THE FORMULA OF THE HOLY
GRAAL:
OF ABRAHADABRA:
"and of certain other Words"
Also: THE MAGICAL MEMORY
I
The Hieroglyph shewn in the Seventh Key of the Tarot (described
in the 12th Aethyr, Liber 418, Equinox I, V) is the Charioteer of OUR LADY
BABALON, whose Cup or Graal he hears.
Now this is an important formula. It is the First
of the Formulae, in a sense, for it is the formula of Renunciation.<>
It is also the Last!
This Cup is said to be full of the Blood of the Saints;
that is, every "saint" or magician must give the last drop of his life's
blood to that cup. It is the original price paid for magick power.
And if by magick power we mean the true power, the assimilation of all
force with the Ultimate Light, the true Bridal of the Rosy Cross, then
is that blood the offering of Virginity, the sole sacrifice well-pleasing
to the Master, the sacrifice whose only reward is the pain of child-bearing
unto him.
But "to sell one's soul to the devil", to renounce no matter
what for an equivalent in personal gain<<"Supposed" personal gain.
There is really no person to gain; so the whole transaction is a swindle
on both sides.>>, is black magic. You are no longer a noble giver
of your all, but a mean huckster. {41}
This formula is, however, a little different in symbolism,
since it is a Woman whose Cup must be filled. It is rather the sacrifice
of the Man, who transfers life to his descendants. For a woman does
not carry in herself the principle of new life, except temporarily, when
it is given her.
But here the formula implies much more even than this.
For it is his whole life that the Magus offers to OUR LADY. The Cross
is both Death and Generation, and it is on the Cross that the Rose blooms.
The full significance of these symbols is so lofty that it is hardly fitted
for an elementary treatise of this type. One must be an Exempt Adept,
and have become ready to pass on, before one can see the symbols even from
the lower plane. Only a Master of the Temple can fully understand
them.
(However, the reader may study Liber CLVI, in Equinox
I, VI, the 12th and 2nd Aethyrs in Liber 418 in Equinox I, V, and the Symbolism
of the V Degree and VI Degree in O.T.O.)
Of the preservation of this blood which OUR LADY offers
to the ANCIENT ONE, CHAOS<> the All-Father, to revive him, and of how
his divine Essence fills the Daughter (the soul of Man) and places her
upon the Throne of the Mother, fulfilling the Economy of the Universe,
and thus ultimately rewarding the Magician (the Son) ten thousandfold,
it would be still more improper to speak in this place. So holy a
mystery is the Arcanum of the Masters of the Temple, that it is here hinted
at in order to blind the presumptuous who may, unworthy, seek to lift the
veil, and at the same time to lighten the darkness of such as may be requiring
only one ray of the Sun in order to spring into life and light.
II
ABRAHADABRA is a word to be studied in Equinox I, V., "The
Temple of Solomon the King". It represents the Great Work complete,
and it is therefore an archetype of all lesser magical operations.
It is in a way too perfect to be applied in {42} advance to any of them.
But an example of such an operation may be studied in Equinox I, VII, "The
Temple of Solomon the King", where an invocation of Horus on this formula
is given in full. Note the reverberation of the ideas one against
another. The formula of Horus has not yet been so fully worked out
in details as to justify a treatise upon its exoteric theory and practice;
but one may say that it is, to the formula of Osiris, what the turbine
is to the reciprocating engine.
III
There are many other sacred words which enshrine formulae
of great efficacity in particular operations.
For example, V.I.T.R.I.O.L. gives a certain Regimen of
the Planets useful in Alchemical work. Ararita is a formula of the
macrocosm potent in certain very lofty Operations of the Magick of the
Inmost Light. (See Liber 813.)
The formula of Thelema may be summarized thus: Theta "Babalon
and the Beast conjoined" --- epsilon unto Nuith (CCXX, I, 51) --- lambda
The Work accomplished in Justice --- eta The Holy Graal --- mu The Water
therein --- alpha The Babe in the Egg (Harpocrates on the Lotus.)
That of "Agape" is as follows:
Dionysus (Capital Alpha) --- The Virgin Earth gamma ---
The Babe in the Egg (small alpha --- the image of the Father) --- The Massacre
of the Innocents, pi (winepress) --- The Draught of Ecstasy, eta.
The student will find it well worth his while to seek
out these ideas in detail, and develop the technique of their application.
There is also the Gnostic Name of the Seven Vowels, which
gives a musical formula most puissant in evocations of the Soul of Nature.
There is moreover ABRAXAS; there is XNOUBIS; there is MEITHRAS; and indeed
it may briefly be stated that every true name of God gives the formula
of the invocation of that God.<> It would therefore be impossible,
even were it desirable, to analyse all such names. The general method
of doing so has been {43} given, and the magician must himself work out
his own formula for particular cases.
IV
It should also be remarked that every grade has its peculiar
magical formula. Thus, the formula of Abrahadabra concerns us, as
men, principally because each of us represents the pentagram or microcosm;
and our equilibration must therefore be with the hexagram or macrocosm.
In other words, 5 Degree = 6Square is the formula of the Solar operation;
but then 6 Degree = 5Square is the formula of the Martial operation, and
this reversal of the figures implies a very different Work. In the
former instance the problem was to dissolve the microcosm in the macrocosm;
but this other problem is to separate a particular force from the macrocosm,
just as a savage might hew out a flint axe from the deposits in a chalk
cliff. Similarly, an operation of Jupiter will be of the nature of
the equilibration of him with Venus. Its graphic formula will be
7 Degree = 4Square, and there will be a word in which the character of
this operation is described, just as Abrahadabra describes the Operation
of the Great Work.
It may be stated without unfairness, as a rough general
principle, that the farther from original equality are the two sides of
the equation, the more difficult is the operation to perform.
Thus, to take the case of the personal operation symbolized
by the grades, it is harder to become a Neophyte, 1 Degree = 10Square,
than to pass from that grade to Zelator, 2 Degree = 9Square.
Initiation is, therefore, progressively easier, in a certain
sense, after the first step is taken. But (especially after the passing
of Tiphareth) the distance between grade and grade increases as it were
by a geometrical progression with an enormously high factor, which itself
progresses.<> {44}
It is evidently impossible to give details of all these
formulae. Before beginning any operation soever the magician must
make a through Qabalistic study of it so as to work out its theory in symmetry
of perfection. Preparedness in Magick is as important as it is in
War.
V
It should be profitable to make a somewhat detailed study of the
strange-looking word AUMGN, for its analysis affords an excellent illustration
of the principles on which the Practicus may construct his own Sacred Words.
This word has been uttered by the MASTER THERION himself, as
a means of declaring his own personal work as the Beast, the Logos of the
Aeon. To understand it, we must make a preliminary consideration
of the word which it replaces and from which it was developed: the word
AUM.
The word AUM is the sacred Hindu mantra which was the
supreme hieroglyph of Truth, a compendium of the Sacred Knowledge.
Many volumes have been written with regard to it; but, for our present
purpose, it will be necessary only to explain how it came to serve for
the representation of the principal philosophical tenets of the Rishis.
{45}
Firstly, it represents the complete course of sound.
It is pronounced by forcing the breath from the back of the throat with
the mouth wide open, through the buccal cavity with the lips so shaped
as to modify the sound from A to O (or U), to the closed lips, when it
becomes M. Symbolically, this announces the course of Nature as proceeding
from free and formless creation through controlled and formed preservation
to the silence of destruction. The three sounds are harmonized into
one; and thus the word represents the Hindu Trinity of Brahma, Vishnu,
and Shiva; and the operations in the Universe of their triune energy.
It is thus the formula of a Manvantara, or period of manifested existence,
which alternates with a Pralaya, during which creation is latent.
Analysed Qabalistically, the word is found to possess
similar properties. A is the negative, and also the unity which concentrates
it into a positive form. A is the Holy Spirit who begets God in flesh
upon the Virgin, according to the formula familiar to students of "The
Golden Bough". A is also the "babe in the Egg" thus produced.
The quality of A is thus bisexual. It is the original being --- Zeus
Arrhenothelus, Bacchus Diphues, or Baphomet.
U or V is the manifested son himself. Its number
is 6. It refers therefore, to the dual nature of the Logos as divine
and human; the interlacing of the upright and averse triangles in the hexagram.
It is the first number of the Sun, whose last number<> is 666, "the
number of a man".
The letter M exhibits the termination of this process.
It is the Hanged Man of the Tarot; the formation of the individual from
the absolute is closed by his death.
We see accordingly how AUM is, on either system, the expression
of a dogma which implies catastrophe in nature. It is cognate with
the formula of the Slain God. The "resurrection" and "ascension"
are not implied in it. They are later inventions without basis in
necessity; they may be described indeed as Freudian phantasms conjured
up by the fear of facing reality. To {46} the Hindu, indeed, they
are still less respectable. in his view, existence is essentially
objectionable<>; and his principle concern is to invoke Shiva<> to
destroy the illusion whose thrall is the curse of the Manvantara.
The cardinal revelation of the Great Aeon of Horus is
that this formula AUM does not represent the facts of nature. The
point of view is based upon misapprehension of the character of existence.
It soon became obvious to The Master Therion that AUM was an inadequate
and misleading hieroglyph. It stated only part of the truth, and
it implied a fundamental falsehood. He consequently determined to
modify the word in such a manner as to fit it to represent the Arcana unveiled
by the Aeon of which He had attained to be the Logos.
The essential task was to emphasize the fact that nature is not
catastrophic, but proceeds by means of undulations. It might be suggested
that Manvantara and Pralaya are in reality complementary curves; but the
Hindu doctrine insists strongly on denying continuity to the successive
phases. It was nevertheless important to avoid disturbing the Trinitarian
arrangement of the word, as would be done by the addition of other letters.
It was equally desirable to make it clear that the letter M represents
an operation which does not actually occur in nature except as the withdrawal
of phenomena into the absolute; which process, even when so understood,
is not a true destruction, but, on the contrary, the emancipation of anything
from the modifications which it had mistaken for itself. It occurred
to him that the true nature of Silence was to permit the uninterrupted
vibration of the undulatory energy, free from the false conceptions attached
to it by the Ahamkara or Ego-making facility, whose assumption that conscious
individuality constitutes existence let it to consider its own apparently
catastrophic character as pertaining to the order of nature. {47}
The undulatory formula of putrefaction is represented
in the Qabalah by the letter N, which refers to Scorpio, whose triune nature
combines the Eagle, Snake and Scorpion. These hieroglyphs themselves
indicate the spiritual formulae of incarnation. He was also anxious
to use the letter G, another triune formula expressive of the aspects of
the moon, which further declares the nature of human existence in the following
manner. The moon is in itself a dark orb; but an appearance of light
is communicated to it by the sun; and it is exactly in this way that successive
incarnations create the appearance, just as the individual star, which
every man is, remains itself, irrespective of whether earth perceives it
or not.
Now it so happens that the root GN signifies both knowledge
and generation combined in a single idea, in an absolute form independent
of personality. The G is a silent letter, as in our word Gnosis;
and the sound GN is nasal, suggesting therefore the breath of life as opposed
to that of speech. Impelled by these considerations, the Master Therion
proposed to replace the M of AUM by a compound letter MGN, symbolizing
thereby the subtle transformation of the apparent silence and death which
terminates the manifested life of Vau by a continuous vibration of an impersonal
energy of the nature of generation and knowledge, the Virgin Moon and the
Serpent furthermore operating to include in the idea a commemoration of
the legend so grossly deformed in the Hebrew legend of the Garden of Eden,
and its even more malignantly debased falsification in that bitterly sectarian
broadside, the Apocalypse.
Sound work invariable vindicates itself by furnishing
confirmatory corollaries not contemplated by the Qabalist. In the
present instance, the Master Therion was delighted to remark that his compound
letter MGN, constructed on theoretical principles with the idea of incorporating
the new knowledge of the Aeon, had the value of 93 (M = 40, G = 3, N =
50). 93 is the number of the word of the Law --- Thelema --- Will,
and of Agape --- Love, which indicates the nature of Will. It is
furthermore the number of the Word which overcomes death, as members of
the degree of M M of the O.T.O. are well aware;<> and it is also that
of the complete formula of existence as expressed in the {48} True Word
of the Neophyte,<> where existence is taken to import that phase of
the whole which is the finite resolution of the Qabalistic Zero.
Finally, the total numeration of the Word AUMGN is 100,
which, as initiates of the Sanctuary of the Gnosis of the O.T.O.<> are
taught, expresses the unity under the form of complete manifestation by
the symbolism of pure number, being Kether by Aiq Bkr<>; also Malkuth
multiplied by itself<<10 to the 2 power = 100.>>, and thus
established in the phenomenal universe. But, moreover, this number
100 mysteriously indicates the Magical formula of the Universe as a reverberatory
engine for the extension of Nothingness through the device of equilibrated
opposites.<>
It is moreover the value of the letter Qoph, which means
"the back of the head", the cerebellum, where the creative or reproductive
force is primarily situated. Qoph in the Tarot is "the Moon", a card
suggesting illusion, yet shewing counterpartal forces operating in darkness,
and the Winged Beetle or Midnight Sun in his Bark travelling through the
Nadir. Its Yetziratic attribution is Pisces, symbolic of the positive
and negative currents of fluidic energy, the male Ichthus or "Pesce" and
the female Vesica, seeking respectively the anode and kathode. The
number 100 is therefore a synthetic glyph of the subtle energies employed
in creating the Illusion, or Reflection of Reality, which we call manifested
existence.
The above are the principal considerations in the matter
of AUMGN. They should suffice to illustrate to the student the methods
employed in the construction of the hieroglyphics of Magick, and to arm
him with a mantra of terrific power by virtue whereof he may apprehend
the Universe, and control in himself its Karmic consequences.
VI
THE MAGICAL MEMORY.
I
There is no more important task than the exploration of one's
previous incarnations<>. As Zoroaster says: "Explore the river
of the soul; whence and in what order thou has come." One cannot do one's
True Will intelligently unless one knows what it is. Liber Thisarb,
Equinox I, VII, give instructions for determining this by calculating the
resultant of the forces which have made one what one is. But this
practice is confined to one's present incarnation.
If one were to wake up in a boat on a strange river, it
would be rash to conclude that the direction of the one reach visible was
that of the whole stream. It would help very much if one remembered
the bearings of previous reaches traversed before one's nap. It would
further relieve one's anxiety when one became aware that a uniform and
constant force was the single determinant of all the findings of the stream:
gravitation. We could rejoice "that even the weariest river winds
somewhere safe to sea."
Liber Thisarb describes a method of obtaining the Magical Memory
by learning to remember backwards. But the careful {50} practice
of Dharana is perhaps more generally useful. As one prevents the
more accessible thoughts from arising, we strike deeper strata --- memories
of childhood reawaken. Still deeper lies a class of thoughts whose
origin puzzles us. Some of these apparently belong to former incarnations.
By cultivating these departments of one's mind we can develop them; we
become expert; we form an organized coherence of these originally disconnected
elements; the faculty grows with astonishing rapidity, once the knack of
the business is mastered.
It is much easier (for obvious reasons) to acquire the
Magical Memory when one has been sworn for many lives to reincarnate immediately.
The great obstacle is the phenomenon called Freudian forgetfulness; that
is to say, that, though an unpleasant event may be recorded faithfully
enough by the mechanism of the brain, we fail to recall it, or recall it
wrong, because it is painful. "The Psychopathology of Everyday Life"
analyses and illustrates this phenomenon in detail. Now, the King
of Terrors being Death, it is hard indeed to look it in the face.
Mankind has created a host of phantastic masks; people talk of "going to
heaven", "passing over", and so on; banners flaunted from pasteboard towers
of baseless theories. One instinctively flinches from remembering
one's last, as one does from imagining one's next, death.<> The
point of view of the initiate helps one immensely.
As soon as one has passed this Pons Asinorum, the practice becomes
much easier. It is much less trouble to reach the life before the
last; familiarity with death breeds contempt for it.
It is a very great assistance to the beginner if he happens
to have some intellectual grounds for identifying himself with some definite
person in the immediate past. A brief account of Aleister Crowley's
good fortune in this matter should be instructive. It will be seen
that the points of contact vary greatly in character.
1. The date of Eliphas Levi's death was about six months
previous to that of Aleister Crowley's birth. The reincarnating ego
is supposed to take possession of the foetus at about this stage of development.
{51}
2. Eliphas Levi had a striking personal resemblance to
Aleister Crowley's father. This of course merely suggests a certain
degree of suitability from a physical point of view.
3. Aleister Crowley wrote a play called "The Fatal Force"
at a time when he had not read any of Eliphas Levi's works. The motive
of this play is a Magical Operation of a very peculiar kind. The
formula which Aleister Crowley supposed to be his original idea is mentioned
by Levi. We have not been able to trace it anywhere else with such
exact correspondence in every detail.
4. Aleister Crowley found a certain quarter of Paris incomprehensibly
familiar and attractive to him. This was not the ordinary phenomenon
of the "deja vu", it was chiefly a sense of being at home again.
He discovered long after that Levi had lived in the neighbourhood for many
years.
5. There are many curious similarities between the events
of Eliphas Levi's life and that of Aleister Crowley. The intention
of the parents that their son should have a religious career; the inability
to make use of very remarkable talents in any regular way; the inexplicable
ostracism which afflicted him, and whose authors seemed somehow to be ashamed
of themselves; the events relative to marriage<>: all these offer surprisingly
close parallels.
6. The characters of the two men present subtle identities
in many points. Both seem to be constantly trying to reconcile insuperable
antagonisms. Both find it hard to destroy the delusion that men's
fixed beliefs and customs may be radically altered by a few friendly explanations.
Both show a curious fondness for out-the-way learning, preferring recondite
sources of knowledge they adopt eccentric appearances. Both inspire
what can only be called panic fear in absolute strangers, who can give
no reason whatever for a repulsion which sometimes almost amounts to {52}
temporary insanity. The ruling passion in each case is that of helping
humanity. Both show quixotic disregard of their personal prosperity,
and even comfort, yet both display love of luxury and splendour.
Both have the pride of Satan.
7. When Aleister Crowley became Frater Omicron-Upsilon
Mu-Eta and had to write his thesis for the grade of Adeptus Exemptus, he
had already collected his ideas when Levi's "Clef des Grands Mysteres"
fell into his hands. It was remarkable that he, having admired Levi
for many years, and even begun to suspect the identity, had not troubled
(although an extravagant buyer of books) to get this particular work.
He found, to his astonishment, that almost everything that he had himself
intended to say was there written. The result of this was that he
abandoned writing his original work, and instead translated the masterpiece
in question.
8. The style of the two men is strikingly similar in numerous
subtle and deep-seated ways. The general point of view is almost
identical. The quality of the irony is the same. Both take
a perverse pleasure in playing practical jokes on the reader. In
one point, above all, the identity is absolute --- there is no third name
in literature which can be put in the same class. The point is this:
In a single sentence is combined sublimity and enthusiasm with sneering
bitterness, scepticism, grossness and scorn. It is evidently the
supreme enjoyment to strike a chord composed of as many conflicting elements
as possible. The pleasure seems to be derived from gratifying the
sense of power, the power to compel every possible element of thought to
contribute to the spasm.
If the theory of reincarnation were generally accepted,
the above considerations would make out a strong case. FRATER PERDURABO
was quite convinced in one part of his mind of this identity, long before
he got any actual memories as such.
II
Unless one has a groundwork of this sort to start with,
one must get back to one's life as best one can by the methods above indicated.
{53} It may be of some assistance to give a few characteristics of genuine
Magical Memory; to mention a few sources of error, and to lay down critical
rules for the verification of one's results.
The first great danger arises from vanity. One should
always beware of "remembering" that one was Cleopatra or Shakespeare.
Again, superficial resemblances are usually misleading.
One of the great tests of the genuineness of any recollection
is that one remembers the really important things in one's life, not those
which mankind commonly classes as such. For instance, Aleister Crowley
does not remember any of the decisive events in the life of Eliphas Levi.
He recalls intimate trivialities of childhood. He has a vivid recollection
of certain spiritual crises; in particular, one which was fought out as
he paced up and down a lonely stretch of road in a flat and desolate district.
He remembers ridiculous incidents, such as often happen at suppers when
the conversation takes a turn such that its gaiety somehow strikes to the
soul, and one receives a supreme revelation which is yet perfectly inarticulate.
He has forgotten his marriage and its tragic results<>, although the
plagiarism which Fate has been shameless enough to perpetrate in this present
life, would naturally, one might think, reopen the wound.
There is a sense which assures us intuitively when we
are running on a scent breast high. There is an "oddness" about the
memory which is somehow annoying. It gives a feeling of shame and
guiltiness. There is a tendency to blush. One feels like a
schoolboy caught red-handed in the act of writing poetry. There is
the same sort of feeling as one has when one finds a faded photograph or
a lock of hair twenty years old among the rubbish in some forgotten cabinet.
This feeling is independent of the question whether the thing remembered
was in itself a source of pleasure or of pain. Can it be that we
resent the idea of our "previous condition of servitude"? We want
to forget the past, however good reason we may have to be proud of it.
It is well known that many men are embarrassed in the presence of a monkey.
{54}
When the "loss of face" does not occur, distrust the accuracy
of the item which you recall, The only reliable recollections which
present themselves with serenity are invariably connected with what men
call disasters. Instead of the feeling of being caught in the slips,
one has that of being missed at the wicket. One has the sly satisfaction
of having done an outrageously foolish thing and got off scot free.
When one sees life in perspective, it is an immense relief to discover
that things like bankruptcy, wedlock, and the gallows made no particular
difference. They were only accidents such as might happen to anybody;
they had no real bearing on the point at issue. One consequently
remembers having one's ears cropped as a lucky escape, while the causal
jest of a drunken skeinsmate in an all-night cafe stings one with the shame
of the parvenu to whom a polite stranger has unsuspectingly mentioned "Mine
Uncle".
The testimony of intuitions is, however, strictly subjective,
and shrieks for collateral security. It would be a great error to
ask too much. In consequence of the peculiar character of the recollections
which are under the microscope, anything in the shape of gross confirmation
almost presumes perjury. A pathologist would arouse suspicion if
he said that his bacilli had arranged themselves on the slide so as to
spell Staphylococcus. We distrust an arrangement of flowers which
tells us that "Life is worth living in Detroit, Michigan". Suppose
that Aleister Crowley remembers that he was Sir Edward Kelly. It
does not follow that he will be able to give us details of Cracow in the
time of James I of England. Material events are the words of an arbitrary
language; the symbols of a cipher previously agreed on. What happened
to Kelly in Cracow may have meant something to him, but there is no reason
to presume that it has any meaning for his successor.
There is an obvious line of criticism about any recollection.
It must not clash with ascertained facts. For example --- one cannot
have two lives which overlap, unless there is reason to suppose that the
earlier died spiritually before his body ceased to breathe. This
might happen in certain cases, such as insanity.
It is not conclusive against a previous incarnation that
the present should be inferior to the past. One's life may represent
the full possibilities of a certain partial Karma. One may have {55}
devoted one's incarnation to discharging the liabilities of one part of
one's previous character. For instance, one might devote a lifetime
to settling the bill run up by Napoleon for causing unnecessary suffering,
with the object of starting afresh, clear of debt, in a life devoted to
reaping the reward of the Corsican's invaluable services to the race.
The Master Therion, in fact, remembers several incarnations of almost uncompensated wretchedness, anguish and humiliation, voluntarily undertaken so that he might resume his work unhampered by spiritual creditors.
These are the stigmata. Memory is hall-marked by
its correspondence with the facts actually observed in the present.
This correspondence may be of two kinds. It is rare (and it is unimportant
for the reasons stated above) that one's memory should be confirmed by
what may be called, contemptuously, external evidence. It was indeed
a reliable contribution to psychology to remark that an evil and adulterous
generation sought for a sign.
(Even so, the permanent value of the observation is to
trace the genealogy of the Pharisee --- from Caiaphas to the modern Christian.)
Signs mislead, from "Painless Dentistry" upwards.
The fact that anything is intelligible proves that it is addressed to the
wrong quarter, because the very existence of language presupposes impotence
to communicate directly. When Walter Raleigh flung his cloak upon
the muddy road, he merely expressed, in a cipher contrived by a combination
of circumstances, his otherwise inexpressible wish to get on good terms
with Queen Elizabeth. The significance of his action was determined
by the concourse of circumstances. The reality can have no reason
for reproducing itself exclusively in that especial form. It can
have no reason for remembering that so extravagant a ritual happened to
be necessary to worship. Therefore, however well a man might remember
his incarnation as Julius Caesar, there is no necessity for his representing
his power to set all upon the hazard of a die by imagining the Rubicon.
Any spiritual state can be symbolized by an infinite variety of actions
in an infinite variety of circumstances. One should recollect only
those events which happen to {56} be immediately linked with one's peculiar
tendencies to imagine one thing rather than another.<>
Genuine recollections almost invariably explain oneself
to oneself. Suppose, for example, that you feel an instinctive aversion
to some particular kind of wine. Try as you will, you can find no
reason for your idiosyncrasy. Suppose, then, that when you explore
some previous incarnation, you remember that you died by a poison administered
in a wine of that character, your aversion is explained by the proverb,
"A burnt child dreads the fire." It may be objected that in such
a case your libido has created a phantasm of itself in the manner which
Freud has explained. The criticism is just, but its value is reduced
if it should happen that you were not aware of its existence until your
Magical Memory attracted your attention to it. In fact, the essence
of the test consists in this: that your memory notifies you of something
which is the logical conclusion of the premisses postulated by the past.
As an example, we may cite certain memories of the Master
Therion. He followed a train of thought which led him to remember
his life as a Roman named Marius de Aquila. It would be straining
probability to presume a connection between (alpha) this hieroglyphically
recorded mode of self-analysis and (beta) ordinary introspection conducted
on principles intelligible to himself. He remembers directly various
people and various events connected with this incarnation; and they are
in themselves to all appearance actual. There is no particular reason
why they, rather than any others, should have entered his sphere.
In the act of remembering them, they are absolute. He can find no
reason for correlating them with anything in the present. But a subsequent
examination of the record shows that the logical result of the Work of
Marius de Aquila did not occur to that romantic reprobate; in point of
fact, he died before anything could happen. Can we suppose that any
cause can be baulked of effect? The Universe is unanimous in rebuttal.
If then the exact effects which might be expected to result from these
causes are manifested in the career {57} of the Master Therion, it is assuredly
the easiest and most reasonable explanation to assume an identity between
the two men. Nobody is shocked to observe that the ambition of Napoleon
has diminished the average stature of Frenchmen. We know that somehow
or other every force must find its fulfilment; and those people who have
grasped the fact that external events are merely symptoms of external ideas,
cannot find any difficulty in attributing the correspondences of the one
to the identities of the other.
Far be it from any apologist for Magick to insist upon
the objective validity of these concatenations! It would be childish
to cling to the belief that Marius de Aquila actually existed; it matters
no more that it matters to the mathematician whether the use of the symbol
X to the 22 power involves the "reality" of 22 dimension of space.
The Master Therion does not care a scrap of yesterday's newspaper whether
he was Marius de Aquila, or whether there ever was such a person, or whether
the Universe itself is anything more than a nightmare created by his own
imprudence in the matter of rum and water. His memory of Marius de
Aquila, of the adventures of that person in Rome and the Black Forest,
matters nothing, either to him or to anybody else. What matters is
this: True or false, he has found a symbolic form which has enabled him
to govern himself to the best advantage. "Quantum nobis prodest hec
fabula Christi!" The "falsity" of Aesop's Fables does not diminish their
value to mankind.
The above reduction of the Magical Memory to a device for externalizing
one's interior wisdom need not be regarded as sceptical, save only in the
last resort. No scientific hypothesis can adduce stronger evidence
of its validity than the confirmation of its predictions by experimental
evidence. The objective can always be expressed in subjective symbols
if necessary. The controversy is ultimately unmeaning. However
we interpret the evidence, its relative truth depends in its internal coherence.
We may therefore say that any magical recollection is genuine if it gives
the explanation of our external or internal conditions. Anything
which throws light upon the Universe, anything which reveals us to ourselves,
should be welcome in this world of riddles.
As our record extends into the past, the evidence of its
truth is cumulative. Every incarnation that we remember must increase
{58} our comprehension of ourselves as we are. Each accession of
knowledge must indicate with unmistakable accuracy the solution of some
enigma which is propounded by the Sphynx of our own unknown birth-city,
Thebes. The complicated situation in which we find ourselves is composed
of elements; and no element of it came out of nothing. Newton's First
Law applies to every plane of thought. The theory of evolution is
omniform. There is a reason for one's predisposition to gout, or
the shape of one's ear, in the past. The symbolism may change; the
facts do not. In one form or another, everything that exists is derived
from some previous manifestation. Have it, if you will, that the
memories of other incarnations are dreams; but dreams are determined by
reality just as much as the events of the day. The truth is to be
apprehended by the correct translation of the symbolic language.
The last section of the Oath of the Master of the Temple is: "I swear to
interpret every phenomenon as a particular dealing of God with my soul."
The Magical Memory is (in the last analysis) one manner, and, as experience
testifies, one of the most important manners, of performing this vow.