness, weakness, danger of death, choosing to live the
life of a cow -- so mankind might sail the sea of time.
She knew that man wanted nothing of her but service of his base appetites; in
his true manhood-life she had no part nor lot; and all her wage was his careless
contempt.
She hath been trampled thus through all the ages, and she hath tamed them thus.
Her silence was the token of her triumph.
But now the word of me the Beast is this; not only art thou woman, sworn to a
purpose not thine own; thou art thyself a star, and in thyself a purpose to
thyself. Not only mother of men art thou, or whore to men; serf to their need of
life and love, not sharing in their light and liberty; nay, thou art mother and
whore for thine own pleasure; the word I say to man I say to thee no less: Do
what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law!
Ay, priest, ay, lawyer, ay, censor! Will ye not gather in secret once again, if
in your hoard of juggler's tricks there be not one untried, or in your cunning
and counsel one device new-false to save your pirate ship from sinking?
It has always been so easy up to now! What is the blasting magick in that word,
first thesis of The Book of the Law, that "every woman is a star."
Alas! it is I the Beast that roared that word so loud, and wakened beauty.
Your tricks, your drowsy drugs, your lies, your hypnotic passes -- they will not
serve you. Make up your minds to be free men, fearless as I, fit mates for women
no less free and fearless! For I, the Beast, have come; an end to the evils of
old, to the duping and clubbing of abject and ailing animals, degraded to that
shameful state to serve that shameful pleasure.
The essence of my word is to declare woman to be herself, of, to, and for,
herself; and I give this one irresistible weapon, the expression of herself and
her will through sex, to her on precisely the same terms as to man.
Murder is no longer dreaded; the economic weapon is powerless since female labor
has been found industrially valuable; and the social weapon is entirely in her
own hands.
The best women have always been sexually free, like the best men; it is only
necessary to remove the penalties for being found out. Let Women's labor
organizations support any individual who is economically harried on sexual
grounds. Let social organizations honor in public what their members practice in
private.
Most domestic unhappiness will disappear automatically, for its chief cause is
the sexual dissatisfaction of wives, or the anxiety (or other mental strain)
engendered should they take the remedy into their own hands.
The crime of abortion will lose its motive in all but the most exceptional
cases. Blackmail will be confined to commercial and political offenses, thus
diminishing its frequency by two-thirds at least, maybe much more. Social
scandals and jealousies will tend to disappear. Sexual disease will be easier to
track and to combat, when it is no longer a disgrace to admit it.
Prostitution (with its attendant crimes) will tend to disappear, as it will
cease to offer exorbitant profits to those who exploit it. The preoccupation of
the minds of the public with sexual questions will no longer breed moral disease
and insanity, when the sex appetite is treated as simply as hunger. Frankness of
speech and writing on sexual questions will dispel the ignorance which entraps
so many unfortunate people; proper precaution against actual dangers will
replace unnecessary and absurd precautions against imaginary or artificial
dangers; and the quacks who trade on fear will be put out of business.
All this must follow as the light the night as soon as woman, true to herself,
finds that she can no longer be false to any man. She must hold herself and her
will in honor; and she must compel the world to accord it.
The modern woman is not going to be dupe, slave, and victim anymore; the woman
who gives herself up freely to her own enjoyment, without asking recompense,
will earn the respect of her brothers, and will openly despise her "chaste" or
venal sisters, as men now despise "milksops," "sissies," and "tango lizards."
Love is to be divorced utterly and irrevocably from social and financial
agreements, especially marriage. Love is a sport, an art, a religion, as you
will; ol' clo' emporium.
"Mary inviolate" is to be "torn upon wheels" because tearing is the only
treatment for her; and RV, a wheel, is the name of the feminine principle. (See
Liber D.) It is her own sisters who are to punish her for the crime of denying
her nature, not men who are to redeem her, since, as above remarked, it is man's
own false sense of guilt, his selfishness, and his cowardice, which originally
forced her to blaspheme against herself, and so degraded her in her own eyes,
and in his. Let him attend to his own particular business, to redeem himself --
he surely has his hands full! Woman will save herself if she be but left alone
to do it. I see it, I, the Beast, who have seen -- who see -- space splendid
with stars, who have seen -- who see -- the Body of our Lady Nuit,
all-pervading, and therein swallowed up, to have found -- to find -- no soul
that is not wholly of her. Woman! thou drawest us upward and onward forever; and
every woman is among women, of woman; one star of her stars.
I see thee, woman, thou standest alone; High Priestess art thou unto love at the
altar of life. And man is the victim therein.
Beneath thee, rejoicing, he lies; he exalts as he dies, burning up the breath of
thy kiss. Yea, star rushes flaming to star; the blaze bursts, splashes the
skies.
There is a cry in an unknown tongue. It resounds through the temple of the
universe; in its one word is death and ecstasy, and thy title of honor, o thou,
to thyself High Priestess, Prophetess, Empress, to thyself the Goddess whose
name means mother and whore!