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- (Part 8 of 8)
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- YOGA FOR YELLOWBELLIES.
-
- FOURTH LECTURE.
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-
- Salutation to the Sons of the Morning!
-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
-
- 1. I should like to begin this evening by recapitulating very
- briefly what has been said in the previous three lectures, and this
- would be easier if I had not completely forgotten everything I said.
- But there is a sort of faint glimmering to the effect that the
- general subject of the series was the mental exercises of the Yogi;
- and the really remarkable feature was that I found it impossible to
- discuss them at all thoroughly without touching upon, first of all,
- ontology; secondly, ordinary science; and thirdly, the high Magick of
- the true initiates of the light.
- 2. We found that both Ontology and Science, approaching the
- question of reality from entirely different standpoints, and pursuing
- their researches by entirely different methods, had yet arrived at an
- identical 'impasse.' And the general conclusion was that there could
- be no reality in any intellectual concept of any kind, that the only
- reality must lie in direct experience of such a kind that it is
- beyond the scope of the critical apparatus of our minds. It cannot
- be subject to the laws of Reason; it cannot be found in the fetters
- of elementary mathematics; only transfinite and irrational concep-
- tions in that subject can possibly shadow forth the truth in some
- such paradox as the identity of contradictories. We found further
- that those states of mind which result from the practice of Yoga are
- properly called trances, because they actually transcend the
- conditions of normal thought.
- 3. At this point we begin to see an almost insensible drawing
- together of the path of Yoga which is straight (and in a sense arid)
- with that of Magick, which may be compared with the Bacchic dance or
- the orgies of Pan. It suggests that Yoga is ultimately a sublimation
- of philosophy, even as Magick is a sublimation of science. The way
- is open for a reconciliation between these lower elements of thought
- by virtue of their tendency to flower into these higher states beyond
- thought, in which the two have become one. And that, of course, is
- Magick; and that, of course, is Yoga.
- 4. We may now consider whether, in view of the final identifi-
- cation of these two elements in their highest, there may not be
- something more practical than sympathy in their lower elements -- I
- mean mutual assistance.
- I am glad to think that the Path of the Wise has become much
- smoother and shorter than it was when I first trod it; for this very
- reason that the old antinomies of Magick and Yoga have been
- completely resolved.
- You all know what Yoga is. Yoga means union. And you all know
- how to do it by shutting off the din of the intellectual boiler
- factory, and allowing the silence of starlight to reach the ear. It
- is the emancipation of the exalted from the thrall of the commonplace
- expression of Nature.
- 5. Now what is Magick? Magick is the science and art of
- causing change to occur in conformity with the Will. How do we
- achieve this? By exalting the will to the point where it is master
- of circumstance. And how do we do this? By so ordering every
- thought, word and act, in such a way that the attention is constantly
- recalled to the chosen object.
- 6. Suppose I want to evoke the 'Intelligence' of Jupiter. I
- base my work upon the correspondences of Jupiter. I base my mathema-
- tics on the number 4 and its subservient numbers 16, 34, 136. I
- employ the square or rhombus. For my sacred animal I choose the
- eagle, or some other sacred to Jupiter. For my perfume, saffron --
- for my libation some preparation of opium or a generous yet sweet and
- powerful wine such as port. For my magical weapon I take the scep-
- tre; in fact, I continue choosing instruments for every act in such a
- way that I am constantly reminded of my will to evoke Jupiter. I
- even constrain *every* object. I extract the Jupiterian elements
- from all the complex phenomena which surround me. If I look at my
- carpet, the blues and purples are the colours which stand out as
- Light against an obsolescent and indeterminate background. And thus
- I carry on my daily life, using every moment of time in constant
- self-admonition to attend to Jupiter. The mind quickly responds to
- this training; it very soon automatically rejects as unreal anything
- which is not Jupiter. Everything else escapes notice. And when the
- time comes for the ceremony of invocation which I have been consis-
- tently preparing with all devotion and assiduity, I am quickly
- inflamed. I am attuned to Jupiter, I am pervaded by Jupiter, I am
- absorbed by Jupiter, I am caught up into the heaven of Jupiter and
- wield his thunderbolts. Hebe and Ganymedes bring me wine; the Queen
- of the Gods is throned at my side, and for my playmates are the
- fairest maidens of the earth.
- 7. Now what is all this but to do in a partial (and if I may
- say so, romantic) way what the Yogi does in his more scientifically
- complete yet more austerely difficult methods? And here the advan-
- tage of Magick is that the process of initiation is spontaneous and,
- so to speak, automatic. You may begin in the most modest way with
- the evocation of some simple elemental spirit; but in the course of
- the operation you are compelled, in order to attain success, to deal
- with higher entities. Your ambition grows, like every other organ-
- ism, by what it feeds on. You are very soon led to the Great Work
- itself; you are led to aspire to the Knowledge and Conversation of
- the Holy Guardian Angel, and this ambition in turn arouses automati-
- cally further difficulties the conquest of which confers new powers.
- In the Book of the Thirty Aethyrs, commonly called 'The Vision and
- the Voice', it becomes progressively difficult to penetrate each
- Aethyr. In fact, the penetration was only attained by the initia-
- tions which were conferred by the Angel of each Aethyr in its turn.
- There was this further identification with Yoga practices recorded in
- this book. At times the concentration necessary to dwell in the
- Aethyr became so intense that definitely Samadhic results were
- obtained. We see then that the exaltation of the mind by means of
- magical practices leads (as one may say, in spite of itself) to the
- same results as occur in straightforward Yoga.
- I think I ought to tell you a little more about these visions.
- The method of obtaining them was to take a large topaz beautifully
- engraved with the Rose and Cross of forty-nine petals, and this topaz
- was set in a wooden cross of oak painted red. I called this the
- shew-stone in memory of Dr. Dee's famous shew-stone. I took this in
- my hand and proceeded to recite in the Enochian or Angelic language
- the Call of the Thirty Aethyrs, using in each case the special name
- appropriate to the Aethyr. Now all this went very well until about
- the 17th, I think it was, and then the Angel, foreseeing difficulty
- in the higher or remoter Aethyrs, gave me this instruction. I was to
- recite a chapter from the Q'uran: what the Mohammedans call the
- 'Chapter of the Unity.' 'Qol: Hua Allahu achad; Allahu assamad:
- lam yalid walam yulad; walam yakun lahu kufwan achad.' I was to say
- this, bowing myself to the earth after each chapter, a thousand and
- one times a day, as I walked behind my camel in the Great Eastern Erg
- of the Sahara. I do not think that anyone will dispute that this was
- pretty good exercise; but my point is that it was certainly very good
- Yoga.
- From what I have said in previous lectures you will all recog-
- nise that this practice fulfils all the conditions of the earlier
- stages of Yoga, and it is therefore not surprising that it put my
- mind in such a state that I was able to use the Call of the Thirty
- Aethyrs with much greater efficacy than before.
- 8. Am I then supposed to be saying that Yoga is merely the
- hand-maiden of Magick, or that Magick has no higher function than to
- supplement Yoga? By no means. it is the co-operation of lovers;
- which is here a symbol of the fact. The practices of Yoga are almost
- essential to success in Magick -- at least I may say from my own
- experience that it made all the difference in the world to my magical
- success, when I had been thoroughly grounded in the hard drill of
- Yoga. But -- I feel absolutely certain that I should never have
- obtained success in Yoga in so short a time as I did had I not spent
- the previous three years in the daily practice of magical methods.
- 9. I may go so far as to say that just before I began Yoga
- seriously, I had almost invented a Yogic method of practising Magick
- in the stress of circumstances. I had been accustomed to work with
- full magical apparatus in an admirably devised temple of my own. Now
- I found myself on shipboard, or in some obscure bedroom of Mexico
- City, or camped beside my horse among the sugar canes in lonely
- tropical valleys, or couched with my rucksack for all pillow on bare
- volcanic heights. I had to replace my magical apparatus. I would
- take the table by my bed, or stones roughly piled, for my altar. My
- candle or my Alpine Lantern was my light. My ice-axe for the wand,
- my drinking flask for the chalice, my machete for the sword, and a
- chapati or a sachet of salt for the pantacle of art! Habit soon
- familiarised these rough and ready succedanea. But I suspect that it
- may have been the isolation and the physical hardship itself that
- helped, that more and more my magical operation became implicit in my
- own body and mind, when a few months later I found myself performing
- *in full* operations involving the Formula of the Neophyte (for which
- see my treatise 'Magick') without any external apparatus at all.
- 10. A pox on all these formalistic Aryan sages! Unless one
- wants to be very pedantic, it is rather absurd to contend that this
- form of ritual forced upon me, first by external and next by internal
- circumstances, was anything else but a new form of Asana, Pranayama,
- Mantra-Yoga, and Pratyahara in something very near perfection; and it
- is therefore not surprising that the Magical exaltation resulting
- from such ceremonies was in all essential respects the equivalent of
- Samyama.
- On the other hand, the Yoga training was an admirable aid to
- that final concentration of the Will which operates the magical
- ecstasy.
- 11. This then is reality: direct experience. How does it
- differ from the commonplace every-day experience of sensory impres-
- sions which are so readily shaken by the first breath of the wind of
- intellectual analysis?
- Well, to answer first of all in a common-sense way, the differ-
- ence is simply that the impression is deeper, is less to be shaken.
- Men of sense and education are always ready to admit that they may
- have been mistaken in the quality of their observation of any pheno-
- menon, and men a little more advanced are almost certain to attain to
- a placid kind of speculation as to whether the objects of sense are
- not mere shadows on a screen.
- I take off my glasses. Now I cannot read my manuscript. I had
- two sets of lenses, one natural, one artificial. If I had been
- looking through a telescope of the old pattern I should have had
- three sets of lenses, two artificial. If I go and put on somebody
- else's glasses I shall get another kind of blur. As the lenses of my
- eyes change in the course of my life, what my sight tells me is
- different. The point is that we are quite unable to judge what is
- the truth of the vision. Why then do I put on my glasses to read?
- Only because the particular type of illusion produced by wearing them
- is one which enables me to interpret a pre-arranged system of hiero-
- glyphics in a particular sense which I happen to imagine I want. It
- tells me nothing whatever about the object of my vision -- what I
- call the paper and the ink. Which is the dream? The clear legible
- type or the indecipherable blur?
- 12. But in any case any man who is sane at all does make a
- distinction between the experience of daily life and the experience
- of dream. It is true that sometimes dreams are so vivid, and their
- character so persistently uniform that men are actully deceived into
- believing that places they have seen in dreams repeatedly are places
- that they have known in a waking life. But they are quite capable of
- criticising this illusion by memory, and they admit the deception.
- Well, in the same way the phenomena of high Magick and Samadhi have
- an authenticity, and confer an interior certainty, which is to the
- experience of waking life as that is to a dream.
- But, apart from all this, experience is experience; and the real
- guarantee that we have of the attainment of reality is its rank in
- the hierarchy of the mind.
- 13. Let us ask ourselves for a moment what is the characteris-
- tic of dream impressions as judged by the waking mind. Some dreams
- are so powerful tht they convince us, even when awake, of their
- reality. Why then do we criticise and dismiss them? Because their
- contents are incoherent, because the order of nature to which they
- belong does not properly conform with the kind of experience which
- does hang together -- after a fashion. Why do we criticise the
- reality of waking experience? On precisely similar grounds. Because
- in certain respects it fails to conform with our deep instinctive
- consciousness of the structure of the mind. *Tendency!* We *happen*
- to be that kind of animal.
- 14. The result is that we accept waking experience for what it
- is within certain limits. At least we do so to this extent, that we
- base our action upon the belief that, even if it is not philoso-
- phically real, it is real enough to base a course of action upon it.
- What is the ultimate prctical test of conviction? Just this,
- that it is our standard of conduct. I put on these glasses in order
- to read. I am quite certain that the blurred surface will become
- clear when I do so. Of course, I may be wrong. I may have picked up
- some other body's glasses by mistake. I might go blind before I
- could get them into position. Even such confidence has limits; but
- it is a real confidence, and this is the explanation of why we go
- ahead with the business of life. When we think it over, we know that
- there are all sorts of snags, that it is impossible to formulate any
- proposition which is philosophically unassailable, or even one which
- is so from a practical standpoint. We admit to ourselves that there
- are all sorts of snags; but we take our chance of that, and go ahead
- in the general principles inculcated by our experience of nature. It
- is, of course, quite easy to prove that experience is impossible. To
- begin with, our consciousness of any phenomenon is never the thing
- itself, but only a hieroglyphic symbol of it.
- Our position is rather that of a man with a temperamental motor-
- car; he has a vague theory that it ought to go, on general princi-
- ples; but he is not quite sure how it will perform in any given
- circumstances. Now the experience of Magick and Yoga is quite above
- all this. The possibility of criticising the other types of experi-
- ence is based upon the possibility of expressing our impressions in
- adequate terms; and this is not at all the case with the results of
- Magick and Yoga. As we have already seen, every attempt at expres-
- sion in ordinary language is futile. Where the hero of the adventure
- is tied up with a religious theory, we get the vapid and unctuous
- bilgewater of people like St. John of the Cross. All Christian
- Mystics are tarred with the same brush. Their abominable religion
- compels them to every kind of sentimentality; and the theory of
- original sin vitiates their whole position, because instead of the
- noble and inspiring Trance of Sorrow they have nothing but the
- miserable, cowardly, and selfish sense of guilt to urge them to
- undertake the Work.
- 15. I think we may dismiss altogether from our minds every
- claim to experience made by any Christian of whatever breed of
- spiritual virus as a mere morbid reflection, the apish imitation of
- the true ecstasies and trances. All expressions of the real thing
- must partake of the character of that thing, and therefore only that
- language is permissible which is itself released from the canon of
- ordinary speech, exactly as the trance is unfettered by the laws of
- ordinary consciousness. In other words, the only proper translation
- is in poetry, art and music.
- 16. If you examine the highest poetry in the light of common
- sense, you can only say that it is rubbish; and in actual fact you
- cannot so examine it at all, because there is something in poetry
- which is not in the words themselves, which is not in the images
- suggested by the words 'O windy star blown sideways up the sky!'
- True poetry is itself a magic spell which is a key to the ineffable.
- With music this thesis is so obvious as hardly to need stating.
- Music has no expressed intellectual content whatever, and the sole
- test of music is its power to exalt the soul. It is then evident
- that the composer is himself attempting to express in sensible form
- some such sublimities as are attained by those who practise Magick
- and Yoga as they should.
- 17. The same is true of plastic art, but evidently in much less
- degree; and all those who really know and love art are well aware
- that classical painting and sculpture are rarely capable of producing
- these transcendent orgasms of ecstasy, as in the case of the higher
- arts. One is bound to the impressions of the eye; one is drawn back
- to the contemplation of a static object. And this fact has been so
- well understood in modern times by painters that they have endea-
- voured to create an art within an art; and this is the true explana-
- tion of such movements as 'surrealisme.' I want to impress upon you
- that the artist is in truth a very much superior being to the Yogi or
- the Magician. He can reply as St. Paul replied to the centurion who
- boasted of his Roman citizenship 'With a great sum obtained I this
- freedom'; and Paul, fingering the Old School Tie, sneered: "But I
- was free born.'
- 18. It is not for us here to enquire as to how it should happen
- that certain human beings possess from birth this right of intimacy
- with the highest reality, but Blavatsky was of this same opinion that
- the natural gift marks the acquisition of the rank in the spiritual
- hierarchy to which the student of Magick and Yoga aspires. He is, so
- to speak, an artist in the making; and it is perhaps not likely that
- his gifts will have become sufficiently automatic in his present
- incarntion to produce the fruits of his attainment. Yet, undoubted-
- ly, there have been such cases, and that within my own experience.
- 19. I could quote you the case of a man -- a very inferior and
- wishy-washy poet -- who undertook for a time very strenuously the
- prescribed magical practices. He was very fortunate, and attained
- admirable results. No sooner had he done so that his poetry itself
- became flooded with supernal light and energy. He produced master-
- pieces. And then he gave up his Magick because the task of further
- progress appalled him. The result was that his poetry fell
- completely away to the standard of wet blotting paper.
- 20. Let me tell you also of one man almost illiterate, a
- Lancashire man who had worked in a mill from the age of nine years.
- He had studied for years with the Toshophists with no results. Then
- he corresponded with me for some time; he had still no results. He
- came to stay with me in Sicily. One day as we went down to bathe we
- stood for a moment on the brink of the cliff which led down to the
- little rocky cove with its beach of marvellous smooth sand.
- I said something quite casually -- I have never been able to
- remember what it was -- nor could he ever remember -- but he suddenly
- dashed down the steep little path like a mountain goat, threw off his
- cloak and plunged into the sea. When he came back, his very body had
- become luminous. I saw that he needed to be alone for a week to
- complete his experience, so I fixed him up in an Alpine tent in a
- quiet dell under broad-spreading trees at the edge of a stream. From
- time to time he sent me his magical record, vision after vision of
- amazing depth and splendour. I was so gratified with his attainment
- that I showed these records to a distinguished literary critic who
- was staying with me at the time. A couple of hours later, when I
- returned to the Abbey, he burst out upon me a flame of excitement.
- 'Do you know what this is?' he cried. I answered casually that it
- was a lot of very good visions. 'Bother your visions,' he exclaimed,
- 'didn't you notice the style? It's pure John Bunyan!' It was.
- 21. But all this is neither here nor there. There is only one
- thing for anybody to do on a path, and that is to make sure of the
- next step. And the fact which we all have to comfort us is this:
- that all human beings have capacities for attainment, each according
- to his or her present position.
- For instance, with regard to the power of vision on the astral
- plane, I have been privileged to train many hundreds of people in the
- course of my life, and only about a dozen of them were incapable of
- success. In one case this was because the man had already got beyond
- all such preliminary exercise; his mind immediately took on the
- formless condition which transcends all images, all thought. Other
- failures were stupid people who were incapable of making an experi-
- ment of any sort. They were a mass of intellectual pride and preju-
- dice, and I sent them away with an injunction to go to Jane Austen.
- But the ordinary man and woman get on very well, and by this I do not
- mean only the educated. It is, in fact, notorious that, among many
- of the primitive races of mankind, strange powers of all kinds
- develop with amazing florescence.
- 22. The question for each one of us is then: first of all, to
- acertain our present positions; secondly, to determine our proper
- directions; and, thirdly, to govern ourselves accordingly.
- The question for me is also to describe a method of procedure
- which will be sufficiently elastic to be useful to every human being.
- I have tried to do this by combining the two paths of Magick and
- Yoga. If we perform the preliminary practices, each according to his
- capacity, the result will surely be the acquisition of a certain
- technique. And this will become much easier as we advance, especial-
- ly if we bear it well in mind not to attempt to discriminate between
- the two methods as if they were opposing schools, but to use the one
- to help out the other in an emergency.
- 23. Of course, nobody understands better than I do that,
- although nobody can do your work for you, it is possible to make use
- -- to a certain very limited extent -- of other people's experience,
- and the Great Order which I have the honour to serve has appointed
- what I think you will agree is a very satisfactory and practical
- curriculum.
- 24. You are expected to spend three months at least on the
- study of some of the classics on the subject. The chief object of
- this is not to instruct you, but to familiarise you with the ground
- work, and in particular to prevent you getting the idea that there is
- any right or wrong in matters of opinion. You pass an examination
- intended to make sure that your mind is well grounded in this matter,
- and you become a Probationer. Your reading will have given you some
- indication as to the sort of thing you are likely to be good at, and
- you select such practices as seem to you to promise well. You go
- ahead with these, and keep a careful record of what you do, and what
- results occur. After eleven months you submit a record to your
- superior; it is his duty to put you right where you have gone wrong,
- and particularly to encourage you where you think you have failed.
- 25. I say this because one of the most frequent troubles is
- that people who are doing excellent work throw it up because they
- find that Nature is not what they thought it was going to be. But
- this is the best test of the reality of any experience. All those
- which conform with your idea, which flatter you, are likely to be
- illusions. So you become a Neophyte; and attack the Task of a
- Zelator.
- There are further grades in this system, but the general prin-
- ciples are always the same -- the principles of scientific study and
- research.
- 26. We end where we began. 'The wheel has come full circle.'
- We are to use the experience of the past to determine the experience
- of the future, and as that experience increases in quantity it also
- improves in quality. And the Path is sure. And the End is sure.
- For the End is the Path.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
- casually -- I have never been able to
- remember what it was -- nor could he ever remember -- but he suddenly
- dashed down the steep little path like a mountain goat, threw off his
- cloak and plunged into the sea. When he came back, hi