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CHAPTER IX
OF SILENCE AND SECRECY:
AND OF
THE BARBAROUS NAMES OF EVOCATION.
It is found by experience (confirming the statement of Zoroaster) that the most potent
conjurations are those in an ancient and perhaps forgotten language, or even those couched
in a corrupt and possibly always meaningless jargon. Of these there are several main
types. The "preliminary invocation" in the "Goetia" consists
principally of corruptions of Greek and Egyptian names. For example, we find
"Osorronnophris" for "Asor Un-Nefer".
See appendix 4, Liber Samekh; this is an edition of this Invocation, with an
elaborate Rubric, translation, scholia, and instruction.
{WEH ADDENDUM: This is the "Preliminary Invocation" placed in the
"Goetia" in the Mathers transcription (Not "translation") by Crowley.
This invocation is not a part of the original text, but comes to us from the
Greco-Egyptian period of perhaps the 6th century. The Goetia is itself a small portion of
the "Lemegeton" or "Lesser Key of Solomon." This "Preliminary
Evocation" is altered in Liber Samekh over that published in the "Goetia".
The conjurations given by Dr. Dee (vide Equinox I, VIII) are in a language called
Angelic, or Enochian. Its source has hitherto baffled research, but it is a language and
not a jargon, for it possesses a structure of its own, and there are traces of grammar and
syntax.
However this may be, it "works". Even the beginner finds that "things
happen" when he uses it: and this is an advantage --- or disadvantage! ---- shared by
no other type of language,. The rest need skill. This needs Prudence!
The Egyptian Invocations are much purer, but their meaning has not been sufficiently
studied by persons magically competent. We possess a number of Invocations in Greek of
every degree of excellence; in Latin but few, and those of inferior quality. It will be
noticed that in every case the conjurations are very sonorous, and there is a certain
magical voice in which they should be recited. This special voice was a natural gift of
the Master Therion; but it can be easily taught --- to the right people.
Various considerations impelled Him to attempt conjurations in the English language.
There already existed one example, the charm of the witches in Macbeth; although this was
perhaps not meant seriously, its effect is indubitable.
A true poet cannot help revealing himself and the truth of things in his art,
whether he be aware of what he is writing, or no.
He has found iambic tetrameters enriched with many rimes both internal an external very
useful. "The Wizard Way" (Equinox I,I) gives a good idea of the sort of thing.
So does the Evocation of Bartzabel in Equinox I,IX. There are many extant invocations
throughout his works, in many kinds of metre, of many kinds of being, and for many kinds
of purposes. (See Appendix).
Other methods of incantation are on record as efficacious. For instance Frater I.A.,
when a child, was told that he could invoke the devil by repeating the "Lord's
Prayer" backwards. He went into the garden and did so. The Devil appeared, and almost
scared him out of his life.
It is therefore not quite certain in what the efficacy of conjurations really lies. The
peculiar mental excitement required may even be aroused by the perception of the absurdity
of the process, and the persistence in it, as when once FRATER PERDURABO (at the end of
His magical resources) recited "From Greenland's Icy Mountains", and obtained
His result.
See "Eleusis", A. Crowley, "Collected Works", Vol. III
Epilogue.
It may be conceded in any case that the long strings of formidable words which roar and
moan through so many conjurations have a real effect in exalting the consciousness of the
magician to the proper pitch --- that they should do so is no more extraordinary than
music of any kind should do so.
Magicians have not confined themselves to the use of the human voice. The Pan-pipe with
its seven stops, corresponding to the seven planets, the bull-roarer, the tom-tom, and
even the violin, have all been used, as well as many others, of which the most important
is the bell,
See Part II. It should be said that in experience no bell save His own Tibetan bell
of Electrum Magicum has ever sounded satisfactory to the Master Therion. Most bells jar
and repel.
though this is used not so much for actual conjuration as to mark stages in the
ceremony. Of all these the tom-tom will be found to be the most generally useful.
While on the subject of barbarous names of evocation we should not omit the utterance
of certain supreme words which enshrine (alpha) the complete formula of the God invoked,
or (beta) the whole ceremony.
Examples of the former kind are Tetragrammaton, I.A.O., and Abrahadabra.
An example of the latter kind is the great word StiBeTTChePhMeFSHiSS, which is a line
drawn on the Tree of Life (Coptic attributions) in a certain manner.
It represents the descent of a certain Influence. See the Evocation of
Taphtatharath, Equinox I, III. The attributions are given in 777. This Word expresses the
current Kether - Beth - Binah - Cheth - Geburach - Mem - Hod - Shin - Malkuth, the descent
from 1 to 10 via the Pillar of Severity.
With all such words it is of the utmost importance that they should never be spoken
until the supreme moment, and even then they should burst from the magician almost despite
himself --- so great should be his reluctance
This reluctance is Freudian, due to the power of these words to awaken the
suppressed subconscious libido.
to utter them. In fact, they should be the utterance of the God in him at the first
onset of the divine possession. So uttered, they cannot fail of effect, for they have
become the effect.
Every wise magician will have constructed (according to the principles of the Holy
Qabalah) many such words, and he should have quintessentialised them all in one Word,
which last Word, once he has formed it, he should never utter consciously even in thought,
until perhaps with it he gives up the ghost. Such a Word should in fact be so potent that
man cannot hear it and live.
Such a word was indeed the lost Tetragrammaton.
The Master Therion has received this Word; it is communicated by Him to the proper
postulants, at the proper time and place, in the proper circumstances.
It is said that at the utterance of this name the Universe crashes into dissolution.
Let the Magician earnestly seek this Lost Word, for its pronunciation is synonymous with
the accomplishment of the Great Work.
Each man has a different Great Work, just as no two points on the circumference of
a circle are connected with the centre by the same radius. The Word will be
correspondingly unique.
In this matter of the efficacity of words there are again two formulae exactly opposite
in nature. A word may become potent and terrible by virtue of constant repetition. It is
in this way that most religions gain strength. At first the statement "So and so is
God" excites no interest. Continue, and you meet scorn and scepticism: possibly
persecution. Continue, and the controversy has so far died out that no one troubles to
contradict your assertion.
No superstition is so dangerous and so lively as an exploded superstition. The
newspapers of to-day (written and edited almost exclusively by men without a spark of
either religion or morality) dare not hint that any one disbelieves in the ostensibly
prevailing cult; they deplore Atheism --- all but universal in practice and implicit in
the theory of practically all intelligent people --- as if it were the eccentricity of a
few negligible or objectionable persons. This is the ordinary story of advertisement; the
sham has exactly the same chance as the real. Persistence is the only quality required for
success.
The opposite formula is that of secrecy. An idea is perpetuated because it must never
be mentioned. A freemason never forgets the secret words entrusted to him, thought these
words mean absolutely nothing to him, in the vast majority of cases; the only reason for
this is that he has been forbidden to mention them, although they have been published
again and again, and are as accessible to the profane as to the initiate.
In such a work of practical Magick as the preaching of a new Law, these methods may be
advantageously combined; on the one hand infinite frankness and readiness to communicate
all secrets; on the other the sublime and terrible knowledge that all real secrets are
incommunicable.
If this were not the case, individuality would not be inviolable. No man can
communicate even the simplest thought to any other man in any full and accurate sense. For
that thought is sown in a different soil, and cannot produce an identical effect. I cannot
put a spot of red upon two pictures without altering each in diverse ways. It might have
little effect on a sunset by Turner, but much on a nocturne by Whistler. The identity of
the two spots as spots would thus be fallacious.
It is, according to tradition, a certain advantage in conjurations to employ more than
one language. In all probability the reason of this is than any change spurs the flagging
attention. A man engaged in intense mental labour will frequently stop and walk up and
down the room --- one may suppose for this cause --- but it is a sign of weakness that
this should be necessary. For the beginner in Magick, however, it is permissible
This is not to say that it is advisable. O how shameful is human weakness! But it
does encourage one --- it is useless to deny it --- to be knocked down by a Demon of whose
existence one was not really quite sure.
to employ any device to secure the result.
Conjurations should be recited, not read:
Even this is for the weaker brethren. The really great Magus speaks and acts
impromptu and extempore.
and the entire ceremony should be so perfectly performed that one is hardly conscious
of any effort of memory. The ceremony should be constructed with such logical fatality
that a mistake is impossible.
First-rate poetry is easily memorized because the ideas and the musical values
correspond to man's mental and sensory structure.
The conscious ego of the Magician is to be destroyed to be absorbed in that of the God
whom he invokes, and the process should not interfere with the automation who is
performing the ceremony.
But this ego of which it is here spoken is the true ultimate ego. The automaton should
possess will, energy, intelligence, reason, and resource. This automaton should be the
perfect man far more than any other man can be. It is only the divine self within the man,
a self as far above the possession of will or any other qualities whatsoever as the
heavens are high above the earth, that should reabsorb itself into that illimitable
radiance of which it is a spark.
This is said of the partial or lesser Works of Magick. This is an elementary
treatise; one cannot discuss higher Works as for example those of "The Hermit of
Aesopus Island".
The great difficulty for the single Magician is so to perfect himself that these
multifarious duties of the Ritual are adequately performed. At first he will find that the
exaltation destroys memory and paralyses muscle. This is an essential difficulty of the
magical process, and can only be overcome by practice and experience.
See "The Book of Lies"; there are several chapters on this subject. But
Right exaltation should produce spontaneously the proper mental and physical reactions. As
soon as the development is secured, there will be automatic reflex "justesse",
exactly as in normal affairs mind and body respond with free unconscious rightness to the
Will.
In order to aid concentration, and to increase the supply of Energy, it has been
customary for the Magician to employ assistants or colleagues. It is doubtful whether the
obvious advantages of this plan compensate the difficulty of procuring suitable persons,
The organic development of Magick in the world due to the creative Will of the
Master Therion makes it with every year that passes easier to find scientifically trained
co-workers.
and the chance of a conflict of will or a misunderstanding in the circle itself. On one
occasion FRATER PERDURABO was disobeyed by an assistant, and had it not been for His
promptitude in using the physical compulsion of the sword, it is probable that the circle
would have been broken. As it was, the affair fortunately terminated in nothing more
serious than the destruction of the culprit.
However, there is no doubt that an assemblage of persons who really are in harmony can
much more easily produce an effect than a magician working by himself. The psychology of
"Revival meetings" will be familiar to almost every one, and though such
meetings
See, for an account of properly-conducted congregational ceremonial, Equinox I, IX.
"Energized Enthusiasm", and Equinox III, L. Liber XV, Ecclesiae Gnosticae
Catholicae Cannon Missae. The "Revival meetings" here in question were
deliberate exploitations of religious hysteria.
are the foulest and most degraded rituals of black magic, the laws of Magick are not
thereby suspended. The laws of Magick are the laws of Nature.
A singular and world-famous example of this is of sufficiently recent date to be fresh
in the memory of many people now living. At a nigger camp meeting in the
"United" States of America, devotees were worked up to such a pitch of
excitement that the whole assembly developed a furious form of hysteria. The comparatively
intelligible cries of "Glory" and "Hallelujah" no longer expressed the
situation. Somebody screamed out "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay!", and this was taken up
by the whole meeting and yelled continuously, until reaction set in. The affair got into
the papers, and some particularly bright disciple of John Stuart Mill, logician and
economist, thought that these words, having set one set of fools crazy, might do the same
to all the other fools in the world. He accordingly wrote a song, and produced the desired
result. This is the most notorious example of recent times of the power exerted by a
barbarous name of evocation.
A few words may be useful to reconcile the general notion of Causality with that of
Magick. How can we be sure that a person waving a stick and howling thereby produces
thunderstorms? In no other way than that familiar to Science; we note that whenever we put
a lighted match to dry gunpowder, an unintelligibly arbitrary phenomenon, that of sound,
is observed; and so forth.
We need not dwell upon this point; but it seems worth while to answer one of the
objections to the possibility of Magick, chosing one which is at first sight of an
obviously "fatal" character. It is convenient to quote verbatim from the Diary
In a later entry we read that the diarist has found a similar train of argument in
"Space, Time, and Gravitation", page 51. He was much encourage by the
confirmation of his thesis in so independent a system of thought.
of a distinguished Magician and philosopher. "I have noticed that the effect of a
Magical Work has followed it so closely that it must have been started before the time of
the Work. E.g. I work to-night to make X in Paris write to me. I get the letter the next
morning, so that it must have been written before the Work. Does this deny that the Work
caused the effect?
"If I strike a billiard-ball and it moves, both my will and its motion are due to
causes long antecedent to the act. I may consider both my Work and its reaction as twin
effects of the eternal Universe. The moved arm and ball are parts of a state of the Cosmos
which resulted necessarily from its momentarily previous state, and so, back for ever.
"Thus, my Magical Work is only one of the cause-effects necessarily concomitant with
the case-effects which set the ball in motion. I may therefore regard the act of striking
as a cause-effect of my original Will to move the ball, though necessarily previous to its
motion. But the case of magical Work is not quite analogous. For my nature is such that I
am compelled to perform Magick in order to make my will to prevail; so that the cause of
my doing the Work is also the cause of the ball's motion, and there is no reason why one
should precede the other. (CF. "Lewis Carroll," where the Red Queen screams
before she pricks her finger.)
"Let me illustrate the theory by an actual example.
"I write from Italy to a man in France and another in Australia on the same day,
telling them to join me. Both arrive ten days later; the first in answer to my letter,
which he received, the second on "his own initiative", as it would seem. But I
summoned him because I wanted him; and I wanted him because he was my representative; and
his intelligence made him resolve to join me because it judged rightly that the situation
(so far as he knew it) was such as to make me desire his presence.
"The same cause, therefore, which made me write to him made him come to me; and
though it would be improper to say that the writing of the letter was the direct cause of
his arrival, it is evident that if I had not written I should have been different from
what I actually am, and therefore my relations with him would have been otherwise than
they are. In this sense, therefore, the letter and the journey are causally connected.
"One cannot go farther, and say that in this case I ought to write the letter even
if he had arrived before I did so; for it is part of the whole set of circumstance that I
do not use a crowbar on an open door. "The conclusion is that one should do one's
Will 'without lust of result'. If one is working in accordance with the laws of one's own
nature, one is doing 'right'; and no such work can be criticised as 'useless', even in
cases of the character here discussed. So long as one's Will prevails, there is no cause
for complaint.
"To abandon one's Magick would shew lack of self-confidence in one's powers, and
doubt as to one's inmost faith in Self and in Nature.
i.e. on the ground that one cannot understand how Magick can produce the desired
effects. For if one possesses the inclination to do Magick, it is evidence of a tendency
in one's Nature. Nobody understands fully how the mind moves the muscles; but we know that
lack of confidence on this point means paralysis. "If the Sun and Moon should doubt,
They'd immediately go out", as Blake said. Also, as I said myself. "Who hath the
How is careless of the Why".
Of course one changes one's methods as experience indicates; but there is no need to
change them on any such ground as the above.
"Further, the argument here set forth disposes of the need to explain the
"modus operandi" of Magick. A successful operation does not involve any theory
soever, not even that of the existence of causality itself. The whole set of phenomena may
be conceived as single.
"For instance, if I see a star (as it was years ago) I need not assume causal
relations as existing between it, the earth, and myself. The connexion exists; I can
predicate nothing beyond that. I cannot postulate purpose, or even determine the manner in
which the event comes to be. Similarly, when I do Magick, it is in vain to inquire why I
so act, or why the desired result does or does not follow. Nor can I know how the previous
and subsequent conditions are connected. At most I can describe the consciousness which I
interpret as a picture of the facts, and make empirical generalizations of the superficial
aspects of the case.
"Thus, I have my own personal impressions of the act of telephoning; but I cannot
be aware of what consciousness, electricity, mechanics, sound, etc., actually are in
themselves. And although I can appeal to experience to lay down 'laws' as to what
conditions accompany the act, I can never be sure that they have always been, or ever will
again be, identical. (In fact, it is certain that an event can never occur twice in
precisely the same circumstances.)
If it did so, how could we call it duplex?
"Further, my 'laws; must always take nearly all the more important elements of
knowledge for granted. I cannot say --- finally --- how an electric current is generated.
I cannot be sure that some totally unsuspected force is not at work in some entirely
arbitrary way. For example, it was formerly supposed that Hydrogen and Chlorine would
unite when an electric spark was passed through the mixture; now we 'know' that the
presence of a minute quantity of aqueous vapour (or some tertium quid) is essential to the
reaction. We formulated before the days of Ross the 'laws' of malarial fever, without
reference to the mosquito; we might discover one day that the germ is only active when
certain events are transpiring in some nebula,
The history of the Earth is included in the period of some such relation; so that
we cannot possibly be sure that we may deny: "Malarial fever is a function of the
present precession of the Equinoxes".
or when so apparently inert a substance as Argon is present in the air in certain
proportions.
"We may therefore admit quite cheerfully that Magick is as mysterious as
mathematics, as empirical as poetry, as uncertain as golf, and as dependent on the
personal equation as Love.
"That is no reason why we should not study, practice and enjoy it; for it is a
Science in exactly the same sense as biology; it is no less an Art that Sculpture; and it
is a Sport as much as Mountaineering.
"Indeed, there seems to be no undue presumption in urging that no Science
possesses equal possibilities of deep and important Knowledge;
Magick is less liable to lead to error than any other Science, because its terms
are interchangeable, by definition, so that it is based on relativity from the start. We
run no risk of asserting absolute propositions. Furthermore we make our measurements in
terms of the object measured, thus avoiding the absurdity of defining metaphysical ideas
by mutable standards, (Cf. Eddington "Space, Time, and Gravitation". Prologue.)
of being forced to attribute the qualities of human consciousness to inanimate things
(Poincare, "La mesure du temps"), and of asserting that we know anything of the
universe in itself, though the nature of our senses and our minds necessarily determines
our observations, so that the limit of our knowledge is subjective, just as a thermometer
can record nothing but its own reaction to one particular type of Energy.
Magick recognizes frankly (1) that truth is relative, subjective, and apparent; (2)
that Truth implies Omniscience, which is unattainable by mind, being transfinite; just as
if one tried to make an exact map of England in England, that map must contain a map of
the map, and so on, ad infinitum; (3) that logical contradiction is inherent in reason,
(Russell, "Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy", p. 136; Crowley,
"Eleusis", and elsewhere); (4) that a Continuum requires a Continuum to be
commensurable with it: (5) that Empiricism is ineluctable, and therefore that adjustment
is the only possible method of action; and (6) that error may be avoided by opposing no
resistance to change, and registering observed phenomena in their own language.
that no Art offers such opportunities to the ambition of the Soul to express its Truth,
in Ecstasy, through Beauty; and that no Sport rivals its fascinations of danger and
delight, so excites, exercises, and tests its devotees to the uttermost, or so rewards
them by well-being, pride, and the passionate pleasures of personal triumph.
"Magick takes every thought and act for its apparatus; it has the Universe for its
Library and its Laboratory; all Nature is its Subject; and its Game, free from close
seasons and protective restrictions, always abounds in infinite variety, being all that
exists.
The elasticity of Magick makes it equal to all possible kinds of environment, and
therefore biologically perfect. "Do what thou wilt..." implies self-adjustment,
so that failure cannot occur. One's true Will is necessarily fitted to the whole Universe
with the utmost exactitude, because each term in the equation a+b+c=0 must be equal and
opposite to the sum of all the other terms. No individual can ever be aught than himself,
or do aught else than his Will, which is his necessary relation with his environment,
dynamically considered. All error is no more than an illusion proper to him to dissipate
the mirage, and it is a general law that the method of accomplishing this operation is to
realize, and to acquiesce in, the order of the Universe, and to refrain from attempting
the impossible task of overcoming the inertia of the forces which oppose, and therefore
are identical with, one's self. Error in thought is therefore failure to understand, and
in action to perform, one's own true Will.
 
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