Rosslyn
Sanctuary
Southern Oregon Thelemic Community and Organic Farm
Rosslyn Coven of the Hawk & Jackal
Merlin - Oregon - USA
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THE publications of the A.'. A.'.
Liber CXLVIII
Soldier and the
Hunchback ! & ?
"Expect seven misfortunes from the cripple, and forty-two from the one-eyed man;
but when the hunchback comes, say 'Allah our aid.'"
ARAB PROVERB
I
INQUIRY. Let us inquire in the first place: What is Scepticism? The word means
looking, questioning, investigating. One must pass by contemptuously the
Christian liar's gloss which interprets "sceptic" as "mocker"; though in a sense
it is true for him, since to inquire into Christianity is assuredly to mock at
it; but I am concerned to intensify the etymological connotation in several
respects. First, I do not regard mere incredulity as necessary to the idea,
though credulity is incompatible with it. Incredulity implies a prejudice in
favour of a negative conclusion; and the true sceptic should be perfectly
unbiassed.
Second, I exclude "vital scepticism." What's the good of anyfink? expects (as we
used to learn about "nonne?") the answer, "Why nuffink!" and again is
prejudiced. Indolence is no virtue in a questioner. Eagerness, intentness,
concentration, vigilance --- all these I include in the connotation of "sceptic."
Such questioning as has been called "vital scepticism" is but a device to avoid
true questioning, and therefore its very antithesis, the devil disguised as an
angel of light.
(Or vice versa, friend, if you are a Satanist; 'tis a matter of words --- words
--- words. You may write x for y in your equations, so long as you consistently
write y for x. They remain unchanged --- and unsolved. Is not all our
"knowledge" an example of this fallacy of writing one unknown for another, and
then crowing like Peter's cock?)
I picture the true sceptic as a man eager and alert, his deep eyes glittering
like sharp swords, his hands tense with effort as he asks,
"What does it matter?"
I picture the false sceptic as a dude or popinjay, yawning, with dull eyes, his
muscles limp, his purpose in asking the question but the expression of his
slackness and stupidity.
This true sceptic is indeed the man of science; as Wells' "Moreau" tells us. He
has devised some means of answering his first question, and its answer is
another question. It is difficult to conceive of any question, indeed, whose
answer does not imply a thousand further questions. So simple an inquiry as "Why
is sugar sweet?" involves an infinity of chemical researches, each leading
ultimately to the blank wall --- what is matter? and an infinity of
physiological researches, each (similarly) leading to the blank wall --- what is
mind?
Even so, the relation between the two ideas is unthinkable; causality is itself
unthinkable; it depends, for one thing, upon experience --- and what, in God's
name, is experience? Experience is impossible without memory. What is memory?
The mortar of the temple of the ego, whse bricks are the impressions. And the
ego? The sum of our experience, maybe. (I doubt it!) Anyhow, we have got values
of y and z for x, and the values of x and z for y --- all our equations are
indeterminate; all our knowledge is relative, even in a narrower sense than is
usually implied by the statement. Under the whip of the clown God, our
performing donkeys the philosophers and men of science run round and round in
the ring; they have amusing tricks: they are cleverly trained; but they get
nowhere.
I don't seem to be getting anywhere myself.
II
A fresh attempt. Let us look into the simplest and most certain of all possible
statements. Thought exists, or if you will, Cogitatur.
Descartes supposed himself to have touched bed-rock with his
Cogito, ergo Sum.
Huxley pointed out the complex nature of this proposition, and that it was an
enthymeme with the premiss Omnes sunt, qui cogitant suppressed. He reduced it to
Cogito; or, to avoid the assumption of an ego, Cogitatur.
Examining more closely this statement, we may still cavil at its form. We cannot
translate it into English without the use of the verb to be, so, that, after
all, existence is implied. Nor do we readily conceive that contemptuous silence
is sufficient answer of the further query, "By whom is it thought?" The Buddhist
may find it easy to image an act without an agent; I am not so clever. It may be
possible for a sane man; but I should like to know more about his mind before I
gave a final opinion.
But apart from purely formal objections, we may still inquire: Is this Cogitatur
true?
Yes; reply the sages; for to deny it implies thought; Negatur is only a
sub-section of Cogitatur.
This involves, however, an axiom that the part is of the same nature as the
whole; or (at the very least) an axiom that A is A.
Now, I do not wish to deny that A is A, or may occasionally be A. But certainly
A is A is a very different statement to our original Cogitatur.
The proof of Cogitatur, in short, rests not upon itself but upon the validity of
our logic; and if by logic we mean (as we should mean) the Code of the Laws of
Thought, the irritating sceptic will have many more remarks to make: for it now
appears that the proof that thought exists depends upon the truth of that which
is thought, to say no more.
We have taken Cogitatur, to try and avoid the use of esse; but A is A involves
that very idea, and the proof is fatally flawed.
Cogitatur depends on Est; and there's no avoiding it.
III
Shall we get on any better if we investigate this Est ---Something is ---
Existence is --- vhvt rat vhvt?
What is Existence? The question is so fundamental that it finds no answer. The
most profound meditation only leads to an exasperating sense of impotence. There
is, it seems, no simple rational idea in the mind which corresponds to the word.
It is easy of course to drown the question in definitions, leading us to further
complexity --- but
"Existence is the gift of Divine Providence,"
"Existence is the opposite of Non-Existence,"
do not help us much!
The plain Existence is Existence of the Hebrews goes farther. It is the most
sceptical of statements, in spite of its form. Existence is just existence, and
there's no more to be said about it; don't worry! Ah, but there is more to be
said about it! Though we search ourselves for a thought to match the word, and
fail, yet we have Berkeley's perfectly convincing argument that (so far as we
know it) existence must mean "thinking existence" or "spiritual existence".
Here then we find our Est to imply Cogitatur, and Berkeley's
arguments are "irrefragable, yet fail to produce conviction" (Hume)
because the Cogitatur; as we have shown, implies Est.
Neither of these ideas is simple; each involves the other. Is the division
between them in our brain a proof of the total incapacity of that organ, or is
there some flaw in our logic? For all depends upon our logic; not upon the
simple identity A is A only, but upon its whole structure from the question of
simple propositions, enormously difficult from the moment when it occurred to
the detestable genius that invented "existential import" to consider the matter,
to that further complexity and contradiction, the syllogism.
IV
Thought is appears then (in the worst case possible, denial) as the conclusion
of the premisses:
There is denial of thought.
(All) Denial of thought is thought.
Even formally, 'tis a clumsy monster. Essentially, it seems to involve a great
deal beyond our original statement. We compass heaven and earth to make one
syllogism; and when we have made it, it is tenfold more the child of mystery
than ourselves.
We cannot here discuss the whole problem of the validity (the surface-question
of the logical validity) of the syllogism; though one may throw out the hint
that the doctrine of distributed middle seems to assume a knowledge of a
Calculus of Infinites which is certainly beyond my own poor attainments, and
hardly impregnable to the simple reflection that all mathematics is
conventional, and not essential; relative, and not absolute.
We go deeper and deeper, then, it seems, from the One into the Many. Our primary
proposition depends no longer upon itself, but upon the whole complex being of
man, poor, disputing, muddle-headed man! Man with all his limitations and
ignorance; man --- man!
V
We are of course no happier when we examine the Many, separately or together.
They converge and diverge, each fresh hill-top of knowledge disclosing a vast
land unexplored; each gain of power in our telescopes opening out new galaxies;
each improvement in our microscopes showing us life minuter and more
incomprehensible. A mystery of the mighty spaces between molecules; a mystery of
the ether-cushions that fend off the stars from collision! A mystery of the
fulness of things; a mystery of the emptiness of things! Yet, as we go, there
grows a sense, an instinct, a premonition --- what shall I call it? -- that
Being is One, and Thought is One, and Law is One --- until we ask What is that
One?
Then again we spin words --- words --- words. And we have got no single question
answered in any ultimate sense.
What is the moon made of?
Science replies "Green Cheese".
For our one moon we have now two ideas:
Greenness, and Cheese.
Greenness depends on the sunlight, and the eye, and a thousand other things.
Cheese depends on bacteria and fermentation and the nature of the cow.
"Deeper, even deeper, into the mire of things!"
Shall we cut the Gordian knot? shall we say "There is God"?
What, in the devil's name, is God?
If (with Moses) we picture Him as an old man showing us His back parts, who
shall blame us? The great Question --- any question is
the great question --- does indeed treat us thus cavalierly, the disenchanted
Sceptic is too prone to think!
Well, shall we define Him as a loving Father, as a jealous priest, as a gleam of
light upon the holy Ark? What does it matter? All these images are of wood and
stone, the wood and stone of our own stupid brains! The Fatherhood of God is but
a human type; the idea of a human father conjoined with the idea of immensity.
Two for One again!
No combination of thoughts can be greater than the thinking brain itself; all we
can think of God or say of Him, so long as our words really represent thoughts,
is less than the whole brain which thinks, and orders speech.
Very good; shall we proceed by denying Him all thinkable qualities, as do the
heathen? All we obtain is mere negation of thought.
Either He is unknowable, or He is less than we are. Then, too, that which is
unknowable is unknown; and "God" or "There is God" as an answer to our question
becomes as meaningless as any other.
Who are we, then?
We are Spencerian Agnostics, poor silly, damned Spencerian Agnostics!
And there is an end of the matter.
VI
It is surely time that we began to question the validity of some of our data. So
far our scepticism has not only knocked to pieces our tower of thought, but
rooted up the foundation-stone and ground it into finer and more poisonous
powder than that into which Moses ground he calf. These golden Elohim! Our
calf-heads that brought us not out of Egypt, but into a darkness deeper and more
tangible than any darkness of the double Empire of Asar.
Hume put his little ? to Berkeley's God --- !; Buddha his ? to the Vedic Atman
--- ! --- and neither Hume nor Buddha was baulked of his reward. Ourselves may
put ? to our own ? since we have found no ! to put it to; and wouldn't it be
jolly if our own second ? suddenly straightened its back and threw its chest out
and marched off as !?
Suppose then we accept our scepticism as having destroyed our knowledge root and
branch --- is there no limit to its action? Does it not in a sense stultify
itself? Having destroyed logic by logic --- if
Satan cast out Satan, how shall his kingdom stand? Let us stand on the Mount,
Saviours of the World that we are, and answer "Get thee behind me Satan!" though
refraining from quoting texts or giving reasons.
Oho! says somebody; is Aleister Crowley here? --- Samson blinded and bound,
grinding corn for the Philistines!
Not at all, dear boy!
We shall put all the questions that we can put --- but we may find a tower built
upon a rock, against which the winds beat in vain.
Not what Christians call faith, be sure! But what (possibly) the forgers of the
Epistles --- those eminent mystics! --- meant by faith. What I call Samadhi ---
and as "faith without works is dead," so,
good friends, Samadhi is all humbug unless the practitioner shows the
glint of its gold in his work in the world. If your mystic becomes Dante, well;
if Tennyson, a fig for his trances!
But how does this tower of Samadhi stand the assault of Question --- time?
Is not the idea of Samadhi just as dependent on all the other ideas --- man,
time, being, thought, logic? If I seek to explain Samadhi by analogy, am I not
often found talking as if we knew all about Evolution, and Mathematics, and
History? Complex and unscientific studies, mere straws before the blast of our
hunchback friend!
Well, one of the buttresses is just the small matter of common sense.
The other day I was with Dorothy, and, as I foolishly imagined, very cosy: for
her sandwiches are celebrated. It was surely bad taste on the part of Father
Bernard Vaughan, and Dr. Torrey, and Ananda Metteyya, and Mr. G. W. Foote, and
Captain Fuller, and the ghost of Immanuel Kant, and Mr. Bernard Shaw, and young
Neuburg, to intrude. But intrude they did; and talk! I never heard anything like
it. Every one with his own point of view; but all agreed that Dorothy was
non-existent, or if existent, a most awful specimen, that her buns were stale,
and her tea stewed; ergo, that I was having a very poor time of it. Talk! Good
God! But Dorothy kept on quietly and took no notice; and in the end I forgot
about them.
Thinking it over soberly, I see now that very likely they were quite right: I
can't prove it either way. But as a mere practical man, I intend taking the
steamer --- for my sins I am in Gibraltar --- back to Dorothy at the earliest
possible moment. Sandwiches of bun and German sausage may be vulgar and even
imaginary --- it's the taste I like. And the more I munch, the more complacent I
feel, until I go so far as to offer my critics a bite.
This sounds in a way like the "Interior Certainly" of the common or garden
Christian; but there are differences.
The Christian insists on notorious lies being accepted as an essential part of
his (more usually her) system; I, on the contrary, ask for facts, for
observation. Under Scepticism, true, one is just as much a house of cards as the
other; but only in the philosophical sense.
Practically, Science is is true; and Faith is foolish.
Practically, 3 x 1 = 3 is the truth; and 3 x 1 = 1 is a lie; though,
sceptically, both statements may be false or unintelligible.
Practically, Franklin's method of obtaining fire from heaven is
better than that of Prometheus or Elijah. I am now writing by the light that
Franklin's discovery enabled men to use.
Practically, "I concentrated my mind upon a white radiant triangle in whose
centre was a shining eye, for 22 minutes and 10 seconds, my attention wandering
45 times" is a scientific and valuable statement. "I prayed fervently to the
Lord for the space of many days" means anything or nothing. Anybody who cares to
do so may imitate my experiment and compare his result with mine. In the latter
case one would always be wondering what "fervently" meant and who "the Lord"
was, and how many days made "many."
My claim, too, is more modest than the Christian's. He (usually she) knows more
about my future than is altogether pleasant; I claim nothing absolute from my
Samadhi --- I know only too well the worthlessness of single-handed
observations, even on so simple a matter as a boiling-point determination! ---
and as for his (usually her) future, I content myself with mere common sense
about the probable end of a fool.
So that after all I keep my scepticism intact --- and I keep my
Samadhi intact. The one balances the other; I care nothing for the vulgar
brawling of these two varlets of my mind!
VII
If, however, you would really like to know what might be said on the soldierly
side of the question, I shall endeavour to oblige.
It is necessary if a question is to be intelligibly put that the querent should
be on the same plane as the quesited.
Answer is impossible if you ask: Are round squares triangular? or Is butter
virtuous? or How many ounces go to the shilling? for the questions are not
really questions at all.
So if you ask me Is Samadhi real? I reply: First, I pray you, establish a
connection between the terms. What do you mean by Samadhi?
There is a physiological (or pathological; never mind now!) state which I call
Samadhi; and that state is as real --- in relation to man --- as sleep, or
intoxication, or death.
Philosophically, we may doubt the existence of all of these; but we have no
grounds for discriminating between them --- the Academic Scepticism is a
wholesale firm, I hope! --- and practically, I challenge you to draw valid
distinctions.
All these are states of the consciousness of man; and if you seek to destroy
one, all fall together.
VIII
I must, at the risk of appearing to digress, insist upon this distinction
between philosophical and practical points of view, or (in Qabalistic language)
between Kether and Malkuth.
In private conversation I find it hard --- almost impossible --- to get people
to understand what seems to me so very simple a point. I shall try to make it
exceptionally clear.
A boot is an Illusion.
A hat is an illusion.
Therefore, a boot is a hat.
So argue my friends, not distributing the middle term.
But this argue I.
All boots are illusions.
All hats are illusions.
Therefore (though it is not a syllogism), all boots and hats are illusions.
I add:
To the man in Kether neither boots nor hats matter.
In fact, the man in Kether is out of all relation to these boots and hats.
You, they say, claim to be a man in Kether (I don't). Why then, do you not wear
boots on your head and hats on your feet?
I can only answer that I the man in Kether ('tis but an argument) am out of all
relation as much with feet and heads as with boots and hats. But why should I
(from my exalted pinnacle) stoop down and worry the headed and footed gentleman
in Malkuth, who after all doesn't exist for me, by these drastic alterations in
his toilet? There is no distinction whatever; I might easily put the boots on
his shoulders, with his head on one foot and the hat on the other.
In short, why not be a clean-living Irish gentleman, even if you do have insane
ideas about the universe?
Very good, say my friends, unabashed, then why not stick to that? Why glorify
Spanish gipsies when you have married a clergyman's daughter?
Why go about proclaiming that you can get as good fun for eighteenpence as
usually costs men a career?
Ah! let me introduce you to the man in Tiphereth; that is, the man who is trying
to raise his consciousness from Malkuth to Kether.
This Tiphereth man is in a devil of a hole! He knows theoretically all about the
Kether point of view (or thinks he does) and practically all about the Malkuth
point of view. Consequently he goes about contradicting Malkuth; he refuses to
allow Malkuth to obsess his thought. He keeps on crying out that there is no
difference between a goat and a God, in the hope of hypnotising himself (as it
were) into that perception of their identity, which is his (partial and
incorrect) idea of how things look from Kether.
This man performs great magic; very strong medicine. He does reallyfind gold on
the midden and skeletons in pretty girls.
In Abiegnus the Sacred Mountain of the Rosicrucians the Postulant finds but a
coffin in the central shrine; yet that coffin contains
Christian Rosencreutz who is dead and is alive for evermore and hath the keys of
Hell and of Death.
Ay! your Tiphereth man, child of Mercy and Justice, looks deeper than the skin!
But he seems a ridiculous object enough both to the Malkuth man and to the
Kether man.
Still, he's the most interesting man there is; and we all must pass through that
stage before we get our heads really clear, the Kether-vision above the Clouds
that encircle the mountain Abiegnus.
IX
Running and returning, like the Cherubim, we may now resume our attempt to drill
our hunchback friend into a presentable soldier. The digression will not have
been all digression, either; for it will have thrown a deal of light on the
question of the limitations of scepticism.
We have questioned the Malkuth point of view; it appears absurd, be it agreed.
But the Tiphereth position is unshaken; Tiphereth needs no telling that Malkuth
is absurd. When we turn our artillery against Tiphereth, that too crumbles; but
Kether frowns above us.
Attack Kether, and it falls; but the Yetziratic Malkuth is still there ....
until we reach Kether of Atziluth and the Infinite Light, and Space, and
Nothing.
So then we retire up the path, fighting rear-guard actions; at every moment a
soldier is slain by a hunchback; but as we retire there is always a soldier just
by us.
Until the end. The end? Buddha thought the supply of hunchbacks infinite; but
why should not the soldiers themselves be infinite in number?
However that may be, here is the point; it takes a moment for a hunchback to
kill his man, and the farther we get from our base the longer it takes. You may
crumble to ashes the dream-world of a boy, as it were, between your fingers; but
before you can bring the physical universe tumbling about a man's ears he
requires to drill his hunchbacks so devilish well that they are terribly like
soldiers themselves. And aquestion capable of shaking the consciousness of
Samadhi could, I imagine,give long odds to one of Frederick's grenadiers.
It is useless to attack the mystic by asking him if he is quite sure Samadhi is
good for his poor health; 'tis like asking the huntsman to be very careful,
please, not to hurt the fox.
The ultimate Question, the one that really knocks Samadhi to pieces, is such a
stupendous Idea that it is far more of a ! than all previous !'s whatever, for
all its ? form.
And the name of that Question is Nibbana.
Take this matter of the soul.
When Mr. Judas McCabbage asks the Man in the Street why he believes in a soul,
the Man stammers out that he has always heard so; naturally McCabbage has no
difficulty in proving to him by biological methods that he has no soul; and with
a sunny smile each passes on his way.
But McCabbage is wasted on the philosopher whose belief in a soul rests on
introspection; we must have heavier metal; Hume will serve our turn, may be.
But Hume in his turn becomes perfectly futile, pitted against the Hindu mystic,
who is in constant intense enjoyment of his new-found Atman. It takes a
Buddha-gun to knock "his" castle down.
Now the ideas of McCabbage are banal and dull; those of Hume are live and
virile; there is a joy in them greater than the joy of the Man in the Street. So
too the Buddha-thought, Anatta, is a more splendid conception than the
philosopher's Dutch-doll-like Ego, or the rational artillery of Hume.
This weapon, too, that has destroyed our lesser, our illusionary
universes, ever revealing one more real, shall we not wield it with divine
ecstasy? Shall we not, too, perceive the inter-dependence of the Questions and
the Answers, the necessary connection of the one with the other, so that (just
as 0/1 is an indefinite) we destroy the absolutism of either ? or ! by their
alternation and balance, until in our series ? ! ? ! ? ! ? ... ! ? ! ? ... we
care nothing as to which may prove the final term, any single term being so
negligible a quantity in relation to the vastness of the series ?. Is it not a
series of geometrical progression, with a factor positive and incalculably vast?
In the light of the whole process, then, we perceive that there is no absolute
value in the swing of the pendulum, thought its shaft lengthen, its rate grow
slower, and its sweep wider at every swing.
What should interest us is the consideration of the Point from which it hangs,
motionless at the height of things! We are unfavourably placed to observe this,
desperately clinging as we are to the bob of the pendulum, sick with our
senseless swinging to and fro in the abyss!
We must climb up the shaft to reach that point --- but --- wait one moment! How
obscure and subtle has our simile become! Can we attach any true meaning to the
phrase? I doubt it, seeing what we have taken for the limits of the swing. True,
it may be that at the end the swing is always 360° so that the !-point and the
?-point coincide; but that is not the same thing as having no swing at all,
unless we make kinematics identical with statics.
What is to be done? How shall such mysteries be uttered?
Is this how it is that the true Path of the Wise is said to lie in a
totally different plane from all his advance in the path of Knowledge, and of
Trance? We have already been obliged to take the Fourth Dimension to illustrate
(if not explain) the nature of Samadhi.
Ah, say the adepts, Samadhi is not the end, but the beginning. You must regard
Samadhi as the normal state of mind which enables you to begin your researches,
just as waking is the state from which you rise to
Samadhi, sleep the state from which you rose to waking. And only from
Sammasamadhi --- continuous trance of the right kind --- can you rise up as it
were on tiptoe and peer through the clouds unto the mountains.
Now of course it is really awfully decent of the adepts to take all that trouble
over us, and to put it so nicely and clearly. All we have to do, you see, is to
acquire Sammasamadhi, and then rise on tiptoe. Just so!
But there there are the other adepts. Hard at him! Little brother, he says, let
us rather consider that as the pendulum swings more and more slowly every time,
it must ultimately stop, as soon as the shaft is of infinite length. Good! then
it isn't a pendulum at all but a
Mahalingam --- The Mahalingam of Shiva (Namo Shivaya namaha Aum!) which is all I
ever thought it was; all you have to do is to keep swinging hard --- I know it's
hook-swinging! --- and you get there in the End. Why trouble to swing? First,
because you are bound to swing, whether you like it or not; second, because your
attention is thereby distracted from those lumbar muscles in which the hook is
so very firmly fixed; third, because after all it's a ripping good game; fourth,
because you want to get on, and even to seem to progress is better than standing
still. A treadmill is admittedly good exercise.
True, the question, "Why become an Aarhat?" should precede, "How become an
Arahat?" but an unbiassed man will easily cancel the first question with "Why
not?" --- the How is not so easy to get rid of. Then, from the standpoint of the
Arahat himself, perhaps this "Why did I become an Arahat?" and "How did I become
an Arahat?" have but a single solution!
In any case, we are wasting our time --- we are as ridiculous with our Arahats
as Herod the Tetrarch with his peacocks! We pose Life with the question Why ?
and the first answer is: To obtain the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy
Guardian Angel.
To attach meaning to this statement we must obtain that Knowledge and
Conversation: and when we have done that, we may proceed to the next Question.
It is no good asking it now.
"There are purse-proud, penniless ones who stand at the door of the tavern, and
revile the guests."
We attach little importance to the Reverend Out-at-Elbows, thundering in
Bareboards Chapel that the rich man gets no enjoyment from his wealth.
Good, then. Let us obtain the volume entitled "The Book of the Sacred Magick of
Abramelin the Mage"; or the magical writings of that holy illuminated Man of
God, Captain Fuller, and carry out fully their instructions.
And only when we have succeeded, when we have put a colossal ! against our vital
? need we inquire whether after all the soldier is not going to develop spinal
curvature.
Let us take the first step; let us sing:
"I do not ask to see
The distant path; one step's enough for me."
But (you will doubtless say) I pith your ? itself with another ?: Why question
life at all? Why not remain "a clean-living Irish gentleman" content with his
handicap, and contemptuous of card and pencil? Is not the Buddha's goad
"Everything is sorrow" little better than a currish whine? What do I care for
old age, disease, and death? I'm a man, and a Celt at that. I spit on your
snivelling Hindu prince, emasculate with debauchery in the first place, and
asceticism in the second. A weak, dirty, paltry cur, sir, your Gautama!
Yes, I think I have no answer to that. The sudden apprehension of some vital
catastrophe may have been the exciting cause of my conscious devotion to the
attainment of Adeptship --- but surely the capacity was there, inborn. Mere
despair and desire can do little; anyway, the first impulse of fear was the
passing spasm of an hour; the magnetism of the path itself was the true lure. It
is as foolish to ask me "Why do you adep?" as to ask God "Why do you pardon?"
C'est son métier.
I am not so foolish as to think that my doctrine can ever gain the ear of the
world. I expect that ten centuries hence the "nominal Crowleians" will be as
pestilent and numerous a body as the "nominal Christians" are to-day; for (at
present) I have been able to devise no mechanism for excluding them. Rather,
perhaps, should I seek to find them a niche in the shrine, just as Hinduism
provides alike for those capable of the Upanishads and those whose intelligence
hardly reaches to the Tantras. In short, one must abandon the reality of
religion for a sham, so that the religion may be universal enough for those few
who are capable of its reality to nestle to its breast, and nurse their nature
on its starry milk. But we anticipate!
My message is then twofold; to the greasy bourgeois I preach discontent; I shock
him, I stagger him, I cut away earth from under his feet, I turn him upside
down, I give him hashish and make him run amok, I twitch his buttocks with the
red-hot tongs of my Sadistic fancy -- until he feels uncomfortable.
But to the man who is already as uneasy as St. Lawrence on his silver grill, who
feels the spirit stir in him, even as a woman feels, and sickens at, the first
leap of the babe in her womb, to him I bring the splendid vision, the perfume
and the glory, the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel. And to
whosoever hath attained that height will I put a further Question, announce a
further Glory.
It is my misfortune and not my fault that I am bound to deliver this elementary
Message.
"Man has two sides; one to face the world with,
One to show a woman when he loves her."
We must pardon Browning his bawdy jest; for his truth is ower true! But it is
your own fault if you are the world instead of the beloved; and only see of me
what Moses saw of God!
It is disgusting to have to spend one's life jetting dirt in the face of the
British public in the hope that in washing it they may wash off the
acrid grease of their commercialism, the saline streaks of their hypocritical
tears, the putrid perspiration of their morality, the dribbling slobber of their
sentimentality and their religion. And they don't wash it! ...
But let us take a less unpleasing metaphor, the whip! As some
schoolboy poet repeatedly wrote, his rimes as poor as Edwin Arnold, his metre as
erratic and as good as Francis Thompson, his good sense and frank indecency a
match for Browning!
"Can't be helped; must be done ---
So ..."
Nay! 'tis a bad, bad rime.
And only after the scourge that smites shall come the rod that consoles, if I
may borrow a somewhat daring simile from Abdullah Haji of Shiraz and the
twenty-third Psalm.
Well, I would much prefer to spend my life at the rod; it is wearisome and
loathsome to be constantly flogging the tough hide of Britons, whom after all I
love. "Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son that He
receiveth." I shall really be glad if a few of you will get it over, and come
and sit on daddy's knee! The first step is the hardest; make a start, and I will
soon set the hunchback lion and the soldier unicorn fighting for your crown. And
they shall lie down together at the end, equally glad, equally weary; while sole
and sublime that crown of thine (brother!) shall glitter in the frosty Void of
the abyss, its twelve stars filling that silence and solitude with a music and a
motion that are more silent and more still than they; thou shalt sit throned on
the Invisible, thine eyes fixed upon That which we call Nothing, because it is
beyond Everything attainable by thought, or trance, thy right hand gripping the
azure rod of Light, thy left hand clasped upon the scarlet scourge of Death; thy
body girdled with a snake more brilliant than the sun, its name Eternity; thy
mouth curved moonlike in a smile, in the invisible kiss of Nuit, our Lady of the
Starry
Abodes; thy body's electric flesh stilled by sheer might to a movement closed
upon itself in the controlled fury of Her love --- nay, beyond all these Images
art thou (little brother!) who art passed from I and Thou, and He unto That
which hath no Name, no Image. ...
Little brother, give me thy hand; for the first step is hard.
ALEISTER CROWLEY.