Sorceriesofzos
Sorceriesofzos
Sorceriesofzos
Sorcery and witchcraft are the degenerate offspring of occult traditions coeval with
those described in the second chapter. The popular conception of witchcraft, shaped
by the anti-Christian manifestations that occurred in the Middle Ages is so distorted
and so inadequate that to try and interpret the symbols of its mysteries, perverted and
debased as they are, without reference to the vastly ancient systems from which they
derive is like mistaking the tip of an iceberg for its total mass.
It has been suggested by some authorities that the original witches sprang from a race
of Mongol origin of which the Lapps are the sole surviving remnants. This may or
may not be so, but these 'mongols' were not human. They were degenerate survivals
of a pre-human phase of our planet's history generally- though mistakenly- classified
as Atlantean. The characteristic that distinguished them from the others of their kind
was the ability to project consciousness into animal forms, and the power they
possessed of reifying thought-forms. The bestiaries of all the races of the earth are
littered with the results of their sorceries.
They were non-human entities; that is to say they pre-dated the human life- wave on
this planet, and their powers- which would today appear unearthly- derived from
extra-spatial dimensions. They impregnated the aura of the earth with the magical
seed from which the human foetus was ultimately generated.
Arthur Machen was, perhaps, near the truth of the matter when he suggested that the
fairies and little people of folklore were decorous devices concealing processes of
non-human sorcery repellent to mankind.
Machen, Blackwood, Crowley, Lovecraft, Fortune, and others, frequently used as a
theme for their writings the influx of extra-terrestrial powers which have been
moulding the history of our planet since time began; that is, since time began for us,
for we are only too prone to suppose that we were here first and that we alone are
here now, whereas the most ancient occult traditions affirm that we were neither the
first nor are we the only ones to people the earth; the Great Old Ones and the Elder
Gods find echoes in the myths and legends of all peoples.
Austin Spare claimed to have had direct experience of the existence of extra-
terrestrial intelligences, and Crowley- as his autobiography makes abundantly clear-
devoted a lifetime to proving that extra-terrestrial and superhuman consciousness can
and does exist independently of the human organism.
As explained in Images and Oracles of Austin Osman Spare, Spare was initiated into
the vital current of ancient and creative sorcery by an aged woman named Paterson,
who claimed decent form a line of Salem witches. The formation of Spare's Cult of
the Zos and the Kia owes much to his contact with Witch Paterson who provides the
model for many of his 'sabbatic' drawings and paintings. Much of the occult lore that
she transmitted
to him suffuses two of his books- The Book of Pleasure and the Focus
of Life. In the last years of his life he embodied further esoteric researches in a
grimoire which he had intended publishing as a sequel to his two other books.
Although death prevented its publication, the manuscript survives, and the substance
of the grimoire forms the basis of this chapter.
Spare concentrated the theme of his doctrine in the following Affirmation Creed of
Zos vel Thanatos.
I believe in the flesh 'as now' and forever . . . for I am the Light, the Truth, the Law,
the Way, and none shall come unto anything except through his flesh. Did I not show
you the eclectic path between ecstasies; that precarious funambulatory way . . . . But
you had no courage, were tired, and feared. THEN AWAKE! De-hypnotize yourselves
from the poor reality you be-live and be-lie. For the great Noon- tide is here, the
great bell has struck . . . Let others await involuntary immolation, the forced
redemption so certain for many apostates to Life. Now, in this day, I ask you to
search your memories, for great unities are near. The Inceptor of all memory is your
Soul. Life is desire, Death is reformation . . . I am the resurrection . . . I, who
transcend ecstasy by ecstasy, meditating Need Not Be in Self-love . . .
This creed, informed by the dynamism of Spare's will and his great ability as an
artist, created a Cult on the astral plane that attracted to itself all the elements
naturally orientated to it. He referred to it as Zos Kia Cultus, and its votaries claimed
affinity on the following terms:
A word of explanation is, perhaps, necessary concerning the term Karezza as used in
the present context. Retention of semen is a concept of central importance in certain
Tantric practices, the idea being that the bindu (seed) then breeds astrally, not
physically. In other words, an entity of some sort is brought to birth at astral levels of
consciousness. This, and analogous techniques, have given rise to the impression-
quite erroneous- that celibacy is a sine qua non of magical success; but such celibacy
is of a purely local character and confined to the physical plane, or waking state,
alone. Celibacy, as commonly understood, is therefore a meaningless parody or
travesty of the true formula. Such is the initiated rationale of Tantric celibacy, and
some such interpretation undoubtedly applies also to other forms of religious
asceticism. The 'temptations' of the saints occurr ed on the astral plane precisely
because the physical channels had been deliberately blocked. The state of drowsiness
noted in the votaries of the Ku suggests that the ensuing shadow-play was evoked
after a fashion similar to that obtained by a species of dream control.
Gerald Massey, Aleister Crowley, Austin Spare, Dion Fortune, have- each in their
way- demonstrated the bio-chemical basis of the Mysteries. They achieved in the
sphere of the 'occult' that which Wilhelm Reich achieved for psychology, and
established it on a sure bio-chemical basis. #%$
Spare's 'sentient symbols' and 'alphabet of desire', correlating as they do the marmas
of the body with the specific sex-principles, anticipated in several ways the work of
Reich who discovered- between 1936 and 1939- the vehicle of psycho-sexual energy,
which he named the orgone. Reich's singular contribution to psychology and,
incidentally, to Western occultism, lies in the fact that he successfully isolated the
libido and demonstrated its existence as a tangible, biological energy. This energy,
the actual substance of Freud's purely hypothetical concepts - libido and id- was
measured by Reich, lifted out of the category of hypothesis, and reified. He was,
however, wrong in supposing that the orgone was the ultimate energy. It is one of the
more important kalas but not the Supreme Kala (Mahakala), although it may become
such by virtue of a process not unknown to Tantrics of the Varma Marg. Until
comparatively recent times it was known- in the West- to the Arab alchemists, and
the entire body of alchemical literature, with its tortuous terminology and
hieroglyphic style, reveals- if it reveals anything- a deliberate device on the part of
Initiates to veil the true process of distilling the Mahakala.
Reich's discovery is significant because he was probably the first scientist to place
psychology on a solid biological basic, ant the first to demonstrate under laboratory
conditions the existence of a tangible magical energy at last measurable and therefore
strictly scientific. Whether this energy is termed the astral light (Levi), the elan vital
(Bergson), the Odic Force (Reichenbach), #'& the libido (Freud), Reich was the first- with
the possible exception of Reichenbach - actually to isolate it and demonstrate its
properties.
Austin Spare suspected, as early as 1913, that some such energy was the basic factor
in the re-activization of primal atavisms, and he treated it accordingly as cosmic
energy (the 'Atmospheric I') responsive to subconscious suggestion through the
medium of Sentient Symbols, and through the application of the body (Zos) in such a
way that it could reify remote atavisms and all possible future forms.
During the time that he was preoccupied with these themes Spare dreamed repeatedly
of fantastic buildings whose alignments he found quite impossible to note down on
waking. He supposed them to be adumbrations of a future geometry of space-time
bearing no known relation to present-day forms of architecture. Eliphaz Levi claimed
a similar power of reification for the 'Astral Light', but he failed to show the precise
manner of its manipulation. It was to this end that Spare #%( evolved his Alphabet of
Desire 'each letter of which relates to a sex -principle'. That is to say he noted certain
correspondences between the inner movements of the sexual impulse and the outer
form of its manifestation in symbols, sigils, or letters rendered sentient by being
charged with its energy. Dali #%) refers to such magically charged fetish-forms as
'accommodations of desire'which are visualized as shadowy voids, black
emptinesses, each having the shape of the ghostly object which inhabits its latency,
and which IS only by virtue of the fact that it is NOT. This indicates that the origin of
manifestation is non-manifestation, and it is plain to intuitive apprehension that the
orgone of Reich, the Atmosheric 'I' of Austin Spare, and the Dalinian delineations of
the 'accommodations of desire' refer in each case to an identical Energy manifesting
through the mechanics of desire. Desire, Energized Will, and Obsession, are the keys
to unlimited manifestation, for all form and all power is latent in the Void, and its
god-form is the Death Posture.
These theories have their roots in very ancient practices, some of which- in distorted
form- provided the basis of the mediaeval Witch Cult, covens of which flourished in
New England at the time of the Salem Witch Trials at the end of the 17th century.
The subsequent persecutions apparently obliterated all outer manifestations both of
the genuine cult and its debased counterfeits.
The principal symbols
*,+ of the original cult have survived
*"- the passage of aeon- long
cycles of time. They all suggest the Backward Way: The Sabbath sacred to
Sevekh or Sebt, the number Seven, the Moon, the Cat, Jackal, Hyaena, Pig, Black
Snake, and other animals considered unclean by later traditions; the Widdershins and
Back-to-Back dance, the Anal Kiss, the number Thirteen, the Witch mounted on the
besom handle, the Bat, and other forms of webbed or winged *,. nocturnal creature; the
Batrachia generally, of which the Toad, Frog, or Hekt was preeminent. These and
similar symbols originally typified the Draconian Tradition which was degraded by
the pseudo witch-cults during centuries of Christian persecution. The Mysteries were
profaned and the sacred rites were condemned as anti-Christian. The Cult thus
became the repository of inverted and perverted religious rites and symbols having no
inner meaning; mere affirmations of the witches' total commitment to anti -Christian
doctrine whereas- originally- they were living emblems, sentient symbols, of ante-
Christian faith.
When the occult significance of primal symbols is fathomed at the Draconian level,
the systme of sorcery which Spare evolved through contact with 'Witch' Paterson
becomes explicable, and all magical circles, sorceries, and cults, are seen as
manifestations of the Shadow.
footnotes
(1) See The White People, The Shining Pyramid, and other stories. This theme is a
frequent one with Machen. The hideous atavisms described by Lovecraft in many of
his tales evoke even more potently the atmosphere of cosmic horror and 'evil'
peculiar to the influx of extra-terrestrial powers.
(2) See The Confessions, Moonchild, Magick Without Tears, and other works by
Crowley.
(3) Frederick Muller, 1975.
(4) 'The body considered as a whole I call Zos' (The Book of Pleasure, p.45). The Kia
is the 'Atmospheric I'. The 'I' and the 'Eye', being interchangeable, the entire range of
'eye' symbolism - to which repeated reference has been made- is here applicable.
(5) First published in 1913 and 1921 respectively. There has been a recent
republication of The Book of Pleasure, with an introduction by Kenneth Grant.
(Montreal, 1975).
(6) This was to have been divided into two parts: The Book of the Living Word of
Zos and The Zoetic Grimoire of Zos; in the present chapter it is referred to simply as
the grimoire.
(7) Vide infra.
(8) See previous chapter.
(9) The significance of the number eight as the height, or ultimate One, is explained
in Aleister Crowley & the Hidden God.
(10) i.e. the assumption of the 'god -form' of death.
(11) See Arthur Osborne: Ramana Maharshi and the Path of Self Knowledge,
London, 1954.
(12) See Shri Haranath: His Play and Precepts, Bombay, 1954.
(13) i.e. 1913.
(14) The 5¡=6ú Ritual was published in Volume I, No.3. in 1910.
(15) See Chapter I.
(16) By qabalah, Hand=Yod=10; Eye=Ayin=70. The total, 80=Pe (Mouth), the
Goddess, Uterus, or Utterer of the Word.
(17) Crowley's definition of magick. See Magick, p.131.
(18) i.e. the True Will.
(19) Crowley defined the Great Work in terms of the 'Next Step', implying that het
Great Work is not a remote and mysterious thing, unattainable by humans, but the
realization of the 'here and now', and attention to immediate reality. Both Spare and
Crowley castigated the prevaricators who, scared of the idea of work, look to the
'future life' and the unattainable, instead of seizing reality and living NOW. 'O
Babblers, Prattlers, Loquacious Ones, . . . learn first what is work! and the Great
Work is not so far beyond' (The Book of Lies, Chapter 52).
(20) 1886-1945.
(21) Hell is the type of the concealed place symbolic of the subconsciousness; the
'infernal' region.
(22) See Chapter 10.
(23) Vide, infra, p.204.
(25) i.e. a solitary sex act.
(26) Described in The Book of Pleasure (A.O. Spare), republished 1975.
(27) See Letters on Od and Magnetism; Karl von Reichenbach, London, 1926.
(28) The Book of Pleasure, p.56.
(29) See The Secret Life of Salvador Dali, New York, 1942.
(30) They were carried over from the Draconian or Typhonian Traditions of pre-
dynastic Egypt. See The Magical Revival, Chapter 3.
(31) The Way of Resurgent Atavisms.
(32) Hecate, the witch or transformer from dark to light, as the tadpole of the waters
to the frog of dry land, as the dark and baleful moon of witchcraft to the full bright
orb of magical radiance and enchantment exemplified for Spare by 'Witch' Paterson
who changed from the hag to the virgin before his eyes. See Images and Oracles of
Austin Osman Spare, 1975.