An Introduction to Magick
by
The Master
Therion
Aleister
Crowley
"Magic is the Highest, most Absolute, and most Divine Knowledge of Natural
Philosophy, advanced in its works and wonderful operations by a right
understanding of the inward and occult virtue of things; so that true
Agents being applied to proper Patients, strange and admirable effects
will thereby be produced. Whence magicians are profound and diligent
searchers into Nature; they, because of their skill, know how to
anticipate an effect, the which to the fulgar shall seem to be a miracle."
- The Goetia of the Lemegeton of King
Solomon
"Wherever sympathetic magic occurs in its pure unadulterated form, it is
assumed that in nature one event follows another necessarily and
invariably without the intervention of any spiritual or personal
agency.
Thus its fundamental conception is identical with that of modern science;
underlying the whole system is a faith, implicit but real and firm, in the
order and uniformity of nature.
The magician does not doubt that the same causes will always produce the
same effects, that the performance of the proper ceremony accompanied by
the appropriate spell, will inevitably be attended by the desired results,
unless, indeed, his incantations should chance to be thwarted and foiled
by the more potent chams of another sorcerer. He supplicates no higher
power: he sues the favour of no fickle and wayward being: he abases
himself before no awful diety. Yet his power, great as he believes it to
be, is by no means arbitrary and unlimited. He can weild it only so long
as he strictly conforms to the rules of his art, or to what may be called
the laws of nature as conceived by him. To neglect these rules, to break
these laws in the smallest particular is to incure failure, and may even
expose the unskilful practitioner himself to the utmost peril. If he
claims a sovereignty over nature, it is a constitutional sovereignty
rigorously limited in its scope and exercised in exact conformity with
ancient usage.
Thus the analogy between the magical and the scientific conceptions of the
world is close. In both of them the succession of events is perfectly
regular and certain, being determined by immutable laws, the operation of
which can be forseen and calculated precisely;
the elements of caprice, of chance, and of accident are banished from the
course of nature. Both of them open up a seemingly boundless vista of
possibilities to him who knows the causes of things and can touch the
secret springs that set in motion the vast and intricate mechanism of the
world. Hence the strong attraction which magic and science alike have
exercised on the human mind; hence the powerful stimulus that both have
given to the pursuit of knowledge. They lure the weary enquirer, the
footsore seeker, on through the wilderness of disappointment in the
present by their endless promises of the future: they take him up to the
top of an exceeding high mountain and shew him, beyond the dark clouds and
rolling mists at his feet, a vision of the celestial city, far off, it may
be, but radiant with unearthly splendour, bathed in the light of
dreams."
- Dr.J.G.FRAZER, "The Golden
Bough".
"So far, therefore,as the public profession of magic has
been one of
the roads by which men have passed to supreme power, it has contributed to
emancipate mankind from the thraldom of tradition and to elevate them into
a larger, freer life, with a broader outlook on the world. This is no
small service rendered to humanity.
And when we remember further that
in another direction magic has paved the way for science, we are forced to
admit that if the black art has done much evil, it has also been the
source of much good; that if it is the child of error,it has yet been
the mother of freedom and
truth."
Ibid.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is
good".
- St.Paul.
"Also the mantras and spells; the obeah and the wanga; the
work of the
wand and the work of the sword: these he shall learn and teach.
"He must teach; but he may make severe the ordeals.
"The word of the Law is Thelema."
LIBER AL vel xxxi: The Book of the
Law.
This book is forALL:
for every man, woman, and
child.
My former work has been misunderstood, and its scope limited, by my use of
technical terms. It has attracted only too many dilettanti and
eccentrics, weaklings seeking in "Magic" an escape from reality. I myself
was first consciously drawn to the subject in this way. And it has
repelled only too many scientific and practical minds, such as I most
designed to influence.
ButMAGICK
is forALL.
I have written this book to help the Banker, the Pugilist, the Biologist,
the Poet, the Navvy, the Grocer, the Factory Girl, the Mathematician, the
Stenographer, the Golfer, the Wife, the Consul -- and all the rest -- to
fulfil themselves perfectly, each in his or her own proper
function.
Let me explain in a few words how it came about that I blazoned the
wordMAGICK
upon the Banner that I have borne
before me all my life.
Before I touched my teens, I was already aware that I was THE BEAST whose
number is 666. I did not understand in the least what that implied; it
was a passionately ecstatic sense of identity.
In my third year at Cambridge, I devoted myself consciously to the Great
Work, understanding thereby the Work of becoming a Spiritual Being, free
from the constraints, accidents, and deceptions of material
existence.
I found myself at a loss for a name to designate my work, just as
H.P.Blavatsky some years earlier. "Theosophy", "Spiritualism",
"Occultism", "Mysticism", all involved undesirable connotations.
I chose therefore the name"MAGICK"
as
essentially the most sublime, and actually the most discredited, of all
the available terms.
I swore to rehabilitateMAGICK,
to identify it with my own career; and to compel mankind to respect, love,
and trust that which they scorned, hated and feared. I have kept my
Word.
But the time is now come for me to carry my banner into the thick of the
press of human life.
I must makeMAGICK
the essential factor in the
life ofALL.
In presenting this book to the world, I must then explain and justify my
position by formulating a definition ofMAGICK
and
setting forth its main principles in such a way
thatALL
may understand instantly that their
souls, their lives, in every relation with every other human being and
every circumstance, depend uponMAGICK
and the
right comprehension and right application thereof.
I. DEFINITION.MAGICK
is the Science and Art of
causing Change to occur in conformity with
Will.
[by "intentional" I mean "willed".
But even unintentional act so-seeming are not truly so. Thus, breathing
is an act of the Will-to-Live.]
(Illustration: It is my Will to
inform the World of
certain facts within my knowledge. I therefore take "magical weapons",
pen, ink, and paper; I write "incantations" -- these sentences -- in the
"magical language" i.e. that which is understood by the people I wish to
instruct; I call forth "spirits", such as printers, publishers,
booksellers, and so forth, and constrain them to convey my message to
those people. The composition and distribution of this book is thus an
act ofMAGICK
by which I cause Changes to take
place in conformity with my Will.)
II. POSTULATE.
ANY required Change may be effected by the application of the proper kind
and degree of Force in teh proper manner through the proper medium to the
proper object.
(Illustration: I wish to prepare an ounce of Chloride of Gold. I must
take the right kind of acid, nitro-hydrochloric and no other, in
sufficient quantity and of adequate strength, and place it, in a vessel
which will not break, leak, or corrode, in such a manner as will not
produce undesirable results, with the necessary quantity of Gold: and so
forth. Every Change has its own conditions.
In the present state of our knowledge and power some changes are not
possible in practice; we cannot cause eclipses, for instance, or transform
lead into tin, or create men from mushrooms. But it is theoretically
possible to cause in any object any change of which that object is capable
by nature; and the conditions are covered by the above
postulate.)
III. THEOREMS.(1) Every intentional act is a Magical Act.
(Illustration: See "Definition" above.)
[In one sense
Magick may be defined as the name given to Science by the
vulgar.]
(2) Every successful act has conformed to the
postulate.
(3) Every failure proves that one or more requirements of the postulate
have not been fulfilled.
(Illustrations: There may be failure to understand the case;
as when a doctor makes a wrong diagnosis, and his treatment injures his
patient. There may be failure to apply the right kind of force, as when a
rustic tries to blow out an electric light. There may be failure to apply
the right degree of force, as when a wrestler has his hold broken. There
may be failure to apply the force in the right manner, as when one
presents a cheque at the wrong window of the Bank. There may be failure
to employ the correct medium, as when Leonardo da Vinci found his
masterpiece fade away. The force may be applied to an unsuitable object,
as when one tries to crack a stone, thinking it a nut.)
(4) The first requisite for causing any change is through qualitative
and quantitative understanding of the conditions.
(Illustration: The most common cause of failure in life is
ignorance of one's own True Will, or of the means by which to fulfil that
Will. A man may fancy himself a painter, and waste his life trying to
become one; or he may be really a painter, and yet fail to understand and
to measure the difficulties peculiar to that career.)
(5) The second requisite of causing any change is the practical
ability to set in right motion the necessary forces.
(Illustration: A banker may have a perfect grasp of a given
situation, yet lack the quality of decision, or the assets, necessary to
take advantage of it.
(6) "Every man and every woman is a star".
That is to say, every human being is intrinsically an independent
individual with his own proper character and proper motion.
(7) Every man and every woman has a course, depending partly on the
self, and partly on the environment which is natural and necessary for
each. Anyone who is forced from his own course, either through not
understanding himself, or through external opposition, comes into conflict
with the order of the Universe, and suffers accordingly.
(Illustration: A man may think it his duty to act in a certain
way, through having made a fancy picture of himself, instead of
investigating his actual nature. For example, a woman may make herself
miserable for life by thinking that she prefers love to social
consideration, or vice versa. One woman may stay with an unsympathetic
lover, while another may fool herself into a romantic elopement when her
only true pleasures are those of presiding at fashionable functions.
Again, a boy's instinct may tell him to go to sea, while his parents
insist on his becoming a doctor. In such a case, he will be both
unsuccessful and unhappy in medicine.)
(8) A Man whose conscious will is at odds with his True Will is
wasting his strength. He cannot hope to influence his environment
efficiently.
(Illustration: When Civil War rages in a nation, it is in no
condition to undertake the invasion of other countries. A man with cancer
employs his nourishment alike to his own use and to that of the enemy
which is part of himself. He soon fails to resist the pressure of his
environment. In practical life, a man who is doing what his conscious
tells him to be wrong will do it very clumsily. At first!)
(9) A man who is doing his True Will has the inertia of the Universe
to assist him.
(Illustration: the first principle of success in evolution is
that the individual should be true to his own nature, and at the same time
adapt himself to his environment.)
(10) Nature is a continuous phenomenon, though we do not know in all
cases how things are connected.
(Illustration: Human consciousness depends on the properties
of protoplasm, the existence of which depends on innumerable physical
conditions peculiar to this planet; and this planet is determined by the
mechanical balance of the whole universe of matter. We may then say that
our consciousness is causally connected with the remotest galaxies; yet we
do not know even how it arises from -- or with -- the molecular changes in
the brain.)
(11) Science enables us to take advantage of the continuity of Nature
by the empirical application of certain principles whose interplay
involves different orders of idea connected with each other in a way
beyond our present comprehension.
(Illustration: We are able to light cities by rule-of-thumb
methods. We do not know what consciousness is, or how it is connected
with muscular action; what electricity is or how it is connected with the
machines that generate it; and our methods depend on calculations
involving mathematical ideas which have no correspondence in the Universe
as we know it. [For instance, "irrational", "unreal", and "infinite"
expressions.])
(12) Man is ignorant of the nature of his own being and powers. Even
his idea of his limitations is based on experience of the past, and every
step in his progress extends his empire. There is therefore no reason to
assign theoretical limits to what he may be, or to what he may do.
[i.e., except--possibly--in the case of
logically absurd questions, such as the Schoolmen discussed in connection
with "God".]
(Illustration: A generation ago it was supposed theoretically
impossible that man should ever know the chemical composition of the fixed
stars. It is known that our senses are adapted to receive only an
infinitesimal fraction of the possible rates of vibration. Modern
instruments have enabled us to detect some of these supra-sensibles by
indirect methods, and even to use their peculiar qualities in the service
of man, as in the case of the rays of Hertz and Rontgen. As Tyndall said,
man might at any moment learn to perceive and utilise vibrations of all
conceivable and inconceivable kinds. The question of Magick is a question
of discovering and employing hitherto unknown forces in nature. We know
that they exist, and we cannot doubt the possibility of mental or physical
instruments capable of bringing us into relation with them.)
(13) Every man is more or less aware that his individuality comprises
several orders of existence, even when he maintains that his subtler
principles are merely symptomatic of the changes in his gross vehicle. A
similar order may be assumed to extend throughout nature.
(Illustration: One does not confuse the pain of toothache with
the decay which causes it. Inanimate objects are sensitive to certain
physical forces, such as electrical and thermal conductivity; but neither
in us or in them -- so far as we know -- is there any direct perception of
these forces. Imperceptible influences are therefore associated with all
material phenomena; and there is no reason why we should not work upon
matter through those subtle energies as we do through their material
bases. In fact, we use magnetic force to move iron, and solar radiation
to reproduce images.)
(14) Man is capable of being, and using, anything which he perceives,
for everything that he perceives is in a certain sense part of his being.
He may thus subjugate the whole Universe of which he is conscious to his
individual Will.
(Illustration: Man has used the idea of God to dictate his
personal conduct, to obtain power over his fellows, to excuse his ccrimes,
and for innumerable other purposes, including that of realizing himself as
God. He has used the irrational and unreal conceptions of mathematics to
help him in the construction of mechanical devices. He has used his moral
force to influence the actions even of wild animals. He has employed
poetic genius for political purposes.)
(15) Every force in the Universe is capable of being transformed into
any other kind of force by using suitable means. There is thus an
inexhaustible supply of any particular kind of force that we may
need.
(Illustration: Heat may be transformed into light and power by
using it to drive dynamos. The vibrations of the air may be used to kill
men by so ordering them in speech as to inflame war-like passions. The
hallucinations connected with the mysterious energies of sex result in the
perpetuation of the species.)
(16) The application of any given force affects all the orders of
being which exist in the object to which it is applied, whichever of those
orders is directly affected.
(Illustration: If I strike a man with a dagger, his
consciousness, not his body only, is affected by my act; although the
dagger, as such, has no direct relation therewith. Similarly, the power
of my thought may so work on the mind of another person as to produce
far-reaching physical changes in him, or in others through
him.
(17) A man may learn to use any force so as to serve any purpose, by
taking advantage of the above theorems.
(Illustration: A man may use a razor to make himself vigilant
over his speech, by using it to cut himself whenever he unguardedly utters
a chosen word. He may serve the same purpose by resolving that every
incident of his life shall remind him of a particular thing, making every
impression the starting point of a connected series of thoughts, ending in
that thing. He might also devote his whole energies to some one
particular object, by resolving to do nothing at variance therewith, and
to make every act turn to the advantage of that object.)
(18) He may attract to himself any force of the Universe by making
himself a fit receptacle for it, establishing a connection with it, and
arranging conditions so that his nature compels it to flow toward
him.
(Illustration: If I want pure water to drink, I dig a well in
a place where there is underground water; I prevent it from leaking away;
and I arrange to take advantage of water's accordance with the laws of
Hydrostatics to fill it.)
(19) Man's sense of himself as seperate from, and opposed to, the
Universe is a bar to his conducting its currents. It insulates him.
(Illustration: A popular leader is more successful when he
forgets himself, and remembers only "The Cause". Self-seeking engenders
jealousies and schism. When the organs of the body assert their presence
otherwise than by silent satisfaction, it is a sign that they are
diseased. The single exception is the organ of reproduction. Yet even
in this case its self-assertion bears witness to its dissatisfaction with
itself, since it cannot fulfil its function until completed by its
counterpart in another organism.)
(20) Man can only attract and employ the forces for which he is really
fitted.
(Illustration: You cannot make a silk purse out of a sow's
ear. A true man of science learns from every phenomenon. But Nature is
dumb to the hypocrite; for in her there is nothing false. [It is no
objection that the hypocrite is himself part of Nature. He is an
"endothermic" product, divided against himself, with a tendency to break
up. He will see his own qualities everywhere, and thus obtain a radical
misconception of phenomena. Most religions of the past have failed by
expecting Nature to conform with their ideals of proper
conduct.])
(21) There is no limit to the extent of the relations of any man with
the Universe in essence; for as soon as man makes himself one with any
idea the means of measurement cease to exist. But his power to utilize
that force is limited by his mental power and capacity, and by the
circumstances of his human environment.
(Illustration: When a man falls in love, the whole world
becomes, to him, nothing but love boundless and immanent; but his mystical
state is not contagious; his fellow-men are either amused or annoyed. He
can only extend to others the effect which his love has had upon himself
by means of his mental and physical qualities. Thus, Catullus, Dante, and
Swinburne made their love a mighty mover by virtue of their power to put
their thoughts on the subject in musical and eloquent language. Again,
Cleopatra and other people in authority moulded the fortunes of many other
people by allowing love to influence their political actions. The
Magician, however well he succeed in making contact with the secret
sources of energy in nature, can only use them to the extent permitted by
his intellectual and moral qualities. Mohammed's intercourse with Gabriel
was only effective because of his statesmanship, soldiership, and the
sublimity of his command of Arabic. Hertz's discovery of the rays which
we now use for wireless telegraphy was sterile until reflected through the
minds and wills of the people who could take his truth, and transmit it to
the world of action by means of mechanical and economic
instruments.
(22) Every individual is essentially sufficient to himself. But he is
unsatisfactory to himself until he has established himself in his right
relation with the Universe.
(Illustration: A microscope, however perfect, is useless in
the hands of savages. A poet, however sublime, must impose himself upon
his generation if he is to enjoy (and even to understand) himself, as
theoretically should be the case.)
(23) Magick is the Science of understanding oneself and one's
conditions. It is the Art of applying that understanding in action.
(Illustration: A golf club is intended to move a special ball
in a special way in special circumstances. A Niblick should rarely be
used on the tee, or a Brassie under the bank of a bunker. But also, the
use of any club demands skill and experience.)
(24) Every man has an indefeasible right to be what he is.
(Illustration: To insist that any one else shall comply with
one's own standards is to outrage, not only him, but oneself, since both
parties are equally born of necessity.)
(25) Every man must do Magick each time that he acts or even thinks,
since a thought is an internal act whose influence ultimately affects
action, though it may not do so at the time.
(Illustration: The least gesture causes a change in a man's
own body and
in the air around him; it disturbs the balance of the entire Universe, and
its effects continue eternally throughout all space. Every thought,
however swiftly suppressed, has its effect on the mind. Itt stands as one
of the causes of every subsequent thought, and tends to influence every
subsequent action. A golfer may lose a few yards on his drive, a few more
with his second and third, he may lie on the green six bare inches too far
from the hole, but the net result of these trifling mishaps is the
difference of a whole stroke, and so probably between halving and losing
the hole.)
(26) Every man has a right, the right of self-preservation, to fulfil
himself to the utmost.
[Men of "criminal nature" are simply at issue
with their true Wills. The murderer has the Will-to-Live; and his will to
murder is a false will at variance with his true Will, since he risks
death at the hands of Society by obeying his criminal
impulse.](Illustration: A function imperfectly performed
injures, not only itself, but everything associated with it. If the heart
is afraid to beat for fear of disturbing the liver, the liver is starved
for blood, and avenges itself on the heart by upsetting digestion, which
disorders respiration, on which cardiac welfare depends.)
(27) Every man should make Magick the keynote of his life. He should
learn its laws and live by them.
(Illustration: The Banker should discover the real meaning of
his existence, the real motive which led him to choose that profession.
He should understand banking as a necessary factor in the economic
existence of mankind, instead of as merely a business whose objects are
independent of the general welfare. He should learn to distinguish false
values from real, and to act not on accidental fluctuations but on
considerations of essential importance. Such a banker will prove himself
superior to others; because he will not be an individual limited by
transitory things, but a force of Nature, as impersonal, impartial and
eternal as gravitation, as patient and irresistible as the tides. His
system will not be subject to panic, any more than the law of Inverse
Squares is disturbed by Elections. He will not be anxious about his
affairs because they will not be his; and for that reason he will be able
to direct them with the calm, clear-headed confidence of an onlooker, with
intelligence unclouded by self-interest and power unimpaired by
passion.)
(28) Every man has a right to fulfil his own will without being afraid
that it may interfere with that of others; for if he is in his proper
place, it is the fault of others if they interfere with him.
(Illustration: If a man like Napoleon were actually appointed
by destiny to control Europe, he should not be blamed for exercising his
rights. To oppose him would be an error. Any one so doing would have
made a mistake as to his own destiny, except in so far as it might be
necessary for him to learn the lessons of defeat. The sun moves in space
without interference. The order of Nature provides an orbit for each
star. A clash proves that one or the other has strayed from its course.
But as to each man that keeps his true course, the more firmly he acts,
the less likely are others to get in his way. His example will help them
to find their own paths and pursue them. Every man that becomes a
Magician helps others to do likewise. The more firmly and surely men
move, and the more such action is accepted as the standard of morality,
the less will conflict and confusion hamper humanity.)
I hope that the above principles will demonstrate
toALLthat their welfare, their very existence,
is bound up inMAGICK.I trust that they will
understand, not only the reasonableness, but the necessity of the
fundamental truth which I was the means of giving to mankind:"Do what
thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law."
I trust that they will
assert themselves as individually absolute, that they will grasp the fact
that it is their right to assert themselves, and to accomplish the task
for which their nature fits them. Yea, more, that this is their duty, and
that not only to themselves but to others, a duty founded upon universal
necessity, and not to be shirked on account of any casual circumstances of
the moment which may seem to put such conduct in the light of
inconvenience or even of cruelty.
I hope that the principles outlined above will help them to understand
this book, and prevent them from being deterred from its study by the more
or less technical language in which it is written.
The essense ofMAGICKis simple enough in all conscience.
It is not otherwise with teh art of government. The Aim is simply
prosperity; but the theory is tangled, and the practice beset with
briars.
In the same way MAGICK
is merely to be and to
do. I should add: "to suffer". For Magick is the verb; and it is part of
the Training to use the passive voice. This is, however, a matter of
Initiation rather than of Magick in its ordinary sense. It is not my
fault if being is baffling, and doing desperate!
Yet, once the above principles are firmly fixed in the mind, it is easy
enough to sum up the situation very shortly. One must find out for
oneself, and make sure beyond doubt, who one is, what one is, why one is.
This done, one may put the Will which is implicit in the "Why" into words,
or rather into One Word. Being thus conscious of the proper course to
pursue, the next thing is to understand the conditions necessary to
following it out. After that, one must eliminate from oneself every
element alien or hostile to success, and develop those parts of oneself
which are specially needed to control the aforesaid conditions.
Let us make an analogy. A nation must become aware of its own character
before it can be said to exist. From that knowledge it must divine its
destiny. It must then consider the political conditions of the world; how
other countries may help it or hinder it. It must then destroy in itself
those qualities which will enable it to combat successfully the external
conditions which threaten to oppose its purpose. We have had a recent
example in the case of the young German Empire, which, knowing itself and
its will, disciplined and trained itself so that it conquered the
neighbors which had oppressed it for so many centuries. But after 1866
and 1870, 1914! It mistook itself for superhuman, it willed a thing
impossible, it failed to eliminate its own internal jealousies, it failed
to understand the conditions of victory, it did not train itself to hold
the sea, and thus, having violated every principle
ofMAGICK
it was pulled down and broken into
pieces by provincialism and democracy, so that neither individual
excellence nor civic virtue has yet availed to raise it again to that
majestic unity which made so bold a bid for the mastery of the race of
man.
The sincere student will discover, behind the symbolic technicalities of
this book, a practical method of making himself a Magician. The processes
described will enable him to discriminate between what he actually is, and
what he has fondly imagined himself to be.[Professor Sigmund
Freud and his school have, in recent years, discovered a part of this body
of Truth, which has been taught for many centuries in the Sanctuaries of
Initiation. But failure to grasp the fullness of Truth, especially that
implied in my Sixth Theorem (above) and its corollaries, has led him and
his followers into the error of admitting that the avowedly suicidal
"Censor" is the proper arbiter of conduct. Official psycho-analysis is
therefore committed to upholding a fraud, although the foundation of the
science was the observation of the disastrous effects on the individual of
being false to is Unconscious Self, whose "writing on the wall" in dream
language is the record of the sum of the essential tendencies of the true
nature of the individdual. The result has been that psycho-analysts have
misinterpereted life, and announced the absurdity that every human being
is essentially an anti-social, criminal, and insane animal. It is evident
that the errors of the Unconscious of which the psycho-analysts complain
are neither more nor less than the "original sin" of the theologians whom
they despise so heartily.]
He must behold his soul in all its awful nakedness, he must not fear to
look on that appalling actuality. He must discard the gaudy garments with
which his shame has screened him; he must accept the fact that nothing can
make him anything but what he is. He may lie to himself, drug himself,
hide himself; but he is always there. Magick will teach him that his mind
is playing him traitor. It is as if a man were told that tailors'
fashion-plates were the canon of human beauty, so that he tried to make
himself formless and featureless like them, and shuddered with horror at
the idea of Holbein making a portrait of him. Magick will show him the
beauty and majesty of the self which he has tried to suppress and
disguise.
Having discovered his identity, he will soon perceive his purpose.
Another process will show him how to make that purpose pure and powerful.
He may then learn how to estimate his environment, learn how to make
allies, how to make himself prevail against all powers whose error has
caused them to wander across his path.
In the course of this Training, he will learn to explore the Hidden
Mysteries of Nature, and to develop new sences and faculties in himself,
whereby he may communicate with, and control, Beings and Forces pertaining
to orders of existence which have been hitherto inaccessible to profane
research, and available only to that unscientific and
empiricalMAGICK
(of tradition) which I came to
destroy in order that I might fulfil.
I send this book into the
world that every man and woman may take hold of life in the proper manner.
It does not matter if one's present house of flesh be the hut of a
shepherd; by virtue of myMAGICK
he shall be such
a shepherd as David was. If it be the studio of a sculptor, he shall so
chisel from himself the marble masks his idea that he shall be no less a
master than Rodin.
Witness mine hand:
The Master Therion : The Beast 666; MAGUS 9 = 2 A.'.A.'. who is The Word
of the Aeon THELEMA; whose name is called V.V.V.V.V. 8 = 3 A.'.A.'. in the
City of the Pyramids; OU MH 7 = 4; OL SONUF VAORESAGI 6 = 5, and .....
..... 5 = 6 A.'.A.'. in the Mountain of Abiegnus: but FRATER PERDURABO in
the Outer Order or the A.'.A.'. and in the World of men upon the Earth,
Aleister Crowley of Trinity College, Cambridge.