THE WAKE WORLD
A TALE FOR BABES AND SUCKLINGS
Webmaster's note: this fairy tale was written before this Aeon.
In other words, the 15th and 28th paths have the correspondences backwards
(ie, He is not the Emperor, it is the Star. The Emperor is now in Tzaddi,
between Yesod and Netzach, as opposed to Tiphareth (The Sixth House) to
Chokmah (The Second House)).
My name is Lola, because I am the Key of Delights, and the other
children in my dream call me Lola Daydream. When I am awake, you see, I
know that I am dreaming, so that they must be very silly children, don't
you think? There are people in the dream, too, who are quite grown up and
horrid; but the really important thing is the wake-up person. There is
only one, for there never could be any one like him. I call him my Fairy
Prince. He rides a horse with beautiful Wings like a swan, or sometimes a
strange creature like a lion or a bull, with a woman's face and breasts,
and she has unfathomable eyes.
My Fairy Prince is a dark boy, very comely; I think every one must love
him, and yet every one is afraid. He looks through one just as if one had
no clothes on in the Garden of God, and he had made one, and one could do
nothing except in the mirror of his mind. He never laughs or frowns or
smiles; because, whatever he sees, he sees what is beyond as well, and so
nothing ever happens. His mouth is redder than any roses you ever saw. I
wake up quite when we kiss each other, and there is no dream any more.
But when it is not trembling on mine, I see kisses on his lips,
as if he were kissing some one that one could not see.
Now you must know that my Fairy Prince is my lover, and one day he will
come for good and ride away with me and marry me. I shan't tell you his
name because it is too beautiful. It is a great secret between us. When we
were engaged he gave me such a beautiful ring. It was like this. First
there was his shield, which had a sun on it and some roses, all on a kind
of bar; and there was a terrible number written on it. Then there was a
bank of soft roses with the sun shining on it, and above there was a red
rose on a golden cross, and then there was a three-cornered star, shining
so bright that nobody could possibly look at it unless they had love in
their eyes; and in the middle was an eye without an eyelid. That could see
anything, I should think, but you see it never could go to sleep, because
there wasn't any eye-lid. On the sides were written l.N.R.I. and T.A.R.O.,
which mean many strange and beautiful things, and terrible things too. I
should think any one would be afraid to hurt any one who wore that ring.
It is all cut out of an amethyst, and my Fairy Prince said: "Whenever you
want me, look into the ring and call me ever so softly by my name, and
kiss the ring, and worship it, and then look ever so deep down into it,
and I will come to you." So I made up a pretty poem to say every time I
woke up, for you see I am a very sleepy girl, and dream ever so much about
the other children; and that is a pity, because there is only one thing I
love, and that is my Fairy Prince. So this is the poem I did to worship
the ring, part is words, and part is pictures. You must pick out what the
pictures mean, and then it all makes poetry.
THE INVOCATION OF THE RING
ADONAI! Thou inmost {symbol of Fire},
Self-glittering image of my soul,
Strong lover to thy Bride's desire,
Call me and claim me and control!
I pray Thee keep the holy tryst
Within this ring of Amethyst.
For on mine eyes the golden {symbol of Sun}
Hath dawned; my vigil slew the Night.
I saw the image of the One:
I came from darkness into L.V.X.
I pray Thee keep the holy tryst
Within this ring of Amethyst.
I.N.R.I. - me crucified,
Me slain, interred, arisen, inspire!
T.A.R.O. - me glorified,
Anointed, fill with frenzied {symbol of Fire}
I pray Thee keep the holy tryst
Within this ring of Amethyst.
I eat my flesh: I drink my blood
I gird my loins: I journey far:
For thou hast shown {circle}, +,
{Ayin}, 777, {kappa alpha mu eta lambda omicron nu},
I pray Thee keep the holy tryst
Within this ring of Amethyst.
Prostrate I wait upon Thy will,
Mine Angel, for this grace of union.
O let this Sacrament distil
Thy conversation and communion.
I pray Thee keep the holy tryst
Within this ring of Amethyst.
I have not told you anything about myself, because it doesn't really
matter; the only thing I want to tell you about is my Fairy Prince. But
as I am telling you all this, I am seventeen years old, and very fair when
you shut your eyes to look; but when you open them, I am really dark, with
a fair skin. I have ever such heaps of hair, and big, big, round eyes,
always wondering at everything. Never mind, it's only a nuisance. I shall
tell you what happened one day when I said the poem to the ring. I wasn't
really quite awake when I began, but as I said it, it got brighter and
brighter, and when I came to "ring of amethyst" the fifth time (there
are five verses, because my lover's name has five V's in it), he galloped
across the beautiful green sunset, spurring the winged horse, till the
blood made all the sky turn rosy red. So he caught me up and set me on his
horse, and I clung to his neck as we galloped into the night. Then he told
me he would take me to his Palace and show me everything, and one day when
we were married I should be mistress of it all. Then I wanted to be
married to him at once, and then I saw it couldn't be, because I was so
sleepy and had bad dreams, and one can't be a good wife if one is always
doing that sort of thing. But he said I would be older one day, and not
sleep so much, and every one slept a little, but the great thing was not
to be lazy and contented with the dreams, so I mean to fight hard.
By and by we came to a beautiful green place with the strangest
house
you ever saw. Round the big meadow there lay a wonderful snake, with steel
gray plumes, and he had his tail in his mouth, and kept on eating and
eating it, because there was nothing else for him to eat, and my Fairy
Prince said he would go on like that till there was nothing left at all.
Then I said it would get smaller and smaller and crush the meadow and the
palace, and I think perhaps I began to cry. But my Fairy Prince said:
"Don't be such a silly!" and I wasn't old enough to understand all that it
meant, but one day I should; and all one had to do was to be as glad as
glad. So he kissed me, and we got off the horse, and he took me to the
door of the house, and we went in. It was frightfully dark in the passage,
and I felt tied so that I couldn't move, so I promised to myself to love
him always, and he kissed me. It was dreadfully, dreadfully dark though,
but he said not to be afraid, silly! And it's getting lighter, now keep
straight forward, darling! And then he kissed me again, and said:
"Welcome to my Palace !"
I will tell you all about how it was built, because it is the
most
beautiful Palace that ever was. On the sunset side were all the baths, and
the bedrooms were in front of us as we were. The baths were all of pale
olive-coloured marble, and the bedrooms bad lemon-coloured everything.
Then there were the kitchens on the sunrise side, and they were russet,
like dead leaves are in autumn in one's dreams. The place we had come
through was perfectly black everything, and only used for offices and such
things. There were the most horrid things everywhere about; black beetles
and cockroaches, and goodness knows what; but they can't hurt when the
Fairy Prince is there. I think a little girl would be eaten though if she
went in there alone.
Then he said: "Come on ! This is only the Servants' Hall, nearly
everybody stays there all their lives." And I said: "Kiss me!" So he
said: "Every step you take is only possible when you say that." We came
into a dreadful dark passage again, so narrow and low, that it was like a
dirty old tunnel, and yet so vast and wide that everything in the whole
world was contained in it. We saw all the strange dreams and awful shapes
of fear, and really I don't know how we ever got through, except that the
Prince called for some splendid strong creatures to guard us. There was
an eagle that flew, and beat his wings, and tore and bit at everything
that came near; and there was a lion that roared terribly, and his breath
was a flame, and burnt up the things, so that there was a great cloud;
and rain fell gently and purely, so that he really did the things good by
fighting them. And there was a bull that tossed them on his horns, so that
they changed into butterflies; and there was a man who kept on telling
everybody to be quiet and not make a noise. So we came at last in the
next house of the Palace. It was a great dome of violet, and in the centre
the moon shone. She was a full moon, and yet she looked like a woman
quite, quite young. Yet her hair was silver, and finer than spiders'
webs, and it rayed about her, like one can't say what; it was all too
beautiful. In the middle of the hall there was a black stone pillar, from
the top of which sprang a fountain of pearls; and as they fell upon the
floor, they changed the dark marble to the colour of blood, and it was
like a green universe full of dowers, and little children playing among
them. So I said: "Shall we be married in this House?" and he said: "No,
this is only the House where the business is carried on. All the Palace
rests upon this House; but you are called Lola because you are the Key of
Delights. Many people stay here all their lives though." I made him kiss
me, and we went on to another passage which opened out of the Servants'
Hall. This passage was all fire and flame and full of coffins. There was
an Angel blowing ever so hard on a trumpet, and people getting up out of
the coffins. My Fairy Prince said: "Most people never wake up for
anything less." So we went (at the same time it was; you see in dreams
people can only be in one place at a time; that's the best of being awake)
through another passage, which was lighted by the Sun. Yet there were
fairies dancing in a great green ring, just as if it was night. And there
were two children playing by the wall, and my Fairy Prince and I played as
we went; and he said: "The difference is that we are going through. Most
people play without a purpose; if you are traveling it is all right, and
play makes the journey seem short." Then we came out into the Third (or
Eighth, it depends which way you count them, because there are ten) House,
and that was so splendid you can't imagine. In the first place it was a
bright, bright, bright, orange colour, and then it had flashes of light
all over it, going so fast we couldn't see them, and then there was the
sound of the sea and one could look through into the deep, and there was
the ocean raging beneath one's feet, and strong dolphins riding on it and
crying aloud, "Holy! Holy! Holy!" in such an ecstasy you can't think, and
rolling and playing for sheer joy. It was all lighted by a tiny, weeny,
shy little planet, sparkling and silvery, and now and then a wave of fiery
chariots filled with eager spearmen blazed through the sky, and my Fairy
Prince said: "Isn't it all fine?" But I knew he didn't really mean it, so
I said "Kiss me!" and he kissed me, and we went on. He said: "Good little
girl of mine, there's many a one stays there all his life." I forgot to
say that the whole place was just one mass of books, and people reading
them till they were so silly, they didn't know what they were doing. And
there were cheats, and doctors, and thieves; I was really very glad to go
away.
There were three ways into the Seventh House, and the first was
such a
funny way. We walked through a pool, each on the arm of a great big
Beetle, and then we found ourselves on a narrow winding path. There were
nasty Jackals about, they made such a noise, and at the end I could see
two towers. Then there was the queerest moon you ever saw, only a quarter
full. The shadows fell so strangely, one could see the most mysterious
shapes, like great bats with women's faces, and blood dripping from their
mouths, and creatures partly wolves and partly men, everything changing
one into the other. And we saw shadows like old, old, ugly women, creeping
about on sticks, and all of a sudden they would fly up into the air,
shrieking the funniest kind of songs, and then suddenly one would come
down flop, and you saw she was really quite young and ever so lovely, and
she would have nothing on, and as you looked at her she would crumble away
like a biscuit. Then there was another passage which was really too secret
for anything; all I shall tell you is, there was the most beautiful
Goddess that ever was, and she was washing herself in a river of dew. If
you ask what she is doing, she says: "I'm making thunderbolts." It was
only starlight, and yet one could see quite clearly, so don't think I'm
making a mistake. The third path is a most terrible passage; it's all a
great war, and there's earthquakes and chariots of fire, and all the
castles breaking to pieces. I was glad when we came to the Green Palace.
It was all built of malachite and emerald, and there was the
loveliest
gentlest living, and I was married to my Fairy Prince there, and we had
the most delicious honeymoon, and I had a beautiful baby, and then I
remembered myself, but only just in time, and said: "Kiss me!" And he
kissed me and said: "My goodness! But that was a near thing that time: my
little girl nearly went to sleep. Most people who reach the Seventh House
stay there all their lives, I can tell you."
It did seem a shame to go on; there was such a flashing green
star to
light it, and all the air was filled with amber-coloured dames like
kisses. And we could see through the floor, and there were terrible lions,
like furnaces for fury, and they all roared out: "Holy! Holy! Holy!" and
leaped and danced for joy. And when I saw myself in the mirrors, the dome
was one mass of beautiful green mirrors, I saw how serious I looked, and
that I had to go on. I hoped the Fairy Prince would look serious
too,
because it is a most dreadful business going beyond the Seventh House;
but he only looked the same as ever. But oh! how I kissed him, and how I
clung to him, or I think I should never, never have had the courage to go
up those dreadful passages, especially knowing what was at the end of
them. And now I'm only a little girl, and I'm ever so tired of writing,
but I'll tell you all about the rest another time.
Explicit
Capitulum Primum
vel
De Collegio Externo.
PART II
I was telling you how we started from the Green Palace. There are three
passages that lead to the Treasure House of Gold, and all of them are very
dreadful. One is called the Terror by Night, and another the Arrow by Day,
and the third has a name that people are afraid to hear, so I won't say.
But in the first we came to a mighty throne of gray granite,
shaped like
the sweetest pussy cat you ever saw, and set up on a desolate heath. It
was midnight, and the Devil came down and sat in the midst; but my Fairy
Prince whispered: "Hush! it is a great secret, but his name is Yeheswah,
and he is the Saviour of the World." And that was very funny, because the
girl next me thought it was Jesus Christ, till another Fairy Prince (my
Prince's brother) whispered as he kissed her: "Hush, tell nobody ever,
that is Satan, and he is the Saviour of the World."
We were a very great company, and I can't tell you of all the
strange
things we did and said, or of the song we sang as we danced face out-wards
in a great circle ever closing in on the Devil on the throne. But
whenever I saw a toad or a bat, or some horrid insect, my Fairy Prince
always whispered: "It is the Saviour of the world" and I saw that it was
so. We did all the most beautiful wicked things you can imagine, and yet
all the time we knew they were good and right, and must he done if ever we
were to get to the House of Gold. So we en-joyed ourselves very much and
ate the most extraordinary supper you can think of. There were babies
roasted whole and stuffed with pork sausages and olives; and some of the
girls cut off chops and steaks from their own bodies, and gave them to a
beautiful white cook at a silver grill, that was lighted with the gas of
dead bodies and marshes; and he cooked them splendidly, and we all enjoyed
it immensely. Then there was a tame goat with a gold collar, that went
about laughing with every one; and he was all shaved in patches like a
poodle We kissed him and petted him, and it was lovely. You must remember
that I never let go of my Fairy Prince for a single instant, or of course
I should have been turned into a horrid black toad.
Then there was another passage called the Arrow by Day, and
there was a
most lovely lady all shining with the sun, and moon, and stars, who was
lighting a great bowl of water with one hand, by dropping dew on it out of
a cup, and with the other she was putting out a terrible fire with a
torch. She had a red lion and a white eagle, that she had always had ever
since she was a little girl. She had found them in a nasty pit full of all
kinds of filth, and they were very savage; but by always treating them
kindly they had grown up faithful and good. This should be a lesson to all
of us never to be unkind to our pets.
My Fairy Prince was laughing all the time in the third path.
There was
nobody there but an old gentleman who had put on his bones out-side, and
was trying ever so hard to cut down the grass with a scythe. But the
faster he cut it the faster it grew. My Fairy Prince said: "Everybody that
ever was has come along this path, and yet only one ever got to the end of
it." But I saw a lot of people walking straight through as if they knew it
quite well; be explained, though, that they were really only one; and if
you walked through that proved it. I thought that was silly, but he's much
older and wiser than I am; so I said nothing. The truth is that it is a
very difficult Palace to talk about, and the further you get in, the
harder it is to say what you mean because it all has to be put into dream
talk, as of course the language of the wake-world is silence.
So never mind! let me get on. We came by and by to the Sixth
House. I
forgot to say that all those three paths were really one, because they all
meant that things were different inside to outside, and so people couldn't
judge. It was fearfully interesting; but mind you don't go in those
passages without the Fairy Prince. And of course there's the Veil. I don't
think I'd better tell you about the Veil. I'll only put your mouth to my
head, and your hand - there, that'll tell any body who knows that I've
really been there, and that it 's all true that I'm telling you. This
Sixth House is called the Treasure House of Gold; it's a most mysterious
place as ever you were in. First there's a tiny, tiny, tiny doorway, you
must crawl through on your hands and knees; and even then I scraped ever
such a lot of skin off my back; then you have to be nailed on a red board
with four arms, with a great gold circle in the middle, and that hurts you
dreadfully. Then they make you swear the most solemn things you ever heard
of, how you would be faithful to the Fairy Prince, and live for nothing
but to know him better and better. So the nails stopped hurting, because,
of course, I saw that I was really being married, and this was part of it,
and I was as glad as glad; and at that moment my Fairy Prince put his hand
on my head, and I tell you, honour bright, it was more wake up than ever
before, even than when he used to kiss me. After that they said I could go
into the Bride-chamber, but it was only the most curious room that ever
was with seven sides. There was a dreadful red dragon on the floor, and
all the sides were painted every colour you can think of, with curious
figures and pictures. The light was not like dream light at all; it was
wake light, and it came through a beautiful rose in the ceiling. In the
middle was a table all covered with beautiful pictures and texts, and
there were ever such strange things on it. There was a little crucifix in
the middle, all of diamonds and emeralds and rubies, and other precious
stones, and there was a dagger with a golden handle, and a cup full of the
most delicious wine, and there was a curious coin with the strangest
writing on it, and a funny little stick that was covered with flames, like
a rose tree is with roses. Beside the strange coin was a heavy iron chain,
and I took it and put it round my neck because I was bound to my Fairy
Prince, and I would never go about like other people till I found him
again. And they took the dagger and dipped it in the cup, and stabbed me
all over to show that I was not afraid to be hurt, if only I could find my
Fairy Prince. Then I took the crucifix and held it up to make more light
in case he was somewhere in the dark corners, but no! Yet I knew be was
there somewhere, so I thought he must be in the box, for under the table
was a great chest; and I was terribly sad because I felt something
dreadful was going to happen. And sure enough, when I had the courage, I
asked them to open the box, and the same people that made me crawl through
that horrid hole, and lost my Fairy Prince, and nailed me to the red
board, took away the table and opened the box, and there was my Fairy
Prince, quite, quite dead. If you only knew how sorry I felt! But I had
with me a walking-stick with wings, and a shining sun at the top that had
been his, and I touched him on the breast to try and wake him; but it was
no good. Only I seemed to hear his voice saying wonderful things, and it
was quite certain he wasn't really dead. So I put the walking-stick on his
breast, and another little thing he had which I had forgotten to tell you
about. It was a kind of cross with an oval handle that he had been very
fond of. But I couldn't go away without something of his, so I took a
shepherd's staff, and a little whip with blood on it, and jewels oozing
from the blood, if you know what I mean, that they had put in his hands
when they buried him. Then I went away, and cried, and cried, and cried.
But before I had got very far they called me back; and the people who had
been so stern were smiling, and I saw they had taken the coffin out of the
little room with seven sides. And the coffin was quite, quite empty. Then
they began to tell us all about it, and I heard my Fairy Prince within me
little room saying holy exalted things, such as the stars trace in the sky
as they travel in the Car called " Millions of Years." Then they took me
into the little room, and there was my Fairy Prince standing in the
middle. So I knelt down and we all kissed his beautiful feet, and the
myriads of eyes like diamonds that were hidden in his feet laughed joy at
us. One couldn't lift one's head, for he was too glorious to behold; but
he spoke wonderful words like dying nightingales that have sorrowed for
the fading of the roses, and pressed themselves to death upon the thorns;
and one's whole body became a single eye, so that one saw as if the unborn
thought of light brooded over an eternal sea. Then was light as the
lightning flaming out of the east, even unto the west, and it was
fashioned as the swiftness of a sword.
By and by one rose up, then one seemed to be quite, quite dead,
and
buried in the centre of a pyramid of the most brilliant light it is
possible to think of. And it was wake-light too; and everybody knows that
even wake-darkness is really brighter than the dream-light. So you must
just guess what it was like. There was more than that too; I can't
possibly tell you. I know too what l.N.R.I. on the Ring meant: and I can't
tell you that either, because the dream-language has such a lot of
important words missing. It's a very silly language, I think.
By and by I came to myself a little, and now I was really and
truly
married to the Fairy Prince, so I suppose we shall always be near each
other now.
There was the way out of the little room with millions of
changing
colours, ever so beautiful, and it was lined with armed men, waving their
swords for joy like flashes of lightning; and all about us glittering
serpents danced and sang for joy. There was a winged horse ready for us
when we came out on the slopes of the mountain. You see the Sixth House is
really in a mountain called Mount Abiegnus, only one doesn't see it
because one goes through indoors all the way. There's one House you have
to go outdoors to get to, because no passage has ever been made; but I'll
tell you about that afterwards; it's the Third House. So we got on the
horse and went away for our honeymoon. I shan't tell you a single word
about the honeymoon.
Explicit
Capitulum Secundum
vel
De Collegio ad S. S. porta
Collegii Interni.
PART III
You mustn't suppose the honeymoon is ever really over, because it just
isn't. But he said to me: "Princess, you haven't been all over the Palace
yet. Your ~special~ House is the Third, you know, because it's so
convenient for the Second where I usually live. The King my Father lives
in the First; he's never to be seen, you know. He's very, very old
nowadays; I am practically Regent of course. You must never forget that I
am really He; only one generation back is not so far, and I entirely
represent his thought. Soon," he whispered ever so softly, "you will be a
mother; there will be a Fairy Prince again to run away with another pretty
little Sleepy head. Then I saw that when Fairy Princes were really and
truly married they became Fairy Kings; and that I was quite wrong ever to
be ashamed of being only a little girl and afraid of spoiling his
prospects, because really, you see, he could never become King and have a
son a Fairy Prince without me.
But one can only do that by getting to the Third House, and it's
a
dreadful journey, I do most honestly assure you.
There are two passages, one from the Eighth House and one from
the
Sixth; the first is all water, and the second is almost worse, because you
have to balance yourself so carefully, or you fall and hurt yourself.
To go through the first you must be painted all over with blood
up to
your waist, and you cross your legs, and then they put a rope round one
ankle and swing you off. I had such a pretty white petticoat on, and my
Prince said I looked just like a white pyramid with a huge red cross on
the top of it, which made me ever so glad, because now I knew I should be
the Saviour of the World, which is what one wants to be, isn't it? Only
sometimes the world means all the other children in the dream, and
sometimes the dream itself, and sometimes the wake-things one sees before
one is quite, quite awake. The prince tells me that really and truly only
the First House where his Father lived was really a wake-House, all the
others had a little sleep-House about them, and the further you got the
more awake you were, and began to know just how much was dream and how
much wake.
Then there was the other passage where there was a narrow edge
of green
crystal, which was all you had to walk on, and there was a beautiful blue
feather balancing on the edge, and if you disturbed the feather there was
a lady with a sword, and she would cut off your head. So I didn't dare
hardly to breathe, and all round there were thousands and thousands of
beautiful people in green who danced and danced like anything, and at the
end there was the terrible door of the Fifth House, which is the Royal
armoury. And when we came in the House was full of steel machinery, some
red hot and some white hot, and the din was simply fearful. So to get the
noise out of my head, I took the little whip and whipped myself till all
my blood poured down over everything, and I saw the whole house like a
cataract of foaming blood rushing headlong from the flaming and
scintillating Star of Fire that blazed and blazed in the candescent dome,
and everything went red before my eyes, and a great flame like a strong
wind blew through the House with a noise louder than any thunder could
possibly be, so that I couldn't hold myself hardly, and I took up the
sharp knives of the machines and cut myself all over, and the noise got
louder and louder, and the flame burnt through and through me, so that I
was very glad when my Prince said: "You wouldn't think it, would you,
sweetheart? But there are lots of people who stay here all their lives."
There are three ways into the Fourth House from below. The first
passage
is a very curious place, all full of wheels and ever such strange
creatures, like monkeys and sphinxes and jackals climbing about them and
trying to get to the top. It was very silly, because there isn't really
any top to a wheel at all; the place you want to get to is the centre, if
you want to be quiet. Then there was a really lovely passage, like a deep
wood in Springtime, the dearest old man came along who had lived there all
h is life, because he was the guardian of it, and he didn't need to travel
because he belonged to the First House really from the very beginning. He
wore a vast cloak and be carried a lamp and a long stick; and he said that
the cloak meant you were to be silent and not say anything you saw, and
the lamp meant you were to tell everybody and make them glad, and the
stick was like a guide to tell you which to do. But I didn't quite believe
that, because I am getting a grown-up girl now, and I wasn't to be put off
like that. I could see that the stick was really the measuring rod with
which the whole Palace was built, and the lamp was the only light they had
to build it by, and the cloak was the abyss of darkness that covers it all
up. That is why dream-people never see beautiful things like I'm telling
you about. All their houses are built of common red bricks, and they sit
in them all day and play silly games with counters, and oh I dear me, how
they do cheat and quarrel. When any one gets a million counters, he is so
glad you can't think, and goes away and tries to change some of the
counters for the things he really wants, and he can't, so you nearly die
of laughing, though of course it would be dreadfully sad if it were
wake-life. But I was telling you about the ways to the Fourth House, and
the third way is all full of lions, and a person might be afraid; only
whenever one comes to bite at you, there is a lovely lady who puts her
hands in its mouth and shuts it. So we went through quite safely, and I
thought of Daniel in the lions' den.
The Fourth House is the most wonderful of all I had ever seen.
It is the
most heavenly blue mansion; it is built of beryl and amethyst, and lapis
lazuli and turquoise and sapphire. The centre of the floor is a pool of
purest aquamarine, and in it is water, only you can see every drop as a
separate crystal, and the blue tinge filtering through the light. Above
there hangs a calm yet mighty globe of deep sapphirine blue. Round it
there were nine mirrors, and there is a noise that means when you
understand it, "Joy! Joy! Joy!" There are violet flames darting through
the air, each one a little sob of happy love. One began to see what the
dream-world was really for at last: every time any one kissed any one for
real love, that was a little throb of violet flame in this beautiful House
in the Wake-World. And we bathed and swam in the pool, and were so happy
you can't think. But they said: "Little girl, you must pay for the
entertainment." [I forgot to tell you there was music like fountains make
as they rise and fall, only of course much more wonderful than that.] So I
asked what I must pay, and they said: "You are now mistress of all these
houses from the Fourth to the Ninth. Yon have managed the Servants' Hall
well enough since your marriage; now you must manage the others, because
till you do you can never go on to the Third House. So I said: "It seems
to me that they are all in perfectly good order." But they took me up in
the air, and then I saw that the outsides were horribly disfigured with
great advertisements, and every single house had written all over it:
FIRST
HOUSE
This is his Majesty's favourite Residence.
No other genuine. Beware of worthless imitations.
Come in HERE and spend life!
Come in HERE and see the Serpent eat his
Tail!
So I was furious, as you may imagine, and had men go and put all the
proper numbers on them, and a little sarcastic remark to make them
ashamed; so they read:
Fifth House, and mostly dream at that.
Seventh House. External splendour and internal corruption.
and so
on. And on each one I put " No thoroughfare from here to the First House.
The only way is out of doors. By order.'"
This was frightfully annoying, because in the old days we could
walk
about inside everywhere, and not get wet if it rained, but nowa-days there
isn't any way from the Fourth to the Third House. You could go of course
by chariot from the Fifth to the Third, or through the House where the
twins live from the Sixth to the Third, but that isn't allowed unless you
have been to the Fourth House too, and go from there at the same time.
It was here they told me what T.A.R.O. on the ring meant. First
it means
gate, and it is the name of my Fairy Prince, when you spell it in full
letter by letter. There are seventy-eight parts to it, which makes a
perfect plan of the whole Palace, so you can always find your way, if you
remember to say T.A.R.O. Then you remember I.N.R.I. was on the ring too.
I.N.R.I. is short for L.V.X., which means the brilliance of the wide-wake
Light, and that too is the name of my Fairy Prince only spelt short.
The Romans said it had sixty-five parts, which is five times
thirteen,
and seventy-eight is six times thirteen. To get into the Wake World you
must know your thirteen times table quite well. So if you take them both
together that makes eleven times thirteen, and then you say "Abrahadabra,"
which is a most mysterious word, because it has eleven letters in it. You
remember the Houses are numbered both ways, so that the Third House is
called the Eighth House too, and the Fifth the Sixth, and so on. But you
can't tell what lovely things that means till you've been through them
all, and got to the very end. So when you look at the Ring and see
I.N.R.I. and T.A.R.O. on it that means that it is like a policeman keeping
on saying "Pass along, please!" I would have liked to stay in the Fourth
House all my life, but I began to see it was just a little dream House
too; and I couldn't rest, because my own House was the very next one. But
it's too awful to tell you how to get there. You want the most fearful lot
of courage, and there's nobody to help you, nobody at all, and there's no
proper passage. But it's frightfully exciting, and you must wait till next
time before I tell you how I started on that horrible journey, and if I
ever got there or not.
Explicit Cepitulum
Tertium
vel
de Collegio Interno.
PART IV
Now I shall tell you about the chariot race in the first passage. The
chariot is all carved out of pure, clear amber, so that electric sparks
fly about as the furs rub it. The whole cushions and rugs are all
beautiful soft ermine fur. There is a canopy of bright blue with stars
(like the sky in the dream world), and the chariot is drawn by two
sphinxes, one black and one white. The charioteer is a most curious
person; he is a great big crab in the most lovely glittering armour, and
he can just drive! His name is the mysterious name I told you about with
eleven letters in it, but we call him Jehu for short, because he 's only
nineteen years old. It's important to know though because this journey is
the most difficult of all, and without the chariot one couldn't ever ever
do it, because it is so far - much farther than the heaven is from the
earth in the dream world.
The passage where the twins live is very difficult too. They are
two
sisters; and one is very pure and good, and the other is a horrid fast
woman. But that shows you how silly dream language is - really there is
another way to put it: you can say they are two sisters, and one is very
silly and ignorant, and the other has learnt to know and enjoy.
Now when one is a Princess it is very important to have good
manners, so
you have to go into the passage, and take one on each arm, and go through
with them singing and dancing; and if you hurt the feelings of either of
them the least little bit in the world it would show you were not really a
great Lady, only a dress lady, and there is a man with a bow and arrow in
the air, and he would soon finish you, and you would never get to the
Third House at all.
But the real serious difficulty is the outdoors. You have to
leave the
House of Love, as they call the Fourth House. You are quite, quite naked:
you must take off your husband-clothes, and your baby-clothes, and all
your pleasure clothes, and your skin, and your flesh, and your bones,
every one of them must come right off. And then you must take off your
feeling clothes; and then your idea clothes; and then what we call your
tendency clothes which you have always worn, and which make you what you
are. After that you take off your consciousness clothes, which you have
always thought were your very own self, and you leap out into the cold
abyss, and you can't think how lonely it is. There isn't any light, or any
path, or anything to catch hold of to help you, and there is no Fairy
Prince any more: you can't even hear his voice calling to you to come on.
There's nothing to tell you which way to go, and you feel the most
horrible sensation of falling away from everything that ever was. You've
got no nothing at all; you don't know how awful it all is. You would turn
back if you could only stop falling; but luckily you can't. So you fall
and fall faster and faster; and I can't tell you any more. The Third
House is called the House of Sorrow. They gave me new clothes of the
queerest kind, because one never thinks of them as one's own clothes, but
only as clothes. It is a House of utmost Darkness. There is a pool of
black solemn water in the shining obsidian, and one is like a vast veiled
figure of wonderful beauty brooding over the sea; and by and by the Pains
come upon one. I can't tell you anything about the Pains. Only they are
different from any other pains, because they start from inside you, from a
deeper, truer kind of you than you ever knew. By and by you see a
tremendous blaze of a new sun in the Sixth House, and you are as glad as
glad as glad; and there are millions of trumpets blown, and voices crying:
"Hail to the Fairy Prince!" meaning the new one that you have had for your
baby; and at that moment you find you are living in the first Three Houses
all at once, for you feel the delight of your own dear Prince and his
love; and the old King stirs in his Silence in the First House, and
thousands of millions of blessings shoot out like rays of light, and
everything is all harmony and beauty below, and crowned above with the
crown of twelve stars, which is the only way you can put it into dream
talk.
Now you see you don't need to struggle to go on any more,
because you
know already that all the House is one Palace, and you move about in your
own wake world, just as is necessary. All the paths up to the Second House
all open - the path of the Hierophant with the flaming star and the
incense in the vast cathedral, and the path of the Mighty Ruler, who
governs everything with his orb and his crown and his sceptre. There is
the path of the Queen of Love which is more beautiful than anything, and
along it my own dear lover passes to my bridal chamber. Then there are the
three ways to the Holy House of the old King, the way by which he is
joined with the new Fairy Prince, where dwells a moonlike virgin with an
open book, and always, always reads beautiful words therein, smiling
mysteriously through her shining veil, woven of sweet thoughts and pure
kisses. And there is the way by which I always go to the King, my Father,
and that passage is built of thunder and lightning; but there is a holy
Magician called Hermes, who takes me through so quickly that I arrive
sometimes even at the very moment that I start. Last of all is the most
mysterious passage of them all, and if any of you saw it you would think
there was a foolish man in it being bitten by crocodiles and dogs, and
carrying a sack with nothing any use at all in it. But really it is the
man who meant to wake up, and did wake up. So that is his House, he is the
old King himself, and so are you. So he wouldn't care what any one thought
he was.
Really all the passages to the first Three Houses are very
useful; all
the dream-world and the half-dream world, and the Wake-world are governed
from those passages.
I began to see now how very unreal even the Wake-world is,
because there
is just a little dream in it, and the right world is the
Wide-Wide-Wide-Wake-World. My lover calls me little Lola Wide-awake, not
Lola Daydream any more. But it is always Lola, because I am the Key of
Delights. I never told you about the first two houses, and really you
wouldn't understand. But the second House is gray, because the light and
dark flash by so quick it's all blended into one; and in it lives my
lover, and that's all I care about.
The First House is so brilliant that you can't think; and there,
too, is
my lover and I when we are one. You wouldn't understand that either. And
the last thing I shall say is that one begins to see that there isn't
really quite a Wide-Wide-Wide-Wake-World till the Serpent outside has
finished eating up his tail, and I don't really and truly understand that
myself. But it doesn't matter; what you must all do first is to find the
Fairy Prince to come and ride away with you, so don't bother about the
Serpent yet. That's all.
Explicit Opusculum
in
Capitulo Quarto
vel
de Collegio Summo.