LIBER Taw-Yod-Shin-Aleph-Resh-Bet (ThIShARB)
VIAE MEMORIAE
SVB FIGVRA
CMXIII {105}
A ∴ A ∴
Publication in Class B.
Imprimatur:
N. Fra A ∴ A ∴
LIBER Taw-Yod-Shin-Aleph-Resh-Bet
VIAE MEMORIAE
SVB FIGVRA CMXIII
000. May be.
[00. It has not been possible to construct this book on a basis of pure Scepticism.
This matters less, as the practice leads to Scepticism, and it may be through it.]
0. This book is not intended to lead to the supreme attainment. On the contrary, its
results define the separate being of the Exempt Adept from the rest of the Universe, and
discover his relation to that Universe.
- It is of such importance to the Exempt Adept that We cannot overrate it. Let him in no
wise adventure the plunge into the Abyss until he have accomplished this to his most
perfectest satisfaction.
- For in the Abyss no effort is anywise possible. The Abyss is passed by virtue of the
mass of the Adept and his Karma. Two forces impel him: (1) the attraction of Binah, (2)
the impulse of his Karma; and the ease and even the safety of his passage depend on the
strength and direction of the latter.
- Should one rashly dare the passage, and take the irrevocable Oath of the Abyss, he might
be lost therein through AEons of incalculable agony; he might even be {107} thrown back
upon Chesed, with the terrible Karma of failure added to his original imperfection.
- It is even said that in certain circumstances it is possible to fall altogether from the
Tree of Life, and to attain the Towers of the Black Brothers. But We hold that this is not
possible for any adept who has truly attained his grade, or even for any man who has
really sought to help humanity even for a single second,<> and that although his
aspiration have been impure through vanity or any similar imperfection.
- Let then the Adept who finds the result of these meditations unsatisfactory refuse the
Oath of the Abyss, and live so that his Karma gains strength and direction suitable to the
task at some future period.
- Memory is essential to the individual consciousness; otherwise the mind were but a blank
sheet on which shadows are cast. But we see that not only does the mind retain
impressions, but that it is so constituted that its tendency is to retain some more
excellently than others. Thus the great classical scholar, Sir Richard Jebb, was unable to
learn even the schoolboy mathematics required for the preliminary examination at Cambridge
University, and a special act of the authorities was required in order to admit him.{WEH
NOTE: Normally this would be an exercise of Medieval privilege by a Royal or other
nobility. Wars have been lost over such "Grace" being given in the qualification
of officers!}
- The first method to be described has been detailed in Bhikkhu Ananda Metteya's
"Training of the Mind" (EQUINOX, I. 5, pp. 28-59, and especially pp. 48-56). We
have little to alter or to add. Its most important result, as regards the Oath of the
Abyss, is the freedom from all desire or clinging to anything which it gives. Its second
result is to {108} aid the adept in the second method, by supplying him with further data
for his investigation.
- The stimulation of memory useful in both practices is also achieved by simple meditation
(Liber E), in a certain stage of which old memories arise unbidden. The adept may then
practise this, stopping at that stage, and encouraging instead of suppressing the flashes
of memory.
- Zoroaster has said, "Explore the River of the Soul, whence or in what order you
have come; so that although you have become a servant to the body, you may again rise to
that Order (the A ∴ A ∴) from which you descended, joining Works (Kamma) to the Sacred
Reason (the Tao)."
- The Result of the Second Method is to show the Adept to what end his powers are
destined. When he has passed the Abyss and become NEMO, the return of the current causes
him "to appear in the Heaven of Jupiter as a morning star or as an evening
star."[The formula of the Great Work "Solve et Coagula" may be thus
interpreted. Solve, the dissolution of the Self in the Infinite; Coagula, the presentation
of the Infinite in a concrete form to the outer. Both are necessary to the Task of a
Master of the Temple.] In other words, he should discover what may be the nature of his
work. Thus Mohammed was a Brother reflected into Netzach, Buddha a Brother reflected into
Hod, or, as some say, Daath. The present manifestation of Frater P. to the outer is in
Tiphereth, to the inner in the path of Leo.
- First Method. Let the Exempt Adept first train himself to think backwards by external
means, as set forth here following.
- ("a") Let him learn to write backwards, with either hand.
- ("b") Let him learn to walk backwards. {109}
- ("c") Let him constantly watch, if convenient, cinematograph films, and listen
to phonograph records, reversed, and let him so accustom himself to these that they appear
natural, and appreciable as a whole.
- ("d") Let him practise speaking backwards; thus for "I am He" let
him say, "Eh ma I".
- ("e") Let him learn to read backwards. In this it is difficult to avoid
cheating one's self, as an expert reader sees a sentence at a glance. Let his disciple
read aloud to him backwards, slowly at first, then more quickly.
- ("f") Of his own ingenium, let him devise other methods.
- In this his brain will at first be overwhelmed by a sense of utter confusion; secondly,
it will endeavour to evade the difficulty by a trick. The brain will pretend to be working
backwards when it is really normal. It is difficult to describe the nature of the trick,
but it will be quite obvious to anyone who has done practices ("a") and
("b") for a day or two. They become quite easy, and he will think that he is
making progress, an illusion which close analysis will dispel.
- Having begun to train his brain in this manner, and obtained some little success, let
the Exempt Adept, seated in his Asana, think first of his present attitude, next of the
act of being seated, next of his entering the room, next of his robing, et cetera, exactly
as it happened. And let him most strenuously endeavour to think each act as happening
backwards. It is not enough to think: "I am seated here, and before that I was
standing, and before that I entered the room," etc. That series is the trick detected
in the preliminary practices. {110} The series must not run "ghi-def-abc" but
"ihgfedcba": not "horse a is this" but "esroh a si siht". To
obtain this thoroughly well, practice ("c") is very useful. The brain will be
found to struggle constantly to right itself, soon accustoming itself to accept
"esroh" as merely another glyph for "horse." This tendency must be
constantly combated.
- In the early stages of this practice the endeavour should be to meticulous minuteness of
detail in remembering actions; for the brain's habit of thinking forwards will at first be
insuperable. Thinking of large and complex actions, then, will give a series which we may
symbolically write "opqrstu-hijklmn-abcdefg." If these be split into detail, we
shall have "stu-pqr-o---mn-kl-hij---fg-cde-ab," which is much nearer to the
ideal "utsrqponmlkjihgfedcba."
- Capacities differ widely, but the Exempt Adept need have no reason to be discouraged if
after a month's continuous labour he find that now and again for a few seconds his brain
really works backwards.
- The Exempt Adept should concentrate his efforts upon obtaining a perfect picture of five
minutes backwards rather than upon extending the time covered by his meditation. For this
preliminary training of the brain is the Pons Asinorum of the whole process.
- This five minutes' exercise being satisfactory, the Exempt Adept may extend the same at
his discretion to cover an hour, a day, a week, and so on. Difficulties vanish before him
as he advances; the extension from a day to the course of his whole life will not prove so
difficult as the perfecting of the five minutes.
- This practice should be repeated at least four times {111} daily, and progress is shown
firstly by the ever easier running of the brain, secondly by the added memories which
arise.
- It is useful to reflect during this practice, which in time becomes almost mechanical,
upon the way in which effects spring from causes. This aids the mind to link its memories,
and prepares the adept for the preliminary practice of the Second Method.
- Having allowed the mind to return for some hundred times to the hour of birth, it should
be encouraged to endeavour to penetrate beyond that period. If it be properly trained to
run backwards, there will be little difficulty in doing this, although it is one of the
distinct steps in the practice.
- It may be then that the memory will persuade the adept of some previous existence. Where
this is possible, let it be checked by an appeal to facts, as follows:
- It often occurs to men that on visiting a place to which they have never been, it
appears familiar. This may arise from a confusion of thought or a slipping of the memory,
but it is conceivably a fact.
If, then, the adept "remember" that he was in a previous life in some city, say
Cracow, which he has in this life never visited, let him describe from memory the
appearance of Cracow, and of its inhabitants, setting down their names. Let him further
enter into details of the city and its customs. And having done this with great
minuteness, let him confirm the same by consultation with historians and geographers, or
by a personal visit, remembering (both to the credit of his memory and its discredit) that
historians, geographers, and himself are alike fallible. But let him not trust his memory
{112} to assert its conclusions as fact, and act thereupon, without most adequate
confirmation.
- This process of checking his memory should be practised with the earlier memories of
childhood and youth by reference to the memories and records of others, always reflecting
upon the fallibility even of such safeguards.
- All this being perfected, so that the memory reaches back into aeons incalculably
distant, let the Exempt Adept meditate upon the fruitlessness of all those years, and upon
the fruit thereof, severing that which is transitory and worthless from that which is
eternal. And it may be that he being but an Exempt Adept may hold all to be savourless and
full of sorrow.
- This being so, without reluctance will he swear the Oath of the Abyss.
- Second Method. Let the Exempt Adept, fortified by the practice of the First Method,
enter the preliminary practice of the Second Method.
- Second Method. Preliminary Practices. Let him, seated in his Asana, consider any event,
and trace it to its immediate causes. And let this be done very fully and minutely. Here,
for example, is a body erect and motionless. Let the adept consider the many forces which
maintain it; firstly, the attraction of the earth, of the sun, of the planets, of the
farthest stars, nay, of every mote of dust in the room, one of which (could it be
annihilated) would cause that body to move, although so imperceptibly. Also the resistance
of the floor, the pressure of the air, and all other external conditions. Secondly, the
internal forces which sustain it, the vast and complex machinery of the skeleton, the
muscles, {113} the blood, the lymph, the marrow, all that makes up a man. Thirdly the
moral and intellectual forces involved, the mind, the will, the consciousness. Let him
continue this with unremitting ardour, searching Nature, leaving nothing out.
- Next, let him take one of the immediate causes of his position, and trace out its
equilibrium. For example, the will. What determines the will to aid in holding the body
erect and motionless?
- This being discovered, let him choose one of the forces which determined his will, and
trace out that in similar fashion; and let this process be continued for many days until
the interdependence of all things is a truth assimilated in his inmost being.
- This being accomplished, let him trace his own history with special reference to the
causes of each event. And in this practice he may neglect to some extent the universal
forces which at all times act on all, as for example the attraction of masses, and let him
concentrate his attention upon the principal and determining or effective causes.
For instance, he is seated, perhaps, in a country place in Spain. Why? Because Spain is
warm and suitable for meditation, and because cities are noisy and crowded. Why is Spain
warm? and why does he wish to meditate? Why choose warm Spain rather than warm India? To
the last question: Because Spain is nearer to his home. Then why is his home near Spain?
Because his parents were Germans. And why did they go to Germany? And so during the whole
meditation.
- On another day, let him begin with a question of another kind, and every day devise new
questions, not only concerning his present situation, but also abstract questions. {114}
Thus let him connect the prevalence of water upon the surface of the globe with its
necessity to such life as we know, with the specific gravity and other physical properties
of water, and let him perceive ultimately through all this the necessity and concord of
things, not concord as the schoolmen of old believed, making all things for man's benefit
or convenience, but the essential mechanical concord whose final law is
"inertia." And in these meditations let him avoid as if it were the plague any
speculation sentimental or fantastic.
- Second Method. The Practice Proper. Having then perfected in his mind these conceptions,
let him apply them to his own career, forging the links of memory into the chain of
necessity.
And let this be his final question: To what purpose am I fitted? Of what service can my
being prove to the Brothers of the A ∴ A ∴ if I cross the Abyss, and am admitted to the
City of the Pyramids?
- Now that he may clearly understand the nature of this question, and the method of
solution, let him study the reasoning of the anatomist who reconstructs an animal from a
single bone. To take a simple example.
- Suppose, having lived all my life among savages, a ship is cast upon the shore and
wrecked. Undamaged among the cargo is a "Victoria." What is its use? The wheels
speak of roads, their slimness of smooth roads, the brake of hilly roads. The shafts show
that it was meant to be drawn by an animal, their height and length suggest an animal of
the size of a horse. That the carriage is open suggests a climate tolerable at any rate
for part of the year. The height of the box suggest crowded streets, or the spirited
character of the {115} animal employed to draw it. The cushions indicate its use to convey
men rather than merchandise; its hood that rain sometimes falls, or that the sun is at
times powerful. The springs would imply considerable skill in metals; the varnish much
attainment in that craft.
- Similarly, let the adept consider of his own case. Now that he is on the point of
plunging into the Abyss a giant Why? confronts him with uplifted club.
- There is no minutest atom of his composition which can be withdrawn without making him
some other than he is; no useless moment in his past. Then what is his future? The
"Victoria" is not a waggon; it is not intended for carting hay. It is not a
sulky; it is useless in trotting races.
- So the adept has military genius, or much knowledge of Greek; how do these attainments
help his purpose, or the purpose of the Brothers? He was put to death by Calvin, or stoned
by Hezekiah; as a snake he was killed by a villager, or as an elephant slain in battle
under Hamilcar. How do such memories help him? Until he have thoroughly mastered the
reason for every incident in his past, and found a purpose for every item of his present
equipment,[A brother known to me was repeatedly baffled in this meditation. But one day
being thrown with his horse over a sheer cliff of forty feet, and escaping without a
scratch or a bruse, he was reminded of his many narrow escapes from death. These proved to
be the last factors in his problem, which, thus completed, solved itself in a moment. O.M.
{WEH NOTE ADDENDA: Here Crowley speaks of himself, the event being noted in his China walk
account.}] he cannot truly answer even those Three Question what were first put to him,
even the Three Questions of the Ritual of the Pyramid; he is not ready to swear the Oath
of the Abyss.
- But being thus enlightened, let him swear the Oath of the Abyss; yea, let him swear the
Oath of the Abyss.
{116}