LIBER E
vel
EXERCITIORUM
SUB FIGURA IX
I.
1. It is absolutely necessary that all experiments
should be recorded in detail during, or immediately after, their
performance.
2. It is highly important to note the physical and
mental condition of the experimenter or experimenters.
3. The time and place of all experiments must be
noted; also the state of the weather, and generally all conditions
which might conceivably have any result upon the experiment either as adjuvants
to or causes of the result, or as inhibiting it, or as sources of error.
4. the A: A: will not take official notice of any
experiments which are not thus properly recorded.
5. It is not necessary at this stage for us to declare
fully the ultimate end of our researches; nor indeed would it be understood
by those who have not become proficient in these elementary courses.
6. The experimenter is encourages to use his own
intelligence, and not to rely upon any other person or persons, however
distinguished, even among ourselves.
7. The written record should be intelligently prepared
so that others may benefit from its study.
8. The Book "John St. John" published in the first
number of the Equinox is an example of this kind of record by a very advanced
student. It is not as simply written as we could wish, but will show
the method.
9. The more scientific the record is, the better.
Yet the emotions should be noted, as being some of the conditions.
Let then the record be written with sincerity and
care; thus with practice it will be found more and more to approximate
to the ideal.
II
Physical clairvoyance.
1. Take a pack of (78) Tarot playing cards.
Shuffle; cut. Draw one card. Without looking at it, try to name it.
Write down the card you name, and the actual card. Repeat, and tabulate
results.
2. This experiment is probably easier with an old
genuine pack of Tarot cards, preferably a pack used for divination by some
one who really understood the matter.
3. Remember that one should expect to name the right
card once in 78 times. Also be careful to exclude all possibilities of
obtaining the knowledge through the ordinary senses of sight and touch,
or even smell.
There was once a man whose fingertips were so sensitive
that he could feel the shape and position of the pips and so judge the
card correctly.
4. It is better to try first the easier form of the
experiment, by guessing only the suit.
5. Remember that in 78 experiments you should obtain
22 trumps and 14 of each other suit; so that without any clairvoyance at
all, you can guess right twice in 7 times (roughly) by calling trumps each
time.
6. Note that some cards are harmonious.
Thus it would not be a bad error to call the five
of Swords ("The Lord of Defeat") instead of the ten of Swords ("The Lord
of Ruin"). But to call the Lord of Love (2 Cups) for the Lord of
Strife (5 Wands) would show that you were getting nothing right.
Similarly a card ruled by Mars would be harmonious
with a 5, a card of Gemini with "The Lovers".
7. These harmonies must be thoroughly learnt, according
to the numerous tables given in 777.
8. As you progress you will find that you are able
to distinguish the suit correctly three times in four and that very few
indeed inharmonious errors occur, while in 78 experiments you are able
to name the card aright as many as 15 or 20 times.
9. When you have reached this stage, you may be admitted
for examination; and in the even of your passing you will be given more
complex and difficult exercises.
III
Asana --- Posture.
1. You must learn to sit perfectly still with every
muscle tense for long periods.
2. You must wear no garments that interfere with
the posture in any of these experiments.
3. The first position: (The God). Sit in a
chair; head up, back straight, knees together, hands on knees, eyes closed.
4. The second position: (The Dragon). Kneel;
buttocks resting on the heels, toes turned back, back and head straight,
hands on thighs.
5. The third position: (The Ibis). Stand, hold
left ankle with right hand, free forefinger on lips.
6. The fourth position: (The Thunderbolt).
Sit; left heel pressing up anus, right foot poised on its toes, the heel
covering the phallus; arms stretched out over the knees; head and back
straight.
7. Various things will happen to you while you are
practising these positions; they must be carefully analysed and described.
8. Note down the duration of practice; the severity
of the pain (if any) which accompanies it, the degree of rigidity attained,
and any other pertinent matters.
9. When you have progressed up to the point that
a saucer filled to the brim with water and poised upon the head does not
spill one drop during a whole hour, and when you can no longer perceive
the slightest tremor in any muscle; when, in short, you are perfectly steady
and easy, you will be admitted for examination; and, should you pass, you
will be instructed in more complex and difficult practices.
IV
Pranayama --- Regularisation of the Breathing
1. At rest in one of your positions, close the right
nostril with the thumb of the right hand and breathe out slowly and completely
through the left nostril, while your watch marks 20 seconds. Breathe
in through the same nostril for 10 seconds. Changing hands, repeat
with the other nostril. Let this be continuous for one hour.
2. When this is quite easy to you, increase the periods
to 30 and 15 seconds.
3. When this is quite easy to you, but not before,
breathe out for 15 seconds, in for 15 seconds, and hold the breath for
15 seconds.
4. When you can do this with perfect ease and comfort
for a whole hour, practice breathing out for 40 and for 20 seconds.
5. This being attained, practice breathing out for
20, in for 10, holding the breath for 30 seconds.
When this has become perfectly easy to you, you
may be admitted for examination, and should you pass, you will be instructed
in more complex and difficult practices.
6. You will find that the presence of food in the
stomach, even in small quantities, makes the practices very difficult.
7. Be very careful never to overstrain your powers;
especially never get so short of breath that you are compelled to breathe
out jerkily or rapidly.
8. Strive after depth, fullness, and regularity of
breathing.
9. Various remarkable phenomena will very probably
occur during these practices. They must be carefully analysed and
recorded.
V
Dharana --- Control of Thought.
1. Constrain the mind to concentrate itself upon
a single simple object imagined.
The five tatwas are useful for this purpose; they
are: a black oval; a blue disk; a silver crescent; a yellow square; a red
triangle.
2. Proceed to combinations of simple objects; e.g.
a black oval within a yellow square, and so on.
3. Proceed to simple moving objects, such as a pendulum
swinging, a wheel revolving, etc. Avoid living objects.
4. Proceed to combinations of moving objects, e.g.
a piston rising and falling while a pendulum is swinging. The relation
between the two movements should be varied in different experiments.
Or even a system of flywheels, eccentrics, and governor.
5. During these practices the mind must be absolutely
confined to the object determined upon; no other thought must be allowed
to intrude upon the consciousness. The moving systems must be regular
and harmonious.
6. Note carefully the duration of the experiments,
the number and nature of the intruding thoughts, the tendency of the object
itself to depart from the course laid out for it, and any other phenomena
which may present themselves. Avoid overstrain; this is very important.
7. Proceed to imagine living objects; as a man, preferably
some man known to, and respected by, yourself.
8. In the intervals of these experiments you may
try to imagine the objects of the other senses, and to concentrate upon
them.
For example, try to imagine the taste of chocolate,
the smell of roses, the feeling of velvet, the sound of a waterfall or
the ticking of a watch.
9. Endeavour finally to shut out all objects of any
of the senses, and prevent all thoughts arising in your mind. When
you feel you have attained some success in these practices, apply for examination,
and should you pass, more complex and difficult practices will be prescribed
for you.
VI
Physical limitations.
1. It is desirable that you should discover for yourself
your physical limitations.
2. To this end ascertain for how many hours you can
subsist without food or drink before your working capacity is seriously
interfered with.
3. Ascertain how much alcohol you can take, and what
forms of drunkenness assail you.
4. Ascertain how far you can walk without once stopping;
likewise with dancing, swimming, running, etc.
5. Ascertain for how many hours you can do without
sleep.
6. Test your endurance with various gymnastic exercises,
club swinging, and so on.
7. Ascertain for how long you can keep silence.
8. Investigate any other capacities and aptitudes
which may occur to you.
9. Let all these things be carefully and conscientiously
recorded; for according to your powers will it be demanded of you.
VII
A Course of Reading
1. The object of most of the foregoing practices
will not at first be clear to you; but at least (who will deny it?) they
have trained you in determination, accuracy, introspection, and many other
qualities which are valuable to all men in their ordinary avocations, so
that in no case will your time have been wasted.
2. That you may gain some insight into the nature
of the Great Work which lies beyond these elementary trifles, however,
we should mention that an intelligent person may gather more than a hint
of its nature from the following books, which are to be taken as serious
and learned contributions to the study of Nature, though not necessarily
to be implicitly relied upon.
The Yi King (S.B.E. Series, Oxford University Press.)
The Tao Teh King (S.B.E. Series.)
Tannhuser, by A. Crowley.
The Upanishads.
The Bhagavad-Gita.
The Voice of the Silence.
Raja Yoga, by Swami Vivekananda.
The Shiva Sanhita.
The Aphorisms of Patanjali.
The Sword of Song.
The Book of the Dead.
Rituel et Dogme de la Haute Magie.
The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.
The Goetia.
The Hathayoga Pradipika.
The Spiritual Guide of Molinos.
Erdmann's History of Philosophy.
The Star in the West (Captain Fuller).
The Dhammapada (S.B.E. Series, Oxford University
Press).
The Questions of King Milinda (S.B.E. Series).
777 vel Prolegomena, etc.
Varieties of Religious Experience (James).
Kabbala Denudata.
Knox Om Pax.
3. Careful study of these books will enable the pupil
to speak in the language of his master, and facilitate communications with
him.
4. The pupil should endeavour to discover the fundamental
harmony of these very varied works; for this purpose he will find it best
to study the most extreme divergencies side by side.
5. He may at any time that he wishes apply for examination
in this course of reading.
6. During the whole of this elementary study and
practice he will do wisely to seek out and attach himself to, a master,
one competent to correct him and advise him. Nor should he be discouraged
by the difficulty of finding such a person.
7. Let him further remember that he must in no wise
rely upon, or believe in, that master. He must rely entirely upon
himself, and credit nothing whatever but that which lies within his own
knowledge and experience.
8. As in the beginning, so at the end, we here insist
upon the vital importance of the written record as the only possible check
upon error derived from the various qualities of the experimenter.
9. Thus let the work be accomplished duly; yea, let
it be accomplished duly.
(If any really important or remarkable results should
occur, or if any great difficulty presents itself, the A: A: should be
at once informed of the circumstances.)