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CHAPTER XIX
OF DRAMATIC RITUALS.
The Wheel turns to those effectual methods of invocation employed in the ancient
Mysteries and by certain secret bodies of initiates to-day. The object of them is almost
invariably
The word is unwarrantably universal. It would not be impracticable to adopt this
method to such operations as Talismanic Magick. For example, one might consecrate and
charge a Pantacle by the communication by AIWAZ to the Scribe of the BOOK of the LAW, the
Magician representing the Angel, the Pantacle being the Book, and the person on whom the
Pantacle is intended to act taking the part of the Scribe.
the invocation of a God, that God conceived in a more or less material and personal
fashion. These Rituals are therefore well suited for such persons as are capable of
understanding the spirit of Magick as opposed to the letter. One of the great advantages
of them is that a large number of persons may take part, so that there is consequently
more force available; but it is important that they should all be initiates of the same
mysteries, bound by the same oaths, and filled with the same aspirations. They should be
associated only for this one purpose.
Such a company being prepared, the story of the God should be dramatised by a
well-skilled poet accustomed to this form of composition. Lengthy speeches and invocations
should be avoided, but action should be very full. Such ceremonies should be carefully
rehearsed; but in rehearsals care should be taken to omit the climax, which should be
studied by the principal character in private. The play should be so arranged that this
climax depends on him alone. By this means one prevents the ceremony from becoming
mechanical or hackneyed, and the element of surprise. assists the lesser characters to get
out of themselves at the supreme moment. Following the climax there should always be an
unrehearsed ceremony, an impromptu. The most satisfactory form of this is the dance. In
such ceremonies appropriate libations may be freely used.
The Rite of Luna (Equinox I. VI) is a good example of this use. Here the climax is the
music of the goddess, the assistants remaining in silent ecstasy.
In the rite of Jupiter the impromptu is the dance, in that of Saturn long periods of
silence.
It will be noticed that in these Rites poetry and music were largely employed ---
mostly published pieces by well-known authors and composers. It would be better
"PERHAPS! One can think of certain Awful Consequences". "But, after
all, they wouldn't seem so to the authors!" "But --- pity the poor Gods!"
"Bother the Gods!"
to write and compose specially for the ceremony.
A body of skilled Magicians accustomed to work in concert may be competent to
conduct impromptu Orgia. To cite an actual instance in recent times; the blood of a
Christian being required for some purpose, a young cock was procured and baptized into the
Roman Catholic Church by a man who, being the son of an ordained Priest, was magically an
incarnation of the Being of that Priest, and was therefore congenitally possessed of the
powers thereto appurtenant. The cock, "Peter Paul," was consequently a baptized
Christian for all magical purposes. Order was then taken to imprison the bird; which done,
the Magicians assuming respectively the characters of Herod, Herodias, Salome, and the
Executioner, acted out the scene of the dance and the beheading, on the lines of Oscar
Wilde's drama, "Peter Paul" being cast for the part of John the Baptist. This
ceremony was devised and done on the spur of the moment, and its spontaneity and
simplicity were presumably potent factors in its success.
On the point of theology, I doubt whether Dom Gorenflot sucessfully avoided eating meat
in Lent by baptizing the pullet a carp. For as the sacrament --- by its intention, despite
its defects of form --- could not fail of efficacy, the pullet must have become a
Christian, and therefore a human being. Carp was therefore only its baptized name --- cf.
Polycarp --- and Dom Gorenflot ate human flesh in Lent, so that, for all he became a
bishop, he is damned.
 
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