Mastery
The aim of him who would be Master is single; men
call it Personal Ambition. That is, he wants his Universe to be as vast, and his
control of it as perfect, as possible.
Few fail to understand this aim; but many fail in the formulation of their
campaign to attain it. Some, for instance, fill their purse with fairy gold,
which, when they try to use it, is found to be dead leaves.
Others attempt to rule the universe of another, not seeing that they cannot even
take true cognizance thereof.
The proper method of extending one's universe, besides the conventional
apparatus of material Science, is tripartite: evocation, invocation, and vision.
Control is a matter of theoretical and practical acquaintance with Magical
Formulae, but notably also of Self-Discipline. The ground is to be consolidated,
and all contradictions resolved in higher harmonies, by various Trances.
So much indeed is obvious to superficial consideration; strange, then, that so
few Magicians take the further step of enquiry as to the availability of the
Instrument. Shortsighted selfishness, good sooth, to take for granted that one's
Self is sure to find its proper medium to hand for its next adventure.
Here the Magical Memory is of virtue marvellous to correct perspective; for, how
often in the past has one's life been all but sheer failure from the mere lack
of proper means of self-expression? And who among us can be seriously satisfied (to-day, knowing what we do) with even the most perfect
human instrument?
It is then no more than simple good sense for the Magus to formulate his general
political aim in some such terms as these:
To secure the greatest possible freedom of self-expression for the greatest
possible number of Points-of-View.
Of which issue the practical aspect may be phrased as follows:
To improve the human race in every conceivable way, so as to have available for
service the greatest possible variety of the best Instruments imaginable.
And this is the rational justification of the apparently imbecile and too often
sentimental-hypocritical aphorism:
Love all Beings! Serve Mankind!
That is, upon the political plane; for also these two phrases contain (1) the
Magical Formula which is the Key alike of Invocation and of Trance (2) the
implicit injunction to make clear the Way of the Magician through the Heavens by
right ordering of every Star. The word "serve" is indeed misleading
and objectionable: it implies a false and despicable attitude.
The relation between men should be the brotherly respect which obtains between
noble strangers. The idea of service is either true, and humiliating; or false,
and arrogant.
The most common and fatal pitfall which menaces the man who has begun to extend
his Universe beyond the world of sense-perception is called Confusion of the
Planes. To him who realises the All-One, and knows that to distinguish between
any two things is the basic error, it must seem natural and even right to
perform what seem perforce Acts of Love between incongruous ideas. He has the
Key of Languages: why then should not he the Englishman avail himself of it to
speak in Hebrew without learning it? The same problem offers itself daily in a
myriad subtle shapes. "Command these stones to become bread."
"Throw thyself down from the pinnacle of the Temple: as it is written ~`He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep
thee in all thy ways'" -- These last four words throw light upon the fog of
Choronzon -- Restriction be unto him in the Name of BABALON! For "his
ways" are the ways of Nature, who hath appointed between the planes a
well-ordered relation; to deform this device is not, and cannot be, "thy
way." The Act of Love, so-seeming, is a false gesture; for such love is not
"love under will." Be thou well aware, O thou who seekest to attain to
Mastery, of doing aught "miraculous": the surest sign of the Master is
this, that he is a man of like passions with his fellows. He does indeed
transcend them all, and turn them all to perfections: but he does this without
suppression (for `Everything that lives is holy') or distortion (for `Every Form
is a true symbol of Substance') or confusion (for `Admixture is hatred as Union
is love').
Initiation means the Journey Inwards: nothing is changed or can be changed; but
all is trulier understood with every step. The Magus of the Gods, with His one
Word that seems to overturn the chariot of Mankind in ruin, does not in fact
destroy or even alter anything; He simply furnishes a new mode of applying
existing Energy to established Forms.
The invention of electric machines has in no way interfered with Matter or
Motion; it has only helped us to get rid of certain aspects of the Illusion of
Time and Space, and so brought the most intelligent minds to the threshold of
the Magical and Mystical Doctrine: they have been forced to imagine the
possibility of the perception of the Universe as it is, freed of conditions.
That is, they have been given a glimpse of the nature of the Attainment of
Mastery. And it is surely but a little step to take for the leaders of natural
Science, Mathematics their guiding Star, that they should understand the
compelling necessity of the Great Work, and apply themselves to its achievement.
Here the great obstacles are these; firstly, the misunderstanding of Self; and
secondly, the resistance of the rational mind against its own conclusions. Men
must cast off these two restrictions; they must begin to realise that Self is
hidden behind, and independent of, the mental and material instrument in which
they apprehend their Point-of-View; and they must seek an instrument other than
that which insists (with every single observation) on impressing on them what is
merely its own most hateful flaw and error, the idea of duality.
The Aeon of Horus is here: and its first flower may well be this: that, freed of
the obsession of the doom of the Ego in Death, and of the limitation of the Mind
by Reason, the best men again set out with eager eyes upon the Path of the Wise,
the mountain track of the goat, and then the untrodden Ridge, that leads to the
ice-gleaming pinnacles of Mastery!