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Book Four
by Aleister Crowley
BY: FRATER: PERDURABO:
AND: SOROR: VIRAKAM::
A NOTE
THIS book is intentionally "not" the work of Frater Perdurabo. Experience
shows that his writing is too concentrated, too abstruse, too occult, for ordinary
minds to apprehend. It is thought that this record of disjointed fragments of
his casual conversation may prove alike more intelligible and more convincing,
and at least provide a preliminary study which will enable the student to attack
his real work from a standpoint of some little general knowledge and understanding
of his ideas, and of the form in which he figures them.
Part II, "Magick," is more advanced in style than Part I; the student
is expected to know a little of the literature of the subject, and to be able
to take an intelligent view of it. This part is, however, really explanatory
of Part I, which is a crude outline sketch only.
If both parts are thoroughly studied and understood, the pupil will have obtained
a real grasp of all the fundamentals and essentials of both Magick and Mysticism.
I wrote this book down from Frater Perdurabo's dictation at the Villa Caldarazzo,
Posilippo, Naples, where I was studying under him, a villa actually prophesied
to us long before we reached Naples by that Brother of the A.'.A.'. who appeared
to me in Zurich. Any point which was obscure to me was cleared up in some new
discourse (the discourses have consequently been re-arranged). Before printing,
the whole work was read by several persons of rather less than average intelligence,
and any point not quite clear even to them has been elucidated.
May the whole Path now be plain to all!
Frater Perdurabo is the most honest of all the great religious teachers. Others
have said: "Believe me!" He says:""Don't" believe me!"
He does not ask for followers; would despise and refuse them. He wants an independent
and self-reliant body of students to follow out their own methods of research.
If he can save them time and trouble by giving a few useful "tips,"
his work will have been done to his own satisfaction.
Those who have wished men to believe in them were absurd. A persuasive tongue
or pen, or an efficient sword, with rack and stake, produced this "belief,"
which is contrary to, and destructive of, all real religious experience.
The whole life of Frater Perdurabo is now devoted to seeing that you obtain
this living experience of Truth for, by, and in yourselves!
SOROR VIRAKAM (Mary d'Este Sturges).
BOOK FOUR
BY FRATER
PERDURABO
AND SOROR
VIRAKAM
PART I
MEDITATION
THE WAY OF ATTAINMENT OF GENIUS OR GODHEAD CONSIDERED
AS A DEVELOPMENT OF THE HUMAN BRAIN
Issued by order of
the GREAT WHITE
BROTHERHOOD
known as the A.'.A.'.
"Witness our Seal,"
N.'.'
"Praemonstrator-General"
{Diagram: A.'.A.'. seal}
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
EXISTENCE, as we know it, is full of sorrow. To mention only one minor point:
every man is a condemned criminal, only he does not know the date of his execution.
This is unpleasant for every man. Consequently every man does everything possible
to postpone the date, and would sacrifice anything that he has if he could reverse
the sentence.
Practically all religions and all philosophies have started thus crudely, by
promising their adherents some such reward as immortality.
No religion has failed hitherto by not promising enough; the present breaking
up of all religions is due to the fact that people have asked to see the securities.
Men have even renounced the important material advantages which a well-organized
religion may confer upon a State, rather than acquiesce in fraud or falsehood,
or even in any system which, if not proved guilty, is at least unable to demonstrate
its innocence.
Being more or less bankrupt, the best thing that we can do is to attack the
problem afresh without preconceived ideas. Let us begin by doubting every statement.
Let us find a way of subjecting every statement to the test of experiment. Is
there any truth at all in the claims of various religions? Let us examine the
question.
Our original difficulty will be due to the enormous wealth of our material.
To enter into a critical examination of all systems would be an unending task;
the cloud of witnesses is too great. Now each religion is equally positive;
and each demands faith. This we refuse in the absence of positive proof. But
we may usefully inquire whether there is not any one thing upon which all religions
have agreed: for, if so, it seems possible that it may be worthy of really thorough
consideration.
It is certainly not to be found in dogma. Even so simple an idea as that of
a supreme and eternal being is denied by a third of the human race. Legends
of miracle are perhaps universal, but these, in the absence of demonstrative
proof, are repugnant to common sense.
But what of the origin of religions? How is it that unproved assertion has so
frequently compelled the assent of all classes of mankind? Is not this a miracle?
There is, however, one form of miracle which certainly happens, the influence
of the genius. There is no known analogy in Nature. One cannot even think of
a "super-dog" transforming the {7} world of dogs, whereas in the history
of mankind this happens with regularity and frequency. Now here are three "super-men,"
all at loggerheads. What is there in common between Christ, Buddha, and Mohammed?
Is there any one point upon which all three are in accord?
No point of doctrine, no point of ethics, no theory of a "hereafter"
do they share, and yet in the history of their lives we find one identity amid
many diversities.
Buddha was born a Prince, and died a beggar.
Mohammed was born a beggar, and died a Prince.
Christ remained obscure until many years after his death.
Elaborate lives of each have been written by devotees, and there is one thing
common to all three -- an omission. We hear nothing of Christ between the ages
of twelve and thirty. Mohammed disappeared into a cave. Buddha left his palace,
and went for a long while into the desert.
Each of them, perfectly silent up to the time of the disappearance, came back
and immediately began to preach a new law.
This is so curious that it leaves us to inquire whether the histories of other
great teachers contradict or confirm.
Moses led a quiet life until his slaying of the Egyptian. He then flees into
the land of Midian, and we hear nothing of what he did there, yet immediately
on his return he turns the whole place upside down. Later on, too, he absents
himself on Mount Sinai for a few days, and comes back with the Tables of the
Law in his hand.
St. Paul (again), after his adventure on the road to Damascus, goes into the
desert of Arabia for many years, and on his return overturns the Roman Empire.
Even in the legends of savages we find the same thing universal; somebody who
is nobody in particular goes away for a longer or shorter period, and comes
back as the "great medicine man"; but nobody ever knows exactly what
happened to him.
Making every possible deduction for fable and myth, we get this one coincidence.
A nobody goes away, and comes back a somebody. This is not to be explained in
any of the ordinary ways.
There is not the smallest ground for the contention that these were from the
start exceptional men. Mohammed would hardly have driven a camel until he was
thirty-five years old if he had possessed any talent or ambition. St. Paul had
much original talent; but he is the least of the five. Nor do they seem to have
possessed any of the usual materials of power, such as rank, fortune, or influence.
Moses was rather a big man in Egypt when he left; he came back as a mere stranger.
{8}
Christ had not been to China and married the Emperor's daughter.
Mohammed had not been acquiring wealth and drilling soldiers.
Buddha had not been consolidating any religious organizations.
St. Paul had not been intriguing with an ambitious general.
Each came back poor; each came back alone.
What was the nature of their power? What happened to them in their absence?
History will not help us to solve the problem, for history is silent.
We have only the accounts given by the men themselves.
It would be very remarkable should we find that these accounts agree.
Of the great teachers we have mentioned Christ is silent; the other four tell
us something; some more, some less.
Buddha goes into details too elaborate to enter upon in this place; but the
gist of it is that in one way or another he got hold of the secret force of
the World and mastered it.
Of St. Paul's experiences, we have nothing but a casual illusion to his having
been "caught up into Heaven, and seen and heard things of which it was
not lawful to speak."
Mohammed speaks crudely of his having been "visited by the Angel Gabriel,"
who communicated things from "God."
Moses says that he "beheld God."
Diverse as these statements are at first sight, all agree in announcing an experience
of the class which fifty years ago would have been called supernatural, to-day
may be called spiritual, and fifty years hence will have a proper name based
on an understanding of the phenomenon which occurred.
Theorists have not been at a loss to explain; but they differ.
The Mohammedan insists that God is, and did really send Gabriel with messages
for Mohammed: but all others contradict him. And from the nature of the case
proof is impossible.
The lack of proof has been so severely felt by Christianity (and in a much less
degree by Islam) that fresh miracles have been manufactured almost daily to
support the tottering structure. Modern thought, rejecting these miracles, has
adopted theories involving epilepsy and madness. As if organization could spring
from disorganization! Even if epilepsy were the cause of these great movements
which have caused civilization after civilization to arise from barbarism, it
would merely form an argument for cultivating epilepsy.
Of course great men will never conform with the standards of little men, and
he whose mission it is to overturn the world can hardly escape the title of
revolutionary. The fads of a period always furnish terms of abuse. The fad of
Caiaphas was Judaism, and the Pharisees told him that Christ "blasphemed."
Pilate was a loyal Roman; to him {9} they accused Christ of "sedition."
When the Pope had all power it was necessary to prove an enemy a "heretic."
Advancing to-day towards a medical oligarchy, we try to prove that our opponents
are "insane," and (in a Puritan country) to attack their "morals."
We should then avoid all rhetoric, and try to investigate with perfect freedom
from bias the phenomena which occurred to these great leaders of mankind.
There is no difficulty in our assuming that these men themselves did not understand
clearly what happened to them. The only one who explains his system thoroughly
is Buddha, and Buddha is the only one that is not dogmatic. We may also suppose
that the others thought it inadvisable to explain too clearly to their followers;
St. Paul evidently took this line.
Our best document will therefore be the system of Buddha;<<footnote: We
have the documents of Hinduism, and of two Chinese systems. But Hinduism has
no single founder. Lao Tze is one of our best examples of a man who went away
and had a mysterious experience; perhaps the best of all examples, as his system
is the best of all systems. We have full details of his method of training in
the "Kh"ang "K"ang "K"ing, and elsewhere. But
it is so little known that we shall omit consideration of it in this popular
account.>> but it is so complex that no immediate summary will serve;
and in the case of the others, if we have not the accounts of the Masters, we
have those of their immediate followers.
The methods advised by all these people have a startling resemblance to one
another. They recommend "virtue" (of various kinds), solitude, absence
of excitement, moderation in diet, and finally a practice which some call prayer
and some call meditation. (The former four may turn out on examination to be
merely conditions favourable to the last.)
On investigating what is meant by these two things, we find that they are only
one. For what is the state of either prayer or meditation? It is the restraining
of the mind to a single act, state, or thought. If we sit down quietly and investigate
the contents of our minds, we shall find that even at the best of times the
principal characteristics are wandering and distraction. Any one who has had
anything to do with children and untrained minds generally knows that fixity
of attention is never present, even when there is a large amount of intelligence
and good will.
If then we, with our well-trained minds, determine to control this wandering
thought, we shall find that we are fairly well able to keep the thoughts running
in a narrow channel, each thought linked to the last in a perfectly rational
manner; but if we attempt to stop this current we shall find that, so far from
succeeding, we shall merely bread down the banks of the channel. The mind will
overflow, and instead of a chain of thought we shall have a chaos of confused
images. {10}
This mental activity is so great, and seems so natural, that it is hard to understand
how any one first got the idea that it was a weakness and a nuisance. Perhaps
it was because in the more natural practice of "devotion," people
found that their thoughts interfered. In any case calm and self-control are
to be preferred to restlessness. Darwin in his study presents a marked contrast
with a monkey in a cage.
Generally speaking, the larger and stronger and more highly developed any animal
is, the less does it move about, and such movements as it does make are slow
and purposeful. Compare the ceaseless activity of bacteria with the reasoned
steadiness of the beaver; and except in the few animal communities which are
organized, such as bees, the greatest intelligence is shown by those of solitary
habits. This is so true of man that psychologists have been obliged to treat
of the mental state of crowds as if it were totally different in quality from
any state possible to an individual.
It is by freeing the mind from external influences, whether casual or emotional,
that it obtains power to see somewhat of the truth of things.
let us, however, continue our practice. Let us determine to be masters of our
minds. We shall then soon find what conditions are favourable.
There will be no need to persuade ourselves at great length that all external
influences are likely to be unfavourable. New faces, new scenes will disturb
us; even the new habits of life which we undertake for this very purpose of
controlling the mind will at first tend to upset it. Still, we must give up
our habit of eating too much, and follow the natural rule of only eating when
we are hungry, listening to the interior voice which tells us that we have had
enough.
The same rule applies to sleep. We have determined to control our minds, and
so our time for meditation must take precedence of other hours.
We must fix times for practice, and make our feasts movable. In order to test
our progress, for we shall find that (as in all physiological matters) meditation
cannot be gauged by the feelings, we shall have a note-book and pencil, and
we shall also have a watch. We shall then endeavour to count how often, during
the first quarter of an hour, the mind breaks away from the idea upon which
it is determined to concentrate. We shall practice this twice daily; and, as
we go, experience will teach us which conditions are favourable and which are
not. Before we have been doing this for very long we are almost certain to get
impatient, and we shall find that we have to practice many other things in order
to assist us in our work. New problems will constantly arise which must be faced,
and solved.
For instance, we shall most assuredly find that we fidget. We shall {11} discover
that no position is comfortable, though we never noticed it before in all our
lives!
This difficulty has been solved by a practice called "Asana," which
will be described later on.
Memories of the events of the day will bother us; we must arrange our day so
that it is absolutely uneventful. Our minds will recall to us our hopes and
fears, our loves and hates, our ambitions, our envies, and many other emotions.
All these must be cut off. We must have absolutely no interest in life but that
of quieting our minds.
This is the object of the usual monastic vow of poverty, chastity, and obedience.
If you have no property, you have no care, nothing to be anxious about; with
chastity no other person to be anxious about, and to distract your attention;
while if you are vowed to obedience the question of what you are to do no longer
frets: you simply obey.
There are a great many other obstacles which you will discover as you go on,
and it is proposed to deal with these in turn. But let us pass by for the moment
to the point where you are nearing success.
In your early struggles you may have found it difficult to conquer sleep; and
you may have wandered so far from the object of your meditations without noticing
it, that the meditation has really been broken; but much later on, when you
feel that you are "getting quite good," you will be shocked to find
a complete oblivion of yourself and your surroundings. You will say: "Good
heavens! I must have been to sleep!" or else "What on earth was I
meditating upon?" or even "What was I doing?" "Where am
I~" "Who am I?" or a mere wordless bewilderment may daze you.
This may alarm you, and your alarm will not be lessened when you come to full
consciousness, and reflect that you have actually forgotten who you are and
what your are doing!
This is only one of many adventures that may come to you; but it is one of the
most typical. By this time your hours of meditation will fill most of the day,
and you will probably be constantly having presentiments that something is about
to happen. You may also be terrified with the idea that your brain may be giving
way; but you will have learnt the real symptoms of mental fatigue, and you will
be careful to avoid them. They must be very carefully distinguished from idleness!
At certain times you will feel as if there were a contest between the will and
the mind; at other times you may feel as if they were in harmony; but there
is a third state, to be distinguished from the latter feeling. It is the certain
sign of near success, the view-halloo. This is when the mind runs naturally
towards the object chosen, not as if in obedience to the will of the owner of
the mind, but as if directed by nothing at all, or by something impersonal;
as if it were falling by its own weight, and not being pushed down. {12}
Almost always, the moment that one becomes conscious of this, it stops; and
the dreary old struggle between the cowboy will and the buckjumper mind begins
again.
Like every other physiological process, consciousness of it implies disorder
or disease.
In analysing the nature of this work of controlling the mind, the student will
appreciate without trouble the fact that two things are involved -- the person
seeing and the thing seen -- the person knowing and the thing known; and he
will come to regard this as the necessary condition of all consciousness. We
are too accustomed to assume to be facts things about which we have no real
right even to guess. We assume, for example, that the unconscious is the torpid;
and yet nothing is more certain than that bodily organs which are functioning
well do so in silence. The best sleep is dreamless. Even in the case of games
of skill our very best strokes are followed by the thought, "I don't know
how I did it;" and we cannot repeat those strokes at will. The moment we
begin to think consciously about a stroke we get "nervous," and are
lost.
In fact, there are three main classes of stroke; the bad stroke, which we associate,
and rightly, with wandering attention; the good stroke which we associate, and
rightly, with fixed attention; and the perfect stroke, which we do not understand,
but which is really caused by the habit of fixity of attention having become
independent of the will, and thus enabled to act freely of its own accord.
This is the same phenomenon referred to above as being a good sign.
Finally something happens whose nature may form the subject of a further discussion
later on. For the moment let it suffice to say that this consciousness of the
Ego and the non-Ego, the seer and the thing seen, the knower and the thing known,
is blotted out.
There is usually an intense light, an intense sound, and a feeling of such overwhelming
bliss that the resources of language have been exhausted again and again in
the attempt to describe it.
It is an absolute knock-out blow to the mind. It is so vivid and tremendous
that those who experience it are in the gravest danger of losing all sense of
proportion.
By its light all other events of life are as darkness. Owing to this, people
have utterly failed to analyse it or to estimate it. They are accurate enough
in saying that, compared with this, all human life is absolutely dross; but
they go further, and go wrong. They argue that "since this is that which
transcends the terrestrial, it must be celestial." One of the tendencies
in their minds has been the hope of a heaven such as their parents and teachers
have described, or such as {13} they have themselves pictured; and, without
the slightest grounds for saying so, they make the assumption "This is
That."
In the Bhagavadgita a vision of this class is naturally attributed to the apparation
of Vishnu, who was the local god of the period.
Anna Kingsford, who had dabbled in Hebrew mysticism, and was a feminist, got
an almost identical vision; but called the "divine" figure which she
saw alternately "Adonai" and "Maria."
Now this woman, though handicapped by a brain that was a mass of putrid pulp,
and a complete lack of social status, education, and moral character, did more
in the religious world than any other person had done for generations. She,
and she alone, made Theosophy possible, and without Theosophy the world-wide
interest in similar matters would never have been aroused. This interest is
to the Law of Thelema what the preaching of John the Baptist was to Christianity.
We are now in a position to say what happened to Mohammed. Somehow or another
his phenomenon happened in his mind. More ignorant than Anna Kingsford, though,
fortunately, more moral, he connected it with the story of the "Annunciation,"
which he had undoubtedly heard in his boyhood, and said "Gabriel appeared
to me." But in spite of his ignorance, his total misconception of the truth,
the power of the vision was such that he was enabled to persist through the
usual persecution, and founded a religion to which even to-day one man in every
eight belongs.
The history of Christianity shows precisely the same remarkable fact. Jesus
Christ was brought up on the fables of the "Old Testament," and so
was compelled to ascribe his experiences to "Jehovah," although his
gentle spirit could have had nothing in common with the monster who was always
commanding the rape of virgins and the murder of little children, and whose
rites were then, and still are, celebrated by human sacrifice.<<footnote:
The massacres of Jews in Eastern Europe which surprise the ignorant, are almost
invariably excited by the disappearance of "Christian" children, stolen,
as the parents suppose, for the purposes of "ritual murder."<<WEH
footnote: This unfortunate perpetuation of the "blood-libel" myth
was later recanted by Crowley. The blood-libel was visited upon early Christians
by the Romans and is visited today upon Thelemites by Christian Fundamentalists.>>>>
Similarly the visions of Joan of Arc were entirely Christian; but she, like
all the others we have mentioned, found somewhere the force to do great things.
Of course, it may be said that there is a fallacy in the argument; it may be
true that all these great people "saw God," but it does not follow
that every one who "sees God" will do great things.
This is true enough. In fact, the majority of people who claim to have "seen
God," and who no doubt did "see God" just as much as those whom
we have quoted, did nothing else.
But perhaps their silence is not a sign of their weakness, but of their strength.
Perhaps these "great" men are the failures of humanity; {14} perhaps
it would be better to say nothing; perhaps only an unbalanced mind would wish
to alter anything or believe in the possibility of altering anything; but there
are those who think existence even in heaven intolerable so long as there is
one single being who does not share that joy. There are some who may wish to
travel back from the very threshold of the bridal chamber to assist belated
guests.
Such at least was the attitude which Gotama Buddha adopted. Nor shall he be
alone.
Again it may be pointed out that the contemplative life is generally opposed
to the active life, and it must require an extremely careful balance to prevent
the one absorbing the other.
As it will be seen later, the "vision of God," or "Union with
God," or "Samadhi," or whatever we may agree to call it, has
many kinds and many degrees, although there is an impassable abyss between the
least of them and the greatest of all the phenomena of normal consciousness.
"To sum up," we assert a secret source of energy which explains the
phenomenon of Genius.<<footnote: We have dealt in this preliminary sketch
only with examples of religious genius. Other kinds are subject to the same
remarks, but the limits of our space forbid discussion of these.>> We
do not believe in any supernatural explanations, but insist that this source
may be reached by the following out of definite rules, the degree of success
depending upon the capacity of the seeker, and not upon the favour of any Divine
Being. We assert that the critical phenomenon which determines success is an
occurrence in the brain characterized essentially by the uniting of subject
and object. We propose to discuss this phenomenon, analyse its nature, determine
accurately the physical, mental and moral conditions which are favourable to
it, to ascertain its cause, and thus to produce it in ourselves, so that we
may adequately study its effects. {15}
CHAPTER I
ASANA
THE problem before us may be stated thus simply. A man wishes to control his
mind, to be able to think one chosen thought for as long as he will without
interruption.
As previously remarked, the first difficulty arises from the body, which keeps
on asserting its presence by causing its victim to itch, and in other ways to
be distracted. He wants to stretch, scratch, sneeze. This nuisance is so persistent
that the Hindus (in their scientific way) devised a special practice for quieting
it.
The word Asana means "posture; but, as with all words which have caused
debate, its exact meaning has altered, and it is used in several distinct senses
by various authors. The greatest authority on "Yoga"<<footnote:
Yoga is the general name for that form of meditation which aims at the uniting
of subject and object, for "yog" is the root from which are derived
the Latin word "Jugum" and the English word "Yoke.">>
is Patanjali. He says, "Asana is that which is firm and pleasant."
This may be taken as meaning the result of success in the practice. Again, Sankhya
says, "Posture is that which is steady and easy." And again, "any
posture which is steady and easy is an Asana; there is no other rule."
Any posture will do.
In a sense this is true, because any posture becomes uncomfortable sooner or
later. The steadiness and easiness mark a definite attainment, as will be explained
later on. Hindu books, such as the "Shiva Sanhita," give countless
postures; many, perhaps most of them, impossible for the average adult European.
Others insist that the head, neck, and spine should be kept vertical and straight,
for reasons connected with the subject of Prana, which will be dealt with in
its proper place. The positions illustrated in Liber E (Equinox I and VII) form
the best guide.<<footnote: Here are four:
1. Sit in a chair; head up, back straight, knees together, hands on knees, eyes
closed. ("The God.")
2. Kneel; buttocks resting on the heels, toes turned back, back and head straight,
hands on thighs. ("The Dragon.")
3. Stand; hold left ankle with right hand (and alternately practise right ankle
in left hand, etc.), free forefinger on lips. ("The Ibis.")
4. Sit; left heel pressing up anus, right foot poised on its toes, the heel
covering the phallus; arms stretched out over the knees: head and back straight.
("The Thunderbolt.")>>
The extreme of Asana is practised by those Yogis who remain in one position
without moving, except in the case of absolute necessity, {16} during their
whole lives. One should not criticise such persons without a thorough knowledge
of the subject. Such knowledge has not yet been published.
However, one may safely assert that since the great men previously mentioned
did not do this, it will not be necessary for their followers. Let us then choose
a suitable position, and consider what happens. There is a sort of happy medium
between rigidity and limpness; the muscles are not to be strained; and yet they
are not allowed to be altogether slack. It is difficult to find a good descriptive
word. "Braced" is perhaps the best. A sense of physical alertness
is desirable. Think of the tiger about to spring, or of the oarsman waiting
for the gun. After a little there will be cramp and fatigue. The student must
now set his teeth, and go through with it. The minor sensations of itching,
etc., will be found to pass away, if they are resolutely neglected, but the
cramp and fatigue may be expected to increase until the end of the practice.
One may begin with half an hour or an hour. The student must not mind if the
process of quitting the Asana involves several minutes of the acutest agony.<<WEH
footnote: It is important to distinguish between cramp and severe chronic muscle
spasm which can tear ligaments. Muscle spasm tends to result from pinching or
compressing nerves, and can lead to permanent injury. Also beware of constricted
circulation, which produces numbness more than it does pain. Wear loose clothing
and avoid pressing on hard objects.>>
It will require a good deal of determination to persist day after day, for in
most cases it will be found that the discomfort and pain, instead of diminishing,
tend to increase.
On the other hand, if the student pay no attention, fail to watch the body,
an opposite phenomenon may occur. He shifts to ease himself without knowing
that he has done so. To avoid this, choose a position which naturally is rather
cramped and awkward, and in which slight changes are not sufficient to bring
ease. Otherwise, for the first few days, the student may even imagine that he
has conquered the position. In fact, in all these practices their apparent simplicity
is such that the beginner is likely to wonder what all the fuss is about, perhaps
to think that he is specially gifted. Similarly a man who has never touched
a golf club will take his umbrella and carelessly hole a putt which would frighten
the best putter alive.
In a few days, however, in all cases, the discomforts will begin. As you go
on, they will begin earlier in the course of the hour's exercise. The disinclination
to practise at all may become almost unconquerable. One must warn the student
against imagining that some other position would be easier to master than the
one he has selected. Once you begin to change about you are lost.
Perhaps the reward is not so far distant: it will happen one day that the pain
is suddenly forgotten, the fact of the presence of the body is forgotten, and
one will realize that during the whole of one's previous life the body was always
on the borderland of consciousness, {17} and that consciousness a consciousness
of pain; and at this moment one will further realize with an indescribable feeling
of relief that not only is this position, which has been so painful, the very
ideal of physical comfort, but that all other conceivable positions of the body
are uncomfortable. This feeling represents success.
There will be no further difficulty in the practice. One will get into one's
Asana with almost the same feeling as that with which a tired man gets into
a hot bath; and while he is in that position, the body may be trusted to send
him no message that might disturb his mind.
Other results of this practice are described by Hindu authors, but they do not
concern us at present. Our first obstacle has been removed, and we can continue
with the others.
{18}
CHAPTER II
PRANAYAMA AND ITS PARALLEL IN SPEECH, MANTRAYOGA
THE connection between breath and mind will be fully discussed in speaking
of the Magick Sword, but it may be useful to premise a few details of a practical
character. You may consult various Hindu manuals, and the writing of "K"wang
Tze, for various notable theories as to method and result.
But in this sceptical system one had better content one's self with statements
which are not worth the trouble of doubting.
The ultimate idea of meditation being to still the mind, it may be considered
a useful preliminary to still consciousness of all the functions of the body.
This has been dealt with in the chapter on Asana. One may, however, mention
that some Yogis carry it to the point of trying to stop the beating of the heart.
Whether this be desirable or no it would be useless to the beginner, so he will
endeavour to make the breathing very slow and very regular. The rules for this
practice are given in Liber CCVI.
The best way to time the breathing, once some little skill has been acquired,
with a watch to bear witness, is by the use of a mantra. The mantra acts on
the thoughts very much as Pranayama does upon the breath. The thought is bound
down to a recurring cycle; any intruding thoughts are thrown off by the mantra,
just as pieces of putty would be from a fly-wheel; and the swifter the wheel
the more difficult would it be for anything to stick.
This is the proper way to practise a mantra. Utter it as loudly and slowly as
possible ten times, then not quite so loudly and a very little faster ten times
more. Continue this process until there is nothing but a rapid movement of the
lips; this movement should be continued with increased velocity and diminishing
intensity until the mental muttering completely absorbs the physical. The student
is by this time absolutely still, with the mantra racing in his brain; he should,
however, continue to speed it up until he reaches his limit, at which he should
continue for as long as possible, and then cease the practice by reversing the
process above described.
Any sentence may be used as a mantra, and possibly the Hindus are correct in
thinking that there is a particular sentence best suited to any particular man.
Some men might find the liquid mantras of the Quran slide too easily, so that
it would be possible to continue another train of thought without disturbing
the mantra; one is supposed while saying {19} the mantra to meditate upon its
meaning. This suggests that the student might construct for himself a mantra
which should represent the Universe in sound, as the pantacle<<footnote:
See Part II.>> should do in form. Occasionally a mantra may be "given,"
"i.e.," heard in some unexplained manner during a meditation. One
man, for example, used the words: "And strive to see in everything the
will of God;" to another, while engaged in killing thoughts, came the words
"and push it down," apparently referring to the action of the inhibitory
centres which he was using. By keeping on with this he got his "result."
The ideal mantra should be rhythmical, one might even say musical; but there
should be sufficient emphasis on some syllable to assist the faculty of attention.
The best mantras are of medium length, so far as the beginner is concerned.
If the mantra is too long, one is apt to forget it, unless one practises very
hard for a great length of time. On the other hand, mantras of a single syllable,
such as "Aum,"<<footnote: However, in saying a mantra containing
the word "Aum," one sometimes forgets the other words, and remains
concentrated, repeating the "Aum" at intervals; but this is the result
of a practice already begun, not the beginning of a practice.>> are rather
jerky; the rhythmical idea is lost. Here are a few useful mantras:
1. Aum.
2. Aum Tat Sat Aum. This mantra is purely spondaic.
II.
{illustration: line of music with: Aum Tat Sat Aum :under it}
3. Aum mani padme hum; two trochees between two caesuras.
III.
{illustration: line of music with: Aum Ma-ni Pad-me Hum :under it}
4. Aum shivaya vashi; three trochees. Note that "shi" means rest,
the absolute or male aspect of the Deity; "va" is energy, the manifested
or female side of the Deity. This Mantra therefore expresses the whole course
of the Universe, from Zero through the finite back to Zero.
IV.
{illustration: line of music with: Aum shi-va-ya Va-shi Aum shi-va-ya Vashi
:under it}
5. Allah. The syllables of this are accented equally, with a certain pause between
them; and are usually combined by fakirs with a rhythmical motion of the body
to and fro.
6. Hua allahu alazi lailaha illa Hua. {20}
Here are some longer ones:
7. The famous Gayatri.
Aum! tat savitur varenyam
Bhargo devasya dimahi
Dhiyo yo na pratyodayat.
Scan this as trochaic tetrameters.
8. Qol: Hua Allahu achad; Allahu Assamad; lam yalid walam yulad; walam yakun
lahu kufwan achad.
9. This mantra is the holiest of all that are or can be. It is from the Stele
of Revealing.<<footnote: See Equinox VII.>>
A ka dua
Tuf ur biu
Bi aa chefu
IX. Dudu ner af an nuteru.
{illustration: two lines of music with: A ka du - a Tuf ur bi - u Bi A'a che
-
- fu Du - du ner af an nu - te -ru :under them}
Such are enough for selection.<<footnote: Meanings of mantras:
1 Aum is the sound produced by breathing forcibly from the back of the throat
and gradually closing the mouth. The three sounds represent the creative, preservative,
and destructive principles. There are many more points about this, enough to
fill a volume.
2. O that Existent! O! -- An aspiration after realty, truth.
3. O the Jewel in the Lotus! Amen! -- Refers to Buddha and Harpocrates; but
also the symbolism of the Rosy Cross.
4. Gives the cycle of creation. Peace manifesting as Power, Power dissolving
in Peace.
5. God. It adds to 66, the sum of the first 11 numbers.
6. He is God, and there is no other God than He.
7. O! let us strictly meditate on the adorable light of that divine Savitri
(the interior Sun, etc.). May she enlighten our minds!
8. Say:
He is God alone!
God the Eternal!
He begets not and is not begotten!
Nor is there like unto Him any one!
9. Unity uttermost showed!
I adore the might of Thy breath,
Supreme and terrible God,
Who makest the Gods and Death
To tremble before Thee: --
I, I adore Thee!>>
There are many other mantras. Sri Sabapaty Swami gives a particular one for
each of the Cakkras. But let the student select one mantra and master it thoroughly.
{21}
You have not even begun to master a mantra until it continues unbroken through
sleep. This is much easier than it sounds.
Some schools advocate practising a mantra with the aid of instrumental music
and dancing. Certainly very remarkable effects are obtained in the way of "magic"
powers; whether great spiritual results are equally common is a doubtful point.
Persons wishing to study them may remember that the Sahara desert is within
three days of London; and no doubt the Sidi Aissawa would be glad to accept
pupils. This discussion of the parallel science of mantra-yoga has led us far
indeed from the subject of Pranayama.
Pranayama is notably useful in quieting the emotions and appetites; and, whether
by reason of the mechanical pressure which it asserts, or by the thorough combustion
which it assures in the lungs, it seems to be admirable from the standpoint
of health. Digestive troubles in particular are very easy to remove in this
way. It purifies both the body and the lower functions of the mind,<<footnote:
Emphatically. Emphatically. Emphatically. It is impossible to combine Pranayama
properly performed with emotional thought. It should be resorted to immediately,
at all times during life, when calm is threatened.
On the whole, the ambulatory practices are more generally useful to the health
than the sedentary; for in this way walking and fresh air are assured. But some
of the sedentary practice should be done, and combined with meditation. Of course
when actually "racing" to get results, walking is a distraction.>>
and should be practised certainly never less than one hour daily by the serious
student.
Four hours is a better period, a golden mean; sixteen hours is too much for
most people.
{22}
CHAPTER III
YAMA<<footnote: Yama means literally "control." It is dealt
with in detail in Part II, "The Wand.">> AND NIYAMA
THE Hindus have place these two attainments in the forefront of their programme.
They are the "moral qualities" and "good works" which are
supposed to predispose to mental calm.
"Yama" consists of non-killing, truthfulness, non-stealing, continence,
and non-receiving of any gift.
In the Buddhist system, "Sila", "Virtue," is similarly enjoined.
The qualities are, for the layman, these five: Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt
not steal. Thou shalt not lie. Thou shalt not commit adultery. Thou shalt drink
no intoxicating drink. For the monk many others are added.
The commandments of Moses are familiar to all; they are rather similar; and
so are those given by Christ<<footnote: Not, however, original. The whole
sermon is to be found in the Talmud.>> in the "Sermon on the Mount."
Some of these are only the "virtues" of a slave, invented by his master
to keep him in order. The real point of the Hindu "Yama" is that breaking
any of these would tend to excite the mind.
Subsequent theologians have tried to improve upon the teachings of the Masters,
have given a sort of mystical importance to these virtues; they have insisted
upon them for their own sake, and turned them into puritanism and formalism.
Thus "non-killing," which originally meant "do not excite yourself
by stalking tigers," has been interpreted to mean that it is a crime to
drink water that has not been strained, lest you should kill the animalcula.
But this constant worry, this fear of killing anything by mischance is, on the
whole, worse than a hand-to-hand conflict with a griesly bear. If the barking
of a dog disturbs your meditation, it is simplest to shoot the dog, and think
no more about it.
A similar difficulty with wives has caused some masters to recommend celibacy.
In all these questions common sense must be the guide. No fixed rule can be
laid down. The "non-receiving of gifts," for instance, is rather important
for a Hindu, who would be thoroughly upset for weeks if any one gave him a coconut:
but the average European takes things as they come by the time that he has been
put into long trousers. {23}
The only difficult question is that of continence, which is complicated by many
considerations, such as that of energy; but everybody's mind is hopelessly muddled
on this subject, which some people confuse with erotology, and others with sociology.
There will be no clear thinking on this matter until it is understood as being
solely a branch of athletics.
We may then dismiss Yama and Niyama with this advice: let the student decide
for himself what form of life, what moral code, will least tend to excite his
mind; but once he has formulated it, let him stick to it, avoiding opportunism;
and let him be very careful to take no credit for what he does or refrains from
doing -- it is a purely practical code, of no value in itself.
The cleanliness which assists the surgeon in his work would prevent the engineer
from doing his at all.
(Ethical questions are adequately dealt with in "Then Tao" in "Konx
Om Pax," and should be there studied. Also see Liber XXX of the A. A. Also
in Liber CCXX, the "Book of the Law," it is said: "DO WHAT THOU
WILT shall be the whole of the Law."<<WEH FOOTNOTE: SIC, should be:
"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.">> Remember
that for the purpose of this treatise the whole object of Yama and Niyama is
to live so that no emotion or passion disturbs the mind.)
{24}
CHAPTER IV
PRATYAHARA
PRATYAHARA is the first process in the mental part of our task. The previous
practices, Asana, Pranayama, Yama, and Niyama, are all acts of the body, while
mantra is connected with speech: Pratyahara is purely mental.
And what is Pratyahara? This word is used by different authors in different
senses. The same word is employed to designate both the practice and the result.
It means for our present purpose a process rather strategical than practical;
it is introspection, a sort of general examination of the contents of the mind
which we wish to control: Asana having been mastered, all immediate exciting
causes have been removed, and we are free to think what we are thinking about.
A very similar experience to that of Asana is in store for us. At first we shall
very likely flatter ourselves that our minds are pretty calm; this is a defect
of observation. Just as the European standing for the first time on the edge
of the desert will see nothing there, while his Arab can tell him the family
history of each of the fifty persons in view, because he has learnt how to look,
so with practice the thoughts will become more numerous and more insistent.
As soon as the body was accurately observed it was found to be terribly restless
and painful; now that we observe the mind it is seen to be more restless and
painful still. ("See diagram opposite.")
A similar curve might be plotted for the real and apparent painfulness of Asana.
Conscious of this fact, we begin to try to control it: "Not quite so many
thoughts, please!" "Don't think quite so fast, please!" "No
more of that kind of thought, please!" It is only then that we discover
that what we thought was a school of playful porpoises is really the convolutions
of the sea-serpent. The attempt to repress has the effect of exciting.
When the unsuspecting pupil first approaches his holy but wily Guru, and demands
magical powers, that Wise One replies that he will confer them, points out with
much caution and secrecy some particular spot on the pupil's body which has
never previously attracted his attention, and says: "In order to obtain
this magical power which you seek, all that is necessary is to wash seven times
in the Ganges during seven days, being particularly careful to avoid thinking
of that one spot." Of {25}
{diagram on page 26, nothing else, graph with following text beneath:
BD shows the Control of the Mind, improving slowly at first, afterwards more
quickly. It starts from at or near zero, and should reach absolute control at
D.
EF shows the Power of Observation of the contents of the mind, improving quickly
at first, afterwards more slowly, up to perfection at F. It starts well above
zero in the case of most educated men.
The height of the perpendiculars HI indicates the dissatisfaction of the student
with his power of control. Increasing at first, it ultimately diminishes to
zero.}
course the unhappy youth spends a disgusted week in thinking of little else.
It is positively amazing with what persistence a thought, even a whole train
of thoughts, returns again and again to the charge. It becomes a positive nightmare.
It is intensely annoying, too, to find that one does not become conscious that
one has got on to the forbidden subject until one has gone right through with
it. However, one continues day after day investigating thoughts and trying to
check them; and sooner or later one proceeds to the next stage, Dharana, the
attempt to restrain the mind to a single object.
Before we go on to this, however, we must consider what is meant by success
in Pratyahara. This is a very extensive subject, and different authors take
widely divergent views. One writer means an analysis so acute that every thought
is resolved into a number of elements (see "The Psychology of Hashish,"
Section V, in Equinox II).
Others take the view that success in the practice is something like the experience
which Sir Humphrey Davy had as a result of taking nitrous oxide, in which he
exclaimed: "The universe is composed exclusively of ideas."
Others say that it gives Hamlet's feeling: "There's nothing good or bad
but thinking makes it so," interpreted as literally as was done by Mrs.
Eddy.
However, the main point is to acquire some sort of inhibitory power over the
thoughts. Fortunately there is an unfailing method of acquiring this power.
It is given in Liber III. If Sections 1 and 2 are practised (if necessary with
the assistance of another person to aid your vigilance) you will soon be able
to master the final section.
In some people this inhibitory power may flower suddenly in very much the same
way as occurred with Asana. Quite without any relaxation of vigilance, the mind
will suddenly be stilled. There will be a marvellous feeling of peace and rest,
quite different from the lethargic feeling which is produced by over-eating.
It is difficult to say whether so definite a result would come to all, or even
to most people. The matter is one of no very great importance. If you have acquired
the power of checking the rise of thought you may proceed to the next stage.
{27}
CHAPTER V
DHARANA
NOW that we have learnt to observe the mind, so that we know how it works to
some extent, and have begun to understand the elements of control, we may try
the result of gathering together all the powers of the mind, and attempting
to focus them on a single point.
We know that it is fairly easy for the ordinary educated mind to think without
much distraction on a subject in which it is much interested. We have the popular
phrase, "revolving a thing in the mind"; and as long as the subject
is sufficiently complex, as long as thoughts pass freely, there is no great
difficulty. So long as a gyroscope is in motion, it remains motionless relatively
to its support, and even resists attempts to distract it; when it stops it falls
from that position. If the earth ceased to spin round the sun, it would at once
fall into the sun.
The moment then that the student takes a simple subject -- or rather a simple
object -- and imagines it or visualizes it, he will find that it is not so much
his creature as he supposed. Other thoughts will invade the mind, so that the
object is altogether forgotten, perhaps for whole minutes at a time; and at
other times the object itself will begin to play all sorts of tricks.
Suppose you have chosen a white cross. It will move its bar up and down, elongate
the bar, turn the bar oblique, get its arms unequal, turn upside down, grow
branches, get a crack around it or a figure upon it, change its shape altogether
like an Amoeba, change its size and distance as a whole, change the degree of
its illumination, and at the same time change its colour. It will get splotchy
and blotchy, grow patterns, rise, fall, twist and turn; clouds will pass over
its face. There is no conceivable change of which it is incapable. Not to mention
its total disappearance, and replacement by something altogether different!
Any one to whom this experience does not occur need not imagine that he is meditating.
It shows merely that he is incapable of concentrating his mind in the very smallest
degree. Perhaps a student may go for several days before discovering that he
is not meditating. When he does, the obstinacy of the object will infuriate
him; and it is only now that his real troubles will begin, only now that Will
comes really into play, only now that his manhood is tested. If it were not
for the Will-development which he got in the conquest of Asana, he would probably
give up. As it is, the mere physical agony which he underwent is the veriest
trifle compared with the horrible tedium of Dharana. {28}
For the first week it may seem rather amusing, and you may even imagine you
are progressing; but as the practice teaches you what you are doing, you will
apparently get worse and worse.
Please understand that in doing this practice you are supposed to be seated
in Asana, and to have note-book and pencil by your side, and a watch in front
of you. You are not to practise at first for more than ten minutes at a time,
so as to avoid risk of overtiring the brain. In fact you will probably find
that the whole of your will-power is not equal to keeping to a subject at all
for so long as three minutes, or even apparently concentrating on it for so
long as three seconds, or three-fifths of one second. By "keeping to it
at all" is meant the mere attempt to keep to it. The mind becomes so fatigued,
and the object so incredibly loathsome, that it is useless to continue for the
time being. In Frater P.'s record we find that after daily practice for six
months, meditations of four minutes and less are still being recorded.
The student is supposed to count the number of times that his thought wanders;
this he can do on his fingers or on a string of beads.<<footnote: This
counting can easily become quite mechanical. With the thought that reminds you
of a break associate the notion of counting.
The grosser kind of break can be detected by another person. It is accompanied
with a flickering of the eyelid, and can be seen by him. With practice he could
detect even very small breaks.>> If these breaks seem to become more frequent
instead of less frequent, the student must not be discourage; this is partially
caused by his increased accuracy of observation. In exactly the same way, the
introduction of vaccination resulted in an apparent increase in the number of
cases of smallpox, the reason being that people began to tell the truth about
the disease instead of faking.
Soon, however, the control will improve faster than the observation. When this
occurs the improvement will become apparent in the record. Any variation will
probably be due to accidental circumstances; for example, one night your may
be very tired when you start; another night you may have headache or indigestion.
You will do well to avoid practising at such times.
We will suppose, then, that you have reached the stage when your average practice
on one subject is about half an hour, and the average number of breaks between
ten and twenty. One would suppose that this implied that during the periods
between the breaks one was really concentrated, but this is not the case. The
mind is flickering, although imperceptibly. However, there may be sufficient
real steadiness even at this early stage to cause some very striking phenomena,
of which the most marked is one which will possibly make you think that you
have gone to sleep. Or, it may seem quite inexplicable, and in any case {29}
will disgust you with yourself. You will completely forget who you are, what
you are, and what you are doing. A similar phenomenon sometimes happens when
one is half awake in the morning, and one cannot think what town one is living
in. The similarity of these two things is rather significant. It suggests that
what is really happening is that you are waking up from the sleep which men
call waking, the sleep whose dreams are life.
There is another way to test one's progress in this practice, and that is by
the character of the breaks.
"Breaks" are classed as follows:
"Firstly," physical sensations. These should have been overcome by
Asana.
"Secondly," breaks that seem to be dictated by events immediately
preceding the meditation. Their activity becomes tremendous. Only by this practice
does one understand how much is really observed by the sense without the mind
becoming conscious of it.
"Thirdly," there is a class of breaks partaking of the nature of reverie
or "day-dreams." These are very insidious -- one may go on for a long
time without realizing that one has wandered at all.
"Fourthly," we get a very high class of break, which is a sort of
aberration of the control itself. You think, "How well I am doing it!"
or perhaps that it would be rather a good idea if you were on a desert island,
or if you were in a sound-proof house, or if you were sitting by a waterfall.
But these are only trifling variations from the vigilance itself.
"A fifth class of breaks" seems to have no discoverable source in
the mind. Such may even take the form of actual hallucination, usually auditory.
Of course, such hallucinations are infrequent, and are recognized for what they
are; otherwise the student had better see his doctor. The usual kind consists
of odd sentences or fragments of sentences, which are heard quite distinctly
in a recognizable human voice, not the student's own voice, or that of any one
he knows. A similar phenomenon is observed by wireless operators, who call such
messages "atmospherics."
There is "a further kind of break, which is the desired result itself."
It must be dealt with later in detail.
Now there is a real sequence in these classes of breaks. As control improves,
the percentage of primaries and secondaries will diminish, even though the total
number of breaks in a meditation remain stationary. By the time that you are
meditating two or three hours a day, and filing up most of the rest of the day
with other practices designed to assist, when nearly every time something or
other happens, and there is constantly a feeling of being "on the brink
of something pretty big," one may expect to proceed to the next state --
Dhyana.
{30}
CHAPTER VI
DHYANA
THIS word has two quite distinct and mutually exclusive meanings. The first
refers to the result itself. Dhyana is the same word as the Pali "Jhana."
The Buddha counted eight Jhanas, which are evidently different degrees and kinds
of trance. The Hindu also speaks of Dhyana as a lesser form of Samadhi. Others,
however, treat it as if it were merely an intensification of Dharana. Patanjali
says: "Dhrana is holding the mind on to some particular object. An unbroken
flow of knowledge in that subject is Dhyana. When that, giving up all forms,
reflects only the meaning, it is Samadhi." He combines these three into
Samyama.
We shall treat of Dhyana as a result rather than as a method. Up to this point
ancient authorities have been fairly reliable guides, except with regard to
their crabbed ethics; but when they get on the subject of results of meditation,
they completely lose their heads.
They exhaust the possibilities of poetry to declare what is demonstrably untrue.
For example, we find in the Shiva Sanhita that "he who daily contemplates
on this lotus of the heart is eagerly desired by the daughters of Gods, has
clairaudience, clairvoyance, and can walk in the air." Another person "can
make gold, discover medicine for disease, and see hidden treasures." All
this is filth. What is the curse upon religion that its tenets must always be
associated with every kind of extravagance and falsehood?
There is one exception; it is the A.'.A.'., whose members are extremely careful
to make no statement at all that cannot be verified in the usual manner; or
where this is not easy, at least avoid anything like a dogmatic statement. In
Their second book of practical instruction, Liber O, occur these words:
"By doing certain things certain results will follow. Students are most
earnestly warned against attributing objective reality or philosophical validity
to any of them."
Those golden words!
In discussing Dhyana, then, let it be clearly understood that something unexpected
is about to be described.
We shall consider its nature and estimate its value in a perfectly unbiassed
way, without allowing ourselves the usual rhapsodies, or deducing any theory
of the universe. One extra fact may destroy some {31} existing theory; that
is common enough. But no single fact is sufficient to construct one.
It will have been understood that Dharana, Dhyana, and Samadhi form a continuous
process, and exactly when the climax comes does not matter. It is of this climax
that we must speak, for this is a matter of "experience," and a very
striking one.
In the course of our concentration we noticed that the contents of the mind
at any moment consisted of two things, and no more: the Object, variable, and
the Subject, invariable, or apparently so. By success in Dharana the object
has been made as invariable as the subject.
Now the result of this is that the two become one. This phenomenon usually comes
as a tremendous shock. It is indescribable even by the masters of language;
and it is therefore not surprising that semi-educated stutterers wallow in oceans
of gush.
All the poetic faculties and all the emotional faculties are thrown into a sort
of ecstasy by an occurrence which overthrows the mind, and makes the rest of
life seem absolutely worthless in comparison.
Good literature is principally a matter of clear observation and good judgment
expressed in the simplest way. For this reason none of the great events of history
(such as earthquakes and battles) have been well described by eye-witnesses,
unless those eye-witnesses were out of danger. But even when one has become
accustomed to Dhyana by constant repetition, no words seem adequate.
One of the simplest forms of Dhyana may be called "the Sun." The sun
is seen (as it were) by itself, not by an observer; and although the physical
eye cannot behold the sun, one is compelled to make the statement that this
"Sun" is far more brilliant than the sun of nature. The whole thing
takes place on a higher level.
Also the conditions of thought, time, and space are abolished. It is impossible
to explain what this really means: only experience can furnish you with apprehension.
(This, too, has its analogies in ordinary life; the conceptions of higher mathematics
cannot be grasped by the beginner, cannot be explained to the layman.)
A further development is the appearance of the Form which has been universally
described as human; although the persons describing it proceed to add a great
number of details which are not human at all. This particular appearance is
usually assumed to be "God."
But, whatever it may be, the result on the mind of the student is tremendous;
all his thoughts are pushed to their greatest development. He sincerely believes
that they have the divine sanction; perhaps he even supposes that they emanate
from this "God." He goes back into the world armed with this intense
conviction {32} and authority. He proclaims his ideas without the restraint
which is imposed upon most persons by doubt, modesty, and diffidence;<<footnote:
This lack of restraint is not to be confused with that observed in intoxication
and madness. Yet there is a very striking similarity, though only a superficial
one.>> while further there is, one may suppose, a real clarification.
In any case, the mass of mankind is always ready to be swayed by anything thus
authoritative and distinct. History is full of stories of officers who have
walked unarmed up to a mutinous regiment, and disarmed them by the mere force
of confidence. The power of the orator over the mob is well known. It is, probably,
for this reason that the prophet has been able to constrain mankind to obey
his law. I never occurs to him that any one can do otherwise. In practical life
one can walk past any guardian, such as a sentry or ticket-collector, if one
can really act so that the man is somehow persuaded that you have a right to
pass unchallenged.
This power, by the way, is what has been described by magicians as the power
of invisibility. Somebody or other has an excellent story of four quite reliable
men who were on the look-out for a murderer, and had instructions to let no
one pass, and who all swore subsequently in presence of the dead body that no
one had passed. None of them had seen the postman.
The thieves who stole the "Gioconda" from the Louvre were probably
disguised as workmen, and stole the picture under the very eye of the guardian;
very likely got him to help them.
It is only necessary to believe that a thing must be to bring it about. This
belief must not be an emotional or an intellectual one. It resides in a deeper
portion of the mind, yet a portion not so deep but that most men, probably all
successful men, will understand these words, having experience of their own
with which they can compare it.
The most important factor in Dhyana is, however, the annihilation of the Ego.
Our conception of the universe must be completely overturned if we are to admit
this as valid; and it is time that we considered what is really happening.
It will be conceded that we have given a very rational explanation of the greatness
of great men. They had an experience so overwhelming, so out of proportion to
the rest of things, that they were freed from all the petty hindrances which
prevent the normal man from carrying out his projects.
Worrying about clothes, food, money, what people may think, how and why, and
above all the fear of consequences, clog nearly every one. Nothing is easier,
theoretically, than for an anarchist to kill a king. He has only to buy a rifle,
make himself a first-class shot, and shoot the king from a quarter of a mile
away. And yet, although there are plenty of anarchists, outrages are very few.
At the same time, the police would {33} probably be the first to admit that
if any man were really tired of life, in his deepest being, a state very different
from that in which a man goes about saying he is tired of life, he could manage
somehow or other to kill someone first.
Now the man who has experienced any of the more intense forms of Dhyana is thus
liberated. The Universe is thus destroyed for him, and he for it. His will can
therefore go on its way unhampered. One may imagine that in the case of Mohammed
he had cherished for years a tremendous ambition, and never done anything because
those qualities which were subsequently manifested as statesmanship warned him
that he was impotent. His vision in the cave gave him that confidence which
was required, the faith that moves mountains. There are a lot of solid-seeming
things in this world which a child could push over; but not one has the courage
to push.
Let us accept provisionally this explanation of greatness, and pass it by. Ambition
has led us to this point; but we are now interested in the work for its own
sake.
A most astounding phenomenon has happened to us; we have had an experience which
makes Love, fame, rank, ambition, wealth, look like thirty cents; and we begin
to wonder passionately, "What is truth?" The Universe has tumbled
about our ears like a house of cards, and we have tumbled too. Yet this ruin
is like the opening of the Gates of Heaven! Here is a tremendous problem, and
there is something within us which ravins for its solution.
Let us see what what explanation we can find.
The first suggestion which would enter a well-balanced mind, versed in the study
of nature, is that we have experienced a mental catastrophe. Just as a blow
on the head will made a man "see stars," so one might suppose that
the terrific mental strain of Dharana has somehow over-excited the brain, and
caused a spasm, or possibly even the breaking of a small vessel. There seems
no reason to reject this explanation altogether, though it would be quite absurd
to suppose that to accept it would be to condemn the practice. Spasm is a normal
function of at least one of the organs of the body. That the brain is not damaged
by the practice is proved by the fact that many people who claim to have had
this experience repeatedly continue to exercise the ordinary avocations of life
without diminished activity.
We may dismiss, then the physiological question. It throws no light on the main
problem, which is the value of the testimony of the experience.
Now this is a very difficult question, and raises the much larger question as
to the value of any testimony. Every possible thought has been doubted at some
time or another, except the thought which can {34} only be expressed by a note
of interrogation, since to doubt that thought asserts it. (For a full discussion
see "The Soldier and the Hunchback," "Equinox," I.) But
apart from this deep-seated philosophic doubt there is the practical doubt of
every day. The popular phrase, "to doubt the evidence of one's senses,"
shows us that that evidence is normally accepted; but a man of science does
nothing of the sort. He is so well aware that his senses constantly deceive
him, that he invents elaborate instruments to correct them. And he is further
aware that the Universe which he can directly perceive through sense, is the
minutest fraction of the Universe which he knows indirectly.
For example, four-fifths of the air is composed of nitrogen. If anyone were
to bring a bottle of nitrogen into this room it would be exceedingly difficult
to say what it was; nearly all the tests that one could apply to it would be
negative. His senses tell him little or nothing.
Argon was only discovered at all by comparing the weight of chemically pure
nitrogen with that of the nitrogen of the air. This had often been done, but
no one had sufficiently fine instruments even to perceive the discrepancy. To
take another example, a famous man of science asserted not so long ago that
science could never discover the chemical composition of the fixed stars. Yet
this has been done, and with certainty.
If you were to ask your man of science for his "theory of the real,"
he would tell you that the "ether," which cannot be perceived in any
way by any of the senses, or detected by any instruments, and which possesses
qualities which are, to use ordinary language, impossible, is very much more
real than the chair he is sitting on. The chair is only one fact; and its existence
is testified by one very fallible person. The ether is the necessary deduction
from millions of facts, which have been verified again and again and checked
by every possible test of truth. There is therefore no "a priori"
reason for rejecting anything on the ground that it is not directly perceived
by the senses.
To turn to another point. One of our tests of truth is the vividness of the
impression. An isolated event in the past of no great importance may be forgotten;
and if it be in some way recalled, one may find one's self asking: "Did
I dream it? or did it really happen?" What can never be forgotten is the
"catastrophic". The first death among the people that one loves (for
example) would never be forgotten; for the first time one would "realize"
what one had previously merely "known". Such an experience sometimes
drives people insane. Men of science have been known to commit suicide when
their pet theory has been shattered. This problem has been discussed freely
in "Science and Buddhism,"<<footnote: See Crowley, "Collected
Works.">> "Time," "The Camel," and other papers.
This much only need we {35} say in this place that Dhyana has to be classed
as the most vivid and catastrophic of all experiences. This will be confirmed
by any one who has been there.
It is, then, difficult to overrate the value that such an experience has for
the individual, especially as it is his entire conception of things, including
his most deep-seated conception, the standard to which he has always referred
everything, his own self, that is overthrown; and when we try to explain it
away as hallucination, temporary suspension of the faculties or something similar,
we find ourselves unable to do so. You cannot argue with a flash of lightning
that has knocked you down.
Any mere theory is easy to upset. One can find flaws in the reasoning process,
one can assume that the premisses are in some way false; but in this case, if
one attacks the evidence for Dhyana, the mind is staggered by the fact that
all other experience, attacked on the same lines, will fall much more easily.
In whatever way we examine it the result will always be the same. Dhyana may
be false; but, if so, so is everything else.
Now the mind refuses to rest in a belief of the unreality of its own experiences.
It may not be what is seems; but it must be something, and if (on the whole)
ordinary life is something, how much more must that be by whose light ordinary
life seems nothing!
The ordinary man sees the falsity and disconnectedness and purposelessness of
dreams; he ascribes them (rightly) to a disordered mind. The philosopher looks
upon waking life with similar contempt; and the person who has experienced Dhyana
takes the same view, but not by mere pale intellectual conviction. Reasons,
however cogent, never convince utterly; but this man in Dhyana has the same
commonplace certainty that a man has on waking from a nightmare. "I wasn't
falling down a thousand flights of stairs, it was only a bad dream."
Similarly comes the reflection of the man who has had experience of Dhyana:
"I am not that wretched insect, that imperceptible parasite of earth; it
was only a bad dream." And as you could not convince the normal man that
his nightmare was more real than his awakening, so you cannot convince the other
that his Dhyana was hallucination, even though he is only too well aware that
he has fallen from that state into "normal" life.
It is probably rare for a single experience to upset thus radically the whole
conception of the Universe, just as sometimes, in the first moments of waking,
there remains a half-doubt as to whether dream or waking is real. But as one
gains further experience, when Dhyana is no longer a shock, when the student
has had plenty of time to make himself at home in the new world, this conviction
will become absolute.<<Footnote: It should be remembered that at present
there are no data for determining the duration of Dhyana. One can only say that,
since it certainly occured between such and such hours, it must have lasted
less than that time. Thus we see, from Frater P.'s record, that it can certianly
occur in less than an hour and five minutes.>> {36}
Another rationalist consideration is this. The student has not been trying to
excite the mind but to calm it, not to produce any one thought but to exclude
all thoughts; for there is no connection between the object of meditation and
the Dhyana. Why must we suppose a breaking down of the whole process, especially
as the mind bears no subsequent traces of any interference, such as pain or
fatigue? Surely this once, if never again, the Hindu image expresses the simplest
theory!
That image is that of a lake into which five glaciers move. These glaciers are
the senses. While ice (the impressions) is breaking off constantly into the
lake, the waters are troubled. If the glaciers are stopped the surface becomes
calm; and then, and only then, can it reflect unbroken the disk of the sum.
This sun is the "soul" or "God."
We should, however, avoid these terms for the present, on account of their implications.
Let us rather speak of this sun as "some unknown thing whose presence has
been masked by all things known, and by the knower."
It is probable, too, that our memory of Dhyana is not of the phenomenon itself,
but of the image left thereby on the mind. But this is true of all phenomena,
as Berkeley and Kant have proved beyond all question. This matter, then, need
not concern us.
We may, however, provisionally accept the view that Dhyana is real; more real
and thus of more importance to ourselves than all other experience. This state
has been described not only by the Hindus and Buddhists, but by Mohammedans
and Christians. In Christian writings, however, the deeply-seated dogmatic bias
has rendered their documents worthless to the average man. They ignore the essential
conditions of Dhyana, and insist on the inessential, to a much greater extent
than the best Indian writers. But to any one with experience and some knowledge
of comparative religion the identity is certain. We may now proceed to Samadhi.
{37}
CHAPTER VII
SAMADHI
MORE rubbish has been written about Samadhi than enough; we must endeavour
to avoid adding to the heap. Even Patanjali, who is extraordinarily clear and
practical in most things, begins to rave when he talks of it. Even if what he
said were true he should not have mentioned it; because it does not sound true,
and we should make no statement that is "a priori" improbable without
being prepared to back it up with the fullest proofs. But it is more than likely
that his commentators have misunderstood him.
The most reasonable statement, of any acknowledged authority, is that of Vajna
Valkya, who says: "By Pranayama impurities of the body are thrown out;
by Dharana the impurities of the mind; by Pratyahara the impurities of attachment;
and by Samadhi is taken off everything that hides the lordship of the soul."
There is a modest statement in good literary form. If we can only do as well
as that!
In the first place, what is the meaning of the term? Etymologically, "Sam"
is the Greek {in Greek alphabet: sigma-upsilon-nu--} the English prefix "syn-"
meaning "together with." "Adhi" means "Lord,"
and a reasonable translation of the whole word would be "Union with God,"
the exact term used by Christian mystics to describe their attainment.
Now there is great confusion, because the Buddhists use the word Samadhi to
mean something entirely different, the mere faculty of attention. Thus, with
them, to think of a cat is to "make Samadhi" on that cat. They use
the word Jhana to describe mystic states. This is excessively misleading, for
as we saw in the last section, Dhyana is a preliminary of Samadhi, and of course
Jhana is merely the wretched plebeian Pali corruption of it.<<footnote:
The vulgarism and provincialism of the Buddhist cannon is infinitely repulsive
to all nice minds; and the attempt to use the terms of an ego-centric philosophy
to explain the details of a psychology whose principal doctrine is the denial
of the ego, was the work of a mischievous idiot. Let us unhesitatingly reject
these abominations, these nastinesses of the beggars dressed in rags that they
have snatched from corpses, and follow the etymological signification of the
word as given above!>>
There are many kinds of Samadhi.<<footnote: Apparently. That is, the obvious
results are different. Possibly the cause is only one, refracted through diverse
media.>> "Some authors consider Atmadarshana, the Universe as a single
phenomenon without conditions, to be the first real Samadhi." If we accept
this, we must relegate many less exalted states to the class of Dhyana. Patanjali
enumerates a number of these states: to perform these on different things gives
different {38} magical powers; or so he says. These need not be debated here.
Any one who wants magic powers can get them in dozens of different ways.
Power grows faster than desire. The boy who wants money to buy lead soldiers
sets to work to obtain it, and by the time he has got it wants something else
instead -- in all probability something just beyond his means.
Such is the splendid history of all spiritual advance! One never stops to take
the reward.
We shall therefore not trouble at all about what any Samadhi may or may not
bring as far as its results in our lives are concerned. We began this book,
it will be remembered, with considerations of death. Death has now lost all
meaning. The idea of death depends on those of the ego, and of time; these ideas
have been destroyed; and so "Death is swallowed up in victory." We
shall now only be interested in what Samadhi is in itself, and in the conditions
which cause it.
Let us try a final definition. Dhyana resembles Samadhi in many respects. There
is a union of the ego and the non-ego, and a loss of the senses of time and
space and causality. Duality in any form is abolished. The idea of time involves
that of two consecutive things, that of space two non-coincident things, that
of causality two connected things.
These Dhyanic conditions contradict those of normal thought; but in Samadhi
they are very much more marked than in Dhyana. And while in the latter it seems
like a simple union of two things, in the former it appears as if all things
rushed together and united. One might say that in Dhyana there was still this
quality latent, that the One existing was opposed to the Many non-existing;
in Samadhi the Many and the One are united in a union of Existence with non-Existence.
This definition is not made from reflection, but from memory.
Further, it is easy to master the "trick" or "knack" of
Dhyana. After a while one can get into that state without preliminary practice;
and, looking at it from this point, one seems able to reconcile the two meanings
of the word which we debated in the last section. From below Dhyana seems like
a trance, an experience so tremendous that one cannot think of anything bigger,
while from above it seems merely a state of mind as natural as any other. Frater
P., before he had Samadhi, wrote of Dhyana: "Perhaps as a result of the
intense control a nervous storm breaks: this we call Dhyana. Samadhi is but
an expansion of this, so far as I can see."
Five years later he would not take this view. He would say perhaps that Dhyana
was "a flowing of the mind in one unbroken current from the ego to the
non-ego without consciousness of either, accompanied by a crescent wonder and
bliss." He can understand how that is the {39} natural result of Dhyana,
but he cannot call Dhyana in the same way the precursor of Samadhi. Perhaps
he does not really know the conditions which induce Samadhi. He can produce
Dhyana at will in the course of a few minutes' work; and it often happens with
apparent spontaneity: with Samadhi this is unfortunately not the case. He probably
can get it at will, but could not say exactly how, or tell how long it might
take him; and he could not be "sure" of getting it at all.
One feels "sure" that one can walk a mile along a level road. One
knows the conditions, and it would have to be a very extraordinary set of circumstances
that would stop one. But thought it would be equally fair to say: "I have
climbed the Matterhorn and I know I can climb it again," yet there are
all sorts of more or less probable circumstances any one of which would prevent
success.
Now we do know this, that if thought is kept single and steady, Dhyana results.
We do not know whether an intensification of this is sufficient to cause Samadhi,
or whether some other circumstances are required. One is science, the other
empiricism.
One author says (unless memory deceives) that twelve seconds' steadiness is
Dharana, a hundred and forty-four Dhyana, and seventeen hundred and twenty-eight
Samadhi. And Vivekananda, commenting on Patanjali, makes Dhyana a mere prolongation
of Dharana; but says further: "Suppose I were meditating on a book, and
I gradually succeeded in concentrating the mind on it , and perceiving only
the internal sensation, the meaning unexpressed in any form, that state of Dhyana
is called Samadhi."
Other authors are inclined to suggest that Samadhi results from meditating on
subjects that are in themselves worthy. For example, Vivekananda says: "Think
of any holy subject:" and explains this as follows: "This does not
mean any wicked subject."(!)
Frater P. would not like to say definitely whether he ever got Dhyana from common
objects. He gave up the practice after a few months, and meditated on the Cakkras,
etc. Also his Dhyana became so common that he gave up recording it. But if he
wished to do it this minute he would choose something to excite his "godly
fear," or "holy awe," or "wonderment."<<footnote:
It is rather a breach of the scepticism which is the basis of our system to
admit that anything can be in any way better than another. Do it thus: "A.,
is a thing that B. thinks 'holy.' It is natural therefore for B. to meditate
on it." Get rid of the ego, observe all your actions as if they were another's,
and you will avoid ninety-nine percent. of the troubles that await you.>>
There is no apparent reason why Dhyana should not occur when thinking of any
common object of the sea-shore, such as a blue pig; but Frater P.'s constant
reference to this as the usual object of his meditation need not be taken "au
pied de la lettre." His records of meditation contain no reference to this
remarkable animal.
It will be a good thing when organized research has determined the {40} conditions
of Samadhi; but in the meantime there seems no particular objection to our following
tradition, and using the same objects of meditation as our predecessors, with
the single exception which we shall note in due course.
The first class of objects for serious meditation (as opposed to preliminary
practice, in which one should keep to simple recognizable objects, whose definiteness
is easy to maintain) is "various parts of the body." The Hindus have
an elaborate system of anatomy and physiology which has apparently no reference
to the facts of the dissecting-room. Prominent in this class are the seven Cakkras,
which will be described in Part II. There are also various "nerves",
equally mythical.<<WEH footnote: Not quite correct. Western anatomical
knowledge has advanced since Crowley wrote this!>>
The second class is "objects of devotion," such as the idea or form
of the Deity, or the heart or body of your Teacher, or of some man whom you
respect profoundly. This practice is not to be commended, because it implies
a bias of the mind.
You can also meditate on "your dreams." This sounds superstitious;
but the idea is that you have already a tendency, independent of your conscious
will, to think of those things, which will consequently be easier to think of
than others. That this is the explanation is evident from the nature of the
preceding and subsequent classes.
You can also meditate on "anything that especially appeals to you."
But in all this one feels inclined to suggest that it will be better and more
convincing if the meditation is directed to an object which in itself is apparently
unimportant. One does not want the mind to be excited in any way, even by adoration.
See the three meditative methods in Liber HHH (Equinox VI.).<<footnote:
These are the complements of the three methods of Enthusiasm (A.'.A.'. instruction
not yet issued up to March 1912.)>> At the same time, one would not like
to deny positively that it is very much "easier" to take some idea
towards which the mind would naturally flow.
The Hindus assert that the nature of the object determines the Samadhi; that
is, the nature of those lower Samadhis which confer so-called "magic powers."
For example, there are the Yogapravritti. Meditating on the tip of the nose,
one obtains what may be called the "ideal smell"; that is, a smell
which is not any particular smell, but is the archetypal smell, of which all
actual smells are modifications. It is "the smell which is "not"
a smell." This is the only reasonable description; for the experience being
contrary to reason, it is only reasonable that the words describing it should
be contrary to reason too.<<footnote: Hence the Athanasian Creed. Compare
the precise parallel in the Zohar: "The Head which is above all heads;
the Head which is "not" a Head.'>>
Similarly, concentration on the tip of the tongue gives the "ideal taste";
on the dorsum of the tongue, "ideal contact." "Every atom of
{41} the body comes into contact with every atom in the Universe all at once,"
is the description Bhikku Ananda Metteya gives of it. The root of the tongue
gives the "ideal sound"; and the pharynx the "ideal sight."<<footnote:
Similarly Patanjali tells us that by making Samyama on the strength of an elephant
or a tiger, the student acquires that strength. Conquer "the nerve Udana,"
and you can walk on the water; "Samana," and you begin to flash with
light; the "elements" fire, air, earth, and water, and you can do
whatever in natural life they prevent you from doing. For instance, by conquering
earth, one could take a short cut to Australia; or by conquering water, one
can live at the bottom of the Ganges. They say there is a holy man at Benares
who does this, coming up only once a year to comfort and instruct his disciples.
But nobody need believe this unless he wants to; and you are even advised to
conquer that desire should it arise. It will be interesting when science really
determines the variables and constants of these equations.>>
The Samadhi "par excellence," however, is Atmadarshana, which for
some, and those not the least instructed, is the first real Samadhi; for even
the visions of "God" and of the "Self" are tainted by form.
In Atmadarshana the All is manifested as the One: it is the Universe freed from
its conditions. Not only are all forms and ideas destroyed, but also those conceptions
which are implicit in our ideas of those ideas.<<footnote: This is so
complete that not only "Black is White," but "The Whiteness of
Black is the "essential" of its Blackness." "Naught = One
= Infinity"; but this is only true "because" of this threefold
arrangement, a trinity or "triangle of contradictories.">> Each
part of the Universe has become the whole, and phenomena and noumena are no
longer opposed.
But it is quite impossible to describe this state of mind. One can only specify
some of the characteristics, and that in language which forms no image in mind.
It is impossible for anyone who experiences it to bring back any adequate memory,
nor can we conceive a state transcending this.
There is, however, a very much higher state called Shivadarshana, of which it
is only necessary to say that it is the destruction of the previous state, its
annihilation; and to understand this blotting-out, one must not imagine "Nothingness"
(the only name for it) as negative, but as positive.
The normal mind is a candle in a darkened room. Throw open the shutters, and
the sunlight makes the flame invisible. That is a fair image of Dhyana.<<footnote:
Here the dictation was interrupted by very prolonged thought due to the difficulty
of making the image clear. Virakam.>>
But the mind refuses to find a simile for Atmadarshana. It seems merely ineffective
to say that the rushing together of all the host of heaven would similarly blot
out the sunlight. But if we do say so, and wish to form a further image of Shivadarshana,
we must imagine ourselves as suddenly recognizing that this universal blaze
is darkness; not {42} a light extremely dim compared with some other light,
but darkness itself. It is not the change from the minute to the vast, or even
from the finite to the infinite. It is the recognition that the positive is
merely the negative. The ultimate truth is perceived not only as false, but
as the logical contradictory of truth. It is quite useless to elaborate this
theme, which has baffled all other minds hitherto. We have tried to say as little
as possible rather than as much as possible.<<footnote: Yet all this has
come of our desire to be as modest as Yajna Valkya!>>
Still further from our present purpose would it be to criticise the innumerable
discussions which have taken place as to whether this is the ultimate attainment,
or what it confers. It is enough if we say that even the first and most transitory
Dhyana repays a thousandfold the pains we may have taken to attain it.
And there is this anchor for the beginner, that his work is cumulative: every
act directed towards attainment builds up a destiny which must some day come
to fruition. May all attain!
{43}
SUMMARY
"Q." What is genius, and how is it produced?
"A." Let us take several specimens of the species, and try to find
some
one thing common to all which is not found in other species.
"Q." Is there any such thing?
"A." Yes: all geniuses have the habit of concentration of thought,
and
usually need long periods of solitude to acquire this habit. In
particular the greatest religious geniuses have all retired from the
world at one time or another in their lives, and begun to preach
immediately on their return.
"Q." Of what advantage is such a retirement? One would expect that
a
man who so acted would find himself on his return out of touch
with his civilization, and in every way less capable than when
he left.
"A." But each claims, though in different language, to have gained
in his
absence some superhuman power.
"Q." Do you believe this?
"A." It becomes us ill to reject the assertions of those who are admittedly
the greatest of mankind until we can refute them by proof, or
at least explain how they may have been mistaken. In this case
each teacher left instructions for us to follow. The only scientific
method is for us to repeat their experiments, and so confirm or
disprove their results.
"Q." But their instructions differ widely!
"A." Only in so far as each was bound by conditions of time, race,
climate and language. There is essential identity in the method.
"Q." Indeed!
"A." It was the great work of the life of Frater Perdurabo to prove
this.
Studying each religious practice of each great religion on the spot,
he was able to show the Identity-in-diversity of all, and to formulate
a method free from all dogmatic bias, and based only on the ascertained
facts of anatomy, physiology, and psychology.
"Q." Can you give me a brief abstract of this method?
"A." The main idea is that the Infinite, the Absolute, God, the Over-soul,
or whatever you may prefer to call it, is always present; but
veiled or masked by the thoughts of the mind, just as one cannot
hear a heart-beat in a noisy city.
"Q." Yes?
"A." Then to obtain knowledge of That, it is only necessary to still
all
thoughts. {44}
"Q." But in sleep thought is stilled?
"A." True, perhaps, roughly speaking; but the perceiving function
is
stilled also.
"Q." Then you wish to obtain a perfect vigilance and attention of
the
mind, uninterrupted by the rise of thoughts?
"A." Yes.
"Q." And how do you proceed?
"A." Firstly, we still the body by the practice called Asana, and
secure
its ease and the regularity of its functions by Pranayama. Thus no
messages from the body will disturb the mind.
Secondly, by Yama and Niyama, we still the emotions and passions,
and thus prevent them arising to disturb the mind.
Thirdly, by Pratyahara we analyse the mind yet more deeply, and
begin to control and suppress thought in general of whatever
nature.
Fourthly, we suppress all other thoughts by a direct concentration
upon a single thought. This process, which leads to the highest
results, consists of three parts, Dharana, Dhyana, and Samadhi,
grouped under the single term Samyama.
"Q." How can I obtain further knowledge and experience of this?
"A." The A.'.A.'. is an organization whose heads have obtained by
personal experience to the summit of this science. They have
founded a system by which every one can equally attain, and that
with an ease and speed which was previously impossible.
The first grade in Their system is that of
STUDENT.
A Student must possess the following books:
1. The Equinox,
2. 777.
3. Konx Om Pax.
4. Collected Works of A. Crowley; Tannhauser, The Sword of
Song, Time, Eleusis. 3 vols.
5. Raja Yoga, by Swami Vivekananda.
6. The Shiva Sanhita, or the Hathayoga Pradipika.
7. The Tao Teh "K"ing and the writings of "K"wang Tze: S.B.E.
xxxix, xl.
8. The Spiritual Guide, by Miguel de Molinos.
9. Rituel et Dogme de la Haute Magie, by Eliphas Levi, or its
translation by A. E. Waite.
10. The Goetia of the Lemegeton of Solomon the King.
These books should be well studied in any case in conjunction with the second
part -- Magick -- of this Book IV. {45}
Study of these books will give a thorough grounding in the intellectual side
of Their system.
After three months the Student is examined in these books, and if his knowledge
of them is found satisfactory, he may become a Probationer, receiving Liber
LXI and the secret holy book, Liber LXV. The principal point of this grade is
that the Probationer has a master appointed, whose experience can guide him
in his work.
He may select any practices that he prefers, but in any case must keep an exact
record, so that he may discover the relation of cause and effect in his working,
and so that the A.'.A.'. may judge of his progress, and direct his further studies.
After a year of probation he may be admitted a Neophyte of the A.'.A.'., and
receive the secret holy book Liber VII.
These are the principal instructions for practice which every probationer should
follow out:
Libri E, A, O, III, XXX, CLXXV, CC, CCVI, CMXIII.
{46}
THERE are seven keys to the great gate,
Being eight in one and one in eight.
First, let the body of thee be still,
Bound by the cerements of will,
Corpse-rigid; thus thou mayst abort
The fidget-babes that tease the thought.
Next, let the breath-rhythm be low,
Easy, regular, and slow;
So that thy being be in tune
With the great sea's Pacific swoon.
Third, let thy life be pure and calm,
Swayed softly as a windless palm.
Fourth, let the will-to-live be bound
To the one love of the profound.
Fifth, let the thought, divinely free
From sense, observe its entity.
Watch every thought that springs; enhance
Hour after hour thy vigilance!
Intense and keen, turned inward, miss
No atom of analysis!
Sixth, on one thought securely pinned
Still every whisper of the wind!
So like a flame straight and unstirred
Burn up thy being in one word!
Next, still that ecstasy, prolong
Thy meditation steep and strong,
Slaying even God, should He distract
Thy attention from the chosen act!
Last, all these things in one o'erpowered,
Time that the midnight blossom flowered!
The oneness is. Yet even in this,
My son, thou shall not do amiss
If thou restrain the expression, shoot
Thy glance to rapture's darkling root,
Discarding name, form, sight, and stress
Even of this high consciousness;
Pierce to the heart! I leave thee here:
Thou art the Master. I revere
Thy radiance that rolls afar,
O Brother of the Silver Star!
CROWLEY "AHA!"
Issued by order of
the GREAT WHITE
BROTHERHOOD
known as the A.'.A.'.
"Witness our Seal,"
N.'.'
"Praemonstrator-General"
{Diagram: A.'.A.'. seal}
{photograph: The colotype of Crowley from EQUINOX I, 3, just before page 11,
titled underneath "ALEISTER CROWLEY"}
PART II -- MAGICK
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
{photograph: (probably colotype original) of Crowley with implements, titled
underneath "THE MAGICIAN IN HIS ROBE AND CROWN, ARMED WITH WAND, CUP, SWORD,
PANTACLE, BELL, BOOK, AND HOLY OIL."}
{52}
CEREMONIAL MAGICK,<<footnote: The old spelling MAGICK has been adopted
throughout in order to distinguish the Science of the Magi from all its counterfeits.>>
THE TRAINING FOR MEDITATION
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
HITHERTO we have spoken only of the mystic path; and we have kept particularly
to the practical exoteric side of it. Such difficulties as we have mentioned
have been purely natural obstacles. For example, the great question of the surrender
of the self, which bulks so largely in most mystical treatises, has not been
referred to at all. We have said only what a man must do; we have not considered
at all what that doing may involve. The rebellion of the will against the terrible
discipline of meditation has not been discussed; one may now devote a few words
to it.
There is no limit to what theologians call "wickedness." Only by experience
can the student discover the ingenuity of the mind in trying to escape from
control. He is perfectly safe so long as he sticks to meditation, doing no more
and no less than that which we have prescribed; but the mind will probably not
let him remain in that simplicity. This fact is the root of all the legends
about the "Saint" being tempted by the '"Devil." Consider
the parable of Christ in the Wilderness, where he is tempted to use his magical
power, to do anything but the thing that should be done. These attacks on the
will are as bad as the thoughts which intrude upon Dharana. It would almost
seem as if one could not succesfully practice meditation until the will had
become so strong that no force in the Universe could either bend or break it.
Before concentrating the lower principle, the mind, one must concentrate the
higher principle, the Will. Failure to understand this has destroyed the value
of all attempts to teach "Yoga," "Menticulture," "New
Thought," and the like.
There are method of training the will, by which it is easy to check one's progress.
Every one knows the force of habit. Every one knows that if you keep on acting
in a particular way, that action becomes easier, and at last absolutely natural.
All religions have devised practices for this purpose. If you keep on praying
with your lips long enough, you will one day find yourself praying in your heart.
The whole question has been threshed out and organized {53} by wise men of old;
they have made a Science of Life complete and perfect; and they have given to
it the name of MAGICK> It is the chief secret of the Ancients, and if the
keys have never been actually lost, they have certainly been little used. <<footnote:
The holders of those keys have always kept very quiet about it. This has been
especially necessary in Europe, because of the dominance of persecuting churches.>>
Again, the confusion of thought caused by the ignorance of the people who did
not understand it has discredited the whole subject. It is now our task to re-establish
this science in its perfection.
To do this we must criticize the Authorities; some of them have made it too
complex, others have completely failed in such simple matters as coherence.
Many of the writers are empirics, still more mere scribes, while by far the
largest class of all is composed of stupid charlatans.
We shall consider a simple form of magick, harmonized from many systems old
and new, describing the various weapons of the Magician and the furniture of
his temple. We shall explain to what each really corresponds, and discuss the
construction and the use of everything.
The Magician works in a "Temple;" the Universe, which is (be it remembered!)
conterminous with himself.<<footnote: By "yourself" you mean
the contents of your consciousness. All without does not exist for you.>>
In this temple a "Circle" is drawn upon the floor for the limitation
of his working. This circle is protected by divine names, the influences on
which he relies to keep out hostile thoughts. Within the circle stands an "Altar",
the solid basis on which he works, the foundation of all. Upon the Altar are
his "Wand," "Cup," "Sword," and "Pantacle,"
to represent his Will, his Understanding, his Reason, and the lower parts of
his being, respectively. On the Altar, too, is a phial of "Oil," surrounded
by a "Scourge," a "Dagger," and a "Chain," while
above the Altar hangs a "Lamp." The Magician wears a "Crown,"
a single "Robe," and a "Lamen," and he bears a "Book"
of Conjurations and a "Bell."
The oil consecrates everything that is touched with it; it is his aspiration;
all acts performed in accordance with that are holy. The scourge tortures him;
the dagger wounds him; the chain binds him. It is by virtue of these three that
his aspiration remains pure, and is able to consecrate all other things. He
wears a crown to affirm his lordship, his divinity; a robe to symbolize silence,
and a lamen to declare his work. The book of spells or conjurations is his magical
record, his Karma. In the East is the "Magick Fire," in which all
burns up at last.<<footnote: He needs nothing else but the apparatus here
described for invocation, by which he calls down that which is above him and
within him; but for evocations, by which he calls forth that which is below
him and without him, he may place a triangle without the circle.>>
We will now consider each of these matters in detail.{54}
CHAPTER I
THE TEMPLE
THE Temple represents the external Universe. The Magician must take it as he
finds it, so that it is of no particular shape; yet we find written, Liber VII,
vi, 2: "We made us a Temple of stones in the shape of the Universe, even
as thou didst wear openly and I concealed." This shape is the Vesica Piscis;
but it is only the greatest of the Magicians who can thus fashion the Temple.
There may, however, be some choice of rooms; this refers to the power of the
Magician to reincarnate in a suitable body. {55}
{diagram on this page: a magical circle reminiscent of an illustration in the
"Treasure House of Images" in the Equinox. Caption below: "THE
CIRCLE".}
{56}
CHAPTER II
THE CIRCLE
THE Circle announces the Nature of the Great Work.
Though the Magician has been limited in his choice of room, he is more or less
able to choose what part of the room he will work in. He will consider convenience
and possibility. His circle should not be too small and cramp his movements;
it should not be so large that he has long distances to traverse. Once the circle
is made and consecrated, the Magician must not leave it, or even lean outside,
lest he be destroyed by the hostile forces that are without.
He chooses a circle rather than any other lineal figure for many reasons; e.g.,
1. He affirms thereby his identity with the infinite.
2. He affirms the equal balance of his working; since all points on the circumference
are equidistant from the centre.
3. He affirms the limitation implied by his devotion to the Great Work. He no
longer wanders about aimlessly in the world.
The centre of this circle is the centre of the Tau of ten squares which is in
the midst, as shown in the illustration. The Tau and the circle together make
one form of the Rosy Cross, the uniting of subject and object which is the Great
Work, and which is symbolized sometimes as this cross and circle, sometimes
as the Lingam-Yoni, sometimes as the Ankh or Crux Ansata, sometimes by the Spire
and Nave of a church or temple, and sometimes as a marriage feast, mystic marriage,
spiritual marriage, "chymical nuptials," and in a hundred other ways.
Whatever the form chosen, it is the symbol of the Great Work.
This place of his working therefore declares the nature and object of the Work.
Those persons who have supposed that the use of these symbols implied worship
of the generative organs, merely attributed to the sages of every time and country
minds of a calibre equal to their own.
The Tau is composed of ten squares for the ten Sephiroth.<<footnote: The
Ten Sephiroth are the Ten Units. In one system of classification (see "777")
these are so arranged, and various ideas are so attributed to them, that they
have been made to mean anything. The more you know, the more these numbers mean
to you.>> About this Tau is escribed a triangle, which is inscribed in
the great Circle; but of the triangle nothing is actually marked but the three
corners, the areas defined by the cutting of the lines bounding this triangle.
This triangle is only visible in the parts which are common to two of the {57}
sides; they have therefore the shape of the diamond, one form of the Yoni. The
significance of this is too complex for our simple treatise; it may be studied
in Crowley's "Berashith."
The size of the whole figure is determined by the size of one square of the
Tau. And the size of this square is that of the base of the Altar, which is
placed upon Maukuth. It will follow then that, in spite of the apparent freedom
of the Magician to do anything he likes, he is really determined absolutely;
for as the Altar must have a base proportionate to its height, and as that height
must be convenient for the Magician, the size of the whole will depend upon
his own stature. It is easy to draw a moral lesson from these considerations.
We will merely indicate this one, that the scope of any man's work depends upon
his own original genius. Even the size of the weapons must be determined by
necessary proportion. The exceptions to this rule are the Lamp, which hangs
from the roof, above the centre of the Circle, above the square of Tiphereth;
and the Oil, whose phial is so small that it will suit any altar.
On the Circle are inscribed the Names of God; the Circle is of green, and the
names are in flaming vermilion, of the same colour as the Tau. Without the Circle
are nine pentagrams equidistant,<<footnote: Some magicians prefer seven
lamps, for the seven Spirits of God that are before the Throne. Each stands
in a heptagram, and in each angle of the heptagram is a letter, so that the
seven names (see "Equinox VII") are spelt out. But this is a rather
different symbolism. Of course in ordinary specialised working the number of
lamps depends on the nature of the work, "e.g.," three for works of
Saturn, eight for works Mercuial, and so on.>> in the centre of each of
which burns a small Lamp; these are the "Fortresses upon the Frontiers
of the Abyss." See the eleventh Aethyr, Liber 418 ("Equinox V").
They keep off those forces of darkness which might otherwise break in.
The names of God form a further protection. The Magician may consider what names
he will use; but each name should in some way symbolise this Work in its method
and accomplishment. It is impossible here to enter into this subject fully;
the discovery or construction of suitable names might occupy the most learned
Qabalist for many years.
These nine lamps were originally candles made of human fat, the fat of enemies<<footnote:
Or sometimes of "birth-strangled babes," "i.e.," of thoughts
slain ere they could arise into consciousness.>> slain by the Magician;
they thus served as warnings to any hostile force of what might be expected
if it caused trouble. To-day such candles are difficult to procure; and it is
perhaps simpler to use beeswax. The honey has been taken by the Magician; nothing
is left of the toil of all those hosts of bees but the mere shell, the fuel
of light. This beeswax is also used in the construction of the Pantacle, and
this {58} forms a link between the two symbols. The Pantacle is the food of
the Magus; and some of it he gives up in order to give light to that which is
without. For these lights are only apparently hostile to intrusion; they serve
to illuminate the Circle and the Names of God, and so to bring the first and
outmost symbols of initiation within the view of the profane.
These candles stand upon pentagrams, which symbolize Geburah, severity, and
give protection; but also represent the microcosm, the four elements crowned
by Spirit, the Will of man perfected in its aspiration to the Higher. They are
placed outside the Circle to attract the hostile forces, to give them the first
inkling of the Great Work, which they too must some day perform. {59}
{diagram on this page: A double cubic altar with universal sigil on top, sigils
of the 4 Enochian elemental kings around sides in top half and Enochian watch
towers (elemental squares) around sides in bottom half. There is a scale at
bottom of the diagram and the caption under that: "THE ALTAR. SIDE DESIGNS
FROM DR. DEE, AS IN EQUINOX VII."}
{60}
CHAPTER III
THE ALTAR
THE Altar represents the solid basis of the work, the fixed Will<<footnote:
It represents the extension of Will. Will is the Dyad (see section on the Wand);
2 x 2 = 4. So the altar is foursquare, and also its ten squares show 4. 10 =
1 + 2 + 3 + 4.>> of the Magician; and the law under which he works. Within
this altar everything is kept, since everything is subject to law. Except the
lamp.
According to some authorities the Altar should be made of oak to represent the
stubbornness and rigidity of law; others would make it of Acacia, for Acacia
is the symbol of resurrection.
The Altar is a double cube, which is a rough way of symbolizing the Great Work;
for the doubling of the cube, like the squaring of the circle, was one of the
great problems of antiquity. The surface of this Altar is composed of ten squares.
The top is Kether, and the bottom Malkuth. The height of the Altar is equal
to the height above the ground of the navel of the Magician. The Altar is connected
with the Ark of the Covenant, Noah's Ark, the nave ("navis," a ship)
of the Church, and many other symbols of antiquity, whose symbolism has been
well worked out in an anonymous book called "The Cannon,"<<WEH
footnote: written by William Stirling>> (Elkin Mathews), which should
be studied carefully before constructing the Altar.
For this Altar must embody the Magician's knowledge of the laws of Nature, which
are the laws through which he works.
He should endeavour to make geometrical constructions to symbolize cosmic measurements.
For example, he may take the two diagonals as (say) the diameter of the sun.
Then the side of the altar will be found to have a length equal to some other
cosmic measure, a vesica drawn on the side some other, a "rood cross"
within the vesica yet another. Each Magician should work out his own system
of symbolism -- and he need not confine himself to cosmic measurements. He might,
for example, find some relation to express the law of inverse squares.
The top of the Altar shall be covered with gold, and on this gold should be
engraved some such figure as the Holy Oblation, or the New Jerusalem, or, if
he have the skill, the Microcosm of Vitruvius, of which we give illustrations.
On the |