OF THE LICENSE TO DEPART
After a ceremony has reached its climax, anti-climax must
inevitably follow. But if the ceremony has been successful this anti-climax
is merely formal. The Magician should rest permanently on the higher
plain to which he has aspired.<> The whole force of the operation
should be absorbed; but there is almost certain to be a residuum, since
no operation is perfect: and (even if it were so) there would be a number
of things, sympathetic to the operation, attracted to the Circle.
These must be duly dispersed, or they will degenerate and become evil.
It is always easy to do this where invocations are concerned; the mere
removal of the strain imposed by the will of the magician will restore
things to their normal aspects, in accordance with the great law of inertia.
In a badly-managed evocation, however, this does not always obtain; the
spirit may refuse to be controlled, and may refuse to depart --- even after
having sworn obedience. In such a case extreme danger may arise.
In the ordinary way, the Magician dismisses the spirit
with these words: "And now I say unto thee, depart in peace unto thine
habitations and abodes --- and may the blessing of the Highest be upon
thee in the name of (here mention the divine name suitable to the operation,
or a Name appropriate to redeem that spirit); and let there be peace between
thee and me; and be thou very ready to come, whensoever thou are invoked
and called!"<> {139}
Should he fail to disappear immediately, it is a sign
that there is something very wrong. The Magician should immediately
reconsecrate the Circle with the utmost care. He should then repeat
the dismissal; and if this does not suffice, he should then perform the
banishing ritual suitable to the nature of the spirit and, if necessary,
add conjurations to the same effect. In these circumstances, or if
anything else suspicious should occur, he should not be content with the
apparent disappearance of the spirit, who might easily make himself invisible
and lie in ambush to do the Magician a mischief when he stepped out of
the Circle --- or even months afterwards.
Any symbol which has once definitely entered your environment
with your own consent is extremely dangerous; unless under absolute control.
A man's friends are more capable of working him harm than are strangers;
and his greatest danger lies in his own habits.
Of course it is the very condition of progress to build
up ideas into the subconscious. The necessity of selection should
therefore be obvious.
True, there comes a time when all elements soever must
be thus assimilated. Samadhi is, by definition, that very process.
But, from the point of view of the young magician, there is a right way
--- strait and difficult --- of performing all this. One cannot too
frequently repeat that what is lawful and proper to one Path is alien to
another.
Immediately after the License to Depart, and the general closing
up of the work, it is necessary that the Magician should sit down and write
up his magical record. However much he may have been tired<> by
the ceremony, he ought to force himself to do this until it becomes a habit.
Verily, it is better to fail in the magical ceremony than to fail in writing
down an accurate record of it. One need not doubt the propriety of
this remark. Even if one is eaten alive by Malkah be-Tarshishim ve-Ruachoth
ha-Schehalim, it does not matter very much, for it is over so very quickly.
But the record of the transactions is {140} otherwise important.
Nobody cares about Duncan having been murdered by Macbeth. It is
only one of a number of similar murders. But Shakespeare's account
of the incident is a unique treasure of mankind. And, apart from
the question of the value to others, there is that of the value to the
magician himself. The record of the magician is his best asset.
It is as foolish to do Magick without method, as if it
were anything else. To do Magick without keeping a record is like
trying to run a business without book-keeping. There are a great
many people who quite misunderstand the nature of Magick. They have
an idea that it is something vague and unreal, instead of being, as it
is, a direct means of coming into contact with reality. It is these
people who pay themselves with phrases, who are always using long words
with no definite connotation, who plaster themselves with pompous titles
and decorations which mean nothing whatever. With such people we
have nothing to do. But to those who seek reality the Key of Magick
is offered, and they are hereby warned that the key to the treasure-house
is no good without the combination; and the combination is the magical
record.
From one point of view, magical progress actually consists
in deciphering one's own record.<> For this reason it is the most
important thing to do, on strictly magical grounds. But apart from
this, it is absolutely essential that the record should be clear, full
and concise, because it is only by such a record that your teacher can
judge how it is best to help you. Your magical teacher has something
else to do besides running around after you all the time, and the most
important of all his functions is that of auditor. Now, if you call
in an auditor to investigate a business, and when he asks for the books
you tell him that you have not thought it worth while to keep any, you
need not be surprised if he thinks you every kind of an ass.
It is --- at least, it was --- perfectly incredible to
THE MASTER THERION that people who exhibit ordinary common sense in {141}
the other affairs of life should lose it completely when they tackle Magick.
It goes far to justify the belief of the semi-educated that Magick is rather
a crazy affair after all. However, there are none of these half-baked
lunatics connected with the A.'. A.'., because the necessity for hard work,
for passing examinations at stated intervals, and for keeping an intelligible
account of what they are doing, frightens away the unintelligent, idle
and hysterical.
There are numerous models of magical and mystical records
to be found in the various numbers of the "Equinox", and the student will
have no difficulty in acquiring the necessary technique, if he be diligent
in practice.