ΕΠΙΣΤΟΛΗ
ΤΩΥ ΜΕΓΑΛΟΥ ΘΗΡΙΟΥ
ΠΡΟΣ ΤΟΝ
ΥΙΟΝ
ΑΥΤΟΥΓΕΣΡΑΜΜΑΤΟΝ
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
If the Sun and Moon should doubt
They'd immediately go out.
O my Son, our Work is to shine by Force and Virtue of our own Natures without Consciousness or consideration. Now, notwithstanding that our Radiance is constant and undimmed, it may be that Clouds gathering about us conceal our Glory from the Vision of other Stars. These Clouds are our Thoughts; not those true Thoughts which are but conscious Expressions of our Will, such as manifest in our Poesy, or our Music, or other Flower-Ray of our Life quintessential. Nay, the Cloud-Thought is born of Division and of Doubt; for all Thoughts, except they be creative emanations, are Witnesses to Conflict within us. Our settled Relations with the Universe do not disturb our Minds, as, by Example, our automatic Functions, which speak to us only in the Sign of Distress. Thus all consideration is Demonstration of Doubt, and Doubt of Duality, which is the Root of Choronzon.
Love is the law, love under will.
666
AN XIV
in
in
[1] Preface
[2] To each his own.
[3] Be blessed.
[4] On the Art of the Qabalah
[5] On the Corrected Life
[6] Fables of Love
[7] History of Love
[8] Final Theory of Love
[9] On Comprehending One's Nature
[10] More on the Way of Nature
[11] On how one's nature should be examined
[12] On Dreams, (a) External Causes
[13] On Dreams, (b) Innate Causes
[14] On Dreams, (g) Closed with Horror
[15] On Dreams, (d) Continued
[16] On Dreams, (e) the Key
[17] On Travel through the Empyrean
[18] Of Discipline
[19] On the Key of Dreams
[20] On Lucid Sleep
[21] On Poisons
[22] On the Motion of Life
[23] On Diseases of Blood
[24] On the Way of Love
[25] On the Mystic Marriage
[26] On Joy from Pain
[27] On the Ultimate Will
[28] On the Difference between Things
[29] To wander, stray; to digress in speech
[30] On the Silent Will
[31] On the Supreme Formula
[32] On the Way of Inertia
[33] On the Way of Freedom
[34] On the Law of Motion
[35] On the Laws against Motion
[36] On the Common Need
[37] On the Freedom of the Body
[38] On the Freedom of the Mind
[39] On the Freedom of Children
[40] On Cultivating Strength through Discipline
[41] On the Ordering of Things
[42] On the Fundamentals of the State
[43] On the Will of Children
[44] On the Method of Argument
[45] On Knowing the Will of a Child
[46] On the Red Gold
[47] You will go safest in the middle.
[48] On Wisdom in Sexual Affairs
[49] On the Equal Steps to Knowledge
[50] On the Virtue of Daring
[51] On the Art of Training the Mind, (1) Mathematics
[52] Continued, (2) Classics
[53] Continued, (3) Science
[54] How Magical Law Works
[55] On the Mechanism of Magick
[56] On the Haromony of the Soul with the Body
[57] On the Mystery of Œconomy [Knowledge, Wisdom]
[58] On the Alchemical Arts
[59] On the Most Subtle Secret
[60] On the Medium of Art
[61] On the Necessity of Will
[62] On the Universal Comedy, which is called Pan
[63] On the Blindness of Men
[64] An Allegory of Chess
[65] On the Truth of Falsehood
[66] The necessary changes having been made
[67] On the Relations of Illusions
[68] On Prudence
[69] On Reason in the Life of the Magician
[70] On the Pure Heart
[71] On the Conformity of the Magician
[72] On the Poets
[73] On the Magi of the A∴A∴ in Whom the Word takes Flesh
[74] On the Magi of Old: First of Lao-tze
[75] On Gautama
[76] On Sri Krishna and Dionysus
[77] On Tahuti
[78] On that Egyptian Magus whom the Jews call Mosheh
[79] On the Arabian Magician Mohammed
[80] On the Great Beast Himself, the Logos of the Æon, whose Word is Thelema
[81] A Command to His Son
[82] Wherefore he Begat His Son: So that there be Freedom
[83] On His Frailty
[84] On the Hand that Upholds the Magus
[85] On His Sins
[86] On His Victory through the Name Babalon
[87] On the Unspeakable Secret
[88] On the Secret through which any Spirit is Received in the Body
[89] On the Qabalistic Key of this Art
[90] On the Mass of the Holy Ghost
[91] On the Complete Formula
[92] Qabalistic Considerations on this Formula
[93] On Certain Magick Arts
[94] On the Great Work
[95] On the Steps to the Great Work
[96] On the Formula of the Moon
[97] On Consuming the Eagle
[98] On Chemical Agents according to the Four Elements
[99] On the Virtue of Experience in this Art
[100] On the True Sacrament
[101] On Directing Disciples
[102] On Certain Diseases of Disciples
[103] On Watching for Faults in the House
[104] On the Body that is the Shadow of Man
[105] On Sirens
[106] On a Certain Woman
[107] On Her Virtue
[108] On Certain Methods of Seeking an Oracle
[109] On the Black Brothers, Sons of Iniquity
[110] [They] are beaten, struck.
[111] On the Virtue of Surgery
[112] On the Four Lesser Operations of the Microcosmic Star
[113] On the Four Major Operations of the Microcosmic Star
[114] On the Macrocosmic Star
[115] On his Woman Olun, and on the Ecstasy that Surpasses All
[116] I am here.
[117] On the Name Olun
[118] "I am Mercury."
[119] On Great Men Most Distinguished in Love
[120] On Chastity
[121] On the Ceremony of the Equinox
[122] On the Light of the Stars
[123] On Song
[124] On Human Stupidity
[125] On His Struggle
[126] On the Need of Declaring the Word
[127] On the Universal Eucharistic Mystery
[128] On Righteousness in the Fundament
[129] On the Blessed Virgin
[130] On the Sport of His Mistress
[131] On a Danger of the Sports of Love
[132] On the Unconscious, or Libido
[133] On the Organization of Communities
[134] On the Method of Science
[135] On Monsters
[136] On the Hidden Palace of Wisdom
[137] On the Defects of the Hidden Will
[138] On Reason, Minister of the Will
[139] On the Way of Wisdom
[140] On Reason, Source of Madness when not Under Will
[141] On Truth, which may not be Told to a Woman
[142] On the Nature of Woman
[143] "The eternal Feminine draws us upward."
[144] On the Two Rewards of the Path
[145] On the Ecstasy of Samadhi and how it Differs from Others
[146] On the Art of Love and the Pleasures of the Mystic
[147] On the Highest Reward, True Wisdom and Perfect Happiness
[148] On the Hell of the Slaves
[149] A Rhapsody to Our Lady
[150] A Rhapsody to His Star
[151] On the Harmony of Will and Fate
[152] "Up from Earth's Centre through the Seventh Gate
I rose, and on the Throne of Saturn sate,
And many a Knot unravel'd by the Road,
But not the Master-knot of Human Fate."
— Omar Khayyam, Rubaiyat
[153] A Parenthesis on a Certain Virgin
[154] On Cinstancy in Love, to a Pure Heart
[155] On the Mystery of Evil
[156] On the Virtue of Tolerance
[157] On the Formula of the Dying Gods
[158] On Malign Fools
[159] An Apology for His Writings
[160] In Praise of the Law of Thelema
[161] On the Sphinx of the Egyptians
[162] On the Nature of the Sphinx
[163] On the Bull
[164] On the Lion
[165] Further on the Lion
[166] On the Man
[167] On the Dragon, which is Eagle, Serpent, and Scorpion
[168] On the Four Virtues of the Sphinx
[169] On the Balance in which the Four Virtues have Equal Power
[170] On the Pyramid
[171] Prefatory Remarks on Silence
[172] On the Nature of Our Silence
[173] On the Correct Formula of the Dragon
[174] On His Horoscope
[175] On His Work
[176] On the Black Brothers
[177] On the Alchemical Art
[179] On the Formula of Woman
[180] His Master's Words on Woman
[181] On the Proper Path for Woman
[182] We Will Discuss This Next
[183] "No sign of any returning", i.e., no turning back
[184] On the Keys of Death and the Devil, Arcana of the Tarot of the R.C. Brotherhood
[185] Further on These Paths
[186] On the Eye of Hoor
[187] On His Initiation
[188] On the Most Holy Grass of the Arabs
[189] On Certain Mysteries, which I have Seen
[190] On a Certain Method of Meditation
[191] Further on This
[192] Further on This
[193] Conclusion on this Method of Holiness
[194] On the One Way of the Sun
[195] On the Sagacity of the Order of A∴A∴
[196] More on This Path
[197] On Prodence in Teaching the Arts
[198] On the Mind, Enemy of the Soul
[199] On the Different Works of the Illuminators
[200] Further Words on This
[201] On Perfect Peace in Light
[202] On Perfect Peace
[203] On Death
[204] An Eschatology of the R.C. Adepts
[205] On the Supreme Marriage
[206] On a Certain Problem in the Art of Pleasure
[207] An Unravelling of this Knot
[208] On the Comedy that is called Pan
[209] On the Game of Love
[210] On the Pleasure of Sin
[211] On the Blindness of the Elder Philosophers
[212] On the Manichæan Heresy
[213] On the Measure of Reality
[214] On the Aphorism where I say: All Things Exist
[215] On the Reason for Writing this Letter
[216] On the Nature of this Letter
[217] How I Wrote this Letter
[218] On Wisdom and Folly
[219] "Highest holy wonder! The Redeemer is Redeemed!"
[220] The Supreme Oracle