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The Book of ceremonial Magic

The Book of ceremonial Magic

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IT is only within recent times that the attempt to communicate with the dead has been<br />

elevated to the dignity <strong>of</strong> White <strong>Magic</strong>. Here it is necessary to affirm that the phenomena<br />

<strong>of</strong> Modern Spiritualism are to be distinguished clearly from those <strong>of</strong> old Necromancy.<br />

<strong>The</strong> identity <strong>of</strong> purpose is apt to connect the methods, but the latter differ generically. To<br />

compare them would be almost equivalent to saying that the art <strong>of</strong> physical Alchemy is<br />

similar to mercantile pursuits because the acquisition <strong>of</strong> wealth is the end in either case.<br />

To appreciate the claim <strong>of</strong> Modern Spiritualism would be to exceed the limits <strong>of</strong> this<br />

inquiry; it is mentioned only with the object <strong>of</strong> setting it quite apart. It should, however,<br />

be added that occult writers--with the indiscrimination which is common to their kind--<br />

have sometimes sought ambitiously to represent the communication with departed souls<br />

by means <strong>of</strong> Ceremonial <strong>Magic</strong> as something much more exalted than mere Spiritualism,<br />

whereas the very opposite is nearer the truth. Ancient Necromancy was barbarous and<br />

horrible in its rites; it is only under the auspices <strong>of</strong> Éliphas Lévi and Pierre Christian that<br />

it has been purged and civilised, but in the hands <strong>of</strong> these elegant magicians it has<br />

become simply a process <strong>of</strong> auto-hallucination, having no scientific consequence<br />

whatever. <strong>The</strong> secret <strong>of</strong> true evocation belongs to the occult sanctuaries, by the<br />

hypothesis <strong>of</strong> those who are their spokesmen; it is not the process<br />

p. 324<br />

<strong>of</strong> Spiritualism, and still less, so far as may be gleaned, is it that <strong>of</strong> the magical Rituals,<br />

nor would the secret at best seem respected by those who possess it, because the higher<br />

soul <strong>of</strong> man transcends evocation, and that which does respond ought to be beneath the<br />

initiate. <strong>The</strong> claim, however, is naturally one <strong>of</strong> delusion complicated by imposture.<br />

In any case, the Necromancy <strong>of</strong> the Rituals is, properly speaking, a department <strong>of</strong> Black<br />

<strong>Magic</strong>, and for this reason no doubt it was excluded from the theurgic scheme <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Arbatel; nor do even such composite works as the two Keys <strong>of</strong> Solomon and the <strong>Magic</strong>al<br />

Elements contain any account <strong>of</strong> a process which was always held in execration. It was<br />

lawful apparently for the Magus to conjure and compel the devils, to rack the hierarchy <strong>of</strong><br />

Infernus by the agony <strong>of</strong> Divine Names, but he must leave the dead to their rest.<br />

Where the process is given, as in the Fourth <strong>Book</strong> <strong>of</strong> Cornelius Agrippa, it is confined to<br />

the evocation <strong>of</strong> those souls who might be reasonably supposed to be damned, and it<br />

involves revolting rites. It assumes that the evil liver carries with him into the next world<br />

the desires which have depraved him here, and it allures him by his persistent affinities<br />

with the relinquished body. 1 In this way the use <strong>of</strong> blood came to be regarded as<br />

indispensable, because blood was held to be the medium <strong>of</strong> physical life; so also a portion<br />

<strong>of</strong> the body itself, whether flesh or bone, was prescribed in the rite. <strong>The</strong>re is not any need<br />

to say that evocations involving the use <strong>of</strong> such materials belong to Black <strong>Magic</strong>, but they<br />

would not in any case <strong>of</strong>fer a redeeming feature to the consideration <strong>of</strong> the informed<br />

student.<br />

"It is also to be understood," says pseudo-Agrippa, "that<br />

p. 325

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