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John St. John
The Record of the Magical Retirement of
G.H. Frater, O.'.M.'.
PREFACE
NOBODY is better aware than myself that this account of my Retirement labours
under most serious
disadvantages.
The scene should have been laid in an inaccessible lamaserai in Tibet, perched
on stupendous crags; and
my familiarity with Central Asia would have enabled me to do it quite nicely.
One should really have had an attendant Sylph; and one's Guru, a man of
incredible age and ferocity,
should have frequently appeared at the dramatic moment.
A gigantic magician on a coal-black steed would have added to the effect:
strange voices, uttering
formidable things, should have issued from unfathomable caverns. A mountain
shaped like a Svastika with
a Pillar of Flame would have been rather taking; herds of impossible yaks,
ghost-dogs, gryphons. ...
But my good, friends, this is not the way things happen. Paris is as wonderful
as Lhassa, and there are just
as many miracles in London as in Luang Prabang.
I did not even think it necessary to go into the Bois de Boulogne and meet those
Three Adepts who cause
bleeding at the nose, familiar to us from the writings of Macgregor Mathers. {3}
The Universe of Magic is in the mind of a man: the setting is but Illusion even
to the thinker.
Humanity is progressing; formerly men dwelt habitually in the exterior world;
nothing less than giants and
Paynim and men-at-arms and distressed ladies, vampires and succubi, could amuse
them. Their magicians
brought demons from the smoke of blood, and made gold from baser metals.
In this they succeeded; the intelligent perceived that the gold and the lead
were but shadows of thought. It
became probable that the elements were but isomers of one element; matter was
seen to be but a
modification of mind, or (at least) that the two things matter and mind must be
joined before either could
be perceived. All knowledge comes through the senses, on the one hand; on the
other, it is only through
the senses that knowledge comes.
We then continue our conquest of matter; and we are getting pretty expert. It
took much longer to perfect
the telescope than the motor-car. And though, of course, there are limitations,
we know enough to be able
to predict them.
We know in what progression the Power to Speed coefficient of a steamboat rises
--- and so on.
But in our conquest of Nature, which we are making principally by the use of the
rational intelligence of the
mind, we have become aware of that world itself, so much so that educated men
spend nine-tenths of their
waking lives in that world, only descending to feed and dress and so on at the
imperative summons of their
physical constitution.
Now to us who thus live the world of mind seems almost as savage and unexplored
as the world of
Nature seemed to the Greeks. {4}
There are countless worlds of wonder unpath'd and uncomprehended --- and even
unguessed, we doubt
not.
Therefore we set out diligently to explore and map these
untrodden regions of the mind.
Surely our adventures may be as exciting as those of Cortes or Cook!
It is for this reason that I invite with confidence the attention of humanity to
this record of my journey.
But another set of people will find another disappointment. I am hardly an
heroic figure. I am not The
Good Young Man That Died. I do not remain in holy meditation, balanced on my
left eyelash, for forty
years, restoring exhausted nature by a single grain of rice at intervals of
several months.
You will perceive in these pages a man with all his imperfections thick upon him
trying blindly, yet with all
his force, to control the thoughts of his mind, so that he shall be able to say
"I will think this thought and not
that thought" at any moment, as easily as (having conquered Nature) we are all
able to say "I will drink this
wine, and not that wine."
For, as we have now learnt, our happiness does not at all depend upon our
possessions or our power.
We would all rather be dead than be a millionaire who lives in daily dread of
murder or blackmail.
Our happiness depends upon our state of mind. It is the mastery of these things
that the Magicians of
to-day have set out to obtain for humanity; they will not turn back, or turn
aside. {5}
It is with the object of giving the reins into the hands of others that I have
written this record, not without
pain.
Others, reading it, will see the sort of way one sets to work; they will imitate
and improve upon it; they will
attain to the Magistry; they will prepare the Red Tincture and the Elixir of
Life -- for they will discover
what Life means.
{6}
PROLOGUE
IT hath appeared unto me fitting to make a careful and even an elaborate record
of this Great Magical
Retirement, for that in the first place I am now certain of obtaining some
Result therefrom, as I was never
previously certain.
Previous records of mine have therefore seemed vague and obscure, even unto the
wisest of the scribes;
and I am myself afraid that even here all my skill of speech and study may avail
me little, so that the most
important part of the record will be blank.
Now I cannot tell whether it is a part of my personal Kamma, or whether the
Influence of the Equinox of
Autumn should be the exciting cause; but it has usually been at this part of the
year that my best Results
have occurred. It may be that the physical health induced by the summer in me,
who dislike damp and
chill, may being forth as it were a flower the particular kind of Energy ---
Sammav yamo --- which gives
alike the desire to perform more definitely and exclusively the Great Work, and
the capacity to achieve
success.
It is in any case remarkable that I was born in October (18-); suffered the
terrible mystic trance which
turned me toward the Path in October (18-); applied for admission to G.'. D.'.
in October (18-); opened
my temple at B---e in {7} October (18-); received the mysteries of L.I.L. in
October (19-); and obtained
the grade of 6ĝ = 5ĝ; obtained the first true mystic results in October (19-);
first landed in Egypt in
October (19-); landed again in Egypt in October (19-); first parted from ... in
October (19-); wrote the
B.-i-M. in October (19-), and obtained the grade of 7ĝ = 4ĝ; received the great
Initiation in October 19-;
and, continuing, received ........ in October 19-.
So then in the last days of September 19- do I begin to collect and direct my
thoughts; gently, subtly,
persistently turning them one and all to the question of retreat and communion
with that which I have
agreed to call the Holy Guardian Angel, whose Knowledge and Conversation I have
willed, and in greater
or less measure enjoyed, since Ten Years.
Terrible have been the ordeals of the Path; I have lost all that I possessed,
and all that I love, even as at
the Beginning I offered All for Nothing, unwitting as I was of the meaning of
those words. I have suffered
many and grievous things at the hands of the elements, and of the planets;
hunger, thirst, fatigue, disease,
anxiety, bereavement, all those woes and others have laid heavy hand upon me,
and behold! as I look
back upon these years, I declare that all hath been very well. For so great is
the Reward which I
(unworthy) have attained that the Ordeals seem but incidents hardly worthy to
mention, save in so far as
they are the Levers by which I moved the World. Even those dreadful periods of
"dryness" and of despair
seem but the necessary lying fallow of the Earth. All those "false paths" of
Magic and Meditation and of
Reason were not false paths, but steps upon the {8} true Path; even a a tree
must shoot downwards its
roots into the Earth in order that it may flower, and bring forth fruit in its
season.
So also now I know that even in my months of absorption in worldly pleasure and
business, I am not really
there, but stand behind, preparing the Event.
Imagine me, therefore, if you will, in Paris on the last day of September. How
surprised was I --- though,
had I thought, I should have remembered that it was so --- to find all my
necessary magical apparatus to
my hand! Months before, for quite other reasons, I had moved most of my portable
property to Paris;
now I go to Paris, not thinking of a Retirement, for I now know enough to trust
my destiny to bring all
things to pass without anxious forethought on my part --- and suddenly,
therefore, here do I find myself
--- and nothing is lacking.
I determined therefore to begin steadily and quietly, allowing the Magical Will
to come slowly forth, daily
stronger, in contrast to my old plan, desperation kindling a store of fuel dried
by long neglect, despair
inflaming a mad energy that would blaze with violence for a few hours and then
go out --- and nothing
done. "Not hurling, according to the oracle, a transcendent foot towards Piety."
Quite slowly and simply therefore did I wash myself and robe myself as laid down
in the Goetia, taking the
Violet Robe of an Exempt Adept (being a single Garment), wearing the Ring of an
Exempt Adept, and
that Secret Ring which hath been entrusted to my keeping by the Masters. Also I
took the Almond Wand
of Abramelin and the Secret Tibetan Bell, made of Electrum Magicum with its
striker of human {9} bone.
I took also the magical knife, and the holy Anointing Oil of Abramelin the Mage.
I began then quite casually by performing the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the
Pentagram, finding to my great
joy and some surprise that the Pentagrams instantly formulated themselves,
visible to the material eye as it
were bars of shining blackness deeper than the night.
I then consecrated myself to the Operation; cutting the Tonsure upon my head, a
circle, as it were to admit
the light of infinity: and cutting the cross of blood upon my breast, thus
symbolising the equilibration of and
the slaying of the body, while loosing the blood, the first projection in matter
of the universal Fluid.
The whole formulating the Ankh --- the Key of Life!
I gave moreover the signs of the grades from 0ĝ = 0ĝ to 7ĝ 4ĝ.
Then did I take upon myself the Great Obligation as follows:
I. I, O.M. &c., a member of the Body of God, hereby bind myself on behalf of the
whole
Universe, even as we are now physically bound unto the cross of suffering:
II. that I will lead a pure life, as a devoted servant of the Order:
III. that I will understand all things:
IV. that I will love all things:
V. that I will perform all things and endure all things:
VI. that I will continue in the Knowledge and Conversation of My Holy Guardian
Angel:
VII. that I will work without attachment: {10}
VIII. that I will work in truth:
IX. that I will rely only upon myself:
X. that I will interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with my
soul.
And if I fail herein, may my pyramid be profaned, and the Eye be closed upon me!
All this did I swear and seal with a stroke upon the Bell.
Then I steadily sat down in my Asana (or sacred Posture), having my left heel
beneath my body pressing
into the anus, my right sole closely covering the phallus, the right leg
vertical; my head, neck, and spine in
one straight vertical line; my arms stretched out resting on their respective
knees; my thumbs joined each
to the fourth finger of the proper hand. All my muscles were tightly held; my
breath came steady, slow and
even through both nostrils; my eyes were turned back, in, up to the Third Eye;
my tongue was rolled back
in my mouth; and my thoughts, radiating from that Third Eye, I strove to shut in
unto an ever narrowing
sphere by concentrating my will upon the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy
Guardian Angel.
Then I struck Twelve times upon the Bell; with the new month the Operation was
duly begun.
Oct. I.
The First Day
At Eight o'clock I rose from sleep and putting on my Robe, began a little to
meditate. For several reasons
--- the journey and business of the day before, etc., etc., I did not feel
fresh. But forcing myself a little I
rose {11} and went out to the Caf du Dme where I took coffee and a biroche,
after buying an exercise
book in which to write this record.
This was about 8.45; and now (10.10) I have written thus far. [Including the
Prologue, but not the
Preface. --- ED.]
10.45. I have driven over to the Hammam through the beautiful sunshine,
meditating upon the discipline of
the Operation.
It seems only necessary to cut off definitely dispersive things, aimless chatter
and such; for the Operation
itself will guide one, leading to disgust for too much food and so on. It there
by upon my limbs any chain
that requires a definite effort to break it, perhaps sleep is that chain. But we
shall see --- solvitur
ambulando. If any asceticism be desirable later on, true wariness will soon
detect any danger, and devise
a means to meet it and overcome it.
12.0. Have finished bath and massage, during which I continued steadily but
quite gently, "not by a strain
laborious and hurtful but with stability void of movement," willing the Presence
of Adonai.
12.5. I ordered a dozen oysters and a beefsteak, and now (12.10) find myself
wishing for an apple
chewed and swallowed by deglutition, as the Hatha Yogis do.
The distaste for food has already begun.
12.12. Impressions already failing to connect.
I was getting into Asana and thinking "I record this fact," when I saw a jockey
being weighed. {12}
12.12. I thought of recording my own weight which I had not taken.
Good!
12.13. Pranayama [10 seconds to breath in, 20 seconds to
12.24. breathe out, 30 seconds to hold in the breath.] Fairly good; made me
sweat again thoroughly.
Stopped not from fatigue but from lunch.
[Odd memoranda during lunch.
Insist on pupils writing down their whole day; the play as well as the work. "By
this means they will
become ashamed, and prate no longer of 'beasts.'"]
I am now well away on the ascetic current, devising all sorts of privations and
thoroughly enjoying the
idea.
12.55. Having finished a most enjoyable lunch, will drink coffee and smoke, and
try and get a little sleep.
Thus to break up sleep into two shifts.
2.18. A nice sleep. Woke refreshed.
3.15. Am arrived home, having performed a little business and driven back.
Will sit down and do Asana, etc.
3.20. Have started.
3.28. 7 Pranayama cycles enough. Doubtless the big lunch is a nuisance.
I continue meditating simply.
3.36. Asana hurts badly, and I can no longer concentrate at all. Must take 5
minutes' rest and then
persevere. {13}
3.41. Began again. I shall take "Hua allalu alazi lailaha illa hua" for mantra
[any sacred sentence, whose
constant repetition produces many strange effects upon the mind. --- ED.] if I
want one, or: may Adonai
reveal unto me a special mantra to invoke Him!
3.51. Broke down again, mantra and all.
3.52- Went on meditating in "Hanged Man posture" [Legs
4.14. crossed, arms below head, like the figure of the Hanged Man in the Tarot
Cards. --- ED.] to
formulate sacrifice and pain self- inflicted; for I feel such a worm, able only
to remain a few minutes at a
time in a position long since "conquered." For this reason too I cut again the
Cross of Blood; and now a
third time will I do it. And I will take out the Magical Knife and sharpen it
yet more, so that this body may
fear me; for that I am Horus the terrible, the Avenger, the Lord of the Gate of
the West.
4.15- Read Ritual DCLXXI. [The nature of this Ritual is
4.30. explained later. --- ED.]
5.10. I have returned from my shopping. Strange how solemn and dignified so
trivial a thing becomes,
once one has begun to concentrate!
I bought two pears, half a pound of Garibaldi biscuits, and a packet of
Gaufrettes. I had a citron press,
too, at the Dme.
At the risk of violating the precepts of Zoroaster 170 and 144 I propose to do a
Tarot divination for this
Operation. {14}
5.10. I should explain first that I write this record for other eyes than mine,
since I am now sufficiently sure
of myself to attain something or other; but I cannot foretell exactly what form
the attainment may take. Just
so, if one goes to call upon a friend, he may be walking or riding or sleeping.
Thus, then, is Adonai hidden from me. I know where He lives; I know I shall be
welcome if I call; but I do
not know whether He will invite me to a banquet or ask me to go out with him for
a long journey.
It may be that the Rota will give me some hint.
[We have omitted the details of this divination. --- ED.]
I am never content with such divinations; trustworthy enough in material
concerns, in the things of the Spirit
one rarely obtains good results.
The first operation was rather meaningless; but one must allow (a) that it was a
new way of dealing those
cards for the opening of an operation; (b) that I had had two false starts.
The final operation is certainly most favourable; we shall see if it comes true.
I can hardly believe it
possible.
6.10. Will now go for a stroll, get some milk, and settle down for the evening.
10.50. I regret to have to announce that on going across to the Dme with this
laudable intention, Nina
brought up that red-headed bundle of mischief, Maryt Waska. This being in a way
a "bandobast" (and so
inviolable), I took her to dinner, eating an omelette, and {15} some bread and
Camembert, and a little
milk. Afterwards a cup of coffee, and then two hours of the Vajroli Mudra badly
performed.
All this I did with reluctance, I did with reluctance, as an act of self-denial
or asceticism, lest my desire to
concentrate on the mystic path should run away with me.
Therefore I think it may fairly be counted unto me for righteousness.
I now drink a final coffee and retire, to do I hope a more straightforward type
of meditation.
So mote it be.
Naked, Maryt looks like Corregio's Antiope. Her eyes are a strange grey, and her
hair a very wonderful
reddish gold --- a colour I have never seen before and cannot properly describe.
She has Jewish blood in
her, I fancy; this, and her method of illustrating the axiom "Post coitum animal
triste" made me think of
Baudelaire's "Une nuit que j'etais prs d'une affreuse Juive": and the last line
Obscurcir la splendeur des tres froides prunelles.
and Barbey d'Aurevilly's "Rideau Cramoisi" suggested to me the following poem.
[We omit this poem. ---
ED.]
11.30. Done! i' th' rough! i' th' rought! Now let me go back to my room, and
Work!
(11.47.) Home --- undressed --- robed --- attended to toilet -- cut cross of
Blood once more to affirm
mastery of Body --- sat down at 11.49 and ended the day with 10 Pranayamas,
which caused me to
perspire freely, but were not altogether easy or satisfactory. {16}
The Second Day
The Stroke of Twelve found me duly in my Asana, practising Pranayama.
Let me continue this work; for it is written that unto the persevering mortal
the Blessed Immortals are swift
...
What they should happen to a persevering Immortal like myself?
12.7. Trying meditation and mantra.
12.18. I find thoughts impossible to concentrate; and my Asana, despite various
cowardly attempts to
"fudge" it, is frightfully painful.
12.20. In the Hanged Man posture, meditating and willing the Presence of Adonai
by the Ritual "Thee I
invoke, the Bornless One" and mental formulae.
12.28. I'm hopelessly sleepy! Invocation as bad as bad could be --- attention
all over the place. Irrational
hallucinations, such as a vision of either Eliphaz Levi or my father (I can't
swear which!) at the most solemn
moment!
But the irrational character of said visions is not bad. They come from nowhere;
it is much worse when
your own controlled brain breaks loose.
12.33. I will therefore compose myself to sleep: is it not written that He
giveth unto His beloved even in
sleep? "Others, even in sleep, He makes fruitful from His own strength." {17}
7.29. Woke and forced myself to rise. I had a number of rather pleasing dreams,
as I seem to remember.
But their content is gone from me; and, in the absence of the prophet Daniel, I
shall let the matter slide.
7.44. Pranayama. 13 cycles. Very tiring; I began to sweat. A mediocre
performance.
8.0- Breakfast. Hatha Yogi --- a pear and two gau-
8.20 frettes.
8.53. Have been meditating in Hanged Man position. Thought dull and wandering;
yet once "the
conception of the Glowing Fire" seen as a planet (perhaps Mars). Just enough to
destroy the
concentration; then it went out, dammit!
10.40. Have attended to correspondence and other business and drunk a citron
press.
The Voice of the Nadi began to resound.
10.50. Have done "Bornless One" in Asana. Good; yet I am filled with utter
despair at the hopelessness of
the Task. Especially do I get the Buddhist feeling, not only that Asana is
intensely painful, but that all
conceivable positions of the body are so.
11.0. Still sitting; quite sceptical; sticking to it just because I am a man,
and have decided to go through
with it.
11.13. Have done 10 P.Y. cycles. A bit better,and a slight hint of the Bhuchari
Siddhi foreshadowed.
Have been saying mantra; the question arises in my mind: {18}
11.13. Am I mixing my drinks unduly? I think not; if one didn't change to
another mystic process, one
would have to read the newspaper.
11.20. This completes my half-hour of Asana. Legs very painful; yet again I find
myself wishing for Kandy
(not sugar candy, but the place where I did my first Hindu practices and got my
first Results) and a life
devoted entirely to meditation. But not for me! I'm no Pratyeka-Buddha; a Dhamma-Buddha
every inch of
me! [A Pratyeka-Buddha attains the Supreme Reward for himself alone; a Dhamma-Buddha
renounces it
and returns to hell (earth) to teach others the Way. --- ED.]
I now take a few minutes "off" to make "considerations."
I firmly believe that the minutest dose of the Elixir would operate as a
"detonator." I seem to be perfectly
ready for illumination, if only because I am so perfectly dark. Yet my power to
create magical images is
still with me.
11.40- Hanged Man posture. Will invoke Adonai once more
12.0. by pure thought. Got into a very curious state indeed; part of me being
quite perfectly asleep, and
part quite perfectly awake.
2.10. Have slept, and that soundly, though with many dreams. Awaking with the
utmost horror and
loathing of the Path of the Wise --- it seemed somehow like a vast dragon-demon
with bronze green
wings iridescent that rose up startled and angry. And I saw that {19}
2.10. the littlest courage is enough to rise and throw off sleep, like a small
soldier in complete armour of
silver advancing with sword and shield --- at whose sight that dragon, not
daring to abide the shock, flees
utterly away.
2.15. Lunch, 3 Garibaldis and 3 Gaufrettes. Wrote two letters.
2.50. Going out walk with mantra.
8.3. This walk was in a way rather a success. I got the good mantra effects,
e.g., the brain taking it up of
its own accord; also the distaste for everything but Adonai became stronger and
stronger.
But when I returned from a visit to B---e on an errand of comradeship --- 1 1/2
hours' talk to cut out of
this mantra-yoga --- I found all sorts of people at the Dome, where I drank a
citron presse: they detained
me in talk, and at 6.30 Maryt turned up and I had to chew a sandwich and drink
coffee while she dined.
I feel a little headache; it will pass.
She is up here now with me, but I shall try to meditate. Charming as she is, I
don't want to make love to
her.
8.40. Mixed mantra and caresses rather a success. (At her request I gave M. a
minimum dose of X.)
9.15. Asana and Meditation with mantra since 8.40. The blackness seems breaking.
For a moment I got a
vague glimpse of one's spine (or rather one's Sushumna) as a galaxy of stars,
thus suggesting the stars as
the ganglia of the Universe.
9.18 To continue.
10.18. Not very satisfactory. Asana got painful; like a {20} worm I gave up, and
tried playing the fool;
got amused by the New Monster, but did not perform the "Vajroli Mudra." [For
this see the Shiva
Sanhita, and other of the Holy Sanskrit Tantras. --- ED.]
However, having got rid of her for the moment, one may continue.
10.24- P.Y. [Prana Yama. --- ED.] 14 cycles. Some effort re-
10.39. quired; sweating appears to have stopped and Bhuchari hardly begun.
My head really aches a good deal.
I must add one or two remarks. In my walk I discovered that my mantra Hua allahu,
etc., really belongs to
the Visuddhi Cakkram; so I allowed the thought to concentrate itself there. [The
Visuddhi-Cakkram: the
"nerve centre," in Hindu mystic physiology, opposite the larynx. --- ED.]
Also, since others are to read this, one must mention that almost from the
beginning of this Working of
Magick Art the changed aspect of the world whose culmination is the keeping of
the oath "I will interpret
every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with my soul" was present with
me. This aspect is
difficult to describe; one is indifferent to everything and yet interested in
it. The meaning of things is lost,
pending the inception of their Spiritual Meaning; just as, on putting one's eye
to the microscope, the drop
of water on the slide is gone, and a world of life discovered, though the real
import of that world is not
apprehended, until one's knowledge becomes far greater than a single glance can
make it. {21}
10.55. Having written the above, I shall rest for a few moments to try and get
rid of my headache.
A good simile (by the way) for the Yogi is to say that he watches his thought
like a cat watching a mouse.
The paw ready to strike the instant Mr. Mouse stir.
I have chewed a Gaufrette and drunk a little water, in case the headache is from
hunger. (P.S. --- It was
so; the food cured it at once.)
11.2. I now lie down as Hanged Man and say mantra in Visuddhi.
11.10. I must really note the curious confusion in my mind between the Visuddhi
Cakkram and that part of
the Boulevard Edgar Quinet which opens on to the cemetery. It seems an identity.
In trying to look "at" the Cakkram, I saw that.
Query: What is the connection, which appeared absolute and essential? I had been
specially impressed by
that gate two days ago, with its knot of mourners. Could the scene have been
recorded in a brain-cell
adjoining that which records the Visuddhi-idea? Or did I at that time
unconsciously think of my throat for
some other reason? Bother! These things are all dog- faced demons! To work!
11.17. Work: Meditation an Mantra.
11.35. No good. Went off into a reverie about a castle and men-at-arms. This had
all the qualities of a
true dream, yet I was not in any other sense asleep. I soon will be, though. It
seems foolish to persist.
{22}
11.35. And indeed, though I tried to continue the mantra with its high
aspiration to know Adonai, I must
have slept almost at once.
The Third Day
6.55. Now the day being gloriously broken, I awoke with some weariness, not
feeling clean and happy,
not burning with love unto my Lord Adonai, though ashamed indeed for that thrice
of four times in the
night I had been awakened by this loyal body, urging me to rise and meditate ---
and my weak will bade it
be at ease and take its rest --- oh, wretched man! slave of the hour and of the
worm!
7.0- Fifteen cycles of Prana Yama put me right mentally
7.16. and physically: otherwise they had little apparent success.
7.30. Have breakfasted --- a pear and two Garibaldis. (These by the way are the
small size, half the big
squares.)
7.50. Have smoked a pipe to show that I'm not in a hurry.
8.5. Hanged Man with mantra in Visuddhi. Thought I had been much longer. At one
point the Spirit began
to move --- how the devil else can I express it? The consciousness seemed to
flow, instead of pattering. Is
that clear?
One should here note that there may perhaps be some essential difference in the
operation of the Moslem
and Hindu mantrams. The latter boom; the former ripple. I have never tried the
former at all seriously until
now. {23}
8.10- Meme jeu --- no good at all. Think I'll get up and have
8.32. a Turker.
9.0. Am up, having read my letters. Continuing mantra all the time in a more or
less conscious way.
9.25. Wrote my letters and started out.
10.38. Have reached the Cafe de la Paix, walking slowly with my mantra. I am
beginning to forget it
occasionally, mispronouncing some of the words. A good sign! Now and then I
tried sending it up and
down my spine, with good effect.
10.40. I will drink a cup of coffee and then proceed to the Hammam. This may
ease my limbs, and afford
an opportunity for a real go- for-the-gloves effort to concentrate.
It cannot be too clearly understood that nearly all the work hitherto has been
preliminary; the intention is to
get the Chittam (thought-stuff) flowing evenly in one direction. Also one
practises detaching it from the
Virttis (impressions). One looks at everything without seeing it.
O coffee! By the mighty Name of Power do I invoke thee, consecrating thee to the
Service of the Magic
of Light. Let the pulsations of my heart be strong and regular and slow! Let my
brain be wakeful and
active in its supreme task of self-control! That my desired end may be effected
through Thy strength,
Adonai, unto Whom be the Glory for ever! Amen without lie, and Amen, and Amen of
Amen.
11.0. I now proceed to the Hammam. {24}
12.0. The Bath is over. I continued the mantra throughout, which much alleviated
the torture of massage.
But I could not get steady and easy in my Asana or even in the Hanged Man or
Shavasana, the
"corpse-position." I think the heat is exciting, and makes me restless. I
continue in the cooling-room lying
down.
12.10. I have ordered 12 oysters and coffee and bread and butter.
O oysters! be ye unto me strength that I formulate the 12 rays of the Crown of
HVA! I conjure ye, and
very potently command.
Even by Him who ruleth Life from the Throne of Tahuti unto the Abyss of Amennti,
even by Ptah the
swathed one, that unwrappeth the mortal from the immortal, even by Amoun the
giver of Life, and by
Khem the mighty, whose Phallus is like the Pillar in Karnak! Even by myself and
my male power do I
conjure ye. Amen.
12.20 I was getting sleepy when the oysters came.
I now eat them in a Yogin and ceremonial manner.
12.45. I have eaten my oysters, chewing them every one; also some bread and
butter in the same manner,
giving praise to Priapus the Lord of the oyster, to Demeter the Lady of corn,
and to Isis the Queen of the
Cow. Further, I pray symbolically in this meal for Virtue, and Strength, and
Gladness; as is appropriate to
these symbols. But I find it very difficult to keep the mantra going, even in
tune with the jaws; perhaps it is
that this peculiar method of eating (25 minutes {25} for what could be done
normally in 3) demands the
whole attention.
1.30. Drifted into a nap. Well! we shall try what Brother Body really wants.
1.35. My attempt to go to sleep has made me supernaturally wakeful.
I am --- as often before --- in the state described by Paul (not my masseur; the
other Paul!) in his Epistle
to the Romans, cap. vii. v. 19.
I shall rise and go forth.
1.55. I have a good mind to try violent excitement of the Muladhara Cakkram; for
the whole Sushumna
seems dead. This at the risk of being labelled a Black Magician --- by
clergymen, Christian Scientists, and
the "self-reliant" classes in general.
2.15. Arrived (partly by cab) at the Place. Certain curious phenomena which I
have noticed at odd times
--- e.g., on Thursday night --- but did not think proper to record must be
investigated. It seems quite
certain that meditation-practices profoundly affect the sexual process: how and
why I do not yet certainly
know.
2.45. Rubbish! everything perfectly normal.
Difficult, though, to keep mantram going.
3.0. Am sitting on the brink of the big fountain in the Luxembourg. This
deadness of the whole system
continues.
To explain. Normally, if the thought be energetically directed to almost any
point in the body, that point is
{26} felt to pulse and even to ache. Especially this is the case if one vibrates
a mantra or Magical name in
a nerve-centre. At present I cannot do this at all. The Prana seems equilibrated
in the whole organism: I
am very peaceful --- just as a corpse is.
It is terribly annoying, in a sense, because this condition is just the opposite
of Dharana; yet one knows
that it is a stage on the way to Samadhi.
So I rise and give confidently the Sign of Apophis and Typhon, and will then
regard the reflection of the
sweet October Sun in the kissing waters of the fountain. (P.S. --- I now
remember that I forgot to rise and
give the Sign.)
3.15. In vain do I regard the Sun, broken up by the lips of the water into
countless glittering stars ---
abounding, revolving, whirling forth, crying aloud --- for He whom my soul
seeketh is not in these. Nor is
He in the fountain, eternally as it jets and falls in brilliance of dew; for I
desire the Dew Supernal. Nor is
He in the still depths of the water; their lips do not meet His. Nor --- O my
soul! --- is He anywhere to be
found in thy secret caverns, unluminous, formless, and void, where I wander
seeking Him --- or seeking
rest from that Search! O my soul! --- lift thyself up; play the man, be strong;
harden thyself against thy
bitter Fate; for at the End thou shalt find Him; and ye shall enter in together
into the Secret Palace of the
King; even unto the Garden of Lilies; and ye shall be One for evermore. So mote
it be! {27}
Yet now --- ah now! --- I am but a dead man. Within me and without still stirs
that life of sense that is not
life, but is as the worms that feast upon my corpse. ... Adonai! Adonai! my Lord
Adonai! indeed, Thou
hast forsaken me. Nay! thou liest, O weak soul! Abide in the meditation; unite
all thy symbols into the
form of a Lion, and be lord of thy jungle, travelling through the servile
Universe even as Mau the Lion very
lordly, the Sun in His strength that travelleth over the heaven of Nu in His
bark in the mid-career of Day.
For all these thoughts are vain; there is but One thought, though that thought
be not yet born --- He only is
God, and there is none other God than He!
3.30. Walking home with mantra; suddenly a spasm of weeping took me as I cried
through the mantra ---
"My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" --- and I have to stop and put it
down!
A good thing; for it calms me.
3.45. At the Dome, master of myself. The Mantra goes just 30 times a minute,
1800 times an hour,
43,200 times a day. To say it a million times would take longer than Mrs. Glyn's
heroine did to conceive.
Yet I will get the result if I have to say it a hundred and eleven million
times. But oh! fertilise my Akasic
egg today!
This remark, one should notice, is truly characteristic of the man John St.
John. I see how funny it is; but
I'm quite serious withal. Ye dull dogs! {28}
[The "Akasic Egg" is the sphere of the personality of man. A theosophic term.
--- ED.]
3.55. N.B. --- Mantras might with advantage be palindromes.
3.56. I try to construct a magic square from the mantra. No good. But the mantra
is going much better,
quite mechanically and "without attachment" (i.e., without conscious ulterior
design. "Art for Art's sake" as
it were).
4.10. I drink a "citron presse."
4.25. Alas! here comes Maryt (with a sad tale of X. It appears that she fainted
and spent some hours at
the hospital. I should have insisted on her stying with me; the symptoms began
immediately on her drinking
some coffee. I have noticed with myself, that eating has started the action).
5.30. An hour of mingled nap and mantra.
I now feel alive again. It was very strange how calm and balanced I was: yet now
I am again energised;
may it be to the point of Enthusiasm!
People will most assuredly smile at this exalted mystic; his life seems made up
of sleep and love-making.
Indeed, to-day I have been shockingly under the power of Tamas, the dark sphere.
But that is clearly a
fatigue-effect from having worked so hard.
Oh Lord, how long?
5.50. The Mantra still ripples on. I am so far from the Path that I have a real
good mind to get Maryt to let
me perform the Black Mass on her at midnight. I would {29} just love to bring up
Typhon, and curse
Osiris and burn his bones and his blood!
At least, I now solemnly express a pious wish that the Crocodile of the West may
eat up the Sun once and
for all, that Set may defile the Holy Place, that the supreme Blasphemy may be
spoken by Python in the
ears of Isis.
I want trouble. I want to say Indra's mantram till his throne gets red-hot and
burns his lotus-buttocks; I
want to pinch little Harpocrates till he fairly yells ... and I will too!
Somehow!
6.15. I have now got into a sort of smug content, grinning all over like some
sleepy Chinese god. No
reason for it, Lord knows!
I can't make up my mind whether to starve or sandwich or gorge the beast St.
John. He's not the least bit
hungry, though he's had nothing to call a Meal since Thursday lunch. The Hatha-Yoga
feeding game is
certainly marvellous.
I should like to work marching and breathing with this mantra as I did of old
with Aum Tat Sat Aum.
Perhaps two steps to a mantra, and 4-8-16 steps to a breath-cycle? This would
mean 28 seconds for a
breath-cycle; quite enough for a marching man. We might try 4-8-8 to start; or
even 8-8-8 (for the
Chariot, wherein the Geburah of me rises to Binah --- Strength winning the Wings
of Understanding).
[These symbols, allusions, and references will all be found in 777, just
published by "The Equinox" --- see
advt. --- ED.] {30}
6.55. I shall now ceremonially defile the Beyt Allah with Pig, to express in
some small measure my utter
disgust and indignation with Allah for not doing His job properly. I say in vain
"Labbaik!" [I am here. ---
ED.] He answers, "But I'm not here, old boy --- another leg-pull!" He little
knows His man, though, if He
thinks He can insult me with impunity. Andre, un sandwich!
[Beyt Allah, the Mosque at Mecca, means "House of God" --- ED.]
7.5. I shall stop mantra while I eat, so as to concentrate (a) on the chewing,
(b) on defiling the House of
God. Not so easy! the damned thing runs on like a prairie fire. Important then
to stop it absolutely at will:
even the Work itself may become an obsession.
11 hours with no real break --- not bad.
The bad part of to-day seems the Asana, and the deadness. Or, perhaps worse, I
fail to apprehend the
true magical purport of my work: hence all sort of aimless formulae, leading ---
naturally enough --- to no
result.
It just strikes me --- it may be this Isis Apophis Osiris IAO formula that I
have preached so often.
Certainly the first two days were Isis --- natural, pleasant, easy events. Most
certainly too to-day has been
Apophis! Think of the wild cursing and black magic, etc. ... we must hope for
the Osiris section
to-morrow or next day. Birth, death, resurrection! IAO!
7.35. The Sandwich duly chewed, and two Coffees drunk, I resume the mystic
Mantra. Why? Because I
dam well choose to. {31}
7.50. 'Tis a rash thing to say, and I burn incense to the Infernal Gods that the
Omen may be averted; but I
seem to have conquered the real Dweller of the Threshold once and for all. For
nowadays my blackest
despair is tempered by the certainty of coming through it sooner or later, and
that with flying colours.
9.30. The last 3/4 hour I wasted talking to Dr. R---, that most interesting man.
I don't mean talking; I
mean listening. You are a bad, idle good-for-nothing fellow, O.M.! Why not stick
to that mantra?
10.40. Have drunk two citrons presss and gone to my room to work a mighty spell
of magick Art.
11.0. Having got rid of Maryt (who, by the way, is Quite mad), and thereby (one
might hope) of Apophis
and Typhon, I perform the Great Ritual DCLXXI with good results magically;
"i.e.", I formulated things
very easily and forcibly; even at one time I got a hint of the Glory of Adonai.
But I made the absurd
mistake of going through the Ritual as if I was rehearsing it, instead of
staying at the Reception of the
Candidate and insisting upon being really received.
I will therefore now (11.50) sit down again and invoke really hard on these same
lines, while the Perfume
and the Vision are yet formulated, though insensibly, about me. And thus shall
end the Third day of my
retirement.
The Fourth Day
12.15. So therefore begins the fourth day of this my great magical retirement; I
bleed from the slashes of
the {32} magick knife; I smart from the heat of the Holy Oil; I am bruised by
the scourge of Osiris that
hath so cruelly smitten me; the perfume yet fills the chamber of Art; --- and I?
Oh Adonai my Lord, surely I did invoke Thee with fervour; yet Thou camest not
utterly to the tryst. And
yet I know that Thou wast there; and it may be that the morning may being
rememberance of Thee which
this consciousness does not now contain.
But I swear by Thine own glory that I will not be satisfied with this, that I
will go on even unto madness
and death if it be Thy will --- but I will know Thee as Thou art.
It is strange how my cries died down; how I found myself quite involuntarily
swinging back to the old
mantra that I worked all yesterday.
However, I shall try a little longer in the Position of the Hanged Man, although
sleep is again attacking me.
I am weary, yet content, as if some great thing had indeed happened. But if I
lost consciousness --- a thing
no man can be positive about from the nature of things --- it must have happened
so quietly that I never
knew. Certainly I should not have thought that I had gone on for 25 minutes, as
I did.
But I do indeed ask for a Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel
which is not left so
much to be inferred from the good results in my life and work; I want the
Perfume and the the Vision. ...
Why am I so materially wallowing in grossness? It matters little; the fact
remains that I do wallow. {33} I
want that definite experience in the very same sense as Abramelin had it; and
what's more, I mean to go
on till I get it.
12.34. I begin, therefore, in Hanged Man posture, to invoke the Angel, within
the Pyramid already duly
prepared by DCLXXI.
12.57. Alas! in vain have I tried even the supreme ritual of Awaiting the
Beloved, although once I thought
--- Ah! give unto Thy beloved in sleep!
How ashamed I should be, though! For an earthly lover one would be on tiptoe of
excitement, trembling at
every sound, eager, afraid ...
I will, however, rise and open (as for a symbol) the door and the window. Oh
that the door of my heart
were ever open! For He is always there, and always eager to come in.
1.0. I rise and open unto my Beloved.
... May it be granted unto me in the daylight of this day to construct from
DCLXXI a perfect ritual of
self-initiation, so as to avoid the constant difficulty of assuming various
God-forms. Then let that ritual be a
constant and perfect link between Us ... so that at all times I may be perfect
in Thy Knowledge and
Conversation, O mine Holy Guardian Angel! to whom I have aspired these ten years
past.
1.5. And though as it may seem I now compose myself to sleep, I await Thee ... I
await Thee!
7.35. I arise from sleep, mine eyes a little weary, my soul fresh, my heart
restored. {34}
8.0. Accordingly, I continue in gentle and easy meditation on my Lord Adonai,
without fear or violence,
quite directly and naturally.
One of the matters that came up last night with Dr. R---d was that of writing
rubbish for magazines. He
thought that one could do it in the intervals of serious work; but I do not
think that one should take the
risk. I have spent these many years training my mind to think cleanly and
express beautifully. Am I to
prostitute myself for a handful of bread?
I swear by Thyself, O Thou who art myself, that I will not write save to glorify
Thee, that I will write only
in beauty and melody, that I will give unto the world as Thou givest unto me,
whether it be a consuming
fire, or a cup of the wine of Iacchus, or a glittering dagger, or a disk
brighter than the sun. I will starve in
the street before I pander to the vileness of the men among whom I live --- oh
my Lord Adonai, be with
me, give me the purest poesy, keep me to this vow! And if I turn aside, even for
a moment, I pray Thee,
warn me by some signal chastisement, that Thou art a jealous god, and that Thou
wilt keep me veiled,
cherished, guarded in Thine harem a pure and perfect spouse, like a slender
fountain playing in Thy courts
of marble and of malachite, of jasper, of topaz, and of lapis lazuli.
And by my magick power I summon all the inhabitants of the ten thousand worlds
to witness this mine
oath.
8.15. I will rise, and break my fast. I think it as well to go on with the
mantra, as it started of its own
accord. {35}
9.0. Arrived at Pantheon, to breakfast on coffee and biroche and a peach.
I shall try and describe Ritual DCLXXI; since its nature is important to this
great ceremony of initiation.
Those who understand a little about the Path of the Wise may receive some hint
of the method of
operation of the L.V.X.
And I think that a description will help me to collect myself for the proper
adaptation of this Ritual to the
purpose of Self- initiation.
Oh, how soft is the air, and how serene the sky, to one who has passed through
the black rule of
Apophis! How infinitely musical are the voices of Nature, those that are heard
and those that are not
heard! What Understanding of the Universe, what Love is the prize of him that
hath performed all things
and endured all things!
The first operation of Ritual DCLXXI is the preparation of the Place.
There are two forces; that of Death and that of Natural Life.
Death begins the Operation by a knock, to which Life answers.
Then Death, banishing all forces external to the operation, declares the Speech
in the Silence.
Both officers go from their thrones and form the base of a triangle whose apex
is the East. They invoke the
Divine Word, and then Death slays with the knife, and embalms with the oil, his
sister Life.
Life, thus prepared, invokes, at the summons of Death, {36} the forces necessary
to the Operation. The
Word takes its station in the East and the officers salute it both by speech and
silence in their signs; and
they pronounce the secret Word of power that riseth from the Silence and
returneth thereunto.
All this they affirm; and in affirming the triangular base of the Pyramid, find
that they have mysteriously
affirmed the Apex thereof whose name is Ecstasy.
This also is sealed by that secret word; for that Word containeth All.
Into this prepared Pyramid of divine Light there cometh a certain darkling wight,
who knoweth not either
his own nature, or his origin or destiny, or even the name of that which he
desireth. Before he can enter the
Pyramid, therefore, four ordeals are required of him.
So, bound and blinded, he stumbles forward, and passes through the wrath of the
Four Great Princes of
the Evil of the World, whose Terror is about him on every side. Yet since he has
followed the voice of the
Officer who has prepared him, in this part of the Ritual no longer merely
Nature, the great Mother, but
Neschamah (his aspiration) and the representative of Adonai, he may pass through
all. Yea, in spite of the
menace of the Hiereus, whose function is now that of his fear and of his
courage, he goes on and enters
the Pyramid. But there he is seized and thrown down by both officers as one
unworthy to enter. His
aspiration purifies him with steel and fire; and there as he lies shattered by
the force of the ritual, he hears
--- even as {37} a corpse that hears the voice of Israfel --- the Hegemon that
chants a solemn hymn of
praise to that glory which is at the Apex, and who invisibly rules and governs
the whole Pyramid.
Now then that darkling wight is lifted by the officers and brought to the altar
in the centre; and there the
Hiereus accuses him of the two and twenty Basenesses, while the Hegemon lifting
up his chained arms
cries again and again against his enemy that he is under the Shadow of the
Eternal Wings of the Holy One.
Yet at the end, at the supreme accusation, the Hiereus smites him into death.
The same answer avails him,
and in its strength he is uplifted by his aspiration --- and now he stands
upright.
Now then he makes a journey in his new house, and perceives at stated times,
each time preceded by a
new ordeal and equilibration, the forces that surround him. Death he sees, and
the Life of Nature whose
name is Sorrow, and the Word that quickeneth these, and his own self --- and
when he hath recognised
these four in their true nature he passes to the altar once more and as the apex
of a descending triangle is
admitted to the lordship of the Double Kingdom. Thus is he a member of the
visible triad that is crossed
with the invisible --- behold the hexagram of Solomon the King! All this the
Hiereus seals with a knock
and at the Hegemon's new summons he --- to his surprise --- finds himself as the
Hanged Man of the
Tarot.
Each point of the figure thus formed they crown with light, until he glitters
with the Flame of the Spirit.
{38}
Thus and not otherwise is he made a partaker of the Mysteries, and the Lightning
Flash strikes him. The
Lord hath descended from heaven with a shout and with the Voice of the
Archangel, and the trump of
God.
He is installed in the Throne of the Double Kingdom, and he wields the Wand of
Double Power by the
sings of the grade.
He is recognized an initiate, and the word of Secret Power, and the silent
administration of the Sacrament
of Sword and Flame, acknowledge him.
Then, the words being duly spoken and the deeds duly done, all is symbolically
sealed by the Thirty
Voices, and the Word that vibrateth from the Silence to the Speech, and from the
Speech again unto the
Silence. Then the Pyramid is sealed up, even as it was opened; yet in the
sealing thereof the three men
partake in a certain mystical manner of the Eucharist of the Four Elements that
are consumed for the
Perfection of the Oil.
Knox Om Pax. [With these mystic words the Mysteries Eleusinian were sealed. ---
ED.]
10.0. Having written out this explanation, I will read it through and meditate
solemnly thereupon. All this I
wrote in the Might of the Secret Ring committed unto me by the Masters; so that
all might be absolutely
correct.
One thing strikes me as worthy of mention. Last night when I went into the
restaurant to speak to {39}
R---d, my distaste for food was so intense that the smell of it caused real
nausea. To-day, I am perfectly
balanced, neither hungry nor nauseated. This is indeed more important than it
seems; it is a sure sign when
one sees a person take up fads that he is under the black rule of Apophis. In
the Kingdom of Osiris there
is freedom and light. To-day I shall eat neither with the frank gluttony of Isis
nor with the severe asceticism
of Apophis. I shall eat as much and as little as I fancy; these violent means
are no longer necessary. Like
Count Fosco, I shall "go on my way sustained by my sublime confidence,
self-balanced by my
impenetrable calm."
10.50. I have spent half an hour wandering in the Musee du Luxembourg.
I now sit down to meditate on this new ritual.
The following, so it appears, should be the outlines --- damn it, I've a good
mind to write it straight off ---
no! I'll be patient and tease the Spirit a little. I will be coquettish as a
Spanish catamite.
1. Death summons Life and clears away all other forces.
2. The Invocation of the Word. Death consecrates Life, who in her whirling dance
invokes
that Word.
3. They salute the Word. The Signs and M---M1 must be a Chorus, if anything.
4. The Miraculous appearance of Iacchus, uninvoked.
{40}
10.50
1. The 3 Questions.
2. The 4 ordeals. Warning and comfort as an appeal to the Officers.
3. The Threshold.
1 WEH Note: "M---M" refers to the secret Neophyte word of the A.'. A.'..
The Chorus of Purification.
The Hymn "My heart, my mother!" as already written, years ago.
4. At the altar. The accusation and defence as antiphonies.
5. The journey. Bar and pass, and the 4 visions even as a mighty music.
6. The Hanged Man --- the descent of Adonai.
7. The installation --- signs, etc.
Sealing as for opening; but insert Sacrament.
1.15. During a lunch of 12 oysters, Cepes Bordelaise, Tarte aux Cerises, Cafe
Noir, dispatched without
Yoga or ceremonial, I wrote the Ritual in verse, in the Egyptian Language. I
don't think very well. Time
must show: also experience. I'd recite Tennyson if I thought it would give
Samadhi!
Now more mantra, though by the Lord I'm getting sick of it.
1.40. It occurs to me, now that I am seeing my way in the Operation a little
more clearly, that one might
consider the First Day as Osiris Slain +, the Second as that of the Mourning of
Isis _, the third as that of
the Triumph of Apophis V, and to-day that of Osiris Risen X; these four days
being perfect in themselves
as a 5ĝ = 6ĝ operation (or possibly with one or two more {41} to recapitulate
L.V.X. Lux, the Light of
the Cross). Thence one might proceed to some symbolic passage through the 6ĝ =
5ĝ grade --- though of
course that grade is really symbolic of this soul-journey, not "vice versa" ---
and through 7ĝ = 4ĝ; so
perhaps --- if one could only dare to hope it! --- to the 8ĝ = 3ĝ attainment.
Certainly what little I have
done so far pertains no higher than Minor adeptship though I have used higher
formulae in the course of
my working.
1.55. My Prana is acting in a feverish manner; a mixture of fatigue and energy.
This is not good: it
probably comes from bolting that big lunch, and may mean that I must sleep to
recover equilibrium. I will,
however, use the Pentagram ritual on my Anahata Cakkram [the heart; a
nerve-centre in Hindu mystical
physiology. --- ED.] and see if that steadies me. (P.S. --- Yes: instantly).
Notice, please, how in this
condition of intense magical strain the most trifling things have a great
influence. Normally, I can eat
anything in any quantity without the slightest effect of any sort; witness my
expeditions and debauches;
nothing upsets me.
P.S. --- But notice, please! Normally half a bottle of Burgundy excites me
notably; while doing this magic
is like so much water. A "transvaluation of all values!"
3.55. Over a citron presse I have revised the new Ritual. Also I have bought
suitable materials for copying
it fair; and this I did without solemnity or ceremonial, {42} but quite simply,
just as anybody else might buy
them. In short, I bought them in a truly Rosicrucian manner, according to the
custom of the country. I add
a few considerations on the grade of Adeptus Major 6ĝ = 5ĝ.
(P.S. --- Distinction is to be made between attainment of this
grade in the natural and in the spiritual world. The former I
long since possessed.)
1. It may perhaps mean severe asceticism. In case I should be going out on that
path I will
try and get a real good dinner to fortify myself.
2. The paths leading to Geburah are from Hod, that of the Hanged Man, and from
Tiphereth,
that of Justice, both equilibrated aspects of Severity, the one implying
Self-Sacrifice, the
other involuntary suffering. One is Freewill, the other Karma; and that in a
wider sense than
that of Suffering.
The Ritual DCLXXI will still be applicable: indeed, it may be considered
sufficient; but of
course it must be lived as well as performed.
(I must here complain of serious trouble with fountain pens, and the waste of
priceless time fixing them up.
They have been wrong throughout the whole operation, a thing that has not
happened to me for near eight
years. I hope I've got a good one at last --- yes, thank God! this one writes
decently.) {43}
4.15. Somehow or other I have got off the track; have been fooling about with
too many odd things,
necessary as they may have been. I had better take a solid hour willing the
Tryst with Adonai.
5.40. Have done all this, and a Work of Kindness. I will again revise the new
ritual, dine, return and copy
it fair for use.
Let Adonai the Lord oversee the Work, that it be perfect, a sure link with Him,
a certain and infallible
Conjuration, and Spell, and Working of true Magick Art, that I may invoke Him
with success whenever
seemeth good unto Him.
Unto Him; not unto Me! Is it not written that Except Adonai build the House,
they labour in vain that build
it?
6.15. Chez Lavenue. Not feeling like revision, will read through this record.
My dinner is to be Bisque d'Ecrevisses, Tournedos Rossini, a Coupe Jack, half a
bottle of Meursault, and
Coffee. All should now acquit adepts of the charge of not knowing how to do
themselves well.
7.20. Dinner over, I return the Mantra-Yoga. One may note that I expected the
wine to have an excessive
effect on me; on the contrary, it has much less effect than usual.
This is rather important. I have purposely abstained from anything that might be
called a drug, until now,
for fear of confusing the effects.
With my knowledge of hashish-effects, I could very {44} likely have broken up
the Apophis-kingdom of
yesterday in a moment, and the truth of it would have been 5 per cent. drug and
95 per cent. magic; but
nobody would have believed me. Remember that this record is for the British
Public, "who may like me
yet." God forbid! for I cannot echo Browning's hope. Their greasiness,
hypocrisy, and meanness are such
that their appreciation could only mean my vileness, not their redemption. Sorry
if I seem pessimistic about
them! A nasty one for me, by the way, if they suddenly started buying me! I
should have, in mere
consistency, to cut my throat!
Calm yourself, my friend! There is no danger.
7.40. At home again and robed. Am both tired and oppressed, even in my peace;
for the day has been,
and the evening is, close and hot, with a little fog, and, one may suspect, the
air is overcharged with
electricity. I will rest quietly with my mantra as Hanged Man, and perhaps sleep
for a little.
8.10. No sleep --- no rest for the wicked! 'Tis curious how totally independent
is mantra-yoga of reverie.
I can say my mantra vigorously while my thought wanders all over the world; yet
I cannot write the
simplest sentence without stopping it, unless with a very great effort, and then
it is not satisfactory to either
party!
Meditation --- of the "rational' sort --- on this leads me to suggest that
active "radiant" thought may be
incompatible with the mantra, itself being (?) active. One can {45} read and
understand quite easily with
the mantra going; one can remember things.
For example, I see my watch chain; I think. "Gold. Au, 196 atomic weight. AuCl3,
L3 10s. 0d. an ounce"
and so on ad infinitum; but the act of writing down these things stops the
mantra. This may be (partly)
because I always say under my breath each word as I write it. [P.S. --- But I do
so, though less possibly,
as I read.]
8.22. As I am really awake, I may as well do a little Pranayama.
8.40. How little I know of magic and the conditions of success! My 17 cycles of
breath were not
absolutely easy; yet I did them. After a big dinner!!! The sweating was quite
suppressed, in spite of the
heat of the night and the exercise; and the first symptoms of the
Bhuchari-Siddhi --- the "jumping about
like a frog" --- were well marked. I am encouraged to spend a few minutes (still
in Asana) reading the
Shiva Sanhita.
9.0. Asana very painful again. True, I was doing it very strictly.
I notice they give a second stage --- trembling of the body --- as preliminary
to the jumping about like a
frog --- I had omitted this, as one is so obviously the germ of the other.
The Hindus seem to lack a sense of proportion. When the Yogi, by turning his
tongue back for one
half-minute, has conquered old age, disease and death; then instead of having
good time he patiently (and
rather pathetically, I think!) devotes his youthful {46} immortality to trying
to "drink the air through the
crow-bill" . . . . . . . . in the hope of curing a consumption of the lungs
which he probably never had and
which was in any case cured by his former effort!
9.40. Have been practising a number of these mudras and asanas.
Concerning the Visuddi Cakkram which is "of brilliant gold or smoke colour and
has sixteen petals
corresponding to the sixteen vowel sounds," one might make a good mantra of the
English vowel sounds,
or the Hebrew.
"Curiouser and curiouser!" The Yogis identify the Varana (Ganges) with the
Ida-Nadi, the Asi (?) with the
Pingala-Nadi, and Benares with the space between them. Like my identification of
my throat with the Gate
of the cimetiere du Montparnasse.
Well, it requires very considerable discrimination and a good sound foundation
of knowledge, if one
means to get any sense at all out of these Hindu books.
10.20. A little Pranayama, I think.
10.22. Can't get steady and easy at all! Will try Hanged Man again.
10.42. Not much good. The mantra goes on, but without getting hold of
the Chakkram.
'Tis difficult to explain; the best simile I can get is that of a motor running
with the clutch out; or of a man
cycling on a suspended machine.
There's no grip to it. {47}
The fact of the matter is, I am quite unconcentrated. Evidently the Osiris Risen
stage is over; and I think it
is a case for violent measures.
If one were to slack off now and hope for the morning, like a shipwrecked Paul,
one would probably
wake up a mere man of the world.
The Question then arises: What shall I do to be saved?
The only answer --- and one which is quite unconnected with the question -- is
that a Ritual of Adeptus
Major should display the Birth of Horus and Slaying of Typhon. Here again Horus
and Harpocrates ---
the twins of the twin signs of 0ĝ = 0ĝ ritual --- are the slayers of Typhon. So
all the rituals get mixed: the
symbols recur, though in a different aspect. Anyway, one wants something a deal
better than the path of
Pe in 4ĝ = 7ĝ ritual.
I think the postulant should be actually scourged, tortured, branded by fire for
his equilibrations at the
various "Stations of the Cross" or points upon his mystic journey. He must
assuredly drink blood for the
sacrament --- ah! now I see it all so well! The Initiator must kill him, Osiris;
he must rise again as Horus
and kill the Initiator, taking his place in the ceremony thence to the end. A
bit awkward technically, but
'twill yield to science. They did it of old by a certain lake in Italy!
Well, all this is dog-faced demon, ever seducing me from the Sacred Mysteries. I
can't go out and kill
anybody at this time o'night! We might make a start, {48} though, with a little
scourging, torturing, and
branding by fire. ...
Anything for a quiet life!
11.0. But scourging oneself is not easy with a robe on; and though one could
take it off, there is this point
to be considered: that one can never (except by a regrettable accident) hurt
oneself more than one wants
to. In other words, it is impossible thus to inflict pain, and so flagellants
have been rightly condemned as
mere voluptuaries. The only way to do so would be to inflict some torture whose
severity one could not
gauge at the time: e.g., one might dip oneself in petroleum and set light to it,
as the young lady mystic did
--- I suppose in Brittany! --- the other day. It's not the act that hurts, but
the consequences; so, although
one knows only roughly what will happen, one can force oneself to the act.
This, then, is a possible form of self-martyrdom. Similarly, mutilations; though
it is perhaps just to observe
that all these people are mad when they do these things, and their standard of
pleasure and pain
consequently so different from the sane man's as to be incomprehensible.
Look at my Uncle Tom! who goes about the world bragging of his chastity. The
maniac is probably happy
--- a peacock who is all tail! And squawk. Look at the Vegetarians and
Wallaceites and all that crew of
lunatics. They are paid in the coin of self- conceit. I shall waste no pity on
them! {49}
11.3. Rather pity myself, who cannot even make sensible "considerations" for a
Ritual of Adeptus Major.
The only thing to do in short is to go steadily on, with a little extra courage
and energy --- no harm in that!
--- on the same old lines. The Winding of the Way must necessarily lead me just
where it may happen to
go. Why deliberately go off to Geburah? Why not aspire direct by the Path of the
Moon-Ray unto the
Ineffable Crown? Modesty is misplaced here!
Very good. Then how aspire? Who is it that standeth in the Moon-Ray? The Holy
Guardian Angel. Aye!
O my Lord Adonai, Thou art the Beginning and the End of the Path. For as Thou
HB:Heh HB:Taw
HB:Aleph thou art also 406 = HB:Vau HB:Taw Tau the material world, the Omega.
And as He HB:Aleph
HB:Vau HB:Heh Thou art 12, the rays of the Ineffable Crown.
(A disaster has occurred; viz., a sudden and violent attack of that which
demands a tabloid of Pepsin,
Bismuth, and Charcoal --- and gets it. On my return, 11.34, I continue.)
And as HB:Yod HB:Nun HB:Aleph Ani "I" thou art also HB:Nun HB:Yod HB:Aleph 2 the
Negative, that
is beyond these on either side!
But this illness is a nuisance. I must have got a little chill somehow. Its
imminence would account for my
lack of concentration. And I could doubtless go on gloriously, but that another
disaster has occurred!
Enter Maryt, sitting and clothed and in her right mind --- or comparatively so!
11.38. I suppose, then, I must quit the game for a minute or two. {50}
11.56. Got rid of her, thank God. I may say in self-defence that I would never
have let her in but for the
accident of my being outside the room and the door left open, so that she was
inside on my return.
Let me get into Asana.
The Fifth Day
12.26. So beginneth the Fifth Day of this great Magical Retirement. With two and
twenty breath-cycles
did I begin. This practice was a little easier; but not much better. It ought to
become quite simple and
natural before one devotes the half-minute of Kambhakam (breath held-in), when
one is rigid to a strong
projection of Will toward Adonai, as has been my custom. I hope to-day will be
more hard definite
magical Work, less discourse, less beatific state of mind --- which is the very
devil! the real Calypso, none
the less temptress because her name happens to be Penelope. Ah Lord Adonai, my
Lord! Grant unto me
the Perfume and the Vision; let me attain the desirable harbour; for my little
ship is tossed by divers
tempests, even by Euroclydon, in the Place where Four Winds meet.
12.35. Therefore I shall go to rest, letting my mind rest ever in the Will
toward Adonai. Let my sleep be
toward Him, or annihilation; let my waking be to the music of His name; let the
day be full to the uttermost
of Him only.
2.18. My good friend the body woke me at this hour by means of disturbed dreams
about a quite
imaginary {51} relative of whom nobody for years had ever seen anything but his
head, which he would
poke out of a waterproof sheet. He was supposed to be an invalid. I am glad to
say that I woke properly
and got quite automatically on to the mantra.
My Prana, however, seems feverish and unbalanced. So I eat a biscuit or two and
drink some water and
will put it right with the Pentagram Ritual.
2 WEH Note: This is a correction from HB:Vau HB:Yod HB:Aleph , an evident typo
in the original
printing.
Done, but oh! how hard. Sleep fights me as Apollyon fought Christian! but I will
up and take him by the
throat.
(See; 'tis 2.30. Twelve minutes to do that little in!)
And look at the handwriting!
3.6. How excellent is Prana Yama, a comfort to the soul! I did thirty-two
cycles, easy and pleasant; could
have gone on indefinitely. The muscles went rigid, practically of their own
accord; so light did I feel that I
almost thought myself to be "that wise one" who "can balance himself on his
thumb." Sleep is conquered
right away from the word "jump." Indeed, if
Satan trembles when he sees
The weakest saint upon his knees;
then surely:
Satan flees, exclaiming "Damn!"
When any saint starts Pranayam!
So happy, indeed, was I in the practice that I devoted myself by the Waiting
formula to Adonai; and that I
got to "neighbourhood- concentration" is shewn by the fact that I several times
forgot altogether about
Adonai, and found myself saying the silly old Mantram. {52}
I despair of asking my readers to distinguish between the common phenomenon of
wandering thought and
this phenomenon which is at the very portal of true and perfect concentration;
yet it is most important that
the distinction should be seized. The further difficulty will occur --- I hope!
--- of distinguishing between
the vacancy of the idiot, and that destruction of thought which we call
Shivadarshana, or
Nirvikalpa-samadhi. [We must again refer the reader to the Hindu classics. ---
ED.]
The only diagnostic I can think of is this; that there is (I can't be sure about
it) no rational connection
between the thought one left behind one and the new thought. In a simple
wandering during the practice of
concentration one can very nearly always (especially with a little experience)
trace the chain. With
neighbourhood-concentration this is not so. Perhaps there is a chain, but so
great already is the power of
preventing the impressions from rising into consciousness that one has no
knowledge of the links, each one
having been automatically slaughtered on the threshold of the consciousness.
Of course, the honest and wary practitioner will have no difficulty in
recognising the right kind of
wandering; with this explanation there is no excuse for him if he does.
I have another theory, though. Perhaps this is not a wandering at all, but a
complete annihilation of all
thought. Affirming Adonai, I lop off the heads of all others; and Adonai's own
head falls. But in the {53}
momentary pause which this causes, some old habitual thought (to- night my
mantra) rises up. A case of
the Closure followed by the Moving of the Previous Question.
Oh Lord! when wilt Thou carry a Motion to Adjourn, nay, to Prorogue, nay! to
Dissolve this Parliament?
3.32. I am not sleepy; yet will I again compose myself, devoting myself to
Adonai.
7.7. Again woke and continued mantra.
8.10. I ought to have made more of it at 7.7; I went off again to sleep; the
result is that I am rather difficult
to wake again.
However, let me be vigilant now.
8.45. I have dressed and from 8.35-8.45 performed the Ritual of the Bornless
One.
Though I performed it none too well (failing, "e.g.", to make use of the
Geometric Progression on the
Mahalingam formula in the Ieou section [We cannot understand this passage. It
presumably refers to the
"Preliminary Invocation" in the "Goetia" of King Solomon, published S.P.R.T.,
Boleskine Foyers, N.B.,
1904. --- ED], and not troubling even to formulate carefully the Elemental
Hosts, or to marshal them
about the circle) I yet, by the favour of IAO, obtained a really good effect,
losing all sense of personality
and being exalted in the Pillar. Peace and ecstasy enfolded me. It is well.
8.50 But as I was ill last night, and as the morning has broken chill and damp,
I will go to the Cafe du
Dome {54} and break my fast humbly with Coffee and Sandwich. May it strengthen
me in my search for
the Quintessece, the Stone of the Wise, the Summum Bonum, True Wisdom and
Perfect Happiness!
9.0. I hope (by the way) that I have made it quite clear that all this time even
a momentary cessation of
active thought has been accompanied by the rising-up of the mantra. The rhythm,
in short, perpetually
dominates the brain; and becomes active on every opportunity. The liquid Moslem
mantra is much easier
to get on to than is the usual Hindu type with its "m" and "n" sounds
predominating: but it does not shake
the brain up so forcibly. Perhaps 'tis none the worse for that. I think the
unconscious training of the brain to
an even rhythm better than startling it into the same by a series of shocks.
I should like, to to remark that the suggestions in the "Herb Dangerous" [We
hope to publish this essay in
No. 2 of "The Equinox" --- ED.] for a ritual seem the wrong way round. It seems
to me that the Eastern
methods are very arid, and chiefly valuable as a training of the Will, while the
Ceremonies of the Magic of
Light tune up the soul to that harmony when it is but one step to the Crown.
The real plan is, then, to train the Will into as formidable an engine as
possible, and then, at the moment in
the Ritual when the real work should be done, to fling forth flying that
concentrated Will "whirling forth
with re-echoing Roar, so that it may comprehend with {55} invincible Will ideas
omniform, which flying
forth from that one Fountain issued: whose Foundation is One, One and Alone."
As therefore Discipline of whatever kind is only one way of going into a wood at
midnight on Easter Eve
and cutting the magic wand with a single blow of the magic knife, etc. etc.
etc., we can regard the Western
system as the essential one. Yet of course Pranayama, for one thing, has its own
definite magical effect,
apart from teaching the practitioner that he must last out those three seconds
--- those deadly long last
three seconds --- even if he burst in the process.
All this I am writing during breakfast.
My devotees may note, by the way, how the desire to sleep is breaking up.
Night I. 7 1/2 hours, unbroken from 12.30.
" II. 7 hours nearly, with dreams.
" III. 8 hours nearly; but woke three or four
times, and if I had not been a worm
would have scattered it like chaff!
" IV. 6 1/2 hours; and I wake fresh.
" V. 1 3/4 + 4 1/2 + 1 hour; and real good work done
in the intervals.
[P.S. " VI. Probably 4 hours.
" VII. 2 + 2 + 1/2 hours.
" VIII. 6 hours much broken.
" IX. 1 1/2 + 2 + 2 hours.
" X. 4 + 1 1/4 hours.
" XI. 1 3/4 + 4 1/2 hours.
" XII. Back to the normal --- 7 hours perfect sleep.]
{56} 11.30. Have been walks with the mantra arranging for and modelling a
"saddle" whereby to get
Asana really steady and easy; also for some photographs illustrating some of the
more absurd positions,
for the instruction of my devotees.
I must now copy out the new Ritual.
This, you will readily perceive, is all wrong. Theoretically, everything should
be ready by the beginning of
the Operation; and one should simply do it and be done with it.
But this is a very shallow view. One never knows what may be required; "i.e.", a
beginner like myself
doesn't. Further, one cannot write an effective Ritual till one is already in a
fairly exalted state ... and so on.
We must just do the best we can, now as always.
2.0. I have been concentrating solely on the Revision and copying of the Ritual.
Therefore I now live just
as I always live in order to get a definite piece of work done: concentrating as
it were " "off" the Work. As
Levi also adjures us by the Holy Names.
Coming back from lunch (a dozen Marennes Vertes and an Andouillette aux Pommes)
I met Zelina
Visconti, more lovely-ugly than ever in her wild way. She says that she is
favourably disposed towards
me, on the recommendation of her concierge!!!
"The tongue of good report hath already been heard in his favour.
Advance, free and of good report!" {57}
4.45. And only two pages done! but the decorations "marvelious"!
5.15. Another half-hour gone! in mere titivating the Opus! and now I'm too tired
to as much as start Prana
Yama. I will go to the Dome and see what a citron press and a sandwich does for
me, at the same time
taking over the MS. of Liber DCCCCLXIII., which has been given me to correct,
and doing it.
Please the pigs, the Visconti will cheer me up in the evening; and I shall get a
good day in to-morrow.
6.35. Still at Liber DCCCCLXIII. [To be published shortly by "The Equinox." ---
ED.] I should like to
write mantrams for each chapter.
7.20. Still at Liber DCCCCLXIII. I need hardly say that I am perfectly aware
that in one sense all this
working and ritual making and copying and illuminating is but a crowd of
dog-faced demons, since the
One Thought of Unity with Adonai is absent.
But I do it on purpose, making each thing I do into that Magic Will.
So if you ask me "Are you correcting Liber DCCCCLXIII.?" I reply, "No! I am
Adonai!"
7.50. Arrival of the Visconti.
8.50. Departure of the Visconti. Really a necessary rest: for my head had begun
to ache, and her kiss, half
given and half taken, much refreshed me.
9.50. Have done Liber DCCCCLXIII. 'Tis hardly thinkable that one could have read
it (merely) in the
{58} time. Say three and a half hours! Well, if it doesn't count as Tapas, and
Jap, and Yama, and
Niyama, and all the rest of it, all I can say is that I think They don't play
fair. I will now go and get
something to eat, and (God willing) on my return settle down to real work, for I
need daylight to copy my
Ritual.
11.30. A sandwich and two coffees at the Versailles and a citron press at the
Dome, some little chatter
with M---e, B---e, H---s, and others. In fact, I'm a lazy unconcentrated hound.
I started Mantra again,
though; of course it goes quite easily.
11.50. Undressed, and the mantra going, and the Will toward Adonai less
unapparent.
To-day I began ill, full of spiritual pride --- look at the records of my early
hours! One might have thought
me a great master of magic loftily condescending to explain a few elementary
truths suited to the capacity
of his disciples.
The fact is that I am a toad, ugly and venomous, and if I do wear a precious
jewel in my hand, that jewel is
Adonai, and --- well, come to think of it, I am Adonai. But St. John is not
Adonai; and St. John had better
do a little humiliation to-morrow.
Nothing being more humiliating than Prana Yama, I will begin with that.
The Sixth Day
12.5. Thus then --- oh ye great gods of Heaven! --- begins the Sixth Day of the
Great Magical Retirement
of that {59} Holy Illuminated Man of God our Greatly Honoured Frater, O.M.,
Adeptus Exemptus 7ĝ =
4ĝ Brother-Elect of the Most Secret and Sublime Order A.'. A.'.
He does with great difficulty (and no interior performance) just four
breath-cycles.
Somebody once remarked that it had taken a hundred million years to produce me;
I may add that I hope
it will be another hundred million before God makes such another cur.
12.15. Have performed the Equilibrating Ritual of the Scourge, the Dagger, and
the Chain; with the Holy
Anointing Oil that bringeth the informing Fire into their Lustral Water.
12.35. I am so sleepy that I cannot concentrate at all. (I was trying the
"Bornless One.") The magic goes
well; good images and powerful, but I slack right off into sleep. It's the hour
for heroic measures or else to
say: A good night's rest, and start fresh in the morning! I suppose, as usual, I
shall say the first and do the
second.
12.45. Have risen, washed, performed the ritual "Thee I invoke, the Bornless
One" physically.
The result fair. One gets better magical sight and feeling when one is
performing a ritual in one's Astral
Body, so called. For one is on the same plane as the things one's dealing with.
If, however, serious work is wanted, one must be all there. To get
"materialized" "spirits" --- pardon the
absurd language! --- one should (nay, must!) work inside {60} one's body. So,
too, I think, for the
highest spiritual work; for that Work extends from Malkuth to Kether.
Here is the great value of the rationalistic Eastern systems. [P.S. Of course
scientifically worked with
pencil, note-book, and stop-watch. The Yogi is usually in practice just as vague
a dreamer as the mystic.]
They keep one always balanced by common sense. One might go off on lines of
pleasing illusion for years,
until one was lost on the "Astral Plane."
All this, observe, is very meaningless, very vague at the best. What is the
Astral Plane? Is there such a
thing? How do its phantoms differ from those of absinthe, reverie, and love, and
so on?
We may admit their unsubstantiality without denying their power; the phantoms of
absinthe and love are
potent enough to drive a man to death or marriage; while reverie may end in
anti- vivisectionism or
nut-food-madness.
On the whole, I prefer to explain the many terrible catastrophes I have seen
caused by magic
misunderstood by supposing that in magic one is working with some very subtle
and essential function of
the brain, whose disease may mean for one man paralysis, for another mania, for
a third melancholia, for a
fourth death. It is not "
priori" absurd to suggest that there may be some one
particular thought that
would cause death. In the man with heart disease, for instance, the thought "I
will run quickly upstairs"
might cause death quite as directly as "I will shoot myself."
Yet of {61} course this thought acts through the will and the apparatus of
nerves and muscles. But might
not a sudden fear cause the heart to stop? I think cases are on record.
But all this is unknown ground, or, as Frank Harris would say, Unpath'd Waters.
We are getting
dangerously near "mental arsenic" and "all --- god --- good --- bones --- truth
--- lights --- liver --- mind
--- blessing --- heart --- one and not of a series --- ante and pass the buck."
The common sense of the practical man of the world is good enough for me! 1.10.
Will G. R. S. Mead or
somebody wise like that tell me why it is that if I get out of my body and face
(say) East, I can turn (in the
"astral body") as far as West-Sou'-West or thereabouts, but no further except
with very great difficulty
and after long practice? In making the circle, just as I got to West, I would
swing right back to
West-Nor'-West: turn easily enough, in short, to any point but due West, within
perhaps 5ĝ, but never
pass that point. I have taught myself to do it, but always with an effort.
Is this a common experience?
I connect it with my faculty of knowing direction, which all mountaineers and
travellers who have been
with me admit to be quite exceptional.
If I leave my tent or hut by a door facing, say, South-West, throughout that
whole day, over all kinds of
ground, through any imaginable jungle, in all kinds {62} of weather, fog,
blizzard, blight, by night or day, I
know within 5ĝ (usually within 2ĝ) the direction in which I faced when I left
that tent or hut. And if I
happen to have observed its compass bearing, of course I can deduce North by
mere judgment of angle,
at which I am very accurate.
Further, I keep a mental record, quite unconsciously, of the time occupied on a
march; so that I can
always tell the time within five minutes or so without consulting my watch.
Further, I have another automatic recorder which maps out distance plus
direction. Suppose I were to
start from Scott's and walk (or drive; it's all the same to me) to Haggerston
Town Hall (wherever
Haggerston may be; but say it's N.E.), thence to Maida Vale. From Maida Vale I
could take a true line
for Piccadilly again and not go five minutes walk out of my way, bar blind
alleys, etc., and I should know
when I got close to Scott's again before I recognised any of the surroundings.
It always seems to me that I get an intuition of the direction and length of
line A (Scott's to Haggerston
bee-line; in spite of any winding, it would make little odds if I went via
Poplar), another intuition of line B
(Haggerston to Maida Vale), and obtained my line C (back to Scott's) by
"Subliminal trigonometry."
In this example I am assuming that I had never been in London before. I have
done precisely similar work
in dozens of strange cities, even a twisted warren like Tangier or Cairo. I am
worse in Paris than {63}
anywhere else; I think because the main thoroughfares radiate from stars, and so
the angles puzzle one.
The power, too, suits ill with civilized life; it fades as I live in towns,
revives as I get back to God's good
earth. A seven- foot tent and the starlight --- who wants more?
1.35. Well, I've woke myself writing this. The point that really struck me was
this: what would happen if
by severe training I forced my "astral body" --- damn it! isn't there a term for
it free from L. ...
-prostitution? (One speaks of "les deux prostitutions"; so it's all right.) My
Scin-Laeca, then --- what
would happen if I forced my Scin-Laeca to become a Whirling Dervish? I couldn't
get giddy, because my
Semicircular canals would be at rest.
I must really try the experiment.
[Scin-Laeca. See Lord Lytton's "Strange Story." --- ED.]
1.58. I will now devote myself to sleep, willing Adonai. Lord Adonai, give me
deep rest like death, so that
in very few hours I may be awake and active, full of lion-strength of purpose
toward Thee!
7.35. My heroic conduct was nearly worth a "Nuit Blanche." For, being so
thoroughly awake, I had all my
Prana irritated, a feeling like the onset of a malarial attack, twelve hours
before the temperature rises. I
dare say it was after 3 o'clock when I slept; I woke too, several times, and
ought to have risen and done
Prana Yama: but I did not. O worm! the sleepiest bird can easily catch "thee!"
... I am not nicely awake,
though it is to {64} my credit that I woke saying my mantra with vigour. 'Tis a
bitter chill and damp the
morn; yet must I rise and toil at my fair Ritual.
7.55. Settling down to copy.
10.12. Have completed my two prescribed pages of illumination.
Will go and break my fast and do my business.
10.30. After writing letters went out and had coffee and two brioches.
11.50. At Louvre looking up some odd points in the lore of Khemi [Egypt. ---
ED.] for my Ritual.
12.20. I cannot understand it; but I feel faint for lack of food; I must get
back to strict Hatha-Yoga
feeding.
1.00. Half-dozen oysters and an entrecte aux pommes.
2.05. Back to work. I am in a very low physical condition; quite equilibrated,
but exhausted. I can hardly
walk upright!
Lord Adonai, how far I wander from the gardens of thy beauty, where play the
fountains of the Elixir!
2.55. Wrote two pages; the previous were not really dry; so I must wait a little
before illuminating.
I will rest --- if I can! In the Hanged Man posture.
4.30. I soon went to sleep and stayed there.
It is useless to persist. ... Yet I persist.
5.40. I was so shockingly cold that I went to the Dme and had milk, coffee, and
sandwich, eaten in
Yogin manner. {65} But it has done no good as far as energy is concerned. I'm
just as bad or worse than
I was on the day which I have called the day of Apophis (third day). The only
thing to my credit is the way
I've kept the mantra going.
5.57. One thing at least is good; if anything does come of this great magical
retirement --- which I am
beginning to doubt --- it will not be mixed up with any other enthusiasm,
poetic, venereal, or bacchanalian.
It will be purely mystic. But as it has not happened yet --- and just at present
it seems incredible that it
should happen --- I think we may change the subject.
.... What a fool I am, by the way! I say that "He is God, and that there is no
other God than He" 1800
times an hour; but I don't "think" it even once a day.
6.30. All my energy has suddenly come back.
Was it that Hatha-Yoga sandwich?
I go on copying the Ritual.
7.10. Copying finished. I will go and dine, and learn it by heart, humbly and
thoughtfully. The illumination
of it can be finished, with a little luck, in two more days.
I am disinclined to use the Ritual until it is beautifully coloured. As
Zoroaster saith: "God is never so much
turned away from man, and never so much sendeth him new paths, as when he maketh
ascent to divine
speculations or works, in a confused or disordered manner, and (as the oracle
adds) with unhallowed lips,
or unwashed feet. For of those who are thus {66} negligent the progress in
imperfect, the impulses are
vain, and the paths are dark."
7.40. Chez Lavenue. Bisque d'Ecrevisses, demi-perdreau
la Gele, Cpes
Bordelaise, Coupe Jack.
Demi Clos du Roi. I am sure I made a serious mistake in the beginning of this
Operation of Magick Art. I
ought to have performed a true Equilibration by an hour's Prana Yama in Asana
(even if I had to do it
without Kambhakham) at midnight, dawn, noon, and sunset, and I should have
allowed nothing in heaven
above, or in earth beneath, or in the waters under the earth, to have interfered
with its due performance.
Instead I thought myself such a fine fellow that to get into Asana for a few
minutes every midnight and the
rest go-as-you- please would be enough. I am well punished.
8.30. This food, eaten in a Yogin and ceremonial manner, is doing me good. I
shall end, God willing, with
coffee, cognac, and cigar. It is a fatal error to knock the body to pieces and
leave the consciousness
intact, as has been the case with me all day. It is true that some people find
that if they hurt the body, they
make the mind unstable. True; they predispose it to hallucination.
One should use strictly corporeal methods to tame the body; strictly mental
methods to control the mind.
This latter restriction is not so vitally important. Any weapon is legitimate
against a public enemy like the
mind. No truce nor quarter! {67} On the contrary, to use the spiritual forces to
secure health, as certain
persons attempt to do to-day, is the vilest black magic. This is one of the
numerous reasons for supposing
that Jesus Christ was a Brother of the Left-Hand Path. Now my body has been
treating me well, waking
nicely at convenient hours, sleeping at suitable times, keeping itself to itself
... an admirable body. Then
why shouldn't I take it out and give it the best dinner Lavenue can serve? ...
Provided that it doesn't stop
saying that mantra!
It would be so easy to trick myself into the belief that I had attained! It
would be so easy to starve myself
until there was "visions about"! It would be so easy to write a sun-splendid
tale of Adonai my Lord and
my lover, so as to convince the world and myself that I had found Him! With my
poetic genius, could I not
outwrite St. John (my namesake) and Mrs. Dr. Anna Bonus Kingsford? Yea, I could
deceive myself if I
did not train and fortify my scepticism at every point. That is the great
usefulness of this record; one will be
able to see afterwards whether there is any trace of poetic or other influence.
But this is my sheet-anchor: I
cannot wrote a lie, either in poetry or about magic. These are serious things
that constitute my personality;
and I could more easily blow out my brains that write a poem which I did not
feel. The apparent exception
is in case of irony.
[P.S. I wonder whether it would be possible to draw up a mathematical table,
showing curves of food
(and {68} digestion), drink, other physical impulses, weather, and so on, and
comparing them with the
curve of mystic enthusiasm and attainment. Through it is perhaps true that
perfect health and "bien-tre" are
the bases of any true trance or rapture, it seems unlikely that mere exuberance
of the former can excite the
latter.
In other words there is probably some first matter of the work which is not
anything we know of as bodily.
On my return to London, I must certainly put the matter before more experienced
mathematicians, and if
possible, get a graphic analysis of the kind indicated.]
9.20. How difficult and expensive it is to get drunk, when one is doing magic!
Nothing exhilarates or
otherwise affects one. Oh, the pathos and tragedy of those lines:
Come where the booze is cheaper!
Come where the pots hold more!
How I wish I had written them!
10.08. Having drunk a citron press and watched the poker game at the Dme for a
little, I now return
home. I thought to myself, "Let me chuck the whole thing overboard and be
sensible, and get a good
night's rest" --- and perceived that it would be impossible. I am so far into
this Operation that
pausing to cast one last glance back
O'er the safe road --- 'twas gone! {69}
I must come out of it either an Adept or a maniac. Thank the Lord for that! It
saves trouble.
10.20. Undressed and robed. Will do an Aspiration in the Hanged Man position,
hoping to feel rested and
fit by midnight.
The Incense has arrived from London; and I feel its magical effects most
favourable.
O creature of Incense! I conjure thee by Him that sitteth upon the Holy Throne
and liveth and reigneth for
ever as the Balance of Righteousness and Truth, that thou comfort and exalt my
soul with Thy sweet
perfume, that I may be utterly devoted to this Work of the Invocation of my Lord
Adonai, that I may fully
attain thereto, beholding Him face to face --- as it is written "Before there
was Equilibrium, Countenance
beheld not Countenance" --- yea, being utterly absorbed in His ineffable Glory
--- yea, being That of
which there is no Image either in speech or thought.
10.55. What a weary world we live in! No sooner am I betrayed into making a few
flattering remarks
about my body that I find everything wrong with it, and two grains of Cascara
Sagrada necessary to its
welfare!
.... I wish I knew where I was! I don't at all recognise what Path I am on; it
doesn't seem like a Path at all.
As far as I can see, I am drifting rudderless and sailless on a sea of no shore
--- the False Sea of the
Qliphoth. For in my stupidity I began to try a certain ritual of the Evil Magic,
so called. ...
Not {70} evil in truth, because only that is evil (in one sense) which does not
lead to Adonai. (In another
sense, all is evil which is not Adonai.) And of course I had the insane idea
that this ritual would serve to
stimulate my devotion. For the information of the Z.A.M., I may explain that
this ritual pertained to Saturn
in Libra; and, though right enough in its own plane, is a dog-faced demon in
this operation. Is it, though? I
am so blind that I can no longer decide the simplest problems. Else, I see so
well, and am so balanced,
that I see both sides of every question.
In chess-blindness one used to abjure the game. I never tried to stick it
through; I wish I had. Anyhow, I
have to stick this through!
O Lord of the Eye, let thine Eye be ever open upon me! For He that watcheth
Israel doth not slumber nor
sleep!
Lord Shiva, open Thou the Eye upon me, and consume me altogether in its
brilliance!
Destroy this Universe! Eat up thine hermit in thy terrible jaws!
Dance Thou upon this prostrate saint of Thine!
... I suffer from thirst ... it is a thirst of the body ... yet the thirst of
the soul is deeper, and impossible to
quench.
Lord Adonai! Let the Powers of Geburah plunge me again and again into the Fires
of Pain, so that my
steel may be tempered to that Sword of Magic that invoketh Thy Knowledge and Thy
Conversation.
Hoor! Elohim Gibor! Kamael! Seraphim! Graphiel! {71}
Bartzabel! Madim! I conjure ye in the Number Five.
By the Flaming Star of my Will! By the Senses of my Body! By the Five Elements
of my Being! Rise!
Move! Appear! Come ye forth unto me and torture me with your fierce pangs ...
for why? because I am
the Servant of the Same your God, the True Worshipper of the Highest.
Ol sonuf vaoresaji, gono ladapiel, elonusaha caelazod.
I rule above ye, said the Lord of Lords, exalted in power.
[From Dr. Dee's MSS. --- ED.]
11.17. Will now try the Hanged Man again.
11.30. Very vigorous and good, my willing of Adonai. ... I should like to
explain the difficulty. It would be
easy enough to form a magical Image of Adonai: and He would doubtless inform it.
But it would only be
an Image. This may be the meaning of the commandment "Thou shalt not make any
graven image," etc.,
just as "Thou shalt not have any other Gods but me" implies single-minded
devotion (Ekagrata) to Adonai.
So any mental or magical Image must necessarily fall short of the Truth.
Consequently one has to will that
which is formless; and this is very difficult. To concentrate the mind upon a
definite thing is hard enough;
yet at least there is something to grasp, and some means of checking one's
result. But in this case, the
moment one's will takes a magical shape -- and the will simply revels in
creating shapes -- at the moment
one knows that one has gone off the track. {72} This is of course (nearly
enough) another way of
expressing the Hindu Meditation whose method is to kill all thoughts as they
arise in the mind. The
difference is that I am aiming at a target, while they are preventing arrows
from striking one. In my
aspiration to know Adonai, I resemble their Yogis who concentrate on their
"personal Lord"; but at the
same time it must be remembered that I am not going to be content with what
would content them. In
other words, I am going to "define" "the Knowledge and Conversation of my Holy
Guardian Angel" as
equal to Neroda-Samapatti, the trance of Nibbana.
I hope I shall be able to live up to this!
11.55. Have been practising Asana, etc. I forgot one thing in the last entry: I
had been reproaching Adonai
that for six days I had evoked Him in vain. ... I got the reply, "The Seventh
Day shall be the Sabbath of the
Lord thy God."
So mote it be!
The Seventh Day.
12.17. I began this great day with Eight breath-cycles; was stopped by the
indigestion trouble in its other
form. (P.S. --- Evidently the introduction of the Cascara into my sensitive aura
made its action
instantaneous.) My breathing passages were none too clear, either; I have
evidently taken a chill.
Now, O, my Lord Adonai, thou Self-Glittering One, wilt Thou not manifest unto
Thy chosen one? For see
{73} me! I am as a little white dove trembling upon thine altar, its throat
stretched out to the knife. I am as
a young child bought in the slave market ... and night is fallen! I await Thee,
O my Lord, with a great
longing, stronger than Life; yet am I as patient as Death.
There was a certain Darwesh whose turban a thief stole. But when they said to
him, "See! he hath taken
the road to Damascus!" that holy man answered, as he went quietly to the
cemetery, "I will await him
here!"
So, therefore, there is one place, O thou thief of my heart's love, Adonai, to
which thou must come at last;
and that place is the tomb in which lie buried all my thoughts and emotions, all
that which is "I, and Me,
and Mine." There will I lay myself and await thee, even as our Father Christian
Rosenkreutz that laid
himself in the Pastos in the Vault of the Mountain of the Caverns, Abiegnus, on
whose portal did he cause
to be written the words, "Post Lux Crucis Annos Patebo." So Thou wilt enter in
(as did Frater N. N. and
his companions) and open the Pastos; and with thy Winged Globe thou wilt touch
the Rosy Cross upon
my breast, and I shall wake into life --- the true life that is Union with Thee.
So therefore --- perinde ac cadaver --- I await Thee.
12.43. I wrote, by the way, on some previous day (IV. 12.57 A.M.) that I used
the Supreme formula of
Awaiting. ... Ridiculous mouse! is it not written in the Book of the {74} Heart
that is girt about with the
Serpent that "To await Thee is the End, not the Beginning"?
It is as silly as rising at midnight, and saying, "I will go out and sleep in
the sun."
But I am an Irishman, and if you offer me a donkey-ride at a shilling the first
hour and sixpence the second,
you must not be surprised at the shrewd silliness of my replying that I will
take the second hour first.
But that is always the way; the love of besting our dearest friends in a bargain
is native to us: and so, even
in religion, when we are dealing with our own souls, we try to cheat. I go out
to cut an almond rod at
midnight, and, finding it inconvenient, I "magically affirm" that ash is almond
and that seven o'clock is
twelve. It seems a pity to have become a magician, capable of forcing Nature to
accommodate herself to
your statements, for no better use to be made of the power than this!
Miracles are only legitimate when there is no other issue possible. It is waste
of power (the most expensive
kind of power) to "make the spirits bring us all kinds of food" when we live
next door to the Savoy; that
Yogi was a fool who spent forty years learning to walk across the Ganges when
all his friends did it daily
for two pice; and that man does ill when he invokes Tahuti to cure a cold in the
head while Mr. Lowe's
shop is so handy in Stafford Street.
But miracles may be performed in an extremity; and are.
This brings us round in a circle; the miracle of the {75}
Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel is only to be performed
when the magus has
rowed himself completely out; in the language of the Tarot, when the Magus has
become the Fool. But for
my faith in the Ritual DCLXXI. I should be at the end of my spells.
Well? We shall see in the upshot.
1.25. I really almost begin to believe IT will happen.
For I lay down quite free of worry or anxiety (hugging myself, as it were),
perfectly sure of Him in the
simple non-assertive way that a child is sure of its mother, in a state of
pleased expectancy, my thoughts
quite suppressed in an intent listening, as it were for the noise of the wind of
His chariot, as it were for the
rustle of His wings.
For lo! through the heaven of Nu He rideth in His chariot --- soon, soon He will
be here!
Into this state of listening come certain curious things --- formless flittings,
I know not what. Also, what I
used to call "telephone-cross" voices --- voices of strange people saying quite
absurd commonplace things
--- "Here, let's feel it!" "What about lunch?" "So I said to him: Did you ..."
and so on; just as if one were
overhearing a conversation in a railway carriage. I beheld also Kephra, the
Beetle God, the Glory of
Midnight. But let me compose myself again to sleep, as did the child Samuel.
If He should choose to come, He can easily awaken me. {76}
3.35. I have been asleep a good deal --- one long dream in which P---t, Lord
M---y of B---n and my
wife are all staying with me in my mother's house. My room the old room, with
one page torn out --- for I
conceived it as part of a book, somehow! Oh such a lot of this dream! Most of it
clearly due to obvious
sources --- I don't see where Lord M---y comes in. Very likely he is dead. I
have had that happen now
and again. [P.S. --- this was not the case.]
The dream changed, too, to a liner; where Japanese stole my pipe in a series of
adventures of an annoying
type --- every one acted as badly as he knew how, and as unexpectedly.
Waking just now, and instantly concentrating on Adonai, I found my body seized
with a little quivering,
very curious and pleasant, like
trembling leaves in a continuous air.
I think I have heard this state of Interior Trembling described
in some mystic books. I think the Shakers and Quakers had
violent shudderings. Abdullah Haji of Shiraz writes: ---
Just as the body shudders when the Soul
Gives up to Allah in its quick career
Itself. ...
It is the tiniest, most intimate trembling, not unlike that of Kambhakham or
"Vindu-siddhi" [see the Shiva
Sanhita. --- ED.] properly performed; but of a female quality. I feel as if I
were being shaken; in {77} the
other cases I recognize my own ardour as the cause. It is very gentle and sweet.
So now I may turn back to wait for Him.
3.50. The Voice of the Nadi has changed to a music faint yet very full and very
sweet, with a bell-like tone
more insistent than the other notes at intervals.
5.45. Again awake, and patient-eager. The dreams flow through me ceaselessly.
This time a house where I, like a new Bluebeard, have got to conceal my wives
from each other. But my
foolish omission to knife them brings it about that I have thirty-nine secret
chambers, and only one open
one in each case.
Oh, yards of it! And all sorts of people come in to supper --- which there isn't
any, and we have to do all
sorts of shifts --- and all the wives think themselves neglected --- as they are
bound to do, if one is insane
enough to have forty --- and I loathed them all so! it was terrible having to
fly round and comfort and
explain; the difficulty increases (I should judge) as about the fifth power of
the number of wives... I'm glad
I'm awake!
Yea, and how glad when I am indeed awake from this glamour life, awake to the
love my Lord Adonai!
It is bitter chill at dawn. A consecrating cold it seems to me --- yet I will
not confront it and rejoice in it ---
I am already content, having ceased to strive.
7.15. Again awake, deliciously rested and refreshed.
9.45. Again awake, ditto. {78}
11.35. I will now break my fast with a sandwich and coffee, eaten Yogin- wise.
I seem like one convalescent after a fever; very calm, very clean, rather weak,
too weak, indeed, to be
actually happy: but content.
I spent the morning posing for Michael Brenner, a sculptor who will one day be
heard of. Very young yet,
but I think the best man of his generation --- of those whose work I have seen.
By the way, I am suffering
from a swollen finger, since yesterday morning or possibly earlier. I have given
it little attention, but it is
painful.
I want to explain why I have so carefully recorded the somewhat banal details of
all I have eaten and
drunk.
1. All food is a species of intoxicant; hence a fruitful source of error. Should
I obtain any
good result, I might say "You were starved" or "You were drunk." It is very easy
to get
visions of sorts by either process, and to delude oneself into the idea that one
has attained,
mistaking the Qliphoth for Kether.
2. In keeping the vow "I will interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing
of God with
my soul" the mere animal actions are the most resistant. One cannot see the
nature of the
phenomenon; it seems so unimportant; one is inclined to despise it. Hence I
enter it in the
record as a corrective. {79}
3. If others are to read this, I should like them to see that elaborate codes of
morality have
nothing to do with my system. No question of sin and grace ever enters it.
If a chemist wants to prepare copper sulphate from its oxide, he does not
hesitate on the ground that
sulphuric acid, thrown in the eyes, hurts people. So I use the moral drug which
will produce the desired
result, whether that drug be what people commonly call poison or no. In short, I
act like a sensible man;
and I think I deserve every credit for introducing this completely new idea into
religion.
12.25. That function of my brain which says "You ought to be willing Adonai"
sometimes acts. But I am
willing Him! It is so active because all this week it has been working hard, and
doesn't realise that its work
is done. Just as a retired grocer wakes up and thinks "I must go and open the
shop."
In Hindu phrase, the thought-stuff, painfully forced all these days into one
channel, has acquired the habit
["i.e.", of flowing naturally in it. --- ED.] I am Ekagrata --- one-pointed.
Just as if one arranges a siphon, one has to suck and suck for a while, and then
when the balance in the
two arms of the tube is attained, the fluid goes on softly and silently of its
own act. Gravitation which was
against us is now for us.
So now the whole destiny of the Universe is by me overcome; I am impelled, with
ever-gathering and
irresistible force, toward Adonai. {80}
Vi Veri Vniversvm Vivvs Vici!
12.57. Back home to illuminate my beautiful Ritual.
3.30. Two pages done and set aside to dry. I think I will go for a little walk
and enjoy the beautiful sun.
Also to the chemist's to have my finger attended to.
4.05. The chemist refused to do anything; and so I did it myself. It is the
romantic malady of ingrowing
nail; a little abscess had formed. Devilish painful after the clean-up. Will go
the walk aforesaid.
4.17. I ought to note how on this day there is a complete absence of all one's
magical apparatus. The
mantra has slowed down to (at a guess) a quarter of its old pace. The rest in
unison. This is because the
feeling of great power, etc. etc., is the mere evidence of conflict --- the
thunder of the guns. Now all is at
peace; the power of the river, no more a torrent.
The Concourse of the Forces has become the Harmony of the Forces; the word
Tetragrammation is
spoken and ended; the holy letter Shin is descended into it. For the roaring God
of Sinai we have the
sleeping Babe of Bethlehem. A fulfilment, not a destroying, of the Law.
4.45. Am at home again. I will lie down in the Position of the Hanged Man, and
await the coming of my
Lord.
6.00. Arisen again to go out to diner. I was half-asleep some of the time.
6.15. Dinner --- Hors d'OEuvre --- Tripes
la Mode de Caen --- Filet de Porc
--- Glace --- 1/2
Graves. Oh, how the world {81} hath inflexible intellectual rulers! I eat it in
a semi-Yogin manner.
6.20. I am wondering whether I have not made a mistake in allowing myself to
sleep.
It would be just like me, if there were only one possible mistake to make, to
make it! I was perfect, had I
only watched. But I let my faith run away with me. ... I wonder.
6.45. Dinner over, I go on as I am in calm faith and love. Why should I expect a
catastrophic effect? Why
should not the circumstances of Union with God be compatible with the normal
consciousness?
Interpenetrating and illuminating it, if you like; but not destroying it. Well,
I don't know why it shouldn't be;
but I bet it isn't! All the spiritual experience I have had argues against such
a theory.
On the contrary, it will leave the reason quite intact, supreme Lord of its own
plane. Mixing up the planes
is the sad fate of many a mystic. How many do I know in my own experience who
tell me that, obedient to
the Heavenly Vision, they will shoot no more rabbits! Thus they found a system
on trifles, and their Lord
and God is some trumpery little elemental masquerading as the Almighty.
I remember my Uncle Tom telling me that he was sure God would be displeased to
see me in a blue coat
on Sunday. And to-day he is surprised and grieved that I do not worship his god
--- or even my own
tailor, as would be surely more reasonable! {82}
7.32. How is it that I expect the reward at once? Surely I am presuming on my
magical power, which is an
active thing, and therefore my passivity is not perfect. Of course, when IT
happens, it happens out of time
and space --- now or ten years hence it is all the same. All the same to IT; not
all the same to me, O.M.
So O.M. (the dog!) persists irrationally in wanting IT, here and now. Surely,
indeed, it is a lack of faith, a
pandering to the time-illusion ... and so forth. Yes, no doubt it is all
magically wrong, even magically
absurd; yet, though I see the snare, I deliberately walk into it. I suppose I
shall be punished somehow ...
Good! there's the excuse I wanted. Fear is failure: I must dare to do wrong.
Good!
7.50. It has just occurred to me that this Waiting and Watching is the supreme
Magical strain. Every slight
sound or other impression shocks one tremendously. It is easy enough to shut out
sounds and such when
one is concentrating in active magic: I did all my early evocations in Chancery
Lane. But now one is
deliberately opening all the avenues of sense to admit Adonai! One has destroyed
one's own Magic
Circle. The whole of that great Building is thrown down. ... Therefore I am in a
worse hole that I ever was
before --- and I've only just realized it. A footfall on the pavement is most
acute agony --- because it is
not Adonai. My hearing, normally rather dull, is intensely sharpened; and I am
thirty yards from the electric
trams of the Boulevard Montparnasse at the busiest hour of the evening. ... {83}
And the Visconti may turn up! ...
Eli, Eli, lama sabacthani!
8.45. I went out to the Dme to drink my final citron press and to avoid the
Visconti. Am returned, and in
bed. I shall try and sleep now, waking in time for midnight and the quiet hours.
8.53. I have endured the supreme temptation and assault of the Enemy.
In this wise. First, I found that I did not want sleep --- I couldn't stop
"Waiting." Next, I said "Since last
night that Black Ritual (see entry 10.55) did at least serve to turn all my
thoughts to the One Thought, I will
try it again ..."
Then I said: "No; to do so is not pure 'waiting.'"
And then --- as by a flash of lightning --- the Abyss of the Pit opened, and my
whole position was turned.
I saw my life from the dawn of consciousness till now as a gigantic "pose"; my
very love of truth assumed
for the benefit of my biographer! All these strange things suffered and enjoyed
for no better purpose than
to seem a great man. One cannot express the horror of this thought; it is The
thought that murders the soul
--- and there is no answer to it. So universal is it that it is impossible to
prove the contrary. So one must
play the man, and master it and kill it utterly, burying it in that putrid hell
from which it sprang. Luckily I
have dealt with it before. Once when I lived at Paddington J---s and F---r were
with me taking, and,
when they went, thoughtfully left this devil-thought behind --- the agony is
with me yet. {84} That, though,
was only a young mild devil, though of the same bad brood. It said: "Is there
any Path or Attainment?
Have you been fooled all along?"
But to-night's thought struck at my own integrity, at the inmost truth of the
soul and of Adonai.
As I said, there is no answer to it; and as these seven days have left me fairly
master of the fortress, I
caught him young, and assigned him promptly to the oubliette.
I put down this --- not as a "pose" --- but because the business is so gigantic.
It encourages me
immensely; for if my Dweller on the Threshold be that most formidable devil, how
vast must be the Pylon
that shelters him, and how glorious must be the Temple just beyond! 9.30. It
seems that there was one
more mistake to make; for I've made it!
I started to attempt to awaken the Kundalini --- the magical serpent that sleeps
at the base of the spine;
coiled in three coils and a half around the Sushumna; and instead of pumping the
Prana up and down the
Sushumna until Siva was united with Sakti in the Sahasrara-Cakkram, I tried ---
God knows why; I'm
stupider than an ass or H ... C .... --- to work the whole operation in
Muladhara --- with the obvious
result.
There are only two more idiocies to perform --- one, to take a big dose of
Hashish and record the ravings
as if they were Samadhi; and two, to go to church. I may as well give up. {85}
Yet here answers me the
everlasting Yea and Amen: Thou canst not give up, for I will bring thee through.
Yet here I lie, stripped of
all magic force, doubting my own peace and faith, farther from Adonai than ever
before --- and yet ---
and yet ---
Do I not know that every error is a necessary step in the Path? The longest way
round is the shortest way
home. But it is disgusting! There's a grim humour in it, too. The real Devil of
the Operation must be sitting
with sardonic grin upon his face, enjoying my perplexity ---
For that Dweller-of-the-Threshold-thought was not as dead as I supposed; as I
write he comes again and
again, urging me to quit the Path, to abandon the unequal contest. Luckily,
friend Dweller, you prove too
much! Your anxiety shows me that I am not as far from attainment as my own
feelings would have me
think. At least, though, I am thrown into the active again; I shall rise and
chant the Enochian Calls and
invoke the Bornless One, and clear a few of the devils away, and get an army of
mighty angels around me
--- in short, make another kind of fool of myself, I wonder?
Anyway, I'll do it. Not a bad idea to ask Thoth to send me Taphtatharath with a
little information as to the
route --- I do not know where I am at all. This is a strange country, and I am
very lonely.
This shall be my ritual.
1. Banishing Pentagram Ritual.
2. Invoking ditto. [These will appear in No. 2, "Liber O." --- ED.] {86}
3. "The Bornless One." [See the "Goetia." --- ED.]
4. The Calls I --- VI with the rituals of the five Grades. [From Dr. Dee's and
the G.'. D.'.
MSS. --- ED.]
5. Invocation of Thoth.
6. (No: I will "not" use the New Ritual, nor will I discuss the matter.) An
impromptu
invocation of Adonai.
7. Closing formulae.
To work, then!
11.15. The ceremony went well enough; the forces invoked came readily and
visibly; Thoth in particular as
friendly as ever --- I fancy He takes this record as a compliment to Him ---
He's welcome to it, poor
God!
The L.V.X. came, too but not enough to pierce the awful shroud of darkness that
by my folly I have
woven for myself.
So at the end I found myself on the floor, so like Rodin's Cruche Casse Danaide
Girl as never was ... As
I ought to have been in the beginning! Well, one thing I got (again!), that is,
that when all is said and done,
I am that I am, and all these thoughts of mine, angels and devils both, are only
fleeting moods of me. The
one true self of me is Adonai. Simple! Yet I cannot remain in that simplicity.
I got this "revelation" through the Egyptian plane, a partial illumination of
the reason. It has cleared up the
mind; but alas! the mind is still there. This is the strength and weakness both
of the Egyptian plane, {87}
that it is so lucid and spiritual and yet so practical. When I say weakness, I
mean that it appeals to my
weakness; I am easily content with the smaller results, so that they seduce me
from going on to the really
big ones. I am quite happy as a result of my little ceremony --- whereas I ought
to be taking new and
terrible oaths! Yet why should Tahuti be so kind to me, and Asar Un-nefer so
unkind? The answer comes
direct from Tahuti himself: Because you have learned to write perfectly, but
have not yet taught yourself to
suffer.
True enough, the last part!
Asar Un-nefer, thou perfected One, teach me Thy mysteries! Let my members be
torn by Set and
devoured by Sebek and Typhon! Let my blood be poured out upon Nile, and my flesh
be given to Besz
to devour! Let my Phallus be concealed in the maw of Mati, and my Crown be
divided among my
brethren! Let the jaws of Apep grind me into poison! Let the sea of poison
swallow me wholly up!
Let Asi my mother rend her robes in anguish, and Nepti weep for me unavailing.
Then shall Asi being forth Hoor, and Heru-pa-kraat shall leap glad from her
womb. The Lord of
Vengeance shall awaken; Sekhet shall roar, and Pasht cry aloud. Then shall my
members be gathered
together, and my bonds shall be unloosed; and my khu shall be mighty in Khem for
ever and ever!
11.37. I return to he place of the Evil Triad, of Ommo Satan, that is
before the altar. There to expiate my folly in {88} attaching
myself to all this great concourse of ideas that I have here
recorded, instead of remaining fixed in the single stronghold of
Unity with Myself.
11.54. And so this great day draws to its end.
These are indeed the Qliphoth, the Qliphoth of Kether, the Thaumiel, twin giant
heads that hate and tear
each other.
For the horror and darkness have been unbelievable; yet again, the light and
brilliance have been almost
insupportable.
I was never so far, and never so near ... But the hour approaches. Let me
collect myself, and begin the
new day in affirmation of my Unity with my Lord Adonai!
The Eighth Day
12.3. Thus the Eighth day, the Second Week, begins. I am in Asana.
For some reason or other, Pranayama is quite easy. Concentrating on Adonai, I
was in Kambhakham for
a whole minute without distress.
It "is" true, by the way. I was --- and am --- in some danger of looking on this
Record as a Book; "i.e.",
of emphasising things for their literary effect, and diminishing the importance
of others which lend
themselves less obviously.
But the answer to this, friend Satan! is that the Canon of Art is Truth, and the
Canon of Magic is Truth; my
true record will make a good book, and my true book will make a good record.
{89} " "Ekam evam
advaitam!" friend Satan! One and not two. "Hua allahu"
"alazi lailaha illa Hua!"
But what shall by my "considerations" for this week? I am so absolutely become
as a pantomorphous
Lynx that all things look alike to me; there are just as many pros and cons to
Pranayama as to Ceremonial,
etc. etc., --- and the pros and cons are so numerous and far reaching that I
simply dare not start
discussing even one. I can see an endless avenue in every case. In short, like
the hashish-drunkard in full
blast, I am overwhelmed by the multitude of my own magical Images. I have become
the great Magician
--- Mayan, the Maker of Illusion --- the Lord of the Brethren of the Left-hand
Path.
I don't "wear my iniquity as an aureole, deathless in Spiritual Evil," as Mr.
Waite thinks; but it's nearly as
bad as that. There seems only one reply to this great question of the Hunchback
(I like to symbolize the
spirit of Questioning by "?" --- a little crooked thing that asks questions) and
that is to keep on affirming
Adonai, and refusing to be obsessed by any images of discipline or magic.
Of course! but this is just the difficulty --- as it was in the Beginning, is
now, and every shall be, world
without end! My beautiful answer to the question, How will you become a
millionaire? is: I will possess a
million pounds. The "answer" is not an answer; it is a begging of the question.
What a fool I am! and people think me clever. "Ergo," perhaps! {90}
Anyhow I will now (12.37) go quietly to sleep --- as I am always saying, and
never do when I say it! ---
in the hope that daylight may bring counsel.
7.40. Woke fresh and comfortable. Sleep filled with dreams and broken into short
lengths. I ought to
observe that this is a very striking result of forging this magic chain; for in
my normal life I am one of the
soundest sleepers imaginable. Nine solid hours without turning once is my
irreducible minimum.
9.10. Having done an hour's illumination of the New Ritual, will go and break my
fast with coffee and a
brioche, and thence proceed to Michael Brenner's studio.
12.15. I have spent the morning in modelling Siddhasana --- a more difficult
task than appeared. Rather
like THE task!
But I went on with the mantra, and made some Reflections upon Kamma.
I will now have a Yogin coffee and sandwich, and return to my illumination of
the Ritual.
In the desert of my soul, where no herb grows, there is yet one little spring. I
am still one-pointed, at least
in the lower sense that I have no desire or ambition but this of accomplishing
the Great Work.
Barren is this soul of mine, in these 3 1/2 years of drought (the 3 1/2 coils of
the Kundalini are implied by
this) and this Ekagrata is the little cloud like a hand (Yod, the Lingam of
great Shiva). And, though I catch
up my robe and run before the chariot of the King into Jezreel, it may be {91}
that before I reach those
gates the whole sky may be one black flame of thundercloud, and the violet
swords of the lightning may
split asunder its heavy womb, and the rain, laughing like a young child, may
dance upon the desert!
12.58. The Light beginneth to dawn upon the Path, so that I see a little better
where I stand. This whole
journey seems under some other formula than IAO --- perhaps a Pentagram formula
with which I am not
clearly acquainted. If I knew the Word of the Grade, I could foretell things:
but I don't.
I think I will read through the whole Record to date and see if I can find an
Ariadne-clue.
1.15. Back, and settled to Ritual-painting.
2.30. Finished: bar frontispiece and colophon, which I can design and execute
to-morrow.
3.0. Took half an hour off, making a silly sketch of a sunset. Will now read
through the Record, and
Reflect upon it.
4.15. "Before I was blind; now I see!" Yesterday I was right up to the
Threshold, right enough; but got
turned back by the Dweller. I did not see the Dweller till afterwards (8.53
entry) for he was too subtle. I
will look carefully back to try and spot him; for if I "knew his Name" I could
pass by --- "i.e.", next time I
climb up to the Threshold of the Pylon.
I think the entries 1.25 and 3.35 A.M. explain it. "HUGGING MYSELF, AS IT WERE."
How fatally
{92} accurate! I wrote it and never saw the hellish snare! I ought to have risen
up and prepared myself
ceremonially as a bride, and waited in the proper magical manner. Also I was too
pleased with the
Heralds of my Lord's coming --- the vision of Khephra, etc. It was perhaps this
subtle self-satisfaction that
lost me ... so I fell to the shocking abyss of last night!
The Dweller of the Threshold is never visible until after one has fallen; he is
a Veiled God and smites like
the Evil Knight in Malory, riding and slaying --- and no man seeth him. But when
you are tumbled
headlong into Hell, where he lives, then he unveils his Face, and blasts you
with its horror!
Very good, John St. John, now you know! You are plain John St. John and you have
to climb right up
again through the paths to the Threshold; and remember this time to mortify that
self- satisfaction! Go at it
more reverently and humbly --- oh, you dog, how I loathe you for your Vileness!
To have risen so high,
and --- now --- to be thus fallen!
4.40. The question arises: how to mortify this self-satisfaction?
Asceticism notoriously fosters egoism; how good am I to go without dinner! Now
noble! What
renunciation!
On the other hand,the good wine in one says: "A fine fellow I have made my
coffin of!"
The answer is simple, the old answer: "think not of" {93} "St. John" "and his
foolishness; think of Adonai!"
Exactly: the one difficulty!
My best way out will be to concentrate on the New Ritual, learn it perfectly by
heart, work it at the right
moment. ...
I will go, with this idea, to have a Citron press; thence to my Secret
Restaurant, and dine, always learning
the Ritual.
I will leave off the mantra, though it is nearly as much part of me as my head
by now; and instead repeat
over and over again the words of the Ritual so that I can do it in the end with
perfect fluency and
comprehension. And this time may Adonai build the House!
6.10. Instead I met Dr. R---, who kindly offered to teach me how to obtain
astral visions! (P.S. --- The
tone of this entry wrongs me. I sat patiently and reverently, like a "chela"
with his "guru," hoping to hear the
Word I needed.) Thence I went my long and lonely walk to my Secret Restaurant,
learning the Ritual as I
went.
7.15. Arrived at the Secret Restaurant. Ordered 6 ousters, Rable de Livre
poivrade pure de marrons,
and Glace "Casserole" with a small bottle of Perrier Water.
I know the New Ritual down to the end of the Confession. It was hard to stop the
mantra --- the moment
my thought wandered, up it popped!
8.3. I shall add Caf Cognac Cigare to this debauch.
I continue learning the Ritual.
8.40. I will return and humble myself before the Lord {94} Adonai. It is near
the night of the Full Moon; in
my life the Full Moon hath ever been of great augury. But to-night I am too poor
in spirit to hope.
Lo! I was travelling on the paths of Lamed and of Mem, of Justice and the Hanged
Man, and I fell into
both the pitfalls thereof. Instead of the Great Balance firmly held, I found
only Libra, the house of Venus
and of the exaltation of Saturn; and these evil planets, smiling and frowning,
overcame me. And so for the
sublime Path of Man; instead of that symbol of the Adept, his foot set firmly
upon heaven, his whole figure
showing forth the Reconciler with the Invisible, I found but the stagnant and
bitter water of selfishness, the
Dead Sea of the Soul. For all is Illusion. Who saith "I" denieth Adonai, save
only if he mean Adonai. And
Daleth the Door of the Pylon, is that Tree whereon the Adept of Man hangeth, and
Daleth is Love
Supernal, that if it be inserted in the word ANI, "I," giveth ADNI, Adonai.
Subtle art thou and deadly, O Dweller of the Threshold (P.S. --- This name is a
bad one. "Dweller beside
the Pylon" is a better term; for he is not in the straight path, which is simple
and easy and open. He is never
"overcome"; to meet him is the proof of having strayed. The Key fits the Door
perfectly; but he who is
drunken on the bad wine of Sense and Thought fumbles thereat.
And of course there is a great deal of door, and very little key- hole), who
dost use my very love of
Adonai to destroy me!
Yet how shall I approach Him, if not with reverent {95} joy, with a delicious
awe? I must wash His feet
with my tears; I must die at His gateway; I must ... I know not what ...
Adonai, be thou tender unto me Thy slave, and keep my footsteps in the Way of
Truth! ... I will return and
humble myself before the Lord Adonai.
10.18. Home again; have done odd necessary things, and am ready to work.
I feel slack; and I feel that I have been slack, though probably the Record
shows a fair amount of work
done. But I am terribly bruised by the Great Fall; these big things leave the
body and mind no worse,
apparently; but they hurt the Self, and later that is reflected into the lower
parts of the man as insanity or
death.
I must attain, or ... an end of John St. John.
An end of him, one way or the other, then!
Good-bye, John!
10.30. Ten minutes wasted in sheer mooning! I'm getting worse every minute.
10.40. Fooled away ten minutes more!
10.57. Humiliation enough! For though I made the cross with Blood and Flame, I
cannot even remain
concentrated in humiliation, which yet I feel so acutely. What a wormy worm I
am! I tried the new strict
Siddhasana, only to find that I had hurt myself so this morning with it that I
cannot bear it at all, even with
the pillow to support the instep.
I will just try and do a little Pranayama, to see if I can {96} stay doing any
one simple thing for ten minutes
at a stretch!
11.30. Twenty-five Breath-Cycles ... But it nearly killed me. I was saying over
the Ritual, and did so want
to get to the Formulation of the Hexagram at least, if not to the Reception. As
it was, I broke down during
the Passage of the Pylons, luckily not till I had reached that of Tahuti.
But it is a good rule; when in doubt play Pranayama. For one can no longer worry
about the Path: the
Question is reduced to the simple problem: Am, I, or am I not, going to burst?
I got all the sweating and trembling of the body that heart could desire; but no
"jumping about like a frog"
or levitation. A pity!
11.45. I shall read for a little in the Yoga-Shastra as a rest. Then for the end
of the day and the Beginning
of the Ninth Day. Zoroaster (or Pythagoras?) informs us that the number Nine is
sacred, and attains the
summit of Philosophy. I'm sure I hope so!
11.56. I get into Asana ... and so endeth the Eighth Lesson.
The Ninth Day
12.2. Thus I began this great day, being in my Asana firm and easy, and holding
in my breath for a full
minute while I threw my will with all my might towards Adonai.
12.19. Have settled myself for the night. Will continue a little, learning the
Ritual. {97}
12.37. Having learnt a few passages of a suitable nature to go to sleep upon, I
will do so.
... Now I hope that I shall; surely the Reaction of Nature against the Magical
Will must be wearing down
at last!
2.12. I wake. It takes me a little while to shake off the dominion of sleep,
very intense and bitter.
3.4. Thus John St. John --- for it is not convenient further to speak as "I" ---
performed 45 Breath-cycles;
for 20 minutes he had to struggle against the Root of the Powers of Sleep, and
the obstruction of his left
nostril.
During his Kambhakham he willed Adonai with all his might. Let him sleep,
invoking Adonai!
5.40. Well hath he slept, and well awakened.
The last entry should extend to 3.30 or thereabouts; probably later; for,
invoking Adonai, he again got the
beginnings of the Light, and the "telephone-cross" voices very strongly. But
this time he was fortunately
able to concentrate on Adonai with some fervour, and these things ceased to
trouble. But the Perfume and
the Vision came not, nor any full manifestation of the L.V.X., the Secret Light,
the light that shineth in
darkness.
John St. John is again very sleepy. He will try and concentrate on Adonai
without doing Pranayama ---
much harder of course. It is a supreme effort to keep both eyes open together.
{98}
He must do his best. He does not wish to wake too thoroughly, either, lest
afterward he oversleep himself,
and miss his appointment with Michael Brenner to continue moulding Siddhasana.
7.45. Again I awake. ... [O swine! thou hast felt in thyself "Good! Good! the
night is broken up nicely; all
goes very well" --- and thou hast written "I!" O swine, John St. John! When wilt
thou learn that the least
stirring of thy smug content is the great Fall from the Path?]
It will be best to get up and do some kind of work; for the beast would sleep.
8.25. John St. John has arisen, after doing 20 breath-cycles, reciting
internally the ritual, 70 per cent. of
which he now knows by heart.
8.35. To the Dme --- a caf-croissant. Some proofs to correct during the meal.
10.25. Having walked over to the studio reciting the Ritual (9.25-9.55
approximately), John St. John got
into his pose, and began going for the gloves. The Interior Trembling began, and
the room filled with the
Subtle Light. He was within an ace of Concentration; the Violet Lotus of Ajna
appeared, flashing like
some marvellous comet; the Dawn began to break, as he slew with the
Lightning-Flash every thought that
arose in him, especially this Vision of Ajna; but fear --- dread fear! ---
gripped his heart. Annihilation
stood before him, annihilation of John St. John that he had {99} so long striven
to obtain: yet he dared not.
He had the loaded pistol to his head; he could not pull the trigger. This must
have gone on for some time;
his agony of failure was awful; for he knew that he was failing; but though he
cried a thousand times unto
Adonai with the Voice of Death, he could not --- he could not. Again and again
he stood at the gate, and
could not enter. And the Violet Flames of Ajna triumphed over him.
Then Brenner said: "Let us take a little rest!" --- oh irony! --- and he came
down from his throne,
staggering with fatigue. ...
If you can conceive all his anger and despair! His pen, writing this, forms a
letter badly, and through
clenched teeth he utters a fierce curse.
Oh Lord Adonai, look with favour upon him!
11.30. After five minutes rest (to the body, that is), John St. John was too
exhausted on resuming his
pose, which, by the way, happens to be the Sign of the Grade 7ĝ = 4ĝ, to strive
consciously. But his
nature itself, forced through these days into the one channel of Will towards
Adonai, went on struggling on
its own account. Later, the conscious man took heart and strove, though not so
fiercely as before. He
passed through the Lightnings of Ajna, whose two petals now spread out like
wings above his head, and
the awful Corona of the Interior Sun with its flashing fires appeared, and
declared itself to be his Self. This
he rejected; and the Formless Ocean of {100} White Brilliance absorbed him,
overcame him; for he could
not pass therethrough. This went on repeating itself, the man transformed (as it
were) into a mighty
Battering Ram hurling itself again and again against the Walls of the City of
God to breach them. --- And
as yet he has failed. Failed. Failed. Physical and mental exhaustion are fairly
complete.
Adonai, look with favour upon Thy slave!
12.20. He has walked, reciting the Ritual, to Dr. R--- and H--- for lunch. They
have forgotten the
appointment, so he continues and reaches Lavenue's at 12.4 after reading his
letters and doing one or two
necessary things. He orders Epinards, Tarte aux Fraises, Glace au Caf, and 1/2
Evian. The distaste for
food is great; and for meat amounts to loathing. The weather is exceedingly hot;
it may be arranged thus
by Adonai to enable John St. John to meditate in comfort. For he is vowed
solemnly "to interpret every
phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with his soul."
12.50. During lunch he will go on correcting his proofs.
1.35. Lunch over, and the proofs read through.
1.45. He will make a few decorations further in his Ritual, and perhaps design
the Fontispiece and
Colophon. He is very weary, and may sleep.
2.25. He has done the illumination, as far as may be. He will now lie down as
Hanged Man, and invoke
Adonai. {101}
4.45. He was too tired to reach nearer than the neighbourhood of that tremendous
Threshold; wherefore
he fell from meditation into sleep, and there his Lord gave him sweet rest
thereof.
He will arise, and take a drink --- a citron press --- at the Dme; for the day
is yet exceeding hot, and he
has had little.
4.53. One ought to remark that all this sleep is full extravagant dreams; rarely
irrational and never (of
course) unpleasant, or one would be up and working with a circle every night.
But O.M. thinks that they
show an excited and unbalanced condition of John St. John's brain, though he is
almost too cowed to
express an opinion at all, even were the question, Is grass green?
Every small snatch of sleep, without exception, in the last three or four days,
has these images.
The ideal condition seems likely to be perfect oblivion --- or (in the Adept) is
the Tamo-Guna, the Power
of elemental Darkness, broken once and for ever, so that His sleep is vivid and
rational as another man's
waking; His waking another man's Samadhi; His Samadhi --- to which He ever
strives ---- ?????
At least this later view is suggested by the Rosicrucian formula of Reception:
May thy mind be open unto the Higher!
May thy heart be the Centre of Light!
May thy body be the Temple of the Rosy Cross!
and by the Hindu statement that in the attained Yogin {102} the Kundalini sleeps
in the Svadistthana, no
more in the Muladhara Cakkram.
See also the Rosicrucian lecture on the Microcosmos, where this view is
certainly upheld, the Qliphoth of
an Adept being balanced and trained to fill his Malkuth, vacated by the purified
Nephesch which has gone
up to live in Tiphereth.
Or so O.M. read it.
The other idea of the Light descending and filling each principle with its glory
is, it seems to him, less fertile,
and less in accord with any idea of Evolution.
(What would Judas McCabbage think?)
And one can so readily understand how tremendous a task is that of the
postulant, since he has to glorify
and initiate all his principles and train them to their new and superior tasks.
This surely explains better the
terrible dangers of the path. ...
Some years back, on the Red River in China, John St. John saw at every corner of
that swift and
dangerous stream a heap of wreckage.
... He, himself in danger, thought of his magical career.
Alcoholism, insanity, disease, faddism, death, knavery, prison --- every earthly
hell, reflection of some
spiritual blunder, had seized his companions. By dozens had that band been swept
away, dashed to pieces
on one rock or another. He, alone almost upon that angry stream, still held on,
his life each moment the
plaything of giant forces, so enormous as to be (once they were loose) quite out
of proportion to all human
wit or courage or address --- and he held on his course, humbly, {103} not
hopelessly, not fearfully, but
with an abiding certainty that he would endure unto the end.
And now?
In this great Magical Retirement he has struck many rocks, sprung many leaks;
the waters of the False Sea
foam over the bow, ride and carry the quarter --- is he perchance already
wrecked, his hopeless plight
concealed from him as yet by his own darkness?
For, dazzled as he is by the blinding brilliance of this morning's Spiritual
Sun, which yet he beheld but
darkly, to him now even the light of earth seems dark. Reason the rudder was
long since unshipped; the
power of his personality has broken down, yet under the tiny storm-sail of his
Will to Adonai, the crazy
bark holds way, steered by the oar of Discipline --- Yea, he holds his course.
Adonai! Adonai! is not the
harbour yet in sight?
6.7. He has returned home and burnt (as every night since its arrival) the holy
incense of Abramelin the
Mage.
The atmosphere is full of vitality, sweetened and strengthened; the soul
naturally and simply turns to the
holy task with vigour and confidence; the black demons of doubt and despair flee
away; one respires
already a foretaste of the Perfume, and obtains almost a premonition of the
Vision.
So, let the work go on.
6.23. 7 Breath-cycles, rather difficult. Clothes are a nuisance, and make all
the difference.
6.31. John St. John is more broken up by this morning's {104} failure than he
was ready to admit. But the
fact stands; he cannot concentrate his mind for three seconds together. How
utterly hopeless it makes one
feel! One thinks one is at least always good for a fair average performance ---
and one is undeceived.
This, by the way, is the supreme use of a record like this. It makes it
impossible to cheat oneself.
Well, he has got to get up more steam somehow, though the boiler bursts. Perhaps
early dinner, with
Ritual, may induce that Enthusiastic Energy of which the Gnostics write.
This morning the whole Sankhara-dhatu (the tendency of the being John St. John)
was operating aright.
Now by no effort of will can he flog his tired cattle along the trail.
So poor a thing is he that he will even seek an Oracle from the book of
Zoroaster.
Done. Zoroaster respectfully wishes to point out that "The most mystic of
discourses informs us --- his
wholeness is in the Supra-Mundane Order; for there a Solar World and Boundless
light subsist, as the
Oracles of the Chaldeans affirm."
Not very helpful, is it?
As if divination could ever help on such exalted planes! As if the trumpery
elementals that operate these
things possessed the Secrets of the Destiny of an Adept, or could help him in
his agony!
For this reason, divination should be discarded from the start: it is only a
"mere toy, the basis of mercenary
fraud" as Zoroaster more practically assures us. {105}
Yet one can get the right stuff out of the Tarot (or other inconvenient method)
by spiritualising away all the
meaning, until the intuition pierces that blank wall of ignorance.
Let O.M. meditate upon this Oracle on his way to feed John St. John's body ---
and thus feed his own!
6.52. Out, out, to feed!
6.57. Trimming his beard in preparation for going out, he reflects that the
deplorable tone (as one's Dean
would say) of the last entry is not the cry of the famished beast, but that of
the over-driven slave.
"Adonai, ply Thou thy scourge! Adonai, load Thou the chain!"
7.25. What the devil is the matter with the time? The hours flit just like
butterflies --- the moon, dead full,
shines down the Boulevard. My moon --- full moon of my desire! (Ha, ha, thou
beast! are "I and Me and
Mine" not dead yet?)
Yea, Lord Adonai! but the full moon means much to John St. John; he fears
("fears," O Lord of the
Western Pylon!) lest, of once that full moon pass, he may not win through. ...
"The harvest is over, the summer is ended, and we are not saved!" Yet hath not
Abramelin lashed the folly
of limiting the spiritual paths by the motions of the planets? And Zoroaster, in
that same oracle just
quoted?
7.35. Hors d'OEuvres, Bouillabaisse, contrefilet rti, Glace. 1/2 Graves. {106}
The truth is that the Chittam is excited and racing, the control being impaired;
and the Ego is springing up
again.
7.50. This racing of the Chittam is simply shocking. John St. John must stop it
somehow. Hours and hours
seem to have passed since the last entry.
7.57. !!! He is in such a deuce of a hurry that (in a lucid moment) he finds
himself trying to eat bread,
radish, beef and potato at a mouthful.
Worse, the beast is pleased and excited at the novelty of the sensation, and
takes delight in recording it.
Beast! Beast!
8.3. !!!! After myriads of aeons. He has drunk only about one third of his
half-bottle of light white wine;
yet he's like a hashish- drunkard, only more so. The loss of the time-sense
which occurs with hashish he
got during his experiments with that drug in 1906, but in an unimportant way.
(Damn him! he is so glad. He
calls this a Result. A result! Damn him!) O.M. who writes this is so angry with
him that he wants to scrawl
the page over with the most fearful curses! and John St. John has nearly thrown
a bottle at the waiter for
not bringing the next course. He will not be allowed to finish his wine! He
orders cold water.
8.12. Things a little better. But he tries 100 small muscular movements,
pressing on the table with his
fingers in tune, and finds the tendency to hurry almost irresistible. This
record is here written at lightning
speed. ... Attempt to write slowly is painful. {107}
8.20. The thought too, is wandering all over the world. Since the last entry,
very likely, the beast has not
thought even once of Adonai.
8.35. The Reading of the Ritual has done much service, though things are still
far from calm. Yet the
mighty flood of the Chittam is again rolling its tremendous tide toward the sea
--- the Sea of annihilation.
Amen.
9.0. Returning home, with his eyes fixed on the supreme glory of the Moon, in
his heart and brain invoking
Adonai, he hath now entered into his little chamber, and will prepare all things
for the due performance of
the New Ritual which he hath got by heart.
9.35. Nearly ready. In a state of very intense magical strain --- anything might
happen.
9.48. Washed, robed, temple in order. Will wait until 10 o'clock and begin upon
the stroke. O.M. 7ĝ =
4ĝ will begin; and then solemnly renounce all his robes, weapons, dignities,
etc., renouncing his grades
even by giving the Signs of them backwards and downwards toward the outer. He
will keep only one
thing, the Secret Ring that hath been committed unto him by the Masters; for
from that he cannot part,
even if he would. That is his Password into the Ritual itself; and on his finger
it shall be put at the moment
when all else is gone.
11.5. Ceremony works admirably. Magical Images strong. At Reception behold! the
Sigil of the Supreme
Order itself in a blaze of glory not to be spoken of. And the half-seen symbol
of my Lord Adonai
therewith as a mighty angel glittering with infinite light. {108} According the
the Ritual, O.M. withdrew
himself from the Vision; the Vision of the Universe, a whirling abyss of
coruscating suns in all the colours,
yet informed and dominated by that supernal brilliance. Yet O. M. refused the
Vision; and a conflict began
and was waged through many ages --- so it seemed. And now all the enemies of O.
M. banded
themselves against him. The petty affairs of the day; even the irritations of
his body, the emotions of him,
the plans of him, worry about the Record and the Ritual and --- O! everything!
--- then, too, the thoughts
which are closer yet to the great Enemy, the sense of separateness; that sense
itself at last --- so O. M.
withdrew from the conflict for a moment so that the duty of this Record done
might leave him free for the
fight.
It may have been a snare --- may the Lord Adonai keep him in the Path.
Adonai! Adonai!
(P.S. --- Add that the "ultra-violet" or "astral" light in the room was such
that it seemed bright as daylight.
He hath never seen the like, even in the ceremony which he performed in the
Great Pyramid of Gizeh.)
11.14- O. M. then passed from vision unto vision of unexampled
11.34. splendour. The infinite abyss of space, a rayless orb of liquid and
colourless brilliance fading
beyond the edges into a flame of white and gold. ... The Rosy Cross flashing
with lustre ineffable. ... and
more, much more which ten scribes could hardly catalogue in a century. {109}
The Vision of the Holy Guardian Angel itself; yet was He seen as from afar, not
intimately. ...
Therefore is O. M. not content with all this wonder; but will now orderly close
the temple, that at the
Beginning of the Tenth Day --- and Ten are the Holy Sephiroth, the Emanations of
the Crown; Blessed be
He! ... He may make new considerations of this Operation whereby he may discover
through what error
he is thus betrayed again and again into failure. Failure. Failure.
11.49. The Temple is closed.
Now the, O Lord Adonai! Let the Tenth Day be favourable unto O. M. For in the
struggle he is as nothing
worth. Nor valiant, nor fortunate, nor skilful --- except Thou fight by his
side, cover his breast with Thy
shield, second his blows with Thy spear and with Thy sword.
Aye! let the Ninth Day close in silence and in darkness, and let O.M. be found
watching and waiting and
willing Thy Presence. Adonai! Adonai! O Lord Adonai! Let Thy Light illumine the
Path of that darkling
wight John St. John, that being who, separate from Thee, is separate from all
Light, Life, Love.
Adonai! Adonai! let it be written of O. M. that "The Lord Adonai is about him
like a thunderbolt and like
a Pylon and like a Serpent and like a Phallus --- and in the midst thereof like
the Woman that jetteth the
Milk {110} of the Stars from Her paps; yea, the Milk of the Stars from Her
paps."
The Tenth Day
12.17. Now that the perfume of the incense is clearly away, one may most
potently perceive the Invoked
Perfume of the Ceremony Itself. And this mystical perfume of Adonai is like pure
Musk, but infinitely
subtilised --- far stronger, and at the same time far more delicate.
(P.S. --- Doubt has arisen about this perfume, as to whether there was not a
commonplace cause. On the
balance of the evidence, carefully considered, one would pronounce for the
mystic theory.)
One should add a curious omen. On sitting down for the great struggle (11.14)
John St. John found a nail
upon the floor, at his feet. Now a nail is Vau in Hebrew, and the Tarot Trump
corresponding to Vau is the
Hierophant or Initiator --- whereby is O. M. greatly comforted.
So poor a thing hath he become!
Even as a little child groping feebly for the breast of its mother, so gropeth
Thy little child after Thee, O
thou Self- Glittering One!
12.55. He hath read through Days VIII. and IX.
... He is too tired to understand what he reads. He will, despite of all, do a
little Pranayama, and then
sleep, ever willing Adonai.
For Pranayama with its intense physical strain is a great medicine for the mind.
Even as the long trail of the
desert and the life with the winds and the stars, {111} the daily march and its
strife with heat, thirst,
fatigue, cure all the ills of the soul, so does Pranayama clear away the
phantoms that Mayan, dread maker
of Illusion, hath cumbered it withal.
1.13. 10 Breath-Cycles; calm, perfect, without the least effort; enough to go to
sleep upon.
He will read through the Ritual once, and then sleep. (The Pranayama
precipitated a short attack of
diarrhoea, started by the chill of the Ceremony.)
6.23. He slept from 1.45 (approximately) till now. The morn is cold and damp;
rain has fallen.
John St. John is horribly tired; the "control" is worn to a thread. He takes
five minutes to make up his mind
to go through with it, five more to wash and write this up. And he has a million
excuses for not doing
Pranayama.
6.51. 15 Breath-cycles, steady and easy enough.
The brain is cool and lucid; but no energy is in it. At least no Sammav yamo.
And at present the
Superscription on John St. John's Cross is
FAILURE.
Marvellous and manifold as are his results, he hath renounced them and esteemeth
them as dross. ... This
is right, John St. John! yet how is it that there is place for the great
hunchbacked devil to whisper in thine
ear the doubt: Is there in truth any mystic path at all? Is it all
disappointment and illusion?
And the "Poor Thing" John St. John moves off {112} shivering and sad, like a sot
who has tried to get
credit at a tavern and is turned away --- and that on Christmas Eve!
There is no money in his purse, no steam in his boilers --- that's what's the
matter with John St. John. It is
clear enough, what happened yesterday. He failed at the four Pylons in turn; in
the morning Fear stopped
him at that of Horus and so on; while in the evening he either failed at the
Pylon of Thoth, "i.e.", was
obsessed by the necessity (alleged) of recording his results, or failed to
overcome the duality of Thoth.
Otherwise, even if he comprehended the base, he certainly failed at the apex of
the Pyramid.
In any case, he cannot blame the Ceremony, which is most potent; one or two
small details may need
correction, but no more.
Here then he is down at the bottom of the hill again, a Rosicrucian Sisyphus
with the Stone of the
Philosophers! An Ixion bound to the Wheel of Destiny and of the Samsara, unable
to reach the centre,
where is Rest.
He must add to the entry 1.13 that the "telephone-cross" voices came as he
composed himself to sleep, in
the Will to Adonai.
This time he detached a body of cavalry to chase them to oblivion. Perhaps an
unwise division of his
forces; yet he was so justly indignant at the eternal illusions that he may be
excused.
Excused! To whom? Thou must succeed or fail! O Batsman, with thy frail fortress
of Three-in-One, the
Umpire cries "Out"; and thou explainest to thy friends {113} in the pavilion.
But thy friends have heard
that story before, and thy explanation will not appear in the score. "Mr. J. St.
John, b. Maya," 0, they will
read in the local newspaper. There is no getting away from that!
Failure! Failure! Failure!
Now then let me (7.35) take the position of the Hanged Man and invoke Adonai.
9.0. Probably sleep returned shortly. Not a good night, through dreamless, so
far as memory serves.
The rain comes wearily down, not chasing the dryness, but soddening the streets.
The rain of autumn, not the rain of spring!
So is it in this soul, Lord Adonai. The thought of Thee is heavy and uneasy,
flabby and loose, like an old
fat woman stupid-drunk in her slum; which was as a young maiden in a field of
lilies, arrow-straight,
sun-strong, moon-pure, a form all litheness and eagerness, dancing, dancing for
her own excess of life.
Adonai! Adonai!
9.17. Rose, dressed, etc., reflecting on the Path. Blinder than ever!
The brain is in revolt; it has been compressed too long. Yet it is impossible to
rest. It is too late. The
Irresistible God, whose name is Destiny, has been invoked, and He hath answered.
The matter is in His
hands; He must end it, either with that mighty spiritual Experience which I have
sought, or else with black
madness, or with death. By the Body of God, swear thou that death would come ---
welcome, welcome,
welcome! {114} And to Thee, and from Thee, O thou great god Destiny, there is no
appeal. Thou turnest
not one hair's breadth from Thy path appointed.
That which "John St. John" "means" (else is it a blank name) is that which he
must be --- and what is that?
The issue is with Thee --- cannot one wait with fortitude, whether it be for the
King's Banqueting-House
or for the Headsman and the Block?
9.45. Breakfast --- croissant, sandwich, 2 coffees. Concentrating "off" the Work
as well as possible.
10.10. Arrived at Brenner's studio. The rest has produced one luminous idea: why
not end it all with
destruction? Say a great ritual of Geburah, curses, curses, curses! John St.
John ought not to have
forgotten how to curse. In his early days at Wastdale Head people would travel
miles to hear him!
Curse all the Gods and all the demons --- all those things in short which go to
make up John St. John. For
"that" --- as he now knows --- is the Name of the great Enemy, the Dweller upon
the Threshold. It was
that mighty spirit whose formless horror beat him back, for it was he!
So now to return to concentration and the Will toward Adonai.
10.20. One thing is well; the vow of "interpreting every phenomenon as a
particular dealing of God with
my soul" is keeping itself.
Whatever impression reaches the consciousness is turned by it into a symbol or a
simile of the Work.
{115}
11.18. The pose over; recited Ritual, now known by heart; then willed Adonai;
hopelessly
unconcentrated.
... To interpret this Record aright, it must, however, be understood that the
"Standard of Living" goes up at
an incredible rate. The same achievement would, say five days ago, have been
entered as "High degree of
concentration; unhoped-for success."
The phenomena which to-day one dismisses with annoyed contempt are the same
which John St. John
worked four years continuously to attain, and when attained seemed almost to
outstrip the possible of
glory. The flood of the Chittam is again being heaped up by the dam of
Discipline. There is less headache,
and more sense of being on the Path --- that is the only way one finds of
expressing it.
11.45. Worse and worse; though pose even better held.
In despair returned to a simple practice, the holding of the mind to a single
imagined object; in this case the
Triangle surmounted by the Cross. It seems quite easy to do nowadays; why
shouldn't it lead to the
Result? It used to be supposed to do so.
Might be worth trying anyway; things can hardly be worse than they are.
Or, one might go over to the Hammam, and have a long bath and sleep --- but who
can tell whether it
would refresh, or merely destroy the whole edifice built up so laboriously in
these ten days?
12.15. At Panthon. 1/2 dozen Marennes, Rognons Brochette, Lait chaud.
{116}
John St. John is aching all over, cannot get comfortable anyhow; is hungry, and
has no appetite; thirsty,
and loathes the thought of drinking!
He must do something --- something pretty drastic, or he will find himself in
serious trouble of body and
mind, the shadows of his soul, that is sick unto death. For "where are now their
gods?" Where is the Lord,
the Lord Adonai?
12.35. The beast feels decidedly better; but whether he is more concentrated one
may doubt. Honestly,
he is now so blind that he cannot tell!
Perhaps a "caf, cognac, et cigare" may tune him up to the point of either going
back to work, or across
Paris to the Hammam. He will make the experiment, reading through his proofs the
while.
One good thing; the Chittam is moving slowly. The waiters all hurry him --- what
a contrast to last night!
1.15. Proofs read through again. John St. John feels far from well.
2.15. A stroll down the Boul' Mich' and a visit to M---'s studio improve matters
a good deal.
3.30. The cure continued. No worry about the Work, but an effort to put it
altogether out of the mind.
A caf crme, forty minutes at the Academie Marcelle --- a gruelling bout
without gloves --- and J. St. J. is
at the Luxembourg to look at the pretty pictures.
3.40. The proof of the pudding, observes the most mystic of discourses
(surely!), is in the Eating. {117}
One might justly object to any Results of this Ten days' strain. But if abundant
health and new capacity to
do great work be the after-effect, who then will dare to cast a stone?
Not that it matters a turnip-top to the Adept himself. But others may be
deterred from entering the Path by
the foolish talk of the ignorant, and thus may flowers be lost that should go to
make the fadeless wreath of
Adonai. Ah, Lord, pluck "me" up utterly by the root, and set that which Thou
pluckest as a flower upon
thy brow!
4.10. Walked back to the Dme to drink a citron press through the lovely
gardens, sad with their fallen
leaves. Reflecting on what Dr. Henry Maudsley once wrote to him about mysticism
"Like other bad habits
(he might have said 'Like all living beings') it grows by what it fees on." Most
important, then, to use the
constant critical check on all one's work. The devotion to Adonai might itself
fall under suspicion, where it
not for the definition of Adonai.
Adonai is that thought which informs and strengthens and purifies, supreme
sanity in supreme genius.
Anything that is not that is not Adonai.
Hence the refusal of all other Results, however glorious; for they are all
relative, partial, impure. Anicca,
Dukkha, Anatta: Change, sorrow, Unsubstantiality; these are their
characteristics, however much they may
appear to be Atman, Sat, Chit, Ananda, Soul, Being, Knowledge, Bliss.
But the main consideration was one of expediency. {118} Has not John St. John
possibly been stuffing
himself both with Methods and Results?
Certainly this morning was more like the engorgement of the stomach with too
much food than like the
headache after a bout of drunkenness.
A less grave fault, by far; it is easy and absurd to get a kind of hysterical
ecstasy over religion, love, or
wine. A German will take off his hat and dance and jodel to the sunrise --- and
nothing comes of it!
Darwin studies Nature with more reverence and enthusiasm, but without antics ---
and out comes the Law
of Evolution. So it is written "By their fruits ye shall know them." But about
this question of spiritual
overfeeding --- what did Darwin do when he got to the stage (as he did, be sure!
many a time) when he
wished every pigeon in the world at the devil! Now this wish has never really
arisen in John St. John;
however bad he feels, he always feels that Attainment is the only possible way
out of it. This is the good
Karma of his ten years' constant striving.
Well, in the upshot, he will get back to Work at once, and hope that his few
hours in the world may prove
a true strategic movement to the rear, and not a euphemism for rout!
5.4. There are further serious considerations to be made concerning Adonai. This
title for the Unknown
Thought was adopted by O. M. in November, 19--, in Upper Burma, on the occasion
of his passing
through the ordeal and receiving the grade which should be really attributed to
Daath (on account of its
nature, the {119} Mastery of the Reason), though it is commonly called 7ĝ = 4ĝ.
It appeared to him at
that period that so much talk and time were wasted on discussing the nature of
the Attainment --- a
discussion foredoomed to failure, in the absence of all Knowledge, and in view
of the Self-Contradictory
Nature of the Reasoning Faculty, as applied to Metaphysics --- that it would be
wiser to drop the whole
question, and concentrate on a simple Magical Progress.
The Next Step for humanity in general was then "the Knowledge and Conversation
of the Holy Guardian
Angel."
One thing at a time.
But here he finds himself discussing and disputing with himself the nature of
that Knowledge.
Better far act as hitherto, and aspire simply and directly, as one person to
another, careless of the critical
objections (quite insuperable, of course) to this or any other conception.
For as this experience transcends reason, it is fruitless to argue about it.
Adonai, I invoke Thee!
Simpler, then, to go back to the Egoistic diction, only remembering always that
by "I" is meant John St.
John, or O. M., or Adonai according to the context.
5.30. Having read some of THE Books to induct myself again into the Work.
Therefore will I kindle the holy Incense, and turn myself again to the One
Thought. {120}
6.27. All this time in Hanged Man position, and thinking of everything else.
As bad as it was on the very first day!
7.10. More waste time aimlessly watching a poker game. Walked down to Caf de
Versailles. Dinner.
Hors d'OEuvre, Escargots, Cassoulet de Castelnaudry, Glace, 1/2 Evian. Am quite
washed-out. I have
not even the courage of despair. There is not enough left in me to despair.
I don't care.
7.35. One gleam of light illumines the dark path --- I can't enjoy my dinner.
The snails, as I prong them
forth, are such ugly, slimy, greasy black horrors --- oh! so like my soul! ...
Ugh!
I write a letter to F---r and sign myself with a broken pentagram.
It makes me think of a "busted flush." ...
But through all the sunlight peeps: "e.g.", These six snails were my six
inferior souls; the seventh, the real
soul, cannot be eaten by the devourer.
How's that for high?
8.3. Possibly a rousing mantra would fix things up; say the Old Favorite:
Aum Tat Sat Aum
and give the Hindus a chance.
We can but try.
So I begin at once.
9.10. This is past all bearing. Another hour wasted chatting to Nina and H---.
The mantra hardly
remembered {121} at all. I have gone to bed, and shall take things in hand
seriously, if it kills me.
9.53. Since 9.17 have done Pranayama, though allowing myself some irregularities
in the way of
occasional omission of a Kambhakham.
'Tis very hard to stick to it. I find myself, at the end of above sentence,
automatically crawling into bed.
No John!
10.14 Have been trying to extract some sense from that extraordinary treatise on
mysticism, "Konx Om
Pax."
Another failure, but an excusable one.
I will now beseech Adonai as best I may to give me back my lost powers.
For I am no more even a magician! So lost am I in the illusions that I have made
in the Search for Adonai,
that I am become the vilest of them all!
10.27. A strange and unpleasant experience. My thought suddenly transmuted
itself into a muscular cry, so
that my legs gave a violent jerk. This I expect is at bottom the explanation of
the Bhuchari-Siddhi. A very
bad form of uncontrolled thought. I was on the edge of sleep; it woke me.
The fact is, all is over! I am done! I have tried for the Great Initiation and I
have failed: I am swept away
into strange hells.
Lord Adonai! let the fires be informing; let them "balance, assain assoil."
I suppose this rash attempt will end in Locomotor Ataxia or G. P.
I. {122}
Let it! I'm going on.
11.47. The first power to return is the power to suffer.
The shame of it! The torture of it!
I slept in patches as a man sleeps that is deadly ill. I am only afraid of
failing to wake for the End of the
day.
God! what a day!
...I dare not trust my will to keep me awake; so I rise, wash, and will walk
about till time to get into my
Asana.
Thirst! Oh how I thirst!
I had not thought that there could be such suffering.
The Eleventh Day
12.19. It seems a poor thing to be proud of, merely to be awake. Yet I was
flushed with triumph as a boy
that wins his first race.
The powers of Asana and Pranayama return. I did 21 Breath-cycles without
fatigue.
Energy returns, and Keenness to pursue the Path --- all fruits of that one
little victory over sleep.
How delicate are these powers, so simple as they seem! Let me be very humble,
now and for every more!
Surely at least that lesson has been burnt into me.
And how gladly I would give all these powers for the One Power!
12.33. Another smart attack of diarrhoea. I take 4 gr. Plumb c. Opio and alter
my determination to stay
out of bed all night, as chill is doubtless the chief cause.
... It is really extraordinary how the smallest success {123} awakes a monstrous
horde of egoistic devils,
vain, strutting peacocks, preening and screaming!
This is simply damnable. Egoism is the spur of all energy, in a way; and in this
particular case it is the one
thing that is not Adonai (whatever else may be) and so the antithesis of the
Work. Bricks without straw,
Indeed! That's nothing to it. This job is like being asked to judge a Band
contest and being told that one
may do anything but listen. Only worse! One could form some idea of how they
were playing through
other senses; in this case " "every" faculty is the enemy of the Work. At first
sight the problem seems
insoluble. It may be so, for me. At least, I have not solved it. Yet I have come
very near it, many a time, of
old; have solved it indeed, though in a less important sense than now I seek. I
am not to be content with
little or with much; but only with the Ultimate Attainment.
Apparently the method is just this; to store up --- no matter how --- great
treasures of energy and purity,
until they begin to do the work themselves (in the way that the Hindus call
Sukshma). Just so the engineer
--- five feet six in his boots --- and his men build the dam. The snows melt on
the mountains, the river
rises, and the land is irrigated, in a way that is quite independent of the
physical strength of that Five foot
Six of engineer. The engineer might even be swept away and drowned by the forces
he had himself
organized. So also the Kingdom of Heaven. {124}
And now (12.57) John St. John will turn himself to sleep, invoking Adonai.
1.17. Can neither sleep nor concentrate.
Instead grotesque "astral" images of a quite base gargoylish type.
I suppose I shall have to pentagram them off like a damned neophyte. " "Je
m'emmerde!"
3.8. Praise the Lord, I wake! If that can be called waking which is a mere
desperate struggle to keep the
eyes open.
3.18. Pranayama all wrong --- very difficult. Rose, washed, drank a few drops of
water. (N.B. ---
To-night have drunk several times, a mouthful at a time; other nights, and days,
no. All entries into body
recorded duly.)
3.30. Have done 10 Breath-Cycles; am quite awake.
It will therefore now be lawful again to sleep.
8.12. Awoke at 7.40, read a letter which arrived, and tried quite vainly to
concentrate.
8.52. Have risen, written a letter. Will break my fast --- caf croissant ---
and go a walk with the New
Mantra, using my recently invented method of doing Pranayama on the march. The
weather is again
perfect.
9.14. Breakfast --- eaten Yogin-wise --- at an end. The walk begins.
11.15. The walk over. Kept mantra going well enough. {125}
Made also considerations concerning the Nature of the Path.
The upshot is that it does not matter. Acquire full power of Concentration; the
rest is only leather and
prunella.
Don't worry; work!
I shall now make a pantacle to aid the said faculty of concentration.
The Voice of the Nadi (by the way) is resounding well, and the Chittam is a
little better under control. 1.5.
Have worked well on the Pantacle, thinking of Adonai. Of course we are now
reduced to a "low
anthropomorphic conception" --- but what odds? Once the Right Thought comes it
will transcend any and
all conceptions. The objection is as silly as the objection to illustrating
Geometry by Diagrams, on the
ground that printed lines are thick --- and so on.
This is the imbecility of the "Protestant" objection to images.
What fools these mortals be!
The Greeks, too, after exhausting all their sublimest thoughts of Zeus and Hades
and Poseidon, found that
they could not find a fitting image of the All, the supreme --- so they just
carved a goat-man, saying: Let
this represent Pan!
Also in the holiest place of the most secret temple there is an empty shrine.
But whoso goes there in the first instance thinks; There is no God.
He who goes there at the End, when he has adored all the other deities, knoweth
that No God. {126}
So also I go through all the Ritual, and try all the Means; at the End it may be
I shall find No rituals and
No means, but an act or a silence so simple that it cannot be told or
understood.
Lord Adonai, bring me to the End!
1.25. After writing above, and adding a few touches to the Pantacle, am ready to
go to lunch.
1.45. Arrived at Panthon, with mantra.
Rumpsteak aux pommes souffles, poire, 1/2 Evian, and the three Cs.
Was meditating on asceticism. John Tweed once told me that Swami Vivekananda,
towards the end of his
life, wrote a most pathetic letter deploring that his sanctity forbad his "going
on the bust."
What a farce is such sanctity! How much wiser for the man to behave as a man,
the God as a God!
This is my real bed-rock objection to the Eastern systems. They decry all manly
virtue as dangerous and
wicked; and they look upon Nature as evil. True enough, everything is evil
relatively to Adonai; for all stain
is impurity. A bee's swarm is evil --- inside one's clothes. "Dirt is matter in
the wrong place." It is dirt to
connect sex with statuary, morals with art.
Only Adonai, who is in a sense the True Meaning of everything, cannot defile any
idea. This is a hard
saying, though true, for nothing of course is dirtier than to try and use Adonai
as a fig- leaf for one's shame.
To seduce women under pretence of religion is unutterable {127} foulness; though
both adultery and
religion are themselves clean.
To mix jam and mustard is a messy mistake.
2.5. It also struck me that this Operation is (among other things) an attempt to
prove the proposition:
Reward is the direct and immediate consequence of Work.
Of all the holy illuminated Men of God of my acquaintance, I am the only one
that holds this opinion.
But I think that this Record, when I have time to go through it, and stand at
some distance, to get the
perspective, will be proved a conclusive proof of my thesis. I think that every
failure will be certainly
traceable to my own dam foolishness; every little success to courage, skill,
wit, tenacity.
If I had but a little more of these!
2.22. I further take this opportunity of asserting my Atheism. I believe that
all these phenomena are as
explicable as the formation of hoar-frost or of glacier tables.
I believe "Attainment" to be a simple supreme sane state of the human brain. I
do not believe in miracles; I
do not think that God could cause a monkey, clergyman, or rationalist to attain.
I am taking all this trouble
of the Record principally in hope that it will show exactly what mental and
physical conditions precede,
accompany, and follow "attainment" so that others may reproduce, through those
conditions, that Result
{128} I believe in the Law of Cause and Effect --- and I loathe the cant alike
of the Superstitionist and the
Rationalist.
"The Confession of St. Judas McCabbage"
I believe in Charles Darwin Almighty, maker of Evolution; and in Ernst Haeckel,
his only son our Lord
Who for us men and for our salvation came down from Germany: who was conceived
of Weissmann,
born of Bchner, suffered under du Bois-Raymond, was printed, bound, and
shelved: who was raised
again into English (of sorts), ascended into the Pantheon of the Literary Guide
and sitteth on the right hand
of Edward Clodd: whence he shall come to judge the thick in the head.
I believe in Charles Watts; the Rationalist Press Association; the annual dinner
at the Trocadero
Restaurant; the regularity of subscriptions, the resurrection in a sixpenny
edition, and the Book-stall
everlasting.
AMEN.
3.0. Arrived at Brenner's studio, and went on with the "moulage" of my Asana.
4.20. Left the Studio; walk with mantra.
4.55. Mantra-march. Pranayama; quick-time. Very bracing and
fatiguing, both. At Dme to drink a citron press.
Reflections have been in my mind upon the grossness of the Theistic conception,
as shewn even in such
pictures as Raphael's and Fra Angelico's. {129}
How infinitely subtler and nobler is the contemplation of
The Utmost God
Hid i' th' middle o'matter,
the inscrutable mystery of the nature of common things. With what awe does the
wise man approach a
speck of dust!
And it is this Mystery that I approach!
For Thou, Adonai, art the immanent and essential Soul of Things; not separate
from them, or from me; but
That which is behind the shadow-show, the Cause of all, the Quintessence of all,
the Transcender of all.
And Thee I seek insistently; though Thou hide Thyself in the Heaven, there will
I seek Thee out; though
Thou wrap Thyself in the Flames of the Abyss, even there will I pursue Thee;
Though Thou make Thee a
secret place in the Heart of the Rose or at the Arms of the Cross that spanneth
all-embracing Space;
though Thou be in the inmost part of matter, or behind the Veil of mind; Thee
will I follow; Thee will I
overtake; Thee will I gather into my being.
So thus as I chase Thee from fastness to fastness of my brain, as Thou throwest
out against me Veil after
Magic Veil of glory, or of fear, or of despair, or of desire; it matters
nothing; at the End I shall attain to
Thee --- oh my Lord Adonai!
And even as the Capture is delight, is not the Chase also delight? For we are
lovers from the Beginning,
though it pleasure Thee to play the Syrinx to my Pan. {130} Is it not the
springtide, and are these not the
Arcadian groves?
5.31. At home; settling to strictest meditation upon Adonai my Lord; willing His
presence, the Perfume
and the Vision, even as it is written in the Book of the Sacred Magick of
Abramelin the Mage.
8.6. Soon this became a sleep, though the will was eager and concentrated.
The sleep, too, was deep and refreshing. I will go to dinner.
8.22. Arrived, with mantra, at the Caf de Versailles.
9.10. 1/2 doz. Marennes, Rable de Livre, citron press.
I am now able to concentrate OFF the Path for a little.
Whether this means that I am simply slipping back into the world, or that I am
more balanced on, and
master of, the Path, I cannot say.
10.4. Have walked home, drunk a citron press at the Dme, and prepare for the
night.
As I crossed the boulevard, I looked to the bright moon, high and stately in the
east, for a message. And
there came to me this passage from the Book of Abramelin:
"And thou wilt begin to inflame thyself in praying" ...
It is the sentence which goes on to declare the Result. (P.S. --- With this rose
that curious feeling of
confidence, sure premonition of success, that one gets in most physical tasks,
but especially when one is
going to get {131} down a long putt or a tricky one. Whether it means more than
that perception and
execution have got into unison (for once) and know it, I cannot say.)
It is well that thus should close this eleventh day of my Retirement, and the
thirty-third year of my life.
Thirty and three years was this temple in building. ... It has always been my
custom on this night to look
back over the year, and to ask: What have I done?
The answer is invariably "Nothing."
Yet of what men count deeds I have done no small share. I have travelled a bit,
written a bit ... I seem to
have been hard at it all the time --- and to have got nothing finished or
successful.
One Tragedy --- one little comedy --- two essays --- a dozen poems or so --- two
or three short stories
--- odds and ends of one sort and another: it's a miserable record, though the
Tragedy is good enough to
last a life. It marks an epoch in literature, though nobody else will guess it
for fifty years yet.
The travel, too, has been rubbish. It's been a petty, peddling year.
The one absolute indication is: on no account live otherwise than alone.
But it is 10.35; these considerations, though in a way pertaining to the Work,
are not the Work itself.
Let me "begin to inflame myself in praying!"
The Twelfth Day
12.17. When therefore I had made ready the chamber, so that all was dark, save
for the Lamp upon the
Altar, I {132} began as recorded above, to inflame myself in praying, calling
upon my Lord; and I burned
in the Lamp that Pantacle which I had made of Him, renouncing the Images,
destroying the Images, that
Himself might arise in me.
And the Chamber was filled with that wondrous glow of ultra- violet light
self-luminous, without a source,
that hath no counterpart in Nature unless it be in that Dawn of the North. ...
And there were reveled unto me certain Words of Power...
And I invoked my Lord and recited the Book Ararita at the Altar
...
This holy inspired book (delivered unto me in the winter of last year) was now
at last understanded of me;
for it is, though I knew it not, a complete scheme of this Operation.
For this cause I will add this book Ararita at the end of the Manuscript. [This
has not been permitted. The
Book Ararita will be issued by the A.'. A.'. in due course. --- ED.] I also
demanded of mine Angel the
Writing upon the Lamen of Silver; a Writing of the veritable Elixir and supernal
Dew. And it was granted
unto me.
Then subtly, easily, simply, imperceptibly gliding, I passed away into nothing.
And I was wrapped in the
black brilliance of my Lord, that interpenetrated me in every part, fusing its
light with my darkness, and
leaving there no darkness, but pure light.
Also I beheld my Lord in a figure and I felt the interior {133} trembling kindle
itself into a Kiss --- and I
perceived the true Sacraments --- and I beheld in one moment all the mystic
visions in one; and the Holy
Graal appeared unto me, and many other inexpressible things were know of me.
Also I was given to enjoy the subtle Presence of my Lord interiorly during the
whole of this twelfth day.
Then I besought the Lord that He would take me into His presence eternally even
now.
But He withdrew Himself, for that I must do that which I was sent hither to do;
namely, to rule the earth.
Therefore with sweetness ineffable He parted from me; yet leaving a comfort not
to be told, a Peace ... the
Peace. And the Light and the Perfume do certainly yet remain with me in the
little Chamber, and I know
that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the
earth.
For I am He that liveth, and was dead; and behold! I am alive for evermore, and
have the Keys of Hell
and of Death. I am Amoun the Sun in His rising; I have passed from darkness into
Light. I am Asar
Un-nefer the Perfected One. I am the Lord of Life, triumphant over death. ...
There is no part of me that is not of the Gods. ...
The dead man Ankh-af-na-khonsu
Saith with his voice of truth and calm:
Oh Thou that has a single arm!
O Thou that glitterest in the moon!
I weave Thee in the spinning charm;
I lure thee with the billowy tune. {134}
The dead man Ankh-af-na-khonsu
Hath parted from the darkling crowds,
Hath joined the dwellers of the light,
Opening Duant, the star-abodes;
Their keys receiving.
The dead man Ankh-af-na-khonsu
Hath made his passage into night,
His pleasure on the earth to do
Among the living.
Amen
Amen without lie
Amen, and Amen of Amen.
12.40. I shall lie down to sleep in my robes, still wearing the Ring of the
Masters, and bearing my wand in
my hand.
For to me now sleep is the same as waking, and life the same as death.
In Thy L.V.X. are not light and darkness but twin children that chase each other
in their play?
7.55. Awoke from long sweet dreamless sleep, like a young eagle that soars to
greet the dawn.
9.20. After breakfast, have strolled, on my way to the studio, through the
garden of the Luxembourg to
my favourite fountain. It is useless to attempt to write of the dew and the
flowers in the clear October
sunlight.
Yet the light which I behold is still more than sunlight. My eyes too are quite
weak from the Vision; I
cannot bear the brilliance of things.
The clock of the Senate strikes; and my ears are ravished with> its mysterious
melody. It is the infinite
interior movement of things, secured by the co-extension {135} of their sum with
the all, that transcends
the deadly opposites; change which implies decay, stability which spells
monotony.
I understand all the Psalms of Benediction; there is spontaneous praise, a
fountain in my heart. The authors
of the Psalms must have known something of this Illumination when they wrote
them.
9.30. It seems, too, that this Operation is transformed. I suppose it must read
as a patchwork of most
inharmonious colour, a thing without continuity or cohesion. To me, now, it
appears from the very start a
simple direct progress in one straight line. I can hardly remember that there
were checks.
Of course my rational memory picking out details finds otherwise. But I seem to
have two memories
almost as if belonging to two strata of being. In Qabalastic language, my native
consciousness is now
Neschamah, not Ruach or Nephesch.
... I really cannot write more. This writing is a descent into
Ruach, and I want to abide where I am.
11.17. At 10.0 arrived at Brenner's studio, and took the pose. At once,
automatically, the interior
trembling began again, and again the subtle brilliance flowed through me.
The consciousness again died and was reborn as the divine, always without shock
or stress.
How easy is magic, once the way is found!
How still is the soul! The turbid spate of emotion has ceased; the heavy
particles of thought have sunk
{136} to the bottom; how limpid, how lucid is its glimmer Only from above, from
the overshadowing Tree
of Life, whose leaves glisten and quiver in the shining wind of the Spirit,
drops ever and anon, self-
luminous, the Dew of Immortality.
Many and wonderful also were the Visions and powers offered unto me in this
hour; but I refused them all;
for being in my Lord and He in me, there is no need of these toys.
12.0. The pose over. On this second sitting, practically no thoughts arose at
all to cloud the Sun; but a
curious feeling that there was something more to come.
Possibly the Proof, that I had demanded, the Writing on the Lamen
...
12.40. Chez Lavenue. Certain practical considerations suggest themselves.
One would have been much better off with a proper Magical Cabinet, a disciple to
look after things,
proper magical food ceremonially prepared, a private garden to walk in ... and
so on. But at least it is
useful and important to know that things can be done at a pinch in a great city
and a small room.
1.14. The lunch is good; the kidneys were well cooked; the tarte aux fraises was
excellent; the Burgundy
came straight from the Vat of Bacchus. The Coffee and Cognac are beyond all
praise; the cigar is the best
Caba¤a I ever smoked. {137}
I read through this volume of the Record; and I dissolve my being into
quintessential laughter.
The entries are some of them so funny! ... Previously, this had escaped me.
1.32. And now the Rapture of it takes me!
1.25. The exquisite beauty of the women in the Restaurant ... what John St. John
would have called old
hags!
1.27. My soul is singing ... my soul is singing!
1.30. It matters nothing what I do ... everything goes infinitely, incredibly
right!
"The Lord Adonai is about me as a Thunderbolt and as a Pylon and as a Serpent
and as a Phallus." ...
3.17. Have had a long talk of Art with B---. "The master considers himself
always a student." So,
therefore, whatever one may have attained, in this as in Art, there is always so
much more possible that
one can never be satisfied.
Much less, then, satiated.
11.15. Having gone back into the life of the world --- yet a world transfigured!
-- I did all my little work,
my little amusements, all the things that one does, very quietly and
beatifically. About 10.30 the rapture
began to carry me away; yet I withstood it and went on with my game of
Billiards, for politeness' sake.
And even there in the Caf du Dme was the glory within me, and I therein; so
that every time that I failed
at a stroke and stood up and drank in that {138} ambrosial air, I was night
falling for that intense
sweetness that dissolved away the soul. Even as a lover that swoons with excess
of pleasure at the first
kiss of the belovd, even so was I, oh my Lord Adonai! Wherefore I am come
hither to my chamber to
enflame myself in praying at the Altar that I have set up. And I am ready,
robed, armed, anointed. ...
11.35. Ardesco! ....................
The Thirteenth Day.
It is Eight o'clock in the morning.
Being entered into the Silence, let me abide in the Silence!
AMEN
{139}