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Liber HHH Sub Figura CCCXLI. Continet Capitula Tria: MMM, Aaa, Et Sss. Liber HHH Sub Figura Cccxli. Continet Capitula Tria: MMM, Aaa, Et Sss

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Liber HHH sub figura CCCXLI.

CONTINET CAPITULA TRIA: MMM, AAA,


ET SSS.
LIBER HHH SUB FIGURA CCCXLI.
CONTINET CAPITULA TRIA: MMM, AAA,
ET SSS.
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1. 0. Be seated in thine Asana, wearing the robe of a Neophyte, the hood


drawn.

1. It is night, heavy and hot, there are no stars. Not one breath of wind stirs
the surface of the sea, that is thou. No fish play in thy depths.
2. Let a Breath rise and ruffle the waters. This also thou shalt feel playing
upon thy skin. It will disturb thy meditation twice or thrice, after which
thou shouldst have conquered this distraction. But unless thou first feel
it, that Breath hath not arisen.
3. Next, the night is riven by the lightning flash. This also shalt thou feel in
thy body, which shall shiver and leap with the shock, and that also must
both be suffered and overcome.
4. After the lightning flash, resteth in the zenith a minute point of light. And
that light shall radiate until a right cone be established upon the sea, and
it is day.
With this thy body shall be rigid, automatically; and this shalt thou let
endure, withdrawing thyself into thine heart in the form of an upright Egg
of blackness; and therein shalt thou abide for a space.
5. When all this is perfectly and easily performed at will, let the aspirant
figure to himself a struggle with the whole force of the Universe. In this
he is only saved by his minuteness. But in the end he is overcome by
Death, who covers him with a black cross.
Let his body fall supine with arms outstretched.
6. So lying, let him aspire fervently unto the Holy Guardian Angel.
7. Now let him resume his former posture.
Two and twenty times shall he figure to himself that he is bitten by a
serpent, feeling even in his body the poison thereof. And let each bite be
healed by an eagle or hawk, spreading its wings above his head, and
dropping thereupon a healing dew. But let the last bite be so terrible a
pang at the nape of the neck that he seemeth to die, and let the healing
dew be of such virtue that he leapeth to his feet.
8. Let there be now placed within his egg a red cross, then a green cross,
then a golden cross, then a silver cross; or those things which these
shadow forth. Herein is silence; for he that hath rightly performed the
meditation will understand the inner meaning hereof, and it shall serve
as a test of himself and his fellows.
9. Let him now remain in the Pyramid or Cone of Light, as an Egg, but no
more of blackness.
10. Then let his body be in the position of the Hanged Man, and let him
aspire with all his force unto the Holy Guardian Angel.
11. The grace having been granted unto him, let him partake mystically of
the Eucharist of the Five Elements and let him proclaim Light in
Extension; yea, let him proclaim Light in Extension.

II
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1. 0. Be seated in thine Asana, or recumbent in Shavasana, or in the


position of the dying Buddha.

1. Think of thy death; imagine the various diseases that may attack thee, or
accidents overtake thee. Picture the process of death, applying always
to thyself.
(A useful preliminary practice is to read textbooks of Pathology, and to
visit museums and dissecting-rooms.)
2. Continue this practice until death is complete; follow the corpse through
the stages of embalming, wrapping and burial.
3. Now imagine a divine breath entering thy nostrils.
4. Next, imagine a divine light enlightening the eyes.
5. Next, imagine the divine voice awakening the ears.
6. Next, imagine a divine kiss imprinted on the lips.
7. Next, imagine the divine energy informing the nerves and muscles of the
body, and concentrate on the phenomenon which will already have been
observed in 3, the restoring of the circulation.
8. Last, imagine the return of the reproductive power, and employ this to
the impregnation of the Egg of light in which man is bathed.
9. Now represent to thyself that this Egg is the Disk of the Sun, setting in
the west.
10. Let it sink into blackness, borne in the bark of heaven, upon the back of
the holy cow Hathor. And it may be that thou shalt hear the moaning
thereof.
11. Let it become blacker than all blackness. And in this meditation thou
shalt be utterly without fear, for that the blankness that will appear unto
thee is a thing dreadful beyond all thy comprehension.
And it shall come to pass that if thou hast well and properly performed
this meditation that on a sudden thou shalt hear the drone and booming
of a Beetle.
12. Now then shall the Blackness pass, and with rose and gold shalt thou
arise in the East, with the cry of an Hawk resounding in thine ear. Shrill
shall it be and harsh.
13. At the end shalt thou rise and stand in the mid-heaven, a globe of glory.
And therewith shall arise the mighty Sound that holy men have likened
unto the roaring of a Lion.
14. Then shalt thou withdraw thyself from the Vision, gathering thyself into
the divine form of Osiris upon his throne.
15. Then shalt thou repeat audibly the cry of triumph of the god re-arisen, as
it shall have been given unto thee by thy Superior.
16. And this being accomplished, thou mayest enter again into the Vision,
that thereby shall be perfected in Thee.
17. After this shalt thou return into the Body, and give thanks unto the Most
High God IAIDA, yea unto the Most High God IAIDA.
18. Mark well that this operation should be performed if it be possible in a
place set apart and consecrated to the Works of the Magick of Light.
Also that the Temple should be ceremonially open as thou hast
knowledge and skill to perform, and that at the end thereof the closing
should be most carefully accomplished. But in the preliminary practice it
is enough to cleanse thyself by ablution, by robing, and by the rituals of
the Pentagram and Hexagram.
0-2 should be practised at first, until some realisation is obtained; and
the practice should always be followed by a divine invocation of Apollo
or of Isis or of Jupiter or of Serapis.
Next, after a swift summary of 0-2 practice 3-7.
This being mastered, add 8.
Then add 9-13.
Then being prepared and fortified, well fitted for the work, perform the
whole meditation at one time. And let this be continued until perfect
success be attained therein. For this is a mighty meditation and holy,
having power even upon Death, yea, having power even upon Death.
(Note by Fra. O.M. At any time during this meditation the concentration
may bring about Samadhi. This is to be feared and shunned, more than
any other breaking of control, for that it is the most tremendous of the
forces which threaten to obsess. There is also some danger of acute
delirious melancholia at point 1.)

III
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1. 0. Be seated in thine Asana, preferably the Thunderbolt.


It is essential that the spine be vertical.

1. In this practice the cavity of the brain is the Yoni; the spinal cord is the
Lingam.
2. Concentrate thy thought of adoration in the brain.
3. Now begin to awaken the spine in this manner. Concentrate thy thought
of thyself in the base of the spine, and move it gradually up a little at a
time.
By this means thou wilt become conscious of the spine, feeling each
vertebra as a separate entity. This must be achieved most fully and
perfectly before the further practice is begun.
4. Next, adore the brain as before, but figure to thyself its content as
infinite. Deem it to be the womb of Isis, or the body of Nuit.
5. Next, identify thyself with the base of the spine as before, but figure to
thyself its energy as infinite. Deem it to be the phallus of Osiris or the
being of Hadit.
6. These two concentrations 4 and 5 may be pushed to the point of
Samadhi. Yet lose not control of the will; let not Samadhi be thy master
herein.
7. Now then, being conscious both of the brain and the spine, and
unconscious of all else, do thou imagine the hunger of the one for the
other; the emptiness of the brain, the ache of the spine, even as the
emptiness of space and the aimlessness of Matter.
And if thou hast experience of the Eucharist in both kinds, it shall aid
thine imagination herein.
8. Let this agony grow until it be insupportable, resisting by will every
temptation. Not until thine whole body is bathed in sweat, or it may be in
sweat of blood, and until a cry of intolerable anguish is forced from thy
closed lips, shalt thou proceed.
9. Now let a current of light, deep azure flecked with scarlet, pass up and
down the spine, striking as it were upon thyself that art coiled at the base
as a serpent.
Let this be exceedingly slow and subtle; and though it be accompanied
with pleasure, resist; and though it be accompanied with pain, resist.
10. This shalt thou continue until thou art exhausted, never relaxing the
control. Until thou canst perform this one section 9 during a whole hour,
proceed not. And withdraw from the meditation by an act of will, passing
into a gentle Pranayama without Kumbhakham, and meditating on
Harpocrates, the silent and virginal God.
11. Then at last, being well-fitted in body and mind, fixed in peace, beneath
a favourable heaven of stars, at night, in calm and warm weather, mayst
thou quicken the movement of the light until it be taken up by the brain
and the spine, independently of thy will.
12. If in this hour thou shouldst die, is it not written, "Blessed are the dead
that die in the Lord"? Yea, Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord!

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