Trance
The word Trance implies a passing beyond: scil.,
the conditions which oppress. The whole and sole object of all true Magical and
Mystical training is to become free from every kind of limitation. Thus, body
and mind, in the widest sense, are the obstacles in the Path of the Wise: the
paradox, tragic enough as it seems, is that they are also the means of progress.
How to get rid of them, to pass beyond or to transcend them, is the problem, and
this is as strictly practical and scientific as that of eliminating impurities
from a gas, or of adroitly using mechanical laws. Here is the inevitable logical
flaw in the sorites of the Adept, that he is bound by the very principles which
it is his object to overcome: and on him who seeks to discard them arbitrarily
they haste to take a terrible revenge!
It is in practice, not in theory, that this difficulty suddenly disappears. For
when we take rational steps to suspend the operation of the rational mind, the
inhibition does not result in chaos, but in the apprehension of the Universe by
means of a faculty to which the laws of the Reason do not apply; and when,
returning to the normal state, we seek to analyse our experience, we find that
the description abounds in rational absurdities.
On further consideration, however, it becomes gradually clear - gradually,
because the habit of Trance must be firmly fixed before its fulminating
impressions are truly intelligible - that there are not two kinds of Thought, or
of Nature, but one only. The Law of the Mind is the sole substance of the
Universe, as well as the sole means by which we apprehend it. There is thus no
true antithesis between the conditions of Trance and those of ratiocination and
perception; the fact that Trance is not amenable to the rules of argument is
impertinent. We say that in Chess a Knight traverses the diagonal of a rectangle
measuring three squares by two, neglecting its motion as a material object in
space. We have described a definite limited relation in terms of a special sense
which works by an arbitrary symbolism: when we analyse any example of our
ordinary mental processes, we find the case entirely similar. for what we `see,'
`hear,' etc., depends upon our idiosyncrasies, for one thing, and upon
conventional interpretation for another. Thus we agree to call grass green, and
to avoid walking over the edge of precipices, without any attempt to make sure
that any two minds have exactly identical conceptions of what these things may
mean; and just so we agree upon the moves in Chess. By the rules of the game,
then, we must think and act, or we risk every kind of error; but we amy be
perfectly well aware that the rules are arbitrary, and that it is after all only
a game. The constant folly of the traditional mystic has been to be so proud of
himself for discovering the great secret that the Universe is no more than a toy
invented by himself for his amusement that he hastens to display his powers by
deliberately misunderstanding and misusing the toy. He has not grasped the fact
that just because it is no more than a projection of his own Point-of-View, it
is integrally Himself that he offends!
Here lies the error of such Pantheism as that of Mansur el-Hallaj, whom Sir
Richard Burton so delightfully (twits in the Kasidah with his impotence --
"Mansur was wise, but wiser they who smote him with the hurl(acg)ed stones;
And though his blood a witness bore, no Wisdom-Might could mend his
bones.~" God was in the stones no less than within his turband-wrapping;
and when the twain crashed together, one point of perception of the pact was
obscured -- which was in no wise his design!
To us, however, this matter is not one for regret; it is (like every phenomenon)
an Act of Love. And the very definition of such Act is the Passing Beyond of two
Events into a Third, and their withdrawal into Silence or Nothingness by
simultaneous reaction. In this sense it may be said that the Universe is a
constant issue into Trance; and in fact the proper understanding of any Event by
means of the suitable Contemplation should produce the type of Trance
appropriate to the complex Event-Individual in the case.
Now all Magick is useful to produce Trance; for (alpha) it trains the mind in
the discipline necessary to Yoga; (beta) it exalts the spirit to the impersonal
and divine sublimity which is the first condition of success; (gamma) it
enlarges the scope of the mind, assuring it full mastery of every subtler plane
of Nature, thus affording it adequate material for ecstatic consummation of the
Eucharist of Existence.
The essence of the idea of Trance is indeed contained in that of Magick, which
is pre-eminently the transcendental Science and Art. Its method is, in one chief
sense, Love, the very key of Trance; and, in another, the passing beyond normal
conditions. The verbs to transcend, to transmit, to transcribe, and their like,
are all of cardinal virtue in Magick. Hence "Love is the law, love under
will" is the supreme epitome of Magical doctrine, and its universal
Formula. For need any man fear to state boldly that every Magical Operation
soever is only complete when it is characterised (in one sense or another) by
the occurrence of Trance. It was ill done to restrict the use of the word to the
supersession of dualistic human consciousness by the impersonal and monistic
state of Samadhi. Fast bubbles the fountain of Error from the morass of
Ignorance when distinction is forcibly drawn "between any one thing and any
other thing." Yea, verily, and Amen! it is the first necessity as it is the
last attainment of Trance to abolish every form and every order of dividuality
so fast as it presents itself. By this ray may ye read in the Book of your own
Magical Record the authentic stigma of your own success.