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Equinox I (04).pdf

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178<br />

THE EQUINOX<br />

(2) That I consider Hindu methods of meditation as possible useful to the<br />

beginner, and should not therefore recommend them to be discarded at<br />

once.<br />

With regard to my advancement, the redemption of the Cosmos, etc., etc., I<br />

leave for ever the “Blossom and Fruit” Theory and appear in the character of an<br />

Inquirer on strictly scientific lines.*<br />

This is unhappily calculated to damp enthusiasm; but as I so carefully of old,<br />

for the magical path, excluded from my life all other interests, that life has now<br />

no particular meaning, and the Path of Research, on the only lines I can now<br />

approve of, remains the one Path possible for me to tread.<br />

On the 11th of June P. records that he moved his bed into<br />

the temple that he had constructed at C . . . House, for convenience<br />

of more absolute retirement. In this temple he was<br />

afflicted by dreams and visions of the most appalling Abramelin<br />

devils, which had evidently clung to the spot ever since the<br />

operations of February 1900.<br />

On the night of the 16th of June he began to practise<br />

Mahasatipatthana† and found it easy to get into the way of it<br />

as a mantra which does not interfere much with sense-<br />

* Till 1906. The theory of the Great White Brotherhood, as set forth in the<br />

story called “The Blossom and the Fruit,” by Miss Mabel Collins.<br />

† The practice of Mahasatipatthana is explained by Mr. A. Crowley in his<br />

“Science and Buddhism” very fully. Briefly:<br />

In this meditation the mind is not restrained to the contemplation of a single<br />

object, and there is no interference with the natural funcitons of the body. It is<br />

essentially an observation-practice, which later assumes an analytic aspect in<br />

regard to the question: “What is it that is really observed?”<br />

The Ego-idea is excluded; all bodily motions are observed and recorded; for<br />

instance, one may sit down quietly and say: “There is a raising of the right<br />

foot.” “There is an expiration,” etc., etc., just as it happens. When once this<br />

habit of excluding the Ego becomes intuitive, the next step is to explain the<br />

above thus: “There is a sensation (Vedana) of a raising, etc.” The next stage is<br />

that of perception (Sañña) “There is a perception of a (pleasant and unpleasant)<br />

sensation of a raising, etc.” The two further stages Sankhara and Viññanam<br />

pursue the analysis to its ultimation. “There is a consciousness of a tendency

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