Kolbrin manuscript
Index
Dedication
Foreword
Introduction
Prologue to the
Bronzebook
THE BOOK OF CREATION
Extracted from the
Great Book of the Sons of Fire
THE BOOK OF
GLEANINGS
Being writings from
Various Old Culdee books which were partially
destroyed in Ancient
Times
THE BOOK OF SCROLLS
Formerly called The
Book of Books or The Lesser Book of The
Sons of Fire this
being The Third Book of the Bronzebook
THE BOOK OF THE SONS
OF FIRE
This being The
Fourth Book of the Bronzebook being all that remains
of the Sacred
Writings formerly contained in The Great Book of the Sons of Fire
THE BOOK OF
MANUSCRIPTS
Incorporating The
Treasury of Life compiled from writings preserved by
Amos, an Egyptian;
Claudius Linus, a Roman; and Vitico, a Gaul
THE BOOK OF MORALS
AND PRECEPTS
Formerly called The
Book of Establishment, this being The Third Book
of The Great Book of
the Sons of Fire
THE BOOK OF ORIGINS
OR FERILBOOK
As authorised by the
Conclave of Venedas. Compiled from the three
Books of Britain
which formed the Koalbook, formerly called the Hiferalt
THE BOOK OF THE
SILVER BOUGH
Once known as The
Book of Sacred Scripts. A collection of writings
preserved by the
hand of Gwinder Apowin
THE BOOK OF LUCIUS
Rewritten from The
Book of Pemantris of unknown origin
THE BOOK OF WISDOM
Being a revision and
amalgamation of two books of later date which
were added to the
books of The Bronzebook forming The Kolbrin after
these had been
transcribed in the nineteenth century
THE BRITAIN BOOK
Note found in the
cover of an old copy of the Kolbrin
The Kolbrin Bible
The Kolbrin is a
collection of ancient maunuscripts said to have been salvaged from the
Glastonbury Abbey arson in 1184. The Kolbrin said to have a connection with
Jesus historically through Joseph of Arimathea, they have been discussed by
James McCanney and others. This site has been approved by the culdian trust.
View some of the manuscripts online or to buy the book in hard copy. It has
been rumored that Nikola Tesla acquired some knowledge from this book. In the
past, only a very select few, some might say an elite group, have had access to
this book. Now, the current caretakers
of this ancient knowledge believe ''these are the days of decision, when
humankind stands at the crossroad,'' and are making the book available subject
to explicit conditions.
Thekolbrin.com is
the largest online source of information and content regarding the Kolbrin
bible, this site is a partial electronic rendition of the original translation
first published in New Zealand by the Culdian Trust. The group responsible for
the first translation published believe that they are the of inheritors of the
ancient wisdom of the Culdees of Britain who were part of the British or Keltic
Christian community prior to its romanisation under Augustine, after which it
suffered severely through persecution and suppression. However, it survived to
a greater or lesser degree until the great persecutions of the late Middle
Ages, when the flame was further extinguished, leaving only a few sparks
surviving to kindle the present revival.
From combined
research, the origins of The Kolbrin can be traced back to a large collection
of manuscripts salvaged from Glastonbury Abbey during an arson attack that was
intended to destroy them. It was the
time of history when there was a great suppression of monasterys. As fate would
have it, the once considered heretical works were transcribed on bronze tablets
by the religious druids of the time. Since they were thought to be destroyed
during the fire, they were preserved in secrecy.
Since then, much of
the original text was lost or destroyed due to the passage of time, their
environment and human error. Each
caretaker though, has gone to painstaking efforts to preserve what was left and
to fill in the gaps with the correct knowledge in order to preserve the
original meaning.
During the early
fourteenth century, John Culdy, the leader of a small community in Scotland,
owned The Kolbrin and took steps to ensure its survival beyond his care.
The Kolbrin
eventually became known as The Bronzebook of Britain, and the contents of
additional salvaged manuscripts known as The Coelbook were later incorporated
into it to form the modern version.
In the early parts
of the twentieth century, the responsibility of The Kolbrin’s preservation
rested with a small religious group in England that never gained much power due
their very restrictive membership requirements.
In the years leading
up to the First World War, only two copies of The Kolbrin existed in book form,
written in biblical English. Only part
of the original survived to the Second World War, when the books were thought
to be worthless junk and thrown out by their owners, only to be saved by fate
then discarded again as works of the devil, and salvaged by destiny before any
irreparable damage was done.
Until 1995, The
Kolbrin was in the care of The Hope Trust, of which little is known. There is
currently a Hope Trust registered in NZ but they have nothing to do with the
Kolbrin, nor did they have anything to do with it. The current custodian is The
Culdian Trust, which was formed in 1980.
The Culdian Trust inherited The Kolbrin and other books when the Hope
Trust was deregistered around 1995 in accordance with its constitution. Around 1992, an elderly man from the Hope
Trust who is now deceased put together the current draft from the originals.
His character, reputation and relatives are still living. He was an extremely private man while alive
and the trust are respecting his wishes with regard to continued privacy.
The Culdian Trust
members did not get to see the original manuscripts on which the most recent
version ofThe Kolbrin was derived, nor do they understand how they came into
the elderly man's possession or where he sent the originals upon
completion. They believe based on
speculation that he may have been a member of a hermetic order probably based
in England, so the original manuscripts may have gone back there. Despite the continued ambiguity of The
Kolbrin’s origins, a Culdian Trust representative that knew the man for
approximately twenty years held him in high regard and found him to be a man of
extremely high integrity.
It is also rumored
that there may be other sources for the manuscripts but they are yet to be released,
or discovered. If anyone knows their whereabouts please email me at buy (at)
thekolbrin.com
I have the main
website content in a javascript pop-up because obviously i can remove the
ability for people to copy portions of the text via the view source buttons in
the file menu etc by opening a new window instance. There is no spyware or
malicious code.
I am just covering
myself legally - i have done everything I can to prevent large portions of this
kolbrin text from being pirated. I have an obligation to the trust, and the law
of NZ, I wish to honor this.
I never really
intended the site to be an ad. I was personally just interested in the kolbrin
and it's content. I would put the whole kolbrin online if I had permission from
the trust, but i don't. So this led to only portions of the book being on this
site. I thought that I might as well make the kolbrin available for online
purchase. This just makes the kolbrin a little more accessible for people that
are searching for it.
Unfortunately the
kolbrin is not cheap. The trouble is that the postal service charge by weight
for shipping out of NZ. The book weighs alot... 443 pages, hardcover, layers of
packaging.There are possibly short time delay's in filling the orders. I also
reiterate that im personally not a member of the Culdian Trust, but they have
kindly given me direct permission to distribute to those that contact me
regarding their books. I'm a webmaster, and I appreciate all of your support
for making this website a reality.
In order to view the
kolbrin manuscripts online you are required to have both javascript and pop-ups
enabled in you browser, once you have them enabled, refresh this page or click
on a kolbrin link.
DEDICATION
This work is
dedicated to the men and women
who serve their God
by activating
the good resident in
their hearts.
To the promotion of
the ideal of true love and the
consolidation of
families through the fostering of
family ethics and
traditional moral values.
To the furtherance
of all things conducive to the
betterment of
individuals and the
advancement of
humankind.
To the enhancement
of the spirit of goodwill inherent
in the human race
and the preservation of all the
qualities from the
past which continue to serve
the Cause of Good.
To this end, the
sincere efforts of the
Publishers and
Distributors,
and all profits from
this book,
are dedicated.
FOREWORD
What is presented in
this book is a reproduction of one of several versions
which have existed
in similar form since World War II, first in handwritten form
and then in
typewritten. What is given here was never intended for multiple or
commercial
circulation, and there are valid reasons derived from experience why
this should be so.
However, believing it to be in the public interest, it has
lately been decided
that it should be made available now, subject to explicit
conditions. As far
as is known it faithfully follows the authenticated copy of a
handwritten version
reproduced early in this century. This was resurrected in a
very dilapidated
condition, but has been transcribed fully as found.
Undoubtedly, in
transmission some personal colourations may have crept in, but
the whole, as it
stands now, with its imperfections, is, nevertheless, a
reliable and
validated medium for bringing a body of spiritual truths into
concrete being. It
is the spirit behind the facade that is the all important
factor.
The value of what
has been salvaged and preserved here is not for the present
compilers to
determine, research or edit. Their obligation is seen as being true
recorders of what is
there, others better able may assess its worth. It is
known, however, that
some items, which at their face value and in their context
seem of little
import, contain within themselves something of intrinsic value to
the spiritually
aware. There are hidden depths which superficial reading will
not reveal.
The Kolbrin is
tendered for acceptance at its face value or, more importantly,
for its content of
spiritual truths which, in any religion, are presented in a
form preculiar to
particular faiths. It is the degree of spiritual content
expressed in any
religion which establishes its status on the scale of human
spirituality. The
lifestyle of its adherents, their accepted precepts and
practices, their
moral standards, ethics and social concern are what determines
the worth of any
spiritual philosophy.
There have been and
may still be, associations of people who accepted the
Kolbrin as the pivot
point of their lives, and it is noteworthy, from what is
known, that their
lifestyle and the quality of their lives were enhanced through
doing so. People who
conduct their lives according to the precepts of the
Kolbrin, in
association with others of like mind, will know just where they
stand in relation to
these others. Relationships established among people who
are committed to
such precepts, whatever their religious inclinations, are far
more firmly founded
than others which are based on philosophies established on
patronizing
doctrines derived from cheap products obtained from the spiritual
supermarket.
One difficulty has
been the fact that the guardians of the Kolbrin have never
been literary folk
but simple craftsmen and people far removed from the
scholastic and even
commercial world. Although it formulates a distinctive
spiritual
philosophy, this book is not claimed to be anything other than a
transmitter of
ageless wisdom. It serves the common cause, the common good and
the common man
through presentation in a particular form.
The earlier
preservation and subsequent compilation of the Kolbrin was the
outcome of
independent individual efforts. No one can claim authorship and the
present
reconstructors who have compiled the book in its present form are no
more than
transmitters who accept in good faith what has been passed on to them.
Sufficient funds
have been received to ensure the production of the Kolbrin and
its subsequent
continuance. It is incumbent on the compilers to ensure the
conservation of
these funds and to take adequate steps to entrust them.
Irrespective of
origins or contributors, the Kolbrin as a whole and in its
present form has
been adequately validated and endorsed by Higher Authorities as
being a body of
wisdom conducive to spiritual enlightenment. It embodies
essential spiritual
truths irrespective of the manner of presentation. If there
are a few extraneous
items they are not such as to affect the intrinsic value of
the whole.
Ethically the
Kolbrin holds its own with any other body of literature and it is
now offered to
persons or groups seeking a philosophical focal point. This book
enters the arena of
life at a crucial stage in humanity's progress towards its
destiny, at a time
when the average family is becoming dysfunctional; when
traditional values
and standards, the concept of true love and the development
of spirituality are
under siege. These are the days of decision, when humankind
stands at the
crossroad. The Kolbrin will prove a worthy companion to those who
choose to follow the
more inspiring and virile road leading to ultimate
enlightenment in the
realms of truth and reality.
May the God of Your
Heart be with you along the way.
INTRODUCTION
The Kolbrin, in its
present production, incorporates a body of enlightened
teachings which are
the treasure of the centuries, a light on the path of Truth,
and as applicable to
the world today as they were in the past. There has,
however, been a
considerable amount of reconstruction, as the original writings
survived only
precariously. Most of what is presented here was actually salvaged
from a pile of
discarded manuscripts and was partially burned and damaged by the
weather before being
reconstructed into a manuscript from which this is
rewritten.
Undoubtedly,
additional material has been incorporated with good intent, to fill
gaps and elaborate
on the original. Something may have been lost in the
modernization of
various parts. The important point, however, is that this is
not intended to be a
historical record, an intellectual work or literary effort,
it falls short of
these and is rather a coherent and consistent body of
spiritual teachings.
It is on this aspect alone that it stands or falls. The
spiritual truths
presented here are all that matters, the rest can be regarded
as an embellishment,
a vehicle for presentation and conveyance.
The message
conveyed, whatever its form of presentation, is always the essential
core, and ethically,
morally and spiritually the Kolbrin concedes nothing to
other works of a
like nature. It should be seen as an inspirational work, the
substance of which
can be accepted with confidence and trust.
While great care was
exercised in the past, to ensure that these transcriptions
would be transmitted
through the centuries in a form as unadulterated and
unaltered as
possible, little is known about the actual persons or body of
people concerned.
From what is known, the name 'Kolbrin' was originally applied
to a collection of
manuscripts which were salvaged from Glastonbury Abbey at the
time of its burning.
The fire, which was arson, was intended to destroy those
manuscripts, but
they were secretly housed otherwise than in the scriptorium and
library at the time
of the fire. In any event, it was believed that these
'heretical works'
were destroyed, and as it happened the fire proved to be a
good cover for their
preservation.
Some of the
manuscripts were transcribed, at some time, on to thin metal plates
and, collectively,
these were known as 'The Bronzebook of Britain'. This
designation was
carried forward when they were written out in book STITCH from
in the seventeenth
century. The subject matter was then divided into chapters
and the paragraphs
were numbered. The whole was modernized in the latter part of
the nineteenth or
early part of the twentieth century. Incorporated in the
modern Kolbrin are
manuscripts which were traditionally clamed to have been
copied from salvaged
manuscripts which were not transcribed on to metal plates
and formed a work
known as 'The Coelbook'.
During the second
and third decades of this century these books were in
possession of a
religious group in England which was never very powerful,
because requirements
for membership were too restrictive. It would seem that
throughout history
the Kolbrin has always been on the brink of extinction, yet
it has survived,
safeguarded by a few who barely knew what it was all about, who
were neither
intellectual nor wealthy and for whom the practicalities of life
took precedence.
Originally, there
were twenty-one books, which were said to be twelve books of
Britain, eight books
of Egypt and one of the Trojans, but of their names there
is little certainty.
Only a portion of these books remains and it seems that
much of historical
nature has been trimmed away.
It is known that at
the beginning of the fourteenth century there was a settled
community in
Scotland under the leadership of one John Culdy. The old Culdians,
who were guardians
of what they called 'The Treasures of Britain', were never
numerous and loosely
organized, membership being maintained by itinerant smiths
and other craftsmen.
They seem to have previously been loosely known as
'Koferils'. The
Kolbrin makes mention of 'Wise Strangers' and there is a
tradition to the
effect that these were the original Culdians (Kailedy). There
are other
explanations, but the writer is in no position to express any positive
or worthwhile
opinion. Does it really matter anyway? We are told that the
Ferilmaster (a word
of uncertain meaning) was Nathaniel Smith, martyred in the
beginning of the seventeenth
century. This appears to mark the end of the Old
Culdians as a
coherent body, but steps were taken to preserve the Kolbrin. For a
long time it was
buried or otherwise hidden, but some tijme during the early
part of the last
century, copies were written out in 'biblical English' and two
of the books were in
existence just before the first world war. Since then the
various books of the
Kolbrin have suffered many vicissitudes and what remains is
only part of the
original.
During The last world
war the old books were thrown out as 'worthless junk',
saved and again
discarded as 'heathen works of the Devil', but luckily, again
salvaged before
irreparable damage was done. It has not been easy to
reconstitute them,
even with the assistance of a more knowledgeable co-worker
who filled in a few
gaps with compatible references to modern works.
No doubt, in its
present form the Kobrin leaves much to be desired. The contents
could perhaps have
been condensed and much irrelevant matter deleted, but the
compiler considered
it his prime duty to preserve and retain every possible
fragment and leave
it to others better qualified to sift, revise and condense.
Obviously, some of
the proper names are spelt wrongly, and some of the original
correct ones may
have been replaced by others, for it seems that in the past
there was a biased
selection of material to be included. No claim is made
regarding historical
accuracy, for the compiler is totally unqualified to voice
any opinion in this
respect; but, as stated before this is not an historical
work but the corpus
of a doctrine and way of life.
Whose hands
originally wrote its many parts is unimportant and it is even less
important to know
who transcribed it later, though some details appear in the
modern section. The
phraseology may be cumbersome and even ungrammatical,
because of the
manner in which the biblical form of English has been modernized
by one who has no
scholarly pretensions whatsoever. It may be argued that this
work should have
been presented in its archaic form, to preserve its
authenticity, but
the compiler disagrees, and we concur. The criterion by which
any literary work
should be judged is its message and intent, not its format.
The words, of
themselves, are sterile, it is the spirit of the whole that give
the Kolbrin meaning
and life. What is presented here is an attempt to pass on,
as near as possible
in its original form, with all its defects and shortcomings
in style and
presentation, something which will be of benefit to all. The
original writers
attempted to make words convey something beyond inherent
meaning, they
endeavoured to build an edifice of glory out of common clay.
The importance of
what is given here lies in what is projected out of the past
into the present
lamentable spiritual vacuum; in the help it can offer to the
ordinary man and
woman, not in what it offers to the literary world. On this
basis alone these
writings must stand to be judged. The worth of any knowledge
is in its value here
and now, in present day circumstances. We know, from the
later books of the
Kolbrin, that for centuries its contents had to be kept
secret because they
may have been misunderstood or found unacceptable. Perhaps
they will fare
better now.
This book is
resurrected with the sole intent of ranging it alongside the Forces
of Good. Its
publication will undoubtedly be difficult, for such a work can
scarcely be deemed
to have popular appeal. It deals with goodness and virtue,
courage and
mortality, with spiritual ideals and human aspirations, all
unpopular and
despised fare in these the Days of Decision. It seeks to enshrine
love in a place
beyond clamour and craving of the mortal flesh, and this alone
may be sufficient to
call down derision upon it. The same effort as was put in
the piecing together
and reconstruction of the Kolbrin, put into a book
pandering to the
moral weaknesses of society and exploiting the jaded,
degenerate appetites
of modern life, would undoubtedly prove more popular. But
can it be said, even
in these morally unwholesome times, that the value of a
publication depends
solely on its popular appeal?
In the Kolbrin, the
Masters can record only the outcome of their own searching.
They found assurance
but cannot convey it directly to others. If others want it
they too must tread
the path the Masters trod, a long weary road not for the
faint-hearted. The
first step along that road is the study of the moral code and
standard of conduct
required. The next step is to put these into practice,
making them the rule
of life. They are the disciplines which enabled the truly
enlightened ones of
the past to awaken inner perception and make direct contact
with The Universal
Source of Truth. Only by following in their steps can anyone
be assured of a path
certain of reaching the desired goal.
Originally, the
Kolbrin was in two parts, 'The Open Book' and 'The Closed Book',
the latter being
more properly called 'The Great Book of Eternity', the former
being "The
Great Book of life". What is presented here is "The Open Book".
Actually, this book
contains nothing not already know, for mankind has never
been without
guidance. Truth and wisdom can be no one's monopoly, therefore many
things expressed
therein are to be found elsewhere.
Superficially the
Kolbrin may appear to be just a jumbled collection of maxims
and old stories,
some incomplete, but to judge it from this standpoint is like
analyzing the
pigments of the paint in a painting and counting and classifying
the brushmarks to
discover what an artist wants to convey. To understand it
fully one must stand
off and view it as a whole, even then comprehension must
flow from the heart
and mind, not from the eyes.
A society progresses
through social evolution, not revolution, but the woes
displayed by present
day society indicate that the evolutionary trend has taken
a wrong direction.
The standards of the past, Formulated to stabilise society,
have been spurned,
without any adequate substitutes being put in their place.
That is the tragedy of
the times.
To get a more
comprehensive view of where our society is heading, perhaps a
better understanding
of where we have been is needed. It is in this context that
the Kolbrin is
launched, to take its place in the greater scheme of things.
THE SALUTATION OR
PROLOGUE
TO THE
BRONZEBOOK
(Now incorporated in
the Kolbrin)
Greetings, Unborn
Ones, now asleep in the dark womb of the future. Greetings
from we who were
once as you are now and like whom you will one day be. We too
hoped and feared,
doubted and believed.
Were you choosing a
gift from the past to the future, what would it be? The
golden treasures
hoarded by kings? The Bright jewels beloved by queens? Is
worldly wealth still
so important to you? If that would be your choice above all
else, we are
disappointed, for our labours have been in vain.
Would you prefer the
secret of life, of eternal youth? Have you altered so
little from those
who live and laugh today, with no thought turned towards the
future? This thing
which seems so desirable, were it yours would you value it?
Would it never pall?
Would you still be grateful for it after a thousand years
have passed? The
answer would be "yes" if this life were all, the beginning and
end, complete in
itself. But might not this life be no more than a prelude, an
introduction to
something infinitely greater? is the riddle still unsolved, the
secret of the ages
still well kept, known only by a few, even when these words
are read? How many
generations have passed without progress? Does mankind still
lie passive like
driftwood upon the sea of spiritual apathy, driven back and
forth by changeable
winds and conflicting currents, making no headway?
Could we leave you
the knowledge enabling you to live a life without toil,
surrounded by every
luxury and pleasure; a magic stone granting every desire, an
all healing potion,
the ability to fly or know all things on Earth, would any of
these satisfy the
desires of your heart and fulfil your dreams? We who lie so
far back along the
road trust you have progressed beyond such petty aspirations.
It is beyond our
power to give such gifts, and were they ours to bestow we would
withhold them, for
unless a gift confers a benefit, it were better not given.
With the wisdom of
your generation, tell us, which of the things mentioned would
really benefit you
or even prove less bad than good? Or do you still remain
unaware of your true
nature and needs?
Who you are, how you
speak and dress (are you even like us in form?) we cannot
know or imagine.
This alone we know as truth, you are brother beings of ours and
travel the road we
once trod. We share one destiny and have the same true goal,
though perhaps no
more know in your day what these are than do in ours. Like to
us life comes to you
unbidden, it is frought with problems and difficulties; it
alternates between
light and shade, and like us you wonder what awaits at the
end. You, too, are
victims of Earth's delusions; you, too, find Truth and
perfection beyond
your grasp and you, too, aspire to beauty and goodness. These
things we know about
you, these things must be or you would not exist.
Your needs are no
different from ours, but do you now know with certainty what
they are? Your life
serves the same purpose, you are part of the same pattern,
you are ruled by the
same impulses and urges, but do you know why and to what
end? We know you are
without certainty and assurance about what lies beyond the
veil of death, for
these cannot be given while man remains no more than man, and
doubtless like us
you remain suspended between doubt and belief.
Our Unborn Friends,
whatever your circumstances of life you are the children of
the past and heirs
of those who have lived and died. We trust you have no cause
to reproach those
who once held stewardship over your estate. But whatever you
think of the
heritage, you cannot put it aside, any more than you can refuse the
obligations of life.
Maybe it brings you the happiness and security, the peace
and plenty we never
knew. If so, this will remain unread, for to you it would be
a wilderness of
words serving no purpose. If you have so much, if you have
progressed so far,
nothing we could give would be of benefit. To the traveler,
information about
the road behind is worthless. If this is your state we hail
you, we are proud of
you, our worthy children of light, conceived in the long
dark years wherein
we laboured and ploughed our own short furrow. You have done
well and our
greatest joy would be to stand beside you as you exaltingly reach
out for the crowning
glory of godhood.
But you may be no
more enlightened than we, in which case accept our offering as
a token of our
regret, our desire to make amends on behalf of those who preceded
you, for if you
remain lost in spiritual darkness the blame is theirs and not
yours.
This we give you,
The Hidden Books containing the accumulated harvest of wisdom
and Truth garnered
over the generations, the bread and oil which sustained us
and never
diminished. May they serve you in your day as well as they served us.
Above all, may you
be sufficiently enlightened to receive them, for today we are
persecuted because
of our books, and most who treasured and guarded them are now
dead. We can only
consign these books to the ground and destiny, trusting they
will be called forth
at the proper time and in a receptive generation.
These books, which
we hand into the keeping of time, were written under the
authority of
revelation and inspiration. Containing Truth, their message cannot
be attacked by time,
for Truth is an eternal youth.
We make no claim to
exact and accurate statements beyond the possibility of
error and
misinterpretation, for words are frail messengers. They are fallible
things unable to
transmit accurately from mind to mind. Also, we cannot tell how
they who resurrect
the books will deal with the contents. They are written in
letters known to the
learned, but learning changes with the generations. These
books are the
glorious embodiment of Eternal Truth, but the words and
expressions are unworthy
garments so that misconception and misunderstanding are
not possible. Words
are servants of the fallible mortal sphere and when called
upon to server a
realm of greater things prove inadequate. Therefore, be not
like some
petty-minded ones of our generation who say, "The letters are
misplaced and the
words ill used." They examine each blade of grass diligently,
but fail to discover
the purpose of the meadow. Such men lack insight and seeing
only the bare
letters say, "These tell me all, there is nothing more". We have a
saying, "do not
judge a place of instruction by its bricks". Wisdom, being
eternal, doubtless
this will apply no less in your generation.
So, Unborn
Unknowable Ones, we humbly tender this, the gift of the past which we
could not pass on
otherwise. If you have advanced far along the road towards
greatness, it will
have no value; but if you still dally or have wandered away,
lost in the illusive
mists of worldliness and none answers your cries, then take
this hand extending
out of the past. It will guide you faithfully and well.
Down through the
generations men have been persecuted, have suffered and died so
that Truth and
Goodness might prevail, remember them. If the world is good, then
your peace and
pleasures have been brought by their sacrifices. If it is not,
then you must not
quibble over the cost to yourselves in making it good. Surely
no torments and
terrors in your days could exceed those of the past!
Farewell, Unborn
Ones, with these few words we have reached from the day of the
present into the
night of the future. We have planted the seed, will it grow or
rot in the ground?
What crop will it produce? We cannot know. Let fate deal with
it as it will, we
have gathered the seed, flailed and winnowed it and kept it
with every care. We
have planted well, we can do no more.
May life deal better
with you than with us. May you never be denied the
comforting hand of
hope. Farewell!
THE BOOK OF LUCIUS
rewritten from
THE BOOK OF
PEMANTRIS
of unknown origin
Chapter 1 - THE SPHERES OF EXISTENCE
Chapter 2 - A VISION OF THE HOLY SPIRIT AND
CREATION
Chapter 3 - THE MAKING OF MAN
Chapter 4 - MAN - BOND AND FREE
Chapter 5 - A WANDERING MISSION
Chapter 6 - THE FOREST MISSION 1
Chapter 7 - THE FOREST MISSION 2
Chapter 8 - THE FOREST MISSION 3
Chapter 9 - THE FOREST MISSION 4
Chapter 10 - THE MAN GODS
Chapter 11 - THE VISION OF EVENING
Chapter 12 - THE BODILESS BODY
Chapter 13 - THE LIFEFORCE
Chapter 14 - THE LAST FOREST TEACHINGS
THE BOOK OF MORALS
AND PRECEPTS
formerly called
THE BOOK OF
ESTABLISHMENT
this being
THE THIRD BOOK
of the
GREAT BOOK OF THE SONS OF FIRE
Containing the
teachings of the Great Unamed First Master and the Hidden Wisdom
as recorded in
earilier times from books written in the Sacred Letters and made
indestructible
Chapter 1 - PRELIMINARY
Chapter 2 - THE NATURE OF THE TRUE GOD
Chapter 3 - THE NATURE OF MAN'S SOUL
Chapter 4 - LIFE
Chapter 5 - MAN
Chapter 6 - THE REAL MAN
Chapter 7 - THE WEAKLING
Chapter 8 - THE ATTITUDES OF THE REAL MAN -
1 - TOWARD THE POOR AND WEAK
Chapter 9 - THE ATTITUDES OF THE REAL MAN -
2 - TOWARD WEALTH
Chapter 10 - 3 TOWARDS SERVANTS
Chapter 11 - 4 TOWARDS SUPERIORS
Chapter 12 - THE ATTITUDES OF THE REAL MAN -
5 - TOWARD THE WRONGDOER
Chapter 13 - THE UNSTABLE MAN
Chapter 14 - THE MEAN MAN
Chapter 15 - WOMEN
Chapter 16 - CHOOSING A WIFE
Chapter 17 - THE PHYSICAL BODY
Chapter 18 - MAN - THE EXTERNAL SHELL
Chapter 19 - MAN - THE ETERNAL ESSENCE
Chapter 20 - WISDOM
Chapter
21 - COURAGE
Chapter 22 - CONTENTMENT
Chapter 23 - DILIGENCE
Chapter 24 - LABOUR
Chapter 25 - REPUTATION
Chapter 26 - AMBITION
Chapter 27 - HONESTY
Chapter 28 - GENEROSITY
Chapter 29 - CHEERFULNESS
Chapter 30 - DISCRETION
Chapter 31 - THRIFT
Chapter 32 - LEADERSHIP
Chapter 33 - DIGNITY
Chapter 34 - TRUTH
Chapter 35 - ADVERSITY
Chapter 36 - JOY AND SORROW
Chapter 37 - COMPASSION
Chapter 38 - GREED
Chapter 39 - VANITY
Chapter 40 - ENVY
Chapter 41 - BAD TEMPER
Chapter 42 - LYING AND DECEIT
Chapter 43 - THE HYPOCRITE
Chapter 44 - SLANDER
Chapter 45 - FRIENDSHIP
Chapter 46 - SPEECH
Chapter 47 - THE CHATTERER
Chapter 48 - CONDUCT
Chapter 49 - OFFICIALS
Chapter 50 - THE LAWS OF MEN
Chapter 51 - SOCIAL OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 52 - FOOD AND DRINK
Chapter 53 - HOME
Chapter 54 - FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - SON
Chapter 55 - FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - FATHER
Chapter 56 - FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - MOTHER
Chapter 57 - FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - BROTHER
Chapter 58 - FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS - DAUGHTER
Chapter 59 - WIFE
Chapter 60 - THE SECRETS OF WOMANHOOD
Chapter 61 - PRAYER
Chapter 62 - DEATH
Chapter 63 – CLOSE
THE BOOK OF ORIGINS
OR FERILBOOK
As authorised by the
Conclave of Venedas. Compiled from the three Books of
Britain which formed
the Koalbook, formerly called the Hiferalt. Rewritten by
the hand of Airden,
son of Sead Magfergas, in the common tongue and translated
by John Luid
Ledylith.
PREAMBLE
Chapter 1 - THE WORLDBIRTH
Chapter 2 - THE DAWNDAYS
Chapter 3 - THE FLOODTALE
Chapter 4 - THE FLOODTALE
Chapter 5 - THE WORKERS IN METAL
Chapter 6 - THE TALE OF HEWE
Chapter 7 - THE TALE OF GWINVERA
Chapter 8 - THE FIRSTFAITH BRINGERS
Chapter 9 - THE BATTLEBOOK
Chapter 10 - THE MAYMEN LORE
THE BOOK OF THE
SILVER BOUGH
Once known as
THE BOOK OF SACRED
SCRIPTS
A collection of writings preserved by
the hand of Gwinder Apowin.
Chapter 1 - INTERPRETATIONS
Chapter 2 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 1
Chapter 3 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 2
Chapter 4 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 3
Chapter 5 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 4
Chapter 6 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 5
Chapter 7 - THE TEACHINGS OF ELIDOR 6
Chapter 8 - ELIDOR SPEAKS TO HIS DISCIPLES
Chapter 9 - ELIDOR ON THE SACRED SCRIPTURES
The Kolbrin - Old
Notefirst, previous, next, last, table of contents.
Note
What follows was not
discovered among the shards, but was said to be found
within the cover of
an old copy of the Kolbrin.
"When I was
young my grand-father told me that the Kolbrin had been brought back
to light by his
grand-father's people in the place known to them as Futeril
Cairn, beyond the
pool of Pantlyn at Carclathan by way of Gwendwor in Wales."
"I remember him
saying it was originally written in the old alphabet of
thirty-six letters.
The books were stored in a tinker's budget box, the lid of
which was not hinged
but held with flanges and lifted off after being heated, a
cuning device of the
wayfaring tinkers. It was also secured with pins and
stirrups. There were
goblin heads at the corners and it was fastened by locking
bars inside and out.
I never saw it, nor did I know anyone who knew whether it
still existed."
"I remember
being told that inside the box was a clear glass roundish ball about
the size of a large
apple, which at one spot reflected all the colours of the
rainbow. It was
encased in a precious cagework inside a protective cover of
horny hide which had
raised swellings, the like of which my grand-father had
never seen before.
He knew a lot about animals and their hides, but could not
tell what this was;
he thought it might have been the hide of some kind of
large, horny
snakelike creature such as those which live in deep lakes."
"There were two
stones of dullish glass like rainstones, one being whitish at
one end. Each was
oval in shape and somewhat flattened and tapered towards one
end. Grand-mother
used to tell fortunes with these and they went to cousin Sarah
in America. There
were two other pieces of rounded glass set in something made
of bone which had
pretty designs engraved on it. The bone setting was falling
apart and was of no
conceivable use. There was also a bluish coloured cross with
an opening at the
top and its arms were forked at the ends. This was fastened by
a small chain
curiously worked, to piece of round brass about the size of a
small plate which
was engraved with figured, of which a bird, a wand, two
billhooks, a whip
and some heads could be made out. There were beads of blue and
red and a brooch
shaped like a hook and made of gold. There was a acorn-like cap
such as Flamens
wear."
"There was also
a longish brass object like a knife, with engraving, in a
wrapping of rotten
wood. That is all there was, except for the books which were
not like books at
all. I do not know what became of the other items. I saw the
glass ball once when
I was a small child but cannot remember much about it,
except that it was
hollow at one end and when I put a finger in the hollow it
felt warm."
J.McA.
Extracted From The
Great Book
Of The Sons of Fire
(An account of the
beginning of things and why they are as we find them)
Chapter 1 - CREATION
Chapter 2 - THE BIRTH OF MAN
Chapter 3 - THE DESTRUCTION AND RE-CREATION
Chapter 4 - THE AFFLICTION OF GOD
Chapter 5 - IN THE BEGINNING
Chapter 6 - DADAM AND LEWID
Chapter 7 - HERTHEW - SON OF THE FIRSTFATHER
Chapter 8 – GWINEVA
Chapter 1
CREATION
Mortal knowledge is
circumscribed by mortal ignorance, and mortal comprehension
is circumscribed by
spiritual reality. It is unwise for mortal man to attempt
the understanding of
that which is beyond his conception, for there lies the
road to disbelief
and madness. Yet man is man and ever fated to reach out beyond
himself, striving to
attain things which always just elude his grasp. So in his
frustration he
replaces the dimly seen incomprehensible with things within his
understanding. If
these things but poorly reflect reality, then is not the
reflection of
reality, distorted though it may be, of greater value than no
reflection at all?
There are no true
beginnings on Earth, for here all is effect, the ultimate
cause being
elsewhere. For who among men can say which came first, the seed or
the plant? Yet in
truth it is neither, for something neither seed nor plant
preceded both, and
that thing was also preceded by something else. Always there
are ancestors back
to the beginning, and back beyond to there is only God. This,
then, is how these
things were told in The Great Book of The Sons of Fire.
Before the beginning
there was only one consciousness, that of The Eternal One
whose nature cannot
be expressed in words. It was The One Sole Spirit, The Self
Generator which
cannot diminish. The Unknown, Unknowable One brooding solitary
in profound pregnant
silence.
The name which is
uttered cannot be that of this Great Being who, remaining
nameless, is the
beginning and the end, beyond time, beyond the reach of
mortals, and we in
our simplicity call it God.
He who preceded all
existed alone in His strange abode of uncreated light, which
remains ever
unextinguishable, and no understandable eye can ever behold it. The
pulsating draughts
of the eternal life light in His keeping were not yet loosed.
He knew Himself
alone, He was uncontrasted, unable to manifest in nothingness,
for all within His
Being was unexpressed potential.
The Great Circles of
Eternity were yet to be spun out, to be thrown forth as the
endless ages of
existence in substance. They were to begin with God and return
to Him completed in
infinite variety and expression.
Earth was not yet in
existence, there were no winds with the sky above them;
high mountains were
not raised, nor was the great river in its place. All was
formless, without
movement, calm, silent, void and dark. No name had been named
and no destinies
foreshadowed.
Eternal rest is
intolerable, and unmanifested potential is frustration. Into the
solitude of
timelessness can Divine Loneliness and from this arose the desire to
create, that He
might know and express Himself, and this generated the Love of
God. He took thought
and brought into being within Himself the Universal Womb of
Creation containing
the everlasting essence of slumbering spirit.
The essence was
quickened by a ripple from the mind of God and a creative
thought was
projected. This generated power which produced light, and this
formed a substance
like unto a mist of invisible dust. It divided into two forms
of energy through
being impregnated with The Spirit of God and, quickening the
chaos of the void
within the Universal Womb, became spun out into whirlpools of
substance. From this
activity, as sparks from a fire, came an infinite variety
of spirit minds,
each having creative powers within itself.
The activating word
was spoken, its echoes vibrate still, and there was a
stirring movement
which caused instability. A command was given and this became
the Everlasting Law.
Henceforth, activity was controlled in harmonious rhythm
and the initial
inertia was overcome. The Law divided the materializing chaos
from God and then
established the boundaries of the Eternal Spheres.
Time no longer slept
on the bosom of God, for now there was change where before
all had been
unchanging, and change is time. Now within the Universal Womb was
heat, substance and
life, and encompassing it was the Word which is the Law.
The command was
given, "Let the smallest of things form the greatest and that
which lives but a
flash form everlastingness." Thus the universe came into being
as a condensation of
God's thought, and as it did so it obscured Him from all
enclosed within His
solidifying creation. Henceforth, God was hidden, for He has
always remained
dimly reflected in His creation. He became veiled from all that
came forth from Him.
Creation does not explain itself, under the Law it cannot
do so, its secrets
have to be unraveled by the created.
All things are by
nature finite, they have a beginning, a middle and an end. An
unaccomplishable
purpose would be eternal frustration and therefore, the
universe being
created purposefully it must have an objective. If it ended
without anything
else following, then the God existing must slumber indifferent
to its activities.
But He has made it a living work of greatness operating under
the changeless Law.
The creating word
had been spoken, now there was another command and the power
going forth smote
the sun so its face was lit, and it shone with a great
radiance pouring
warmth and light upon its sister Earth. Henceforth she would
live within the
protection of her brother's household, rejoicing in his
benevolence and strength.
The waters upon the
bosom of Earth were gathered together and dry land appeared.
When the covering of
water was rolled back the body of Earth was unstable, damp
and yielding. The
face of the sun shone down kindly upon his sister and the dry
land of her body
became very hard, humidity and dampness were taken away. He
gave her a garment
of fleece and a veil of fine linen, that she might clothe her
body with modesty.
From the Great Womb
had sprung the Spirit of Life and it was rampant in the
Heavens. It gazed
upon Earth and saw her fairness, and was filled with desire,
and came out of the
heavenly spaces to possess her. It came not peacefully as a
lover, but
tempestuously as a ravager. Its breath howled along her corridors and
raged among her
mountain tops, but it did not discover the dwelling place of her
Spirit. She had
withdrawn, as a woman withdraws before force, for modesty must
not be outraged in
submission. Yet she desired its embrace, for among all the
Radiant Company she
was honoured.
The sun saw her
perplexity and he wrestled with the Spirit of Life and overcame
it. When it was
subdued and the primal struggle had ceased, it was delivered by
the sun to his
sister. It was chastened and quietened and in silence brooded
over Earth's waters,
and she was stirred in response. Mud eggs of life potential
were formed in
swamps, at the meeting places of land and two waters. The sun
gave quickening heat
and life crawled forth upon the bosom of the Earth.
The land dust
brought forth the male and the dark water mist the female, and
they united and
multiplied. The first brought forth the second and the two
produced the third.
Earth was no longer virgin and the Spirit of Life grew old
and departed. Earth
was left garbed in the matron's mantle of green, herbage
covered the face of
the land.
The waters brought
forth fishes and creatures which move about and twist
themselves and
wriggle in the waters, the serpents and the beasts of terrible
aspect which were of
yore, and reptiles which creep and crawl. There were tall
walking things and
dragons in hideous form clothed with terror, whose great
bones may still be
seen.
Then came forth from
the Womb of the Earth all the beasts of the field and
forest. All the
creatures of creation having blood in their bodies, and it was
complete. Beasts
roamed the dry land and fishes swam in the seas. There were
birds in the skies
and worms within the soil.
There were great
land masses and high mountains, wide barren places and heaving
waters. Fertile greenness
covered the land and abundant life swarmed in the
seas, for now Earth
throbbed with the energy of life.
Metals lay hidden in
her rocks and precious stones within the soil. Gold and
silver were
scattered and secreted. There was copper for tools and forest of
timber. There were
swamps of reeds and stone for every purpose.
Everything was
prepared, everything was ready, and now Earth awaited the coming
of man.
CHAPTER TWO
THE BIRTH OF MAN
The love of God
penetrated the third veil and became the Seed of Souls within
the Soul Sea. The
body of man God made of water and things of the Earth,
breathing into him
the Spirit of Life, that he might live. But man, when young,
lived only to eat
and drink and to fornicate, for, being conscious only of the
Earth, he knew only
earthly things and earthly ways.
Now the Spirit of
God Moved over the face of the Earth, but was not of the
Earth. It held all
things and was in all things, but on Earth could not be apart
from anything.
Without substance it was awake, but entering substance it slept.
Consider that which
was told by the servants of Eban, of Heavenman who once
wandered the Earth,
He had no earthly substance and could not grasp its fruits,
for he had no hands.
He could not drink its waters, for he had no mouth, nor
could he feel the
cool winds upon his skin. They tell how the ape tribe Selok,
led by Heavenman,
perished by flames before the Valley of Lod, Only one she-ape
reaching the cave
heights above.
When Heavenman was
reborn of the she-ape in the cavern of Woe, could he taste
the fruits of the
Earth and drink of her waters, and feel the coolness of her
winds? Did he not
find life good? It is not all a tale of the courtyard!
Man, created from
earthly substance alone, could not know things not of Earth,
nor could Spirit
alone subdue him. Had man not been created, who would have
known God's wisdom
and power? As the Spirit fills the body of man, so does God
fill His creation.
Therefore, it was
that God saw something had to be which joined Earth and Spirit
and was both. In His
wisdom and by the creative impulse which governs the Earth,
He prepared a body
for man, for the body of man is wholly of Earth.
Behold, the great
day came when the Spirit, which is God, was joined with the
beast, which is
Earth. Then Earth writhed in the labour of travail. Her
mountains rocked
back and forth and her seas heaved up and down. Earth groaned
in her lands and
shrieked in her winds. She cried in the rivers and wept in her
storms.
So man was born, born
of upheaval and strife. He came wretchedly and
tumultuously, the
offspring of a distraught Earth. All was in discord, snow fell
in the hot
wastelands, ice covered the fertile plains, the forests became seas.
Where once it was
hot, now it was cold and where no rain had ever fallen, now
there were floods.
So man came forth, man the child of calamity, man the
inheritor of
creative struggle, man the battleground of extremes.
Earth nurtured man
with cautious affection, weaning him in the recesses of her
body. Then, when he
was grown sufficiently to be lifted so he walked in the
uprightness of God,
she took him and raised him above all other creatures. She
led him even into
the presence of God and she laid him on His Great Altar.
A man imperfect, of
earthly limitations, a thing unfinished, ungainly and
unlearned, but
proudly was He presented to Earth's Creator. Not her first-born
was man, the son of
Earth, the grandchild of God, man the heir of tribulation
and the pupil of
affliction.
God saw man, the
offering of Earth to her Lord, unconscious on the High Altar, a
sacrifice to Him and
a dedication to the Spirit of Fate. Then from out of the
unfathomable heights
and from behind the impenetrable veil, God came down above
the Altar and He
breathed into man the breath of Eternal Life. Into his sleeping
body God implanted a
fragment of Himself, the Seed of a Soul and the Spark of
Divinity, a man the
mortal became man the heir of God and the inheritor of
immortality.
Henceforth he would have dominion over God's earthly estate, but he
also had to unravel
the Circles of Eternity, and his destiny was to be an
everlasting seeking
and striving.
Man slept, but God
opened the Great Eye within him and man saw a vision of
unsurpassed glory.
He heard the voice of God saying, "O man, in your hand is now
placed the tablet of
your inheritance, and My seal is upon it. Know that all you
desire within your
heart may be yours, but first it is necessary that you be
taught its value.
Behold, the Earth is filled with things of usefulness, they
are prepared to your
hand for a purpose, but the task is upon you to seek them
out and learn their
use. This is the tuition for the management of your
inheritance."
"What you know
to be good, seek for and it shall be found. You may plumb the
seas and pluck the
stars. You may live in everlasting glory and savour eternal
delights. Above and
below and all about there is nothing beyond your reach; all,
with one exception,
is yours to attain". Then God laid His hand upon man,
saying, "Now
you are even as I, except you sleep there enclosed in matter in the
Kingdom of Illusion,
while I dwell here in the freedom of Reality and Truth. It
is not for me to
come down to you, but for you to reach out to Me."
Man then saw a
vision of glory encompassing even the Spheres of Splendour.
Unbounded wisdom
filled his heart and he beheld beauty in perfection. The
ultimates of Truth
and Justice were unveiled before him. He became one with the
profound peace of
eternity and knew the joys of unceasing gladness.
The eternal ages of
time unrolled as a scroll before his eyes, and he saw
written thereon all
that was to become and occur. The great vaults of Heaven
were opened up unto
him and he saw the everlasting fires and unconsumable powers
that strove therein.
He felt within himself the stirring of inexpressible love,
and unlimited
designs of grandeur filled his thoughts. His spirit ranged
unhampered through
all the spheres of existence. He was then even as God
Himself, and he knew
the secret of the Seven Spheres within Three Spheres.
Then God lifted His
hand from man and man was alone. The great vision departed
and he awoke, only a
dim and elusive recollection, no more than the shadow of a
dream remained. But
deep within the sleeping Soul there was a spark of
remembrance and it
generated within man a restless longing for he knew not what.
Henceforth, man was
destined to wander discontented, seeking something he felt
he knew but could
not see, something which continually eluded him, perpetually
goaded him, and
forever tantalized him. Deep within himself man knew something
greater than himself
was always with him and part of him, spurring him on to
greater deeds,
greater thoughts, greater aspirations. It was something out
beyond himself,
scarcely realized and never found; something which told him that
the radiance seen on
the horizon but dimly reflected the hidden glory beyond it.
Man awoke, the
revelation and vision gone, only the grim reality of Earth's
untamed vastness
surrounded him. But when he arose and stepped down onto the
bosom of his Mother
Earth he was undaunted by the great powers that beset him or
by the magnitude of
the task ahead. Within his heart he knew destiny lay beyond
the squalor of his
environment, he stepped out nobly, gladly accepting the
challenge.
He was now a new
man, he was different. He looked above and saw glory in the
Heavens. He saw
beauty about him and he knew goodness and things not of the
Earth. The vision of
eternal values arose before his inner eye. His Spirit was
responding to its
environment, man was now man, truly man.
The nature of man on
Earth was formed after the nature of things in Heaven, and
man had all things
contained as potential within himself, except divine life.
But he was as yet an
untrained, undisciplined child, still nurtured simply upon
the comforting bosom
of Earth.
Man grew in stature,
but Earth was not indulgent, for she disciplined him
firmly. She was ever
strict and unyielding, chastening him often with blasts of
displeasure. It was
indeed the upbringing of one destined for greatness; he was
made to suffer cold,
that he might learn to clothe himself; sent into the barren
places, that his
limbs should be strengthened, and into forests, that his eye
should become keen
and his heart strong. He was perplexed with difficult
problems and set the
task of unraveling the illusions of Nature. He was beset
with hardships of
every description. He was tested with frustrations and tempted
with allurements;
never did Earth relax the vigilance of her supervision.
The child was raised
sternly, for he needed the fortitude, courage and cunning
of a man, to fit him
for the task ahead. He grew wily and wiry in the hunt; he
became adaptable,
able to cope with any untoward happening. Overcoming the
bewilderments of
early days he found explanations for the perplexities of his
surroundings. Yet
the struggle for knowledge, the need for adaptation and the
effort to survive
were never relaxed. The Earthchild was well trained and
disciplined, he was
never unduly mollycoddled. He cried for bread and went
hungry, he shivered
and was cast out, he was sick and driven into the forest.
Weary he was lashed
with storms, thirsty he found the wasters dried up. When
weak his burden was increased
and in the midst of rejoicing he was struck down
with sorrow. In
moments of weakness he cried, "Enough!" and doubted his destiny;
but always something
fortified and encouraged him, the Earthling never forfeited
his godlikeness.
For man was man, he
was not cowed, nor his Spirit broken; a wise God knew his
limitations. As it
is written in the wisdom of men, 'over chastisement is as bad
as no chastisement
at all'. But man was rarely chastised, he was tried, tested
and challenged; he
was led, prodded and urged, yet nothing was done
unneccessairily. The
seeming imperfections of Earth, the hazards and
inequalities of
life, the cruelty, harshness and apparent indifference to
suffering and
affliction are not what they seem; as it is, Earth is perfect for
its purpose. It is
ignorance of that purpose which makes it appear imperfect.
Where is there a
wiser father than the Spirit of God, or a better mother than
Earth? What man is
now he owes to these, may he learn to be duly grateful. Above
all let him never
forget the lessons learned in his upbringing.
CHAPTER THREE
THE DESTRUCTION AND
RE-CREATION
It is known, and the
story comes down from ancient times, that there was not one
creation but two, a
creation and a re-creation. It is a fact known to the wise
that the Earth was
utterly destroyed once then reborn on a second wheel of
creation.
At the time of the
great destruction of Earth, God caused a dragon from out of
Heaven to come and
encompass her about. The dragon was frightful to behold, it
lashed its tail, it
breathed out fire and hot coals, and a great catastrophe was
inflicted upon
mankind. The body of the dragon was wreathed in a cold bright
light and beneath,
on the belly, was a ruddy hued glow, while behind it trailed
a flowing tail of
smoke. It spewed out cinders and hot stones and its breath was
foul and stenchful,
poisoning the nostrils of men. Its passage caused great
thunderings and
lightnings to rend the thick darkened sky, all Heaven and Earth
being made hot. The
seas were loosened from their cradles and rose up, pouring
across the land.
There was an awful, shrilling trumpeting which outpowered even
the howling of the
unleashed winds.
Men, stricken with
terror, went mad at the awful sight in the Heavens. They were
loosed from their
senses and dashed about, crazed, not knowing what they did.
The breath was
sucked from their bodies and they were burnt with a strange ash.
Then it passed,
leaving Earth enwrapped within a dark and glowering mantle which
was ruddily lit up
inside. The bowels of the Earth were torn open in great
writhing upheavals
and a howling whirlwind rent the mountains apart. The wrath
of the sky-monster
was loosed in the Heavens. It lashed about in flaming fury,
roaring like a
thousand thunders; it poured down fiery destruction amid a welter
of thick black
blood. So awesome was the fearfully aspected thing that the
memory mercifully
departed from man, his thoughts were smothered under a cloud
of forgetfulness.
The Earth vomited
forth great gusts of foul breath from awful mouths opening up
in the midst of the
land. The evil breath bit at the throat before it drove men
mad and killed them.
Those who did not die in this manner were smothered under a
cloud of red dust
and ashes, or were swallowed by the yawning mouths of Earth or
crushed beneath
crashing rocks.
The first
sky-monster was joined by another which swallowed the tail of the one
going before, but
the two could not be seen at once. The sky-monster reigned and
raged above Earth,
doing battle to possess it, but the many bladed sword of God
cut them in pieces,
and their falling bodies enlarged the land and the sea.
In this manner the
first Earth was destroyed by calamity descending from out of
the skies. The
vaults of Heaven had opened to bring forth monsters more fearsome
than any that ever
haunted the uneasy dreams of men.
Men and their
dwelling places were gone, only sky boulders and red earth
remained where once
they were, but amidst all the desolation a few survived, for
man is not easily
destroyed. They crept out from caves and came down from the
mountainsides. Their
eyes were wild and their limbs trembled, their bodies shook
and their tongues
lacked control. Their faces were twisted and the skin hung
loose on their
bones. They were as maddened wild beasts driven into an enclosure
before flames; they
knew no law, being deprived of all the wisdom they once had
and those who had
guided them were gone.
The Earth, only true
Altar of God, had offered up a sacrifice of life and sorrow
to atone for the
sins of mankind. Man had not sinned in deed but in the things
he had failed to do.
Man suffers not only for what he does but for what he fails
to do. He is not
chastised for making mistakes but for failing to recognize and
rectify them.
Then the great
canopy of dust and cloud which encompassed the Earth, enshrouding
it in heavy
darkness, was pierced by ruddy light, and the canopy swept down in
great cloudbursts
and raging storm waters. Cool moontears were shed for the
distress of Earth
and the woes of men.
When the light of
the sun pierced the Earth's shroud, bathing the land in its
revitalizing glory,
the Earth again knew night and day, for there were now times
of light and times
of darkness. The smothering canopy rolled away and the vaults
of Heaven became
visible to man. The foul air was purified and new air clothed
the reborn Earth,
shielding her from the dark hostile void of Heaven.
The rainstorms
ceased to beat upon the faces of the land and the waters stilled
their turmoil.
Earthquakes no longer tore the Earth open, nor was it burned and
buried by hot rocks.
The land masses were re-established in stability and
solidity, standing
firm in the midst of the surrounding waters. The oceans fell
back to their
assigned places and the land stood steady upon its foundations.
The sun shone upon
land and sea, and life was renewed upon the face of the
Earth. Rain fell
gently once more and clouds of fleece floated across dayskies.
The waters were
purified, the sediment sank and life increased in abundance.
Life was renewed,
but it was different. Man survived, but he was not the same.
The sun was not as
it had been and a moon had been taken away. Man stood in the
midst of renewal and
regeneration. He looked up into the Heavens above in fear
for the awful powers
of destruction lurking there. Henceforth, the placid skies
would hold a
terrifying secret.
Man found the new
Earth firm and the Heavens fixed. He rejoiced but also feared,
for he lived in
dread that the Heavens would again bring forth monsters and
crash about him.
When men came forth
from their hiding places and refuges, the world their
fathers had known
was gone forever. The face of the land was changed and Earth
was littered with
rocks and stones which had fallen when the structure of Heaven
collapsed. One
generation groped in the desolation and gloom, and as the thick
darkness was
dispelled its children believed they were witnessing a new
creation. Time
passed, memory dimmed and the record of evens was no longer
clear. Generation
followed generation and as the ages unfolded, new tongues and
new tales replaced
the old.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE AFFLICTION OF
GOD
This comes from the
scroll of Kerobal Pakthermin who wrote, "The forbears of all
the nations of man were
once one people, and they were the elect of God who
delivered all the
Earth over to them, all the people, the beasts of the field,
the creatures of the
wasteland and the things that grow. They dwelt through long
ages in lands of
peace and plenty."
"There were
some who struggled harder, were more disciplined; because their
forefathers had
crossed the great dark void, their desires were turned Godward
and they were called
The Children of God".
"Their country
was undulating and forested. It was fertile, having many rivers
and marshes. There
were great mountains to the East and to the West, and in the
North was a vast
stony plain."
"Then came the
day when all things became still and apprehensive, for God caused
a sign to appear in
the Heavens, so that men should know the Earth would be
afflicted, and the
sign was a strange star".
"The star grew
and waxed to a great brightness and was awesome to behold. It put
forth horns and
sang, being unlike any other ever seen. So men , seeing it, said
among themselves,
'Surely, this is God appearing in the Heavens above us'. The
star was not God,
though it was directed by His design, but the people had not
the wisdom to
understand'.
"Then God
manifested Himself in the Heavens. His voice was as the roll of
thunders and He was
clothed with smoke and fire. He carried lightings in His
hand and His breath,
falling upon the Earth, brought forth brimstone and embers.
His eye was a black
void and His mouth an abyss containing the winds of
Destruction. He
encircled the whole of the Heavens, bearing upon His back a
black robe adorned
with stars".
"Such was the
likeness and manifestation of God in those days. Awesome was His
countenance,
terrible His voice of wrath, the sun and moon hid themselves in
fear and there was a
heavy darkness over the face of the Earth".
"God passed
through the spaces of the Heavens above with a mighty roar and a
loud trumpeting.
Then came the grim dead silence and black red lit twilight of
doom. Great fires
and smoke rose up from the ground and men gasped for air. The
land was rent
asunder and swept clean by a mighty deluge of waters. A hole
opened up in the
middle of the land, the waters entered and it sank beneath the
seas".
"The mountains
of the East and West were split apart and stood up in the midst
of the waters which
raged about. The Northland tilted and turned over on its
side".
"Then again the
tumult and clamour ceased and all was silent. In the quiet
stillness madness
broke out among men, frenzy and shouting filled the air. They
fell upon one
another in senseless wanton bloodshed; neither did they spare
woman or child, for
they knew not what they did. They ran unseeing, dashing
themselves to
destruction. They fled to caves and were buried and, taking refuge
in trees, they were
hung. There was rape, murder and violence of every kind".
"The deluge of
waters swept back and the land was purged clean. Rain beat down
unceasingly and
there were great winds. The surging waters overwhelmed the land
and man, his flocks and
his gardens and all his works ceased to exist.".
"Some of the
people were saved upon the mountainsides and upon the flotsam, but
they were scattered
far apart over the face of the Earth. They fought for
survival in the
lands of uncouth people. Amid coldness they survived in caves
and sheltered
places".
"The Land of
the Little People and the Land of Giants, the Land of the Neckless
Ones and the Land of
Marshes and Mists, the Lands of the East and West were all
inundated. The
Mountain Land and the Lands of the South, where there is gold and
great beasts, were
not covered by the waters".
"Men were
distracted and in despair. They rejected the Unseen God behind all
things for something
which they had seen and known by its manifestation. They
were less than
children in those days and could not know that God had afflicted
the Earth in
understanding and not willfully, for the sake of man and the
correction of his
ways".
"The Earth is
not for the pleasure of man, but is a place of instruction for his
Soul. A man more
readily feels the stirrings of his Spirit in the face of
disaster than in the
lap of luxury. The tuition of the Soul is a long and
arduous course of
instruction and training".
"God is good
and from good evil cannot come. He is perfect and perfection cannot
produce
imperfection. Only the limited understanding of man sees imperfection in
that which is
perfect for its purpose".
"This grievous
affliction of man was another of his great tests. He failed and
in so doing followed
the paths of unnatural gods of his making. Man makes gods
by naming them, but
where in this is the benefit to him?"
"Evil comes in
to the midst of mankind spawned by the fears and ignorance of
men. An evil man
becomes an evil spirit, and whatever evil there is on Earth
comes either from
the evil of spirits or the evil of men".
CHAPTER FIVE
IN THE BEGINNING
Now, the Children of
God were moulded by the Hand of God which is called Awen,
and it manifested
according to their desires. For all things which have life are
moulded by Awen. The
fox, shivering in the coldlands, longs for warmth and so
its cubs have warmer
coats. The owl, clumsy in the dark, longs to see its prey
more clearly, and in
generations of longing the desire is granted. Awen makes
everything what it
is, for all things change under its law.
Men, too, are
moulded by their desires, but unlike the beasts and birds their
yearnings are
circumscribed by the laws of fate and destiny and the law of
sowing and reaping.
These, the desires, modified by the laws, are called
Enidvadew. Unlike
the beasts and birds, this, in man, is something relating to
him rather than to
his offspring, though they are not untouched by it.
Destiny may be
likened to a man who must travel to a distant city whether or not
he wishes to make
the journey, the destination being his destiny. He may choose
whether to go by way
of a river or by way of a plain; whether across mountains
or through forests,
on foot or horseback, slow or fast, and whatever befalls
because of this
decision is fate. If a tree falls on him because he chose the
forest path, it was
fated, for luck is an element of fate. Destiny leaves no
choice, fate gives
limited choice which may be good or bad, but it cannot be
averted. What is
fated must be, for at no point can there be any turning back.
The circumstances,
Enidvadew, of the traveler conform to the law of sowing and
reaping; he may
travel in comfort or pain, happily or sorrowfully, with strength
or weakness, heavily
burdened or lightly burdened, well prepared or ill
prepared. When the
destination is set according to the degrees of a former life,
then the
circumstances of the journey should conform with the desire. For what
use is it desiring a
great destination when the law of sowing and reaping
decrees that an
intolerable burden must be carried on the way? Far better to
have lesser
aspirations. The decrees of fate are many, the decrees of destiny
are few.
When the Earth was
young and the race of man still as children, there were
fertile green
pastures in the lands where all is now sand and barren wasteland.
In the midst of it
was a gardenland which lay against the edge of the Earth,
eastward and towards
the sunrising, and it was called Meruah, meaning The Place
of The Garden on the
Plain. It lay at the foot of a mountain which was cleft at
its rising, and out
of it flowed the river of Tardana which watered the plain.
From the mountain,
on the other side, ran the river Kal which watered the plain
through the land of
Kaledan. The river Nara flowed westward and then turned back
to flow around the
gardenland.
It was a fertile
place, for out of the ground grew every kind of tree that was
good for food and
every tree that was pleasant to the sight. Every herb that
could be eaten and
every herb that flowered was there. The Tree of Life, which
was called Glasir,
having leaves of gold and copper, was within the Sacred
Enclosure. There,
too, was the Great Tree of Wisdom bearing the fruits of
knowledge granting
the choice and ability to know the true from the false. It is
the same tree which
can be read as men read a book. There also was the Tree of
Trespass beneath
which grew the Lotus of Rapture, and in the centre was The
Place of Power where
God made His presence known.
Time passed and The
Children of God were grown strong and upright under the
tempering hammer of
God, and Earth, The Anvil of God, became more kindly. All
was pleasant and
food plentiful, but life palls in such places, for it is
against the nature
of man to flourish in these circumstances. Earth is not for
pleasurable
dallying, it is a place of teaching, trial and testing.
The Children of God
were not yet the heirs of God nor inheritors of godhood, but
there was one among
them who had almost completed the Pilgrimage of Enidvadew.
He had unraveled the
tangled skeins of fate and traversed the tumultuous seas of
life to the many
ports of destiny, and having paid the debts of sowing and
reaping was one
triumphant over Enidvadew.
He was Fanvar, son
of Auma and Atem. He was wise and knew all things, he beheld
mysteries and the
secret things hidden from the eyes of other men. He saw
sunrise and the
sunsetting in their splendour, but longed for things not
realisable in the
place where he lived. So because he walked with God he was
culled out from his
kind and brought to Meruah, The Gardenplace.
He came to it across
the mountains and wastelands, arriving after many days
journeying. Weary
and close to death because of the privations he suffered, he
could just reach the
refreshing waters from which he drank deeply, and filled
with exhaustion he
slept. In his sleep he dreamed and this was the manner of his
dreaming: he saw
before him a being of indescribably glory and majesty, who
said, "I am the
God above all, even above the God of your people, I am that
which fulfils the
aspirations of men and I am that in which they are fulfilled.
You, having
traversed all the Circles of Enidvadew and established your
worthiness, are now
made my governor on Earth and you shall rule all things
here, guiding them
in my ways, leading them ever upwards into glory. This will
be your labour and,
behold, here is your reward.".
A cloud mist seemed
to gather about The Glorious Being, enfolding Him so He was
no longer visible.
Then the mist gradually cleared and the man saw another form
emerging. It was
that of a woman, but one such as Fanvar had never seen before,
beautiful beyond his
conception of beauty, with such perfection of form and
grace that he was
dumbfounded. Yet the vision was not substantial, she was a
wraith, an ethereal
being.
The man awoke and
sought food from the fruits about him and having refreshed
himself wandered
about the garden. Wherever he went he saw the wraith, but was
unafraid because she
smiled encouragingly, bringing comfort to his heart. He
built himself a
shelter and grew strong again, but always, wherever he went, the
wraith was not far
distant.
One day, near the
edge of the garden, he fell asleep in the heat of the day and
awoke to find
himself surrounded by the Sons of Bothas, not true men but
Yoslings, kinsfolk
to the beasts of the forest. Before they could take his
strength and wisdom
he loosed himself among them, slaying some in his rage and
might before the
rest ran away. When it was done he sat himself down beneath a
great tree, for he
was wounded and blood gushed out from his side and gathered
thickly beside him.
He became faint, falling into a deep sleep and while he
slept a wondrous
thing happened. The wraith came and lay beside him, taking
blood from his wound
upon herself so it congealed about her. Thus the
Spiritbeing became
clothed with flesh, born of congealing blood, and being
sundered from his
side she rose a mortal woman.
In his heart Fanvar
was not at rest, because of her likeness, but she was
gentle, ministering
to him with solicitude and, being skillful in the ways of
healing, she made
him whole. Therefore, when he had grown strong again he made
her Queen of The
Gardenland, and she was so called even by our fathers who named
her Gulah, but
Fanvar called her Aruah, meaning helpmate. In our tongue she is
called The Lady of
Lanevid.
Now, God enlightened
Fanvar concerning the woman, saying, "This woman was drawn
from her compatible
abode in a realm of beauty through the yearning aspirations
of men. Her coming
accomplishes something which would otherwise have taken
countless
generations, for Earth is more fitting for men to learn manly things
than for women to
learn womanly ones. This woman is not as other women, being in
no way like
yourself; every hair of her head is unlike that of a man, every drop
of blood and every
particle of flesh is that of a woman and quite unlike that of
a man. Her thoughts
and desires are different; she is neither coarse nor
uncouth, being
altogether of another, more refined realm. Her daughters will
walk proudly,
endowed with every womanly perfection and grace. Delicacy, modesty
and charm will be
the lovely jewels enhancing their womanliness. Henceforth, man
will be truly man
and woman will be truly woman, men being girded with manliness
and women clothed
with womanliness. Yet they shall walk together, hand in hand,
towards the
ascending glory before them, each the helpmate and inspiration of
the other". So
Fanvar and Aruah lived in contentment amid bounty and
fruitfulness, with
freedom from afflictions and sickness. They delighted in each
other and because of
their differences were drawn closer together.
Aruah brought but
one thing with her when she crossed the misty frontier, the
treasure of Lanevid,
the jewel contained in the moonchalice, the stone of
inspiration
fashioned by the desires of men. Never owned by any but the
daughters of Aruah,
this, the Lengil, Aruah gave to Fanvar as her dowry and her
pledge of purity and
exclusiveness. She followed the ways of the cradleland, not
the ways of Earth.
Within the
Gardenland was the Sacred Enclosure, the domain of Fanvar and Aruah,
forbidden to those
of The Children of God who had now come to this place. It
contained the Chalice
of Fulfilment granting any who drank from it the
realization of all
things to which they aspired. None might drink from this save
Fanvar and Aruah.
Also there was the Cauldron of Immortality containing an
essence distilled
from the fruits growing in the garden, and this guarded
against mortal ills.
Aruah brought forth
a son by Fanvar and he was called Rautoki, and a daughter
who was called
Armena. Each knew the mysteries of magic and the ways of the
stars. In the
fullness of time Rautoki married among the daughters of the Sons
of God and had two
sons, Enanari and Nenduka. It was Enanari who first taught
the weaving of cloth
from plants, and Nenduka was a mighty hunter. Armena also
married among the
Sons of God and brought forth a son who was called Belenki and
daughters called
Ananua and Mameta. Ananua knew the making of pots and things of
clay and Mameta the
taming of beasts and birds.
Nenduka had two
sons, Namtara and Kainan. Namtara had two sons also, Nenduka and
Dadam, before dying
in the fullness of manhood. Belenki married Enidva and had a
son called Enkidua
and a daughter called Estartha, meaning Maid of the Morning,
and she became a
great teacher among The Children of God. This was the Estartha
who became the first
Moonmaiden, being later called Lady of The Morning Star.
Enkidua had a
daughter and her name was Maeva.
Outside the Sacred
Enclosure, known as Gisar, but forming a gateway into it was
a circular structure
of stones called Gilgal, and within this was a shrine
wherein was kept a
sacred vessel called Gwinduiva. This was like a goblet and
was made of
rainbow-hued crystal set in gold with pearls. Above the cup appeared
a shimmering
moon-coloured mist like a thin cold flame. At certain times, when
the Heavens were in
a proper position, the Gwinduiva was filled with moondew and
potions from the
cauldron within the Sacred Enclosure, making a pale
honey-coloured
liquor, and this the people drank from the goblet. However, there
were different
proportions in the vessel for those of the blood of Fanvar and
Aruah and those who
were Children of God but not of their blood. It was the
potion from the
Gwinduiva which kept sickness and disease away from those who
drank it.
Dadam, the
Firstfather, married Leitha and they had a son called Herthew. Dadam
then married Maeva
who had a daughter, not by him, and this was Gwineva, the
cuckoochild fathered
by Abrimenid of Gwarthon, son of Namtenigal, whom we call
Lewid the
Darkfather.
About the land of
The Children of God was the wasteland where Yoslings, called
The Children of
Zumat, which means They Who Inherit Death, dwelt. Amongst these,
Namtenigal, the wily
hunter, was the most wise and cunning; he alone was
unafraid of The
Children of God and he alone dared enter the Gardenland.
In the days when
Estartha was teaching, Namtenigal often came to hear her words
and The Children of
God were not displeased, for teaching the wild men about
them was a duty with
which they had been charged. Namtenigal, therefore,
participated in their
rites but could not partake of the elixir from the
Gwinduiva, because
this was forbidden. While it gave health and strength to The
Children of God,
safeguarding them from the sicknesses of the Yoslings, if given
to others it caused
a wasting away. It was also altogether forbidden for any of
The Children of God
to mate with the Yoslings, for this was deemed to be the
most unforgivable of
sins.
Now, the wily one
learned much from Estartha and in the fullness of time brought
his own son to her
and he became as her son, living in her house and forsaking
the ways of his
people. Estartha called him Lewid the Lightbringer, for it was
her intention that
he should be taught the ways of those who walked in light,
that he might in
time enlighten his own people.
Lewid grew up tall
and handsome, he was quick to learn and became wise. He was
also a man of the
chase, strong and enduring, a hunter of renown. But there were
times when the call
of his people was strong, then he would go out furtively
into the night to
indulge in their dark rituals. Thus he became knowledgeable in
the ways of the
flesh and in the carnal indulgences of the body.
Dadam became a
servant of the Sacred Enclosure where the misty veil between the
realms could be
penetrated, for all those having the blood of Aruah had
twinsight, an
ability to see wraiths and sithfolk, ansis and spiritbeings, all
the things of the
Otherworld, not clearly but as through a veil.
Beside the place
called Gisar was a pleasant parkland with trees of every kind
and a stream, also
thickets of flowering bushes and all manner of plants growing
lushly. It was the
custom of Maeva to wander there in the sunshine and Lewid
also went there; so
it came about that they met among the trees. Maeva knew the
man but had shunned
him in the past, now she saw he was handsome, possessed of
many attractions, so
her foot was stayed and she did not run away.
As the days passed
they dallied longer together and Lewid talked of things Maeva
had not heard
before. She felt a stirring in her blood but did not respond or
heed his
temptations, because of the things which were forbidden. So Lewid went
to the Moonmother,
wise woman of the Yoslings, and telling of his desires
beseeched her to
help him. The Moonmother gave him two apples containing a vile
substance which they
had drawn through their stalks; this Lewid gave to Maeva
who then became
helpless in his hands.
They met again after
this, for Maeva became enamoured towards Lewid, but it
happened that she
became ill with a strange sickness and was afraid. Then Dadam
became ill and Lewid
also, and Lewid said to the woman, "You must obtain the
pure essences from
within the Sacred Enclosure, and Setina, the Moonmother, will
prepare an elixir
which will cure us". This he said because none of his kind had
ever been able to
obtain the Sacred Substances, though they had always coveted
what had been denied
them. Now, because of her frailty, the woman was pliable in
his hands and Lewid
seized the opportunity.
To achieve his ends
Lewid gave Maeva a potion which had been prepared by the
Moonmother and she
administered this to Dadam and those with him, by guile and
deceit, so that they
fell asleep. While they slept Maeva stole from the Sacred
Substances and took
them to Lewid who gave them to the Moonmother, and she made
a brew.
Part of this was
given to Maeva and the rest was drunk by the Yoslings, from
their awful ankital
during their night rites. When the morning came they were
all smitten with
grievous pains, and before the sun set that day all the
Yoslings were
stricken with a sickness such as they had not known before.
Maeva took what had
been given to her and finding Dadam laid low in his bed gave
him a draught from
her vessel, though she had to use womanly wiles to get him to
drink it. She drank
the remainder and they both slept. But when they awoke in
the morning both
were suffering pains and this was something they had not known
before. Dadam said
to the woman, "What have you done, for what has happened to
us cannot be unless
the things which are forbidden have been done". The woman
replied, "Lord,
I was tempted and I fell, I have done that which is forbidden
and
unforgivable".
Dadam said, "I
am bound by duty to do certain things, but first let us go into
the Gisar to the
place called Bethkelcris, where I will seek enlightenment". So
they went there
together and stood before the shrine beneath the Tree of Wisdom.
There they were
filled with an inflowing vision, seeing themselves as they were
and as they should
have been, and they were ashamed. He because he had not
followed the proper
path of a man and she because of her falsity. There, in the
reflecting mist, the
contamination of the woman was revealed, and the man's
heart shriveled
within him like a flower licked by flame.
Then they saw a
great Spiritbeing materializing in the reflecting mist and he
said to them,
"Woe to you and your house, for the greatest of evils has befallen
the race of The
Children of God and it is defiled. The heritage of Kadamhapa is
lost. The fetid flow
defiling the woman results from the incompatible
intermingling, but
it is not all, for sicknesses and diseases are also
generating from the
ferments of the impure implantation".
Dadam said,
"The fault is with the woman, wherefore should I suffer?" The
Spiritbeing replied,
"Because you two are now as one the conkerworms of disease
and sickness strike
both equally, but you shall not again defile this place.
Henceforth, the
misty veil becomes an impenetrable barrier severing our two
realms from each
other, so they can no longer be easily spanned. Between us
there will now be no
means of communication. Henceforth, man and woman, fated to
unite in love
divine, shall be divided and set apart, though ever yearning
reunion. They may
cleave one to the other, seeking the unity which will rekindle
the flame, but
unless their efforts transcend the limitations of earthly things
they will be in
vain. The spirit of man is now severed from the whole and cast
again into
unconsciousness, and it too shall long for reunion with the whole.
The spark shall seek
to return to the fire, for otherwise it becomes nothing.
The web of fate is
rewoven and the paths of destiny remade, the design of life
is redrawn; again
the progression begins in ignorance, birth and death, pain and
pleasure, joy and
sorrow, success and failure, love and hate, peace and war, all
the light and shade,
the many hues making the splendidly intricate pattern of
life on Earth. This
is a new beginning but a beginning not in purity and
unencumbered, but
one already weighted with debts and burdens".
The Spiritbeing
continued, "Enough wickedness has been wrought by your
willfulness and
disobedience, for the decrees forbidding certain things were for
your own benefit.
Immortality was nearly within your reach, but had you achieved
this you would have
brought an even more grievous evil upon yourselves and your
inheritors, for
freed from servitude to change, you and they would have been
unable to
progress".
The Children of God
were driven out of the gardenland by Spiritbeings, and then
guardians were set
at its gates so none could re-enter. Then it was withdrawn
beyond the misty
veil, the waters ceased to flow and the fertility departed,
only a wilderness
remained. The Children of God went to dwell in the land of
Amanigel, which is
beyond the mountains of Mashur by the sea of Dalemuna.
From this time
onward man fashioned his own spiritlikeness. Some, who were
loathsome in aspect
even unto themselves, went apart and were mercifully veiled
in dark depths, and
they said among themselves, "Let us dwell here in the
darkness and prepare
a place for others like ourselves, so that when they follow
they abide here and
join us". Thus were the Dark Regions formed and inhabited by
demons who are
nought but the hideously fashioned spirits of evil men.
These things have
been written into the record. In Siboit they used to say this
was the manner of
man's making, "God sent His creating Craftsman Spirit down to
Earth and the
reflection of The One was drawn into a spiritless body, and this
became the heart of
man".
These are the words
written by Thonis of Myra in Ludicia in his day:-
"You ask me
what is man and I answer: He is life becoming aware of itself. He is
the intangible
knowing the tangible, Spirit in matter, fire in water. When this
first happened, none
remembers and only the old folktales remain. There was the
beginning and then
the garden, and it was in this garden man found himself;
before this he was
not free, being one with everything about him. As he could
not disobey, good
and evil could not be, they were non-existent".
"Man became
free through awareness of himself, and with this knowledge denied
any kinship with the
beast. As he was no longer in harmonious relationship with
things of the Earth,
he became discontented, dissatisfied and restless, he
wanted to belong but
felt his place of belonging was not there. He had been
reborn as a mangod,
and therefore it is truly said that man was born of Earth
and Spirit, under a
tree, the symbol of life, and in a garden".
"There the eyes
of the man and woman were opened and, being above the beasts,
they knew they were
different and set apart from all else that breathed. They
separated
themselves, being now ashamed of their state and strangers to each
other. The carnal
satisfaction of lesser creatures now no longer sufficed, they
had lost contact
with the Source of Love; but, though knowing something was
lacking, knew not
what. They had fallen into carnal knowledge which only man can
know, for only he
feels the reproach of divinity. They were removed from The
Garden of Content by
an inhalation of the Divine Substance and could not return
because of the
barrier between man an non-man".
Kamelik has written:
"The entwined were cut apart and since that day have never
known content. They
wander restlessly ever seeking to unite again and together
find the jewel which
is lost to Earth forever".
Lupisis has written:
"This first woman, who came from the void, is the eternally
glorified goddess,
the inspirer of hearts, the ideal of womanhood honoured by
all men, the
priestess at the shrines of delicacy and tenderness. She was the
ideal woman who,
because of man's nature, is always tempted by his twinshade,
the beast in his
form. If the beast triumphs and she falls, the ideal becomes
enshrouded in
winding cloths of disillusionment, and something is lost to the
heart of a
man".
These words are also
there: "They did not partake of wisdom, and fruit from the
tree of knowledge is
bitter. Men are denied their true birthright. The fall of
man was a fall from
loving contact with God into material carnality. The Soul
that had shared the
consciousness of God fell into unconsciousness by becoming
ensnared in matter.
The fall severed man from the source of his spiritual
sustenance;
thereafter his efforts were to struggle back. In his blind groping
for God, after the
fall he discovered demons and found it easier to worship them
than to continue the
search".
"God is always
waiting, man has only to look up, but it is easier to go down the
hill than to climb
it. It is easier for man's spiritual beliefs to degenerate
than to evolve. Who
among men knows the truth and can write with certain
knowledge? Would not
this certainty be against the Law? No man was there at the
beginning to see and
write, but of one thing alone we can be sure, The Creating
God knows how and
why, and could the acts of One so great be without purpose?
CHAPTER SIX
DADAM AND LEWID
Maeva fled for her
life and many kinfolk went with her. But Dadam was unable to
follow, being laid
low with the sickness. This loosened his tongue so it became
uncontrollable,
making him babble like a child, and the sickness covered his
body with red sores
from which came an issue. Lewid also departed for a place
far out in the
wilderness.
Those with Dadam,
who looked back towards the place of the garden, saw bright
tongues of light
licking the sky above it, the whole being interwoven with
flickering flames in
many hues. Those who sought to return were repulsed with a
tingling ache over
their bodies which increased into severe pain as they
approached, so they
were driven away.
When Dadam recovered
so he could stand, only a few remained with him and they
all moved further
into the wilderness to a place where there was water and
pasture. There Dadam
left Herthew, his son, and the boy's mother, with Habaris
the Learned, and set
out to find Lewid.
After many days
Dadam and those with him came upon Lewid and his Yoslings who
were full of
sickness, and slew many, but Lewid was not slain though mortally
wounded, and he lay
against a great rock. When Dadam came near, Lewid raised an
arm heavily and
said, "Hail to the victor and benefactor who was come to
terminate our
wretchedness". While Dadam stood sternly contemplating him, Lewid
said, "To kill
me now is your prerogative, for even we lesser being who are far
removed from godmen
have the law of husbandly pride. What I did has been done
before and will be
done again, but I erred by crossing an unknown barrier which
could not be
discerned, for we, within ourselves, are no more contagious to each
other than are your
people. If then I must die, let it be for my part in
spawning the
cankerworms of disease which have stricken both our peoples".
"Back in the
dreamingtime, when the Great Gods strove among themselves for
dominion of the
skyspaces, and the wide expanse of Earth was rent apart by
unearthly wildfire,
Bemotha was cut apart by the bright arrows of Shemas. Then
this land was given
to my people as their dominion, while yours was in another
unearthly place far
distant. Our domain was a pleasant place and though you
teach that because
of this we remained as we are, yet we were content. We know
of no great design,
nor of any barely attainable objectives to which men must
aspire. Such
striving as you know is to us no more than purposeless vexation".
"I have my God
and you have yours, and as they strove one against the other
beforetimes, so will
it always be; but now there is a new battleground with new
battlechiefs. I will
go to my appointed place and you will go to yours, and from
thence, as leaders
of the fray, we shall wage a never ceasing war. Such is fated
and must be, but who
will win the fair prize of Earth for their king? We shall
not strive with
clubs and lances, the hurling stone and flying dart, but with
more subtle
weaponry. This thing is not our choice, we are but playthings of
fate. That you and I
should head the fray is not because of our qualities but
because we were
where we were, when we were. Now we are but two precarious
points of life in a
hostile wilderness, but what might we be in a hundred
generations?"
Dadam said,
"These things I know too, for my eyes have always been opened. I too
have looked out into
an endless plain without any horizon, but I shall lead
those who have grown
strong through seeking and striving, while those in your
ranks will be
weakened through indulgence in the fleshpots and pleasure places
of Earth. We are the
disinherited but not the disowned, we have the seeds of
victory within us.
You and yours were never more than you are, sons of the easy
path, followers of
the downhill road".
Then, when these
things had been spoken, Lewid died and Dadam and those with him
burnt his body.
Dadam and those with him wandered the wasteland for many days,
then turned
southward towards the mountain. Then it happened that one day Dadam
was seated apart, in
solitude among rocks, with chin on chest, and a hunter of
the Ubalites came
upon him from behind. The hunter slung a smooth stone as the
man turned, and it
struck out his eye. Then the Ubalite slew him by smashing in
his head with a
stone.
The hunter was the
son of Ankadur, son of Enanari, king of the Ubalites, by
Urkelah, daughter of
the Chaisites. This is known because those who were with
Dadam came out of
the barren places and learned the ways of builders, becoming
great among the
Ubalites and raising cities along the rivers. Among them was
Enkilgal who built
Keridor, which stands between the two great rivers, and Netar
and Baletsheramam
who taught men the ways of writing, setting the letters upon a
pillar in Herak.
CHAPTER SEVEN
HERTHEW - SON OF THE
FIRSTFATHER
The Book of
Beginnings tells us all things began with Varkelfa, therein called
Awenkelifa, from
whom flows gwinin, the energizer which stabilizes all things so
they maintain their
proper form, and awen which responds to the moulding
desires. This is
well enough, but men concern themselves more with the
beginnings of their
race, and ours is rooted in Herthew the Sunfaced, son of the
Firstfather.
While Herthew was
still young he was expelled from the lushlands where he was
born, and he
journeyed across the hasrshlands in the company and keeping of wise
Habaris. After many
days they came to Krowkasis, cradleland of our race, land of
mountains and
rivers, which is beside Ardis, and they encamped there in a
valley. With them
were retainers and flocks.
Herthew grew to
manhood there and always Habaris was at his side, instructing
him in all the
things he should know. He taught Herthew the Nine essential
disciplines of
Imain, and the secrets of the three sacred vessels. Herthew
learned that there
was a place of gloom, where the air was foul and malodorous
breezes carried
pestilence and poisonous particles. This was the source of all
maladies and
ailments and of the things which cause putrefaction and decay. This
place had been
closed off from Earth, for it existed in another realm beyond the
ken of mortals; but
it had been brought into attunement with Earth when a
forbidden act was
accomplished. Thus the bodies of mortals became susceptible to
influences from the
baleful place.
To this and similar
parts of the Otherworld the wicked would be drawn when they
passed through the
grim gates of death. But Habaris taught a different
conception of
wickedness, one where lack of effort, indolence and indifference
to duty and
obligations, the taking of the easy path, were just as wrong as
actual deeds of
wickedness. He taught that men reach the true goal of life by
transmuting lustlove
into truelove. That true victory is gained only over the
defeated bodies of
their vanquished passions and baser selves.
These and many other
things were taught by Habaris, but many of his teachings
displeased the
people of Krowkasis who were then as they were before Herthew's
forefather was led
away. So Habaris concealed many things from them and taught,
by simple tales,
things within their understanding. He taught them the mysteries
concerning the wheel
of the years and divided the year into a Summer half and a
Winter half, with a
great year circle of fifty-two years, a hundred and four of
which was the circle
of the Destroyer. He gave them the Laws of Weal and Woe and
established the
folkfeasts of harvest-tide and seeding-tide. He taught them the
ritual of Ulisidui.
But Habaris
instructed Herthew in the ways of the Otherworld. He taught him
concerning the three
rays from the central invisible sun, which manifest all
things, upholding
them in stability of form. Also concerning the Oversoul which
filled everything in
creation, as the Soulself filled the mortal body. This
Soulself, he
declared, would develop from mortal sensitivity and feeling
transmuted into
divine sensitivity and feeling, through suppression of the baser
instincts within
mortals. It was strengthened by development of feelings of love
between man and
woman and between these and their kindred; by the appreciation
of beauty and devotion
to duty; by the development of all qualities that pertain
to humans and not to
animals.
Herthew learned that
the Soulself is quickened by soul substances outflowing
from the Godhead.
That the strong soul is transformed and moulded to the soul's
desire, but the weak
soul is not its own master, it is flabby, unstable and is
pulled into a state
of distortion by its own vices. In the afterlife there is
unbounded joy for
the entry of a noble soul, it will glow with splendour and
stand out proudly. The
mean soul of the wicked is dull-hued, twisted and drab,
and, being drawn
towards its own compatible state, it shrinks into the dark
places.
When Herthew had
barely crossed the threshold of manhood, black-bearded spearmen
began to ravish the
borders of Krowkasis, and Idalvar, king of that country,
called his fighting
men together and when word came to Herthew he prepared to
depart. But Habaris
bid him stay awhile, for he was unprepared for battle. Then
Habaris prepared a
strange fire with stones, unlike any fire seen before, and
when it burnt low he
plucked out that which is called 'child of the green flame'
and he beat it out
so it became a blade. This he fitted to a horned handgrip and
when it was edged
and blooded gave it to Herthew, saying, "Behold, Dislana the
Bitterbiter,
faithful servant of he who strikes hard and true". Then he made a
shield of wicker
covered with ox-hide and a cap of hide which came down over the
face and neck. So
equipped Herthew went to the encampment of Idalvar, taking
eight fighting men
with him.
In those days men
fought with hand-thrown spears and clubs, with flung stones
and sticks sharpened
by fire and weighted, but they did not close in the battle
clash. So when
Idalvar saw the battleblade of Herthew, he wondered and it passed
his understanding;
but when he saw Herthew close on the battleline and the
foeman fall before
him, he was amazed.
No man about the
king could understand the making of such weapons, offspring of
fire and stone, but
Habaris made others and Herthew became the king's right hand
man and the first
hero of the Noble Race. The king offered Herthew his
daughter's hand in
marriage, but Herthew declined saying, "The days of my
manhood are not yet
fulfilled".
When the war-filled
days had passed, Herthew withdrew to the place where Habaris
made the bright
battleblade, and already he had taught the mysteries of their
making to others,
sealing their mouths with magic. But Herthew was less
concerned with the
weaponry of war than with the mysteries of life and the
battles of the
Spirit beset by mortality. So while his workmen drew bright
blades from the
thunderstones, Habaris taught Herthew and his battlebrothers,
and these were the
things they learned from his mouth.
"Beyond God
there is an Absolute which no man should try to understand, for it
exists and has
always existed in a state beyond man's finite comprehension. It
is from this
Absolute that God, The Ultimate in all Perfections, was
engendered".
"To create, God
first visualized in thought, then He produced an outflowing wave
of power which, in a
manner of speaking, solidified what might be called
building stones. The
outflowing power also produced the Celestial Hymn which
brought the building
stones together in harmonious forms. So it is truly said
that all creation is
the harp of God and it responds to His song and
manipulations. It is
an everlasting unfoldment. The voice of God can also be
heard in the voice
of His beautiful daughter who endows all growing things with
life and
beauty".
"There is a
divine purpose in creation which may be known only to the few, this
knowledge is the key
to all unanswered questions. Acquiring it is like the
drawing back of
heavy curtains which have kept a room in gloomy half light, so
all things suddenly
became clear and distinct. He who gains this knowledge knows
the Grand Secret,
the answer to the riddle of the ages, and knows beyond a
shadow of a doubt.
This divine purpose, and the divine secret concerning it, is
called
Gwenkelva".
"Apart from
Gwenkelva God gains nothing from His creation, except that as a
Being possessing
infinite love and goodness He must have something to receive
the gift of love and
respond to it. Even among mortal beings, who is there that
could find satisfactory
fulfillment in self-love? Also, He needed something
wherewith He could
contract Himself, some medium wherein He could perform, and
this is
creation".
"Creation is
also, for mortals, the school of life. The training ground for
godhood. There are
Three Circles of Reality, three realms, three stages of
existence. They are:
Heaven, where perfection visualized on Earth may be
realized and desires
and ideals materialized; where hard-striven-for aspirations
are attained; it is
the place where all the properly developed spiritual
potential latent in
man reaches maturity and fulfillment. Earth, the place of
training,
development and preparation, the testing ground, the battlefield where
men discover their
true natures when confronted by life's challenges, contests
and contentions;
where competition and controversy are the rule. It is here that
aims and objectives
are conceived and thought-out for realization later in the
proper place. It is
a starting point, the beginning of the journey; it is here
that the proper road
must be wisely chosen. Then there is the Realm of the Misty
Horizon, the
intermediate place, the place of spirits, where those above can
commune with those
below and where free spirits wander within their
limitations".
These things which
Habaris taught in those far off days have been rewritten in
transmission to
accord with our understanding, but it is unwise to voice them in
these troublesome
days, when words become snares to entrap the unwary.
Now, Idalvar desired
to learn the secret of the bright blade engendering
thunderstones, but
no man who came with Habaris or laboured for him would
disclose any part of
it, and the king was afraid to put them to the test. So,
having thought the
matter out the king sent for his daughters and told them what
he expected them to
do, for he had devised a plan to learn the secret. Then he
sent an invitation
to Herthew and Habaris. When they arrived at the king's
encampment they
found a great gathering in their honour and the king's daughters
favourably inclined
towards them, one smiling upon Herthew and the other upon
Habaris who was at
the age of hoaryheadedness. Though at first Habaris was
indifferent and
wearied her, the king's daughter pandered to him, encouraging
even his follies,
setting out to charm him with her wit and beauty.
It was no great
length of time before her womanly wiles ensnared the heart of
Habaris and though
he was almost ripe for the surrender of secrets, the damsel's
efforts had taxed
her and the game became tiresome, so there came an evening
when she could not
endure his company. In the midst of the merrymaking, when the
alebowls had made
many rounds and the sound of song and story was at its height,
she slipped away
with a young battleman who attended upon her father. Many who
sat among the
benches saw this and whispered to one another, nodding knowingly
in the directions of
Habaris who was not unaware, though he appeared to have
drunk to his
capacity.
Habaris had learned
to love the young woman, so he was sorely heartsmitten, but
within himself he
knew the tree of Winter love bears only Winter's fruits. Yet
he made excuses to
himself for her, thinking perhaps it was just some
girlishness with no
more weight than a floating feather, nothing of serious
import, for it was
true the merrymaking was better suited to the natures of men
than the natures of
women. Maybe, he thought, it is just an innocent
indiscretion.
So when the day came
to its fullness and those who had made merry went heavily
about their tasks,
Habaris approached the king and asked for his daughter's hand
in marriage. He
said, "Your daughter Klara has delighted me with her winsome
ways, she has
charmed me with her gaiety and beauty; she has displayed much
pleasure in my
company, surely I have not misread the signs". The king was not
overpleased, for
though he greatly desired to know the secret of the bright
blade he had not
intended giving his daughter's hand to Habaris, but neither did
he wish to offend
him. Therefore, he was wary in his reply, saying, "It is the
custom for any
suitor for a high born woman's hand to be himself highborn and
worthily
battleblooded. Yet such is my affection for you that I would not let
even the custom
become a bar to this marriage, and you may be a battleblooded
man among your own
people. But let us not enter lightly into this thing, for the
girl is still young
and it would be well if you established yourself favourably
with her. She will
be a worthy wife indeed, for she is one who is ever ready to
learn, one with an
enquiring mind. Nothing gives her greater pleasure than the
acquisition of
knowledge". So the matter was left.
Now, some days later
Idalvar and his retinue, accompanied by Herthew and
Habaris, went to the
gathering place for folkfeasts, some five days journey
away. People were
accustomed to meeting here every thirteen moons to celebrate
the season of
fruitfulness, many coming a great distance. Beside the gathering
place was the
compound of a far-framed seer and warlock called Gwidon, who, in
the fullness of the
moon on the third night, would prophesy events for the
forthcoming year.
Idalvar and those
with him presented their gifts and took their places before
the compound.
Presently, Gwidon came out cloaked in the skins of wild dogs, with
a horned crown and
skull-headed staff. He seated himself before a small fire
into which he threw
prescriptions, making a cloud of smoke which completely
enveloped him. When
this had drifted away he seemed to be asleep, but after a
while he lifted his
head, then raising himself up he started to prophesy.
He talked awhile of
small matters, then told of dangers to the people through
enemies who would
bear down from the Northlands. He prophesied a great
bloodletting,
telling people they could be saved by a great war leader, a king
knowing the secret
of the bright blade, himself a war-wielder of one. He
exhorted the people
to bestir themselves and prepare, wasting no time in finding
their leader.
No man among the
people knew the mysteries of the bright blade except Habaris,
but he was not a man
of battle and Herthew was not high born among them. So,
though they talked
long they talked in tangles, failing to resolve the issue. It
was then decided
each should go his own way, but they should meet at the same
place again at the
next full moon, when Gwidon would be able to help with their
decision.
When Idalvar
returned to his encampment he was no longer hesitant about the
marriage of his
daughter, ordering that it should take place forthwith. But he
stipulated that
Habaris must initiate him and his sons into the mysteries of the
bright blade
immediately. This being agreed, arrangements for the marriage were
put in hand.
Habaris and Klara
were married and Idalvar and his sons partially initiated into
the mysteries of the
bright blade, for the king was told it would take some time
for the initiation
to be completed. So when they next went to the meeting place,
Idalvar was
proclaimed the war leader, with his sons to follow according to
their ages, should
he fall in battle. But Habaris had spoken to Gwidon in secret
and matters were so
arranged that should the sons of Idalvar fall, then Herthew
would become the
battle chief.
The king and those
with him returned to their homecompound where they were to
prepare battlemen,
but Herthew was to go back to the gathering place and there
train fighting men
in the battle tactics which brought them clashing into the
fore.
Now, on their
wedding night, when they had retired to their bower, Klara burst
into tears and fell
weeping with her head on the knees of Habaris, confessing
she was not a virgin
and had deceived him, begging his forgiveness. Habaris
raised her up and
said, "Even the wisest of men becomes a fool when his heart
blinds him to reason.
The older the fool the bigger the fool". He did not
question her
regarding love, for he knew she could not love and deceive him, she
had given her heart
and with it her virginity to another. Yet he made an excuse
for her to himself,
thinking that she had not willfully deceived him but had
acted out of duty to
her father. Also, truly loving someone and wishing to
demonstrate that
love, she necessarily had to sacrifice the happiness and
content, the
self-respect of her husband-to-be, the choice had been hers to
make. It is ever so.
Habaris asked if her father had known how things were and
she said, "He
suspected, for am I not his daughter?" Thus Habaris found himself
tied to an unloving
wife, for he chose to disregard the custom of the people. He
wondered, was she
also to be an undutiful and unfaithful one?
A woman reserves
herself for her husband or she does not, according to her
marriage criterion.
A woman reserved for marriage is one unlikely to be
unfaithful; a woman
easily come by before marriage is no less attainable
afterwards, for if
she says love is the criterion, then she measures by
something
unstandardised, which may figuratively vary from one inch to a mile. A
man declaring his
love may have seduction in mind or a lifetime of protective
devotion, the
marriage proposal determines the difference and establishes the
intent.
After the marriage
the king showed little concern for Habaris, for he kept
Klara's young
battleman in his retinue when he should have dispatched him
elsewhere. Nor did
Klara maintain the restraint and decorum, which dignifies
wifehood, except in
their outward manifestations, which is no more than a
deceptive crust
disguising the polluted love beneath. Thus Habaris bore the
shame of
belittlement in the eyes of men, for Klara was furtively unfaithful.
Habaris visited
Herthew and on his return told the king that he and his sons
would now receive
their final initiation. So, having made preparation, they set
off, accompanied by
Klara, to the place of the thunderstones, this being a
deeply cleft
mountain wherein there was a large cavern from which flowed a
river. Entering the
cave Habaris told those with him to bide where they were,
for only Idalvar,
his sons and Klara were to accompany him into the place of
initiation, a small
cave entered through a long narrow passage closed off by a
heavy door and lit
by fire already prepared, a fire which burnt tardily with a
blue flame.
When a length of
time had passed those who waited without grew uneasy, but it
was long before they
approached the door and when they did their throats were
seized, so they were
affrighted and fled, and one among them died. Then those
who knew the
mysteries of the thunderstones came and cleared the way, and all
within the cave were
found dead. Habaris did what had to be done, for though it
is well for men to
conform to the laws of men, there is a superlaw by which men
who are men should
live and which sometimes decrees that they must die.
Herthew married the
daughter of Idalvar and they had a son who died in his
seventh year.
Idalvar's daughter died in childbirth. The invaders came and were
defeated with a
great slaughtering, and Herthew became the first king over all
the people of
Krowkasis.
CHAPTER EIGHT
GWINEVA
Maeva, one time wife
of Dadam, found refuge among people of Ardis where she gave
birth to Gwineva the
Cuckoochild, but as the child grew it was seen that she had
red hair. Though all
knew there were fair-haired and dark-haired people, none
had ever seen anyone
with red hair. Also, Strange maladies had manifested in
Ardis for which the
strangers were blamed; therefore, because of these things,
Maeva and her child
were driven out.
They came to a pool
near the border of Krowkasis and built a habitation of
reeds, living there
for many years. However, Maeva was killed by a wild beast
and Gwineva was left
alone, but she learned much from familiars who came to her,
and so she became a
sorceress.
Time went by and the
half-folk called Yoslings began to gather around her
habitation and they
thought she was a goddess and worshipped her. As her fame
spread, word came to
Herthew concerning the strange woman, so he sent men to
find out about her
and report. Gwineva knew about Herthew, but he did not know
who she was or that
any child of Maeva lived. When Herthew heard the report he
was intrigued and
sent men to escort her to him, and she came at his request.
They brought her
into his presence wearing a cloak of feathers and a garment of
doeskin, her hair
unbraided like that of other women, falling outside the cloak
almost to her knees.
He was amazed at the cascade of red hair and his heart was
stirred by her
beauty.
Herthew gave Gwineva
a bower and attendants, but she preferred to be attended by
Yoslings whom the
people about Herthew despised. They gossiped about the strange
woman, for it was
seen that Yosling men freely entered her bower, yet her
bearing was modest
and maidenly, the Yoslings showing her every form of respect.
It was the season of
fruitfulness and when Herthew went to the gathering place
he took Gwineva with
him, but the Yoslings could not be taken there. So they
remained behind, but
the people removed them. When they arrived at the gathering
place and Gwidon saw
Gwineva, he was startled, for he had seen such a woman in
the darkened waters;
but he welcomed her and was surprised at her wisdom and
skill at sorcery.
When the time came for Gwidon to prophesy and all who came to
hear him were
gathered about, they became apprehensive, for his coming forth was
delayed and the moon
began to disappear, eaten away by the blackness of the
night. Then, when
they started to jostle and flee there was a great shout and
Gwidon appeared; as
he did, a great fire sprang up on either side of him. The
people remained, for
each was rooted to the place where he stood.
Gwidon spoke at
length, telling them that the nightsky sign heralded a new era.
That as the moon
grew again in brightness, so should their race wax strong and
virile, spreading
wide across the face of the Earth, driving lesser races before
them. That a son of
Herthew would lead their sons out of Krowkasis, and his sons
and their sons would
continue westwardly, towards Hesperis, meaning Land of
Spirits. That there
they would meet their final destiny. He told them that there
would be a great
bloodletting, when brother would fight with brother and father
with son, but that
this would be the planting of the centrepole around which the
framework for the
structure of their race would be woven. He said, "I shall go
before the vanguard
in spirit".
Later, Herthew asked
Gwidon to cast the omensticks and read the ashes, as he
wished to know
things concerning Gwineva. This Gwidon did, telling him that she
was his fatemate,
one destined to be his wife; that she was indeed a true maiden
and he would not be
foreridden. He said, "She acts as she does through innocence
and not through
brashness". But what Gwidon told Herthew was no more than a
grain in the
grainsack among all that which he knew and saw.
When Herthew
returned to his homesite he paid court to Gwineva and asked her to
marry him, and this
she consented to do after one year. The people, hearing what
was intended, were
displeased and murmured against the marriage, saying it was
unseemingly for
their king to marry a sorceress and one strange in so many ways.
Also, there was a
custom forbidding the intermingling of blood, but there was no
doubt as to what she
was, some thinking she was one who could be acceptable.
Gwineva was not the bloodkin
of Herthew, so as the marriage would not be
incestuous Gwineva
decided she would say nothing of their relationship, for she
was in love with him
and love is ever ready to make excuses. Yet, despite her
knowledge and wisdom
her heart was full of fears because of her background, but
she displayed none
of her anxieties. She did not feel at ease among the people,
but never asked that
the Yoslings be allowed back. She tried to become
acceptable by
ministering to the sick with simples and remedies, but the more
she cured and healed
the more people feared her, and fearing they shunned her,
except they were in
dire need of her help.
However, Herthew
remained firm in his resolve to marry, though many advised that
if he simply took
Gwineva as a concubine or as something less than a wife, it
would be more
acceptable. They said, "None would object if she were treated as a
woman with no
standing, mate but do not marry, for marriage would grant her
undue status, and is
marriage so necessary? Does a wise man buy the pie whereof
he can freely eat at
any time?"
Such sayings enraged
Herthew, for he knew Gwineva to be a woman reserved for
marriage, and this
he tried to tell the people, but they laughed, saying, "She
has bewitched you,
put her to the test". But he replied, "This is unworthy, for
it displays doubt
and distrust; a virgin is a virgin, whether named so by horn
or wand and remains
so whatever the conjectures of carnal-minded men who are
more familiar with
women of lesser repute". Yet whether the marriage bar applied
was still a thing of
doubt in the minds of many, for none knew the lineage of
Gwineva, nor did she
enlighten anyone, though it was customary to recite this at
the betrothal. But
Herthew and Gwineva remained unbetrothed, though the
forthcoming marriage
was made known.
Now, the nephews and
kin of Idalvar nurtured seeds of discord among the people
and because it was a
time of peace, when the skills of a warchief were not
needed, many heeded
their words. So it developed that there were those for
Herthew and those
against him. Then Herthew said to the people, "Let this not be
something to cut
people apart, but something which can be decided at the next
folkfeast".
The seedsowing time
had passed, but it was not yet harvest-tide and the young
men held
spear-throwing contests and tested each other in many manly skills. At
such times, seated
on a platform against the palisade, Herthew gave judgement
and awarded merits.
Inside the palisade was a walkway and places from which
great stones could
be hurled, and from one such place came a murderous weapon
which cut down
through Herthew's head to pierce the shoulder of his shield arm,
striking him to the
ground. Immediately there was a great tumult and confusion,
fighting broke out
and men died, but Herthew was carried to safety in the bower
of Gwineva. There he
was protected by his retainers, but within the palisade all
was taken over by
those hostile to Herthew.
Before the cowardly
blow, those for Herthew had been more numerous and powerful,
but after he was so
sorely wounded they were less, and of these many were
inclined to waver,
for such is the nature of man. But to contrast with the frail
reeds who wavered
those who remained loyal were resolute, for this too is the
nature of man.
Now, when Gwineva
and the wise men attended to Herthew they saw that while the
shield arm had been
injured it was not unfeeling, for it grasped the hand of
Gwineva, but this
the sword arm could not do, though it was uninjured.
Therefore, they knew
the slaughter-bent weapon had been charmed and no woman
could remove such
enchantment, nor could the wise men, for they were unblooded.
In the days that
followed, the enchantment caused demons to enter through the
wound and take up
their abode, so Herthew was tormented and his body wracked
before subsiding
into the quietness which precedes death. The demons had abused
Gwineva and called
her foul names and cried out in loud voices against people,
so that they should
abandon their king.
The place where
Herthew lay was near the lakeside and in the lake was an island
called Inskris,
meaning Isle of the Dead, where those about to die were taken,
as well as the dead,
before being consigned to the waters. For the people
believed that those
given into the lake went straight into awareness in the
Otherworld, while
anyone buried on land was only half aware upon arrival and
remained half awake
and half asleep for many years. So those loyal to Herthew
carried him down to
the boats and accompanied him and Gwineva to the Isle and
they were not
molested, for none interfered with those mourning the dead. On the
isle were priests
and nine holy maidens who attended to the rites while other
women ministered to
the newly dead, but Herthew was dead, though halfway across
the threshold.
When Herthew arrived
he was placed in the hospice house where Gwineva attended
to him. Gwidon
opened Herthew's skull where it had been cleft and let out the
demon which had
taken up habitation there, and he brewed powerful potions which
removed the
enchantment. When, after many days, he departed, Herthew was no
longer at the door
of death, though weak and in many ways like a baby.
While Herthew lay so
sorely stricken, the kinsfolk of Idalvar were disputing
among themselves,
and this led to fighting and battles. But none came near the
isle to harm
Herthew, because it was a sacred place and gave him sanctuary. When
it came to the time
of the folkfeast there was a great battle at the gathering
place and Gwidon was
slain. There came a day when Herthew, though still not
whole, could move
about and then he and Gwineva departed with those who remained
with them. They were
married before leaving their isle of sanctuary.
They fled to a place
afar off where, as the years went by, Herthew became whole
again and Gwineva
gave birth to sons and daughters. It was a good place, fertile
and well watered and
so they prospered. But there came a time of drought when
the waters dried up
and their flocks died. So Herthew sent men to Krowkasis and
these came back
saying that there, too, the land was stricken and the people
distressed. He also
sent others to the West and they returned saying that there
the land was not
stricken, but the people would not accept them except with
spears.
Herthew then sent
men back to Krowkasis to tell the people there of the plenty
which lay to the
West and they came back with a warband led by Itilis, and many
people followed.
Herthew could no longer bear weapons and his sons were as yet
young and unblooded.
Therefore, he gave his two sons who were of sufficient age
into the keeping of
Ithilis, so they might learn the art of war, and they
followed him
loyally, becoming men of valour in the conflict which ensued. Many
people left
Krowkasis and settled in the land lying to the West, and Herthew and
Gwineva also settled
there.
Time passed and
Herthew became renowned for his wisdom, and Ithilis king of
Arania, honoured him
with lands and servants. Herthew's two sons, who had
followed the king
and were twins, married the king's two eldest daughters who
were also twins.
This caused problems, for the king, though having three wives,
was sonless,
therefore the twin sons of Herthew became his heirs. The king was
perplexed, for the
two men could not rule together and both were of equal
standing in his
eyes. Yet it was the king's duty to nominate his heir and
proclaim him to the
people so there should be no division after his death.
Therefore, Ithilis
consulted Herthew as to how the judgement should be made, and
Herthew said,
"Let fate decree who shall be king".
In Arania the people
gathered four times a year for the folkfeasts. At such
times it was
customary for new laws to be proclaimed, judgements given and all
contentious issues
settled. So before the next folkfeast Herthew prepared a
manmade stone from
sand, clay and other things, and while it was still soft he
set the hilt of his
great sword, Dislana the Bitterbiter, into it and when the
stone was hardened
Dislana was fast. The sword-implanted stone was then set down
near the place where
the king gave judgement. Around it was drawn a wide circle
bisected across.
On the day when the
people were first assembled to hear his words, Ithilis told
them of his
perplexity over the problem concerning the twin sons of Herthew and
his daughters, he
said, "So the people are not divided and the kingdom rent by
strife, it is well
this matter be settled now. Therefore, I am setting a fair
test involving no
men other than these two whom I hold equally dear. Whichsoever
of them shall remove
their father's great weapon from this stone, so he frees it
and grasps the hilt,
shall become my lawful heir, with the other being to him as
a younger brother.
They will each try in turn during the duration of the fall of
a feather, the first
trier being he who casts his bracelet over the blade. Then
each of Herthew's
sons was placed in a spot where the bisecting line joined the
circle, so they
stood opposite each other, and each had three bracelets. They
threw until one
encircled the blade with his bracelet.
Then this one tried
to withdraw the weapon with his hand but could not, because
of the sharpness,
The other tried by placing his two palms on each side of the
blade, then pressing
them together while lifting, but he could not move it
either. The first
one tried again, copying what had just been done more
powerfully, so the
stone almost lifted off the ground, but the sword did not
leave the stone.
Then the other approached the stone, but this time he put his
hands under the
edges of the stone, so he could lift it in his arms and he
dashed it down over
a rock which was nearby, so it broke asunder. He then picked
Dislana up by the
hilt and brandished it over his head. The people acclaimed him
while his brother
grasped his arms in congratulations. Thus, by wisdom was the
problem overcome.
THE BOOK OF
GLEANINGS
Being writings from
Various Old Culdee books which were partially destroyed in
Ancient Times.
Chapter 1 - MAYA AND LILA
Chapter 2 - ELOMA
Chapter 3 - THE FLOOD OF ATUMA
Chapter 4 - THE DELUGE
Chapter 5 - THE BIRTH OF HURMANETAR
Chapter 6 - THE COMPANIONSHIP OF YADOL
Chapter 7 - THE DEATH OF YADOL
Chapter 8 - HURMANETAR JOURNEYS TO THE
NETHERWORLD
Chapter 9 - ASARUA
Chapter 10 - THE DEATH OF HURMANETAR
Chapter 11 - THE TEACHINGS OF YOSIRA
Chapter 12 - THE RULE OF YOSIRA
Chapter 13 - THE WAY OF YOSIRA
Chapter 14 - THE TRIBULATIONS OF YOSIRA
Chapter 15 - THE VOICE OF GOD
Chapter 16 - THE SPIRIT OF GOD
Chapter 17 - THE SONG OF THE SOUL
CHAPTER ONE
MAYA AND LILA
This was formerly
called The Book of Conception and said to be The First Book of
the Bronzebook. It
concerns man's conception of The True God in olden days,
during the struggle
back towards the light.
Once all men were
dark and hairy and in those days woman was tempted by the
strength and
wildness of the beast which dwelt in the forest, and the race of
man was defiled
again.
Therefore, the
Spirit of God was wrathful against woman, for hers was the
responsibility to
reject the beast within and without, that she might bring
forth children of
the light to walk in the light; for in man there is beast and
god, and the god
walks in light and the beast walks in darkness.
Now, because of the wickedness
that was done, there are among men those who are
the Children of the
Beast, and they are a different people. The race of man
alone was punished,
for the beast acted according to its nature. In man the
beast and god strive
to decide whether he shall take his place among the gods
that live or the
beasts that die, and woman, in her weakness, betrayed him to
the beast.
Men struggle daily
with the beast and wrest their living from the soil, their
day being
encompassed with strife and toil. So women bring forth children with
suffering, and
because they are frail their husbands rule over them. Man is
conceived in the
womb of woman and she brings him forth to life. Therefore, when
God raised man up
from among the beasts, choosing him as His heir and endowing
him with an immortal
spirit, He placed a veil over the portals of life. This,
that woman should
not forget she is unlike all other living creatures and the
trustee of a divine
mission. For a woman not only gives life to a mortal being,
she also bears a
spark of divinity to Earth, and there can be no greater
responsibility.
The eye that sees
earthly things is deceitful, but the eye that sees spiritual
things is true.
Then, because of the things that happened, the Great Eye that
saw Truth was closed
and henceforth man walked in falsity. Unable to perceive
Truth he saw only
that which deceived him, and so it shall be until his
awakening.
Not knowing God, man
worshipped Earth who mothered him and supplied his needs.
God was not displeased,
for such is the nature of children; but when no longer
children they must
put aside childish things. Nor, having blinded them, was He
wrathful that they
could not see, for God is, above all else understanding. The
face of a good
father is stern and his ways are hard, for fatherly duty is no
light burden, but
his heart is ruled by compassion. His children walk in Truth
and uprightness,
their feet do not wander, nor are they willful and wayward.
Man is born of mud,
sun and Spirit. In the days of conception the Spirit of God
impregnated the
receptive Earth, and she brought forth her children. Then came
man who walked like
a little child, but God took him in hand and taught him to
walk in the
uprightness of God.
A race of men came
out of the cold northlands. They were under a wise father and
above them was The
Grand Company which later withdrew in disgust. This race was
The Children of God;
they knew Truth and lived in the midst of peace and plenty.
The Children of Men
about them were wild and savage; clothed in the skins of
beasts they lived
like beasts. Even more wild were the Men of Zumat who lived
beyond them. Among
the Children of God woman had equality with man, for her
counsels were known
to be wise. She heard with understanding and her speech was
considered; in those
days her words were weighed, for then her tongue did not
rattle in her head
like seed in a dried pod.
Woman knew that
though man could subdue her with his strength, he was weak in
his desire for her.
In his weakness lay her power and in those days it was used
wisely, it was the
foundation of people. The race was good, but because of its
goodness it was
destined to be smitten, for only the good vessel is worthy of
the fire. It is
burnt, that its shape may be set and its design endure. This
path of peace is not
the path of progress.
The people were not
governed by princes or by statutes, but wise men sat in
council. They had
only a code of conduct and moral tradition binding each one to
the others in
symmetrical web of life. Those who transgressed the code and
tradition were
deemed to be unworthy of life among the people and were banished
into exile.
Among The Children
of Men woman was a chattel. She was subject to man, an object
for the satisfaction
of his lust and the servant to supply his needs. He subdued
her and kept her in
servitude, for her betrayal of man was known even among
them, and it was
never forgotten, nor could it be forgiven.
The Children of God
valued woman highly and protected her from crudeness and
cruelty, and her
standing was such that she was awarded only to the most worthy
of men. They held
her in respect, for to them she was the fountain of life
within their race,
the designer of its future. Yet even so they had to restrict
her, for she was
inclined to be wilful and unheeding of her responsibility.
The people
flourished and, from generation to generation, grew in stature and
comeliness. They
were the rising tidewaters of mankind surging towards its
destiny. The right
of a man to mate was decided according to his standard of
thought, his
uprightness, the manner in which he upheld the code and tradition
and his dealings
with man and woman. The fittest men could choose a mate among
all woman, but
lesser men could seek only among the less desirable, according to
a known standard. To
some, having only the outward appearance of men, no mate
was given, while the
noblest men could take additional ones from among the ranks
of lesser women.
Thus, the race ever tended to improve, to accord with its
design.
The council of the
people knew well the strength of man's desire for woman. The
force of the urge
was not wasted, for their forbears had harnessed it to the
vehicle which
carried their race to greatness above others. The race which could
properly channel the
forces contained within itself was ready to control the
forces beyond
itself. The greatest forces man can harness to his benefit are
those lying within
himself, but the underlying strength of the people lay in the
morality of its
women, for this was the strength that governed, because it was
the safe guard for
something of value. Men strive for gold, and value it because
it is something not
easily attained. If gold would be gathered by the handful,
men would scorn it,
its power is in its scarcity.
Then it happened
that one man became arrogant in the strength of his manhood and
pride of place, his
thoughts inclined towards himself rather than towards the
welfare of the
people. He scorned the old ways, declaring the code and tradition
an unnecessary
burden laid on the backs of men. He said, "Why should we carry
the burden of things
which have come down to us from our fathers? How do we know
they walked with
wisdom? How can we say that what was good for them is good for
us?" Because of
his unruly speech and wayward ways, the council banished him for
a time and had he
remained apart, his heart would have been humbled in wisdom.
But among The
Children of God there was a woman, one of the most desirable and
fair, who interceded
for him so he might return to dwell among them, it being in
their code that the
wayward could always regain their place.
The woman sought him
out in the wilderness and, coming upon him,. said, "Though,
because of my heart,
you appear to me as the finest of men, in the eyes of the
elders you are
unworthy to claim me. Therefore, I have spoken for you; now come,
go before them
yourself and say the wilderness has changed your ways. By so
doing you will find
favour with the council and, perchance, I may become your
mate. The strength
and courage I admire place you high in the regard of men and
in favour with the
elders, but your wayward and inconsiderate spirit is unworthy
of your body. Though
you find favour in the eyes of the young and foolish women
who see only the
outwardness of your body and thereby become more foolish, the
eyes of the wise
women see your naked spirit and are not deceived. Therefore,
disregard the
glances of foolish maidens and carry yourself well. Act in such
manner that you find
favour in the sight of the wise women". And, said she, "Am
I not Maya, the most
desirable of women, one whom all men seek? Yet will I
remain reserved only
for you, therefore be not unworthy of me".
The man came out of
the wilderness and wastelands. He went before the council of
wise women and said,
"What must I do that I may have this woman for a mate? For
I desire her above
all things, even above my own life. For her I will become the
most worthy of men
among the people, her standard being high I may not possess
her otherwise".
The wise women answered him, saying, "For so long shall you
conduct yourself in
this manner", and they set him a time and a task. That it
should be well, the
task was to be done with heart as well as deed, but the man
accepted it gladly,
his heart not in that day but in the days to come. The
council and the
elders said, "what the wise women have done is good, it will be
well and to the
people's benefit".
The man rose
manfully to the task and was magnificent in his manhood, his new
ways gladdening the
hearts of all the maidens, many of whom were disturbed by
strange stirrings
within their breasts. Among these was one less comely and
desirable whose
heart burned hotly for him, her thoughts resting upon him
continually; but she
knew that in his sights she was of little account. Here
name was Lila.
It happened that,
arising early one day, she saw the man depart into the forest
by the swampland,
going about his task, and she took counsel with herself and
followed him. She
came upon the man while he rested in a place of solitude and
approaching spoke
softly, saying "It is your servant Lila. O my Lord, are you
not weary with the
task burdening your days, also that you lack companionable
gladness to lighten
it? Where is she who set the load upon your strong back?
Where is my
kinswoman who, without doubt, is more comely and very much more
desirable than I and
therefore a very fitting reward for your heavy labours?
Does she rest in the
shade or is she gathering fruit back in the gardens?
Without doubt her
thoughts are with you, but is she not unduly hardhearted in
that she fails to
comfort you, for is it not in the nature of woman to come to
man and lighten his
burden with her softness? Is it not in the nature of woman
to be yielding and
submissive, that man may rejoice in his strength? Is it,
perhaps, that
despite her loveliness the heart of this woman of your desire is
not the heart of a
woman? Is it like the mock orange, sweet to look at but
bitter to bite?
"Or is her
heart in the keeping of the elders, that she prefers the ways of the
old to the ways of
the young? What has she done to you, has she not humiliated
your manliness by
harnessing it like an ox to the customs of the people? Can it
be right that the
decrees of old men long dead should come between living man
and woman? Is it not
more fitting that the customs of men submit to the law of
Her who gave us our
natures? This desirable woman is yours, providing you toil
and wait. She is
yours, but not without conditions. She does not come without
reservations as a
woman should, but like a man who comes to an ass bridle in
hand. Alas, that I
lack the loveliness which places the yoke upon you, but
beneath I lack
nothing and am as much a woman as any. My heart burns for you
with a flame that
comes nigh to consuming my body. Take me, accept my humble
offering. I give all
freely, I will be yours without any conditions. O my Lord,
which of us women
truly offers the most? She who concedes nothing, or I who will
even be accursed by
God and men for your sake? I who am nothing in your sight
require no sacrifice
from you on my behalf. I ask nothing and I offer all a
woman can".
Then Lila knelt at the feet of the man and placed her head on his
knee.
The man was sorely
troubled in his body and he wrestled with it, but his spirit
brought before his
eyes the vision of the more desirable maiden, and he was
strengthened. He
arose and said, "Begone and tempt me no more!"
Then Lila departed
and went her way, but within herself she brooded and in the
course of days her
thoughts hatched a dark scheme. She mixed a forbidden potion
from herbs and,
putting it into a pitcher of water with honey, took it to the
man as he toiled in
the heat of the declining day. Seeing her, the man said,
"Wherefore have
you come again?' And she answered him, saying "My Lord, your
servant brings a
much lesser offering, one you need not fear as you did the
greater one, a
humble gift of refreshment". The day being hot and the toil
arduous, the gift
was not unwelcome. The man drank heavily from the pitcher and
because of the
potion his spirit slept while the beast entered his body in
strength.
When the fire of his
passion was quenched by the waters of lust, his spirit
returned and he
reviled the woman, saying, "What have you wrought? Would you
destroy me in this
manner?" The woman replied, "The deed is yours, my Lord, for
you are a man and I
am a woman". Then the man became afraid, for he knew the
code and custom. He
became angry after the manner of frightened men and shouted,
"Begone from my
sight, you viper, lest I crush you!" Lila answered quietly, "My
Lord, why be
wrathful or afraid without cause? For this thing shall be a secret
between us, none
will ever know of it. Behold, my Lord, are you not free again
and the yoke removed
from your neck? Now you may know the joys a woman can give,
without submitting
to the task; therefore, take your ease, for life is good to
you".
The words of the
woman were not sweet to the ears of the man, for he was filled
with remorse for
what had been done. He said, "You are not the maiden of my
tender desires, in
whom my heart delighted and for whom I gladly undertook the
task. What now of
her whose beauty compares with the glory of the sun, whose
gentleness caresses
as the sunbeam, beside whose brightness you are no more than
a gloomy shadow?
Lila replied, "She is indeed as the sun, you may worship from
afar but never touch
lest you be burnt and destroyed".
"I am the woman
of your body whom your flesh has chosen. What has this other
woman done for you?
Did she not sharpen the sword on which you cut yourself? If
one lights a fire
among reeds, knowing a man sleeps there, who is to blame for
his burning? The
fire, he who lit it or the reeds? It is beneath your manliness
to turn on me thus,
am I not shamed for your sake? And who among women would
invite the wrath of
gods and men as I have done? Be content with the wrong your
lust has already
wrought. This is an evil deed you have committed, but because
we are now united in
the flesh no harm shall befall you through me".
Thenceforth, among
the people they went their separate ways, but flesh called to
flesh, bringing them
furtively together in secret places. Each dwelt with the
reproachful whispers
of their spirit, and each walked in the shadow of fear
because of the code
and tradition.
Now, the elders were
not without shrewdness and they saw that the man was no
longer diligent in
the task and had returned to his former ways. Also he avoided
the eyes of Maya and
was no longer reserved with women, having sampled forbidden
fruit he now sought
other varieties. He was not a man with an end in view
towards which he
strove, his bearing was not that of a free man. The glances
between the man and
the woman, and their uneasiness, were not difficult to
interpret.
The elders and wise
women said among themselves, "Such is the manner of those
carrying a burden in
their hearts, whose shadowy love is a feeble furtive thing
blooming shamefully
in dark and hidden places". Therefore, they set a watch on
the pair. The watch
came upon them as they lay together in nakedness upon their
skins and mocked
them with ribaldry, for their passion was profane and a thing
for jest. It was a
fungus upon the tree of love.
They were brought
before the high council, which was the council of elders, and
the council of wise
women, which questioned them, saying, "Wherefore have you
done evil unto
us?" The man answered, "The woman put my spirit to sleep with an
evil brew, and my
body became weak because of my manhood". They replied, "Truly
you have little
manhood now and are a lesser man because of this woman".
The woman stood up
before the high council and answered them boldly, "Am I then
the stronger of the
two? Can I lift the biggest stone or run the fastest race?
Do not the strong
always prevail against the weak, and is not this man the
strongest among men?
Is this even a matter for your concern? For in what way
have we caused harm
to any but ourselves? Shall we be punished for that which
concerns us two
alone and wrongs no other?"
The high council
replied, "The deeds of any person affecting the lives of others
are the concern of
others. Though it were done in secret between yourselves,
were not the effects
displayed in your eyes for all to see? Does the man serve
the people better
because of this thing, or does he serve them less well? Has
something been added
to the people, or has something been taken away? Have not
the people
lost?"
"Therefore, is
not that which you did the concern of the people and not of
yourselves alone?
The deed of itself was not wrong, except in the manner of its
accomplishment. A
woman who places no value on herself steals something from all
women, for they are
then less valued in the eyes of men. Would men value gold
were it gathered by
the wayside? Above all this, what of God-given love? Have
you elevated or
degraded its means of expression among men and women? Among
people who value
gold above all else, he who debases or adulterates it commits a
wrong against them.
Here, where love is valued above all else and woman honoured
as its custodian,
those who debase it are regarded likewise".
"We dwell in a
pleasant place, amid peace and plenty, an inheritance from our
fathers. The
Children of Men have inherited the wastelands. Are our fathers less
wise than theirs,
that the customs of our fathers should be spurned? What you
have done relates to
your two selves and by your two selves shall your
punishment be
carried out. This is not a punishment for any wrong done to us,
for we are old and
it affects us little. We punish because we have a duty to the
young, to the unborn
of our race. We have an even greater duty to the hallowed
things which inspire
mankind and enthrone man above the beasts".
"Your
wrongdoing affects no one man or woman, yet it affects all men and women,
and if left unheeded
would not be without effect on children yet unborn. The
code and tradition
is the pillar of our people, and the pillar may not be struck
with impunity.
Though it be strong and one blow will not damage it, many blows
will bring down even
the stoutest pillar. A blow left unheeded encourages
another. A deed
disregarded is a deed encouraged".
"A people can
be judged by the things it punishes and the things it permits. The
swine revels in
filth and therefore attacks anyone who enters his pen. Were we
wholly of the Earth,
we need only protect earthly things".
"Thus we banish
you for ever from among us, unless in your old age you are
permitted, in mercy,
to return".
In this manner were
the man and woman banished from the tilled land to wander
the wilderness
beyond. They dwelt in a cavern in the wasteland, against the
outer border of the
tilled land, and they ate weeds and wild creatures. There
they were in a place
defended from hostile men and made safe from ambushes. In
the first days of
their banishment the man was wrathful against the woman and
spoke to her
spitefully, saying, "Like a lamp that gives no light you are a
woman without
womanly virtue, no longer deserving of the honoured treatment
accorded women of
our race. You spoke truly when you said that I am strong and
you are weak. So be
it, henceforth your weakness shall be my strength; no longer
will the weakness of
man be the strength of woman and the backbone of a people
clinging to things
without substance. Henceforth, I am obligated to no one and
owe a duty to none
but myself. Man is weak only in his desire for woman, but the
weakness of woman
shall henceforth assure satisfaction of the desire".
So the man subdued
the woman after the fashion of The Children of Men; she was
the wife who
ministered unto him, saying "My Lord, I am but a woman and your
handmaiden".
The beast of the
wastelands were the keepers of the woman and she was in bondage
to the barrenland,
for the wilderness was beyond reach of the waters, a place of
desolation yielding
only weeds and thorns. The man hunted afield for wild
creatures while the
woman delved for roots, seeking sustenance among the weeds.
Thus it happened
that one day, being overcome with hunger, the woman went among
the reeds growing on
the edge of the tilled land, for flowering plants grew
there, the roots of
which could be eaten. While engaged in gathering she was
seen by a husbandman
tilling the fields, who, coming upon her stealthily, said,
"Woman I see
you, are you not the one who was banished? If so the custom decrees
you will have to
die, for it is forbidden to re-enter the fertile land, having
been cast out".
Then the woman,
being still in the water, loosened her girdle and, letting down
her hair, said,
"honoured I may no longer be, perhaps die I must, but am I not
still a woman while
I live? If you see me otherwise than as a woman who can
please a man by the
ways of women, then I say you cannot be a man. Yes, I am the
woman your brother
seduced, the frail victim of his lust. Perhaps it is better
that I die quickly
by your hand than starve slowly in the wasteland. Death can
hurt me no more than
life which has revealed me to the evil of men. Let me die
now for the
wrongdoing of your brother". So saying she came out of the water.
The husbandman did
not slay, but instead he dallied with her until the evening.
The woman said, ere
he departed, "This shall be a secret between us, for there
is none other nearby
to see us here. Give me food, that my flesh may be firm and
my heart gladdened,
that I may come often to this place".
Thus, in the days
that followed the woman went many times to the waters and in
other places where
there were other men. Therefore, she no longer had to delve
for roots, nor did
she toil in the wilderness.
Then The Children of
God banished other men into the wastelands because of the
woman, and the man,
seeing how this came about, said, "Is my affliction because
of you never to
end?" The woman answered, "My Lord, this thing I did for your
sake; see these
others, are they not outcasts in the wilderness, men without a
chief to rule over
them or a hand to guide? Gather them together, that they may
hunt for you and
serve you, rule over them and become powerful. What I have done
I have done for you
alone. To your strength will be added their strength, and
the loss of the
people in fertile lands will thus become your gain. What is
there that strength
cannon obtain? If your desire is for other women, will not
strength obtain
them? Therefore, revile me not, because I have now placed in
your hands the means
to that which you desire".
"Now I say to
you, and speak truly of things only a woman can know, that you are
a better man than
those who live bound to the tilled lands, whose women secretly
despise them for
their servility to the code and tradition".
The man was stirred
up by these words and went out and about to the others,
approaching them,
saying, "Behold, we have been cast out because we have
followed the ways of
men according to the nature of men. Our manhood is good
within us, let it
therefore assert itself so our strength may be greater".
So it came about
that the men who were outcasts entered the fertile tilled land
stealthily at night
time, burning the houses and overthrowing the water towers,
saying, "Let
this land rejoin the wilderness".
They slew menfolk
and carried the women and children away. They stole sheep,
goats and cattle.
Then they withdrew to the fastnesses of the wastelands. There
they built an
encampment and fortified it about with walls and ditches, and they
made war upon The
Children of Men and prevailed against them. They ruled their
women sternly and
made them chattels, buying and selling them like cattle. When
man said
"Come", the woman came, and when he said "Go", she went. On
her
yielding back and on
her submissive head he dissipated his wrath, on her servile
body he satisfied
his lust.
Lila was a true
daughter of the woman who betrayed the first race of men. It is
written of her that
when her sons grew to manhood, she caused then to kill and
eat their father, so
they might gain lifelong strength and wisdom.
Man kept woman in
bondage, for he knew from his own knowledge of her ways that
she was not to be
trusted. Henceforth, she could not walk freely among men, for
they knew that
though woman was weak and man strong, by womanly guile she could
exploit his
weakness. Among the outcast people and The Children of Men woman was
subject to man, and
he imposed his will upon her and dominated her.
In this manner woman
wrought her own downfall and the destruction of those who
held her in high
regard. Her charms she cast at the feet of those who trampled
them underfoot.
Woman was not yet fitted to be the free guardian of the portals
of life. She was
never wise enough to choose the fathers of the race, for she
was ruled by womanly
waywardness, not by wisdom.
CHAPTER TWO
ELOMA
It came about that
the sons of The Children of God mated with the daughters of
The Children Men,
who knew well the ways of men and were not reserved. The
covenant had been
broken and strange women were taken into the households, some
even as wives, but
though the daughters were lesser women, the sons were
wonderfully big and
mighty fighting men.
These new people
came out of the wastelands and crossed to Kithermis, which they
divided in three
parts between them, and there were rivers on the boundaries.
This was when the
years of man's life were lessened because he became fully
Earth-sustained, but
he remained full of vigour though filled with hostility,
particularly towards
those who loved.
To the East was the
land of Ubal which was mountainous and the Ubalites were
herdsmen. Westward
was the land of Chaisen and it joined Ubak on the North.
Southward were the
land of Utoh and the land of Kayman, whose peoples dwelt on
the plains and
tilled the soil. Some from the households of The Children of God
went into the land
of Chaisen and gave the people laws and taught them to build
with brick. Netar
and Baletsheramam, the sons of Enanari, taught them writing
and set their
letters on a pillar in Herak. Enkilgal, son of Nenduka, built
Keridor which stands
between two rivers.
Then came the
lengthening of the years, when the time of sowing was confused and
seed died in the
ground. In those days, Enos came up out of Chaisen and spoke
for the god of The
Children of Men. In those days, there were many having the
blood of The
Children of God who inclined their ears towards his words, for they
thought the Great
God of their fathers had abandoned them. Therefore, the
enlightening word of
God came to Eloma.
Eloma, daughter of
Kahema, heard the voice of God and was carried into the
wilderness unto a
place where there was a cave and clear running waters, and she
dwelt there for
seven years. Eloma had three sons and they all heard the voice
of God and walked
with Him. Her firstborn son was Haryanah and he carried the
word of God to the
Children of God who dwelt in the Northlands, for they had
forgotten His Ways.
He married Didi, daughter of a great king and became an even
greater king; he had
many sons who all became kings among men of renown. Yahama,
her secondborn son,
carried the word of God to those who dwelt towards the
sunrising, and
Manum, her thirdborn son, carried it to those towards sunsetting.
When the ear of the
Spirit was opened in Eloma, she returned to her people and
became The
Interpreter of God. In the days when some men left to dwell among The
Children of Men,
others came to Eloma and said, "Behold, men leave and we become
weak, while The
Children of Men become strong. Can this be the will of our
Father?" Then
Eloma called upon God and He heard her cry and said unto her, "Let
your spirit be at
peace, for things happen as they will; it is the grain being
winnowed from the
chaff. It is always easier for men to follow the ways of the
flesh than the ways
of the spirit, yet the deeper man descends into the vale of
earthly things, the
harder the climb out to the heights of glory. A generation
to go down, ten
generations to rise again. Man must struggle or degenerate, but
the path of pleasure
is pleasant, while the path of progress is beset with pain
and strife".
God said to Eloma,
His servant, "Behold, I have been good to My children, they
have been given
everything that is pleasant, everything has come easily to their
hand. The lot of The
Children of Men is more harsh and yet they prosper.
Childish things are
expected from a child, but when it grows up more is
anticipated, yet
still My children come to me as children".
God then said,
"Go, return to the place from whence you came and remain there
for seven
years" and she did so. The seven years passed and Eloma returned to
the people and,
behold, the fertile fields were unsown, the water channels were
dry and there was
desolation in the midst of the waters. Eloma sought among the
fields and when she
came upon the habitations her heart was rent apart. For she
saw the daughters of
The Children of God consorted with the sons of The Children
of Men and were
become unlike true women. Then Eloma said to them, "Wherefore
has this thing come
about?" And they answered, "Behold, men came from out of the
wilderness and our
men were like sheep before wolves; see, even now they labour
within a pen of
servitude". Eloma then went unto the men and said, "Wherefore
has this thing come
about?" and they answered her, "Behold, the god of The
Children of Men is,
unlike ours, a god of battles and we were delivered into
their hands".
Then Eloma was heavy
of heart and called upon God, saying, "Behold the plight of
Your children"
and God heard her and answered, "I am not indifferent, for their
sufferings are My
sufferings. They are not under the whips of men but under the
flail of God, the
grain is being separated from the chaff. They toil not under
the blows of men but
under the hammer of God, they are not imprisoned but are
upon an anvil. I am
not the God of battles, not the God of nations, not even the
God of men. I am the
God of Souls, The Keeper of the Treasures of Eternity. I
have not turned away
from My children, My children have turned away from Me,
disobeying my laws.
This cry will echo down through the generations of man: "My
God, why have You
deserted me?" And it will come from those who have deserted
their God".
"Arise, go seek
among the people and you will find a maiden who is pure at
heart, but she is
mocked and degraded by being made a swine attendant. Take her
with you and go to
Shinara, guard her well, for she is the daughter of a new
dawning". Eloma
sought among the people and found Nanua, Maid of the Morning,
and they went into
Shinara.
The Voice of God
came to Eloma in Shinara, saying, "This is the way things shall
be with those who
aspire to godhood. They must follow only the paths which I
have shown through
the words of My interpreters. The unfolding spirit residing
in those who have
the blood of The Children of God and the greatness that dwells
in men shall be
magnified in the blood of their children. Their wisdom shall be
greatly multiplied,
if the tie of blood be strong. As good wine become bad if
diluted overmuch, so
is greatness in the blood of man. There is a virtue in the
blood of those whose
forbears were The Children of God, and if two people having
this blood marry,
then this virtue is increased in their children, so it is
greater than either
parent. There is a law of inheritance from which no man is
exempt, for man is
governed by the laws of earthly creatures as well as by
greater laws. Is not
the best ram chosen to sire the new flock? So let women
choose the best
among men that they can and let men choose the best among women,
and they who heed My
words will know which is the best. Let the truly great ones
rule".
God said, "The
creative words remain on this side of the veil, but their echoes
resound on your
side. The real remains here, but its reflection is there;
creation is My
mirror, though it is not without distortions. I have created in
spirit and in
matter, My thoughts have ranged from the unseeable smallest to the
incomprehensible
largest. My greatest thoughts formed substance for the spirits
of the sons and
daughters of Earth".
"Truth and
justice, perfection of beauty and goodness remain with Me, and these
you can know on
Earth only by their reflection. In the universe of Truth all
things are free from
illusion and are seen in reality, but on Earth even the
reflection is
distorted. I have crated light and called it substance; it is
illuminated within
by the light of an ever present love potential".
"Men call on
many gods, though above all there is but One; yet whatever they
call Me I will hear
them, for I am The God Above Names, The God Embracing All
Names. Whatever men
believe, if it serves Good it serves God. But gold necklaces
are not for sheep
and outward forms of worship must suffice for the spiritually
undeveloped. The
rituals of men may often be empty ceremonials, but they may
also guard the Great
Mysteries behind them".
"If a man seeks
to enter My presence by prayer and says, "God grant me this or
give me that",
the thing will be neither granted no given, unless it be for his
spiritual good or
benefit another. I am no huxter bargaining blessings in
exchange for
worship, nothing man can give can add to what I have. Also me do Me
little honour when
they fail to recognize that I am above concern for mere
bodies which decay
and fall apart when the enlivening spirit leaves them. Yet
man is but man, know
that I am a God of understanding and compassion. If man
cries out to Me, in
genuine stress and suffering, he will not go unrelieved and
uncomforted. Yet
understand that suffering and sorrow are the lot of man, that
he may become
Mangod. There is also the Great Law to which man must conform;
there are
intricacies of enidvadew to be unwoven and the challenging paths of
destiny and fate to
be followed. Too often the price to paid for things done or
not done is pain and
suffering, sorrow and distress, but where would be the
benefit to the
debtor were I to wipe out such debts? Yet will I see that never,
be even a single
grain, will they exceed that which is absolutely necessary and
just. On earth, joy
and gladness will always outweigh pain and sorrow".
"Earth is
Earth, take it as you find it, do not expect to find heavenly things
there. It is a place
of tuition and the purpose of life is learning. All things
of Earth are limited
and mortal, immortality will not be found there. When the
things of Earth have
fulfilled their hidden purposes, each passes away,
returning to the
dust from whence it came".
"Behold, in the
days to come Truth shall be unfolded to all peoples, revealed in
a degree and manner
which will accord with their needs and capabilities. It will
be passed on from
generation to generation and from man to man. The purity of
its flame will
accord with the quality of the oil of spirituality with which it
is fed and
replenished; hence there will be many differing degrees of purity and
revelation. The food
which one man enjoys may sit heavily on the stomach of
another, yet it
would be foolish to say that the food enjoyed by one should
become the food of
all. So it is with the spiritual things which men believe".
"I will not
send prophets, nor will I appoint spokesmen, but such will arise
through their own
efforts and enter into conscious union with Me. They will
point the way, which
will be followed by the spiritually sturdy, but others less
strong in spirit
must take a slower path, and many will advance only by faith
and service, by
justice and kindliness towards others".
"The spark of
divinity in man generates inspiring dreams which will ever lure
him onward and
upward, yet the road is long, the journey wearing and often
unpleasant. Man has
unnecessarily encumbered himself, he has enshrouded his
spirit under a
winding sheet of earthly passions. With his Great Eye blinded by
indulgence in vice
and his spirit corroded by corruption, his fallible senses
only are left to
him, and these deceive him into believing the mortal vehicle is
his total being.
Affliction and decay are now the lot of man and he has passed
into a long, dark
night of ignorance. Now only by journeying the long and
painful road of earthly
experience can his soul be cleansed and awakened to the
realization of the
glory within him".
"Man may
conceive Me as he will and it will be well. I am not a God of
pettishness. As I
brought forth the creation, so shall he bring forth the
revelation of his
God. Unto you, Eloma My child, I grant the keys of Communion
and Union".
Then Eloma went out
among the people and taught them about their Creator in this
manner, "I
bring you the soul-whispered words of God, The Eternal Tower of
Strength, The
Fathomless Ocean of Compassion. He has hung the Earth in the void,
surrounding it with
nothingness, yet by His power it remains in its appointed
place. He veils His
glory behind the shield of illusion, lest it overpower the
spirits of men. He
is obscured by the dark cloud of mortal ignorance. He is the
inspirational spirit
ever entering the hearts of man, striving to arouse them to
reach out towards
greatness and achievement".
"He has moulded
the sky above us and bedecked it with splendour and awesome
beauty. He taught
the stars their song of joy and the winds their wondrous
music. All the
widespread Earth proclaim His creativity, while the high vaults
reveal His skill and
handiwork. His messages go out to men, not in the speech of
men but in wordless
whispers to their hearts. His finger prescribes a course for
the fertilizing
waters which nourish the desolate sands, making tender buds
burst forth from the
dead soil. The soft waters caress the ground and pastures
arise to become the
habitations of great flocks and herds".
"The rose
unfolds its beauty to honour Him and the woodbine delights Him with
perfume delivered
upon the wind. The cornfields bow in humility, then the
wheatstalks raise
upwards in praise. The trees spread wide their worshipping
branches and the
barleyheads whisper together of His sungiven bounty. He is the
Fountainhead of All
Life, the Overseer of the Fertilising Waters and the Captain
of the Stars".
"Men stand
beneath the great dome of the nightskies and are overawed by the work
of their architect
and by the bright mysteries displayed in such a pattern of
beauty. They become
dismayed at their own smallness, but are reassured by His
words which have
come down to them from ancient times".
"God has
crowned man with life and set the scepter of intellect in his hand. He
has given him the
flail of mastery over all other living creatures and set him
on the throne of
creation. He disciplines us when young and stretches out a
welcoming hand when
we near the end of life's journey. He accompanies men on
their pilgrimage
along the road of life, mitigating their misfortunes and
rejoicing with them
in its pleasant surprises. He balances the lives of all men,
so they continually
encounter conditions and situations meet for them".
"The
widespread, mysterious Heavens are His throne and bountiful Earth His
footstool; no
structure man could build would contain Him. Did He need a
residence, no place
built by the hands of man could compare with that which His
hands could erect. There
is nothing on Earth that man can give God which could
add to God's glory
or increase what He has. The only acceptable sacrifice man
can offer is service
to the will of God, and God's will is that man should
spiritualise himself
and improve the Earth. To offer goods or money as a
sacrifice is an
insult to God, it is shirking the needful effort, evading the
necessary duty and
obligation; it is the easy way and not acceptable".
"God is the
refuge of the poor and the comforter of the needy. His compassion
encompasses men when
troubles weigh heavily upon them. Yet tribulation and
adversity, sorrow
and suffering are not to be thought of as needless burdens
imposed upon the
difficulties inseparable from earthly life. They are things of
value which open the
eyes to Truth, tempering the spirit, as iron is tempered in
the flame".
Eloma taught many
things and she forbade any man to fornicate with unwedded
matrons whose silver
tongue beguiled and whose winsome ways led men astray. She
also decreed that
men should not fornicate with any maid or another's wife , for
none so doing could
call himself an honourable man, and such deeds canker the
spirit.
It was Eloma who
taught men the wisdom of the stars which journeyed according to
their destinies. She
taught them to interpret the pattern of each man's life,
which is woven from
the threads of fate and destiny and interwoven with the many
coloured strands of
enidvadew. These things were learned and written down by
Ishkiga.
CHAPTER THREE
THE FLOOD OF ATUMA
Behold, was this not
written in the days of our fathers' fathers and of their
fathers before them,
and given unto us that we should pass it in to you, the
children of days yet
unborn? That if the ability of the scribe remains with you
it could be read in
your generation.
Read, O children of
the unborn years, and absorb the wisdom of the past which is
your heritage. The
enlightening words from a past which is to you, in days so
far away and yet in
Truth so near.
We are taught that
we live forever, and this is true, but it is equally true
that no moment of
life must be wasted; for each hour and day on Earth is a
shaping for the
future. We are the inheritors of a portion of time, we can
dissipate it on
futile things or utilize it to our everlasting benefit. In the
days of our fathers,
before barren teachings clogged the thoughts of men, and
vain, formal ritual
built a wall which obscured understanding, men walked in the
light of Truth. Then
they knew there was One God alone, but because they allowed
their higher
abilities to fall to disuse, they saw less clearly. Because He
appeared in
different aspects, they thought He was many.
Now, in our days,
God has many varied forms in the eyes of men and each declares
he alone knows the
true name and likeness of God. Here all men fall into error,
though all have
spoken truly according to their understanding. But Truth can
never bow to the
limited understanding of man, the comprehension of man must
expand to grasp it.
In olden times there
were spawned great monsters and beasts in fearful form,
with frightful
gnashing teeth and long ripping claws; an elephant was but a cat
in comparison with
them. Then, because of heavenly rebellion and turmoil, and
the terror
overwhelming the hearts of men, The Great One hardened the face of
the land, which had
become unstable, and the beasts were changed to stone. This
was beforetimes,
when the Destroyer still slumbered in the upper vaults of
Heaven.
Thus, it is written
in the record of Beltshera; In those days the people were
wicked and though
the wise men among them gave many warnings of the wrath to
come, they would not
listen, such is the way of the wicked. So it came about
that the Chastening
Spirit became stirred up against them because of the odour
of wickedness
arising from the Earth, for her nostrils abhor the smell of evil.
This is a smell no
man can know, for as the hounds know the smell of fear, which
no man can detect,
so can other beings know the smell of wickedness.
The great floodgates
which are above Earth were all opened. Thus, the
floodwaters rose up
to cover the land and great rainstorms lashed down. The
winds could no
longer discover their destinations.
The people left the
plain of Shinara and fled up into a great mountain rising
above the flatlands
below, and here, near the summit, they camped. Feeling
themselves secured,
the wicked mocked, saying, "No water can ever reach up here,
for there is not
enough of it in Heaven or Earth". Still the waters rose ever
higher and the mouths
of the wicked were silenced. The priests of the people
danced and chanted
in vain, and many rituals were performed to appease the wrath
above.
There came a period
of quietness, then the people built a gateway to Heaven
wherein the Chief of
Interpreters might commune with the Other Realm. He entered
into the silence and
cast his spirit, and when he had done so it contacted the
Chastening Spirit
which men call by other names. Her voice was heard within his
heart and it said,
"I am that which has been called forth by the odour of
wickedness arising
from the bodies of men, which no incense can disguise. For as
the smell of
putrefaction assails the nostrils of men, so does wickedness give
forth something
which assails us in this realm. Wickedness is, therefore, an
offence against us.
If a man threw filth over the wall into your courtyard,
would you not
consider this an act of hostility? Could any among you live in
harmony with those
who were insensitive to your own sensitivity? Thus, I am
awakened to
happenings in the world of men and am now clothed in a performing
substance".
The Spiritbeing
said, "I have no desire to unduly punish men. Go out to the
people and tell them
that if they will but mend their ways and walk no more in
the path of wickedness,
I shall depart". But when the Chief of Interpreters
returned to the
people he found them fearful and distraught, clay in the hands
of false priests,
devotees of the baleful gods. The false priests were crying
out for a sacrifice
to their gods and had seized Anis, a young man more handsome
than any other, a
messenger and runner between cities. Then, though they
whispered fearfully
among themselves concerning the deed, the people had seized
Nanua, handmaiden of
Eloma, the Enlightened One, whose life was dedicated to
Illana, for she had
cried out curses upon their heads when the young man was
taken.
Nanua and Anis were
held by the false priests and about them surged the great
mass of the people,
and though the Chief of Interpreters raised his voice it
went unheeded. Then
the mass of the people moved down to the water's edge and
there they stopped
while the priests shouted prayers to the gods raging above.
All the Heavens were
darkened with great rolling clouds and there were high
winds and lightning
about the mountain top. The people rent their garments, the
women wailed and men
struck their forearms. Anis was beaten with a club and
delivered to the
waters.
Then, as he who
wielded the club turned towards Nanua, she said to those about
her, "Let be, I
will deliver myself to the waters, for if I must be sacrificed I
would be a better
sacrifice so given". Then she went down to the waters, but as
her feet entered she
drew back from the cold dark watery depths before her. But
as the one who
wielded the club moved forward, a young man, Sheluat the Scribe,
a man of quiet ways,
neither handsome nor strong in body, pushed forward and,
taking her by the
hand, went down into the waters with her.
The waters had risen
high and men shared the place where they stood with wild
beasts and with
sheep and cattle, but now the tumult quietened and the waters
drew back. Seeing
this, the people shouted praises to the baleful gods and cried
out, "Great are
the mighty gods, and great their holy priests!"
The Chief of
Interpreters went sorrowfully apart, hiding himself, for now he was
fearful for his
life. When the waters had subsided, he cast his spirit and
entered into
communion with the Chastening Spirit, and he said, "Shall I also
enter the falling
waters as a sacrifice? For life is now futile, as I am without
God or honour".
The Great One answered, "Men see in events the things they wish
to see, they can
interpret only according to their understanding. The waters
rose to their
limitations and did not fall because of the needless sacrifices.
The Powers above may
ordain events to chasten men, but more often such events
are challenges and
tests. However, divine intervention is rare indeed".
"These priests
follow another, a longer path, but they too condemn wickedness
and they too point
the way to Truth, though that way may be indirect and beset
with hazards. So
whether they or you reached the ears of the people the odour of
wickedness will be
diminished. Divine ends are achieved by diverse means, and
the eyes of few men
are opened to see either the means or the end".
"Life is never
futile, but your sacrifice would be. No man can lose his God, for
He is always there;
but the prestige of a man because of that God such prestige
is a worldly thing
of little real value. How do you know whether you have lost
or gained? Events of
the moment cannot be weighed in the moment, but can be
assessed only by the
judgement of the years. Only eternity knows whether this or
that was good or
bad, a gain or loss".
Then the Great One
opened the eyes of the Chief of Interpreters, so he saw
beyond the earthly
border into the realm beyond. Behold, he saw Anis who had
been strong and
handsome on Earth, and now he was something not pleasant to gaze
upon. He saw also
the true beauty of Nanua who was now a being of dazzling
loveliness, and
beside her was Sheluat who had always loved her secretly, and he
was now glowing with
youth and handsome as Helith. The Chief of the Interpreters
then understood that
evil could be transmuted into good, and that men had little
knowledge of the
true nature of things.
Upon the mountain
there is now a grove of trees and a temple built in the form
of a circle of white
stones, where the people remember the day of their
deliverance. But
what they recall and what happened are not the same, nor is the
cause in their minds
the true cause. They say, "We are the children of Atuma who
saved us". Many
who have gone often to the Temple of Deliverance say they have
seen two shades, one
radiantly beautiful and one gloriously handsome, wandering
hand in hand through
the trees or sitting in the sunlit glades. All about is now
a place of peace.
Men walk under the
shadow of dread and fear of unknown powers fills their
hearts. They have fashioned
images in the likeness of the things which frighten
them in the gloom of
their ignorance, and they spurn the real for the unreal.
Did they see more
clearly they would know that the things they fear are but
gentle and sturdy
hands which can lead them to fields of contentment.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE DELUGE
It is written, in
The Great Book of the Firehawks, that Earth was destroyed
twice, once
altogether by fire and once partially by water. The destruction by
water was the lesser
destruction and came about in this manner.
The people of those
times spurned all spiritual things and men lived only for
pleasure, caring
little for the good of mankind or the future of the people.
Lewdness and lies
were upon the tongues of all men and brother could not deal
justly with brother.
The princes and governors were corrupt and proper tribute
was not paid, the
statues were held up to scorn. The lives of men were ruled by
their desires and
they spent their days in gluttony, drunkedness, fornication,
dancing and singing
to instruments of music.
The land was
unattended, for men dissipated their strength in unproductive lusts
and pleasures. Women
lacked shame, for many would cast their glances after one
man. Men fought
among themselves and even slew one another because of their
lusts for worthless
women, while the chaste women were not sought. They were
even rejected, for
men declined the effort of being worthy of them in the eyes
of their fathers.
Wives were unhonoured and only the women of pleasure commanded
the attentions of
men. Women were unclean and immodest and men lay with them
shamelessly in the
presence of one another. Old women were more lustful than the
young ones, while
virgins were seduced and corrupted in their childhood. Fathers
fornicated before
their sons and were admired for their prowess. They made no
distinction between
their sons and other men, or between their wives and other
women. Deceit and
violence were seen on every hand.
To the East and
North were high mountains upon which dwelt a tribe called The
Sons of Nezirah, The
Men of the Mountains, who were hardy men and mighty
hunters, skillful in
the chase and valiant in battle. The men were upright,
their wives were
faithful and their sons noble. In their hearts were no unworthy
thoughts, no envy or
hate, no malice or deceitfulness. They did not smile before
a man's face,
uttering smooth words, then when he turned his back reach out to
stab him. In their
wives and daughters there was no impure longing, and neither
cursing nor lying
was heard among them. The womenfolk respected their men and
maintained decency
and decorum.
Yet they were men
with men's ways, abhorring all forms of unmanliness and
degeneracy.
Therefore, the treasures in the cities of the plains and the
weakness of the
people to whom these belonged did not go unnoticed by The Sons
of Nezirah. So they
said among themselves, "Let us go down and do a good deed
among these people,
let us show them the ways of men who are strong, making them
slaves and
possessing ourselves of their goods". This talk continued among the
men in the
marketplaces and gatherings, until they were stirred up to deeds, and
they gathered
together a warband of fighting men. The Mountain Men chose leaders
from among
themselves, after their custom, and prepared to fall upon the
soft-living people
of the plains and become their masters.
When the chiefs of
The Mountain Men saw what was happening, they became wroth
and ordered their
men to return to their flocks and pastures. The chief of
chiefs stood up
before the gathered warband and said, "It is our decree that
this thing shall not
be done, you must not go down from these mountains bringing
the sword to these
people. Leave them alone, as rotted fruit is left on the tree
to whither and die.
Leave them to follow their own ways a little longer and in
the fullness of time
they will destroy themselves. Make no widows among your own
people. If you go
down there carrying fire and sword, you may find a trap laid
for you among the
fleshpots. The attraction of their pleasure and the
temptations of their
luxury is, to strong men such as you, like the lure the
flame has for the
moth. Do not lay yourselves open to destruction, even though
the manner of its
accomplishment be pleasant. If you must destroy this people,
then destroy utterly
so nothing remains. They are many while we are few, and
though by the keen
hardhitting sword we may prevail in battle, yet might we not
be lost under a
deluge of soft feathers? Will you be wise enough to sup on milk
and honey without
being drowned in it?"
For a time the
fighting men heeded the words of their chiefs, for they were
neither willful nor
reckless, but there were some among them who went down to
the plains in peace.
They returned with tales of treasures and pleasures
awaiting below,
reporting that the time was ripe for an attack, the warmen hired
by the lowlanders
having departed. For in those days the gods of Sharapik strove
against the gods of
Elishdur and Ladek. Then the fighting men disregarded the
commands of their
chiefs and, choosing war captains from among themselves, went
down and fell upon
the people of the plain.
The people of the
plain bowed before the strength of the men of the mountains.
They did not fight,
for among all their possessions they regarded their lives as
the most valuable
thing, precious above all else. They said, "Take whatever we
have, our riches and
harvests, the treasured things from our dwellings, even our
daughters for your
amusement, but leave us enough that we may live under your
shadow". The
sturdy men of the mountains were sickened by these half men who had
lived for three
generations without fighting, and they despised them.
The battlehardened
men who had come down from the highlands took whatsoever they
desired. The
plainsmen demurred, but because their stomachs turned to water
before the virility
of their conquerors, their protestations were words of wind.
The victors clothed
themselves in plundered finery and indulged themselves in
the wines and
delicacies of the food tables. They slept in beds of luxury and
dissipation, every
want being attended to by the vanquished. They learned the
ways of sensuality
which goes with soft-living, and when sated with natural
pleasures some
lightened their boredom with unnatural ones. The Mountain Men saw
that the women of
the cities were beautiful but they were not modest, casting
their charms before
the masters, unashamed; so it followed they were taken when
required and treated
as chattels. The women did not complain, though hitherto
they had stood equal
with their menfolk, but woman's equality with half men is
not something of
value.
With women like this
the men placed no restraint on their lust and went from
excess to excess.
The women, rejoicing in the strength and vigour of the men,
said among
themselves, "Here are men indeed such as we have not known before".
Then, in the manner
of women, they turned away from their own men and from the
households of their
husbands and fathers, for now they despised them. They threw
off all womanly
restraint and grappled with the victors like ravening beasts,
and the strong were
vanquished by weakness. Always do women behave thus when
their menfolk are
defeated in battle, it is for this men fight.
None came to do
battle with the victors, for they who had fought for the gods
had destroyed
themselves and in the fullness of time the victors, too, were
destroyed by the
fleshpots, by fornication and drunkenness, by ease and luxury.
Their fighting
strength and valour departed with the passing years, they grew
fat and slothful.
They who had come down in manly array to fight and win, who
could not be
challenged in battle by the lesser men of the plains, were eaten up
in the mansions of
pleasure, in the drinking booths, with music, wine and fine
linen.
Upon the mountain
and in the mountain homes there was weeping and sadness among
the women. Fields
were untilled and cattle strayed away, sheep went unplucked.
The best craftsmen
were gone and few remained willing to learn their skill, the
teachers of learning
taught no more. The gnarled hand that had wielded the sword
and terrorized the
foe now plucked the strings of psaltery and lyre. The rough
jerkins and
corselets were cast off and now garments were of fine linen dyed
purple and crimson.
Men arrayed their softening bodies in gaudy attire and
bathed in scented
waters. They rejected their own women for those of the cities
whose hands and feet
were stained with bright colours and whose faces were
marked with blue.
One day, from afar
off came three men of Ardis, their country having been
stricken by a
mountain burst. They were worshippers of The One God whose light
shines within men,
and when they had lived in the two cities for a number of
days they were
stirred up in their hearts because of the things they saw. So
they called upon
their God to see these evil things. Their God sent down a curse
upon the men of the
cities, and there came a strange light and a smoky mist
which caught at the
throats of men. All things became still and apprehensive,
there were strange
clouds in the skies and the nights were hung with heaviness.
Many days passed
before a northwind came and the skies cleared; but then, when
women conceived they
bore devils. Monstrosities came forth from their wombs,
whose faces were
terrible and whose limbs were unproportioned.
In those days men
knew the art of working clay and making linen in bright
colours, and also
the use of eye paint. They had knowledge of herbs and magic,
of enchantment, and
the wisdom of The Book of Heaven; the knowledge of signs and
omens, the secrets
of the seasons, of the moon and the coming of the waters.
The remnants of the
Sons of Nezirah remained upon the mountains which are
against Ardis, by
the land about the encampment of Lamak. In Ardis there were
wise men filled with
the inner wisdom, who read The Book of Heaven with
understanding and
knew the signs. They saw that the deeds of men in all the
lands about the
mountains had brought them to their hour. Then the day came when
The Lady of the
Night changed her garment for one of a different hue, and her
form swept more
swiftly across the skies. Her tresses streamed out behind in
gold and copper, and
she rode in a chariot of fire. The people in those days
were a great
multitude and a loud cry ascended into Heaven.
Then the wise men
went to Sharepik, now called Sarapesh, and said to Sisuda, the
King, "Behold,
the years are shortened and the hour of trial draws nigh. The
shadow of doom
approaches this land because of its wickedness; Yet, because you
have not mingled
with the wicked, you are set apart and shall not perish, this
so your seeds may be
preserved". Then the king sent for Hanok, son of Hogaretur,
and he came out of
Ardis, for there he had heard a voice among the reeds saying,
"Abandon your
abode and possessions, for the hour of doom is at hand; neither
gold nor treasure
can buy a reprieve".
Then Hanok came into
the cities and said to the governors, "Behold, I would go
down to the sea and
would therefore build a great ship, that I may take my
people upon it. With
me will go those who trouble you and they will take the
things which cause
you concern; therefore, you will be left in peace to your own
enjoyment". The
governors said, "Go down to the sea and build your ship there,
and it will be well,
for you go with our blessing". But Hanok answered, "It has
been told to me in a
dream that the ship should be built against the mountains,
and the sea will
come up to me". When he had gone away they declared him mad.
The people mocked
him, calling him Commander of the Sea, but they did not hinder
him, seeing gain in
his undertaking. Therefore a great ship was laid down under
the leadership of
Hanok, son of Hogaretur, for Sisuda, king of Sarapesh, from
whose treasury came
payment for the building of the vessel.
It was built on the
Lake of Namos, close by the river of gold, where it divides.
All the household of
Hanok was there and the household of his brother who
directed the men at
the task. Dwyvan, captain of ships, from the land beyond
Ardis, was overseer
of the craftsmen. The women and children carried and the men
built. The length of
the great ship was three hundred cubits, and its breadth
was fifty cubits,
and it was finished off above by one cubit. It had three
storeys which were
built without a break.
The lowermost was
for the beasts and cattle and their provender, and it was laid
over with sand from
the river. The middle one was for birds and fowls, for
plants of every kind
that are good for man and beast, and the uppermost one was
for the people. Each
storey was divided in twain, so that there were six floors
below and one above,
and they were divided across with seven partitions. In it
were cisterns for
water and storehouses for food, and it was built with askara
wood, which water
cannot rot or worms enter. It was pitched within and without
and the cisterns
were lined. The planks were edged and the joints made fast with
hair and oil. Great
stones were hung from ropes of plaited leather, and the ship
was without mast or
oars. There were no poles and no openings, except for a
hatch beneath the
eaves above whereby all things entered. The hatch was secured
by great beams.
Into the great ship
they carried the seed of all living things; grain was laid
up in baskets and
many cattle and sheep were slain for meat which was smoked by
fire. They also took
all kinds of beasts of the field and wild beasts, birds and
fowls, all things
that crawl. Also gold and silver, metals and stones.
The people of the
plains came up and camped about to see this wonder, even the
Sons of Nezirah were
among them, and they daily mocked the builders of the great
ship; but these were
not dismayed and toiled harder at the task. They said to
the mockers,
"Have your hour, for ours will surely come".
On the appointed
day, they who were to go with the great ship departed from
their homes and the
encampment. They kissed the stones and embraced the trees,
and they gathered up
handfuls of the Earth, for all this they would see no more.
They loaded the
great ship with their possessions and all their provender went
with them. They set
a ram's head over the hatch, pouring out blood, milk, honey
and beer. Beating
upon their breasts, weeping and lamenting, the people entered
the great shop and
closed the hatch, making it secure within.
The king had entered
and with him those of his blood, in all fourteen, for it
was forbidden that
his household go into the ship. Of all the people who entered
with him, two
understood the ways of the sun and moon and the ways of the year
and the seasons. One
the quarrying of stones, one the making of bricks and one
the making of axes
and weapons. One the playing of musical instruments, one
bread, one the
making of pottery, one the care of gardens and one the carving of
wood and stone. One
the making of roofs, one the working of timbers, one the
making of cheese and
butter. One the growing of trees and plants, one the making
of ploughs, one the
weaving of cloth and making of dyes, and one the brewing of
beer. One the
felling and cutting of trees, one the making of chariots, one
dancing, one the
mysteries of the scribe, one the building of houses and the
working of leather.
There was one skilled in the working of cedar and willow
wood, and he was a
hunter; one who knew the cunning of games and circus, and he
was a watchman.
There was an inspector of of water and walls, a magistrate and a
captain of men.
There were three servants of God. There was Hanok and his
brother and their
households, and Dwyvan and six men who were strangers.
Then, with the
dawning, men saw an awesome sight. There, riding on a great black
rolling cloud came
the Destroyer, newly released from the confines of the sky
vaults, and she
raged about the Heavens, for it was her day of judgment. The
beast with her
opened its mouth and belched forth fire and hot stones and a vile
smoke. It covered
the whole sky above and the meeting place of Earth and Heaven
could no longer be
seen. In the evening the places of the stars were changed,
they rolled across
the sky to new stations, then the floodwaters came.
The floodgates of
Heaven were opened and the foundations of Earth were broken
apart. The
surrounding waters poured over the land and broke upon the mountains.
The storehouses of
the winds burst their bolts asunder, so storms and whirlwinds
were loosed, to hurl
themselves upon the Earth. In the seething waters and
howling gales all
buildings were destroyed, trees were uprooted and mountains
cast down. There was
a time of great heat, then came a time of bitter cold. The
waves over the
waters did not rise and fall but seethed and swirled, there was
an awful sound
above.
The pillars of
Heaven were broken and fell down to Earth. The skyvault was rent
and broken, the
whole of creation was in chaos. The stars in the Heavens were
loosened from their
places, so they dashed about in confusion. There was a
revolt on high, a
new ruler appeared there and swept across the sky in majesty.
Those who had not
laboured at the building of the great ship and those who had
mocked the builders
came quickly to the place where it was lying. They climbed
upon the ship and
beat upon it with their hands; they raged and pleaded, but
could not enter
inside, nor could they break the wood. As the great ship was
borne up by the
waters it rolled and they were swept off, for there was no
foothold for them.
The ship was lifted by the mighty surge of waters and hurled
among the debris,
but it was not dashed upon the mountainside because of the
place where it was
built. All the people not saved within the ship were
swallowed up in the
midst of raging confusion, and their wickedness and
corruption was
purged away from the face of the Earth.
The swelling waters
swept up to the mountain top and filled the valleys. They
did not rise like
water poured into a bowl, but came in great surging torrents;
but when the tumult
quietened and the waters became still, they stood no more
than three cubits
above the Earth. The Destroyer passed away into the fastness
of Heaven and the
great flood remained seven days, diminishing day by day as the
waters drained away
to their places. Then the waters spread out calmly and the
great ship drifted
amid a brown scum and debris of all kinds.
After many days the
great ship came to rest upon Kardo, in the mountains of
Ashtar, against
Nishim in The Land of God.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE BIRTH OF
HURMANETAR
Hanok had three
brothers by his mother and one by Sadara, two were with him on
the great ship and
one was saved in Megin. Hanok ruled all the land of Bokah,
and his sons, Labeth
and Hatana, were born at Nasira, after the great ship
became fast.
His brothers divided
the water-washed land between them. One went to Tirdana and
built a city there,
and he ruled the western waters. One ruled the eastern
waters and the
swamps down to the waters of the sea. The other raised up Eraka
in the midst of
them, and he was the greatest. The city of Eraka stood for a
thousand years, but
in the days of King Naderasa the people made great images
with faces of gold
and bodies of brass. Children were offered to these demons
conceived in
wickedness. Then God in His wrath unleashed the winds and they were
swept through the
city as a whirlwind. The gold-faced images were thrown one
against another and
were broken, they fell and were buried under their temples.
Eraka was then
removed from the eyes of men.
All the cities were
rebuilt and the kings were dead; the people had multiplied
greatly when
Lugadur, he who taught the working of metals, was born. He was the
mightiest of kings
and his deeds are known to all men and written in his books.
Wisdom came to the
land by the hand of our father Hurmanetar who was called
Hankadah, born at
Egelmek in the land of Khalib under Eraka, of Nintursu, Maiden
of the Temple, by
Gelamishoar, Builder of Walls, son of Lugadur the Metalworker,
son of Dumath the
Shepherd, son of Gigitan the Tiller of the Soil.
In the days when the
mother of Hurmanetar carried him under her heart with pain,
the king, his
father, had a dream. He saw a woman and knew he had just lain with
her but could not
see her face clearly, for whenever he almost recognized it the
likeness changed to
that of another. The woman was purifying herself over a bowl
of incense, and
while so doing she made water. Then a great cloud of smoke arose
up from out of the
bowl and filled all the room, and it went out through the
doors and filled all
the city and all the temples of the city.
The following night
the king was disturbed by the same dream. Therefore, knowing
he had received an
omen, upon his arising he hastened to send a messenger to the
Temple of the
Stargazers. Two wise men came and he told them concerning his
dream, requesting
that they read its meaning. Having heard the words of the king
they, thereupon,
left, going away to consult The Book of Heaven to discover what
was written in the
future concerning such a matter. In two days they returned,
coming in unto the
king as he sat within the hall of judgement, and they bowed
before him saying,
"Woe unto us your servants for what we have to say, for thus
it is written. One
is to be born of a woman whom you have ravished and he will
be a slayer of
kings, a destroyer of temples and a contender with the gods. He
is one born to be
great among men and his hand will be against you".
Hearing this the
king bethought himself of the women he had taken by force, but
they were many and
scattered. So he sent again for the wise men, requesting
their aid, and the
wise men received his words.
Now, the wise men
knew these things were written of a son to be born to
Nintursu, but they
were perplexed not knowing what to do, for she was a Maiden
of the Temple of the
Seven Enlightened Ones, which had been built in the days of
Sisuda. If the blood
of one thus born were shed or its breath stopped within the
boundaries of the
land, the corn would perish within the furrow and the blossom
would fall from the
trees, so that they yielded no fruit. Yet the wise men were
not loath to bring
down the wrath of the king upon this temple, for it was one
whose god had but
small estate yet it paid no tribute to the god of the land.
Nor did they desire
to deceive the king in this matter, for if by perchance the
deceit were uncovered
they lost their protection.
The wise men,
therefore, went before the king and spoke thus, "O king, light of
our lives, we your
servants have discovered this child, though it is yet unborn.
It is to be born of
a maiden bound to the Temple of the Seven Enlightened Ones;
therefore, its blood
may not be shed on land worked by the hand of man, nor may
its breath be
stopped. So now we say unto you, send those who are your most
trusted servants and
let them take this maiden and carry her away to a place
afar off. If it be
beyond the boundaries of this land, the child when born, can
be slain there and
no evil will befall the lands of our god." Hearing these
words, the king
remembered the Maiden he had taken for his pleasure, for while
hunting he had come
upon her as she bathed. Neither the temple nor its god were
known to him and he
had no fear of its priests.
The king called his
chamberlain to his side, a man most trusted, and charged
him, saying,
"Go take this Nintursu, this temple maiden, and carry her into the
land of Kithis,
entering by stealth. She is with child and when it is born slay
it letting its blood
fall upon the soil in the land of Kithis".
The chamberlain
prepared and departed, taking with him men of blood and their
captain. They
traveled so they came upon the temple at first light in the
morning. Nintursu
was taken and they left ornaments of gold and silver.
Now, Nintursu was
not delivered of the child when they came to the boundary of
the land, so they
camped there and in the days that followed men went out to
spy. The captain was
a man skilled in war and courageous, a man of many battles,
and Nintursu spoke
often with him. But between her and the chamberlain few words
were spoken.
It happened that
when Nintursu's time was upon her and the child to be
delivered, it was
the days of full moon; therefore, the child could not be
slain, so they bided
until the dark of the moon. Then, when the order of things
was right, the
chamberlain called the captain and said, "This is a task for a
man of blood and I
am not such a one, therefore you take the child and slay it
over the border.
Seven men will go with you, that all these may bear witness to
the deed and swear
to it".
Now, the men of
blood were grim men of battles, strangers to soft beds and
gentle ways of
women, but some among them were the companions of Nintursu during
the first days of
her motherhood. Also there was one whose father had been a
worshipper at the
Temple of the Seven Enlightened Ones before it was abandoned
by all who followed
the king. There were those who murmured, saying, "This is a
task for those in
high places who speak with honeyed tongues and carry concealed
knives that stab in
the back, this is not for fighting men".
It was true. This
was no task for men of clashing metal, it was a deed more
suited to
squeamish-stomached courtiers; but, lacking backbone, these have ever
needed others to do
their dirty work spawned through intrigue and conspiracy.
Lord, hasten the day
when real men are no longer manipulated by half men!
The captain put the
child into a basket prepared by Nintursu. It was placed upon
an ass. Then he and
his men went over the boundary to a place where neither tree
nor grass grew; but
about ten bowshots distant a stream ran through it to water
fields and pastures
in the valley below. When they stopped, the captain took
down the basket and
opened it, but when he gazed upon the face of the child his
heart held his hand.
He was a man of battles who slew in war, a slayer of men in
combat, not a
weak-kneed man of intrigue and slayer of children. He closed the
basket and said to
those who had come with him, "We will bide our time here
until nightfall. If
we loose the blood of the child here it will be absorbed
into dead soil and
do no harm, but if we carry it further, down into the valley,
it will fall on
living soil". None with him answered, for they were but simple
fighting men knowing
not that the blood could have been let into the waters. Or
maybe they
understood the heart of their captain.
The captain said,
"It is hot, we have time enough before those who dwell below
are asleep;
therefore, let us drink wine and rest awhile". So they drank wine
which had been
brought and rested; becoming drowsy they eventually fell asleep.
Darkness fell.
Now, the ass had not
eaten since the morning, nor had it drunk at the stream and
the captain of men
bided his time, for he had a plan and this was a place known
to him. In the
gathering darkness he put the basket, with the child inside, back
on the ass. It was a
good place of concealment, under an overhanging rock, with
thickets of thorn
all around while below the ground fell away steeply, being
covered with rocks
and loose stones. Only the captain knew how, in the darkness,
a large stone was
loosed from above, bringing down many others with it, so that
stones fell all
about the place where the men lay under the overhang. They were
heavy with wine,
they shouted, they stumbled and fell; one was struck by a dart,
another by a spear;
there was a clash in the darkness though none was killed.
The ass, loosed from
its halter, fled and none could stop it.
Wrathfully the
captain shouted, "What kind of men have I been given, why have
you not brought
trumpets to announce our coming? Who can see the ass among the
bushes or hear it
among the stones? Then, as lights appeared below and the
voices of men were
heard in the night, they withdrew.
Coming to a place of
safety the men took counsel among themselves, for the
captain of the men said,
"If you would go unpunished for this night, then you
must slay me now;
even then, can you return without me? Also, who knows where
the blood will flow?
Therefore, shall we not all say, with mine own eyes I
beheld the blood of
this child and know it is dead? Are we men of wisdom who
live, or are we
foolish ones who die? Thus, borne on the back of an ass
Hurmanetar came to
the land of Kithis.
CHAPTER SIX
THE COMPANIONSHIP OF
YADOL
Concerning our
father Hurmanetar, these things were written in the scroll of
Pakhamin, scribe of
the Firehawks. Generation had grown out of generation and
the Lord of Light
and Life had hidden Himself, for He knew the Nature of man and
none could find Him.
Time passed and they sought Him no more.
Then high riding, ass
borne, came one who was to reveal the Light to men,
praises to the Lord
of Light and Life for Hurmanetar the Lightbringer! He
wandered the
hillsides among shepherds who tended their flocks with care, and he
learned their ways.
This was the wisest of men and his body was filled to
overflowing with
manly powers; wide striding he measured the mountains broad
pastures. In anger
his face burned like the sun at noontide, while in
benevolence it shed
the calm glow of the moon in the night quietness. In courage
and skill none could
match him. He was a child like no other, before others
crawled he stood
upright; he learned his letters at three years, he could read
and write at five,
he taught those who attended the temple with him when he was
seven. He was ten
when his foster-father joined his fathers and the estate was
divided through the
women. At twelve he changed the course of the river falling
down from the
mountains to lead it through new pastures, and thus his mother
became rich. At
thirteen he was sent to the Shepherd of the City and trained
with spear and
shield. At seventeen he slew the king's right hand man and fled
to the mountains of
Akimah.
Like a beast of prey
he wandered at will, he was the mountain dweller, firm of
limb and swift-footed,
taking according to his whim from those who passed his
way. Mighty was his
bow of anshan wood, sinew-strung it sped swiftly his
straight-shot
arrows.
High on the
mountains wandered another, Yadol his name, one who lived on herbs
and wild honey, tall
and long-haired, for no knife had ever touched it. His hand
tamed a wild wolf
cub and it was his companion, wherever he went it followed.
The wild beasts did
not molest him and he walked freely among them.
Hurmanetar was a
trapper of wild breasts and he dug a pit at the place where
they came down to
water, and other traps were set. Yadol passed that way and the
pit was filled in
and the traps broken, the ensnared deer was set free. When
Hurmanetar returned
and found the pit filled in and the traps broken, his heart
was seized by a
whirlwind, he raged against the skies, he swore against the
trees. He sought,
for days he sought but could not come upon Yadol the evasive
one, the cunning
one. His traps were useless, his pits a vain labour. He
hungered and because
he hungered became less cautious. When he lay in wait among
the bushes to waylay
men who passed, he was not held back by thought of their
number but loosed
his arrows and leapt among them. Hurmanetar attacked
stormy-hearted; like
a whirlwind he attacked, but when they saw he was one alone
they stood fast.
Hurmanetar turned back into the bushes, but arrows sent after
him found their
mark.
For three days he
lay in his place upon the mountain and his leg swelled up and
he thirsted, for he
could not get water. He lay in a body of pain and his spirit
prepared to depart
from him. A wolf came and his hand sought a stone, but
weakness held his
arm, so it could not be cast. Then lo, the wolf licked his
hand and departed.
Then Yadol came, in his hand was a skin filled with fresh
water and he knelt
beside. Hurmanetar and gave him a drink. Yadol dressed the
wounds and brought
herbs to eat, and so it came to pass that Hurmanetar grew
strong again.
Thereafter,
Hurmanetar and Yadol dwelt together within a cave among the
mountains, but Yadol
would neither slay for meat nor eat of it. Yet they roamed
the wide mountains
together in joyous companionship, and their days sped swiftly
by. But Hurmanetar
longed for other things and therefore was tempted to attack
men who passed, for
he desired fine meats and garments and ornaments for his
body.
These things were
brought to the ears of the king and those about the king said,
"Let us take
men and go up into the mountain and slay this wild hill wanderer,
this manslayer and
robber". But the king bade them hold their hands, for he
desired to see the
man for himself, he wanted him taken alive and he said,
"Should any man
slay him, that man is mine". The king, therefore, took counsel
of the wisemen, saying,
"How shall we take this man, if man he be and not a
spirit of the
mountains. I would look upon him with my own eyes, for I know of
none such as he. One
such there once was, but he is no more". Then one among the
wise men said,
"This man of the mountains, if man he be, will follow the ways of
men, therefore let
us procure a harlot from the temple, a woman of pleasure, and
let her go and take
him; ensnare the hunter in the well baited trap". The king
said, "This is
no new thing, and perchance it can bring the wild man of the
mountains down to me
in chains of silk, even into the city; therefore, go and
put your words into
deeds". Then a man was sent to the temple and he brought
back Hesurta, a
woman of pleasure, in exchange for gold, and she was taken to
the hunters who knew
the ways of the mountains.
They set off,
journeying for some days, the hunters and the harlot and those
with her, until they
came to a place where there was a waterhole, close by the
way of Elamki. They
passed beyond the waterhole to the spring above, sending men
into the surrounding
forest. The day came when one returned saying, "The wild
man comes".
Then the chief of the hunters said to the woman. "O woman, bare your
breasts and sit
beside the waters, use the wiles of your calling, have no shame
but welcome him
boldly. When he comes up close reveal your secrets, drawing him
to you; teach him
the art of the harlot that ensnares men".
The woman was not
loath to take him, responding well to the task, sitting by the
waters, singing.
However, Hurmanetar circled warily about the place, but
discovered nothing
and no harm came to him. He drew closer and when he did the
harlot revealed her
secret charms and was well pleased by the eagerness he
displayed. She
instructed him in the harlot's art and they dallied there for
several days; but
the hunters did not come to take him, for they found no way to
come upon him
furtively. Then, after seven days Hurmanetar departed, passing up
the incline of the
mountainside without looking back. The harlot was afraid
because the hunters
murmured against her, but it was not her fault and the chief
of hunters said,
"Wait and see, let us bide a while yet".
Hurmanetar returned
to the place where the wild deer grazed, but Yadol was not
there and when he
crossed the wind of the deer they fled away. He went to the
cave where they
shared their rest, but Yadol was not there. The wolf alone lay
close by and
Hurmanetar called out to it, but the wolf stayed afar off, it would
not come near because
Hurmanetar was not purified from contact with the harlot.
For a day and a
night Hurmanetar stalked the mountainside wide striding along
its paths, but he
did not find Yadol; therefore, he returned to the place where
he had left the
woman. She greeted him warmly, making him welcome with cooked
meats, rejoicing in
her heart. They remained there for three days and she tamed
him to the need for
a woman. Then the day came when she said, "You are wise, you
are strong even as a
bull, why run wild upon the mountainsides with one who
deserts you at will?
Come with me unto the king, for he has heard tales of your
might and would
close his eyes to your deeds. He will give you a house and gold,
and I, Hesurta, will
become your servant. The temple of love will be opened for
you and I will show
you the delights within. Come and dwell under the shadow of
the king, for he is
mighty, he is the wild bull which roars over men".
Hurmanetar thought
and said, "No, I will not go before the king, for he does no
good in my sight. Do
not the people murmur against him, saying, "Woe for these
days, the hand of
the king rests heavily upon us, his pride knows no bounds and
no maiden is left
virgin for her husband. Neither the daughter of a man of blood
nor the wife of a
prince walks freely in the city. Are not all its doors shut
like the doors of
prisons?"
The woman thought
awhile, then said, "Who tells these things of the king, are
their words
established? He is the great king, a mountain licked by ten thousand
tongues, the king
whose whisper fills the judgement hall, whose voice echoes a
thousand leagues
away. He is the glorious king, a man perfect in strength and
proportion, his body
is one to delight the eyes of any woman. None other has his
wisdom and knowledge.
Therefore, men talk against him, for it is the nature of
men to be jealous of
those who so much excel them".
"Let us go, let
the king see you face to face and rejoice, for you are alike. O
come with me to
where each day brings new delights, where the young women are
gaily robed and the
young men wonderful to look upon. Come to where breezes are
filled with sweet
smells, where beds are soft and rooms perfumed. Come to the
place where life is
enjoyed. Come, serve the king, as you are now so was he in
his youth, but youth
departs, albeit slowly. He is the never resting one, the
son of The Lady of
Battles. Come and do not fear, all will be made ready for
you; even now the
wise men tell of your coming, and men wait to escort you in
peace".
Hurmanetar was
swayed by her words and said, "So let it be, where you go there
go I". Then
Hesurta gave him a necklace she had brought and led him to the tents
of the hunters. But
when they saw him face to face they were afraid, such was
the light held in
the eyes of the stalwart, wide striding one. Yet they
recognized him as a
man like themselves and their fear passed. So it was that
Hurmanetar went with
them and with the woman, and came to the city and went
before the king, and
the king looked upon him with favour. He gave Hurmanetar
wine and he was
drunk; and oil for his body and he was anointed. He was arrayed
in three robes, he
became a man of rank; he was given a house and servants, he
was given a
watchman. He became captain of the guards and none was like him.
To the woman of
pleasure, the harlot, the king gave bracelets of gold and sent
her away, saying,
"Go to your proper place, for you have completed the thing
required of you.
There you will be great among women, while here you will be
degraded among
them". Hesurta departed in sorrow, for even a harlot can feel
faint stirrings of
affection through the oft soiled winding cloth which enwraps
her sordid spirit.
Hurmanetar learned
the ways of the palace and walked as he willed, but soon he
became restless, for
his thoughts turned towards Hesurta. He missed her ways.
Yet many women cast
their glances towards him, but behind these was the threat
of the sword. He was
not a man of smooth and subtle ways, being unskilled in the
deceit which flourishes
under the shadow of kings. Though favoured by the king
and safe under his
mantle, he was a man alone in the palace and courtyards. He
set out to find
Hesurta, seeking her at the temple of pleasure within the temple
gate where she had
served as a harlot, but the priest said, "The woman is no
longer here, for a
harlot, given gold, thinks herself a queen, and the women
have driven her
out". Hurmanetar sought her throughout the city, but she was
nowhere to be found.
Persisting, he eventually found her at a harlot's post
beside the river,
among wineskins and men of the waters. There was one who sat
with her and he was
a man of blood, therefore armed. So when Hurmanetar came up
to them seeking to
talk with the woman, he drew his sword. When the man of blood
saw that Hurmanetar
was undismayed by this and prepared to settle the issue he
mocked him, saying,
"Why should men fight when women are plentiful and we have
half a measure of
corn?"
Hurmanetar bought
the woman from those who grow rich on the defiled bodies of
women and
established her in his house. The men about the king murmured against
him, speaking
poisoned words in the ear of the king. The women of the palace
also turned from
him. Meeting Hesurta on the street they caught her and tore her
veil off her face,
while men of subtle ways who served the king mocked behind
their hands. The men
of blood serving the king set their faces against
Hurmanetar, while in
the city men said, as he passed, "There goes the great one
who bathes in dirty
water". Therefore, Hurmanetar departed from the city, going
to dwell without its
walls among men who tilled the soil.
It was not long
before the day came when the woman saw that Hurmanetar was
downcast and so she
said to him, "O man of might, when my eyes rest upon you I
am raised above all
women and now my heart is cleansed of all that polluted it,
my body rejoices in
freedom and my life is a song of gladness. Yet I am saddened
because my heart
tells me you are sorrowful and not at ease within yourself,
that half your heart
remains in the mountains. Therefore, hear what I say, go
there once more
while I remain here to await your return, perhaps this time you
will find
Yadol". Her words made Hurmanetar sad and he said, "How can I go away
and leave you here,
who will protect you? What man can I place over you who will
not know you? Yet go
to the mountain I must, therefore you shall come with me".
They departed,
crossing by way of Hamrama, and came to the mountains high
standing and
steep-sided. They searched many days, but Yadol could not be found,
neither would any
bird or beast approach them. They wandered the mountains, they
searched the valleys
and they grew weary in the search. They returned to the
foot of the
mountains, below the place where shepherds dwelt and into the
tillage where there
was a city. It was the time of Akitoa, and Sharah, chief of
the city dwellers,
was to be married. Being invited to remain in the city as
guest, they stayed
there. When the days of feasting commenced men came in from
the mountains and
tillage, and there was much dancing and singing. Hurmanetar
and Hesurta were
made welcome, taking their places among the guests and
storytellers, eating
and drinking their fill. There was strong drink brewed from
corn and wine from
the palm, and Hurmanetar became overfilled with these and,
drunk, he fell
asleep. While he slept a man came upon Hesurta and seized her,
saying, "Come,
let us be together, so I man have pleasure and you may have
silver. I know you
are a woman of many pleasures, a servant to the vices of
men". When she
denied him his desire he sought to take her by force, but she
drew a knife and
slew him, for a woman cannot be taken by man except she
surrender herself to
his needs.
Hearing the clamour,
men came and seeing what had happened they seized the
woman. Others took
Hurmanetar and both were brought before the headman who
delivered them to a
place of confinement. When the feasting was over they were
brought before
Pitosi, one who sat in judgement. Pitosi said to Hurmanetar, "You
have come among us
as a guest and a man of good standing, therefore we know not
whether you have
been wronged or whether a man of this city has been slain
unjustly. If you
have been wronged, then also establish the standing of this
woman. It is said
that she is a harlot without standing; this being so, then you
shall pay the price
of he who is slain to his kindred and no more will be
required of
you".
Hurmanetar answered
Pitosi thus, "You are one filled with the essence of wisdom,
who justly occupies
the seat of judgement. I ask with due humility that you give
ear to my plea for
this woman who may not speak for herself. Denounce her I
cannot, instead I
will claim her as wife under the of Hudashum, for she has
dwelt with me for
twenty months and in that time has not known another man, nor
have I cause for
complaint".
Hearing this, and
because Hurmanetar made claim to the law of Hudashum, Pitosi
sent for Enilerich,
priest of the Great Temple, that he should say whether or
not Hesurta stood
before him as the wife of Hurmanetar. When the priest came he
enquired of the
woman whether she were a virgin when Hurmanetar took her. Had
she say
"yes", then the passage of three months would have given her the
standing of a wife;
but she answered "no". The priest asked her if she were a
widow when
Hurmanetar took her. Had she answered "yes", then the passage of
twenty months would
have given her the standing of a wife; but she answered
"no". Then
the priest asked if she were a harlot when Hurmanetar took her and
she answered
"yes". Therefore, as seven years had not yet passed since
Hurmanetar first
took her, she could not have the standing of a wife. Nor could
she claim to be a
harlot of the temple, for she had left its protection.
Now the mark of a
harlot was upon her and Hurmanetar had forfeited his standing
in the place of
judgement. So Pitosi gave judgement upon them and it was decreed
that when Gaila came
they would be led to the enclosure of death and there tied
back to back. The
woman would be strangled with cords, after the manner of
harlots, while
Hurmanetar would be left to carry her as a burden within the
enclosure for seven
days. Then, if the gods willed; all he might take with him
being three handfuls
of corn and a gourd of water. The judgment was fulfilled,
Hurmanetar lived. He
departed and went his way and the kindred of the slain men
failed to catch him.
Hurmanetar passed
across the land, coming at last to the temple of the Seven
Illuminated Ones,
and his mother was there. She dwelt alone with only an old
serving woman, for
now the temple was desolate and without walls. For two years
Hurmanetar dwelt
with his mother, but then his heart went out again to the
companion he had
left upon the mountainside. He said to his mother, "I must
depart, for my heart
cries out for one who saved my life and whose ways are
mine. Great is the
love of man for woman, but greater the love of man for man".
So Hurmanetar came
again to the mountains and lo, he had entered the forest but
half a day when he
came upon Yadol. How warm was the greeting, how strong the
embrace! Hurmanetar
said, "Long have I sought you and found you not, yet I come
again and you are
here". Yadol answered, "It was because of the harlot, I was
here but you saw me
not, nor could I make myself known to you".
Hurmanetar returned
with Yadol to the place where his mother dwelt and they
remained there, none
knowing what they were, for they were garbed as priests.
They tilled the
ground about the place, enjoying its fruitfulness, and both were
nourished by the
wisdom of Hurmanetar's mother.
Nintursu was the
last of the line of Sisuda. Ten thousand generations had passed
since the beginning
and a thousand generations since the recreation. The
Children of God and
The Children of Men had passed into dust and only men
remained. One
hundred generations had passed since the overwhelming deluge and
ten generations
since The Destroyer last appeared. Once man lived for less than
two score years, now
his years were three score and ten. Once God had walked
with men and men
knew only God. Now He was hidden behind many veils and few saw
Him, and then but
dimly and with great distortion. Where once there was one God
now gods were as
numbered as the stars. Yet the Great Key remained in the midst
of men and it was
here, at the Temple of the Seven Illuminated Ones, the Key of
Life, the Key which
was given into the keeping of our father Hurmanetar. It is a
secret thing,
something exceedingly great. It is not lost but has come down to
us and is known in
our times.
Now, one day, as
Hurmanetar sat beneath a tree, enjoying its shade at the height
of noon, he saw a
stranger approaching. The man was weary and staggered, so
Hurmanetar sent his
servant to bring him into the shade. The servant hastened
out and brought him
in. He was given refreshment and his feet washed, and when
this had been done
Hurmanetar asked him where he was bound and the stranger
replied, "I go
to Tagel, for in that place there is a mighty man and a just one
who will give ear to
my plea, for untoward things are happening in the great
city, things which
should not be, The people cry out in the place of assembly,
but they cry to the
wind. Gilnamnur has seized the heart of the king and now
rules. In twelve
days I am pledged to marry, but there is no lightness of a
bridegroom in my
heart, for the king elects to be first with the bride. This is
the custom come down
to us from the gods of old, but my heart is wrung like a
grape. I cannot find
it within me to give her into his keeping on the wedding
night. Therefore, I
go to find one who can challenge him at the door of the
bridal chamber, as
the custom permits, for this is no low born woman. But this
is a thing none has
heard of as having been done before in our times, for men
fear the gods. I
know of none other who may stand before the king as one
sanctified".
Hurmanetar heard him
and replied, "Be of good heart and go no further, for I am
that man".
Hearing this the stranger, filled with gratitude, fell upon his knees
before Hurmanetar
and said, "How can I thank you, how can I repay you, what can
I give?" But
hurmanetar answered, "When a man does what has to be done, then
payment and reward
sully the deed". Then he called Yadol and said, "Prepare, for
we go into the city
of the king, and because he was sanctified Hurmanetar
claimed the
protection of Erakir. Then they offered prayers in the antechamber
between Heaven and
Earth.
They dwelt with the
brother of the bridegroom until the day of the wedding feast
came, for the
bridegroom was not of this city. When the feast was over, and
before the guests
departed, the bridal chamber was made ready with the bride
within, and the
young messenger of the temple went about making his call. Then
the king came to the
antechamber, passing by the husband who was to wait
without. But there,
standing before the door, was Hurmanetar, his right hand on
the pillar, for none
might otherwise challenge the king, and in his left hand
were the reeds.
Those who were
gathered there, the men and the women, drew back and men of the
king's guard came
forward, each claiming the right to enter the combat on behalf
of the king; for one
man could precede the king but no more. Such was the
custom. The choice
of whom to fight from among those who came forward lay with
Hurmanetar, and
because he chose the captain of the guard, a man skilled in war,
the people were
amazed. But Hurmanetar knew the man's weakness. No more than
five blows were
struck when Hurmanetar, leaping to the left hand side of the
captain of the
guard, drove up under his armpit, so that he fell to the ground
and died.
Then Hurmanetar and
the king girded themselves and fought in the high courtyard,
and it was a fight
such as men had not seen before. The young and the old,
agility against
experience, stamina against cunning, they were both equal in the
fight. They slashed
at each other until their weapons broke and their shields
split. They
grappled, they stamped, they rolled in the dust, they lashed out at
each other, and the
combat went on until the water ran out, and still they both
stood. Then they
could not fight with weapons but stood disarmed, and this time
neither might cause
the death of the other. They circled each other warily,
keeping away from
the balustrade. Then Hurmanetar jumped aside and with a swift
movement caught the
king to him, twisting him so they both fell down into the
courtyard below the
ground, and the king fell over his shoulder, so that his
breastbone broke and
he remained on the ground. Then the king's guard gathered
about him and a man
skilled with medicines came forward; though grievously hurt
the king would not
die. Hurmanetar gave his seal and right to the husband and
with Yadol parted
the men who stood about in silence, for they could not harm
them. So Hurmanetar
and Yadol departed from the land, for it became closed to
them and, mounted on
mountain asses, they set out on the way of Anhu.
Hurmanetar crossed
the wide plains with Yadol until they came safely to the
stream of bitter
waters, brought there by Mamanatum, and so they came up to
Machur close by the
forest of cedars and dwelt there. This is the place where
there was a temple
to Humbanwara the Guardian.
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE DEATH OF YADOL
Hurmanetar married
Astmeth, daughter of Anukis, governor of all the Western
parts of Hamanas,
and the mother of Astmeth was Neforobtama, daughter of Hahuda,
prince of Kerami. In
those days, Daydee, daughter of Samshu, king of all the
lands to the North,
even to the land of everlasting night, ruled all the Eastern
parts of Hamanas,
and of all women she was the most beautiful.
Now, as time passed
Hurmanetar grew rich and he built himself a great house of
cedar wood and had
many servants and concubines. In these, the days of his
greatness, he forgot
the teachings of Nintursu, and the Great Key lay hidden,
for the hours of his
days were filled with worldly matters.
The overseer of
Hurmanetar's cornfields was Noaman, a man of Loza, a man whose
word was not worth
an obal of sand, for he falsified the measure. Therefore,
fingers were removed
from him and he was driven forth out of the lands of
Hurmanetar, and he
became the servant of one Sabitur. This Sabitur dwelt on the
road to Milikum,
outside the city of Kithim where Daydee ruled, and Daydee was a
great queen.
In the days when men
came to Kithim and Lodar to buy and sell, before the feast
when new-milled corn
was offered to the Bull of Yahana, Hurmanetar went up into
the city of Kithim
to pay his tribute.
Now, Gilamishoar,
the king, had died because of the thing hidden in an
earthenware box, and
the new king, wishing to know where he stood with the gods,
sent for wise men
who threw bundles of cedar wood before him. They saw he was
destined to reign in
greatness and prosperity, providing that he never quarreled
with a queen or
killed a child. Therefore, the king deemed it wise to strengthen
his peace with
Daydee and sent his son to her with many gifts.
The prince journeyed
some days then stopped at an inn a day's journey from
Kithim, and supped
there; and while he ate word was brought to him that someone
wished to speak with
him. It was Noaman, and he spoke poisoned words regarding
Hurmanetar, so these
should be brought to the ear of the queen. Thus, when
Hurmanetar entered
the city of Kithim he was seized and brought before the
queen. But when she
saw him and spoke with him, Daydee found no fault with him
and looked upon him
with favour. Therefore, though the prince departed,
Hurmanetar dallied
at the court of queen Daydee.
Time passed and
Hurmanetar came frequently to the court and he was well
favoured, but it
came about that strife arose in the lands about, for the Mother
of the Gods strove
with the Father of the Gods. It was a time of turmoil, when
the hand of brother
was against brother, and all the while Hurmanetar rose in
the esteem of the
queen. So it came about that a son was born to Hurmanetar and
Daydee. While the
lands about had been ravaged by war there was peace in Kithim,
but when the son of
Hurmanetar and Daydee was scarce one year old, men came
bearing tidings of
war; the hosts of the king had gathered and voices were
crying in the market
place. "Prepare to die, for those who are mightier than the
Humbala are upon us.
None shall be spared from the fire of the pit, neither old
men nor women and
children". For those who came were The Children of Githesad
the Serpent, the
Cunning One, whose mother was one of those who brought
defilement into the
race of men. These people knew neither justice nor mercy.
The priests and the
people went up into the mountain to gather before the cave
of Yahana. They
cried out to be delivered, they were overpowered with weakness
and their teeth
shook, their knees became weak. But Daydee remained in the city
and she appointed
Hurmanetar captain of her war hosts, and he gave the orders.
The armsmakers bent
to the task, making spears of willow wood and casting axes.
Hurmanetar freed
Turten who, because he had renounced his father, had become a
slave, and gave him
command of the bowmen. For Turten was a man of might and a
bowman of renown.
In the days when men
feared because of the bull of Heaven, the war hosts of The
Children of Githesad
gathered on the plain and the fires of their encampment
were, at night,
numbered like stars. The men of Hurmanetar encamped against
them, and when he
led the war hosts of queen Daydee out in the morning light the
men of blood faced
one another. Turten, the bowman, had been made a war captain
and he went out
before the host of Daydee to see how those who stood against
them were arrayed.
When he returned he spoke thus to Hurmanetar, "Behold my
Lord, great is the
host of The Children of Githesad and well set in their order
of battle. Behold
the long-limbed spearman, Kami the Mighty, far famed among
men, leads them. See
the powerful bowmen whose wide ranging arrows speed from
behind tall shields
which stand before them. What has Hoames failed to teach
these people? Behold
the hosts of the Husigen who are with them, led by Aknim of
the firm standard.
See to their left the spearmen of ever mighty Marduka, they
stand firm in line;
they are like the point of a nail, ready to thrust inward.
See, already the
horns of the bull spread out for the encircling clash. Slingers
already harass our
foreguard, while bowmen sting us on either side".
"Still let us
take heart. Have we not ourselves many mighty men ready to give
their life's blood
for you? Are they not all armed with every kind of weapon and
masters of war?
There are far throwing slingers and keen-eyed bowmen, there is
tall Lugal with the
flashing weapons of fire. Yet we can number our host, while
the number of those
who stand against us seem countless as the sands".
Then Hurmanetar
raised his voice, calling upon his men to stand firm-footed in
line to await the
clash and bear up before it. He said, "Think of your duty and
do not waver before
the thrusts. To step back in battle is to step back from
manhood. To take
flight would cause men to tell of your dishonour now and in the
days to come, and to
an honourable man the disgrace of dishonour is worse than
death itself. If any
of you run, the staunch ones who stood firm will say you
have fled the battle
through fear, and your comrades who expected your support
will treat your name
with scorn. Those who stand against us on the field of
blood will speak of
you with contempt and derision. They will mock your courage,
and for a true man
there can be no more shameful fate".
Then, to encourage
those who were faint-hearted, Humanetar sounded the loud
thunderous war cry.
It resounded like the roar of ten bulls. Then he caused his
companion of the
shield to blow the far sounding war horn. After this came a
rolling boom of war
drums, the ringing sound of clashing cymbals, the loud
shrilling of
trumpets and even louder trumpets filled the sky above with
thunder.
Turten, of the
powerful bow, and Lugal, of the bright weapons, prepared their
men to meet the
clash. The war hosts drew closer and the flight of arrows and
slingstones began,
followed by the hurling of flight spears. Heaven and Earth
trembled under the
fearful sound of war cries and the clamour of war horns; even
the hearts of stout
fighting men shook before they commanded themselves. Yet
those with
Hurmanetar stood firm, eager for the clash and saying, "Let us smite
those who come full
of fight and fury to do the evil will of their dark king".
Now I, Ancheti,
stood behind the slingers' wall and my limbs trembled and my
mouth was dry, my
tongue craved for water. My scalp moved in fear and my hands
loosened their grip
through moisture. My heart thumped in confusion and I saw a
mist of redness
before my eyes, for this was my first battle and I was but a
youth. Beside me
stood Yadol, the wild tender man, and he said, "I see no
gladness in victory,
if victory be granted. I crave no kingdom that I may rule
over other men. What
would be its pleasures to one such as I? For what do men
slay one another?
Which man seeks spoil and its pleasure and which man the joys
of life? Against us
stand men of living flesh and blood, men who have mothers
and wives, men who
have children, men who are good, even if those who lead them
are evil. These good
men I have no wish to slay, better would it be were I to be
slain myself. Not a
man will I slay with these hands, not even for the kingdom
of the three spheres
would I do it, much less an earthly kingdom. Were those who
stand against us all
men of evil, it would perhaps be a good deed to slay them;
but in the clash of
war the good slay the good and the evil ones live safely
behind the
shields".
"Can we slay
men made in our own likeness, brother beings? What peace shall we
henceforth enjoy in
our hearts? Will not the memory make our hearts heavy, so
that life becomes an
unbearable burden? Even if there are others among these
great war hosts who
are so overcome with greed for spoil that they see no evil
in the slaying of
men, shall we not withhold our blows from this awful deed of
blood?"
"O doom of
darkness, O day of sorrows, what evil has moved the hearts of rulers
that men be slain in
thousands for the gain of treasure and the rule of an
earthly kingdom?
What do we here on this field of blood, we who are men of peace
and goodwill? Better
by far that I stood unarmed, my breast bared, unresisting,
and let them slay
me, that I might lay in my own innocent blood". Thus spoke
Yadol as the clash
drew nigh, but only I, Ancheti, heard him.
Then the lunge and
thrust was upon us and I heard another voice beside me, that
of my uncle,
Hurmanetar, who was there, red sword in hand. The press of the foe
drew back and in the
lull Hurmanetar stood beside Yadol, the companion of his
wanderings, and
placed a hand on his shoulder in compassion, for Yadol was a man
without fear, a man
of more courage than Ancheti. On the field of blood the
craven-hearted are
truly separated from the men of peace and goodwill.
The foe swept upon
the thinning ranks again, they came like waves breaking upon
a beach. They swept
in, then sullenly, tardily, they rolled back, only to reform
and crash again. As
they cam I heard Hurmanetar open his mouth and cry out,
"They come yet
again, they are upon us, arise and greet them; arise above this
field of blood like
men, for this is the day of heroes. This is the final test,
this is the last
trial of strength, the last effort to cast back. Why this
lifeless rejection
of all that is manly? Strong men cannot despair in their
hearts when facing
conflict and death, this gains neither victory on Earth nor
peace in Heaven.
Stand as you have done, firm-footed, rising to the battle clash
like the whirlwind
that carries all before it. We are but men who know nothing
of the causes of
gods and their ways. I fight for the cause of loyalty and
honour, I know not
whether their victory or ours be best for the true cause of
God, but I fight.
Come, rise to the clash".
Then the remnants of
the war hosts came together in the clash of arms. The cruel
weapons struck on against
the other, blow and counter blow. There were dull
cries of death, the
shrieks of pain and the shrill shout of victory, the last
efforts of weary
bodies, the last cries of dry-throated voices. The men of
Hurmanetar stood
firm in the line and the war hosts of those who sought to
overwhelm them broke
like a wave upon the seashore, they came no more.
Hurmanetar stood
blooded and proud in the exultation of victory, but it passed
in a moment when he
saw Yadol lying among the dead and dying, wounded to death
but not yet dead. He
had taken upon himself the spear thrust meant for Ancheti.
Hurmanetar lifted
him up, his knee under his head, and Yadol opened his mouth
and said, "The
Great One has given you the victory, and for you, behind and
beyond the victory,
I see a great destiny, and therefore a difficult one. Be not
heavy-hearted, nor
let your spirit grieve, heavy-laden with sorrow because of
me. Weep not, for
this I know, he who thinks he can slay another or be slain by
him is devoid of
enlightening truth. The spirit of man cannot perish by the
sword or be
overwhelmed by death".
"The sharp
weapon of war cannot harm the spirit, nor can fire burn it. Waters
cannot drown it and
soil cannot bury it. My spirit departs to its abode beyond
the power of sharp
sword, beyond the reach of thrusting spear, beyond the range
of swift arrow. Now,
face to face with what must be and cannot be altered, face
to face with the
ultimatum of destiny, cease from sorrow".
"What is this
passing thing called life? This fragile flower so tenderly
cherished, seen in
its true frailty here on the field of blood. Does it have any
real meaning? Here
on the field of blood the dead sleep to awake to glory. To
the victorious ones
remaining alive there is glory on Earth. So do not dally
here with the dying.
Arise, go to your proper reward and lay me down to mine.
Fear not for me,
already I see the welcoming light beyond the veil. We shall
meet again".
Thus Yadol departed
from Earth and he was laid to rest in glory. He sleeps among
the hills and trees,
among the wild birds and beasts which were his friends.
These words are cut
on his tomb, 'He was a man of peace and died because other
men were not as he'.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE HURMANETAR
JOURNEYS TO THE NETHERWORLD
Perhaps no man of
his day properly honoured Yadol, for he was beyond their
understanding, but
Hurmanetar loved him and Ancheti never forgot him. Long days
the thoughts of
Hurmanetar rested upon Yadol, his friend, the companion in the
joyous hunting on
the mountains. Long he thought, "What manner of sleep is this,
if sleep it be, that
fell upon Yadol? Has he decayed into dust to become
nothing, as my eyes
declare? Or does he live in some strange way? Did not the
worm fasten onto his
body before it was laid to rest, yet he knew it not". Long
hours had Hurmanetar
sat at the feet of Nintursu the wise, yet faced with the
blank stare and deaf
ears of his companion he had begun to fear the certainty of
death. Like many
before him he sought to penetrate the veil.
Therefore, having
claimed audience, Hurmanetar came before the queen to state
his intention.
Daydee, having been victorious, was exalted in her own eyes and
cared little that
the battle had been won for her by Hurmanetar and others. Now
the danger was past
she dallied with new favourites, not knowing the day of
retribution would
come, as come it surely did, for she was carried off captive
in chains, to become
the plaything of a cruel king.
Having come before
the queen Hurmanetar spoke thus, "O great queen, exalted
above all others,
great lady of battles, though dwelling here under your great
shadow I am as a cat
among pigeons, as a wild boar among a docile herd.
Therefore, I would
spread my wings, going to a distant place to communicate with
my God. I would seek
entry into the Place of the Dead. My heart is consumed with
sorrow because of
the uncertainty that grasps my heart, my spirit is restless. I
shall seek to
discover if my friend and companion yet lives in the Land of
Shadows, or whether he
is no more than mere dust, the plaything of the winds".
Queen Daydee
answered, "Wherefore must you go to some distant place to
communicate with
your God? Is He some little god to be found only in one place?
Hurmanetar replied,
"O great queen, no little god is this but the Greatest God
of All. It is not
because of His littleness that I seek Him out but because of
His Greatness. The
handmaiden goes to the dressmaker but the dressmaker comes to
the queen".
Then Daydee enquired from Hurmanetar as to the nature of this God,
for she was curious,
he not having previously discussed such things with her.
She asked him for
which God he fought, but Hurmanetar said he had fought only
for her.
Hurmanetar said, :
"We have a god you and I, and you have a god and I have a
god. The people have
their gods and the strangers within your gates have their
gods; but bidden
behind all these is another God. These lesser gods are no more
than His members. It
is this God whom I seek. How can I, a mere mortal, describe
Him? Only this do I
know, as I learned it in a remote temple. This God came into
existence before all
else. He ever was, so none could know Him in the beginning
and none knows His
mysterious nature. No god came into existence before Him. How
can I even name One
who had no mother after whom His name might have been made?
He had no father who
could have named Him and said, "This is I, your father".
None can display His
likeness in writing, nor can it be cut with knife in wood
or stone. He is too
great that men should even enquire about Him. With what
words could He be
described to their understanding? No other god knows how to
call Him by name,
even the greatest of them being less than a servant before
Him. Yet this I have
been told, that the spirit of man can know this Great God
and can even know
His nature, therefore perchance the spirit of man is greater
than any of the
gods".
At this those who
stood about queen Daydee murmured against Hurmanetar, but she
gave no heed to
them, gazing long upon him. Then she spoke, "Perchance, too,
this Great God does
not exist. Who besides you knows of Him? If He be so great,
is it not more
likely that He would be worshipped by gods rather than by men? Is
it not more likely
that lesser gods stand intermediate between Him and men? If a
shepherd or
husbandman comes to the palace seeking justice or grace, does he see
me or an official
under me? You say your God is approachable by anyone, does
this enhance His
stature? Which is greater, the ruler who judges disputes
between swineherds
and listens to their complaints, or the ruler who appoints
effective officials
to deal with swineherds? Surely the former rules amid chaos
while the latter
rules with efficiency. Do not both of us believe, as all men
believe, that there
is One Great God above all gods, but we believe that being
so great this Being
is beyond approach by mere mortals. Only in this do we
differ you and
I".
Hurmanetar answered
her, saying, "I know Him not as He is, all I know is that He
exists. Look about
you, you who are enthroned so mightily high that your eyes
are bedazzled by
your surroundings, so you cannot see the Truth lesser beings
discover for
themselves. Why, even the lowly worm crawling beneath your palace
proclaims that
nothing less than an almighty God could have created it!"
"Wise were our
fathers in olden times, and wiser our fathers' fathers. Whence
came their wisdom?
Did it not come from the Great God who holds the key to the
meeting place of the
two kingdoms which now stand apart? Who lifted the lofty
vaults of Heaven and
spread Earth out in wide expanse?"
Daydee said,
"Does it matter whether it was this God or that? Your God or mine?
Suffice it was some
god named or unnamed. These are labyrinthic arguments
unsuited to those to
whom time is precious".
Then those who stood
about the queen set a snare for Hurmanetar, asking him
whether the Great
Being of whom he spoke was The Mother of All or The Father of
All. But Hurmanetar
answered, "Let he who has examined the Great Being answer,
for I am but a mere
mortal man, one not even claiming to be wise. Let the wise
among you answer for
me".
Then Hurmanetar
departed from the presence of queen Daydee. In a few days he
left her land,
driven by the God-given restlessness that marks the true seeker
after light. With
him went the youth Ancheti. Tame goats guided them to the
border of the land
and from thence they followed the Way of the Chariot until
they came to the
land of Mekan where they rested. In this place dwelt Formana,
the strong-limbed,
who gave them shelter.
Formana asked
Hurmanetar whither he went and Hurmanetar replied, "I go to seek
the abode of
Hamerit, which is set atop a mountain in the midst of this great
forest, just beyond
the river. There is a door therein which I would open, to
which I hold a
key". Formana said, 'This is an enterprise doomed for failure,
for none may pass
that way and return. I who have dwelt here for many long years
know the truth of
this; nor do I understand this talk of a key, this is a thing
new to my
ears". So Hurmanetar drew forth the Great Key shaped like a sword but
like no other sword,
for it could not be gazed upon for more than a moment
without blindness
striking the beholder. Yet within its strange scabbard it
harmed none.
Formana said,
"This many-hued weapon is a strange thing indeed and I have no
knowledge of its
like or its power. But this I do know, it is an unequal
struggle when men
alone, however weaponed, have to face dread Akamen the
Terrible One. This
is not all, for first they must pass the fearsome watchman at
the gate, and he
never sleeps". Hurmanetar said, "I have set my heart on this
enterprise because
of my friend, also if there is an evil thing lurking within
the forest it must
be destroyed. I am one whose destiny is already written, I
must die that men
might live. What a man cannot escape he must face manfully".
Then Hurmanetar left
Formana to go apart into a place of solitude where he
prayed, "O
Father of the Gods, hear me. Hear me O Father of the Gods, for there
is evil abroad in
the land and men die of despair. Even the tallest of men
cannot reach the
Heights of Heaven, or the swiftest of them encompass the Earth.
Yet men must
struggle against things beyond their reach and overcome evils which
overshadow the whole
land contained within the bitter waters. My destiny is
decreed, I alone
will enter the gate at the abode of Akamen. O Father of the
Gods, when I return
I will set up Your Name where now the name of other gods are
written, little gods
of no standing before you. I will raise a great straight
monument to your
sacred Name, if I could but know it".
"Why did You
move me, Father of the Gods, to embark on this enterprise unless I
were destined to
accomplish it? Why fill me with the restless desire to perform
it? How can I, a
mere mortal, succeed without aid? I sought no more than to know
the lot of my
friend, yet a greater burden has been allotted to me. If I die it
may be without fear,
but if I return may that return be glorified by the
knowledge of Truth.
O Father of the Gods, stand by my side, help me overcome the
lurking thing and
show it the strength of a son of Sisuda".
When Hurmanetar
returned he felt strengthened, but Formana tried to turn him
away from his
intention, saying, "Desist from this thing, put this enterprise
from your thoughts.
You have courage and it carries you far, but does it not
also sweep you along
as one caught in the swift river current is swept to
destruction? You
cannot know what this means, the Guardian at the Gate alone is
like nothing on
Earth, his weapons are like no others, for they are invisible
and strike down from
afar. Why strive to do this thing? It is no equal
struggle".
Hurmanetar replied, "My heart is set on this matter. Though I must
journey along an
unknown road, perhaps a road of no return, and fight a strange
battle, go I will. I
fear not the Terror at the Gate, nor that which dwells
within the abode of
Akamen".
Formana said,
"If go you must, then I who have seen many pass this way will go
with you to the
gate. Even through the forest I will accompany you, for am I not
one who has been
purified before the Sacred Flame? But is it wise that any other
should go with such
as we? Surely this youth, your attendant, this young man of
few years,
inexperienced in things such as we must face, should not accompany
us. Is it not more
fitting that he remain here to protect my daughters? Is it
not better to
exchange his inexperience for my experience, his youthful strength
for my wisdom and
cunning, his endurance for my steadfastness?"
Though Ancheti
protested it was agreed that he should remain behind at the
dwelling place of
Formana.
So, making things
ready, Hurmanetar and Formana departed in the morning light,
while Ancheti remained
behind, a guardian of young women, and his heart was
sore. He raised his
voice to Heaven, saying, "O Father of the Gods whom
Hurmanetar knows,
why did You give him this restless heart? Why did you bestow
it upon him? You
have stirred his spirit so now he goes into unimaginable
danger. O Father of
the Gods, of whom I am ignorant, overlook my shortcomings
and hear my voice;
from this day until he overcomes the Evil Thing and returns,
let him ever rest in
Your thoughts. Stand by him when he faces the Watchman at
the Gate. Strengthen
his arm when he strikes at the things that lurk to devour.
What these might be
or their nature is beyond my imagination. I know them only
from the talk of
men, each of whom sees them from a different stance. Yet, have
any truly seen and
lived to return? I know not, but I pray sincerely for him
whom I serve".
When Hurmanetar and
Formana came to the edge of the forest they were attacked by
lions, but they slew
the beasts. Then they entered the forest and saw great
trees such as they
had not seen before. They went sleepless, for dread things
lurked in the murky
light of the forest. They pressed on, coming to the foot of
the mountain where
they camped and slept, for it was an open place.
Then, as the sun
rose next day they climbed the mountain until they came to a
cleared place before
the cave known as the Portal of the Dead. Here Hurmanetar
took leave of
Formana who remained in a hut just beyond the cleared place.
Now, Hurmanetar
looked about, seeking the Guardian, for he knew what had to be
done before he could
enter the cave. Then he saw, to his right and beside the
cave, a stone hut
and seated before it was a very old woman. Going up to the
woman he greeted her
and said, "I am one who would enter the dread place, the
Abode of Death, the
Threshold of the Otherworld, the Door Replacing the Misty
Veil. I am one
sanctified, one knowing the Lesser Mysteries, I am an Enlightened
One".
The woman replied by
asking the three questions which all who would span the
spheres must answer,
and when this was done correctly she invited Hurmanetar
into the hut. Inside
she indicated a stool, and when he was seated she spread a
cord around him in a
circle. Then
she placed a firepot
before him, onto which she poured the contents of a small
leather bag. She
also gave him a pot of green water which he drank.
Some time later,
after he had slept awhile, Hurmanetar was conducted to the cave
and left there at a
spot known as the Devil's Mouth, for there an evil breath
came from an opening
in the ground. He remained there for awhile and again he
slept. Awaking he
moved forward into a dark passage, but bis movement was
strange and he saw
as through a narrow tunnel, while his body appeared light and
airy.
He came to the place
where the Watchman kept guard at the gate and beside him
the Terror squatted.
Hurmanetar drew his sword and faced the awful pair, he
advanced cautiously
towards them. Then, when they met the air was filled with a
loud clamour, great
hissing noises beat at the ears, shouts and screams tore
overhead. There was
a howling such as no mortal has heard outside of that awful
place. Hurmanetar
drew back a pace then advanced again and, behold, both the
Watchman and the
Terror suddenly vanished and the hideous clamour was stilled.
Hurmanetar passed
through the portal and came to a wider, more open place
wherein there was a
pool of water. It was deep, dark and still. He gazed into
the water, and
surely no mortal has ever seen such sights as he saw pictured in
its stillness. He
passed it by. Terrifying shadows leaped and quivered over the
walls as he entered
a narrowing passage, cast by some bidden ruddy light which
seemed to dance as
though alive. Then he saw daylight ahead.
He came out into the
daylight; on one hand the mountainside reared up, on the
other was a vast
chasm, between the two ran a narrow path and up this he went.
Great birds attacked
him, eagles and birds with strange heads. He fought them
off and continued
upward until he came within sight of the abode of Akamen. He
came to it after the
long journey upward and stood before the great brazen
doors, the
seven-bolted doors.
Hurmanetar saw no
Guardian before the doors, but he heard its voice as it asked
the seven questions.
He who had sat at the feet of Nintursu remembered well the
replies to make, and
as each was answered a bolt slid back. Seven questions were
asked and seven
answers rightly given. The great doors swung apart and
Hurmanetar passed
through, entering the courtyard of Akamen.
Within the courtyard
Hurmanetar fought and overcame the four great beast Beings
which feast on the
bodies of men, but the sword of Hurmanetar laid them low. He
passed through the
Hall of Contest where good and evil spirits fight an eternal
battle for the souls
of men, coming into the Chamber of Death. Now weary he sat
himself down on the
stone called the Seat of Makilam, for it was then in this
place, and he
waited.
Then Akamen the
Terrible came and Hurmanetar strove with him for half a day and
prevailed, and so he
entered into the place where stood the Door of the Spheres.
This, Hurmanetar
opened with the Great Key, he passed through and entered the
Abode of the Dead.
He held fast to the Great Key, for without it there was no
return, nor could it
be held by his own powers alone, but only through the
additional powers of
those who might come to his aid.
A mist gathered
before him, gradually thickening, and as it thickened it gave
off an ever
increasing brilliant light, at the same time shaping itself into a
glorious form of
brightness. When the shaping was complete a Being stood there,
radiant as the
sunlight and lovely as the moonbeam. Hurmanetar heard a voice
coming out from the
Glorious Being which said, "Who are you that comes hither,
wan of cheek and
with lowered countenance, heavy-hearted and dejected in spirit,
weary from a strange
fray? There is lamentation in your heart and surely none
such as you has
entered here beforetimes. Brave indeed is the one who seeks
entry by force of arms".
Hurmanetar answered, "O beautiful vision, indeed my
heart is not light,
for I have fought an inhuman contest. I have been assailed
by hideous things
unknown on Earth, things which haunt the night dreams of men
and are spoken of
only in whispers. I have come seeking a friend, a companion of
the hunt, the loyal
one of my wanderings. His death lies heavily upon my heart,
therefore I have
dared to come even unto this place".
The Form of Beauty
said, "He whom you seek lies beyond the Waters of Death, but
you who have passed
the Guardians are permitted to go thence. One thing,
however, you must
not do. In the midst of the waters grows the plant of
eternity, the
forbidden tree of which you and all men may not eat, a fruit of
which was stolen by
the serpentof ancient times. Partake of it now and you will
suffer everlasting
changelessness, the most dreadful of all fates. Go, tarry
awhile, then return
this way".
Hurmanetar passed
over the still sullen waters to the Land of Waiting where all
spirits shine redly.
He passed through the Great Doorway and came to the Place
of Glory, the Land
of Eternal Living. He saw his friend, his companion of the
hunt, the loyal one
during his wanderings. Behold, there before his eyes was
Yadol. Hurmanetar
knew him though he stood forth in a form more glorious than
can be described to
the understanding of men. He was here, life was in him, he
was here in a bright
and flowering place, a place of trees and waters, a place
such as no man can
describe.
Yadol spoke with
Hurmanetar and he spoke of things long forgotten by men and
revealed truths
unknown since the days when men walked with their Father. They
spoke one with the
other, they rested in pleasant places, they embraced and they
parted. Before
Hurmanetar left, Yadol said, "As you have passed through the
Portal of Death
while yet uncalled from the embrace of the flesh, for no purpose
other than gaining
assurance that the dead do not pass into dust, it is decreed
by the ordinance of
this place that your life shall be shortened. Time enough
you will have,
therefore record the things of which we have spoken, that they
may be guiding
lights to men. Set them down in two books, one recording the
Sacred Secrets, more
precious than life itself and for the elect alone. The
other recording the
Sacred Mysteries for those who sit at the feet of the elect.
One will be the Book
of Truth Unveiled and the other the Book of Veiled Truth,
the Book of Hidden
Things".
Yadol continued,
"Once men could pass easily from one sphere to another, then
came the misty veil.
Now men must pass a grim portal to span the spheres and, as
the generations
pass, this, too, will be closed to men. The secret of the
substances which,
compounded together, become the horse which can bear men here,
will remain with
those who know the mysteries, but these will become even harder
to reach. As the
ages roll by there will be many false mysteries and perhaps the
path will become
closed or the way lost". These things Yadol said and they
talked of other
things.
Hurmanetar returned.
He passed over the Waters of Death, he was upheld by the
Guardians of Form,
by those who safeguarded the powers of the Great Key. He
saluted the Glorious
Being, he passed through the manifold chambers, through the
courtyard and the
many-bolted doors, down the winding path lit by strange
torches, through the
cavern and out through the cave. At the entrance Formana
still waited; he
arose from his watch and greeted Hurmanetar warmly, saying, "I
saw you as one dead,
lying stiff between the twin flames, and I feared for you.
Now, behold, you
come forth with shining countenance as one in whom life has
been renewed. My
heart rejoices for you, but let us not delay, let us depart
from this dread
place, for I have spent the whole long vigil in fear-enshrouded
watchfulness".
They departed the
mountain, they passed through the forest. They fought with
things that lurked
in the gloom beneath the tall overhanging trees. They came
through the Gate of
Many Cubits and back to the pleasant pastures of Formana.
CHAPTER NINE
ASARUA
Ancheti had been
left with the daughters of Formana who, having just reached
maidenhood, were
wilful and vexed him sorely, so that he sought places of
solitude, being an
unbearded youth unlearned in such matters. Beyond the place
where they dwelt
there was a river, and from the hillside, away from the forest,
a small stream
flowed down to join it. Upward of the stream was a valley in
which lay a small
lake fed by an unfailing stream of sweet water. Here, in a
house of wattle,
dwelt a maiden whose name was Asarua, and she lived with her
mother, Mamuah, who
was a wise woman and blind.
The young woman had
barely reached maidenhood and neither hunted for food nor
dug in the ground.
She dwelt in a garden of trees, her implements of toil being
pruning hook and
knife. Her days were spent in joyful tasks and a song was ever
on her lips. She
worked happily among the trees, loosening the soil about their
roots, cutting away
the overgrowth and pulling up the weeds. She knew the art of
fostering twigs so
that fruits grew on trees strange to them. She grew vines,
the fruits of which
were not used for wine, and these she twined around bowers
and over the
branches of trees.
The women dwelt
under the protection of Asarua's father, but the mother of
Asarua was not of
his household, for he was a strange king though a mighty one.
The place wherein
they dwelt was fenced about and guarded by seven fierce
hounds, tawny-coated
and long of body. The maiden was supple and firm-breasted,
she was tall and
graceful, red of cheek and light of skin. Her sole garment was
plainly woven and
unadorned, for she lacked all the things with which women
bedeck themselves.
Upon her head she wore a garland of leaves and her only
ornaments were
flowers. She was shy and restrained of glance; nevertheless, she
was not unobserved,
for the eyes of men had fallen upon her from outside the
place wherein she
dwelt. They did not enter the place, for to them it was sacred
ground upon which
men feared to trespass.
One day, a hunter
passed by and became smitten by her beauty and modesty. He
thought also of what
she had to offer, fine fruits and green growing herbs, a
garden of plenty
where, in her embrace, he could find rest from the rigours of
the hunt. He came to
pay his court, garbed as for the chase with bow on back and
spear in hand. He
brought with him two wild geese and a young piglet to lay at
her feet, but when
his steps brought him within the fence the hounds were loosed
upon him. The
hunter, seeing that he was unwelcome, took counsel with himself
and thought,
"Perhaps if I am uncouth in her sight, my brother the shepherd,
will seem better in
her eyes".
Therefore, the
shepherd came and sat on the grass outside the fence, paying his
court with music
from the pipes, but she paid no heed to him. Still he remained,
until wearying of
his piping she called out, "Go, for what want I with one who
sits blowing wind
all day? Go learn music from the flowing waters".
In the days that
followed others came, among them a merchant, a rich man, a lord
of grainfields and
vineyards. Word of her beauty had been brought to him and he
was challenged by
her inaccessibility. So he thought, "If indeed it is as men
say, then I will
have this woman for my own. Have I not riches enough to provide
all that gladdens
the heart of a woman? So he came wearing a mantle of scarlet
with brooches of
bronze. He wore buckles of silver and ornaments of cornelian
and gold. He was a
man possessed of a smooth, well oiled tongue, the owner of a
storehouse of fine
words. He came with attendants who drove off another who sat
outside the fence.
The merchant came boldly through the gate of the fence, but
Asarua met him. When
he paid court with bejewelled words she said, "What have
you to offer but
gold and treasure? Think you that such unfeeling things can
capture my heart? Am
I to be bought as a woman bound within her father's
household? Am I to
be another counted among the many women you have known? An
occupant of a
cornerplace within your heart, O man of many lovers". Then he was
wrath with her, but
she took no heed and the hounds drove him off, even the
lordly one, for the
ground here was sacred.
One day, not much
later, the young Ancheti came that way and in passing he saw
the maiden Asarua,
but because of bis unfamiliarity with women he hesitated to
speak, though he,
too, was smitten by her beauty and maidenly bearing.
Passing that way
again Ancheti stopped by the place and seeing an old woman
seated beneath the
tree he said to her, "Mother, may I have some water, for I am
thirsty from
journeying". The woman replied, "My son, there is water in plenty
below on the other
side of this place, which young ears should hear, but I am
blind and cannot
see. I, too, thirst and therefore I beg that you enter and
bring me cool water
from the pool below the waterfall". So Ancheti entered and
drank, and he gave
water to the woman. Though Asarua espied him from afar she
did not come near,
but neither were the hounds allowed near him.
Hurmanetar had
returned from his strange journey, but was puzzled when he saw
Ancheti was silent
and spoke little, that his thoughts were not inside him. So
Hurmanetar
questioned him, "Wherefore are you sick? What ails you? " Then, when
Ancheti spoke to him
of the maiden he had seen, Hurmanetar said, "This is a
delicate matter and
one not for the heavy tactics of men. Does not the fawn take
flight at the sight
of the hunting hound? While the moonflower that closes its
petals at the touch
of a man opens them at the touch of a woman. Your heart has
guided you rightly
when counselling caution, for you are ill equipped to catch
this rare bird of
beauty when unaided by wisdom. For a woman's errand let us
send a woman, the
nightingale sings in the presence of the owl but hides in
silence when the
hawk roosts nearby".
Then Hurmanetar
spoke with the maidservant of she who had mothered the daughters
of Formana, and the
maidservant agreed to do the things he told her. Thus, on
the morrow she went
forth unaccompanied, and coming to the place where Asarua
dwelt sat down
outside the gate. When the eyes of the maiden eventually fell
upon her Asarua saw
the bent old woman, weary and travel-stained from the
journey; and out of
kindness, for she was gentle and compassionate by nature,
brought the old
woman in, that she might sit under the shade of a tree to rest
herself and eat some
fruit.
After the
maidservant had rested in the shade and refreshed herself, she spoke
to Asarua and said,
"How lovely is your garden, how well watered, how bright and
refreshing its many
fruits. I have heard much of this place but more of you and
your beauty; but no
words of men have done justice to what I see with my own
eyes".
Asarua said, "The
words of men often differ from the thoughts of their hearts,
while flattering
words are bait above a well set trap. Let us not talk of men
and their wiles but
of more pleasant things. Come, let us walk around the
garden".
They walked and came
to a place where grew a tamarisk tree, and about the
tamarisk entwined a
vine holding many bunches of grapes. The old maidservant
said, "Behold
this tree, of what value would it be were it not for the vine?
Would it have any
value except as firewood? And what of the tree to which it
clings, would it not
straggle along the ground, laying in the dust to be crushed
underfoot by any
passer-by? It would be a helpless thing unable to raise itself
up, a barren creeper
bearing no fruit. So see what benefit comes from their
union and learn
wisdom. Is not the tree named as a man is named and the vine as
a woman is named? We
who are old see lessons in such things and in learning from
them gain wisdom.
The young are ever loath to even read to their benefit from
the book which is
always open before their eyes".
Asarua listened but
said little and as they walked the maidservant spoke of the
young daughters of
Fonnana whom she had nursed, and of the ways of man and
woman. She spoke as
such women speak, her tongue following a winding road. The
speech of men comes
out like an arrow, but the speech of women comes out like a
puff of smoke. Men
talk with the naked tongue, but words from the mouth of a
woman are veiled and
devious. The tongue of a woman is a sword sheathed in silk.
Not for nought are
women called the twin-tongued. Perchance these words were
added in the days of
Thalos, for not all men think thus of women.
The maidservant had
an inexhaustible supply of words and Asarua was so taken
aback to hear the things
of which she spoke that she could find no words to
answer. Thus
speaking, they came to the small dwelling place where the mother of
Asarua was preparing
a meal. She invited the maidservant to eat with them and to
sleep there that
night, and this the maidservant gladly accepted.
After they had
eaten, the maidservant spoke with Mamuah, the mother of Asarua,
and the talk was of
unfortunate women whose daughters were fair yet refused to
be married,
daughters who closed their ears even to good advice on marriage;
whether such women
were true women or unnatural women, The words which mattered
were few while the
words in which they were buried were many, but the former
were not lost on
Mamuah whose ears were not closed to such talk and they entered
her heart. She gave
attentive ears when the other spoke of Ancheti who, though
but a youth, was
wise. Though he had not yet drunk deeply from the waters of
wisdom, nevertheless
the well from which he drew them was a never failing one.
"Be wise",
said the maidservant, "choose this young man, for surely none better
will come this way.
He does not wander from his place of duty; he is not
slothful in manner,
nor does he spend his days in futile pleasures. He does not
go from woman to
woman, and while it is true that this could be because of his
age, yet he speaks
of women only with respect, which is not the way with budding
fornicators. He is
manly, he is of the blood of kings and above all he is wise,
because he has a
wise instructor. He is a youth of good promise and one who
would not bestow his
love lightly".
The mother of Asarua
heard the words of the maidservant with both ears and when
the maidservant was
departing said, "Come again when the moon is new, that we
may speak more of
these matters". Ancheti visited the place again and when the
maidservant returned
at the new moon Mamuah said, "It is well, my daughter will
marry the youth
Ancheti. But first he must bide in the place where he now serves
for one year, then
he must labour in this place for one year; after this he may
marry Asarua with my
blessing". This seemed good in the eyes of Ancheti and so
it was that he
laboured two years in order to marry Asarua.
CHAPTER TEN
THE DEATH OF
HURMANETAR
In the days when the
Elshumban were gathered in war hosts, Hurmanetar departed
with his household
and the household of Ancheti to dwell in the land between the
Great River of Sweet
Waters and the Bitter Waters of the West, and they built an
encampment there.
They were in a land where some men spoke as Hurmanetar spoke
and though there
were men of blood with them the people of the land let
Hurmanetar and those
with him dwell in peace among them, because in those days
men were inflicted
with Inahana.
When the task set
upon him was nigh finished, Hurmanetar knew that his days in
the land of the
living were not to be many more, therefore he betook himself
into a place of
solitude. There he fasted for many days casting his spirit that
it might commune
with the Father of the Gods, but the voice of God remained
silent. Then he left
that place, going into a cave where he dwelt in the half
light for many days;
but again there was no response from the Father of the
Gods. So Hurmanetar
departed from the cave and returned to his people where he
was heard to say,
"Woe, for truly my God has forsaken me and remains dumb
against my
pleadings. Yet I have done all the things told me beforetimes and
written in the great
Book, wherefore have I failed?
Then he went apart
from the people and slept alone, for his heart was heavy. But
behold, in the night
he had a dream. In it he saw the Sacred Symbols spread out
upon a cloth of
white linen and each was displayed according to its form. As he
gazed upon them and
numbered them, each by its own number, an ass came and ate
up the Sacred
Symbols, and lo, the ass became a falcon. Then as he looked the
falcon became a cow
and between its horns was a crown of silver and a crown of
gold, and the cow
spoke to Hurmanetar, saying, "Drink of my milk and anoint your
eyes with it, thus
they will be opened and you will see". Hurmanetar drank the
milk and anointed
his eyes, and then he awoke. Remembering the dream and being
wise he needed no
other to interpret it for him. So then he straightway did the
things which had to
be done, about which those with understanding will know, and
departed from the
people.
Hurmanetar went out
towards a place of solitude, about one day's journey
distant. Having gone
about half the way he became weary under the noonday sun
and so sat down
beneath a tree to rest in its shade. Then, as he drowsed,
behold, a great
flash of light came down from out of Heaven and it smote the
ground before him.
He heard a great noise like a mighty whip crack, and he was
blinded. Then he
heard a voice saying, "Behold I am here, the God of Gods and
the God of Men in
the beginning". Hearing this, Hurmanetar fell upon his face
and cried, "O
Great One, I am Your servant".
Then God said,
"Wherefore would you open a door unto me? Because the race of man
has been defiled and
men are no longer with Me, am I not the withdrawn One, the
Hidden One?"
Hurmanetar, still on
the ground, answered, "O Father of the Gods, I Your servant
would know Your
will. I have a task nigh finished and seek to know whether it is
well in your sight,
or whether it is a thing done without your blessing".
God answered
Hurmanetar, saying, "Is this not a Sacred Thing, a heritage saved
and handed down from
the days when men walked with Me? Therefore, it is a good
thing, though care
must be taken to ensure it is not disclosed to the eyes of
profane men. The
concoctions which, when properly compounded, will enable men to
span the spheres can
also, used otherwise, give men near unlimited potency and
extreme pleasure
with womankind. Therefore, such things must be carefully
safeguarded, for in
the hands of lesser men they will certainly be abused. But
let it all be as it
is written, do with it as you have been instructed".
"You call upon
Me as the Father of the Gods, nor do you err in this. Yet I am
the Hidden God, the
God of Secret Manifestation, the Wronged God, the Betrayed
God, the
Disappointed God. I am the God who sought to give love Divine to men by
making them My
heirs, making them partakers of divinity, co-creators with Me.
But men spurn their
birthright, not through wickedness alone but through their
weakness and love of
pleasure. Therefore, the love once offered cannot now be
displayed in all its
glory; it cannot be revealed in its beauty, it must now be
leavened with
severity and chastisement. This, so that those who are the
inheritors of
divinity may return to it with undiminshed powers, but purged of
their weaknesses and
love of unprofitable pleasure. This you should know, that
men may know:
Divinity of itself is not a created thing and cannot be bestowed
as a gift. It comes
as the crown of achievement. I, the Almighty God who, by
taking thought can
create ten thousand worlds, say this".
"Men have said,
as they will say throughout the ages, "Why, if God be almighty,
can He not create
perfection immediately? Why does He not create beings having
the knowledge of
divine love forthwith? Why have Earth with all its trials and
tribulations?"
Know this, what appears to you as ages in time is, to me, but a
flash of thought in
a moment of eternity. I breathed in, the hosts of earths and
the spheres were
not. I breathed out and the hosts of earths and spheres were. I
breathe in and they
are no more. All things exist within the Eternal One and
that which men know as
the span of time is the act of creation".
"Mark the
flight of an arrow from the hands of a bowman. It flies from the bent
bow, time passes,
then it finds its mark. But to Me the arrow leaves the bow,
and strikes the mark
together. Distance, time and change are not with Me. Once
I, your God, was not
apart from man, My offspring. Now I am veiled from his
sight, not because I
have willed it so but because man has chosen to bring this
about. The barrier
between us grows ever more dense, as man wantonly spurns his
birthright;
henceforth, it may be penetrated only by long and arduous
preparations, and
even then those who would do so must know the key. I come to
you, not because of
your preparations but because your God is ever ready to
incline towards men.
Though there is this barrier between us, it is not
impervious to the
sincere prayers of a pure heart. This, men should know. As for
you your days are
numbered, you are now no more than the basket holding the
seeds which will be
strewn and sown by another hand. Many things of which I have
spoken are not for
the ears of men, for such knowledge, freely bestowed, would
not benefit them.
Other things are beyond their present understanding, let
these, therefore, be
recorded unto the generations of men yet unborn. Men are
now as children and
must learn again as children, being taught childish tales".
"Therefore, go
hence, go to Ancheti and tell him of these things. Say also that
his God, I Who Am,
chooses him as the sower of seeds. Let him know that I Who Am
will guide his steps
and will open a door in the barrier, that he may hear my
voice. Let your eyes
now see again and, behold, I Am Who I Am".
Then Hurmanetar left
the place where he had seen the face of the Father of Gods,
returning to the encampment
of his people which had been set up in the midst of
pastureland. When he
drew nigh he saw cattle lying beside the running waters and
men were moving
among them. The cattle were dead and their bellies swollen. Men
came up to
Hurmanetar and cried, "Behold, the sustenance of our children is
taken from their
mouths. The cattle have eaten a herb that burns as fire in
their bellies so
they crave water, drinking until they become overfilled and
their bellies burst
from within, therefore they die. Who is this whom you call
Father of the Gods?
Perchance the gods do have a father, but where is the god
who protects men?
Where is the god who is the Father of Men? While you leave us
to pay homage to the
Exalted One, who may concern Himself with the affairs of
the gods but has no
concern for the welfare of men, our cattle die. Because of
your words we have
neglected to build an altar to Shemakin or to pay homage to
Yahana; truly we are
men who have been deceived and led astray. We are men who
have walked with
their eyes turned upward and fallen into a quicksand. Tell us
then, O wise one,
who are the gods of men and of cattle?"
This filled the
heart of Hurmanetar with ire and he cried out to the wrathful
people,
"Wherefore do you cry out to me and seek some god to come to your aid?
There is but one God
and these that you call gods are but manifestations of His
members. Why do you
seek to cast blame on God for your own neglect? Has He not
relinquished His
hold on all creatures that serve man and given them into your
hands? Behold the
beasts of the forest and wilderness, do they eat of the herb
that poisons? Are
they not able to know the herb that is harmful and the herb
that nourishes? The
herb that heals in sickness and the herb that brings death?
Who taught them this
wisdom? There are creatures under the care of God which
know not the
slothful care of man, therefore they are safe from the deadly herb
and pass it by. But
you, having taken these poor beasts to benefit from them,
are solely responsible
for their wellbeing. They are your responsibility".
"The Father of
the Gods made cattle as He made all creatures, and while He ruled
their ways they were
protected from the deadly herbs. Then men took them unto
themselves so they
might serve them. They yielded milk and cheese to nourish
them and firm meat
to sustain them, their hides covered them warmly as they
slept. These things
the cattle gave, not unto God but unto man. Therefore, who
should protect and
care for them, he who benefits or He who does not? Do you
expect God to herd
your cattle? To keep them from the deadly herb while you
slumber in the
shade? Is this not a just reward for your slothfulness? You know
that the herb is
deadly, but these cattle, the dumb servants of man, know it
not, for they are
delivered into your care. Would you take all they give while
denying them the
diligence of your protection? What kind of men are you who cry,
"Woe unto us
whom God has forsaken". Who wring their hands, saying, "What god
shall we seek to aid
us in our self-wrought calamity? Arise like men, to
shoulder the burden
of your own slothfulness and lack of diligence. Never fear
that God will fail
man, for if man does the duties of man God will do the duties
of God, for it is
man who falls short. It is man who seeks to take more than he
gives. Surely
whatever man takes for his benefit, also becomes his
responsibility. God
decrees that man may take whatever he will for his own use,
but in so doing he
must also assume responsibility for its care and rightful
use. Is this
unjust?" The men said no more.
Hurmanetar then made
the men draw the cattle up out of the water and some which
had eaten of the
deadly herb were saved. He then divided the pastures and sent
men to seek out the
places of the deadly herb and cut it from the soil.
One day, Hurmanetar
was going about the encampment and he came upon a man
burying bis newly
born daughter, and Hurmanetar was wrathful at the man for such
a deed. It was an
abomination performed by the sand wanderers and the wild men
who dwelt in the
wilderness. Taking the child, Hurmanetar brought it to the wife
of Ancheti who saved
it so it lived. It was named Mahat, meaning pure of heart,
but because of the
sand which had filled her eyes she was blind.
The strangers about
the encampment became enraged against Hurmanetar because of
what he had done.
Also, because he had struck the father of the child so he bled
they demanded that
the blood be requited. They said, "This is an unjust deed,
for he who buries a
daughter because he lacks sustenance for her does no wrong
in our eyes. Is it
not better that she be buried in the ground out of sight than
kept with disgrace?
Is it not for the father to decide whether a daughter should
live? Has a woman a
soul of her own? Is she not no more than the maker of the
body, while the soul
is given into her keeping by man?"
The strangers about
the encampment were not so many, while those with Hurmanetar
were many and
strong, but he dealt justly with those claiming payment for the
blood. They were
given a piece of silver and a calf that was ready for the
slaughter. Thus
Mahat came into the household of Ancheti.
Hurmanetar was
sitting with Ancheti and said to him, "I have spoken to you of
the happening while
I sat beneath a tree in a place of solitude, and of matters
which you should
know in order to be wise. Into your keeping have been given the
treasures I have
wrought by my own hands, and you are well instructed in the
Sacred Things and
the Mysteries. You have a destiny upon you which may not be
fulfilled in this
place, while the sustenance obtainable here declines day by
day. Therefore, let
us depart and go along journey by way of the bitter waters,
for should we go by
way of the forest or through the great wilderness, we may
not live. Our flocks
and herds can be driven before us, for the road is wide and
well watered. Let us
not delay in this place, for already there is a
restlessness among
the people here".
So they departed
from that place, journeying towards the bitter waters and when
they came there they
turned southward, continuing until they came to Basor.
There they encamped,
for the death sickness had come upon Hurmanetar. As he lay
upon a couch of
sheepskins he called for Ancheti, but he did not come, for he
had gone before them
to spy out the land. However, Ancheti did come before
Hurmanetar passed
from Earth, and Hurmanetar knew he was there and called him to
his side. Then
Hurmanetar said, "My hour is at hand, but I am without fear,
knowing I go not to
a place where men eat dust, where all is darkness and gloom.
The fears of my
youth are but shadows having no substance, they flee before the
pure light of
Truth."
"Upon you there
is a great destiny, may you reach out and grasp that which your
heart desires, and
having attained it use it to deliver all men from the
darkness of
ignorance. Go forth like the sun who throws his rays down like a net
over the land to
enlighten it. Go to a land where the honest man will be made
rich and the dishonest
man impoverished, for the balances must be adjusted so
that riches cease to
be the reward of dishonesty and deceit. Go to a land where
those holding places
of power and position will stand forth as examples of
goodness and
honesty; where none but the worthy occupy high positions; where
those who have
possessions and estate use these to succour the needy and resist
the strength of
those who oppress the weak and unprotected".
Ancheti said,
"But where is this land and how shall I find it? " Hurmanetar
answered, "Were
there such a place, what good purpose would you serve by going
there? What you will
have to do would have been done already by another".
Hurmanetar died and
was buried deep within the ground and none knows his tomb.
May he live forever
and dwell with the Father of the Gods whom he served!
These things
concerning Hurmanetar have been rewritten many times, but the
copies have always
been true. That which follows has been added on, but when
made and by whom it
is impossible to discover.
Hurmanetar is buried
in the land of Philistia. Is this Okichia?
The father of
Hurmanetar was Nimrod of the Twin Bows. This, I doubt, and it is
not stated.
The stone of Makilim
is at Bethgal even now. The words on the tomb of Yadol are:
'He died because he
was not as other men'. I, Frastonis, have seen it.
Could this be when
eighty generations have passed?
Men of this race are
unsound witnesses. The Samarites say Yadol was not mortal
man.
This we know in
truth: the deeds of Hurmanetar and Yadol are more fully told in
The Tales of the
Hithites.
The shield of
Ancheti was called the Big Shaker, and painted upon it was a
likeness of the
mudhopping bird. It was this bird that taught men writing, for
it left mud marks
which men first read as omens, later forming them into signs
which could be read.
They are not as ours, though men among us can read them.
Ancheti taught the
mystery of metals in Okichia, a land of beer, bread and milk.
He was renowned in
the Twinlands of light.
Mahat, the blind one
who remained virgin, guided Ancheti to this land while yet
a child. She was
filled with the inner light of wisdom and saw with the spirit.
When he knew not
which way to go her father sat her on the ground and held a
breast feather
before her, upon which she blew. He went whichever way it
inclined and was
never led astray. Later she used this method when settling
disputes and giving
judgements. She was greatly honoured, for in the whole land
there was no wiser
woman.
We who make these
writings indestructible have abandoned the Book of Ancheti,
for it has nought of
value to those who follow us, and this is a work of much
labour. It contains
laws for a people living in a land called Okichia who must
have been less than
barbarians, for he forbade such things as the eating of
children newly born,
the mixing and drying of their blood for eating in uniting
brothers and the
hanging up of women in travail. Also the cutting of a woman's
private parts and
the deballing of men.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE TEACHINGS OF
YOSIRA
These are the words
for the Sons of the True Doctrine, written in the temple of
Sacred Mysteries at
Yankeb in the Days of Darkness, by the Unnamed Lord of the
Secret Belief, who
then lived. The true knowledge of the teachings and mysteries
of Yosira concerning
the spirit within the body, taken from his books and
rewritten truly
after the custom of writing.
Yosira spoke to his
sons in this manner, "I am the Viceregent of the God of
Gods. I am the
custodian of the Books of Power. I am the Voice of Heaven. I am
one sent into
Tamerua as a lightbearer, that a call may go thence throughout all
lands. Let every man
be watchful of his deeds and ways. Whosoever be watchful of
himself is a man of
wisdom, for he shall be saved from the terror of everlasting
darkness".
"I am the
torchbearer running before the chairlitter of Truth. I come to reveal
the greatness of
men, to tell them of their immortal selves, of their spirits
which have to be
ransomed from the doom of devouring darkness".
'The God of Gods
spoke unto me, saying, "Long have you dwelt under my shadow and
listened to my
words. Now arise and go hence to a land where these things of
which we have spoken
can be established. To a place whither I shall lead you,
for it is not proper
that those who dwell there should remain uninstructed.
Behold, I have given
you the secret of immortality, but know that though all men
are born into a
heritage of immortality, not all enjoy it. The God of Gods, in
His infinite mercy,
plunges many into the waters of forgetfulness. Yet even from
there they may
return to be renewed, not of themselves but through the
supplications of
others".
When Yosira came
into Tamerua he gathered his sons together on the stones
beneath the place
called Homtree and spoke to them in this manner, "I am the
Dawnlighter and a
torchbearer for the God of Gods. These are my words which you
will do well to
absorb, as the dry sands soaks up water. Though they are words
of wisdom, they are
useless unless accepted by men who have control over
themselves. They
have no value to men who are unable to feel compassion for
others or who close
their ears to Truth".
"You are the
few chosen ones, my sons, light of my light, who shall hand the
light on down
through the generations. To you I give the true conception of God.
To you I give this
standard, that it may be a rallying point for those who will
accompany us; for we
stand on the borders of a land which has found favour in
the eyes of our
God".
"With us are
fighting men, but they are few while those who stand ready to repel
us are many.
Therefore, we will not set ourselves against them in battle array,
but go among them
with guile, to gather many who will fight with us. You shall
be the light of the
fighting men, even as I am your hght and the God of Gods my
light".
"The light that
is with me was kindled at The Supreme Source, which is the God
of Gods. Therefore,
my hght shines with such brilliance that it must be veiled
in part, lest it
blind you. It is even as the sun be seen through a veil of
cloud, it may be
gazed upon for as long as desired. Seen thus it is a thing of
beauty and mystery,
not something which bums and consumes the eyes of the
beholder".
"Therefore,
even as I veil my light from you, so shall you veil your lights from
the eyes of the
uninstructed. Yet in all matters not pertaining to the light you
shall instruct them
in the fullness of Truth. In all matters concerning their
bodies you shall
instruct them in Truth. But in all matters concerning the Lord
of the Body you
shall instruct them with a light that is veiled".
"Behold the
nature of man. Within him is a spark from the Divine Source and this
is the Lord of the
Body. This alone is everlasting, this alone of man is his
true self. This
spark is enwrapped within a heavy mantle of matter, it is
enclosed in a
covering of earthly clay. This spark alone is the seat of life, it
alone has
understanding and thought. Such things are not with the clay of the
flesh, neither are
they kin to the stones from which the bones come. The life
within man radiates
out from the enclosed spark, and through the blood endows
the body with life
and heat. life gives forth heat and the greater the life the
greater the
heat".
"As the sun
gives light and fire spreads heat, as the flower radiates perfume,
so does the Central
Light give forth a vaporous unseeable glow, and this our
fathers called the
Breath of God. This Breath comes forth in two manifestations:
there is a heavy
form and a hght form, and from these all things are compounded.
From The One comes
the Sacred Glow in its two aspects, which men call the Breath
of God, and from
this are made all things which are in Heaven and Earth".
"Above is the
God of Gods and below Him are Heaven and Earth. Heaven is divided
in twain, there is a
Place of Light and a Place of Darkness. Within the Place of
Light dwell the
spirits of Good and within the Place of Darkness dwell the
spirits of evil.
Between them the boundary is not fixed but flows back and forth
according to their
fluctuating strengths. But they who abide in the hght shall
always prevail, for
light will ever dispel darkness. Therefore, those who dwell
in darkness withdraw
before the brilliance of those who dwell in the light. This
light and darkness are
not such as men can understand, for it is not the light
and darkness known
on Earth".
"Before the
Gates of Heaven is the Land of the Horizon, whence go all who depart
from their earthly
body. From here there are two great gates, one leads to the
Place of Light and
the other to the Place of Darkness, and the Lord of the Body
is admitted into its
appointed place according to its likeness. He who is filled
with the light and
is a Brilliant One cannot go to the Place of Darkness, for it
would draw back
before him. Neither can he who is a Dark One go into the Place
of Light, for there
he would shrivel before the light, as the white worm coming
forth from the damp
darkness of its hole shrivels in the light of the sun".
"Between Heaven
and Earth there is a great gulf across which the dwellers in
Heaven may not
return, but Earth is not wholly beyond their reach. Man receives,
from the Place of
Light, that which influences him for good, and from the Place
of Darkness that
which affects him for evil. These things may be written, but
the secret things
concerning them may not be recorded in such manner that they
come to the
knowledge of the unenlightened men".
"That which
comes from Heaven, whether influencing for good or evil, comes forth
as shades in the
likeness of men, which is rare; or much more often as lukim,
which are like unto
motes. It may also come as waves of air, but not air such as
we breathe and feel.
It is something altogether different in nature. Things come
forth which are not
stable, and these are the formless Ones. All things are held
in form by the
Breath of God, which changes formlessness, but the formless Ones
can alter form into
instability".
"There are
three great spheres and that containing the Earth is held together by
the Great Glow
outflowing from the God of Gods. That part of the Great Glow
which is light and
contains life is called Manah, while that which is heavy and
contains the flesh
of things of the Earth is called Manyu".
"The One Who is
the God of Gods is so great that He cannot be defined in the
speech of men.
Neither can they conceive Him in their thoughts, for He is beyond
then-understanding.
Mortal man has limitations, therefore let men conceive Him
as they will. It is
of no importance, providing their conception serves both His
purpose and
the glorification of
man".
"Man is not yet
great and until he becomes so it is well that he worship the
many Godf orms
conceived within his thoughts, providing they be such as tend to
raise him above
himself. Nor do ritual and worship do harm of themselves, unless
they, too, thickly
overlay the truth so it is buried from sight. Ritual and
outward forms of
worship can be aids to purification of thought and provide a
kind of sustenance
for the Lord of the Body. What are the Lesser Gods beloved by
unawakened men but
thought-conceived friends and guides? Yet this is a dangerous
path men tread,
balanced between light and darkness. Therefore, when man wanders
towards the abyss of
darkness, reveal a little more light, that he may see and
so return to the
path. Beware, too, lest he follow gods that are false guides
and would lure him
into the quicksand of carnality, or into the wilderness of
ignorance".
Before crossing into
Tamuera Yosira chose captains to be over the fighting men,
and they sent forth
men to spy out the land. He also sent some from among his
sons into the land
of Tewar, that they might talk with the people there, and
these came back
bringing hostages from the governors of the land of Tewar. Then
Yosira spoke with
the sons of the governors and they gave ear to his words, they
were receptive to
his speech.
Yosira spoke to the
people, "These are the words of the God of the Gods.
Henceforth, no child
shall be sold into bondage by its father or by any man who
has ward over it.
Such may not yet be the custom of all the people in this land,
but if they become
mighty, this they may do, for such is the nature of men".
"If a man have
a woman in bondage he shall not cause her to become a harlot unto
men, for this is a
great wickedness and he shall not go unpunished. If she
become with child
unto her master, then neither she nor the child shall be given
in bondage to
another. But if she be given to a freeman who takes her in
marriage, then it
will be well".
'The greatest
wickedness m the eyes of the God of Gods is all incest of the
first degree, which
is that between mother and son or father and daughter; or
between the mother's
mother and the son of the mother, or between the mother's
father and the
daughter of the mother; or between the father's father and the
father's daughter,
or between the father's mother and the father's son. This is
a wickedness unto
the God of Gods, for it calls forth the strongest of the
Formless Ones,
causing it to enter into an earthly body to become an abomination
before the eyes of
God and man. Therefore, they who commit such an act shall
perish by fire. If
it be committed with a child, then the child shall not
perish, but it shall
be branded with the mark of incest".
"Adultery is a
foul and evil thing which you shall abhor, for it permits the
lukim to pollute the
fountain of life. In a far off land there lived a queen
more beautiful than
the Dawnflower, who, because she was powerful, disregarded
her heritage of
womanhood. As powerful kings had many wives she thought she
could do likewise
with men. The God of Gods and Creator of Life created men and
women intending that
each should play a different role. They are in no wise
alike, for as men
have their function so do women have theirs. What is meet for
one is not meet for
the other, and because the Creator made them as they are,
each should follow
their own path, never seeking to journey along the other's.
Now, while the seed
of one man was yet with her this queen took the seed of
another, and the
seed of one man strove with that of the other so that both
perished and became
a corrupt pasture. Thus, the way was cleared for lukim to
enter into the
antechamber of life and the sacred shrine of life was polluted,
becoming the
breeding place of foulness. So it was that when other men came unto
her, the flesh of
their bodies was seized upon by the lukim and corrupted, for
foul lukim had made
their abode within the woman. So the wellspring of life
became a fountain of
polluting evil. Adultery is an abomination to the Bestower
of life, therefore
let it not go unpunished".
"None shall
sleep in the bed of another, unless the spell of his presence be
first removed. For
he who goes into any place or takes up any thing while it is
under the spell of
another's presence, shall surely suffer. They who are of the
same kin living
under the one roof, will not suffer unless sickness already be
there".
"None shall eat
from the platter of another or drink from his drinking vessel
until the spell of
his presence has been removed. None among those who know the
God of Gods shall
walk in anything poured out for a libation unto strange gods,
neither shall he
touch any part of the Libation. If it come upon him he shall go
forthwith to the
Master of Mysteries and be cleansed".
Yosira said unto the
people, "These are the words of the God of Gods. None among
you shall wash
himself in water used by another and contained within anything
made by the hand of
man. None among those who know God shall touch a woman while
the days of her
heritage are upon her. No man shall go unto a woman with
unwashed hands, and
when man and woman have lain together both shall purify
themselves before
going about their tasks".
"Among the lukim
none is more subtle than the nableh which seek sustenance among
the food of men.
Therefore, if you have bread within your dwelling, then it
shall not be hung
up; but if there be meat or fish, then it shall be suspended
within the dwelling.
If you have bran or meal which has been pounded, then it
shall be kept in a
capped container with nowrata flowers, thus the lukim will
not come upon it.
Neither crushed corn nor the crumbs of any repast shall be
left within the
sight of man or within the boundaries of the dwelling, lest the
nableh seize upon
them for sustenance. All things that have held life but have
not been used for
food shall be buried within the ground. All vessels which have
held food but hold
it no longer shall be made clean with sun and sand".
"When the flesh
of any beast or of fish or fowl becomes dark in your keeping or
has the smell of
rottenness upon it, then it is a sign that the nableh have come
upon it and it shall
be taken out and buried where no beast can come upon it.
Thus, the nableh are
left without sustenance and will be forced back into their
dark abode. But if
you permit them to sustain themselves, then they will come in
their hosts and,
being fattened and strengthened, will afflict you with many
terrors during night
watches".
"If the pouring
place or the spout of any pitcher or pot have a blackness upon
it, then that
pitcher or pot shall be broken, for it has been entered by the
fiery lukim. If any
who know God eat with strangers, they shall purify
themselves at the
rising of the sun on the following day. If any among you eat
with a hand
uncleansed by water or sand, then be prepared for attack by the
lukim of the night. He
who draws the blood of any beast must cleanse himself of
all blood, lest he
be attacked by the dark lukim. Neither food nor drink of any
kind shall be kept
under a bed or against a sleeping place, lest the lukim of
the night come and
take up their abode therein". These are words of the God of
Gods spoken through
the mouth of Yosira.
Yosira said this
also, "All things which may sustain the lukim are to be buried
or burnt. Anything
coming forth from the nostrils or mouth of any man or woman
is rejected from
within and becomes sustenance for the lukim. Still waters that
lie upon the ground
are their drinking places and forbidden to men. Water shall
not be used as drink
unless it be drawn from within the ground, or be in a place
where it is shaded
by trees".
"Eat only food
known to be wholesome and which gives contentment to the stomach.
In taste it should
be soothing and refreshing, never bringing pain and
discomfort. Eat not
of anything that is too dry or oversalted, or which brings
sickness upon you.
Any food of which men eat and has become rotten or mouldy has
been seized by the lukim
for sustenance; this you can see, for the rottenness
and mould upon it is
the excreta of lukim".
"Anything that
has blood in it and is dead, having died of itself, shall not be
eaten, for the lukim
have made their abode in it. No man shall eat uncooked
meat, even that
which the sandfarers carry shall not be eaten".
"The slaying of
any man or any woman is forbidden, but it is not unlawful to
slay in war or in
self-defence, or to uphold the purity of the household and
home. To kill
deceitfully or to strike from behind is murder and shall not go
unpunished. If blood
be shed it shall not cry out from the ground in vain, and
unto the kinsmen of
each one slain shall be the order of revenge"
"If you swear
an oath one with another, saying, "Great God bear witness" or
before any strange
god, to deceive another man, then consider, for only the most
foolhardy turn their
back on such an oath. For it is sworn on the life of the
Lord of the Body,
and if it be broken the Lord of your Body will be
everlastingly
disfigured with an unremovable scar. Man has many trials to
overcome in his life
and not the least of these, tests is oathkeeping. Though an
oath may diminish
and become nothing with the passing years according to the
memories of men, it
is everlastingly impressed on the Lord of the Body. Wiser
far is he who never
makes an oath".
"If any man
say, 'The whirlwind and the sandstorm, the floodwaters and the
burning fire, these
do I fear because these I see, but the lukim which I see not
neither do I fear,
that man is a fool, for he knows not the deficiencies of his
own eyes. The lukim,
he will learn to know by their manifestations, for they
will seize upon his
body and torment it, sometimes even unto death. It is
likewise with the
God of Gods, none may see Him, but by His manifestations is He
made known unto
men".
Yosira spoke to the
captains of the fighting men and to those who were with them
and said, "When
we come into this new land all things that the people who dwell
therein hold sacred
you will neither defile nor mock. Neither shall you stir up
strife with any man,
for we come to them as friends not foes". Therefore, when
Yosira and all those
with him came up into the land of Tewar and dwelt there,
peace was in the
land.
Then Yosira taught
the people of Tewar the weaving of cloth and the working of
metals, and showed
them how to make tools and weapons of metal cast in a
mysterious manner.
But the secret of the sharp-edged weapons he revealed only to
his own.
The people of Tewar
built a habitation for Yosira and a temple of brick bound
with reeds. There
were skins upon the walls and on the floor, and the door were
of wood. Then Yosira
spoke to his sons in this manner, 'These are the things in
which the people of
this place shall be instructed: The dove is the most sacred
of birds and shall
not be eaten, but if people say, "Forbid it not to us for
sacrifice to our
gods", then it shall not be forbidden them".
"The milk of
all beasts which do not have horns and part the hoof is not for the
sustenance of man,
but if the people say, "Forbid it not, for it is our custom",
then it shall not be
forbidden them".
'The sacrifice of
breast children at the burial of the dead shall be forbidden,
for the blood of the
young cannot provide life for the old, each man being the
fashioner of his own
destiny. He that has life shall bear it with him, and none
can possess the body
and life of a breast child except the God who gave it life.
He who buries a
living breast child with the dead shall himself die".
"All things
buried with the departed one, whether they be weapons or dishes,
instruments or
ornaments, shall have the form released from them before they are
placed within the
ground".
'This shall be the
law unto all those who work with metal, whether it be gold,
silver or copper:
One day in seven shall be a day of rest for the fires herewith
the metals are
wrought. On this day no fire will be lit and no metal touched or
moved from its
place. On the even of this day all things of metal that have been
made since the last
day of rest shall be placed in a trough of sanctified oil,
remaining there
until their appointed time. Nothing shall go out from the
workplace of a
craftsman in metal until it has passed through the oil".
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE RULE OF YOSIRA
Yosira gathered his
sons about him and spoke to them thus, "These are the days
of the dawnlight and
I am the Dawnlighter from beyond Bashiru. I am the
Torchbearer for the
God of Gods. These are the laws which I made for my people
in the land of
Tewar, the laws of one speaking with the mouth of the God above
all gods".
"He who places
a spear or arrow within a dead body shall be accursed and his
hand and arm will
become things of evil. They will swell up and become consumed
by fire. Likewise
shall be accursed who looses these weapons against another,
but if it be a man
of Tamuera who looses the weapons, then he shall die by them
himself, for he is
beyond the reach of the curse".
"A tree that
reaches up above twice the height of a man shall not be stricken
for burning or to
take away its land. But if it be dedicated to the adze and is
then used by a
craftsman in wood, then it may be stricken and cut. Trees are not
things to be lightly
dealt with, for they move the winds which cross the face of
the Earth and
generate these in great forests of the North and South. The
slaughter of a tree
is no less wrong than the slaughter of an ox or a sheep, for
the same breath of
life is in each. Therefore, never bring them low wantonly.
Are not trees held
sacred by the people of this land? Is it not more reasonable
to dedicate a mighty
tree or a grove of trees to a god than a mute stone or
object cut from
wood?"
Therefore, when
Yosira moved among the people he did not forbid them their grave
groves, nor did he
silence the words of the women who tended them. But Yosira
said, "These
things are for women and not for men, let the women bide, but men
should follow the
callings of men and their place is not among the grave
groves".
Now, when Yosira
came among the people they dwelt away from the river, fearing
the god of moving
waters who molested them at night. But Yosira bound the god of
moving waters, so he
no longer troubled the people. Then Yosira bade them build
their dwelling places
beside the moving waters, decreeing that none should dwell
beside still waters
unless the still waters be filled with the life of fishes.
In those days men
sought to appease the Formless Ones and the Spirits of the
Night with offerings
and worship. But Yosira forbade them this and he surrounded
the whole land with
a protective wall which no Dark Spirit could penetrate,
while all those
within were dissolved. Every Dark Spirit being neither male nor
female and every
Dark Spirit which clothed itself in the shape of a beast or
bird was bound and
cast back into the Place of Darkness.
All men who were
blood kindred with the beasts of the forest or with fowl or
with serpent, dwelt
together according to their kinship, and were divided
thereby. Yosira forbade
them not their kinship but did forbid the rule of blood.
He spoke to the
people in this manner: "Great are the ties of that thing which
binds men together
and joins them with their forefathers, but greater still is
each man in himself,
his destiny lying within himself alone and not within his
kindred. Man is not
a drop of water in the stream of life, but a fish that swims
within the stream.
Yet insofar as these things have ever been, the twenty-four
great kinships shall
remain secured in their establishment".
Before the coming of
Yosira a man could not take to wife a woman of his own
blood, but Yosira
redeemed the land with blood, safeguarding it against
barrenness. So
henceforth men could take wives from among their own blood
kindred, and the
land remained fruitful. This, the Spirit of Life, became strong
among men, for it
was not spread out to become diluted and weakened.
Until Yosira came
none in this land knew of hokew, and it filled men with fear
and awe, but Yosira
revealed all its secrets to his sons, and the secrets are
known even in these
days. Hokew is that which sustains the Dawndwellers. It is
but thinly spread
throughout the Earth and before the days of Yosira men could
gather it, storing
it in stones and in sacred objects. It may be drawn upon by
the spirits of men,
as women draw water from a well. It is hokew which bestows
fertility, causing
flocks to multiply and crops to increase. Its secrets are
known by the Twice
Born.
Though in the days
of his distress Yosira called upon his Father in Kanogmahu,
he forbade his sons
to call upon Him likewise, for Yosira was their father on
Earth and their
advocate in the Hall of Admission. Therefore, none can call upon
Him with impunity,
for if He dealt with them He would neglect His task among the
Dawndwellers. Nor is
any man justified in calling upon the spirit of a Departed
One, for they are
beyond concern for the everyday affairs of men.
When the sons of
Yosira had established their rule over the people, the leaders
of the people came
to Yosira desiring to make him their king, so he would rule
over them. But when
they came before him, Yosira replied to their wish in this
manner, "I am
the mouth of the God of Gods and the light of my people. I will be
the father of your
king and the director of his footsteps, but your king I
cannot be, for I am
dedicated in service to the God of Gods". Saying this Yosira
then took his son,
who was grown to manhood, and led him forth by the hand,
giving him to the
people to be their king.
Later, while the
leaders and governors of the people still remained gathered
after the anointing
of their king, Yosira spoke to them as the mouth of God. He
said, 'To judge
justly between man and man is one of the greatest obligations of
a king and those who
stand in his place. So from this day hence judgement shall
not be given by
those who sit under the trees, listening to the words whispered
among the leaves.
However, if three men sit far apart and each gives a like
judgement, the words
from their mouths being the same, then the judgement shall
be good. However, if
it is a matter where a life can be forfeit or property
taken away, a family
divided or a man or woman enslaved, then judgement shall be
given only by the
king or by one who wears his mantle and bears his burden".
"Sacred waters
are living waters filled with the power of hokew and shall no
longer be used for
any purpose other than sanctification and purification. No
longer shall they be
used to decide whether a wife be guilty of adultery;
henceforth she shall
be tested by the bitter draught alone".
"He who eats
the flesh of swine shall be accursed, for to eat the flesh of swine
is to eat something
dedicated to the fathers of men and an abomination. Flesh of
the ass shall not be
eaten, for it diminishes the vigour of men".
"Henceforth,
the bodies of the dead shall not be broken or burnt, for the hokew
within them departs
with the Lord of the Body. Therefore, nothing can be added
unto a Victorious
One by rendering up the essence of his earthly mantle through
the flames of the
fire".
"The people
shall not be denied their feasts, nor shall they be forbidden the
rituals of
fruitfulness. Their offerings to any god shall not be taken away. As
the gods of the
people are today, so shall they remain, for they serve their
end. They may depict
their gods after their own fashion, for the likeness of
such gods is of
small consequence. But the likeness of the God of Gods shall not
be fashioned by any
man, for He is beyond the understanding of men. No man shall
seek to find His
likeness in water".
"The festival
to the god who draws up the land is not to be denied the people,
but no longer shall
they eat the flesh of asses, for now this is forbidden. The
days for the feast
of the forefathers shall not be diminished, lest the gift of
long life be thereby
curtailed. With them alone is the distribution of the life
forces and in their
keeping are the powers granting fertility and good fortune.
Unto those who
control the sprouting of com, the increase of herds and the
harvests of fishes,
the potency of men and the fertility of women, success in
hunting and victory
in war shall be given all due honour and worship".
"He who causes
injury or death, sickness or suffering by drawing the likeness of
another in sand and
piercing it with a fire-hardened stick, or who makes the
likeness of another
in wax to burn in the fire, or in clay to be pierced by
stake or thorn, is
henceforth accursed. He will be delivered to the lukim of
disease or death".
"He shall be
accursed who mixes living grain with fat to enslave the earthshade
of another man or
woman. He shall be accursed who calls up the nightshade of
another or the
nightfrightener. All who are so accursed will be delivered to the
lukim of sickness or
shall become the prey of Formless Ones".
"It is not
wrong to make an image of a breast child, that a woman may conceive,
but to make the
hkeness of a man's private organ so that a woman may conceive,
is wrong and any
woman making or lying with such a likeness shall be accursed.
She who is so
accursed will be delivered to the lukim of sickness and pain".
When Yosira came up
into Harfanti he found there people with strange customs
which displeased
him, but he forbade them none except those which were evil in
the sight of the God
of Gods. While there he laid a great curse upon any who
transgressed his
laws.
These were words
spoken through the mouth of Yosira, which he caused to be
recorded:
"Henceforth, no maiden shall be enclosed in bark and kept in darkness
for seven days
before marriage, but she may be kept in seclusion among women. If
she has to be
purified, it must be done with water and not with fire. A woman
shall never be
mutilated to purge her wickedness".
"Henceforth,
the private parts of young women shall not be sewn up to preserve
their maidenhood.
This shall remain in their own keeping and in the keeping of
the young women's
kindred in good faith and trust. To sew or cut the private
parts of any woman
is a great wickedness, for this is the portal of life and
woman is not an
unworthy guardian. It is best that women remain maidens, until
their marriage day,
of their own free will and choice; but if, because of the
maiden's weakness,
this seems doubtful, then the obligation shall be on her
kindred".
"The custom of
the Habshasti whereby the legs of young women are bound together,
after which young
men may enter their chamber to lie with them, is a thing of
wickedness and no
longer permitted. Now, if any man discover the nakedness of a
maiden, he shall not
go unpunished".
"Man shall not
see the nakedness of woman in childbirth, even though the woman
be bis wife. The hut
of childbirth and all within its circle is a place
forbidden unto men.
Henceforth, no woman shall be suspended at childbirth".
"If the wife of
a hunter he with another man while her husband is absent so that
he be slain or
wounded during the hunt, then no wrong is done if her husband or
the kindred of her
husband slay her. Neither shall it be cause for bloodslaying
if the kindred or
husband slay he who lay with her".
"The foreskin
of a man is cut to defy the lukim of impotency. This is not
forbidden to the
people, but they shall not preserve the foreskin in fat and use
it to endow stones
with hokew. The binding of foreskins is forbidden".
Yosira laid the
greatest of all curses upon those who captured and enslaved the
Lord of the Body
belonging to another. Since that day none has done so and
lived. He also laid
a curse upon women who baked their new born children and ate
them because of the
barrenness of the land. He also cursed the chief of the
women's kindred.
Beforetimes, that
which grew to fullness within the wombs of cattle and sheep
was sustenance for
men alone, but when the beast cast it forth before its day it
became sustenance
appointed for women. Yosira forbade this and cursed all that
came forth from the
womb of beast before its time.
Yosira had these
things recorded in Yapu: "No child shall be slain wilfully,
saying, "Our
god has denied it proper sustenance". Above all gods is the God of
Gods who is the God
of Life and they who proclaim these things proclaim a
falsehood against
Him. Yet they shall not be accursed until after the day when
they have heard the
laws of the God of Gods spoken unto them. Before then they
have been led astray
by those who should guide them, and on the leaders shall be
the curse".
"Henceforth,
the empty body shall not be bound tight against itself, but
stretched out, for
the earthly body cannot be reborn when once its Lord has
departed. The people
shall not be forbidden the carrying of it, nor shall they
be stopped from
elevating it, but it shall not be hung over the living waters,
lest it call forth a
Formless One in the darkness of the night".
"If the kindred
of a man come up to molest him at night, the nightshade shall be
bound by the power
of hokew transmitted into a hollow log filled with
fire-retaining
substances. The log will then be burnt in purifying fire and the
ashes buried after
the fashion of your fathers, but the hokew shall not be given
back. That hokew
which comes from a man whose crops and trees yield abundantly
is best".
"The spirit of
the life of men does not dwell in the moving waters and therefore
it cannot enter into
a woman from the waters, neither does her own water bear it
up from the ground.
Even as a tree springs out from a single seed and the barley
from a single grain,
so is it with the seed of men. That which forms within the
womb of woman is not
built up from many outpourings of man, once will suffice.
If the blood of a
woman be not stopped, then she carry no child, for the life
within is blood of
her blood".
"No man shall
fashion the likeness of any beast to lay with it so that his
flocks and herds be
increased, for henceforth he who does so, and all his
beasts, shall be
accursed so they sicken and perish. Nor shall any man spill his
seed into an object
of wood or stone and bury it. If he does so, then be he
accursed, so that he
is forever molested by the nightshades of terror".
"It is
foolishness to resort to the charmers who make likenesses of beast so
their kind may be
brought to the arrow and spear. Unless he who seeks the wild
beasts be empowered
with the hokew gathered by the kindred of his habitation,
nought can guide his
steps or strengthen his arm, neither will his eye see
keenly. The success
of the hunter is not to be found with the charmers, but lies
in the goodness and
uprightness of the kindred within his habitation".
"If a woman
take seed from a young man and deliver it to the charmers so that
barrenness be
removed from her, then she and the youth, and if she bear any
children they also,
shall be accursed. The young man will be seized by the lukim
which feasts on the
hearts of men, and the woman by those which tear open the
bowels".
"It is an
abomination in the sight of the God of Gods for men to deball
themselves, and all
who do shall be accursed. Those who would deball themselves
for the sake of
their god may instead make an offering of their foreskin, and
this will be
acceptable by any god. The prayer of thankfulness that they are not
born women shall be
made at the time of sacrifice upon the altar".
"The excreta of
man and woman shall never be left exposed to the eyes of anyone,
nor in a place where
its smell can come to the nostrils. Nor shall anyone pass
water where another
can smell it, for they whose nostrils the smell enters
thereby gain power
over the other. The smell from human waste draws up the
formless lambata which
afflict men and women at night and turn their bowels to
water".
"No offering of
meat shall be eaten raw. It shall be roasted before a fire and
the bones pounded
into flour and eaten with meal. If the offering be consumed
within a dwelling
place, then the blood which has been spared must be smeared
upon the door posts,
so that the dark shades of the night haunters and the death
bringers be repulsed
by the power of life".
"It is the duty
of a son to provide sustenance for a Departed One who was his
mother or his
father, and he shall not neglect his brother or his sister or any
of his kinsfolk who
lack children. If he be neglectful of his duty he shall not
escape molestation
by the earthshades of the Departed Ones, which will wander
relentlessly until
satisfied. If Formless Ones be called forth by neglect so
that they reach
stability on Earth, they will haunt the dark watches of the
night and suck
life-filled blood to sustain their awful forms. No man may keep
them from his
dwelling, for they will slide in stealthily even as snakes".
"It is wrong
for charmers to call forth Dark Spirits. Any charmer so doing
within the borders
of the enlightened land shall be accursed, so he be seized by
the nightfiend. If
such be done, and the Dark Spirits wander out of control,
then one of the
Twice Born shall be called upon to return them to their dark
abode".
"It is not
sufficient for men to shun the ways of wickedness, for unless the
Lord of the Body be
clothed in brightness they who watch for him in the Land of
the Dawning will
wait in vain. Those who lack that which would bring them into
the Place of Light
will fall prey to the Lords of the Dark Places and be forever
lost to those who
love them".
"All those who
are Awakeners of the Dead shall be accursed and delivered to the
lukim of madness. If
any of my people deal with them, then they too shall be
accursed so that
they become prey to the terrors of the night. It is futile to
consult the Departed
Ones, for what can they do but advise on matters of little
import? If they have
anything of importance to impart they will come unbidden to
men of understanding
and made it known".
When Yosira came
with his sons and those with them into the true land of
Tamuera, he strove
with the people of Kantiyamtu who followed the ways of
wickedness and
ignorance. He remained among the people of Tamerua during the
days of Gabu,
dwelling at the place where now stands the Temple of the Skyseer,
in an abode of
reeds, by the moving waters.
In those days the people
of Earth united themselves with those who were in the
land of Morning
Light by the powers within the body of a womanchild, seeking in
this manner to
preserve the hokew of their kindred. When Yosira saw the
wickedness of the
custom he placed a great curse upon all the land and upon
those who split the
body of a womanchild, so that her flesh cried out from
within them.
Therefore, the land became stricken with a great plague. Since then
never has anyone in
the enlightened lands eaten the flesh of man or woman, and
no womanchild is
violated in the great wickedness of ignorance. The people of
Tamuera greatly
feared the curse of Yosira.
Yosira taught the
people that the power of hokew resided not in the flesh of the
body but in the
bones, and that each bone contained the essence of all the
being, man and
woman. Then the people began to seek union with the Departed Ones
in the land of the
Morning Light, by the power of the bones, and Yosira forbade
this not, though he
knew it was futile. But where there was healing in the bones
and they were able
to draw it forth, Yosira was not displeased, for all things
pertaining to the
good of the people were well in his sight. Nevertheless, he
forbade to women the
burden of the bones of their husbands, and since then no
shades has risen to
molest them. This was because of the protecting power which
he drew forth to
fill all the land, it relieved the women of their burden,
raising it from
their backs.
All the charmers who
brought forth shades from the Land of Dawning and all the
Questioners of the
Dead and the Awakeners of the Dead were cursed, and this
curse hovers over
the land even to this day. Yet there are still some who seek
to call forth a
shade from the swathed body made eternal, but all they raise up
is an ill-omened
messenger from the Place of Darkness.
Yosira did not
forbid to the people the rites of homage due to their departed
kinsfolk, for in the
Place of Morning Light these were the powers most
interested in the
welfare of any mortal man. Yosira never forbade anything that
was to the benefit
of men, taking away nought but the things which were futile
or harmful. In those
days there were no rites of written record, but Yosira
caused them to be
given to the people. Not so that these should renew life in
the Departed Ones
upon Earth, but so that the Lord of the Body should be
sustained and
strengthened in the Place of the Morning Light by the link of
hokew, sacrificed by
those remaining on Earth.
Yosira spoke to the
people, giving them laws which were recorded in this manner:
'These are words of
the God of Gods Who created man and beast upon the sacred
island. No beast
shall be mated with another not of its kind, and if this
happen, then both
shall be slain and their bodies burnt. If this be done with
the permission of a
man, that man will be accursed. Neither shall any beast be
yoked together with
another not of its own kind. During the first year of its
life no beast shall
be made to take up the burden of man".
When Yosira came to
Kambusis he found there a man of the Hestabwis bound and
prepared for
sacrifice, and he cried out against the deed but none gave ear to
his word. So,
standing off, Yosira placed a staff of power upright into the
ground and danced
around it, singing the song for drawing forth the spirit. When
they saw this, the
people were wroth against him and called upon their charmers
to curse him so he
departed from the Earth. Their curses were ineffective and
when one charmer
approached the dance ring of Yosira, Yosira called forth a
tongue of flame
which consumed the charmer. Then the people became afraid and
fled. So Yosira
released the man who was bound upon the place of sacrifice, but
he was not yet
whole. Yosira also cursed all those who offered the Hestabwis as
a sacrifice to their
gods; since that day no man of the Hestabwis was ever slain
upon the altars.
Yosira did not curse
the charmers of that place, instead he called them to him
and gave them
dominion over the Dark Spirits which left their abode to wander
Earth, molesting men
in their habitation. Thus the charmers became greater in
the eyes of the
people, and from that day onward they have cleansed the land of
all Dark Spirits.
However, Yosira forbade them the calling forth of the Lord of
the Body from any
man so that he became the servant of another, and he placed a
great curse upon any
charmer who disobeyed this law. Yet this is done even now,
but those who
transgress the laws of Yosira do not escape the awful fate due to
them, for his power
is yet potent in the lands of his people. When the
transgressors stand
before him in awful judgement, their deeds will witness
against them.
Yosira forbade those
who sat in judgement the right to judge men by the fat of
crocodiles or by the
horn or skin. Instead he revealed to them the manner of
making judgement
through corn and by the burning sword. He also taught them how
to brew drink which
loosened the bonds from the tongues of men, so that Truth
was no longer
restrained.
The people dwelling
among the trees, along the banks of the moving waters, lived
in fear of tree
apes. They held these sacred and would never harm them. They
believed that these
tree apes snatched the departing Lord of the Body and ate
it, that they lurked
in wait to catch it in a mighty unseen net. So Yosira went
about cursing the
food reserve for the tree apes so that it became fire in their
bellies, causing the
life within them to come up as foam out of their mouths.
Thus the land was
freed from fear of the tree apes, and henceforth the Departed
Ones have gone in
peace, no longer being molested by the tree apes.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE WAY OF YOSIRA
Yosira taught that
within each man resides a little man who is the Lord of the
Body, and this is
the life of men. While man sleeps the little man wanders
abroad to journey as
it will, at death departing from him forever.
The Lord of the Body
cannot be seen by mortal eyes, but it is not hidden from
all seeing eyes of
the Twice Born. When departing at death it comes out from the
mortal mouth,
waiting awhile until it grows celestial wings. Then it flies away
to the Western
Kingdom where the wings are shed.
In the place whither
it journeys the Lord of the Body needs no earth-made abode,
therefore burning
the earthly habitations of a Departed One is futile. However,
if the habitation
remains and it is not purified, it becomes the gathering place
for shades arising
from the Place of Darkness, for the habitation need not be
destroyed, it must
be purified by incense and water and refilled with protective
hokew.
If a man come upon
another asleep, the sleeper must be awakened quietly and with
gentleness, so the
Lord of the Body may re-enter peacefully. For if the sleeper
be awakened before
it has re-entered, or if it jump back in fright, then the man
will become sick.
Therefore, when awakening a sleeper it is well to call gently
to the being
without.
When the mortal body
becomes sickened without the heat of the lukim being
present, or if the
man or woman be seized and tormented by the Dark Spirits of
madness, this may be
caused by the daysleeping of the Lord of the Body. Thus, if
the Lord of the Body
be awakened from its daysleeping, or restored from its
restlessness, then
the man or woman may be cured. These things Yosira permitted
to be done after the
fashion of charmers.
Yosira taught the
curing of many kinds of ills within the mortal body and the
use of draughts
containing the life of herbs and growing things. He used fire to
stop life leaving
the mortal body. The manner of effecting these things is
written in the Book
of Medications.
When Yosira came
with his sons into the land of Tamuera, the people there dwelt
in darkness and they
were ignorant of all knowledge. They were divided among
themselves into many
kindreds, and strife was frequent. They had no kings and
only the old men
ruled. There were many charmers who ruled the people by
delusions and also
those called the Keepers of Customs and the Teller of Tales.
One people dwelt
among great trees and thick forests in the midst of swamplands.
Their habitations
were made of reeds and stood upon high platforms. These people
were called the
Children of Panheta, for he was their god in the days following
those during which
men were first created in the midst of the waters.
Another people dwelt
beyond reach of the waters and away from the trees, and
they were nameless.
They dug holes for their habitations or sought abodes in
caves within the
hillsides. This people had no gods but worshipped the Dark
Spirits and the
Kamawam of the forest which seized men at night. When the men
who had been seized
returned to their kindred, they were without words, being
dumb. They died in
the midst of madness, tearing at their bodies. But there was
no Kamawam in the
forest, this madness being the work of charmers wishing to
instil fear into the
hearts of men.
This is the manner
in which it was brought about: When the charmers seized men
at night they took
them to a secret place where their tongues were pierced well
back with thin
thorns. Thus the tongue swelled up, so they whose tongues were so
pierced lost the
power of speech. The charmers also pierced the victims about
the waist with
slivers of wood, so none could discover where they were inserted.
They drove other
splinters into them at the bridge between the private parts and
the rear channel,
and none could discover them there and know the victim was
pierced with thorns
and splinters.
Yosira cursed all
the charmers who practised this evil with a great curse, so
they were driven to
madness by a demon which ate away their bellies. Since then
the Kamawam has been
known no more in the land.
Yosira taught men to
beat metal out of stones and to burn stones, so that they
gave up their heart.
He taught men to work with clay and he taught them the
weaving of cloth and
the making of beer.
When Yosira came
into the land, the people knew nought about the cutting of
water channels and
the sowing of com, but Yosira taught them these things. It
was he who brought
fertility to the land; it was he who died in the midst of the
waters to give them
life, and his life is in them still. Therefore, it was
through the Spirit
of the Great One who died in the days of old that the soil
became fruitful.
Beyond the reach of the living waters which rise and fall like
the chest of a
breathing man, the land is dead. It remains barren like a woman
who has not known a
man. It was known even to the men of old that if the land
was not refreshed
with the living waters but with other waters, then its
increase would
diminish from year to year until it became waste. The increase
within the soil
comes not from water alone but from the life within the water.
Life comes forth
from life, and that which has not life cannot beget life.
Therefore, the good
land is that which is married to the threefold god, and land
not so married
remains barren. The married land is covered with the rising
waters, but the land
not married is ignored by them.
These things were
written concerning The Children of Panheta: Yosira spoke with
Panheta as man
speaks to man, therefore the laws of the Inta were not changed,
remaining to bind
alike those of them who dwelt on the soil or dwelt on the
sand. If any man
went among the Inta their laws became his laws and if any woman
left the people to
dwell among the Inta she became even as they and might not
return.
Even as the
Sunspirit journeys on a road set between the stars, so does the
spirit of man
journey with the movement of the waters. Therefore, when a man
dies his body shall
be buried lengthwise with the great river.
Even as the land
upon which things grow belongs to the kindred whose blood is
within it, so shall
no man own to himself alone anything growing up from it,
whether it be grass
or herb or tree. But each man and woman may take of every
herb and fruit as
much as can be gathered in the hands and eaten before
sunsetting.
Of all things which
are a seed and can be eaten, each one may gather for
themselves as much
as can be stored within a jar or suspended from the foodpole.
All things which are
a seed and can be eaten but which are not stored in a jar
or suspended from a
foodpole, shall be stored in the pit of the kindred. Nothing
shall be placed
within the pit unless it has been heated by fire and cooled.
Even as the Spirit
of Life resides in the things which men eat, so does it
reside in the living
things from whence they came. Therefore, any tree or bush
bearing the food of
men shall not be cut or broken.
The blood of beasts
cries from the soil even as does the blood of men;
therefore, if shed
it must be appeased. Slay no beast unless it be needed for
food, and bury the
head and whatever comes out of its belly. Every other part
which is taken shall
be eaten or burned, except for the bones and the skin which
are to be used.
Fire serves man, but
it can also become his master. Consider its nature. Does it
spring out of the
wood unbidden or of its own volition, or does it require the
agency of man? Does
it reside in the wood or is there a firespirit? Only the
fools among men
start something which they cannot control. Never let a fire grow
into a thing of much
smoke, keep it bright, using no more wood than is needful
for the purpose. Let
it not stray from its proper place, which is the place
where it serves
without menace.
When they become of
an age to do so every man and woman should take themselves a
mate. Those who fail
to do so are not held in the highest esteem.
By the things
whereby a man commits a wrong, so shall he be punished. Likewise,
he shall be dealt
with according to the nature of the wrong. The customs from
times past are not
unhelpful guides.
When Yosira came to
the place where the Inta dwelt they made him welcome in this
manner, "When
we saw you our hearts were gladdened. The life was renewed in us
and though content
as we were you brought refreshment and joy". Yosira called
these people his
unweaned children.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
THE TRIBULATIONS OF
YOSIRA
These things were
written in the Book of the Two Roads: Yosira, whois therein
called Yoshira, came
from beyond the Realm of Athor and was the first king of
Tehamut. He
established the festivals of the new moon, the festival of wool
drawing and the days
of devotion. When first he brightened this land by his
presence, the
welfare of its people was in the hands of false priests who taught
that man was a
double-spirited being in whom the Spirit of Good struggled with
the Spirit of Evil
for possession of his soul. Each deed and thought was said to
strengthen one or
other of the opponents. The people were not completely
deceived in
accepting this, it is perhaps an earthly distortion of reflected
Truth, but neither
is it wholly true. In the days of old, men saw Truth but
dimly, for it could
be only partially revealed in accordance with their ability
to understand it.
Truth is a light growing even brighter in the darkness of
man's ignorance, and
as the generations pass and go down into dust, men see more
clearly. Each
lightbearer dispels a little more darkness, and Yosira was a
lightbearer, the
greatest of them all.
Before Yosira came,
bearing the lamp of brilliant light, Truth was but dimly
perceived in this
land. The false priests of those days taught that when the
Great God created man
He held back immortality as a special gift for those whom
he favoured. This is
not the attitude of One Who is Great, and therefore such
doctrine cannot be
accepted. That these priests were misled themselves was not
so great an evil as
their misleading of others who trusted them. A true priest
should approach as
close as possible to the shrine of Truth and interpret
whatever he sees
there as clearly as his ability and the understanding of his
followers permit. In
those olden days no man had yet been reborn to wisdom and
enlightenment.
Therefore, nothing was known about the Gardens of light, and men
believed in the Dark
Abode alone. This Dark Abode was a place where sand and
dust were the
sustenance of the dead whose bodies were clothed in long hair and
feathers. Men, in
those olden days, knew little more than that.
They also believed
that souls risen to glory really consumed the food and wore
the garments and
ornaments provided for their use. They did not know, as we do,
that as the soul is
subtle itself so can it use nought but the subtle elements
of earthly things.
Even now incense is burned before the statues of those risen
to glory, so that
they may receive their portion. There are those who believe
that the sustenance
of the soul, and its continued life, depends upon the
monthly communion
sacrifice of its kinsmen on Earth.
As a man who walks
with a lamp at night is attacked by those who lurk in the
darkness, so are
enlighteners who seek to bring light into the gloom of
ignorance attacked
by those whom it would reveal in their true likeness. Thus,
when Yosira cried
out against those who, while not permitting the slaying of men
and women in their
daily lives, nevertheless allowed a child to be slain as
sacrifice, or buried
beneath the pillars they raised up, he was condemned as an
enemy of the gods.
When Yosira was in
the land far up the River of life, one named Azulah who stood
close to the right
hand of Yosira slew a man who was kindred to the Leopard.
This enraged the god
of these people, for the slain man's blood cried out to
him. Therefore, men
of the Leopard came into the land of the East seeking to
slay Azulah for his
offence against their god, but he had withdrawn to a place
of hiding. So when
they found their search to be in vain the men of the Leopard
returned to their
place, informing their priests of their failure. The priests
then held the
rituals for calling down the war power, drawing it down in
strength. Then,
because Yosira was the overlord of Azulah, the men of the
Leopard went forth
against him, claiming the right of war.
But in the night,
when the hostile host waited before the camp of Yosira, the
war priest defiled
himself and so the war power failed to make faint the hearts
of those with
Yosira, the war priest having lost control over it. Thus, the war
power came into the
hands of Yosira and he cast it back so it fell upon the Men
of the Leopard, and
their knees were loosened and their bowels went to water,
and they fled from
that place.
The Men of the
Leopard dwelt within the forests, towards the sunsetting side of
the moving waters,
and Yosira pursued them there. He did not enter the thick
forest, but, coming
to an island in the midst of the waters, he made camp there.
He had a prisoner
whom he released, sending him to the priests with this
message, "Come
in peace, that I may hear your complaint and judge whether it be
just". But the
priests of the Men of the Leopard came down only to the edge of
the waters and would
go no further, and they called out across the waters, "What
was just heretofore
is just no longer, for this is now a matter to be settled
between our kindred
and those who are with you, for blood still cries out for
blood".
Hearing this Yosira
answered, "Let us be wise, there are judges above us, so let
the God of the
Moving Waters decide the matter". To diis the priests said, "It
is well". Then
Yosira took Azulah into a boat, rowing him through the waters
against the South
wind. Stopping the boat Yosira commanded Azulah to leap into
the waters so he
might be tested by swimming, and this Azulah did. He swam
powerfully and the
God of the Moving Waters did not take him, for Yosira had
covered the waters
with his power, so the waters bore up the swimmer, carrying
him in safety to the
shore.
Then Yosira sat down
with the chiefs of the Men of the Leopard and made a
covenant with them
and with other peoples likewise. This was that when a man
slays another among
his own kindred, none among them shall protect him, and he
shall be either
slain or cut off from those of his own blood. However, if the
slain man be of a
kindred different to that of the slayer, then the slayer may
be slain by men of
either kindred. If the kindred of the slayer would avoid the
toll of blood, then
they must send a token to the kindred of the slain man,
together with an
account of the deed. They must also agree that the blood be
upon their own heads
and revenge in their hands, and account of such revenge
shall be sent to the
kindred of the slain man together with their forfeiture.
Then all the kindred
bound themselves with a great oath, declaring that if blood
cried out from the
ground in vain, then the night terrors and blood shades would
be called upon to
fall upon the kindred of the slayer and not upon the kindred
of the slain.
It was at the time
when this covenant was made that Yosira spoke in this manner
to his sons,
"These are the meats which are accursed and shall not be eaten. All
the meat of any
beast which dies of itself. All the meat of any beast which has
been slain as a
sacrifice to the small gods. All the meat of any beast which has
been slain by wild
beasts and all meat which has been offered up on the door
stones. These are
unclean meats".
When Yosira had gone
throughout the land and purified it, and bound up its
wickedness with
curses, he taught those who dwelt there the making of waterways.
He also instructed
them in the meanings of the heavenly signs. He built Piseti
in the midst of the
reedlands and drained the swamps. Then he raised up the
first temple of
brick and stone. At this time he established those who were
recorders of the
days and seasons.
While Yosira was at
Piseti, the priests stirred up the people against him, and
so he fled to the
Land of God with his sons and blood kindred. But his wife and
youngest son did not
go with him, for they were with her father in the land from
whence the great
river flowed. This was the land of Kantoyamtu, where priests
taught that death is
not the normal lot of man. These priests said that though
their forefathers of
old were just as mortal as men, their forefather's fathers
were heirs to
immortality on Earth. This is an erroneous teaching, one belonging
to the childhood of
man, but later men were taught that death is just the
departure of life
which takes flight with the soul.
While Yosira was at
Piseti, his true son, Manindu, commanded the Mesiti who were
a host of men and
workers in brass. They subdued the whole land, returning it to
Yosira. Later it was
delivered into the hands of Manindu whose seal is on it
even yet.
After the time of
Manindu the people forgot the God of Gods, for He appeared
distant from them,
and they worshipped other gods whom the priests devised. The
light was dimmed and
only poorly reflected in small hidden shrines.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE VOICE OF GOD
(This is a
modernised, revised version of a difficult to understand original and
it probably contains
some interpolated material).
The Voice of God
came out of the Heavens unto His servants even before the days
of Wunis, but in
these days it has come to certain of His Devoted Ones who heard
it within the cavern
of visions. Afterwards, each wrote it down according to his
own hearing, and lo,
when they came together it was seen that each had recorded
the same words.
Thus, the things which were heard by the three and set down by
them in writing, all
being agreed alike are things recorded forever.
"I am the Voice
of God Who is the God of All Men and Ruler of their Hearts. I
have many aspects
and come differently to all men, I am the God of Many Faces.
To you, My servants,
I give these words, that they may be carried to all men.
Obey My commands and
I will be Your God. I will enlighten and instruct you,
guiding you along
the way. I desire your love and loyalty, and your adherence to
My plans, but I do
not desire your servility. I am not only your God but your
Commander as well,
and so I expect obedience and discipline, as befits those who
prepare for harsh
and grim battles such as those which lie ahead".
"My desire is
for love rather than futile sacrifices of burnt offerings, but it
should not be a
passive love but one expressing service in My Cause. A certain
knowledge of right
and wrong, with free choice of the former, is of greater
value in My sight
than pointless ritualistic worship. I derive no pleasure from
the wasteful
shedding of blood from bulls and lambs. I gain nothing from the fat
of sheep and the
flesh of goats. I am the Creator of All, so what can men give
that would increase
My greatness? Men are misled if they believe that their sins
can be purged by
vain rituals. Only active goodness can obliterate the stain of
sin".
"Men approach
Me in fear, they come to me with servility. They beg forgiveness
for their sins and
request My help in worldly matters. To sing My praises is
their excuse for
coming into places made sacred unto Me, but they come wanting
something, be it
only reassurance. With this attitude towards Me, do you wonder
that I remain mute
before their pleas? Bring Me no more vain offerings of flesh
and blood, for such
wastefulness of life is an offence to the God of Life. What
benefit do I derive
from all your feasts or festivals? Give me dedication and
effort, that is all
I ask. Above all be true to yourselves, for I abhor the face
of hypocrisy, the
face now all too familiar when men approach Me".
"Men bring Me
meat and wine, fine flour and wheaten cakes, thinking I can
consume these, or
that I have need of such sustenance. I would be far better
served were these to
be given to the widow and orphan, to the multitudinous poor
whom you suffer to
exist in your midst. Poverty is man-made and it is not
sufficient for the
wealthy to give alms to the poor; those with power and
position, with wealth
and plenty must strike at the roots of poverty. If they
fail to do this,
then the alms they give have no merit in My sight".
"Your solemn
assemblies, your tedious processions, your long faces and
melancholy
expressions bring no gladness to My heart. Your burdensome
ceremonials and
futile offerings of life and food benefit Me in no way at all.
Men themselves may
derive benefit from these, but their hypocrisy when they
proclaim they do
this in My name is not hidden from Me".
"The reek of
your incense smoke rises and disappears into the air, but it comes
not unto Me, nor do
I have need of it. Yet I will not deny you the pleasure of
its fragrance which
can bring inner harmony and peace by soothing the spirits of
men. Nor will I deny
you your feasts, if the fetters of wickedness be thereby
loosened from your
souls, but do not say they are undertaken for My benefit or
glorification.
Fasting and the denial of bodily appetites may serve useful ends
for men, but though
you may deceive yourselves regarding their intent, do not
try to deceive Me by
mis-stating their purpose. I have no desire to repress the
joy and exuberance
welling up in the hearts of men, far rather would I prefer
that such humanising
emotions be cultivated. Therefore, pray if prayer serves
its true purpose,
which is to harmonise your spirit with Mine so communication
becomes possible.
Keep your festivals and feasts if they serve their purpose,
which is to inspire
and refine your spirit. Do all that elevates your spirit and
develops your souls,
that is the true purpose of life. Do all that is good for
you, nothing wholly
beneficial is denied you, but do not declare that in so
doing you confer
benefit upon Me. I am the God Above and Beyond All".
"I do not deny
you your rituals and ceremonials, worship Me if you will as you
will, but bear in
mind that this cannot substitute for your obligations. Ritual
and worship cannot
be an adjustment or payment for the things you have failed to
do, or be an apology
for your own shortcomings. Neither do they compensate for
iniquities against
your fellowmen. If you attach importance to ritual and
ceremonial let it be
in a proper proportion, and never let them dull your
conscience against
deeds of wickedness, of usury and injustice. Never let your
duty and obligations
be neglected because you worship Me diligently, following a
formalised ritual
and ceremonial. Let this not become an excuse for failing to
share your bread
with the hungry or for neglecting the needs of the destitute or
weak. I am not
deceived. A life dedicated to Me is not one preoccupied with
worship, that is
more the life of a coward trembling before the unknown. He who
dedicates bis life
to Me gives shelter to the homeless and succours those in
distress, but even
these are not the ultimate in goodness, for they are
passively accepted.
The ultimate in goodness is to actively combat all the root
causes of evil.
Those who are my true followers live a life of service and
goodness. They live
in harmony with their neighbours, harm none and do not shirk
the burdens and
obligations of earthly existence".
"I am better
served by obedience to My laws and conformity with My plans than by
ritual and
offerings. To listen to the words of the Sacred Writings while
striving to understand
them is better in My sight than offerings of flesh and
treasure which
benefit the priests more than they do Me. Among the things which
I abhor few are more
detestable than the hypocritical offerings of the evildoer.
The offerings and
worship of a hypocrite are an abomination to Me. Evil enters
the realm beyond
Earth as a foul smell, and the worse one of all is the smell of
hypocrisy. Those who
pander to hypocrites or do not actively oppose them are
also creatures of
evil".
"I know too
well the deceit to which men are prone. The adulterer and fornicator
preach chastity for
others, while the liar declares the virtues of Truth. The
thief preaches
honesty and the lewd-minded professes modesty. Men say one thing
and mean another,
while all too often the half or slanted truth replaces the
real thing. Men may
deceive themselves and other men, but I am not deceived. Now
I say, let men first
cleanse their own souls and eradicate hypocrisy before
presuming to
approach Me. Men may well cry out, "Why does God remain mute, why
has He deserted Me?
" Do they think their deeds are hidden or that I cannot read
the secrets of their
hearts?"
"Worship by men
of iniquity is mere mockery. How rare the sincere and genuine
heart! Were men
indeed deserted by their God, they would have none to blame but
themselves. Do men
think their lack of kindness and consideration for others,
their insincerity
and inconsistency are truly hidden from Me? I am the All
Knowing One. I see
too little love of goodness in the hearts of men and too much
fear for the
consequences of their deeds".
"Real and
sincere worship is to obey My laws and to shoulder the
responsibilities of
men, to steadfastly conform to My plan and to live in
neighbourly harmony.
He who devotes his life to Me also devotes it t his own
welfare. He who
serves Me well likewise serves himself. This is the Law of Laws.
For the whole
purpose of life is not the service of God but the development of
the soul of man. He
who worships Me with empty ritual and vain ceremonial but
neglects the
wellbeing of his own soul, does not serve Me well, for he thwarts
My purpose. I have
endowed the creature made in My likeness with a religious
instinct, for this
springs from its everlasting spirit, as fire generates heat;
therefore, to
worship is not unnatural. But blind worship lacks the vitalising
element, it defeats
its own end, for in true worship man should reach out beyond
himself to discover
his own soul. Then, having done so, he should develop it
until the soul
aspires to godhood itself".
"Therefore,
dedicate all your labours and the skill of your hands unto Me, and
let your heart ever
dwell on the borders of the spiritual. Let the life which
you cherish be the
spiritlife. Free yourself from all vain hopes and selfish
thoughts; from all
worthless encumbrances; from ungainful avarice and
unbeneficial lusts;
from the domination of the flesh. life is not easy, nor is
it wholly pleasant;
it is not meant to be, but bear your burdens with
cheerfulness and
fortitude. Entrench yourself within an inner fortress of
peace".
"Whatever you
do or give, do or give in My name, and whatsoever sufferings
descend upon you,
suffer them for Me. Thus, you will avoid the stigma of false
pride and all given
and suffered will be without any taint of self-interest".
"The path of
godliness is not an easy one to follow, for it is beset with the
pitfalls of
perplexity and doubt. Then, too, there is not one path but several,
and few among men
know which is the best. There are many false paths leading
nowhere, there are
paths that lead to a wilderness of disillusion and some which
lead to destruction.
Yet among the many beliefs springing up from time to rime
in various lands,
there are always those which lead to the same Truth, to the
one Fountainhead of
Light, though some may be devious and some wander through
dangerous territory.
They are like many roads leading pilgrims to the one
shrine. Though all
true paths are lit by the guiding light of Truth, not all see
it alike; but the
fault lies not so much in the light as in the beholder. It is
this which leads to
misunderstandings concerning each other's teachings and to
disputes between
those who prefer one road and those preferring another. Each
considers his own
way, his own interpretation of the light to be the best, if
not the only,
way".
'There are few, even
among truly enlightened men, who are able to conceive My
true nature, and
these know that I am even above unchangeability in
manifestation. I can
think of Myself as some other and forthwith that other
comes into being.
There are those among men who declare all life, all My
creation to be an
illusion of the senses, a dream without sustenance. They are
in error, for all
that is real and all that exists was ever latent, awaiting the
awakening kiss.
Because men cannot know reality as it actually is but only as
they can conceive it
to be with their deceptive sense, does not make it any less
real. If all men
were blind, the stars would still exist".
"Neither reality
nor Truth, nor the God Who is beyond and above both will be
inconceivable to the
minds of the ultimate man. Only man in his present
undeveloped state
and in his ignorance cannot conceive such things and
therefore, because
in his blindness they are beyond his sight, he says they do
not exist".
"In the
beginning I established the Law, without which the souls of men could
not develop and
progress. As each soul is itself a divine fragment, with all the
powers of divinity
latent within itself, it can modify all but the Great Law.
Man thinks but his
thoughts alone do not create, for, as yet, he lacks knowledge
of the power which
creates in substance. First I created the firmament, which is
the matrix of all;
then when I took thought the creative power flowed outward
and, operating upon
the medium, brought into being things of substance".
"My creation
arose before Me as light does before a flame or heat before a fire.
It came and still
comes into being because I exist, it is because I Am. Creation
in no way affects Me
any more than a man is affected by his shadow, or light by
its reflection. As
raindrops, waves, rivers, dew and mist are all forms of
water, so is
everything existing and knowable by man but various forms of the
one substance. This
substance has its origin in Me, but it is not Me".
"I am the
source of all things, supporting but not being supported by them. Even
as the mighty winds
which sweep across the Earth find their rest in the tranquil
vastness above, so
all beings and all things have their rest in Me. It is a
power outflowing
from Me which holds all things in stability and form".
'They who devote
their lives to My service must do more than love and worship
Me, for such service
entails the elevation of mankind, the spreading of good and
the combating of
evil. They must not only fight against the ungodly, but also
overcome the
wickedness welling up in their own thoughts. They who love Me
desire the
well-being of all men, and their souls are filled with harmony and
peace. Dearer to Me
than their love for Me is the labour and tribulations of
those who serve Me.
I am their end. I am never the God of Inertia but the God of
Effort; if you offer
no more than deeds done in My service or in conformity with
My design, then you serve
Me adequately".
"However, too
rarely do the ways of men conform to My plan and the ranks of
those who serve are
too thin. Therefore, I shall call forth leaders from among
men and send out the
clarion cry to service. I shall seek out men who will serve
Me diligently and
loyally. They will be men of goodwill who are of a friendly
nature. They will be
kind and compassionate, men who can love deeply and truly,
whose steadfastness
is the same in pleasure and affliction; whose resolve
remains equally
unbroken in the sweet embrace of good fortune as under the harsh
blows of misfortune.
I will send men who are fair and just, proud and resolute,
but these qualities
mean nothing unless they also have courage and resolution,
fortitude and
tenacity".
"I shall seek
the man who is himself ever seeking, who seeks to unravel the
riddle of life. One
whose determination is strong, who detests wickedness and
delights in the
good; whose heart and inner vision reach out for enlightenment.
His tranquillity
will remain unshaken under stress and within his heart will be
a haven of peace
beyond the reach of excitement and anger. He will be a lover of
wisdom and seeker of
truth. He who is wise, he who knows what to do, who remains
calm when others
lose their self-control; he who is clearheaded under stress,
who enjoys the
challenge of the task, that man is Mine, He who labours
uncomplainingly, who
disdains to satisfy deforming lusts, whose spirit
remains the same
under the temptations of honours or the pressure of disgrace;
he who is free from
the shackles of unworthy earthly attachments, who retains
his balance under
praise or blame, who can shoulder his own burdens, whose
spirit is calm,
silent and strong under all circumstances; he who can bear the
responsibilities of
life and the obligations of love, that man is Mine. I am the
God of Inspiration,
I am the God of Love".
"I am the
Knower and you are the known. I am the Source of Life. In the vastness
of My nature I place
the seed of things to be, from which come forth all things
that are now or ever
will exist".
"Men must
nourish their spirit and sustain it with spiritual fare. They must
also learn that the
spirit is not something seperate from man, or something
within him. Man is
spirit, man is soul. There is no need to engage in
long-winded empty
discussions about far away things lying beyond the reach and
understanding of
men. To know the reality of the spirit and to establish the
existence of the
soul, man has only to delve within his nature, to seek within
himself. The
spiritual part of man is not a mysterious something outside his
being, or a thing
difficult to understand. To discover it requires no more than
the effort of
seeking".
"Men with
sincere hearts, seeking a path ask for a starting point. However, for
most the key is
self-discipline, and this is the reason for many laws and
restrictions. But
these must never be unnecessarily restrictive, each must have
a definite purpose
and beneficial end, obscure though these may be. The means
for overcoming
unwholesome desires and for harmonising with the divine chord he
within the reach of
all, but effort must be expended in their cultivation. If
the end is great
beyond man's conception, it is no less true that the task
before man is arduous
and difficult in the extreme. To master himself and gain
complete
self-control is no more than the first step along the path".
"Though men may
despair because I am veiled from them, though they may seek
without finding, I
am not indifferent to their needs and desires. Doubt and
uncertainty are
essential earthly conditions serving a definite end. I have not
surrounded men with
perplexities and obscurities unnecessarily. The climate of
unbelief and
materialism, strange though it may seem to men, is best for their
spiritual health. I
know better than men themselves what is best for them, for I
alone can see the
broad design spread over the ages, I alone see the end and
objective. Though
unenlightened men expect it, it is not meet for Me to
interfere unduly in
the affairs of Earth".
"All things are
Mine and under My dominion, but man may deal with them as he
will. I do not
interfere, but finally man is accountable. Though I have all and
nothing can add to
My grandeur, with all this I still labour. Therefore, man
should never disdain
to labour, for this is an attribute of the Highest. I do
not require of any
man that he do something I would not do, or be something I
would not be, I am
the God of Righteousness. If ever I ceased to labour, the
universe would be
without order, chaos would prevail and precede its
destruction".
"I am the God
of Many Aspects, for men may conceive Me in any form they wish, or
even as something
without form. I am the God of Men's Hearts. In whichever way
and by whatever name
men serve Me, abiding by My laws and conforming with the
Great Design, is
right in My eyes. Any path which will bring man to his goal is
the right road.
Truly the paths chosen by men are many and varied, some are even
devious, but if they
be true paths of enlightenment and development, they are
acceptable in My
sight. However, those who lust for earthly power, offering
sacrifice and
worship to earthly gods conceived to accord with their desires,
are not acceptable
to Me. It is true that earthly success and power may come to
those who strive for
them, but do they achieve anything more than fleeting
satisfaction? What
manner of being would now dominate Earth, had all men been
without divine
enlightenment from the beginning, if earthly ends alone had
dominated men's
minds? Consider what earthly life would have been like, had it
been left to develop
predominated by materialism, if it had not been mitigated
by injections of the
divine".
"There are four
main types of men who are good and serve Me well. They are those
who suffer
courageously the afflictions and sorrows which develop the soul.
Those who labour,
that Earth and man may benefit. Those who seek after Truth and
those with vision
and creativity. Yet how rare are those among these who do not
besmirch their
record with deeds of evil and thoughts of wickedness. All too
many may have, by
their carnal desires and acts of wickedness, countered their
goodness to the
detriment of their immortal souls".
"If a man
follow a false god with goodwill and honesty, serving men well and
living in accordance
with My laws, I will not repudiate him and he will not be
denied enlightenment
on the way. There are many roads along which the soul may
travel to bring
about its development and awakening to self-consciousness, but
is it not
advantageous to choose the best one? Only the foolish travel blindly,
without seeking
guidance and directions. Those who have little wisdom or who are
easily misled follow
roads which go nowhere. They who follow a barren faith
reach a barren
destination, they find only an empty place devoid of hope,
incapable of
fulfilling their dreams and aspirations".
"Those who
worship gods of their imagination, gods in strange likenesses, which
have been brought
into being by man's creative conceptions, will go to these
gods who have an
existence in a dim shadow realm. Those who worship lower
spirits will go to
them and those who worship the demons of darkness will join
them, for what a man
desires he deserves. There is a link between that which men
desire and what
becomes established in existence. Provision is made for man to
receive the fruits
of his own creations".
"Whatsoever you
do, whatsoever you plan or create, whatsoever you suffer, let it
be an offering unto
Me, not for My sake but for yours. I am the God of
Compassion, the God
of Understanding. From those who in their devotion offer Me
but a single leaf, a
flower or fruit, or even a little water, this I will gladly
accept, thus
lightening their loving spirit, for it is offered in sincerity of
heart. He who comes
before any god, whatsoever its image, with pureness of heart
and good motives,
comes unto Me, for I gaze upon him with compassion and
understanding. I am
not concerned with the deeds alone of men, but with their
motives. Empty
gestures are ignored, but that which is done with good intent and
a loving heart never
goes unheeded".
"I am the
Hidden God, hidden to serve an end. Veiled in mystery, I am further
obscured by the
mists of mortal delusion. Unable to see me, men declare I do not
exist, yet I declare
to you that man, with his mortal limitations, sees only a
minute part of the
whole. Man is the slave of illusion and deception. Though man
is born to delusion,
for it is a needful state, he is further inflicted by
deceptions wrought
by men. Though man cannot perceive the greatness above him,
because of its
greatness, neither can he see the smallness beneath him, because
of its smallness.
From the greatest came the smallest and from the smallest came
creation, and within
the smallest is greatness and power. For the smallest is
far less than the
mote, yet it is the upholder of the universe and it shines
like the sun beyond
the darkness. It lies out towards the edge of the reach of
man's thought.
In the beginning all
things arose from the invisible and into the invisible all
things will
disappear in the end, but the end is not the end of the spirit. Out
beyond this material
creation born of the invisible, there is a higher eternal
invisible of greater
substance. When all material things have passed away, this
will remain. Above
all is timelessness, which is eternity, and there is My
abode, the supreme
goal of man, and those who attain it dwell in eternity. I am
the Eternal
God".
"Few are they
who can conceive of Me as I really am, the Unborn and Uncreated,
Beginningless and
Without End, Lord of All the Spheres. Those few who can
conceive Me as I am
are awakened spirits freed from mortal delusions. As thick
clouds of smoke rise
up and spread out from a fire burning in damp wood, so did
the material
universe come forth from Me. As a lump of salt dropped into a pool
of water dissolves
and cannot be removed afterwards, yet from whatever part of
the water you draw
there is salt, so it is with My pervading Spirit. I am the
Great Luminary, the
everlasting source of light sparks, which, imprisoned in
matter, become the
slumbering souls of men. These, unconsciously guided, spread
out the five senses
under the control of unconscious thought. That which the
senses harvest
departs with the spirit. It is borne away by the spirit, even as
perfume is carried
by the wind. I am the Boundless One, The One Beyond
Limitations. I
remain free and unencumbered by the effort of creation. I Am and
I watch life unfold.
I set the course which nature follows to bring forth all
that lives".
"The fools on
Earth, who shut their eyes and complain because they stumble, the
ignorant who choose
to walk in darkness and the apathetic who choose paths of
ease and comfort,
have no knowledge of Me. Their hopes are sterile. Theirs the
choice of darkness,
theirs the choice of ignorance, theirs the choice of
apathetic inertia.
Their learning is futile, their thoughts fruitless and their
deeds without purpose.
Though man is born in ignorance and darkness, he is also
heir to the guiding
light which dispels them. The light is his for the taking.
Then there are the
awakened souls among men, their sustenance is My own nature.
They know My Spirit
is among men as an everlasting source of strength and
refreshment to the
weary and disheartened. They are in harmony with My Spirit
and therefore know
Me".
"Men call Me
the God of Battles, which I am not, for good men fight each other
when kings declare
war. Men call Me many things, but this does not make Me
become what they
think I am. I am the hidden power which ultimately rights all
wrongs, which will
eventually redress all injustices. I come to all who are
worthy, but it is
the lonely, the unwanted, the undesirable whom I seek. To Me,
the dispirited, the
perplexed, the sorrowful and humiliated soul is an
irresistible magnet.
I am the welcoming light at the end of the road, the
companion who
watches in compassionate silence, the understanding friend, the
ever ready arm. I am
He Who presides over the haven of peace within your heart".
"To those who
unite their spirit with Mine and to those who are in harmony but
not united, I
increase that which they have and provide what they lack. I turn a
like countenance to
all men. My love for them remains constant, but those who
join Me in devotion
to My cause are truly in Me and I am in them. This is My
everlasting and
unchanging promise unto me: He who walks with Me, serving My
cause, shall not
perish. So join your spirit with Mine, giving me your
confidence and
trust, and thus united in a harmonious relationship you will come
to know the supreme
goal. Men say they cannot know Me through their senses, and
this is true, for I
am above and beyond the reach of their finite senses. The
senses of man are
not meant to be the means for experiencing Me, they are for
experiencing the
material spheres. They are also limiting, shutting out far more
man they reveal. Yet
men have within mem a greater sense which can know Me, but
it lies dormant in
the mass of men. I am the Light Widiin the Heart, the
Consciousness of All
Living Things. I am the God of Consciousness, the Listener
in the
Silences".
"I do not
manifest to man through his mortal senses, for these are bounded by
earthly limitations.
I manifest through the great sense which is of the spirit,
the sense of the
soul. As pure light hides many colours, so am I hidden in the
hearts of men. As
sparks fly from a bellows-blown fire, so from the Eternal Fire
the life sparks fly
out to glow for an instant in matter and then fall back. As
the sun radiates
heat, a flower perfume and a lamp light, so does the heart of
man create his own
spiritual state. The eye of man sees a pebble, a star, a
sheep or a tree and
these do not appear to him in anyway alike. Yet all are
differing forms
manifesting in the one outflowing force originating with Me.
This outflowing
force generated mat which gave birth to substance and endowed it
with the matrix for
form. The fragments of Divine Spirit interpret that which
the Divine Spirit
created, but they cannot know it in its reality, for,
enshrouded in
matter, they sleep. Because the material sphere is a separate part
of the greater
whole, the mortal part of man can never hope to know in full its
boundless beauty, or
experience its limitless bliss. Out beyond the limits of
man's thought and
conception, beyond reach of even the most vivid imagination,
the wonder and glory
of it all stretch out into absolute perfection. Even at the
outer reaches where
eternity begins the wonder of the inner glory remains
veiled. No words of
man can ever hope to describe the true nature of divine
things, to the
divine alone can the divine be known. The radiant living heart
pulsating with love
can never be known to man as man, but when man becomes more
than man he may take
his first glimpse behind the veil. I am the Inspiration and
Goal of Man".
"Before
creation I was the One Alone. I thought and the thought became a command
of power, and into
the void of the invisible came that which was the potential
of substance, though
itself then part of the invisible. light was born of the
power and My Spirit
was in the midst of the light, but it was not that light
which lightens the
day. A firmament became the foundation of all things, matter
gradually forming
there, becoming ever denser as it thrust outward from the
invisible. It moved
from a subtle state to something more solid, from
intangibility to
substance, from incoherent substance into a state of density
and form. I
commanded the subtle substance, with light but without form, to mate
with the subtle
substance of darkness and become dense. It did so and became
water. Then I spread
water over the darkness below the light, placing a fountain
of light about the
waters. This brought forth the light of mortal vision, which
is not the light of
the spirit, nor the light of power. At that time the
universe was made
and then Earth received her form. It slept warmly in the midst
of the waters, which
were not the waters of Earth, and this was before the
beginning of life in
earthly substance. I am the God of Creation".
"At the
foundations of My creations are Truth and Reality, these are with Me and
of Me, but they are
not My substance, neither are they things comprehensible on
Earth. These are
truly great things indescribable in the inadequate words of
men, which can do no
more than form an imperfect, incomplete and distorted
picture of them;
simple things can be described clearly in a few words to the
understanding of
man, but greater things become increasingly difficult to deal
with through mere
words. What words of man can be used to describe the
indescribable? How
can tilings beyond the comprehension of mortal men be brought
within the limits of
their understanding? Before the shadow there was the
reflecting light, a
light so bright that were it not veiled in the darkness it
would consume the
shadow. Seeking to explain and describe transcendental things
in the limited
language of man only leads to obscurity and confusion, the words
form
incomprehensible sentences and unthinking men will declare them to be
incoherence.
Therefore, look behind the sentences strung together with mere
words. I am the
Unknown God veiled from man by man's mortal limitations".
"The universe
came into being and exist because I AM. It is My reflection in
matter. As a man
remains unaffected by the manifestations of his shadow, so do I
remain unaffected by
the material creation. As heat comes forth from fire and
contains its essence
and nature, though it is not fire, neither has it the
substance of fire,
so does My creation relate to Me. I am as an object reflected
in water. The water
may not know the reflection or find it within itself, but
this inability has
no effect on the reality of the object, nor on the fact of
its reflection. It
is as a man looking into clear water on a calm day sees bis
reflection therein,
but if the wind blows the image becomes distorted, and if
the sun hides its
face the image disappears. Yet none of these effects touches
upon the image
itself, nor upon that which casts the image. When the wind drops,
the cloud vanishes
and the sun reappears, both distortion and deception end, and
the reality is again
reflected. Within My creation is My Spirit, which supports
it, and this Spirit
is the bond between My creation and Myself. No man
acknowledges the air
because it is still, but when this same air becomes a
whirlwind men give
it their whole attention. With Me all is real, while with man
all is illusion; but
man may abandon his illusions in seeking Me, and he will
thereby discover
reality. I am the Reahty Behind the Reflection, I am the
Uncaused
Cause".
" Those who
turn away from the glorious jewel within to seek an outside god, a
separate,
unresponsive being, are looking for a mere trinket, while disregarding
the priceless
treasure already in their keeping. Men of light worship the vision
of light, men of
darkness and ignorance worship ghosts and dark spirits, demons
of the night. There
are men who, moved by dark beliefs or their carnal lusts and
perverted passions,
perform awful austerities and self-mutilations never
ordained by Me. They
delight in tormenting the life and spirit within their
bodies. They are
truly deluded victims of the darkest form of ignorance. Yet
some derive pleasure
from their pains and torments, and so continue them, but
these may be truly
described as mutilated souls. Some men follow gods who punish
wickedness and
reward good, and therefore tend towards goodness, but is it not
folly to follow
non-existent gods? All men choose their own spiritual destiny,
whether it be done
knowingly or not, for under the Law their future state must
rest in their own
hands. I am the GodWho ordained the Law, and nothing man can
do will change it.
My love alone mitigates the consequences of man's unredeemed
wickedness. I am the
Changeless One. Could a God of Love become a God of
Vengeance? Revenge
is something alien to Me. Therefore, is it reasonable that
men should believe I
could be one thing today and then because they fall into
error become
something else tomorrow? My nature is not as that of man. I AM as I
AM.
"I am not
influenced by the mere formal actions of men, or by empty sacrifice.
Lighted lamps and
candles, days of fasting and self-mortification by man cannot
sway Me in his
favour. I am not to be bribed, for I am God. He who handles fire
carelessly and gets
burnt cannot blame the fire, neither can he who goes into
swift waters and
drowns blame the waters. There are laws, the violation of which
brings retribution
in its train. They who by their own deeds bring pain and
suffering upon
themselves cannot blame Me for what ensues. These are the effects
of the lesser laws
which are easily understood, but above these is the Great Law
which is not so
incomprehensible. Under this the link between the deed and its
effect is not so
apparent; men bring down calamity and suffering upon their own
heads and blame Me,
when the fault lies with them and the cause is their own
misconduct or
misconception. Men reap as they sow and I am the Fertile Field
which takes no part
in the sowing or the reaping. Man is his own master and the
lord of his own
destiny. He cannot expect help from any great power, unless he
himself expend
effort to contact such power or be deserving of help. Everything
a man is or becomes
is the result of his own striving and efforts, or his lack
of them. I made man
to be a man, not a mere puppet or nurseling. I am the God of
the Law. I am the
God of the Stalwart".
"Man is the
heir to divinity, and the road to divinity is spirituality. Man
cannot become
spiritual except through his own efforts and striving. He cannot
achieve it by being
led by the hand or through fear of punishment, nor by greed
through anticipation
of a reward. He who enters into his heritage of divinity
will be no weakling,
he will have trodden a hard and stony path".
"Man has two
ways of knowing Me. He can know Me through his own spiritual
awakening or through
the continued revelation of moral law and divine purpose by
My inspired
servants. To know Me through a spiritually awakened self is the way
of certainty, but
few can suffer its austerities and disciplines".
"When the
spirit of man is unawakened he cannot know the great self within him,
of which he is a
part. Not knowing his true nature and unable to see clearly, he
is blinded by
material delusions. Would not the creatures of the night, which
never see the sun,
deem the moon to be the most brilliant light in the sky
above? So it is with
the man walking in the darkness of spiritual
unconsciousness, He
says, "I am the body and the body is my whole being", and in
the delusion of that
belief he becomes ensnared in an existence bound to matter.
Like the creatures
bound to an existence in the night, which cannot know the
glories of things
flourishing in the brilliance of daylight, so it is with men
bound to the
darkness of spiritual ignorance".
"As a shadow in
the night is mistaken for an intruder, or a mirage is mistaken
for a pool of clear
water, so does the spiritually immature man mistake the
material body for
the whole living being. As the shimmering heat haze appears
like solid water, so
does the outer body appear as the whole being to the
spiritually
unawakened. As, to a man in a moving boat, another boat lying still
on the water will
often appear to be moving while he himself seems to remain
still, so the
unawakened spirit is deluded by appearances, seeing the mortal
body as a whole
being. When in fact the clouds are flying overhead, it appears
as though the moon
itself is speeding across the Heavens, it is only the
knowledge and
experience we have of the skies above, which tell us this cannot
be the truth. Thus
it is with the spiritually unawakened man who, in his
ignorance, thinks
the mortal body is the whole being, and, having no knowledge
or experience of the
spiritual region, is deceived. In fact all the beliefs of
man which hold that
the mortal body is the whole being are generated in the
darkness of
ignorance. A man may be wise in the ways of men, but completely
ignorant and unaware
of the higher, more glorious things which are revealed in
the light of the
spirit".
"The man held
in bondage to delusion says, "If mere be another body, a part of
me of which I am
unaware, it cannot be real, neither can I know it. My eyes are
infallible guides,
seeing things just as they are, and any feelings I may
experience have
their origin within my mortal being. I am the child of my body".
This man is deluded,
like the creatures of the night, or as the man who sees a
mirage. Are the eyes
which see mirages totally reliable? Motes swimming in the
sunbeam are
unsubstantial things, yet things such as these are the bricks of
man's body, the eyes
making them appear solid and substantial, the unreal for
the real, his mortal
body for his whole self. The deluded man ignores the
spiritual part of
his being and its needs. He cherishes the mortal body,
gratifying its
desires with earthly pleasures. Like the silkworm, he becomes
captive in a cocoon
of his own making. The man who lavishes undue care on the
mortal body displays
his own spiritual ignorance and inadequacy. To be free from
existence in the
darkness of ignorance, to know the glory of life in the light
of spiritual
consciousness, a man must first awaken his spirit, in this way
alone can he become
aware of his true nature".
"Ask
yourselves, "What am I? What is real within myself? What comprises the
whole man? Can it be
that I am truly no more than this fleshy thing, the petty,
immature, unstable
being balanced between futile unearthly ideals and carnal
cruelty and lust? Or
am I something greater which is undiscoverable by mortal
senses? Am I really
akin to something divine and glorious from which source
alone could have
come the ideals and virtues which transcend the mundane needs
of earthly
existence? " Ask yourselves, in the solitudes, and perchance you will
not go unanswered. I
am the God of Silences".
"The words of
men are inadequate to express just what man really is, the
knowledge of his
true nature is beyond the understanding of the unawakened
spirit. The
inheritance within the grasp of man is without limitation, for it is
the totality of all
things. Man has not been misled in the hope and belief that
the seemingly mortal
is in fact immortal. The spirit does not mislead men. They
are deceived by
their own eyes, they are misled, so they are unable to see
things as they are
in reality. All that men see and experience throughout
earthly existence is
veiled in illusion. Man may think his eyes reveal things as
they are, but no
mortal eye has ever beheld a thing as it actually is. It
appears to man
through the coloured distorting glass of his own mortality.
Spiritually, men as
a whole are little different from the madman who builds
himself a kingdom
from the fabric of his imagination. The flowing life existence
about him is seen as
a distorted image, a distortion which his own defects have
imparted to it. Yet
it was meant to be thus, for man is surrounded by the
conditions meet for
him. It is for man to discover why this is so, and in
discovering he will
find himself. I am the Truth, I am the Reality".
"This earthly
life, which I have given you, should not be viewed in its minute
aspect but in the
light of infinitude. All the suffering and disillusionment,
the futility, the
forlorn hopes and wasted efforts, the oppressions and
injustices are not
without a purpose. That purpose is beyond anything man can
understand and
infinitely greater than his conception can grasp. The truly
awakened man, alone
among men, can have any insight into life's end and goal".
"These are
divine things, yet they can be set down only in the mere words of men
and will thus be
reduced to things of mortal frailty. Mere words will be read
and the pattern
formed by them will be far short of Truth and Reality. The taste
of a fruit or the
fragrance of a flower cannot be known by reading about them.
The fruit must be
eaten and the flower smelt. Only in union with Me, spirit
communicating with
Spirit, can proof of My reality be found. Yet, because things
are as they are,
Truth must ever be veiled from man as man. But who would
labour, if labourers
were paid whether they worked or not? Were they revealed to
him, the ignorant
man would not comprehend great things, therefore the light is
not for him. The
insincere and shallow seeker after diversion and pleasure will
find little
entertainment in these words. The really illuminated man will
already know
something of the Truth and will therefore seek it more diligently
along a higher path.
So these words are given just for those sincere seekers who
are aware of their
own shortcomings and ignorance. These will be people whose
thoughts are not
smothered by prejudice, who are not set in their opinions. For
who among men is the
most confirmed in his opinions? Who states things in the
most assertive
manner and talks with the loudest voice? Is it not the most
ignorant? I will not
let the sincere seeker go unguided. I am the Light on the
Path".
"Well do I know
the hearts of men, they ever seek to deceive themselves. They
clearly see the
errors and follies of others but are blind to their own. There
are those whose idea
of righteousness is mumbled words and repetitious prayers.
Their souls are
warped with selfish desires and their Heaven is the fulfilment
of these.
Theirprayers are pleas for pleasure or power, for freedom from the
things which develop
the spirit. The lovers of pleasure and power delight in
following the path
of their own inclinations, they build a creed of their own
desires. They have
neither courage nor the will to follow a sterner and true
path. Avoid the
companionship of such as these, setting your heart upon the task
in hand rather than
the reward. I am the Knower, I am the Rewarder".
"If a man fixes
his attention wholly upon one goal or one thing for his own
selfish purpose, as
if it were an independent, all unrelated to others, thing,
then he moves in
darkness of ignorance. If he undertakes a task with a confused
mind, not
considering the outcome or where it will lead him, or the harm it may
do to others or
himself, then it is an undertaking of evil. There is a wisdom
which knows when to
go and when to stay, when to speak and when to remain
silent, what is to
be done and what is to be left undone. It knows, too, the
limitations set by
fear and by courage, what constitutes bondage and what
freedom. This is the
wisdom I have placed at the disposal of man, if he would
but seek it, the
true wisdom of the spirit. Opposed to this clear-sighted wisdom
is the false,
man-made wisdom obscured by the darkness arising from delusion.
Here wrong is
thought to be right and error passes as Truth, things are thought
to be what they are
not. The unenlightened men dwelling in comfortable darkness,
unperturbed by the
challenge of reality as revealed by the light of Truth, lack
any understanding of
true values. That which appears to them to be no more than
a cup of sorrow is
in fact a chalice filled with the wine of immortality. The
vain pleasures that
come from pandering to the carnal cravings of the senses
appear at first to
be a cup of sweetness, but in the end it is found to hold the
brew of bitterness.
He who does right does it not for Me but for himself; he is
the one who
benefits, not his God. He who does wrong inflicts himself for it,
and he is the
sufferer. He who does right does it to bis own good and he who
works wickedness
does it to his own hurt. It could not be possible, in a just
creation, that those
whose ways are evil should be dealt with as are those who
live goodly lives
and perform good deeds. The fate of the selfish and that of
the unselfish could
not be alike. I am the God of Justice, the Maker of the
Law".
'The spirit of man
has the. potential for doing all things, it can even rise
above earthly
limitations. The awakened soul can do whatsoever it wills. Man
makes the
environment for his own development; as it is now, so countless wills
from the past have
fashioned it. When the body awakens in the morning, it is
like a man entering
his habitation, it becomes a place of awareness. The soul
becomes active in
matter, that with which you hear, taste, smell and feel is the
soul. Physically,
the ear of a dead man is still in perfect condition for
hearing, but the
hearer, the interpreter, has gone. The eyes of a corpse are not
blinded, but that
which operated them is no longer there".
"So long as the
soul looks outward only, into the deceptive environment of
matter and is
satisfied with the material pleasures it finds there, and which
its baser body finds
compatible, it remains cut off from the greater realm of
the spirit. It binds
itself to matter, failing to find the greater pleasures
always there in the
silent depths of its being. Confirmed in his attitude by
experiences in a
deceptive environment, mortal man becomes convinced that all
desirable things lie
outside himself. He concludes that satisfaction comes from
gaining the things
which promote material welfare. This is the folly of the
unbalanced man.
However, balance is the keyword, for it is equally foolish to
turn away from
material things altogether. Man is made of earthly things,
because it is
intended that he should live and express himself on Earth. It is
also intended that
he should discover his nature through earthly conditions and
experiences".
"However, the
Divine Spark must kindle the spirit. It must not be smothered.
Balance is the
ideal, the whole becoming neither wholly inwardly nor outwardly
orientated. Man
needs his body and must not repudiate it, and if it requires
man's labour to
sustain it, then is not man entitled to enjoy its pleasures?
Here also it is
simply a matter of proper balance. Man lives in a sea of
material
manifestation where I am only indirectly reflected, as the soul of man
is indirectly
reflected in his body. If a man sees with nothing but the eyes of
the body, then he
cannot perceive Me, for I am beyond his vision. I am the God
veiled Behind
Matter, I am the God of the Spirit".
"Yet there is a
vision possible to man, which pierces the universal veil, a
vision free from all
obscurity, a vision uncontaminated by the dark shadows of
base desires or
fear, by unstable emotions or unworthy motives. It is the vision
seen when man
develops a new faculty, a new sense. It is an inward vision of
splendour. A wave of
spiritual light will engulf him, a mysterious power
indescribable in
mere words sweeps like a shooting star over the expanse of his
spirit, giving a
sudden illuminating flash which floods his whole inner being,
his soul, with a
glorious light. In its brilliance he is granted, for a brief
moment in time, a
glimpse of the vision splendid. He is then united with the
living heart of the
universe by a bond reaching out to infinity. Nothing known
to man, no symbols
of his conception can express the joyousness which floods his
whole being. It can
be experienced in quiet tranquillity of spirit. It can burst
all the bounds of
restraint, expressing itself in an all embracing, overwhelming
feeling of love.
Lost in an unfathomable sea of silent contemplation, the body
will shine with
radiance from the inner light, and all about will be bathed in a
luminous spiritual
glow. Having once been in divine communication, these
awakened spirits
know a joy supreme, and never again do they walk through the
veil of mortal
sorrows. The truly awakened soul is beyond carnal lust and mortal
grief, his love is
alike for all My creation and thus he shows supreme love for
Me. By this love
alone he knows Me in Truth, Who and What I am, and knowing Me
in Truth he
participates in My Whole Being. Those who seek union with Me must
first prepare a
dwelling place for Me in their hearts; but those who are not
pure, those who do
not fight for Me, those who have not suffered under the
discipline of love
and those without wisdom cannot attain union, no matter how
much they strive. I
am the God of Illumination, I am the God of Enlightenment".
"Would you know
the ultimate state of man when he has finally reached his goal,
when he has entered
into his inheritance of divinity? It is a state of glory
transcending
anything conceivable by him during an earthbound existence. His
consciousness
expands to embrace everything, all that ever was or will be. He
sees all. He knows
all. He is in all and he contains all. These things come to
him through infinite
powers of perception, yet he is above all such powers. He
is beyond all yet
within all. He is beyond the realm of matter, freed from all
restrictions, yet he
is not denied its joys and may, if he so desires, manifest
again in matter. His
thoughts have the power of creation. He is one with the
Light of Lights, the
Light transcending vision. He is the partaker of My
Substance, My son in
eternity, the inheritor of everlasting life. I am your God,
the Father of
Man".
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE SPIRIT OF GOD
"I am the
immortality latent in all things mortal. The light filling all things
with radiance, the
power holding all things to their form. I am the pure,
invulnerable stream
untouchable by evil, the supreme fountain-head of thoughts,
the unfailing well
of consciousness, the light of eternity. I am that to which
the soul of man is
related. I am its power, its life, its strength. I am that to
which it
responds".
"I am the sweet
coolness in refreshing waters and the comforting warmth in the
sun. I am the
calmness of peace in the radiance of the moon and the delicacy in
the moonbeam. I am
the sound heard in the stillness, the companionship felt in
the solitude and the
stirring in the hearts of men. I am the cheerfulness in the
laugh of a youth and
the gentleness in the sigh of a maiden. I am the joy in the
life of all living
things and the content in the hearts of awakened souls. I am
the beauty in the
beautiful and the fragrance in the fragrant. I am the
sweetness in honey
and the scent in perfume. I am the power in the strong arm
and the wistfulness
in a smile. I am the urge in good and moderate desires. I am
the gaiety in
gladness, the restlessness in life, the refreshment in sleep. Yet
though I am in all
these, I am not contained in them and they are in me rather
than I am in them.
How pitiful are the words of men to depict sublime things!
With the souls of
men asleep, enwrapped in clouds of delusion, how can I be
known to them?"
"I am of the
Supreme, the Eternal, of God and from God, yet not God. As heat to
fire, as fragrance
to flowers, as light to a lamp, so am I to God. I am the
power of God
operating in matter. I am the first created of creation, I am the
eternal thread upon
which all creation is strung. I am the effective thought of
God. I am that
brought forth by His creating command, wherein all things share
life. I am the Lord
of forms holding all things together".
"I am the power
giving form, I am the comforting companion of the way. I am that
which gives
substance to the hopes and desires of men. Think of me therefore in
any way you will. I
am the companionable one, the comforter. I am the waters of
inspiration
springing from the Eternal Fount. I am the glory of love shining
forth from the
Central Sun. I am in all things".
"I am the root
of the tree of life, the words written in the Book of God. I am
the guardian of
knowledge, the wisdom of the soul. I am the harmoniser of sound,
the controller of
power, the keeper of matter and the sustainer of shapes. I
unroll the scroll of
time and record its changes. I am the reader of past and
present, the scribe
of change, the chooser of chance".
"I am victory
and the struggle for victory, but I am more, I am that which
defeats defeat, for
I am the victory in defeat. I am the goodness of those who
are good, but I am
more, for I am the success that arises out of failure. I am
the achievement
remaining when all else has gone".
"I am the
sublime veiling secret mysteries. I am the guardian who jealously
discloses hidden
things. I am the knowledge of the knower. I am the seed within
the seed from which
all things spring. I am the bricks of which all things are
built. I am more, I
am the clay and water within the bricks. I am the motion in
all things that
move, without me there is no movement. I am the stability in all
things stable,
without me no thing holds to its shape".
"I am the
craftsman with innumerable shapes, the artist with countless colours.
My labours are
outside the knowledge of men, my works beyond their sight. My
masterpieces will
never be seen by mortal eyes".
"That which
abides in breath and yet is other than breath, which breath itself
cannot know or
influence, which controls it from within itself, that am I. That
which is behind the
voice, which voice itself cannot know or influence, which
controls it from
behind itself, that am I. That which is in the eye yet is other
than the eye, which
the eye itself cannot know or influence, which controls it
from within, that am
I. That which is behind the touch and yet is other than
touch, which touch
itself cannot know or influence, which manipulates it from
behind itself, that
am I. Yet this you must know: I am not you, nor are you me,
though I abide in
you as you abide in me. Let wisdom disentangle these feeble
words set down
through the hands of mortal men".
"The glory that
shines from the Lord of the Day, the gentle gleam radiating from
the Mistress of the
Night, the comforting glow from the hearth fire, all these
are of my substance.
I penetrate Earth with love. I raise up the seed. I am the
breath within the
breath of all living things. 1 am the sweet scent of flowers
and the bitter tang
of vinegar. I am the differentiating essence in all things".
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
THE SONG OF THE SOUL
" I am the
sleeper awakened from slumber. I am the seed of life eternal. I am
the everlasting hope
of man. I am a shoot of the Spirit Divine. I am the soul".
"I have been
since the beginning of time and shall be forever. I am the design
interwoven in the
warp and weft of creation. I am the indestructible essence of
life. I am the
treasure chest of man's hopes and aspirations, the storehouse of
lost loves and
fulfilled dreams".
"Before time I
was an unconscious spirit potential united with the Supreme All.
Ever since time
began I was in the slumbering sea of spirit, waiting to be drawn
forth into separate
mortal incarnation. Now, though the mortal body enwrapping
me fall apart and
decay, I remain everlasting and immortal. Through all the ebb
and flow of life,
whatever destiny decrees, I remain the everlasting jewel of
ages, invisible to
mortal eyes and untouchable by mortal hands"
"I am the
eternal bride of mortal men, ever awaiting the awakening kiss, the
whisper of
recognition. O being of flesh, deny me not; let me not dwell in
forgotten solitude,
left alone, unwanted and unheeded. Hold me to you as a lover
holds the beloved,
reach out beyond earthly things and kiss the lips that are
yours eternally.
Look out beyond the sphere of earthly opposites, out beyond the
pettiness of gains
and possessions. Grasp and possess me, your own everlasting
and responsive
soul".
"You will not
find me where emotional tempests rage, or while sensual storms
bring turmoil and
disquiet. First subdue these, for I await beyond, in the
quietness of calm
waters. I must be sought as a lover seeks the loved one, in
solitude, amid
quietness and tranquillity, only there will I respond to the
awakening kiss of
recognition".
"Do not neglect
me, O my beloved, or tarnish me; for I come to you as an
inestimable
treasure. I bring beauty and innocence, gaiety and wholesomeness,
decency and
consideration, a jewel of potential perfection. Do not drag me down
with you into the
demon-haunted regions of darkness and terror. I am yours,
closer to you than
any loved one of Earth. If you spurn me, I go down to a
terrible doom in
darkness, there to be purged and purified from the corruption
of your touch. The
best I can then hope for is to be bestowed upon another".
"I am the
sublime vehicle awaiting the command to bear your trueself to its
destiny of glory.
Could anyone be so foolhardy as not to cherish me? Without
moving I am swifter
than thought, on celestial wings I far outstrip the range of
mortal senses. I
drink at the fountain of life and feed on the fruits of eternal
energy".
"What are you,
my beloved, but a passing thing fashioned of clay? A handful of
dust given life by a
spark from the everlasting flame. I, myself, am no more
than potential. Yet
together we are so great that Earth of itself alone cannot
contain us, we
transcend it to reach out into the spheres of divinity. Take me,
awaken me,
acknowledge me, cherish me, and I will carry you to realms of glory
unimaginable on
Earth".
"I am the
imprisoned captive longing for return to the freedom of the infinite.
Yet, because of my
mortal love I feel heartpangs of sorrow for things that pass
away. But I know
that beyond the pains inseparable from a sojourn in the vale of
tears, there shines
a glorious rainbow of hope and joy. There is a place of
abiding love centred
on the infinite; there, if you will but cherish me, we
shall not be denied
expression".
"I am drawn, by
the law of spiritual gravitation, towards union with the
Universal Soul and
can no more escape return there than the mortal elements of
man can escape their
return to dust. Man sees glory by the reflected light of
glory within him, he
knows love by the love within himself. The sun is seen by
the light of the sun
and not by any light within man. Man sees the spirit by the
light of the spirit,
and not by any light within his mortal self. Only by the
light of the spirit
can the spirit of man be lit".
"I am at peace
when awakened to communion with my God. I am joyful when
enthroned in
consciousness and when endowed with wisdom and vision transcending
that of Earth. I
delight in communion with the great sphere with which I am
akin. I rejoice in
union with the Divine Spirit from whence I came. I am your
own trueself which
should be forever cherished. By listening to my whispers, by
letting your
thoughts dwell on me and by knowing me, the whole glory of the
greater spheres is
opened unto you".
"I am that
which reads what the eye sees, understands what the ear hears, knows
what the hand feels,
tastes whatever enters the mouth and smells whatever is
borne on the nose. I
am the indwelling consciousness which knows and enjoys all
the good things of
Earth. Those who dwell in the darkness of delusion cannot
know me, and to them
is lost the greatest glory of life. All conceptions of
beauty, love and
kindness are due to the consciousness residing in me. When I
depart from my
earthly abode I will carry with me the knowledge of the senses,
as the wind carries
perfume from the flower".
"I am not born,
nor will I ever die. Once awakened to an existence in
consciousness I can
never become nothingness. I am the everlasting one who dies
not when life
departs from the body. O call me forth, awaken me from sleep with
the kiss bestowing
conscious life. Let me not lie unnoticed, wrapped in the
heavy mantle of
perpetual slumber, dreamless, unknowing".
"I am the
indestructible one. Fire cannot burn me, swords cannot maim me or
water smother me.
When a drum is beaten, the sound it gives forth cannot be
grasped or held. As
that sound, so am I. When a shell is blown, the note it
gives forth cannot
be grasped or held. As that note, so am I. When a pipe is
played, the music it
gives forth cannot be grasped or held. As that music, so am
I. I am the
immaterial in the material awaiting recognition, but in my own
sphere I am the
substantial one. There, man-known matter is no more substantial
than the dawn mists
are here".
"I am the fire
of life in all things that breathe, and in union with the breath
I consume the
nourishing substance within the food which feeds the body. I am
the kernel within
the seed in the heart of all. 1 am the guardian of memory and
the arbiter of
wisdom".
'These things are
mine and ever with me. They are to me what the bones and
muscles are to the
mortal body. The waking and sleeping consciousness. The
awareness of self.
The five powers of feeling and the five of activity. The
controlling spirit,
which is the sensitive being".
"I am the
living consciousness within you, I am the knower. The things seen by
the eye and the
things smelt by the nose are received by me. The things heard
and the things felt
are registered by me. I am the inner being causing all
decisions to be
made, though the tongue report back outside the things that I,
the soul and the
spirit, hold recorded. Everything done and undertaken, such as
the working of the
hands and movement of the legs, all are done in accordance
with my
command".
"When I depart,
the body without me is as useless as a worn-out garment which is
discarded and cast
aside. Do we go together, my beloved, hand in hand as lovers?
Do I return home
radiant in the pride of blooming consciousness, or, spurned and
humiliated, return
without sensitivity, memory or knowledge? Do I return to be
welcomed with joy in
the light of glory, or must I shamefully seek refuge in the
darkness? I am
yours, my beloved, do with me as you will. I am yours
everlastingly".
THE BOOK OF SCROLLS
formerly called
THE BOOK OF BOOKS
or
THE LESSER BOOK OF
THE SONS OF FIRE
this being
THE THIRD BOOK OF
THE BRONZEBOOK
Compiled from
remaining portions of a much damaged part of The Bronzebook and
rewritten in our
tongue and retold to our understanding according to present
usage.
Chapter 1 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 1
Chapter 2 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 2
Chapter 3 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 3
Chapter 4 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 4
Chapter 5 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 5
Chapter 6 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 6
Chapter 7 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 7
Chapter 8 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 8
Chapter 9 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 9
Chapter 10 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 10
Chapter 11 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 11
Chapter 12 - THE SACRED REGISTERS - PART 12
Chapter 13 - THE SCROLL OF RAMKAT
Chapter 14 - THE SCROLL OF YONUA
Chapter 15 - A SCROLL FRAGMENT - ONE
Chapter 16 - THE THIRD OF THE EGYPTIAN
SCROLLS (A Fragment)
Chapter 17 - THE SIXTH OF THE EGYPTIAN
SCROLLS
Chapter 18 - A SCROLL FRAGMENT -TWO
Chapter 19 - A HYMN FROM THE BOOK OF SONGS -
1
Chapter 20 - A HYMN FROM THE BOOK OF SONGS -
2
Chapter 21 - THE SUNSETTING HYMN FROM THE
BOOK OF SONGS
Chapter 22 - A HYMN OR PRAYER FROM THE BOOK
OF SONGS - 3
Chapter 23 - A HYMN FROM THE BOOK OF SONGS -
4 Marked: The Hymn of Rewn
Chapter 24 - A HYMN FROM THE BOOK OF SONGS -
5
Chapter 25 - Some Fragments from a Much
Damaged Section Most of Which has Been
Destroyed
Chapter 26 - FROM THE SCROLL OF SENMUT
Chapter 27 - THE SONGS OF NEFATARI One
Chapter 28 - THE SONGS OF NEFATARI Two
Chapter 29 - THE SONGS OF TANTALIP One
Chapter 30 - THE SONGS OF TANTALIP Two
Chapter 31 - THE MARRIAGE SONG
Chapter 32 - THE LAMENT OF NEFATARI
Chapter 33 - THE SCROLL OF HERAKAT
CHAPTER ONE
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 1
Herein are recorded
sacred things which should never be written, but the memory
of man is like a
storehouse made of straw, or like a storepit dug in sand. Even
less enduring is his
body, for it. is a frail thing of fleeting substance which
passes away like the
dew in the morning. And what of the mortal chain which
links the
generations in knowledge? Behold, it is a thing prone to distortion, a
transmuter of
tradition and Truth.
Therefore, when the
command went forth from the Great One Illuminated With
Wisdom, and came to
your servant, he saw fit to quell the doubts engendered by
fear and undertook
to do the thing which had not been done before, placing his
trust fully in the
protecting wings which are spread by the words issuing from
the Royal Residence.
These are the words
spoken by the Great Interpreter, who, through the powers
inherited by him
from above and by the powers now in his keeping, all freely
bestowed upon him by
the grateful hearts of his people below, will lead us into
the Fields Of
Everlasting Glory.
O Exalted One, intermediate
between gods and men, what we now do for you do you
for us. Let your
deeds and your words become our words. Thus it ever was and
thus it will ever
be, while mortal beings make pilgrimage through this valley of
tears.
Speak thus in your
hour. The High Born One has not blasphemed the Divine Powers,
nor has he paid
undue homage to earthly desires. He has not been loudmouthed in
the Sacred Places,
nor laughed when he should have been grave. His tongue is
pure, for when fed
with the words of men he absorbs Truth and excretes
falsehood. His mouth
has never spewed forth words of malice or envy, words of
oppression or
injustice never passed his lips.
Look now at the
great dark water mirror and see what is reflected there from the
mists swirling along
the corridor of time. Seeing your place, make ready, so
that when the
summons comes from the Dark One you are not caught unprepared.
These are the words
to be spoken to those who peer from beyond the Dark Portal:
His arm was ever
ready to help those who did good for others, and he lent his
power to those who
ordered what was good. He stood for those who could no longer
stand and commanded
for those who could no longer command. He carried the weary
and succoured the
helpless. He never oppressed the weak, nor did he permit
injustices to go
unpunished and unrectified.
He stood by the side
of the Great Potter, and because of his plea the clay was
shaped to a more
pleasing form. He erased disfiguring faults and smoothed the
roughness. He added stiffness
to the mixture.
He has done no evil,
his words have always been true. He stands unashamed and
fearless before the
twin shrines. Even as it was in the Land of the Great River,
so let it be here.
Let him not be cut off by distance.
Let not his power be
cut off, for he stands between the worlds. Let it flow out
like living waters
unto the living and be as shining rays to the Radiant Ones.
For here we see the
power darkly, while beyond the horizon it shines brightly.
He is everlastingly
faithful in heart, for he has admitted no other who would
defile him. He has
remained loyal to the sacred words and has diligently perused
the great writings.
He has navigated the shallows of the winding waters. Now he
draws near.
He has left his
kingdom of trial, he has overcome the challenges of life, he has
done all things
written on the tablets of Truth, and he has sojourned in the
Chamber of Profound
Silence. He has done all things which are proper and been
reassured that he
has followed the right path. He does not fear judgement.
Let him reunite with
The Supreme One who sent him forth, so that he will not be
separated from the
waters of life. Let the Holy Heat enwrap him when he passes
through the Place of
Coldness. Let his nostrils inhale the breath of
nourishment, that he
may live and that we may partake of his existence.
Do not repudiate
him, but make him welcome. Do you not recognise the one you
endowed with power?
Has he become too radiant? Is his form too glorious? Read
what is written in the
books of his heart. You set him in darkness and he saw.
You set him in
silence and he heard. You set him in emptiness and he felt. You
established him in
nothingness and he gathered substance. Therefore, he returns
with manifold
powers. He is well fitted to be presented to those who stand
before The Supreme
One.
When the bright sun
shines with splendour in the dayskies above, the gentle
morning star hides
her face in modesty and becomes unseen. All the great Company
of the radiant
nightlights withdraw before the majesty of the greater light. Yet
when darkness eats
the shining disk we know again the comforting presence of the
eternal stars, so
let it be with your servant.
The Dark Ones who
dwell in their compatible gloom cannot claim him as one of
their own, he cannot
be numbered among their dreadful company. His heart is
pure, his deeds were
good, no creature spawned in murkiness has gained control
of his thoughts. His
desires have not been generated by denizens of the
darkness.
He who was afflicted
here is not afflicted forever, he is made whole, he is
freed from pain, his
sickness has departed. He rejoices in the light, therefore
let him be drawn
towards the greater light where you are. Let him not see the
place of darkness,
let him not behold the Hideous Ones fashioned by wickedness,
the Dwellers in the
Dark Recesses, who shrink before the light, or the Twisted
Ones moulded by lewd
desires.
He brings with him a
lamp lit from the flame of Truth, he bears the rod of
righteousness which
rewards those who have overcome tribulations. O let him pass
to the right side of
the dividing flame! He has left us, he is coming to you, he
approaches, he
throws off the earthly wrappings, he stands free, he stands
glorious. Does he
not glow with splendour? Behold him, your worthy companion in
brightness. Is he
not wholly compatible with those of your company? See, he is a
Shining One, a Hero
of the Horizon. Is he not one destined to abide
everlastingly? Take
him, lead him to the Realm of Glory, show him his place in
the Spheres of
Splendour.
The eyes that were
deceived on Earth now see clearly, O what splendours are
revealed! The music
unheard by earthly ears now sounds sweet melodious music. O
what joyous rapture
it brings! The nostrils inhale perfumes too delicate for the
earthly nose, O how
the heart sings! All drabness, all dullness and all
sordidness, which
are of the Earth, are left behind. Turn him from the place
where these can
regather about him.
The unmoving, empty
body remains here before our eyes; it is nothing, it sees
not, it hears not,
it speaks not, it smells not, its breath is stilled, it
begins to fall
apart. There is no life and the overseer has departed. Nothing
remains here with us
but this unresponsive thing. The greatness, the feeling,
the sensitivity have
departed from the body and are now beyond our ken. These
are with the real
surviving being. O receive him into the life of splendour! We,
who are here, stand
blinded behind the veil of flesh, we cannot see beyond
ourselves, we hope,
we believe and we trust. Thus it has ever been with men, for
they pass their
lives behind a wall of limitations, there is a barrier shutting
them in. They are
imprisoned within a mortal body. O grant us fulfilment, grant
us that which is
that which is the ultimate desire and aspiration of men!
We speak for this
man. He is one who came with us from afar. He is one who has
travelled a long
weary road. No taint of meanness stained the purity of his
spirit, no
corruption of deceit discoloured the garments of his soulself. He has
gone over shining in
radiant splendour, so even the doomed in their darkness can
hope when they sight
his distant glow. May it shed some small warmth into their
grim coldness!
O Great Welcomer,
who greets the newcomers, help our departed one. He served
well in this place
of trial and tribulation, let him not go unrewarded. He is
the son of hope.
Like us, like those who went before, he hoped as men have
always hoped, for
this is not a place of certainties. If it were, our heritage
of glory would be
badly earned.
He lives because it
is ordained that he live; he lives, for all men live
everlastingly. They
die not, they perish not, they endure through ages. His
Kohar awaits him and
needs hide no awful aspect in shame. Let his face shine in
greeting, welcome
home the wanderer.
This tombed
structure is not a place of finality. The grave is not the goal of
earthly life,
anymore than the soil is the goal of the seed. Does seed die
within the ground?
Is it planted intending that it be mingled with the soil and
lost?
O Great Welcomer,
let your face shine with gladness when you greet the
homecoming wanderer.
Lead him to the Kohar which is his inheritance, that he may
enter into it and
enjoy its embrace. Let him find completion and fulfilment by
absorption into his
Kohar.
Our departed one was
the whole part which came forth from the whole, and he
returns to the
whole. Nothing is lost, nothing is gone. He lives over there,
lives more fully
than he ever lived. He lives in splendour, he lives in beauty,
he lives in
knowledge and in the waters of life. He is everlasting.
O departed one risen
to glory, you are now a released spirit united with your
spirit whole, the
companionable Kohar, the everlasting one. Arise alive in the
Land Beyond the
Horizon and journey to the Land of Dawning; the stars
accompanying you
will sing for joy, while the heavenly signs voice hymns of
praise and gladness.
You are not far removed from us, it is as if we were in one
room divided by a
curtain, therefore we are not sorrowful. If we weep it is
because we cannot
share your joys and because we no longer know your touch.
O everlasting Kohar,
take this man of goodness into your eternal embrace, let
your life become his
life and your breath his breath. He is your own, he is the
drop returning to
the filled pitcher, the leaf returning to the tree, you are
the repository of
his incarnations. As you grew there, so he grew here; you are
everlastingly whole
and he lives in you. If he is not even as you in face, let
him enter, hide his
faults, for they are not many. For this you were fashioned,
for this you came
into being, you are the overbody awaiting the returning
spirit, and the
spirit now comes. You are that which will clothe the newly
arrived spirit in
heavenly flesh. You are that in which our departed one will
express himself.
O Kohar, hear us.
Here is your vitalising essence; before you were incomplete,
now you are whole.
Draw your own, your compatible one, to you and observe the
many likenesses. We
send fragrances, that they may spread around you. Now take
the eye which will
perfect your face, it is the perfecting eye, the eye which
sees things as they
are. See the fluctuating wraith, is it not beautiful? Does
it not come with an
aura of fragrance, sweetness filling the air? It has been
purged of all
impurities, all about it is fragrant. Therefore, grant it your
substance, that it
may become solid and firm.
O Kohar, long have
you awaited the day of fulfilment, the day of your destiny.
That day is here, it
is now; therefore, take the spirit which is your own and
enfold it with your
wings. Each to his own and to his own each goes. You and he
are bound together
with unseverable bonds, each without the other is nothing.
Now bear him up, for
in that place you are greater than he, for you are the
generator. While he
rested in the womb you were active, as he grew you grew
before him. If he
has done wrong, and who among men is guiltless, then in you
let the wrong be
adjusted. You are his hope, you are his shield and you are his
refuge.
This we say to the
Brilliant One, the Guardian of Goodness: The departed one has
not walked with
ignorance, he has not been slothful in carrying the burden of
his duty. He has not
been swayed by passions of the body, he has not despoiled
the house of
another, he has not caused undue sorrow, nor has he maltreated a
child for pleasure.
He has succoured the poor and weak, he has done all that is
good; therefore, let
none of Those Who Lurk in Darkness seize him. His radiant
light is strong,
those who would seize him are repulsed by the light and slink
away. He lives, he
lives forever.
He has lived
worthily, he has been purified by the fires of earthly life, he has
been refined in the
furnace of tribulation, he has overcome all earthly
temptations. He has
lived the life which enhances goodness, he has prepared
himself for life in
the light. Receive him, O Brilliant One!
O Kohar, absorb into
yourself the lifeforce, it was meant for you, it is yours.
It is the enlivening
spirit which spans the two worlds. He, the departed one,
was you and even
more so were you he. Come to him as the Beauteous One came to
Belusis, a great
king, and gathered him in compassion and love. Come, that he
may awaken to new
life in your arms.
This man, the
departed one, who in unity with you becomes the Glorious One, was
born of a god and is
the child of two gods, after the nature of greater men. Now
you are impregnated
with the living spirit of he who was prepared by trial on
Earth for you.
Behold, in unity your twain are now throbbing with life and your
brightness bedazzles
the eyes. You are now a Star of Life, a Living Star, and to
a star you shall
ascend to rule its life.
The departed one is
now freed, he is loosed from the bonds of illusion, he is
saved from the dark
waters of unreality and is one with the Eternal Light. These
things we declare,
so let them be. Our thoughts mould a new reality beyond the
present real, and
this becomes the reality of tomorrow.
0 great substantial
Kohar, protect this departed one, your own, from the
accusations of
false-fronted beings, remembering the faithful heart ever
prevailing before
the balances of our forefathers from far away. Put into his
mouth those words
which open doors. Let the goodness in him prevail, but you,
yourself, stand up
and bear witness for him. He suffered from the frailties of
men. He was wrathful
when provoked and surly when enduring great burdens. His
temper flashed
quickly when his words were not accepted or his ways followed,
and at times he
lacked consideration. However, these are small things
inseparable from the
frailties of mortal men, and in all greater things he was
good. Let not the
false-fronted one disguised in his brother's form possess him,
guard him from the
beings lurking in the shadows this side of the darkness.
I see this, my
brothers. Behold, the departed one goes to meet his own image. It
is his own self
reflected in his image. It is his own self that comes to greet
him. It is his Kohar
which embraces him. It welcomes him as though he were one
ransomed from
captivity. I see them blend and he becomes a new seed in the heart
of his Kohar.
I hear the Kohar
speak, it names itself Nevakohar, it says, "O man of pure
thoughts, of kindly
words, of quiet speech, of good deeds, come to me. I am your
being, yet I am not
you; as you have loved and cherished me, so I now love and
cherish you. I am
your reward, as I would have been your affliction". They are
now united and this
is the place of the first threshold, from whence the
Completed Beings
depart.
The departed one now
stands in his own form and likeness. He becomes the Great
Ship-Borne Voyager
and passes over the waters to the Place of Reeds, but his
weaknesses do not
bear him down and he goes through. Great Ones, lift him up,
let him not fall
into the fetid waters of decay. He is a worthy son of Lewth.
Then the lesser is
carried by the greater, while Dark Ones gaze up from their
misery and wait
silently to see if he is borne up. The Glorious One goes past in
peace, for he is not
compatible with their dark company. He remains unmolested,
for flame confounds
the hands of slime.
An unloosed Dark One
comes up saying it will take this man, but is repulsed by
brightness. It is a
thing of maimed rottenness, for on Earth it was clothed in
lust-saturated
flesh, though contained in a form of beauty. The heart of this
man is not faint;
see him now, is he not sure of his welcome among Beings of
Glory? He is as the
wild bull, the prince of herds, he is a Great One among the
Everlasting Spirits.
He reaches the firm
ground where a Bright Being welcomes him, and he is named
'The Newcomer'. He
has landed on the shore and climbed the Steps of Splendour.
He is in the company
of Shining Spirits and his earthlife companions greet him,
they welcome him,
saying, "All this beauty and splendour is yours to enjoy".
They bring garments
of beauty, bright clothes of radiance.
He has passed
through the Hall of Judgement. The Twin Truths have heard his
plea, and those who
bore witness have departed. He has crossed the waters and
ascended the steps,
now he has attained the threshold of immortality and stands
in rapture. He has
passed by the regions of darkness and gloom and is with
glory. He comes to
everlasting hfe in a true form of splendour, to dwell
evermore as a living
spirit within his Kohar. How wonderful it is to be united
and one with the
Kohar!
The Newcomer looks
back across the waters to the Place of Decision, then he
turns and ascends
the steps to the threshold of immortality. He is in his true
form, yet he is a
spirit within his Kohar. He speaks, but it is not the speech
of men and all
understand him. His hearing is all-embracing. He sees both the
powers of Light and
the powers of Darkness, but the powers of Darkness no longer
affect him.
The Newcomer has
reached his compatible abode. He has fought the battle which is
mortal life and
risen supreme to victory. He has not been vanquished by the
Raging Ones which
are the bodily passions. At each step forward he has left a
lifeless form, at
each step he has fought a shadow, at each step he has won the
clash of arms.
The Newcomer has
sought out and discovered the One Hidden Behind the Two, and
the Three which
stand before them. He knows the secrets of the Nine which veil
the others from the
eyes of men. He has unravelled the skein of life's
mysteries, even as
those enlightened ones yet living on Earth must do.
There is no
suffering or pain in the Newcomer, he cannot feel hurt, neither can
he be sorrowful. If
a companion of his Earth journey be numbered among the Dark
Ones, then his heart
is soothed with forgetfulness; but later he will remember,
and because of his
efforts the Dark One will be returned to the crucible.
CHAPTER TWO
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 2
The writings of
Garmi were brought by the hands of Nadayeth The Enlightener, of
the twin cities
whence come the Sons of Fire, when he fled the wrath of kings.
He spread out before
the Learned Ones beauteous things of many colours and spoke
to them after this
fashion, and I, Lavos, recorded it in the tongue of the Sons
of Fire:
Behold this, it is
the Land of the Dawning. It stands between the Land of Light
ever splendid and
the Land of Darkness ever gloomy. They are the lands beyond
the veil, before the
veil is the Land of the Living.
The Aspiring One has
embarked on the waters of illusion, his craft is afloat but
it has not yet
reached the shores where the promise of new life is fulfilled.
Now he is guided by
two beings, one a lovely maiden and the other an ill-visaged
man. These two
strive one with the other, each grasping one side of the craft,
now it overturns.
The maiden seeks to drag the Aspiring One down, while the
ill-favoured man
seeks to keep him afloat. But the Aspiring One struggles
against him. They
come to the sands of the shining shore where the Light of
Truth turns the
maiden into a vile-faced hag and the man into a handsome youth.
The Aspiring One
lies on the sands of Shodew as one dead, for he had fought
against the man who
sought to save him.
The Beauteous One
comes attended by handmaidens, and with them are the
companions of the
Aspiring One's earthly life. There, too, is his soulself,
awaiting his embrace.
The Aspiring One lies as dead, for he did not know his
saviour. They who
stand about, who are The Welcomers, wait in uncertainty. The
Beauteous One bends
over the prostrate man and says, "Revive, this is not a
place where death
rules". He moves and she says, "Raise yourself and cast away
the residue of your
mortality".
The Aspiring One
opens his eyes, he sits up, he shields his eyes before the
vision of beauty, he
is blinded by it and she gives him his heart. The
handmaidens weep and
their tears are the blood of the Aspiring One's life. The
Beauteous One says,
"I have come that you who were dead might live, that you who
were blinded might
see, that you who were deceived might know Truth". The
soulself says,
"I have come to embrace you, I have come to protect you, I have
come to shield you,
I am your refuge".
That which is the
Kohar says, "I have come to brighten up your face, I am you as
you are me. I have
waited for you, I have wept for you and rejoiced when you
rejoiced. I have
never forgotten you while we have been apart. I have heard
every word spoken
and these are recorded for you. I have recorded every sight. I
have recorded every
sound. I have recorded every smell and every taste. Every
memory is secure for
you. Here I give you form and substantiality".
This is The Herald,
he stands between this man and his Kohar, and they, together
with The Adjuster
and The Welcomers, go to the Hall of Judgement and stand
before The Lord of
Life, The Master of Destinies. Now come The Lords of Eternity
who are The Lesser
Gods, and they enter the Gates of Splendour. The Balancer
comes from his
secret place. The Greeter to Darkness stands at his door and The
Greeter to Splendour
stands at his door, they face each other. The Welcomers,
compatible
companions of this man's earthly life, stand about, they are there,
in the Hall of
Judgement.
The Balancer causes
two fluid-like, fluctuating columns which stand on either
side of the Kohar
and one takes the form of the Aspiring One, but it is horribly
malformed because it
mirrors all his wickednesses and weaknesses. The other
shines brightly, for
it mirrors all his goodness and spiritual qualities. Then
the two columns
merge back into the Kohar and The Adjuster adjusts with justice
and mercy. Then the
Aspiring One stands forth in his Kohar and in his true
likeness, whicn is a
blending together of all his incarnational likenesses.
The Aspiring One is
drawn towards the right hand door, he passes through and
sets foot on the
rainbow road. He is accompanied by The Welcomers, the
companions of his
earthly life who are now revealed to him in their true
likeness. They sing,
they dance, they rejoice, and there is much gladness in the
reunion. The word of
Truth is established, it is fulfilled. The ancient promises
are fulfilled. He
who departs shall return, he who sleeps shall awaken, he who
dies shall live. The
Aspiring One has passed into the Regions of Glory.
Now, behold the body
vacated by the vehicle of life. It slumbers in its death
wrappings, for the
enlivening spirit has flown. The earthly body alone stays and
cannot hold itself
together. It prepares to fall apart and decay. The Companions
of the Dead take it
into their company, it will be made incorruptible and become
a communicating door.
It is given the things which rightly belong to the dead.
Those who remain on
Earth fear the Life Shadow of the One who has gone on before
them. The body is
bandaged in its death wrappings. It is purified, it is made
clean, it is
provided with the necessities. Thus, the Life Shadow shall dwell at
peace within the
empty body, it believes it to be its abode. It shall not
wander. O Shadow, do
not wander, remain within the tomb, seize any who come to
steal, seize any who
would break the body, seize any who would open that which
is closed. Seize and
haunt, seize and haunt!
The Companions of
the Dead speak thus, "The Life Shadow of this man who was is
never restless, it
never wanders, it is ever protecting, it is ever watchful. It
remains, for it is
bound to the empty corpse by the restraining throngs".
They say, "The
spirit of this man has awakened in the Land of Immortality, it
rejoices in the Land
Beyond the Horizon. He is a Hero of the Horizon. Offend him
not by thinking that
he is dead, he cannot die, for he is with the Ever Living.
He has not gone away
to die, he has departed to live elsewhere. Let the moisture
of his body return
to the waters of the Earth from whence it came. Let the
things of hardness
in his body return to the dust from whence they came. Let his
bones rejoin the
stones which once they were".
"Weep not, for
your tears and lamentations restrain his eager spirit. Sing the
death dirge, that
its echoes may sound the toscin in the Region of Light and The
Splendid Ones and
The Welcomers come to the place of appointment. It is
unfitting to force
gladness on a sorrowful heart, but be sad only for a
temporary
parting".
"Let not the
earthly body of this man who was, become destitute, surround it
with care and
affection, so that it may transmit the substance of life. Sustain
it, so the Life
Shadow remain within".
"What see you
now? Gaze upon it, the frail mortal remains enwrapped and silent,
unresponsive.
Ponder, this you see with the eyes of the body, which cannot
perceive things of
the spirit. Were the eyes of your spirit opened but a brief
moment, you would
perceive something entirely different and then you would know
that his shining,
immortal spirit walks in the company of those risen to glory."
" It is the
time for parting, the time for farewell, for the closing of the
door."
"O departed one
risen to glory,who has left us to sorrow. As we have helped you
and surrounded you
with the protection of our love and our offerings, so now
help us in the days
of life left to us on Earth."
CHAPTER THREE
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 3
Behold, one comes
wearing white sandals and clad in fine linen. Arise, stand up
to greet him. He
bears the staff of righteousness. He brings a pearl of
priceless value,
take it and become perfect.
Others come, fair
women and young children. His father's heir has come and the
four great ones who
bear sweet waters, who spread the feast and rejoice under
the strong arm of
their protector. He who has gone is not forgotten, but this is
the day of the
living.
He who has inherited
ceases from weeping and begins to smile, the protecting one
comes in peace. The
heart in the sky is no longer small, it expands, it grows
large. Thus it is
also with the heart of he who lives, his days of lamentations
are over and his
heart swells and grows large.
The good son never
ceases from faithful service on behalf of the absent one who
has escaped from the
confinement of the body. The dutiful son now calls upon the
absent one for
protection from wandering shadows and from the molestations of
life Shadows.
O Bountiful, Ever
Considerate One, hear the words of your faithful and dutiful
son, as they ascend
with the blue, penetrating smoke of fragrant incense. Let no
shadow wander from
your safe abode to haunt our habitations, for they who dwell
therein have done
you no dishonour. Safeguard the Dark Doorway, that things in
vile forms come not
near us to pollute our bodies with sickness and disease.
You left, and before
the waters rose again the man of Shodu, he who dealt
harshly with the
widow dwelling beside the channel of black stones, departed for
his judgement. Is
not he whom you judged, and did you not deal rightly with him
when the scales went
down against him? Therefore, might he not return from the
Region of Darkness
with others of his kind and cause misfortune to fall upon us?
You he cannot harm,
you are now in the Place of Glory, in the land beyond
theWestera waters.
Therefore, send us guardians from among the Glorious Company,
that they may spread
protecting wings over our habitations.
Many come, bearing
cakes of fine meal and barley cakes, large, fat-bodied fish
and meats of many
kinds, honeywine in jars and fruits in plenty. He who is
absent from the
feast is joyful.his arm is strong and he issues his commands to
the guardians. Cast
off all gloom and be joyful, for this is not the time of
sorrow, and tears
have no place in your eyes.
If there be
benevolent Life Shadows beyond the protective pale, they may enter.
Join with us in our
rejoicing. Let us all enjoy what we have and what we share,
for life is
irrepressible.
These are things
from a foreign place said for our brother Gwelm, according to
the rites of the
Sons of Fire, and thus it shall be for those who enter the
chambers of stone.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 4
No longer can the
man who was speak with men on Earth, for he now lives in
splendour among The
Eternal Ones. He was weighed before the Assessors, and
though his faults
were not few he was not outweighed in goodness. He has become
a Shining One and
journeys on into the spaces of Heavenland, accompanied only by
his compatible
companions.
He has ascended into
the Place of Glory, the Place of Fulfilment. The years have
fallen off his
shoulders, like a cast off cloak, and he is young again. He is
vigorous, he lives.
Time cannot touch him with change, nor sorrow enter his
heart. He rests,
awaiting a new call to duty.
He has passed
through the Wide Hall and through the Narrow Portal. He has
entered the Land of
a New Dawning and he is welcomed, his Earth companions greet
him, he lives. He is
beyond harm, he sees the sublime visions which fulfil his
yearnings. He who
has served is now served. As he has sown and husbanded, so now
he reaps.
He continues past
the Place of Waiting Souls and sees the awaiting Kohars who
will unite with the
ascending spirits of men. He bears in his hand the Book of
Life and glides over
the pure pastures, past the bright dividing flame. He turns
the face of
compassion towards the darkness, but sees nought but fleeting
shadows against the
red glare. The Lost Ones shrink back in shame and the man
who was passes the
entrance to their foul abode.
Those who are left
to mourn for the Glorious One have dried their tears, for all
is well with him. He
delights in the good life in a place of glory. He is safe
in the embrace of
his Kohar, he is the Adoring One whose eyes are opened to
splendour, he sees
the sublime visions.
The man who was
seeks the Illuminator who will direct him in his duties, he
cleanses himself in
the Lake of Beauty and refreshes himself at the Fountain of
Life. He sees
spirits of the twilight who are purged of all their wickedness and
lusts yet remain
captive to The Lords of Destinies, for they are still unproven.
The Lord of Life
will direct their passage back for trial and testing. For these
there is always
hope.
The man who was has
navigated the winding waters of life and crossed the dark
waters of death, and
is now strengthened in wisdom. He takes a seat on high,
that he may become
an instructor and guide on the path. He becomes a brazier in
the distance, a
homing light to guide those who seek Truth. He is purified and
comes forth wearing
the White Mantle of Greatness.
Behold the splendour
of his raiment and the purity of his adornments, as he sits
awaiting calls from
those in the Heavy Kingdom, who seek his counsel. The seers
in dark waters will
amaze the people with the clarity of their visions and
revelations, for the
power goes forth from the man who was, with manifold
strength. A great
being has joined the Splendid Company in the Land of
Dawnlight. Over
there they will say, "Earth is worthily fulfilling its purpose
when it produces men
such as this".
You may wonder what
are the occupations of the man who was. Does he illuminate
the dark waters
alone? May he not be among those who seek to enter the hearts of
those who close the
doors of their spirit to the instructors of wisdom? Alas,
they who are heavily
enshrouded in earthly wrappings are ever set of face before
the instructors of
wisdom, they say, "What have we to do with this babble?", yet
they, most of all,
require enlightenment, for they are men of small minds.
May he not have
become a pathfinder in the night, a guide through the darkness,
the star
illuminating the night at its darkest hour as the herald of The Great
Illuminator? May he
not have become a Director of Rays that dance on the waters,
or a Controller of
the Winds which caress the cheek? Suffice that he rejoices in
a life of splendour,
so let it remain with him and his Kohar until the day when
all is known, the
day of full knowing.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 5
These are the
instructions for those who journey the outer track of the twinway,
for those who have
been laid in the chambered tombs, who followed the ways of
Kemwelith. The words
are those from the distant past, first spoken in a far land
beyond the rolling
billows:
The Risen One has
become the Newcomer, and having passed through the clearing
house his departure
is not delayed. No toll is required on the ferry, for the
Newcomer has with
him the words of entrance which have become known to him
according to his
deeds. He has not deviated from the path and all is well.
The ferryman comes
to the Place of Waiting, he of the winding river which is the
tortuous channel of
purification. The Newcomer stands at the mooring place and
proclaims, "O
ferryman, away to the Region of the Blessed Ones. I am purified,
purged of polluting
evils; make haste, do not delay. I am a wanderer anxious to
reach my
destination". The ferryman says, "From whence come you?" The
Newcomer
says, "I am
from Restaw and am weary. Take me to my compatible place of abode,
let us not delay, I
wish to join those united with their soulselves. Let us not
dally. Do not tarry,
for I am anxious to depart from this sombre shore. Have no
fear, cautious one,
for no evil dogs my footsteps. Come, let us away, bear me
over the waters to
the appointed place. Carry me swiftly to where spirits are
regenerated and made
young again. Carry me to the foot of the Great Stairway
that ascends to the
Place of the Immortals, to the Courtyard of The Great God".
The ferryman
hesitates, he says, "Show me your token, that I may know you have
truly passed the
tests, that I may know your true destination. For it is the way
with men that they
think one thing but Truth lies elsewhere".
The Newcomer says,
"My token is the brightness, which, if you be no imposter,
you may see shining
above my head, and my introduction is the writing concerning
me, written in the
Book of Sacred Mysteries. Come, bear me over the waters, so
that I may tread the
Field of Peace. See, have I not four attendants, two on
either side? Let
them speak for me, for they are witnesses walking in the light
of Truth".
The ferryman says,
"Who stands to the pole?" and the Risen One answers, "I will
stand to the pole
with my attendants, two on either side. You stand by to bear
at the steering oar,
so that our course remains straight". The ferryman says,
"It is well,
for the current is sullen and changeful".
The Newcomer says,
"O ferryman of the boatless ones, I am truly a man justified
before all on both
sides of the horizon, before Heaven and Earth. I have passed
the tests of the
examiners and am free to proceed. I am one who can claim
passage by virtue of
my deeds. Have not men spoken well of me after I departed
from their midst, is
this not enough? It is the way with Earth, that if men
speak of the
goodness of an absent one, then he is good indeed. Truly I am a
Bright One".
The ferryman says,
"Draw aside your mantle, that I may see your likeness, for
this is a good boat
which may not be polluted. The path henceforth is hard for
those who cannot be
faced without revulsion. O Great One, draw your mantle over
again, for you are
indeed among the brightest of those who pass this way, great
will be the
rejoicing when you appear among your own kind, the pure of heart".
"Delay no
longer, ferryman. Quickly over the waters to the other side. If you
delay further I will
name the names of gods to men, that their unreality be
exposed. I am not
one to be trifled with, I am one who can dispel the clouds of
illusion. I am a man
of no mean qualities, therefore tarry no more, let us
depart".
CHAPTER SIX
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 6
The man who was
becomes the Pilgrim. He has crossed the waters, he has passed
the Grim Guardian,
he waits without the Place of Union and stands firmly. He is
not afraid and
stands resolute. The Cool Gracious One approaches with three jars
of water and
refreshes him.
The Pilgrim says,
"Behold, O Watcher at the Gate, I have laid up treasure enough
in the storehouse of
love, therefore allow me to pass. The love of those who
have gone before,
see is it not a large quantity and sufficient to draw me
upward? See the love
of those who remain behind, is it not a large quantity and
sufficient to draw
me upward?" The Watcher hears his words.
The Grim Guardian
counts and weighs and says, "Pass". Then this man passes and
goes beyond the Lake
of Wisdom, past the Winding Channel of Experiences, over
the flooded Field of
Reeds, to the Eastern side of the Region of Light where he
will be renewed in
birth into the Higher Spheres.
The Pilgrim now stands
before the Womb of Heaven where those who enter as pure
seed are brought
forth into union with God. This man passes by to where the
attendants help him
to assume the Robe of Glory. They welcome him.
"Behold",
they say, "His Kohar has brought this man powers to make him complete.
The powers he gave
into the keeping of his Kohar during the prayer times on
Earth have returned
greatly magnified. This man has joined the Joyful Company,
he has left his old,
discarded body in the Region of Heaviness, to assume
another more
glorified one in the Region of Light.
The Kohar greets the
Pilgrim and says, "I welcome you, my own". The Kohar says
to those about,
"This is my own, he has washed in the Lake of Wisdom and passed
by the Caverns of
Distrust and Doubt. Let us, therefore, enter in peace when the
Great Door is opened
for the United Being in the East, the door leading to the
Place of The One
True God above all gods, whose manifestations are secret
mysteries".
Before going further
they pass by a side entrance to the Region of Darkness
where vile and
sorrowful things lurk, the Lost Ones, those who served in the
ranks of evil on
Earth. O Great Kohar, stop the ears of your own; that he may
not hear the
mournful waitings of the doomed ones left behind!
They who are the
companions of the Pilgrim cry out, "O Kohar, guide your own
right, guide him up
the Ladder of Life which he must traverse again; strengthen
its rungs, support
him, so he bears lightly upon them, let not the rungs break
beneath his weight.
This is the test of deeds long since done, where evil bears
down heavily".
"O Kohar, your
ownis weak andfalters, yet your arms are strong, therefore lift
them to support him,
that he may surmount to the heights above. Do this, that he
may sit with those
who have understanding and perception, that his feet may be
welcomed in the
Fields of Peace and that he may take his place among the
Glorious Ones".
Blessed is the Kohar
who safeguards all memories, storing them as men store
corn; who retains
these for the use of the Reborn Ones; who can recall all that
men forget and can
draw forth a memory as men draw water from a well. The Kohar
is the eternal
recorder, Pilgrims become Risen Ones and enter their Kohars as a
soul enters a body,
and in unity they become Glorious Ones.
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 7
This is the manner
whereby the Aspiring Ones of Earth may cross the dread
horizon through
residence within the Cavern of Stone. It is thus that men come
to know the Truth
concerning the Realms of Glory beyond the Western Horizon, but
it is a path beset
by great dangers and manifold terrors, and many return
witless.
The Aspiring One is
of Earth, he is earthbound. He sits within the cavern before
the Cauldron of
Rebirth and Regeneration, and inhales the smoke from the brew of
release. He rises
above himself, flying on wings of five feathers, the names of
which are recorded
in the Book of Secret Mysteries, wherein are the awful
recipes. There it is
written that he may ascend like a falcon and cannot go
otherwise than as a
falcon. He may not go in the manner of any other bird.
He escapes the call
of Earth, its fetters fall from him. The Aspiring One leaves
his attendants
behind, he is not with them, he is not of Earth, neither is he of
Heaven. He is at the
place where the two meet and intermingle.
His body moves
without the spirit and partakes of the sour yellow bread of wide
vision. The Aspiring
One drinks the brew of grey barley and sips long at the
wine of harish,
eating the cakes of green brown horris. He eats the fruit of the
releasing tree and
drinks the brew of black fungus, which is in the smoke
goblet. Thus, he
sleeps and the attendants lay him down in the receptacle called
the Womb of Rebirth.
He is in the Place of Visions but remains like the masthead
bird.
He shall be covered
and made so that in his struggles he rise not. His voice is
heard speaking in a
strange tongue, as he calls on his fathers who have gone
before and now
preside over affairs beyond the Wide Lake. His body becomes
still, as he enters
the dazzling chamber which is the doorway to twin vision.
Now he must
penetrate the Walls of Dry Air which bar his passage, and rise into
the rainbow-coloured
Clouds of Radiance which are above. High up he looks below
him and sees the
waters of the Winding Canal of Experience and understands the
meaning of all that
had befallen him. Now he has four eyes, these being the
inner and outer
eyes, and rising higher he attains the heights of wide
consciousness.
Here he meets the
Pathfinder and follows him swiftly. He speaks rightly to the
Guardian. He shields
bis eyes when passing the Lurker on the Threshold, and goes
on until he comes to
the abode of the Opener of the Ways.
Now the body of the
Aspiring One becomes restless and those who attend him place
the power of Hori
over his face. He hears the voice of The Sungod, which says,
"I know the
necessary names, I am The Knower of Names. I know the name of The
Limitless One, above
The Lords of the East and West, I am One Most Powerful".
The Aspiring One
becomes covered with moisture, he writhes, he shouts, he
struggles. The
Companionable Watchers know he has left the protection of The
Sungod, that he has
been seized by the Fiends of Darkness, but he struggles and
prevails over them,
and all is well. Then the Aspiring One returns.
A hundred shining
suns whirl above, a whisper rolls around like thunder, lights
of manifold hues
sway above, like the river reeds in the wind. All things appear
to dance in a shimmering
haze, then turn over and fold back into themselves, and
such beauty is
produced that the human tongue cannot describe it. All things
take upon themselves
shimmering forms through which other forms can be seen.
Great melodic music
throbs all around, while everything pulsates a soft rhythm.
The air is filled
with voices of unearthly sweetness, glory and splendour are
everywhere. Then the
Aspiring One awakes.
He is raised, behold
he comes forth and walks as one bemused by a vision of
glory. He staggers,
he cannot walk unsupported. His throat burns and his mouth
is overgrown with
dryness. His head resounds with drumbeats. He is given the
sweet waters in the
cup of forgetfulness and drinks deeply, all is well. He is a
Reborn One, he is an
Enlightened One. He is one resurrected from the Cavern of
Stone.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 8
These are the
supplications of Dkeb, the Stranger, who came from the Land of
Rising Waters and
was known to us as the Opener of the Ways, he came under the
wings of the
Firehawk. He was the first of the Scarlet Robed Ones, the right
hand of Glanvanis.
That was in the time of our fathers' fathers, and the tongue
of the seafarers is
no longer in the mouth of men.
0 Great Being of
Beauty, Brilliant One who greets the Newcomers arriving in the
Place Beyond the
Western Horizon, this woman is your daughter, your daughter is
she. See, she is
pure in spirit and clean in heart. She is modest and womanlike,
so let her pass to
live in the Pastures of Life, in the Land of New Dawning
where all is
wholesome.
Let her be purified
by the maidens of Orshafa, let them purify her, let her be
washed and dried by
the attendants at the clean, sweet waters of life. Let the
nine Delicate Ones
minister to her, let her be clothed in garments of decency,
for she is a womanly
woman. O Great and Glorious One, give this woman your hand,
clasp her hand with
womanly tenderness. Spread out your falcon wings over her,
spread protecting
wings around her. She has followed the tedious ways of
womankind and has
glorified life with her presence. She has endured affliction
with patience and
made her home hearth a place of peace and content. Let her
roam the pastures of
the Blessed Ones and penetrate into the farthest regions of
light.
I raise my hands in
supplication. The flame is lit, it burns brightly, fragrant
incense is placed in
the bowl and it becomes aglow. Its sweet perfume rises into
the recesses above.
O Happy Risen One, O Beautiful Being glowing with womanly
goodness, treasurer
of all the virtues, purify yourself for admittance into the
Higher Regions. The
incense we offer here is your indrawn breath of renewed
life. It fills your
lungs, you breathe and because you breathe you live. This is
the best incense
from the Land of Gwemi, differing not from that which our
fathers knew when
they travelled the water road. O Beautified One, my heart
lingers at the place
where you rest, my heart is with you, entwined with yours.
How sweet your
breath, how pleasant your perfume, how gentle your whispers, how
delicate the rustle
of your attire. O newly become Beauteous One, you are not
alone.
Rise blue perfumed
smoke, rise cleaning fragrance, rise sweet wholesome
offerings, rise like
fluttering birds on wings of purified air to the glorious
regions of light
which he away beyond our poor perception. Accept our sweet
fragrance, O
Beautified One, inhale our sweet smoke, O Ever Delicate One, may
you enjoy the due
reward of your labours and privations, of your selfless
sacrifices. Be ever
contented and peaceful, O dutiful wife and loving mother,
hear our words, as
they rise to you in the softly smouldering incense which
comes shipborne to
these shores.
Hear the voices of
the waiting Welcomers greeting the Beauteous One who now
joins them. They
say, "Cast off the old worn garment and array yourself in
garments of radiant
light, in the clothes of splendour which have awaited you.
Bedeck yourself in
the well earned jewels of spiritual reward.
"Henceforth you
shall dwell here, walking about freely, to be honoured and
loved. Here you will
be renewed, be alert, vigorous and far reaching. The power
of your spirit shall
stretch out to every place. You take thought and fly on
hawks wings. Your
desire becomes a chariot with wings of light".
"Beyond the
place of your first destination is the kingdom of the Lord of the
Distant Sky. There
he will permit manifestations in glory. There, henceforth,
you shall walk in
strength and beauty, being ever filled with life and power,
garmented in
loveliness for all eternity".
"There
floodwaters of a glorious fluid light unknown here rise and fall in
moderation, and
therein you may bathe daily and taste the revitalising rests.
Here your thirst may
be slaked at the well of Divine Essence and your appetite
appeased by the
strange bread of everlasting life".
"This is your
destiny, in the Land Beyond the Veil, therefore lift up your face
in joy. Rise, lovely
liveliness. You are one destined to be numbered among the
Shining Ones and are
warmly welcomed into the company of the Fragrant Ones. O
happy one who
enhanced earthly life with your presence, this is your reward.
Many have done
mighty things, but you have served with constancy and diligence,
adding the small
grains of goodness to the pile of merits until it exceeded in
weight the great
things done by others. We hail you, O victorious one!"
The Welcomers say
among themselves, "How fair and bright the face of this
Newcomer. How fine
must have been her life in the Region of Heaviness. Behold,
here she is, renewed
and made young again but with a loveliness unkown in the
life left
behind".
When she goes
forward from here she is within her Kohar, they are one. Her
vision is through
the Kohar, her smell is through the Kohar. All she senses is
through the Kohar.
All she does and knows is through the Kohar.
Behold, she is among
the Chosen. Henceforth, she becomes an Opener of the Way
for those of her
blood. Glorious is she and blessed are they!
Those are the
supplications made for Milven, daughter of Mailon, son of Market
the Stranger,
according to the rites of the Sons of Fire. Ardwith kept it and it
was done into this
form at the place called Korinamba.
CHAPTER NINE
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 9
This concerns the mystery
of the Twice Born. It relates to those born again, to
those who have
endured the awfulness of the false death which many do not
survive; who have
drunk deeply from Koriladwen, the smooth bitter brew which
releases the spirit;
who have entered Ogofnaum through the thundering doors.
This is their path.
The door of Heaven
stands ajar, the doors of vision have been opened and now the
Cavern of Vision is
revealed. The spirit-bearing waves from the abyss have been
freed, the rays of
the Great light have been set free and the Guides and
Watchers have been
placed in their positions by the Constant One.
The Welcomers stand
back, for this is not their stage. The Brilliant One is
there and another
who is the Reciter, and he explains the visions: "O Brave
stouthearted one,
Syoltash to be, the things you behold are the things seen by
the Great Ones of
Earth when they came this way in their hour and were returned
back to life. They
were truly men of wisdom, well versed in the mystic
procedures, men who
knew their position and parts."
"Behold the
twin stars. These embody the midwifery powers drawing the Twice Born
back to their places
of origin. They who are with them are the champions of
light and darkness.
One you must choose as your companion, but the choice must
be made according to
the law of affinity, otherwise you are lost."
"The pool
wherein you gaze is earthlife. The brilliant light above, far greater
than the sun, is the
manifestation of The One God, but it is not He. The rays
dancing about are
the gods, distorted reflections of what is, distorted
reflections of
Truth, shadows of reality. The sparkling motes are souls, they
descend from the
light to manifest in darkness."
"The clouds
obscuring the lesser lights are the clouds of misconception, which
darken the face of
wisdom. The dark twins standing by the pillar are Delusion
and Illusion, the
constant beguilers of men. The stream of clear water is Truth
and the waters of
Truth constantly sheer away the clay pedestal of falsehood."
"The brightness
you see before you and to the right is the naked spirit
displaying itself in
isolation. It is neither in a mortal body nor within the
Kohar. Beyond it is
a much greater brightness reflected from afar, which is the
Kohar of Kohars, which
men cannot yet understand."
"The repulsive
shapes which are behind the flame on your left are doomed spirits
which once were the
enlivening forces within men. Now they grovel in slime and
filth, denizens of
the mire, but their fate is just, for they themselves were
the judges. The
darkness beyond the murk will not become greater. Darkness
cannot change to
light, for when light comes into darkness there is no darkness,
it ceases to
exist."
"The gloominess
and shadow scene you see, forward on your left hand side, is the
Region of Heaviness
where mortals sojourn. The flickering lights which appear
here and there are
the joys of Earth, while the darker spots are where there are
sorrows and
suffering. The redness is anger and strife. The blue whiteness is
love and
compassion."
"The brightness
above and ahead is the Region of Lightness where the Risen Ones
rejoice, for there
they welcome their Earth companions and are happy in reunion.
Behold, here is a
Rising One newly arrived, see, she flies upward on the wide
wings of spirit and
loving arms reach out to welcome her. The star-girt roadway
you see rising
before you is that trodden by the countless Risen Ones who have
gone before. Now,
advance towards the left."
"The abyss now
before you is the mouth of Earth, and see, it opens and speaks to
you, bidding you
farewell. Listen carefully, for it will retell your deeds, your
accomplishments and
your omissions. If they weigh against you, then cast
yourself into the
abyss, for you are unworthy to survive this trial; go no
further, nor can you
turn back, lest you become prey to the Foul Lurker in
Darkness."
"If you have
not been found wanting in the weighing, then step forward boldly
and without fear,
for the mouth will close to let you pass. If you are not
numbered among the
triumphant ones, then better by far that you be swallowed
forthwith than that
you survive to meet the Dread Lurker, the Devouring Horror,
and be returned to
Earth a witless, empty shell."
"Beyond the
abyss lies a stretch of blue water which contains the Pool of Wisdom
and the Pool of
Purification. Therein you must bathe and refresh yourself. The
trees growing to
your right bear the fruits of spiritual nourishment, eat and
become strong. Know,
as doing so, that the things done, thought and visualised
on Earth become
qualities which are here transmuted into the things and
experiences of this
nature."
"Pass between
the waters and the trees and you will see a cliff against which is
a ladder, the rungs
of which are bound in leathern throngs made from the hide of
the Bull of the
Nightsky. This ladder, which rises before you, is the Ladder of
Experience. Its two
supports are experience in the body and experience in the
spirit. The rungs
are your daily deeds and thoughts and fantasies of your
earthly life. Now is
the test. Will your daily deeds and secret thoughts support
your ascent, or are
they incapable of bearing you upward? See, above is your
Kohar, call upon it
for help, for therein you may have stored a reserve of
spiritual strength.
Or, perchance, it may be barren and empty, only you know.
Those who uphold the
ladder are the Lords of the Ladder, and they greet you as
the Ascending
One."
"The ladder
leads onto a plateau, and beside you appears the strangely garbed
Reciter who sweeps
his arms about and says, "All wherein things manifest is the
firmament, which was
before the beginning and still is. In the beginning its
darkness was pierced
by just a single ray from The Sun of God, but later, when
the first spirits
entered, the firmament was brightened and it was divided by
heaviness and
lightness. Then, when it was set apart, it was divided by the
entry of dark
spirits whose need was for a place with which they had a sombre
affinity.
Therefore, the firmament
of lightness is divided, there is a Place of Light for
the Victorious Ones
and a Place of Darkness for those who could not rise to
victory. There are
regions of gloom and shadow, regions of twilight and shade.
There are regions of
light in many hues, regions ranging from dazzling lights to
dim light. There is
a veil across the firmament, dividing Heaven from Earth, and
each spirit
departing from Earth penetrates through this veil, going to its
appointed place,
carried by the winds of affinity. Arriving there, the spirit,
good or bad,
strengthens and extends its compatible territory."
"The Kohar is
the Knower and the spirit is the known. All knowledge is with the
Knower, but the
known can tap it so it flows out into the known. The Kohar
receives the spirit
seed in Heaven, for there it is as the body is on Earth.
Even as the earthly
body is made of things from the Region of Heaviness, so is
the Kohar made of
things from the Region of Lightness."
"These things
are said by the Reciter before he leads you to the place where
sleeps a serpent,
and pointing to it he says, "Behold the serpent it sleeps at
the bole of a tree
from which hangs the body of man, the tree of his backbone.
It is on guard,
safeguarding the precious gem of spiritual powers, which lies
enwrapped in the
threefold covering. To obtain the gem the serpent must be
aroused and then
overcome. To rouse this serpent is a thing not to be lightly
undertaken, for it
causes a fire to mount into the heart, which may destroy the
brain with delusions
and madness. Only the Twice Born can really obtain the
gem."
"You pass on
with the Reciter who will say: "These are the things you must
establish in your
heart, the knowledge of the eight roads along which you must
travel to reach the
Land of the Westerners. These will bring you to the twelve
first portals
leading to the Land of Shadows. Here I will recite for you the
twenty-two deeds of
wickedness you have not done. You will then pass through the
Land of Shadows as
if it were your hour, and, beyond it, come to the Great
Portal where it must
be established, before the Great Guardian, that you have
ever done all within
your power to live according to the twelve virtues. Then
you pass through the
portal to the Hall of Judgement. Here, for the first time,
your light is
revealed and it is made known whether your tongue has spoken in
accordance with the
things within your heart."
"Many are they
who know the words of the tongue but sever these from what is
written in the
heart. If the words of the tongue are copied from the writings of
the heart and are a
true copy, then cross to the Place of Assessment where your
true form and
likeness will be displayed for all to see."
A curtain of
darkness descends, there is a heavy dark mist, then the muffled
crash of Thundering
Doors. The aching body reclines within the tomb of stone.
The questing pilgrim
has returned to his homehaven. He has learned truths he
could never learn on
Earth and now knows the Grand Secret. Faith is replaced
with certainty and
he is now an Initiated One.
CHAPTER TEN
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 10
My God and Father,
my Creator and Governor, Supreme and Immortal Spirit, I come
to you as a wayward
son comes to his father. I come as the world-weary wanderer
comes home. I come
as the victorious battle-bludgeoned warrior comes to the
place of his rest. I
am one who has passed the trials. I am one who has survived
the challenges.
I have returned full
of wisdom and knowledge, the fruits of long years in Your
earthly place of
instruction. There I was diligent, I was not a waster of time,
I was not a man of
idleness. I am proved worthy. I, Your son, have come home.
The virtues I
developed on Earth are the messengers that sped before me, my
qualities hastened
to announce my coming. They sped on invisible wings, so that
only those sensitive
to that which emanated from me knew of their coming. They
came as perfume
carried on the wind. They announced me, they heralded me. They
gave salutations to
the Spirits in the Bright Abodes. Yet I have not forgotten
the Dwellers in
Terror, and a small dark spirit of the Twilight has gone forth
to make known to
them my departure from Earth. This, that should any there know
of me they may be
made aware that I am not of their dismal company. Will there
be weeping there in
the dank, dreary darkness?
I surmounted the
trials of existence in heaviness. Now my spirit can speed like
the lightning flash.
I am one who has accomplished what had to be done. I have
governed my affairs,
not wholly by earthly standards but by the greater
ordinances of
Heaven. I have carefully read the books of instruction and
listened to the
interpreting words of the wise.
He who tests hearts
and reads thoughts has weighed me and I was not found
wauting in the
balances. I am a Cool One, for my thoughts rest in peace. I am
not numbered among
the Hot Ones whose thoughts consume them as fire consumes
wood.
I have passed the
Nameless Ones, to come into the presence of The Great One whom
no man names, whose
name is not knowable to men. I have reached the destination
of ages, I have
achieved the ultimate goal. I have put on the mantle of
immortality and the
robe of light which the Heavenly Weavers prepared for Me.
I am a Little One,
one who comes in littleness and not greatness. I am a Humble
One and come not in
pomp and grandeur, for these are things of the four
quartered Earth
having no place here. I have done things which have been wrong,
but these were done
in ignorance and not wilfully or with malice.
O Watchers, announce
to the Lords of Light and to the Lords of Darkness that I
am one who has
penetrated the Mystic Veil but is destined to return to the Realm
of Heaviness. O
Watchers, announce that I am now a self-knowing everlasting
spirit. O Father of
the Gods, who is above all, issue the decrees of fate which
ensure that
henceforth I live a life of service, that I may live purposefully
when I return to
fulfil my destiny.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 11
My Heart, my Spirit,
my Kohar, guardian of my memories, cast not your words in
the balances against
me. My faults and failings are not few, for no mortal man
is perfect, yet they
weigh hghtly against my qualities and good deeds. Say not
that I have wrought
evil to any man wilfully or with malice, say not that I am a
man of wickedness.
Let me not suffer sorrowful remorse in the gloom and
darkness, but let me
live forever within the Region of Light.
I have done deeds of
goodness and led a goodly life. I have overcome the wiles
of wickedness and
avoided the snares of temptation. I have lived in peace with
my neighbours. I
have dealt justly and fairly with them and have not uttered
words of malice to
stir up strife. I have not gossiped about my neighbours, nor
engaged in idle
chatter concerning their affairs. These things are not easy, and
as no man is perfect
I have at times been bad tempered under provocation.
Therefore, speak
words that will weigh in the balances against my failings.
I have not slandered
any man, nor have I wilfully caused pain and suffering. I
have not caused the
widow to weep, nor the child to cry without cause. I have
dealt justly with my
servants and with the servants of others, and I have been
loyal to my masters.
I have not slain unlawfully, nor wounded any man wilfully.
Yet no man is
perfect and when my burdens have weighed heavily upon me I have
spoken harshly.
Therefore, speak words that will weigh in the balances against
my failings.
I have never
oppressed a poor man or taken from him what is his by virtue of my
position. I have
never oppressed the weak or cheated in the substance of metals.
I have never said to
a hungry woman, "Lay with me and you shall eat", for this
is a vile thing. I
have not lain with the wife of another man or seduced a
child, for these are
abominations. Yet no man is perfect and few are commanders
of their thoughts,
Therefore, speak words that will lighten these things in the
balances.
I have not turned
the water of another so that he is deprived of his full
measure. I have not
stopped flowing waters in their course. I have not kept
fodder from cattle,
nor allowed the pastures to be neglected. I have not caused
any child to know
fear without reason, nor have I beaten one in bad temper. I
have not transgressed
the statutes of the king. Yet no man is perfect and
sometimes that which
is right in its day becomes wrong in another. Therefore,
speak words that
will weigh in the balances against my wrongdoings.
I have not stolen,
neither have I taken the possessions of any man by deceit. I
have not divided the
household of any man, nor separated him from his wife or
children. I have not
quarrelled with any man because of ignorance. I have not
turned from my
duties or failed in my obligations. I have not hidden my errors
or buried my
failings. Yet no man is perfect, therefore speak words that will
weigh in the
balances for me.
I have never behaved
boisterously in a sacred place, nor have I ever defiled
one. My hand has not
been demanding because of my office, nor have I dealt
haughtily with those
who came to me with a plea. I have not increased my
position by false
words or writings. Yet my burden has been increased because of
the perversity and
wilfulness of men, and no man is perfect. Therefore, speak
words that will
weigh in the balances against my weaknesses.
I have not permitted
envy to eat my heart, nor malice to corrupt it. I have not
been loud of mouth,
nor spoken words of boastfulness. I have never slandered
another or uttered
words of falsehood. My tongue has never escaped from the
control of my heart.
I have never derided the words of another because they
passed my
understanding, nor have I stopped my ears to words of enlightenment. I
have never hidden
myself to observe others, nor have I ever disclosed the secret
designs or doings of
others, unless they be of evil intent. Yet no man is
perfect, therefore
speak words that will weigh in the balances for me. When I
have done wrong I
have adjusted the scales that weighed down heavily against me.
I have not hidden my
weaknesses and failings in dark places, but washed them
clean in the
sunlight of honest compensation.
I have not succumbed
to the lures of lewdness, nor has my tongue spoken slyly of
things which should
be kept private. I have not peeped at nakedness or pryed
into another's
privacy. I have respected the modesty of womankind and the
innocent delicacy of
childhood. Yet men are as they are and imperfect, while
thoughts stray
wilfully and are not easily restrained. Therefore, speak words
that will weigh in
the balances for me.
O Great One, protect
me. O Kohar, save me. Hear the words of my heart. I was one
who was ever mindful
of what was right and what was wrong. I did what I thought
was right and
shunned that which I thought was wrong. I listened to those who
were wiser than I
and helped those who were less privileged. Can man do more?
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE SACRED REGISTERS
- PART 12
Know me and
understand my ways. I am one who sees the past and the future, I
look into hidden
places, I am one who wanders freely. I am one who can be
reborn, I am one who
knows the speech of the released. I am an Uplifter. The
Climbers come to me
and I support them, I lift them up, I strengthen. Therefore,
bring me the
sustenance of smoke.
I hear and I hear
not, for what I hear is heard by others. I speak and I speak
not, for what I
speak is in the mouths of others. I weep and I weep not, for my
weeping is the
weeping of others. I am an Uplifter. The Climbers come to me and
I console them. I
enlighten them with words of hidden wisdom. Thus they find the
way.
I am one who comes
forth when the circle is formed, when the twin lamps have
been lit and the
incantations made. I come forth from the consecrated place and
bear the staff of
power. I know the secrets of the dark waters and the secrets
of blood. I am a
wanderer in strange places. I am one who does not fear to tread
the forbidden paths.
I am an Uplifter. The Climbers come to me and I reveal the
way.
I am the Opener of
Tombs. I am the Dweller in the Stone Caverns. I am the one
who precedes the
Herald of the Companions. I am the Swimmer in the Waters of
Wisdom. I am the
Discoverer of Hidden Places. I am the one who hovers above the
Still Waters. I am
the Wanderer with the Winds. I am an Uplifter. The Climbers
come to me and are
comforted. They thirst and I refresh them, they hunger and I
fill them with food.
I am the Sitter
Beneath the Sycamore. I am the Eater of the Rowan. I am the
heart within the
heat of the fire and the eye within the candle flame. I am the
uprising hawk and
the contented dove. I am one who has tamed the serpent and
drawn forth its
secrets. I am one who has many eyes and sees what is written in
the nightskies;
whose ears hear the whispers at the edge of the Great Waters. I
am one whose right
foot rests on the Earth and whose left foot rests oh the
firmament. I am one
who faces all spirits alike and knows their true nature. I
am an Uplifter. The
Climbers come to me and I give them peace.
I am one who gazes
into the deep dark pool, reading the things hidden therein. I
am the Caller Forth
of the Deformed Ones and the Tongue of the Bright Ones. I am
he of the
Everlasting Form. I am he who provides stability to falterings forms
and the interpreter
who spans the veil. I am an Uplifter. The Climbers come to
me and I provide
their Guide and their Guardian.
Know me and
understand my ways. Invoke me through the rite of smoke and wine.
Call me forth into
the circle of stone, but beware, for lest you hold the seven
keys and understand
the nature of the three rays, you are lost.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE SCROLL OF RAMKAT
Awful is the great
day of judgement at its dawning in the Netherworld. The soul
stands naked in the
Hall of Judgement, nothing can now be hidden. Hypocrisy is
no avail; to
maintain goodness when the soul reveals its own repulsiveness is
futile. To mumble
empty ritual is foolishness. To call upon gods who have no
existence is a waste
of time.
In the Hall of
Judgement the wrongdoer is judged. On that day and henceforth his
qualities shall form
his food. His soul, soft as clay upon Earth, is hardened
and set into shape
according to its moulding. The balances are adjusted.
One arrives. The
Forty-Two Virtues are his assessors. Shall he dwell among
beauty as a godling,
or be given captive to the Keeper of Horrors, to dwell
among vile things
under a merciful mantle of darkness?
One arrives. The
twisted body, tormented on Earth, and the ugly face have gone,
discarded at the
portal. He strides through the Hall in radiance, to pass into
the Place of
Everlasting Beauty.
One arrives. Now no
earthly body sheilds the horror which is the true likeness
of the evildoer upon
Earth. He runs from the light which he cannot tolerate, and
hides himself in the
shadows near the Place of Terror. Soon he will be drawn to
his compatible place
among the Dismal Company.
One arrives. He has
been upright and a just one. His failings and weaknesses
were of little
account. This upright man fears nothing, for he is welcomed among
the Bright Ones and
shall go unhampered among the Everlasting Lords.
One arrives. He
trembles before the Unseen Judges, he is lost, he knows nothing,
earthly knowledge
and confidence are left behind. The balance drops, he sees his
soul and recognises
his true self, he rushes into the merciful darkness. It
enfolds him and dark
arms embrace him, drawing him into the terrible gloom, into
the Place of Dark
Secret Horrors.
One arrives. She
graced the court with beauty, men sang of her loveliness and
grace. Now, as when
a mantle is removed, all is discarded, it is the time of
unveiling. Who can
describe the lustful thoughts and secret unclean deeds which
fashioned the horror
coming through the portal? There is a hush among the
compassionate.
One arrives. On
Earth she was pitied by the compassionate and scorned by the
hard-hearted. There
her lot was degradation and servitude, privation and
sacrifice, few and
meagre were the gifts from life. Yet she triumphed. Now she
comes forward
surrounded by brilliance, even the Shining Ones are dazzled by her
beauty.
One arrives. The
twisted face and pain-wracked body of the cripple have been
left behind. A kind
and loving soul dwelt imprisoned within its confines. Now
the relieved spirit
steps forward into the great Hall, unencumbered and free,
glorious to behold.
One arrives. The
splendid body which graced Earth remains there, an empty,
decaying thing. The
naked soul enters the Everlasting Halls. It is a deformed,
mis-shapen thing fit
only to dwell in the merciful gloom of the place with which
it has compatible
affinity.
One arrives. Neither
goodness nor wickedness bears down upon the scales. The
balances remain
straight. The soul departs to the twilight borderland between
the Region of Light
and the Region of Darkness.
0 Great Lords of
Eternity, who once were in the flesh, even as I, hear not the
outpourings of an
overburdened and sorrowful heart. For who am I to presume to
call upon The Great
God of All? Who am not without wickedness and weak in
spirit. I have
filled my heart with knowledge of the Secret Writings but still I
fear the judgement.
Therefore, Great Lords of Eternity, I call upon you who once
walked the Earth,
even as I, and who, therefore, understand the failings and
weaknesses of men.
I am not weak in my
standing with earthly things, but I am weak beside the
Greater Beings. Will
I, too, ever be worthy of the grandeur of the Eternal
Mansions ? O Great
Beings whose nature is beyond understanding, grant me just a
spark of the Eternal
Wisdom, that it might light my soul and kindle the flame of
immortal life.
What is the destined
fate of a man who knows the existence of things beyond his
understanding? I see
but I do not know, therefore I am afraid. Man can swim
against the current
towards the bank, but he needs a helping hand to pull him
ashore when he is
exhausted from the struggle.
This is the fate of
man. He must strive for that which he cannot attain. He must
believe in that
which he cannot prove. He must seek that which he cannot find.
He must travel a
road without knowing his destination. Only thus can the purpose
of life be
fulfilled.
Man may believe he
knows his destiny, but he cannot be assured with certainty;
in no other way can
he fulfil it. In this way alone can his soul be properly
awakened to flower
with its full potential. This alone he may know: The purpose
of all human life is
a goal so glorious it surpasses all earthly understanding.
We may visualise our
individual goals as we will, it is ordained that we have
this freedom. How
close or how far we are from reality is of little consequence,
what is, is. He who
seeks a non-existent destination will, nevertheless, get
somewhere. He who
seeks not at all will get nowhere. Earthly life fulfils itself
without attainment.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
THE SCROLL OF YONUA
Away from my eyes, O
Hideous One. Slink back into the dark shadows about the
black sunless abode
where dwell the self-distorted souls of the Fearsomely
Formed Ones. Back to
your murky haven of sombre compatibility.
Away, out of sight,
for your repulsiveness brings back into my heart the
thoughts of evils
and temptations I have encountered and overcome, thoughts
which I now so
gladly forget. You poor, doomed fiend, mis-shapen, horny-headed,
slit-snouted,
stunted in arms and legs, horrible to behold. What dreadful
thoughts and unclean
deeds must have been yours, to fashion you in this manner!
Away, back to your
own kind, back from the twilit border where you lurk
furtively, afraid,
pitifully seeking a glimpse of the bright joys denied to your
own folly. Back to
the place with which you have pitiful affinity, back to your
own dark, compatible
companions.
The Guardians of the
Hidden Gates repel you, lest you befoul the pathways of the
Glorious Ones who
once struggled to find beauty and cleanliness. The light of
this place is ever
spreading, and soon a Glorious One may walk where you now
slink in the gloom.
Back, back from the dividing flame, back into the sad
comfort of
enveloping darkness. Back to your foul companions in misery, back
into the mercifully
enshrouding gloom.
Your fate saddens my
heart. Can you find consolation there, hidden in the
comforting darkness?
Does a kind word ever lighten the burden of your days? Is
there a place of
rest among the slime and excreta? O Fallen One, who once walked
Earth so proudly in
self-esteem, selfishness and arrogance, go back, torment
yourself no more
with the sights of beauty and joy which lie beyond your reach.
O Wriggler in the
Slime, back from the purifying flame, what can it avail you
now?
O Repellent One, who
by wrongdoing and non-good doing thus cursed yourself and
were delivered into
the comfortless arms of decay and filth; who on Earth
appeared arrayed in
such deceptive softness and complacency; who dwelt amid
pleasure and luxury,
away, back into the shadows, hide yourself from the pure
gaze of the Glorious
Ones.
O Squirming One,
turned back are you, the shameful flesh is unworthy even of the
flame. The unshapely
mass, unchiselled by the forming blows of self -discipline
and selfless
service, unmoulded by the touch of compassion and love, unpolished
by conformity to the
burnishing blows of sincere goodness, has no place near the
region of revealing
light. See, are you not seared with pain when the pure light
falls upon you?
Miserable indeed is your lot in that dread, dreary abode!
See, your slimy hide
shrinks from the pure glare, it splits, it cracks, back,
back into your dark
cavern with its floor of slime. Back out of sight, out of
hearing, back from
the pure gaze of righteousness. How miserable the lot of one
who finds
unconsoling comfort in the depths of dread darkness lit only by
shadowy gloom! How
awful to dwell in companionship with distorted shades!
What became of the
loveliness which once clothed you on Earth? Whose fault that
you brought it not
with you? Did you ever pause, even for one moment, to gaze
into the
self-revealing mirror within you and see the awful creature you were
forming? Amid your
pleasures and luxury, did you not think of the wellbeing of
your inner self? Did
you not care?
O if I could but
help you now, but the hideousness was set firm in the
furaacefire of
death. Then the enveloping flesh was stripped away and the hidden
horror within the
mould revealed. As the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis,
so should the soul
emerge from its earthly body. An unnatural thing like this
was never intended,
yet you freely made the choice. Not a single disfiguring
line was made by
another.
What words are those
which rasp forth from the unlipped, fish-shaped mouth? O
ears, say you
deceive me! O heart, cease this pounding clamour! O hand of
horror, release your
awful grip! Would that I could swoon, that I could find
relief in
unconsciousness, but facts have to be faced here as on Earth. I must
look in trembling
terror.
Yes, I loved on
Earth, nothing there was more precious to me than my sister in
love. I forgave her
wilfulness and was not stirred up when her words were
unkind. I ever
remained a man of cool temper. I clothed her well and good food
she never lacked. My
heart sang in her presence, I rejoiced in her loveliness,
she was my life, my
wife. Yet she was unfaithful, she was cruel, she found
pleasure in deceit
and perversion. As the years passed they became heavy,
clouded and bitter
because of her wayward ways.
O horror, O terror,
O cringing fear, keep away from me! O my eyes, O my heart,
it is true. It is
the one I loved. O let me die once more, that consciousness
may pass from me! It
is her whom I loved, she for whom I waited in joyful
anticipation, hoping
to find the light of my youth, hoping the overlay of later
evils would be
sloughed away by death, hoping to find the warm, throbbing
liveliness I once
held. I would gladly have forgiven the pain she caused in her
maturity. O what has
become of the smooth flesh, the warm touch? Where is the
beauty of face, the
grace of form? O raise not the crocodile-skinned arms to
shield the awful
snout, the green-rimmed, red-veined eyes!
O racing heart! I
hear the misformed words amidst the hiss and gurgle issuing
forth from the
oozing aperture. O say not that I was so blind, so greatly
deceived, that you
cared for nought but the earthly things we shared; that your
affection was the
false front of hypocrisy, your love a lie. Did I not always
forgive? Was I not
always patient? With whom did you share the terrible thoughts
and desires that
fashioned you thus ? Surely this cannot be the work of your own
nature alone. Fickle
you were and pleasure loving, selfish, cruel and deceitful,
but all this I
forgave because of the plea of my heart. Was this not enough? O
where is the
companion I awaited? Lost, and worse than lost.
O compassion, O
mercy, come to my aid! My heart fails me, I cannot face what I
thought to greet so
joyously. O powers of solicitude, strengthen me. What can I
do to mitigate the
Law? Is there hope? Is there a way?
A whisper of
comfort, O gratefully I hear it, "There is hope and there is a way,
but between this
self-shaped horror and the Glorious Ones there is an
uncrossable chasm.
In sorrow and anguish it must seek a road, it must go its own
dark way as you must
go yours in the light. Turn back, turn again towards the
light, the compassion
in your own heart does nought to bridge the gulf between,
unless it strikes a
responsive spark within the other heart".
"Let the memory
be erased, this is not the companion of your path. The trials
and sorrows borne so
well, the uncomplaining unselfishness fashioned you in
glory. Nor would you
have reached the present degree of perfection had she not
been as she was, and
is now revealed to be. This fearful fate was wrought by the
lost one alone, for
each is the sole keeper of his spirit. Each soul is
fashioned by every
thought, desire and deed, every emotion that touched it
during its sojourn
in an earthly body".
"Each is the
maker of his own future, the fashioner of his own being".
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
A SCROLL FRAGMENT -
ONE
Salvaged from the
Great Book of The Sons of Fire this is all that remains of
some sixteen damaged
pages relating to an initiation ceremony.
Who will reward or
punish me? I will.
Who besets my path
with sorrow? I do.
Who can grant me a
life of everlasting glory? I can.
Who must save me
from the horror of malformation? I must.
Who will guide my
footsteps through life? I will.
Who brings joy into
my life and gladdens my heart? I do.
Who brings peace and
contentment to my spirit? I do.
Who lightens the
burdens of my labour? None but myself.
Whose courage will
protect me from the workers of evil? My courage.
Whose wisdom will
guide me and enlighten my heart? My wisdom.
Whose will rules my
destiny? My will.
Whose duty is it to
attend to my wants? My duty.
Who is responsible
for my future state of being? I alone am responsible.
Who shields me from
temptation? No one.
Who shields me from
sorrow and suffering? No one.
Who shields me from
pain and affliction? No one.
Who benefits from my
toil and tribulation, my sorrow and suffering? Myself, if
wise.
Who benefits from my
temptations and afflictions, my sacrifices and austerities?
Myself, if wise.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE THIRD OF THE
EGYPTIAN SCROLLS
(A Fragment)
If a man would know
Heaven, he must first know Earth. Man cannot understand
Heaven until he
understands Earth. He cannot understand God until he understands
himself, and he
cannot know love unless he has been loveless.
God is unknown but
not unknowable. He is unseen but not unseeable. God is
unheard but not
unhearable.
He is not understood
but He is understandable.
The goal of life is
upstream, not downstream. Man must struggle against the
current, not drift
with the flow.
A child is born
knowing all God intended it to know, the rest it must discover
for itself. Man does
not live to increase the glory of God, this cannot be done,
but to increase the
glory of man.
He who worships with
empty rituals wastes his time and displays the shallowness
of his thought. That
which man does to benefit man is good, but if he seeks to
gratify God it is a
labour of ignorance showing disrespect for God whose nature
is above that of
earthly princes. A lifting hand is worth ten wagging tongues.
Be a man of
fortitude and courage. Prepare to fight, for Earth gives man but two
choices: to struggle
or perish. There is work to be done in the Garden of God,
therefore cease
useless performances and word-wasting discussions, go, pick up
the hoe and tackle
the task to hand.
This is the secret
of life: Man lives in God and God lives in man. This answers
all questions.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
THE SIXTH OF THE
EGYPTIAN SCROLLS
God is in all and He
encompasses all.
There is no God but
The True God, and His existence is our assurance of life
everlasting. He was
before the beginning and will be after the end.
He is mighty and all
powerful. In His magnificence and majesty no man can
conceive Him. His
divine nature is beyond the understanding of man. His creation
is awesome. His ways
unfathomable.
His creative thought
brought all things forth and the power which flows from Him
is life. He holds
life within His mind and the universe within His body.
If a man, in
ignorance and foolishness, conceives a more understandable god in
his own image or
builds gods of wood and stone, that will not take anything away
from the stature of
God. The Supreme One is ever God, The Creator of man, and if
man makes earthly
gods to worship, then it is man who loses thereby and not God.
Among earthly things
man shall find nothing greater than himself.
Man worships, not to
make God greater, for this he cannot do, but to make
himself greater.
Nothing man can do can add to what God already has. Men
conceive God as a
Being having greatly magnified human qualities, as a kinglike
Being greater than
any king. Thus man falls into error.
As the sun surrounds
man with light, though it be hidden behind the stormclouds,
so is man in the
thoughts of God, though God Himself be hidden from him.
Such is our God who,
though Himself eternal, lives with each man and with him
passes through the
Dark Portal of Death into the light of the Glorious Region
beyond.
God rules over all
earths and all spheres. He is in them and they are in Him.
All things are in
God and He is in all things. What is was to be, all things
begin and end in
God.
This alone is
wisdom, understand and live forever.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
A SCROLL FRAGMENT -
TWO
The Book of
Initiation and Rites says of God, "All our hopes rest in God who
created all things,
sustaining them with His breath, whatever their state,
wherever they may
be, in this place on Earth, or in any other place visible or
invisible".
"He alone
causes herbs to blossom in beauty and causes all things to come forth
in their proper
order and time, all flow from His directing thoughts. The
peaceful beauty
enfolding the face of the land at eventide, the melody of song
and speech, the
fragrance of flowers, the soft delicacy of petal and wing. All
beauty and charm
that delight the hearts of men flow from God".
"His wisdom is
unbounded and in His goodness He has provided all things in which
He has created a
need in man. The daylight and wind, food and water, heat and
coolness, the
materials of his dwelling and the substance of his garments, all
things for his daily
use and enjoyment. Man lacks nothing which would increase
his skill and
knowledge, to all useful things guideposts have been planted along
the way. What need
can man know for which God has not already made provision,
even before man was
born?"
"He has
established the nature of all things, so they remain stable and come
forth in their
proper order without change. When a man sows barley he knows what
will come up out of
the ground, the rewards of his toil are not confusion".
"A man lights a
fire knowing it will cook his food, it is not sometimes hot and
at other times cold.
He knows that day will follow night and that the hours of
darkness are
prescribed, it is not a matter of chance. The hours of darkness are
not one day long and
the next day short. Oil is ordained for lamps and water to
drink, man knows
that never can he light a wick in water. Man looks about him
and sees order, not
confusion, and he knows that where there is organisation
there must be an
organiser".
"The ordinances
of God are established for the benefit of man, were they not set
in stability man
would be nothing but the plaything of chance and the victim of
chaos. Therefore, on
the days of feast and fasting, each following in their due
season, I will ever
remember the obligations due to my God".
"I will rejoice
and sing songs of praise with a full heart, I will shun the
hypocrisy of moving
lips. I will be joyful in the fullness of spirit at the
beginning and at the
end of the appointed seasons".
'The decrees of God
are fulfilled at the appointed times and the days of labour
pass one into the
other. The season of first gathering to the full time of
harvest, the season
of sowing to the season of fruitfulness, all pass away as
the kiss of the wind
on the waters".
"I will raise
my voice, and my hands will move with the music. I will pluck
strings and send
sweet musical sounds rising to my God, and my breath will fill
pipes with tunes to
His Glory. When the sky blushes in the dawning I will lift
up my voice in
gladness, and when it reddens in the evening I will not remain
silent".
"O how I
rejoice that God has made me as I am! Truly He is in all and
encompasses all. In
His magnificence and majesty no man can conceive Him, for
His divine nature is
beyond the understanding of man. His creation is awesome,
His ways
unfathomable".
"The love of
God for His wayward children has been limitless and abounding. It
has remained
changeless throughout the ages, filled with His noble purpose. He
created so that He
might express and share that love, which is the very essence
of His nature, with
beings created in His likeness, beings which could absorb
and reflect that
love. Yet, that his love might be wholly free man was endowed
with freewill, the
freewill he has used perversely".
CHAPTER NINETEEN
A HYMN FROM THE BOOK
OF SONGS - 1
Bring forth the
instruments of music, let all voices be raised in thanksgiving
to The Lord of Our
Lives. Be happy in heart and let joyfulness flow from your
lips, but remain in
stillness while the hands move.
Peace and honour be
Yours, O Great One, Shadow of Our Days, Comforter of Our
Nights, to whom
alone we pay homage. Long ago the skydoor opened and You
appeared over the
land in the days of our forefathers, shaking it with Your
wrath, but now You
are hidden, Your awesome glory is seen no more. We, Your
children, rejoice,
for You bring peace and spread contentment and security over
the whole face of
the Earth.
Heaven and Earth and
all the spheres of the infinite spaces are filled with Your
Spirit. The demons
of darkness tremble before You. Yet to us You are truly The
Mysterious Hidden
One, The Guide of our fathers in the sad days of darkness when
the face of the sun
was veiled in gloom from the eyes of men.
You pour out
goodness, bringing fresh water to the green pasturelands, bestowing
life upon all beasts
and living creatures therein. Through the blessing of Your
bounty, even the
parched lands drink unceasingly in then-season.
You are The Bestower
of Bread, for you cause the corn to increase and the
harvest to be
plentiful. You are The Supplier of Reeds and The Provider of Fish.
Every craftsman is
prosperous and deft when under the guidance of Your hand.
Your eye directs the
hammers of the smith and Your hand covers the fingers of
the potter. Your creating
breath is inhaled by the craftsman, so he is inspired
to create an object
of beauty. You whisper on the breeze and the hearts of men
are filled with a
gladness which issues from their mouths as joyous song. You
move the brush of
the painter and direct the pen of the writer.
You are The Warden
of Fishes within the waters and direct them into the nets of
the fishermen. You
are The Watchman who keeps the waterfowl away from the field
sown at the rising
of the bountiful waters. You are The Lookoutman at the eye of
the barge moving
safely over the flowing waters. You are The Director of the
energy-giving
breezes which press against the sails.
Your hand rolled the
coRN grains and Your life-giving breath sucks up the green
growing shoots. Your
fingers unfold the awakening buds. Your firm will holds
stone in stability,
so the great buildings endure through the ages. Nothing can
escape Your
Vigilance, and rest is unknown to You. Eternal activity is the
essence of Your
nature.
You are The Ever
Watchful One, The Great Bearer of the Scales, The Unchanging
Guardian of the
Helpless and The Protector of the Poor. Those who fill these
roles on Earth do
them in You name, for You are the motivation and power behind
their deeds. Were
You non-existent men would devour one another like crocodiles,
while justice and
mercy would be things unknown. Something intangible and
unseeable flows out
from You and rules the lives of men, causing men to deal
justly with one
another. For though injustice is part of the fabric of life, it
is not dominant and
Your power mitigates its effects.
You caress the face
of the land and at Your touch the womb of Earth is opened,
green growth springs
through the soil and reaches up towards the sun. All
creatures move about
according to Your design, and by Your decree their lives
are directed. You
paint the patterns of life and design its destinies.
Though the prince
lay his head on a pillow of down and the beggar lay his on an
unyielding stone,
both sleep alike on Your bosom. The sleep of the rich man is
no better than that
of a poor man, while the sleep of a labourer is better than
that of an idler.
The Nightfrightener does not haunt the dreams of those who
have paid their
debts to the taskmaster of the day. Those who spend their days
in idleness sleep in
a restless bed. Thus, You have ordained that the scales of
life be adjusted.
All is balanced in Your hands.
Your spirit moves
over the Earth, instructing the bee in the gathering of its
honey and the hornet
in the making of its nest. It directs the ant in the
complex design of
its cavern and the swallow in its mudgathering. It guides the
birds in their
season and calls the locusts at the appointed times. All
creatures have their
unlearned wisdom, which is an outpouring force emanating
from Your Spirit.
When You fill the
Earth with the shining light which rules the day under Your
command, all men
rejoice, for by this all things are increased and food comes
forth in abundance.
When the Lady of the Night rules the darkness and all is
hushed in mellow
coolness, hearts are filled with tranquillity and content. You
fulfil all the needs
of men, for You are The Great Provider.
Men labour in the
fields and fill the storehouses with grain, but You provide
the increase. You
are The Ever Bountiful One, yet with all You give never is
Your substance
lessened. You remain everlastingly the same. Man has nought but
what originates with
You. It is Your waters of life, everlastingly flowing, that
sustain him. Eternal
glory be Yours, my God and my Life.
I sought You in many
temples, only to discover that there was One God hidden
behind all other
gods. That You are indeed The Father of Gods, yet The Maker of
none of them. You
have illuminated the widespread universe with beauty and
filled it with
awesome, imperishable grandeur beyond description. So great are
Your works above
that they must be veiled, so we can comprehend them only dimly,
lest we be overcome.
Beforetimes many
great men have praised You in error; not knowing what was good
for them they sought
to attain the things which fed the flesh alone. O Great
One, show such as
these the error of their ways, giving them not the good things
of life but making
all better men, that they may be worthy of these. You have
loved us with an
exceedingly great love, having compassion on our many failings
and weaknesses,
knowing that men are but frail creatures prone to go astray. O
God of Gods, for the
sake of our fathers who placed their trust in You, to whom
You gave the ordinances
of life, be merciful to us. Instruct and guide us along
the paths we should
follow. Lead us through the many entanglements of earthly
life, so we may
finally come to rest in Your safekeeping.
CHAPTER TWENTY
A HYMN FROM THE BOOK
OF SONGS - 2
O Great and
Bountiful One who is the fountainhead of glory and the eternal
spring of power; who
sits enthroned in wisdom; whose counsel is the Law, great
are the
manifestations of Your wrath when it purges the land, even as it was
done in the days of
our fathers. Yet we, weak, wayward and wilful men, know in
the depth of our
hearts that whatever You do is done in justice and to our
ultimate benefit.
With inscrutable
wisdom You prepared a compatible place for the spirits of men,
a place encompassing
the domain of man, a place wherein man rules under the
decrees of Your
everlasting and unchanging Law. You have set the boundaries and
they are held back,
neither troubling nor oppressing us beyond our endurance.
The spirits of men
rule in the mysterious domains governing the sun and the
moon, the stars and
the nightwatchers, the mistmen and the hidden caves of
power. They
undertake their appointed tasks there and are wave wanderers of the
watery wastes,
guardians of the deep.
You have created man
in the likeness of an original conceived in Your mysterious
abode, and the
manner of his life is fixed according to Your plan. Great and
wonderful is the
ultimate destiny of man who, as yet, has progressed but a few
steps along the road
towards the goal of life. Yet You have opened his ear to
mysterious and
wonderful things.
You have revealed
strange mysteries to his eye, he knows things unbelievable in
olden times. .
This being on whom
You have conferred so much is a thing of weakness and
frailty. He was
shaped from moistened clay and moulded in water, then set upon a
mound in the midst
of the great chaos. His eyes were shown the glory above but
he wearied of
looking, for such splendour was beyond his comprehension.
Therefore, he sought
his pleasures among the things from whence he came, and
therein he now finds
his delight. So he sits on a pedestal of shame down by the
polluted spring. His
repast comes from the pot of fornication and he is clad in
the garments of
wickedness.
Great One. You who
are all wise know the words which come forth from his lips.
You know the fruit
of his mouth, the pollen of his tongue. Be merciful to man
and overlook his
weaknesses, for he is as he was made and, perchance, so he was
meant to be. Who can
question the mystery? May Your will prevail!
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
THE SUNSETTING HYMN
FROM THE
BOOK OF SONGS
O Great God,
unbounded by earthly limitations, Your Will is an eternal mystery
and Your deeds
confound the minds of men. Men worship You, the lesser gods pay
due homage, while
they who are between gods and men devote themselves to Your
service. Highest of
Gods, Lord of Men, Ancient Lord of Life and Light, Creator
of the Tree of Life,
who made the herb and fruit to nourish men and grass to
feed the cattle; who
perfumed the flowers and gave birds their gay plumage, Hail
to The Supreme Power
and Spirit!.
Maker of all that
exists in all the spheres above and below, the essence of
whose Spirit is in
all things. Ruler of all the regions of light and Master of
the nether regions.
Great Fountainhead of Wisdom whose abode is in Truth, who
fashioned men so
they accord with Your own nature; who gave rare abilities to
animals and
instilled cunning knowledge into insects; who chose the colours of
the flowers and the
songs of the birds. O Veiled One whose sanctuary is hidden
in the breasts of
men, whose temple is open to the Heavens and hung about with
the stars. O Mighty
One, hear the cry of my spirit as it seeks nourishment from
the divine source
Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
Great Fashioner of
Earthly Things, who came into being before all else, whose
sacred name none can
know, whose likeness is not displayed in writings and whose
image is not carved
in wood or stone; whose eyes were the pattern for the sight
of men and whose
sensitivity generated their touch; whose tongue gave speech to
the little gods; who
made the herbage for cattle and the waterweed for fish; who
feeds even the worms
and insects and quickens the life within the egg; who
fashioned wild
fruits for the birds and wild seed for the mice; who sustains the
lifeforce within
every living thing, up to the heights of Heaven, across the
wide breadth of
Earth, down to the very depths of the sea. O save me from that
which is beneath the
Earth and from those upon the Earth who would work
wickedness against
me. Hear me, and, my God, I shall praise You, my voice will
rise up to Heaven
and roll right across the Earth. All those who ply the great
mothering river
shall hear its echoes. I will tell of Your goodness and
greatness to my
children and to their children. My words will resound down
through the
generations as yet unborn. Respond to me, O Great One, as I seek to
commune in the
silence. My desire is to learn, but You are too mysterious for
men to understand.
Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
O help my soul to
rectify its evil deed and balance them with good. Destroy
every form of evil
which clings to me, and let there be nothing in my soul to
cause malformation
and thus estrange me from my friends who have departed to
dwell in the happy
Land of Dawn. Let brightness be my new life's birthright and
let my spirit be
ever light. Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
The great dome of
Heaven rises above and no man knows its limitations. The broad
Earth is spread wide
and no man knows its boundaries. Man cannot fathom it all,
O God who is great,
have compassion on my littleness. Bear Patiently with my
blunderings and
overlook my ignorance. Your reach is so great and mine is so
small, help me to
know You for myself. I am helpless and lost. Hail to The
Supreme Power and
Spirit!
O Great God, who
brings comfort to the prisoner, peace to the tormented; who
strengthens the
fearful and adjust the scales between the weak and the strong.
Strengthen my desire
to understand Your great purpose. O Sole God whose tears
vitalize the hearts
of men, in reverence and humility my spirit awaits Your
command, my Creator
and my Light. Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
O Great Craftsman,
who fashioned man so wonderfully; who brought together the
elements of the
Earth and transmuted them so mysteriously; who created with such
diversity that no
two things are exactly alike, give your servant some task,
that he may
accomplish it to Your glory. O Provident Benefactor, who provides
sustenance for the
beasts of the wilderness and fills the storehouses of men;
who placed the great
metals in the bosom of the Earth, that man might draw them
forth, let not my
body go naked, nor my sleeping place be destroyed. Accept my
homage, O God of
Truth, who lives down through the ages of time which make up
the everlasting
Circle of Eternity. Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
O Powerful God,
whose wrath lit up the vaults of Heaven and whose fire devoured
the wicked in olden
times; whose whirlwind swept clean the Earth; who lifted the
seas and dashed them
against the mountains. O let not the great forces of Earth
afflict me. Hold
them fast in Your hand, that they may not crush me as the
chariot crushes the
ant. Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
Having an affinity
with You, my soul knows You and rejoices in the knowledge. It
hears You and is at
peace. It opens in response to Your warmth as the lotus, and
awakens softly as
the day opens its eye to the night. My soul knows what I know
not. It sees into
hidden places and understands deep mysteries. Let me know its
nature better, that
it may instruct me in wisdom. My soul swells with gratitude
towards The
Bounteous Being who causes all things to be which fulfil all
desires. My God is
not graven in marble or stone. He is not shaped in wood or
cast in copper. He
has neither offerings nor ministrations. My God is a god of
quiet places and
silences. He is found where the wild winds blow and the gay
flowers blossom,
away from the habitations of men. He is not worshipped in
temples and His
praises are not sung by the unthinking multitude. My God is a
constant companion,
He lives quietly in the homes and hearts of men. His true
abode is unknown. He
has no painted shrine, no building fashioned by the hands
of men could contain
Him. Hail to The Supreme Power and Spirit!
O Ever Watchful God,
The All Seeing One, if aught be done or concealed in the
darkness of the
night it shall be known to You. O Supreme Power, who alone can
deflect the Awesome
Ones of Heaven from their path of destruction; who alone can
turn aside the sky
boulders and break the winds of the hurricane, I acknowledge
You as my Sole God,
The Guide of my ways and The Guardian of my Life. I will
call upon You by
Your names of Power. I give You Your degrees, O Lord Over the
Thrones of Earth,
Director of the Destinies of Nations, Ancient Dweller in the
Heavens, Lord of
Existence, Lord of Terrors, Master of the Hidden Spheres,
Commander of the
Universal Hosts, Lord of The Law wherein Your will is
manifested. Victor
in the Skyfight, Creator of Hidden Desires of the Soul, Great
One who mysteriously
fashions His body as men fashion their souls. Giver of Life
to souls, by whose
breath they awaken. Selector of the Generative Substances,
Transformer of
Matter, Keeper of the Eternal Essences, Ruler of the Spirits in
their Spheres. He
who hears the prayer of the prisoner; who stands between the
weak and the strong.
Lord of Fertility for whom the great mothering river flows
and the waters rise.
Lord of the Tree of Life, Emperor of the Sacred Spheres,
who dispenses the
Celestial Substance, who directs the Thunderbolts; who pilots
the stars in the
skyways; who overlooks the Watchers in the Night, Great
Guardian of Hidden
Things and Master of the Divine Secrets, whose domain is
shrouded in mystery;
who makes tender the hearts of women and makes stern the
faces of men.
Dweller in Deep Obscurity whose sanctuary is infinite; who died in
the effort of
creation and was reborn in the soul of man. Great God, whose face
shall be revealed in
the future, when all men are wise, grant me Your Truth and
Peace Divine. Hail
to The Supreme Power of Spirit!
Though I falter on
the way and fail at the task, despise me not. I try but
success eludes me. I
seek but cannot find. I am so small and You are so great
that I cannot span
the gulf between, unless You incline towards me. O Great
Spirit, how near men
are to You in reality! Through the darkness of ignorance
greater than night
they have groped a way to You. You alone are addressed in the
prayers of men. To
whatever men pray You alone hear their petitions, You alone
can answer them.
Only for You are their words of praise fitting. O Great One,
enter into the
hearts of men and renew the bond with their souls. Hail to The
Supreme Power and
Spirit!
O Mysterious God
hidden in time, Great Ruler of the Ages, we who cannot know
more than the
smallest part of Your creation turn to You for help and
enlightenment. If it
be Your will that man should struggle towards understanding
and strive for
knowledge, then so be it. Man will do whatever he must do, but, O
Great God, be
patient with him in his failures and failings. Hail to The Supreme
Power and Spirit!
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
THE HYMN OR PRAYER
FROM THE BOOK OF SONGS - 3
O Great One in
Heaven, whose thoughts probe the hearts of men, cast forth a
small ray of
illumination to light my way in the darkness of man's ignorance.
Strengthen me by
Your revelation, that for even a brief moment I may see Truth
and know the
mysteries of life. I ask not to see as the Great Ones have seen,
but just for
something within my understanding.
O Great God, send me
one bright shaft of light, that I may see silhouetted as in
a flash of lightning
the forces that wage war for the possession of my soul. For
what mortal unaided
can understand or visualise the dark things that lurk to
lure the soul along
the path of horror, such as the demons waiting to twist the
weak soul into coils
of frightfulness before casting it into the abyss of
terror?
Lord of the
Universe, take pity on me. Everything hes in Your Great Hand except
the fate of each
man, and men are frail and weak. Many who have seen Truth
revealed have
quailed before the awful responsibilities of man and consoled
themselves by
fashioning unnatural gods before whom they quelled the fears in
their hearts. I am
not one worthy to gaze upon Truth, nor do I desire to do so
lest I be
overwhelmed, perhaps I ask too much from One who reads the hearts of
men.
0 Great Luminated
One, keep me from the final horror which hes in wait to devour
the souls of men.
Help me in the dread hour when I come face to face with my own
soul. O save it from
the abode of the Dark Warden of Terrors!
What are the great
mysteries of man's destiny so dimly perceived even by the
Illuminated Ones?
Have mercy on my dismal ignorance, or I am delivered into the
toils of my own
repulsiveness.
What is the Great
Secret whispered so fearfully among the great columns? What
are the substances
wherewith men may pass through the Great Portal and return to
life? Is it true
that the destiny of man is determined by man? O what fearful
responsibility, my
heart is overwhelmed and my spirit becomes weak with dread.
Is it for this that
men shun the Truth and cast themselves at Your feet for
mercy?
I fear, for my soul
is heavy with evil and the scales will bear down against me.
Will it be stamped
with the dread impress of condemnation by the forty-two
seals? Place Your
hand in mercy upon the balances and let my soul be. made
light.
O Great One, hidden
within the eternal silence, who shines forth as a beacon of
light to few men. O
lighten our darkness and our fear-shadowed hearts! Lift the
veil just slightly,
that we may understand something of Your greatness.
We are not
uninstructed and know we can be granted no more than a glimpse of
Your greatness, for
to receive more would be too awesome for the frail
constitution of man.
This is why the ignorant doubt, for their very ignorance
spawns the frailty
which inhibits their enlightenment.
We hardly dare
murmur these fervent words. O Great One, grant that the spirit
within us may be
helped to cleanse itself of the besmirching foulness spawned by
our thoughts. Remove
from us every trace of that which may pollute, and let us
know timeless
splendour in glory.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
THE HYMN FROM THE
BOOK OF SONGS - 4
Marked: The Hymn of
Rewa
I am here, I am
Yours, I sing Your praises. Join the dance, O priests and
priestesses. Join
the dance, O Skytravellers, who cover the Earth with your rays
of power. Join the
dance, O strangers. Accept our offerings and salutations,
accept our devotions
and make them successfully beneficial.
Move around
moonwise, O priests and priestesses. Stamp on wickedness. Stamp on
hypocrisy. Stamp
your feet on malice and hatred. Sound the flutes, blow the
pipes, shake the
bells. Come, stamp on the head of pride, stamp on the Foul
Fiend of Lust.
Melody and music ring me about in a protecting wall. I am one who
rises over the
fallen.
Hail, O Overlooking,
All seeing Power! I am Yours, I am a Chosen One. I am
gifted with
strength, I am thrice gifted with strength. I am filled with The
Sacred Essence. I
have partaken of the cup of joy. I am pure, I am pure, I am
pure.
I see the light of
the East, the arrow of All Embracing Love. I see the light of
the South, the arrow
of All Comforting Benevolence. I see the light of the West,
the arrow of
Everlasting Hope. I see the light of the North, the arrow of All
Consoling Comfort.
Let the golden bow speed the arrows of my desire. I am still,
I worship the
Hallowed Limbs.
The Heavenly Hosts
gather, as swallows for the flight, as stormclouds for the
downpour. Before the
Sacred Shrine I renew my strength. I free myself from all
earthly desires,
from all bodily passions, of all soul-eating lusts, of all
soul-destroying
vices.
Now I see the
rainbow-hued radiance of the real within the unreal. Now I see
true where before I
saw what was not and heard what was not. I was deceived by
my body, I was
deluded by my feelings. Now I see things not seeable by unaided
mortal eyes. I hear
things beyond mortal hearing.
O Great One, O
Radiant One, O Timeless Knower, O Limitless Viewer, O Majestic
One with a form of
indescribable beauty! I have seen You through the veil, I
have glimpsed the
reflection of eternity. I am free.
I, Your son, bow
humbly before You. Lord, my heart is pure. I proclaim my
loyalty to my
neighbour on my right and my neighbour on my left. I see the meat.
I see the tripod. I
see the knife. All is ready. Come, benevolent spirits,
gather about the
flame. Hover over the bowl.
To you in whom
resides the power to appear in any form or shape desired, come,
come as welcome guests.
Before the Place of Awe I stand unafraid, for those who
are damned to sorrow
and horror cannot approach within the barrier. They await
in jealous hate
without, they who come up from the dismal depths. Away foul
spirits of the
damned! Away O self-destroyed ones!
O Great
Representative, the court is purified, I now see the flame-like
radiance. Brothers
and sisters, do you see it too? I see the Radiant Risen Ones
who have torn aside
the veil for one brief moment. I see things of overwhelming
splendour. Bring
incense, bring water, bring salt and bring the offering flame.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
THE HYMN FROM THE
BOOK OF SONGS - 5
The following
paragraphs come from fragments and may originally have formed
parts of more than
one hymn.
I believe in You,
Great God of Life, Lord of the Kingdom of Light, Dweller in
the Eternal
Silences. From the centre of Your domain there is an outflowing
which sustains all
life, and in You rest the hopes of all men.
You are The Ruler of
All Spheres and Your dominion is unchallengeable. Under
Your benevolent
guidance Earth continues to exist and hold together, changing
for nought but the
benefit of man. We are Your children and You are our Father.
I believe in the
Sacred Spirit of Inspiration which enters the hearts of men,
flowing out from You
and joined with You and yet separate, the Spirit to whom
our fathers of old
gave the greatest reverence, the Beautiful One, the Gentle
One, the
Inspirational One who first taught men to love and who drew aside the
veil to show them
beauty.
I believe in the
Great Kingdom Beyond Earth, where, in the Place of Light the
souls of men, if
worthy, find a perfection not known here. The light which is in
the Region Beyond
the Veil is not as earthly light, it has a sustaining quality,
it is a vitalising
light indescribable in earthly words.
O Great Dweller in
the vast silences which are not as the silence known on
Earth, who attends
this sacred place where men gather in devotion. We who are
here see You
revealed as a beacon light for those whose hearts dwell in the
darkness of
ignorance. We rejoice in the strengthening emanation which flows out
towards those with
the wisdom to attract and absorb it.
Here, in the Hidden
Place, we Your servants are gathered, and we bow before You,
O Great One. We bow
in humility, not in servility; we bow in recognition of our
earthly limitations.
We are overcome with awe and can but stand in worshipful
silence before the
vision of Your glory. It shines before our eyes, and our
mouths cannot open.
Here, on this Sacred
Ground, we hardly dare to utter the words of prayer, for
the sentences formed
by men are so unworthy of their purpose, when used and
spoken before You.
Man is limited in knowledge, in understanding and in ability,
it is the
recognition of this which makes him humble.
O Great One, who
understands even the speech of the dumb man, help us to expand
our knowledge and
understanding. We, for our part, will not remain inactive but
will ever sincerely
struggle to reach out towards You, striving even to extend
beyond our
limitations. Were it otherwise we would be dishonest in seeking Your
help.
Help us to remove
the disfiguring stains upon our everlasting spirit, and when
earthly life is
renewed in us let us not be too disadvantaged. Teach us to pray
without
prayerfulness, so that the taint of self-seeking is eliminated. When we
petition, let this
not be in the spirit of selfishness.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Some Fragments from
a Much Damaged
Section
Most of Which Has Been
Destroyed
Fragment 1
O enfolded, sleeping
soul, unaware of the life fountain within from which you
may drink, unfeeling
of the throbbing life all about us, now is your hour.
Prepare yourself for
the great awakening. The bright light of wisdom awaits to
encircle you, as you
stand before the awful door within the Sacred Temple of
Mystery.
That the light of
Truth may be a sure guide amidst the dark gloom of earthly
life, a certain aid
enabling you to find the way of your eternal spirit, you are
not unknowing of
your inner wisdom. It is the key to everlasting life in the
glorious place
beyond the Western veil.
0 live my soul,
awaken, hear me. Let not my love and my sacrifice be in vain,
let not all my hopes
turn to dust within the tomb. Can love become soil and hope
become sand? Never,
for the grave is not the destination of the sublime
attributes which
ennoble the nature of man.
Man is as a flame
burning in water, as it is written on the pillars without. His
soul is as the
rosebud awaiting the kiss of the sun to awaken it to bloom. His
nature is as the day
which is ever accompanied by the night.
******************
Fragment 2
I will praise The
Nameless God who is The True God and The Knower of Every Name.
Hail Great Overseer
of Earth!
The high Heavens
will hear the sound of my voice and its loudness shall ring
across the
widespread land. It shall resound throughout the Red Land. My song
shall ride on the
wings of the wind and my gladness shall whisper into the ear
of the air. Hail Great
Overseer of Earth!
I shall seek
diligently for enlightenment and knowledge, that I may proclaim the
ways of The True God
among people, for they are mysterious ways not easily
understood. Man
wallows in a quicksand of ignorance, and only by extreme effort
can he extricate
himself. Great Overseer, grant me the ability to understand.
Hail Great Overseer
of Earth!
I say to the people,
"Declare The Great One to your children, to the high born
and to the lowly
ones who dwell together under the same sun, to the generations
as yet unborn. Sing
songs that will echo down the corridors of time". Hail Great
Overseer of Earth!
"Sing His
praises with the birds of the air, tell of Him to the fishes in the
waters, to the
creatures which hide in the ground and to the things which walk
and crawl above
it". Hail Great Overseer of Earth!
"Declare Him
unto all, for He is The God of All, He is The Great Compassionate
One whose wrath
declines with the setting sun and in the morning departs with
the dawnlight mists".
Hail Great Overseer of Earth!
Sometimes, in the
lonely nightwatches, I wonder, have You turned Your face from
me? What have I done
that You are unresponsive? Have I ever lived otherwise than
in accordance with
Your word? O Great Overseer of Earth, what is Your will for
me?
******************
Fragment 3
O Great One,
everlastingly considerate of our needs, Overseer and Taskmaster of
mankind, look down
upon us with compassion and lay not too great a burden upon
us, your dutiful
servants. Labour we must, for thus we prepare for a higher
state of being, but
bear with us, for sometimes we grow weary and falter at the
task.
Here we have fallen
victims of our own wiles, we have hopelessly snarled up the
threads of our
existence, so we know not how to loosen the knots we ourselves
have tied and so
free ourselves. We are entangled in a net of our own weaving.
Let us, Your
servants, look to You, The Great One, for aid. Our destinies are
held in the hollow
of your hands, while the future is visible to you as is
writing upon an open
scroll.
The Glorious Ones
worship You with service and serve through following the words
of guidance. Thus,
the earthbound spirits worship You, the shades of the
departed worship You
and the whole of creation worships You. We, Your servants,
offer our continual
and everlasting devotion to Your service. We are not as
others, O Great One,
for we know well that worship and devotion mean service and
expended effort, not
mere words and ritual.
Your spirit governs
the breezes that comfort mankind. You send the fertilising
rains, Your Spirit
quickens the seed within the womb of Earth. The songs of the
birds are inspired
by the knowledge of You and the wild beasts rejoice in the
sustenance provided.
You are The
Universal Being, The Raincloud Overshadowing the Earth, The One
Dwelling in the Cave
of the Heart within all breathing creatures. You are The
Weaver of the Warp
and Woof of Life.
******************
Fragment 4
I praise The One Who
Eats Evil, The Disposer of Earthly Residue. He who sustains
the devoted
followers of The Deathless One in whom all merge on leaving the
body. For the day
comes when we discard all that is of Earth, when we recognise
and realise that all
remaining is the pure and sacred spirit, boundless and free
as the winds.
I praise The One Who
Eats Evil, The Disposer of Earthly Residue. He who sustains
the devoted
followers of The Deathless One; who is with us everywhere and in all
things; in whom is
all, though not Himself the all; who sees and hears all, who
knows and
understands all, but whom none tied to Earth can know; who projects
His word of power,
so that it is within all and holds all things together in
stability.
I praise The One Who
Eats Evil, The Disposer of Earthly Residue. He who sustains
the devoted
followers of The Deathless One; who created all things and thus
became His Own
Greater Self; who clothed Himself in the universe as with a
garment.
******************
Fragment 5
O Great Spirit, I
would see the vast face of the Earth as You behold it. I would
know how the seed is
quickened, so that it grows into the plant, and how the
fowl comes forth
from the egg. What is added to the egg to give it the power to
reproduce life?
I would touch Your
Great Body born of the breath from The Eternal Source and
watch Your thoughts
creating and moulding all things to shape step by step.
I would see the
links of Heaven and Earth and rest one hand in each. I would see
the thread that
binds yesterday, today and tomorrow, so all are one and parts of
the whole.
I would see the
appointed place of every living man and understand why. I would
see the purpose of
every beast and every plant, every tree and every thing that
flies and crawls.
I would know
gladness with the children, as they play and go singing on the way
to their places of
instruction. I would watch birth and death and solve their
mysteries. I would
know the depths of hatred and the heights of love.
I would journey the
adventurous path of love hand in hand with another. I would
know its secret, its
delights and their shadows, and the secrets of its
silences.
I would know the
beginning and the end, and understand what links them. I would
see the chain of the
years and the necklace of the days. I would know the
purpose of it all.
Then, knowing all these, I would know You at last, O Great
Spirit!
******************
Fragment 6
O True God, by whom
the worthy are guided in all they undertake; who rises as a
beacon in the
darkness for the lowly. Grant us, Your servants who put their
trust in You,
strength to overcome all the doubts and uncertainties which rise
in our hearts, as
frightening shadows arise in the night. Let us sip the waters
from the
inexhaustible well of wisdom, that we may not move along false paths to
encompass our own
destruction.
For we cannot see
the way in the enveloping darkness, and confusing voices shout
this way or that
way. We are bewildered, for we know not which one is right. Can
there be so many
ways?
We are not men of
great learning or high position. We do not sit among princes,
being among the
lowliest in the land. Yet it is we who carry the burdens of the
people, we feed the
hungry and provide for the widow and orphan. Ours are the
aching backs and
weary feet, ours the naked body and empty bowl.
Those who are
concerned with higher things sit at tables of plenty, those
seemingly unworthy
rejoice amid prosperity and plenty. Those who take are given
more, while those
who give are mocked.
We see these things
and doubt enters our thoughts, we ask one another, "Why is
this the order of
things? Is it the will of our God? Then we seek for an answer
in all sincerity and
with productive effort, and The Great God Above All does
not remain mute.
******************
Fragment 7
O God, hear my
prayer, for I have gone into the great recess within me and await
a response from out
of the enveloping silence and tranquillity. The restlessness
and discontent of
life I have left at the portal. I have closed the door to the
outer things of life.
Give ear, O my soul,
to the whispers from the silence. Close out the clamour of
Earth and harken to
the soft voice which echoes from the far reaches of
eternity. Hear
without ears the wordless voice of Truth. Close the eyes of the
flesh, that the greater
eye may see in the inner darkness.
Enter into the inner
temple and await the revelation of heavenly secrets. Shut
out the clamouring
senses that demand expression in sensual pleasures. Then,
when all outer doors
are closed and all inner doors open, speak to me and I will
hear your voice.
Tell me the secrets of the ages, and my spirit will dwell in
contentment for
ever.
This alone I ask and
no more, it is sufficient for one lifetime.
******************
Fragment 8
O Great One on High,
have pity on us, for we are hopelessly ensnared by our
complete lack of
things needed to sustain the body. Without sustenance our
spirits are
restless, our hearts cannot find peace. We do not desire foolish
things, or
pleasurable or vain things, but just the things without which we
cannot live.
Though we lack all
things we do not turn our faces from You, for we know well
that in Your bounty
all men are provided for and the Earth is full of richness.
It is not You who
take away the things needed to sustain our lives, but those
made in our own
likeness, our own brother men.
They deny meat to
the hungry and drink to the thirsty, though they themselves
are gorged to
fullness and bloated with good things. Be merciful to them,
instruct and
enlighten them with Your chastising afflictions. Thus they may come
to know that man
needs man and each man is brother to all others.
Others have reaped
where we have sown and others sleep where we have built,
because of the
statutes of men. Therefore, mete out nought but justice, that we
may be fed and
clothed and have a place to rest our heads.
******************
Fragment 9
O God, who teaches
us in so many strange ways in this great place of instruction
called Earth; who
set us tasks to an end which we cannot foresee, and who tests
us to measure our
abilities and to try our courage and fidelity.
Instruct us, so we
may better understand the bitter lessons which purge from our
natures all which is
unwholesome to the spirit. Strengthen us, so we may bear
all things without
complaint and conduct ourselves manfully under the strict
discipline of this
unique place of instruction. Open the-eyes of understanding
within us, that we
may benefit by every experience and not waste time bewailing
our lot.
Tell us, so we may
know. Instruct us in our duties in the battleline, so that
when we are called
upon to take our appointed place we shall not shirk the
clash. Toughen us on
the training ground of adversity, so that we may be
stronger for the
fray. When the day of battle comes upon us and cowards flee
before the strength
of our adversary, when the valiant ones kiss the dust at the
portals of glory,
let our place be where the battle rages most fiercely and the
blows fall the
thickest.
If we faint, may we
still remain faithful. If we are exhausted, may we remain
dauntless. If our
hour come and we fall before the onslaught, may it be with
weapons in hand and
face to the foe. We fight the fight where the victor can be
the vanquished and
the vanquished the victor, for here the fight is the end and
not the victory. He
who serves the end well justly claims the fruits of victory.
We cannot ask to
win, but we can ask to* be made strong if we struggle for
strength. We cannot
ask to remain unhurt, but we do ask for courage. We cannot
ask to be supported
in weakness, but we can ask for the fortitude to endure. We
stand firm-footed,
grim-faced to the foe. The ranks of wickedness encompass us
about, but we will
surge forward with closed ranks, carrying all before us until
we come to rest in
the presence of victory.
O God, Supreme Among
Spirits, watch over us in the struggle, for we are Your
children.
******************
Fragment 10
This is my prayer, O
Great Spirit, accept my prayer. O Dweller in the Pure
Region of Truth, hear
me. O Great Fountain of Wisdom, hear me.
O Comforter and
Companion of the Soul Silences, hear me. I, Your son, come into
your presence with
faith and humility.
Grant that my spirit
be admitted into the Glorious Audience Chamber between the
two regions.
I, Your son, come
into Your presence with faith and humility. O Supreme Source
of the form-holding
rays, grant me a hearing. O Great One seated on The
Celestial Throne
behind The Great Solar Disk, hear me. All homage to you Great
God, Master of the
bodies of men. I, Your son, come into Your presence with
faith and humility.
My every thought and deed are dedicated to Your service.
These things are
written clearly in my heart and are not mere puffs of wind from
my mouth.
********************
Fragment 11
Lord of my heart,
hear me now as I stand in communicating silence before the
listening shrine.
You are The Great One who existed before the upheaval of the
mountains; who tore
apart the land and waters in the infant years of man.
For in Your sight a
thousand great years are as an hour in the heat of the day,
or as a watch in the
coolness of the night. You are The Timekeeper in Eternity
and Warden of the
Ages.
You reap men as corn
is reaped at the harvest and sweep them away as floodwaters
cleanse the land.
For man is like unto the grass of the field, in the morning it
grows full of
vigour, gaily bedecked with the gems of morning dew; in the
eventide it is cut
down, to wither in the night.
The day is not
important if men live by the hour, fulfilling in each its
appointed task.
******************
Fragment 12
When the Dread
Messenger calls for you, let him not find you ill-equipped and
unprepared. In the
final hour, which must surely come, there will be no
opportunity for fine
speech and nought can delay his imperious command. Then all
the possessions you
have cherished and stored will be as nought, and all you
will be able to take
with you will be that which you have fashioned within.
Do not be numbered
among the foolish who say, 'Time enough, for I am yet young".
Death claims the
breast-child as well as the aged, and on this you should
ponder. Consider
well your future estate.
Here you are the
architect of your future abode, the plans prepared here are
carried out in
another place. Earth is the place of sowing, Heaven is the place
of reaping.
Here you are the
sculptor who chisels the statue, the potter who fashions the
pot, the woodworker
who carves the pillar. What is there on Earth more deserving
of your care and
attention than your own future form and appearance?
Do you recklessly
hew or wilfully cut? Do you heedlessly pound the pliable clay
and carelessly
fashion the unfired pot? Do you mix the colours with proper
thought?
What manner of thing
are you fashioning in this great workshop? A beauteous
being arrayed in
radiant splendour, or a hideously foul fiend which can do
nought but squirm in
the slime of its fitting abode?
Whom will you praise
for your prudence or curse for your lack of foresight? Who
can force you to
deal tenderly and responsibly with the slumbering child of your
own self? Or prevent
you from carelessly and wilfully shattering all hopes for
its future
wellbeing?
******************
Fragment 13
Rejoice all cities
beside the waters, be joyful all people in the land, for
great things have
come to pass. Behold, the foe is scattered in confusion, they
are no more, they
are eaten up, victory is with us.
All praise to our
Commanding Lord. Hail The Great Leader, hail The Source of
Power in the land, live
for ever in glory. O Mighty Fighter, let us rest in the
shade of Your
greatness, let us dwell under Your shadow, under the protection of
Your right arm.
You have given us
that which we never thought to know again. Men sit in peace,
speaking freely one
with another. They walk abroad with light steps and their
heads are held high.
Men look their fellowmen in the eye and there is none to
josde them. They are
delivered from the shadow of fear, and confidence is
renewed in them. The
fortresses are no longer overflowing with fighting men and
all throughout the
land no well is forbidden to the thirsty, all may drink
freely where there
is water. Men come and go across the wilderness, carrying the
burdens of trade and
none falls upon them to plunder. Men journey peacefully
along the lonely
roads and none waylays them to rob. Traders cross the barren
places and are
unmolested, none rises against them.
The bearers of
messages no longer hasten about, pale of face and frightened,
they no longer carry
doleful tidings, they no longer bear words of fear. Their
coming no longer
causes the knees to tremble and the stomachs to fall. Now the
messengers loiter in
shady places, remaining there until the nightwatch calls,
for there is no
urgency in the words they carry. The fighting men rest, their
hazardous days have
gone; the bow, the sword, the spear and the shield have been
laid away in the
weapon stores. Women walk freely, they talk gaily, for they are
not overshadowed
with fear, neither do they tremble for fear of molestation. The
faces of the border
guardians are no longer haggard with sleeplessness, nor are
their eyes tired and
strained with watchfulness. Throughout the whole land there
is content and
tranquillity.
The herds are large
and sleek, they are no longer tense and restless. The flocks
graze contentedly in
their green pastures. The fowls are no longer alert and
noisy but squabble
playfully, chasing one another through the dust. The voices
of men are no longer
hoarsened with war cries, instead they can be heard singing
as each goes about
his appointed task. The doleful wailing of women who mourn
their dead is no
longer heard and widows no longer proclaim themselves. The
husbandman sows
contentedly, knowing that where he sows he shall also reap. He
no longer doubts
that he will enjoy his own harvest.
The face of God is
once more inclined favourably towards us, even the lesser
gods look again upon
the land with favour. The reign of Saku is over, he no
longer overshadows
the lives of men, all is well in the two lands.
******************
Fragment 14
We praise our own
God with joyous and grateful hearts. He has shown Himself
among us. He will
come again in His season, all is well with us. His desire
brings forth the
green growing things and the land is clothed in its gay mantle.
His hand guides the
stars, His mind contains all things that fly above the Earth
and all things that
walk and crawl upon its face.
We praise You, Great
Eternal One whose forms are so many. We kiss the ground
before You. All the
sacred beings and sacred things men worship are but
manifestations of
their groping through the clouds of ignorance to understand
You. Have pity on
them, for they were born into darkness and mysteries, but
their hearts are
good.
Each day You bring
some new thing to the attention of men and place before them
problems to unravel.
The nature of men ever inclines them towards the path of
ease and
passiveness, therefore they tend to shun the things which are truly
profitable. Therefore,
deal with men in a manner best fitting for their progress
towards Truth.
******************
Fragment 15
Neither life nor
love ends at the Grim Portal. The strength of the invisible
bond between two
souls binds them even after death. That which binds strongest
of all is the love
which is sincere, true and constant. Such love endures
through tribulations
and trials.
If one you love has
departed through the Western Gates into the Great Halls of
Eternity, then be
comforted by the words of Truth. This you will then know: that
the Guardian at the
Grim Portal is no fearsome being but a compassionate
attendant who tends
you gently while asleep, until the morning of a more
glorious day. Then
you will be awakened to journey through a greater adventure
with the companions
of former times.
******************
Fragment 16
In death you are
greater than ever you were on Earth, for now the companionable
spirits lament for
your sake. They strike their bare flesh for you and smite
upon their forearms.
They tear at their hair and cast dust on their heads.
Yet if they be true
to themselves, they are not cast down, they are not
distressed. There is
a voice speaking out of the silence, saying, "If he goes he
shall come, if he
sleeps he shall awaken, and if he dies he shall live".
Can you be gone from
us forever? No, you are not dead or lost unto us, unless by
our own deeds we
depart to dwell in different regions.
I am not cast down.
You are now in the Great Place beyond the everlasting stars.
You have passed over
the horizon of immortality and now walk erect along the
path of glory. May
we meet there in days yet to come.
Hail O Glorious One!
******************
Fragment 17
Stand by my side,
support me when I pass out from the tomb, O My Guardian! Let
me take Your hand,
stand by my side when I come before the Assessors, that when
I hear the verdict I
may not be alone. If my eyes cannot see, then tell me of
the balances, do
they bear down in my favour?
O Guardian God,
lighten the darkness for me and deliver me from the meshes of
the net woven by my
own deeds of wickedness and weakness. You are my strength
and support, to You
have I given my offerings, You I have honoured above all.
There I may be in
distress and have none to abide with me. I may have no
comforter and may be
alone, therefore desert me not in my time of trial. Stand
by my side, O
Guardian God. If I am numbered among the distressed ones, look
upon me with
compassion and mercy, and if I am deserted, then sustain me with
water, bread and
oil.
******************
Fragment 18
I sing words of
glory unto my God who is the Great God Above All Gods, and the
words which issue
from my mouth shall be exalted above all things. With them I
will praise Him in
the Sacred Place, in the silence of His Hidden Sanctuary.
They will glorify my
God, so that His Majesty is not dishonoured and He is not
deserted, until the
day when He shall be declared before all men.
With the ever loving
thoughts of a devoted heart I praise Him. Even as the sun
rises joyfully into
the daysky, so does my heart rise towards He who gives me
life and renews it
day by day.
He is Great, He is
Mighty, He is Glorious. He made the great river to flow, that
all men in the two
lands might be fed. It never wearies, it never ceases its
onward flowing. It
is everlastingly renewed.
Even as the great
river flows steadily and strongly through the barren
wilderness and
bestows verdant life on its way, so let the river of my life flow
through the Earth
and eat away the sands of wickedness.
Release me from my
mortal fetters. Loosen the heavy covering of flesh which
imprisons me, which
restrains me. Let me rise free into the glory above, as the
falcon floats freely
on the wing. Let not the melody of my song be cut off while
I sing, nor the
story end before its completion.
Keep me, O my God,
from the ways of darkness and let my spirit rejoice in the
light of
righteousness.
Glory to You, Great
God, Lord of Truth, whose eternal throne is concealed behind
man's limitations;
who issued the command that brought things into being; who
made man so
wonderfully that man himself cannot understand his own nature; who
hears with
compassion the cry of the distressed and the moan of the captive.
All hail the
everlasting spirit within, the real self, the seat of all thought
inseparable from me.
I am one who can truly call bis soul everlasting, for I am
one of the Awakened
Ones, one of the few who have at long last attained the
Splendid Vision. I
have seen the bright flash of Truth in the darkness of
earthly existence, I
am free, I am illuminated.
I will sing, that
you may be glorified in the solitudes of Your Hidden Places,
where the eyes of
the profane can never penetrate, where few men come as Chosen
Ones. There we will
sing songs of yore. We will sing of Your ways and of Your
laws, which remain
everlastingly unchangeable.
*****************
Fragment 19
Heaven and the many
Heavens beyond Heaven, Earth and the many Earths beyond
Earth are held in
the thoughts and power of God. They are as a monument to His
everlasting glory.
All things living that move and breathe have their place in
the abode of life.
Man finds the greatest joy in the Eternal Halls, therefore
set not your heart
on earthly possessions.
Here a man may
desire life for a hundred years and may even attain it, but what
benefit are the
extended years to him if they do not exalt the soul? There is a
horror-haunted
region of darkness, and whosoever rejects the godward life on
Earth will surely
dwell therein. They will go down to partake of the nature of
demons, down into
the darkness of delusion and doom.
The soul, without
moving flies on wings swifter than thought. It stands behind
and beyond the
senses. It is the Knower working within the things mat are known.
The spirit of man is
carried down the stream of action into the ocean of life.
The spirit is
everlasting, it is near and it is far, it is in all and it
contains all.
He who sees his own
self in all things and all things in his own self is
awakened. He is
beyond delusion and outside the reach of futile sorrow.
******************
Fragment 20
I am Hahrew the
Enlightened One, Hahrew the Twice Bom. Having crossed the dark
waters myself, I
carry the others across. Being free from fear, I free others
from fear. Being
unrestricted, I ease the restriction of others. Knowing the
way, I show it to
others. Having trodden the road, I now guide others along it.
I am an Illuminated
One, the open of ear, the keen of eye. I am one who knows
the Law, I am a
keeper of ordinances.
I shall refresh all
those whose bodies are bent with toil or sorrow. I shall
come to the aid of
those whose souls are withered and distorted, and give them
strengthening
sustenance. I shall open the eyes of many who are deluded in the
heavy mists of
threefold existence.
Hear me, all who
toil under the yoke of ignorance, who labour under the clouds
of despair. I am the
Forthcoming One, the Future One Turned Back. I am the
Spirit Within The
Law.
I am the Voice of
Enlightenment, one who proclaims the brotherhood of all men. I
am to one as to
another. I am Hahrew.
******************
Fragment 21
0 life-giving Sun,
handwork of God, projection of divine fire, heat of Heaven,
light of the day,
solitary glory of the daytime, let me behold the hidden form
behind your
brightness, for the spirit within you is even as my spirit. Thus, I
may come to
understand the nature of my God who commands you and to whom I pray.
The fair face of the
daughter of Truth remains hidden behind its mask of gold. O
spirit of light,
draw aside the veil even slightly, that I may see.
Who among men is
wise enough to know his own wrongdoing, or to see clearly his
own errors and
follies? The eyes of men are dim and the road narrow, therefore
it is not hard to
wander from the way. Therefore, O my God, keep me from all
hidden wrongdoing
and errors, and keep me from the power of temptations to which
I so readily
succumb.
I know the
rebellions of my heart, and my wickedness is ever before my eyes, yet
how much more do I
not see! I have chafed against the restrictions of Your
decrees and the Law.
I am a foolish one who does himself an injury.
I am ashamed and
blush for my folly. I am as a man who, when his arm does wrong,
cuts off a finger.
Help to make clean my heart and strengthen my spirit, that it
may resist my own
inflictions upon it. I believe I do right and do wrong, for I
have not listened
carefully and diligently to Your words written on the sacred
scrolls.
O my God, whom I
have long worshipped with devotion, incline from the great
heights of Your
splendour and stretch a helping hand down towards Your weary
servant. Trusting in
You I will depart from the pastures of sweet grass and the
calm waters of
restful repose, and go into the presence of the Everlasting
Lords. I will pass
out of the dark tomb, I will arise refreshed with the
outpouring of Your
Spirit. I will clasp Your mighty hand and be guided along the
path of Truth. Thus,
I cannot stray and the lonely places will not claim me.
In confidence and
trust I will take my place before the Court of Assessors.
Guided by Your light
I shall pass safely by the Place of Darkness, and those who
lurk shall do me no
harm. My trust is in You and I will come safely past the
lurking ones. I
shall be freed of all earthly weariness and my spirit shall
shine forth in
glory. I will stand in the Place of Brightness, and the Glorious
Ones will come
bringing refreshing waters. I will not lack sweet sustenance, and
delicacies shall be
poured forth for me in abundance.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
FROM THE SCROLL OF
SENMUT
The stonebearer
measures the stone and it is trimmed and pushed into place. It
is fitted and the
overseer looks upon it and says, "This stone is well laid. It
remains in its
appointed place".
Beside it other
stones are fitted and set, each according to its own shape and
design, each has its
own place and position. Then upon it are placed other
stones and so it
becomes concealed from sight in the foundations of the
structure. The
building rises, firm and strong, to become the dwelling place of
a prince.
I am one of whom men
say, "He establishes buildings which stand forever". I
remember that stone
deep below the ground in the base of the structure where no
eye ever sees it.
Men know it is there, it just remains in its place, fulfilling
its appointed duty,
a necessity for the upholding of the building.
What difference
whether that stone be set upon the pinnacle, shining in the sun,
ever before the eyes
of men, or hidden in the ground, unseen at the base? It
does its duty by
standing solidly in its rightful place and seeking not to
change it.
I, who establish
great buildings which will stand forever, remember that stone.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
THE SONGS OF
NEFATARI
One
I sing my song because
the Earth sings; though the wind is hushed among the
groves it still
plays with soft melodic gaiety. The benevolent sky looks gently
down, its breath
stilled as it listens to the melody of the leaves. The dew
smiles in the
morning, for it has captured the light of love from the stars. My
song is beautiful
because my heart dances gladly in my bosom, its joyfulness
conveys gay music to
my thoughts and places endearing words on my lips.
Because I am
dedicated to love I have but one love, the beautiful container of
my life. My heart is
a lonely thing ever seeking companionship with yours. It is
lost to you, so let
it beat in your breast nestled against your heart, for there
it surely belongs.
My love is wholesome, not tainted by any residue of past
affections; it is
gentle and pure, therefore treat it with manly tenderness, for
it is a precious
treasure. I give it gladly and can give no more. That which I
give to you I can
give to no other man. For you the lovely pearl, for others the
empty shell.
Let me live just for
you, let me serve as your housewife. Let me hold your child
to my breast, let my
eyes be gladdened by your presence each night and in the
morning. Let me bask
continuously in the wonderful radiance of your presence.
Never part me from
the source of my joyfulness and gaiety, but let us go down
the corridor of life
together, your arm laid on my arm and my hand in your hand.
My heart is
desolation, it is like a wilted flower. You are away, my love, and
my eyes search the
road for your coming. The caress of sleep eludes me, for your
image is ever there
beside me and I cannot find consolation with even the most
comforting shadow.
Come to me, my living love, that I may feel the warmth of
your flesh and be at
peace.
While you are absent
I concern myself no more with things which give pleasure to
a woman's heart. I
neglect my hair arrangement and my diadem hangs disregarded.
My curls are laid
aside, for I await your coming to put them on and greet you in
my gaiety. The song
is silent on my lips, for my heart is without joy.
While you are away
my heart slumbers, my bosom is empty. Come quickly, my love,
that my heart may
awaken and beat gladly with the pulse of life. I await your
coming as the dawn
awaits the sun, as the parched lands await the rising waters.
My eyes search the
nightskies and see the mating dance of the stars, the Earth
about me throbs with
the pulse beat of love. The dark waters reflect the mystery
of life, but I sit
beside them desolate. Come to me my love, for none but you
can awaken my
response. I stand alone on the shore of the sea of love, Come, O
come, that we may
enter the enchanted waters together.
Does the night long
for the day as I long for you? Does the thirsty wayfarer
long for water as I
yearn for you? If so, then truly they are to be pitied. O
come, my living
love, and fill my days with the sunshine of your love.
It seems the ages of
man have never been loveless.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
THE SONGS OF
NEFATARI
Two
Life is the bearer
of the most wonderful gifts. You are a man and my man. Maker
of my heart's
butterfly flutter when my breath becomes a necklace of sighs. In
your strong arms I
melt as honey in the warm night waters.
O man and my man,
great one in my maidenly eyes. The light of my life, the sun
of my days and the
moon of my nights; the rock against which I confidently
nestle, for to feel
your protecting strength is my everlasting delight. My body
yearns for you as
the parched fields cry out for the caress of the fertilising
waters.
How delightful the
gentle hour of love with you. O that it might become an
eternity wherein I
might sleep with you as your wife, your lifelong companion in
love. In this life
always yours, to serve your pleasure and be ever with you; to
stand at last, my
hand in your hand, together before the dream goddess in the
Halls of Eternal
Joy. There, those who have loved wholesomely, such as we, find
everlasting
pleasures.
I am yours, both
here and there, escapable never, yours forever. Yours pure,
untouched and
unsullied. I am with you first, sister in love. If at times my
tongue speaks with
unmaidenly boldness, then let this be forgiven me, for I am
pure of heart. The
words pour forth from a heart overflowing with love and not
from a tongue dipped
into the shame of impure experience.
I come to you with
maidenly pride, as a dew-bedecked garden of herbs, fair
flowering, sweet
smelling and refreshing. Peace and contentment are mine to
gladly give. Upon
you I gladly bestow all that is precious to a maiden. You
share me with no
other, I honour love by bestowing what is exclusively yours.
Your brow becomes
hot with the body passion of man burning within, and I cool it
with my womanly hand
as the cooling north wind tempers the heat of the burning
sands. The strength
of an ox and the gentleness of a kitten are united in love.
We walk together in
a land of beauty, a garden of loveliness fashioned thus by
the dreams we share.
Hand in hand in the kingdom of men, heart in heart in the
kingdom of spirit.
When hearts are bound together in a love exceeding all
bounds, then bodies
may unite with purity and peace. We wander heedlessly about
and my heart sings
with joy, for we are together.
Your voice is the
food of my heart, your touch the life of my body. I see you
and I am gay, you
depart and I am sad. Your glance pierces me like an arrow of
fire, your words
carry me away like the surge of bitter waters over the beach.
For the lovers' hour
we sit beneath the wild fig tree, beneath its fruits of
lovers' blood and
its leaves of lovers' eyes. Hear it whisper to our hearts. I
am a maiden reserved
to you in love, you are my lord, the commander of my heart.
I dwell beneath your
shadow and within your shadow. O never leave me unshielded!
My nights are
restless and hot, shall I give my love the apple of his desire,
the first fruits of
womanly love? Am I the wild bird snare awaiting the wild
goose? O my heart,
how have women beyond number decided before me which answer
is the true one?
0 take me not in my
weakness, lest you despise me after the manner of men and
bring low the head
of my father. Have manly compassion on the weaknesses made by
my love. Degrade me
not before my mother and let not the shadow of shame fall
over my father's
house. Let me ever keep faith with the Mother Guardian of Love,
that when I am
called before her I shall stand in unsullied radiance. Make me
not a woman of the
hedgerow.
Let our love bear us
up in glory, up into the revealing light where we may stand
together, proud and
unashamed. Let ours be a love that fulfils its appointed
function in the
great chain of life, something honoured by men and an
inspiration to our
children. Let it not become a flower of the field corner
which withers in
shame when the sunlight falls upon it.
I wait, the day
comes, its hours are long and extended, but with its declining
you hasten to me, my
man and my life. Sweet mistress of love, speed the
fulfilling hour.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
THE SONGS OF
TANTALIP
One
The night rolls back
to reveal the promise of another day. The great sun comes
up in the morning
time and the lotus opens to reveal its shining heart displayed
in devotion. You
come and my heart leaps up from my breast to meet you.
The wind blows and
shakes the wild fig tree, you come and your delicate perfume
enwraps my spirit,
and my body is shaken. I become weak within the shadow of
your presence. I
feel a radiance about you which calls to something within me
and I am awed by the
wonder of a love which can subdue all base feelings.
I have seen you. In
the cool dewtime of the morning I passed on my way and you
were bathing in the
freshening waters. I saw your pure loveliness and all else
faded and passed
from me, the beauty of the morning was dimmed before the vision
I had of you. Modest
maiden of mine, clad in a white garment which clutched your
supple limbs, I saw
you and my heart swelled up in joy. The breath was stopped
within my throat.
You looked up and
smiled a chaste greeting, covering yourself in a garment
expressing your
maidenly modesty. Your delicate hand plucked a lily, and my
heart left its
cradle when you came up out of the waters and drew near. You
embraced me with
cool, glistening arms and open wet lips. I savoured the joys of
the gods, with a
greater promise of unutterable joys to come, before I continued
on my way. Would
that I were the fishes in the pool, that I might be so near to
you twice daily.
Yet I am a man and
consumed in the fires of manhood in my need for you. Still
you remain veiled in
reserve and I pray to the great god for the assurance that
some day my sister
in love will be truly mine. Her reserve and modesty,
treasured as gifts
to be surrendered in love, mean more to me than gold and
pearls or the
treasures of kings. What is mine no king, no matter how great, can
claim. It is love's
mantle bestowed on manliness.
The night comes and
I dream it is our wedding night and you are beside me. My
spirit rises on
wings of joy, singing, "O let my love find its ultimate
expression in this
night of beauty!" Your breath caresses me with the fragrance
of Heaven, your lips
dispense the heavy wine of love. Our bodies meet in ecstasy
and part, but our
spirits remain mingled in the greater bond that knows no
severance. Our
united souls share together the destiny of eternity. I sleep at
last in the gentle
arms of contentment.
O Great Readers of
the Souls of Men, see the strength of my love. Is it not
untainted with base
feelings? Is it not wholesome and undemanding? Is it not
protective of
womanly secrets? Let it endure on Earth, that it may blossom in
glorious fullness
throughout the great ages in everlasting splendour. May it
shine forever in the
unwalled Halls of Eternity. O grant me my heart's desire!
CHAPTER THIRTY
THE SONGS OF
TANTALIP
Two
I am one on whom the
fates smile. My sister in love is the light of my life. She
is the promise of
love enduring, the brazier of a love undying, the hope of joy
throughout eternity.
The night becomes silent, for its fragrance is as nothing
to her sweetness.
The brightness of the dawn fades before her loveliness and the
dove hangs its head
before her virtue.
She breathes gently
and caresses with her glance. Her skin exudes a sweet
perfume and her hair
is proud and confident, as becomes the guardian of secret
mysteries of charm
and delight.
She is graceful, her
robes are not stiffened, they are not of royal or white
linen and caress her
softly. Her sandals are daintily bedecked with beads and
her lovely curls are
clasped in a circlet of blue and red stones. Her bosom is
covered with cloth
of Ithika and held by a clasp of silver.
She flutters her fan
with delicacy and grace. Her speech is gentle as the cool
breeze. Her eyes
sparkle as the moonlit waters, their deep pools enhanced with
tinges of green and
purple delicately applied.
Men say, "Who
is she who walks with graceful steps and lively air? The blush of
the blood rose is on
her cheeks, the perfume of morning sweetness breathes from
her parted lips.
High-spirited joy tempered with innocence and modesty sparkles
in her eyes. Her
voice tinkles like sweetly rippling waters, and from the gay
cheerfulness of her
tender heart she gladdens all nature with her gentle
singing".
I say, "She is
mine, my wife in waiting", and confidently know all her secret
charms are for me
alone. I shall be lifted in joy above all men or cast into the
abyss of despair. I
wonder about her in the manner of men and rebuke myself for
my thoughts. Could
such beauty ever betray love?
I inhale the sweet
breezes which once filled her mouth, and each day my thoughts
recall her beauty.
My heart longs for the sweetness of her lovely voice, fresh
as the cool north
wind. Her love strengthens my limbs, my heart rises from its
place. Let me clasp
once more the delicate hands that hold my heart. Let me feel
her once again in
warm embrace. I hear her name whispered on the cool nightwind,
and never do I hear
it without my spirit responding.
0 my Lord God, who
led me in the conquest, who directed my right arm in battle
and chastened my
pride in victory, help me now in the time of peace. Help me
when the turmoil is
over. I am well skilled in the ways of war, but am a ready
victim for the
snares and wiles of peaceful life.
Give to me my
heart's desire, to be the mother of my children and the companion
of my life. I am
burnt with passion and need the cool quenching waters of true
love. My body cries
out in the night towards one so distant from me. You made me
as men are made, you
gave me the craving, now grant me relief.
I am alone and one
when I should be two. I speak and none answers, I eat and my
food lacks flavour,
I thirst and none brings water. I am a sword unused, let the
sword not rust in
the sheath.
I await my other
self, my right side desires union with my left, I wait and know
that the waiting is
not in vain. I await her coming, she is on her way, as she
was from me
beginning of time. She draws near and my spirit leaps from its seat
and dances from the
body to meet her. I see her, she is mine, fashioned for me
by the ages, her
body is made for mine and mine for hers. We are betrothed by
eternity.
I will keep her
always for myself, I will never let her go hungry or let her
live to lament her
fate. We will share seven lives together and in each I will
seek her anew.
Man is two, the life
force and the life material. Love holds all things together
and no man can know
the joys of love who shares the secret charms of his beloved
with another.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
THE MARRIAGE SONG
O devotee of a love
that rises above the mire of matter and flowers in realms
where romantic love
is glorified! O daughter of love and sweet mistress of life,
now is the hour of
your fulfilment. Prepare to accept the sceptre of womanhood
as becomes a true
maiden, prepare to accept the burdens and pleasures of
motherhood as
becomes a true woman. Verily you are a disciple of love.
Earth knows no
greater joy than that of contented wedded love. Such love is a
beaconlight to all
mankind, it guides the caravan of its journeying with a pure
and sacred flame.
Sweet, hallowed love has a temple in the heart of every chaste
maiden, and all men
worship the mystery enshrined within. O resolute priestess
and guardian, you
are now worthy of the white crown of love.
Great has been your
inspiration to man. Well have you fulfilled the duty of
maidenhood, now step
forward to accept the joyful burden of womanhood, the crown
that proclaims you a
wife. Marriage is sanctified by ancient tradition, for it
has survived the
tests of time and turmoil. It has ever been the anchor of
society and the
shield of the family.
Loveliness belongs
to all women, for it is the heritage of womanhood. Beauty of
face and form is
carried away by the passing years, but the beauty of heart and
thought grows as the
waters rise and fall. The glorious channs of modesty and
purity can be
possessed by any woman.
Weave a mantle of
contentment around your chosen mate, O gentle bearer of
womanly charms.
Remember that you are the mother of generations yet unborn.
Maidenhood, wifehood
and motherhood, these are the phases of a woman's life. A
chaste maiden
becomes a good wife and a good wife becomes a good mother. Thus it
is written.
May The Great God
whom you now worship spread His protecting wings over you, and
may you enjoy the
companionship of many children. May your life be enwrapped in
peace and
contentment, and may it be attended by the four bearers of prosperity.
O son of strength
and goodness, remember always your obligations and duties as a
husband and father.
Love belongs nowhere but beside your own hearth, for what
foolishness it would
be for a man to expend it on one other than his wife! That
which a man gives to
his wife is his also, a love truly shared is joy
multiplied. He who
sows beside his own hearth reaps a manifold harvest.
Be not harsh with
your wife or impatient because of her weaknesses, for her ways
are those of all
women. Be gentle with her, remembering that the dart of love
cannot penetrate a
hard and inconsiderate heart.
Love is a treasure
unearthed by few. It is found by less than one in a thousand.
Yet, where it is let
it be held sacred, for it is the decree of a divine destiny
uniting one to the
other in ever increasing glory and beauty, as they rise from
life to life.
Is not every part of
the Earth paired with its mate? Even Heaven and Earth are
mated, for does not
Earth cherish and nourish whatever Heaven lets fall? When
Earth lacks heat
Heaven bestows it bountifully upon her, and when she loses her
freshness and
withers. Heaven restores her freshness with gentle soothing
waters.
Heaven daily goes
about the task of sustaining Earth, she is never neglected.
Therefore, take an
example from the greater sphere of life, sustain and cherish
your wife, that she
never be neglected. He who sows seeds of discontent before
his hearth reaps a
full harvest of misery. Thus it is written by the Wise One in
olden times, even so
it is now and will always be.
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
THE LAMENT OF
NEFATARI
They have placed my
dear lord in the engulfing tomb, they have laid him to rest
in eternal secure
silence. We depart, we journey home but home is no more, it is
rent apart and a
place of dull shadows. Some with me are silent and solemn, some
are weeping, some
make show of weeping. Some suffer silently, some talk idly,
some mask their
sorrow with false mirth. It is a time of solitary heart pain.
Some say it is
finished and others that he sails the sky, but I ask my soul and
it says this is not
the end. It is not finished, this is the beginning, which
all loving things
must know as they awake to a new dawn.
The years of earthly
instruction are left behind, the last lesson is read, the
pupil has departed
to take up his appointed task. He has been bom to life, and
death has been left
behind. There are no dead, just the departed living, death
alone occupies the
silent tomb. Death is a pause at the beginning of hfe, a
hesitation before
the light of a greater day.
Death is a deceiver,
a non-existent thing of the shadows. From the creeping
caterpillar comes
the light-loving butterfly, and from the hard grain the full
blooming barley.
Who, looking at the date stone, can see therein the tree to be?
Search the seed and
the plant is nowhere to be found. Even so is it with the
spirit.
I trust in He who
gave us life and love, but I suffer because of my loss. I am
alone. Where is my
lord, the one I loved, the sharer in my cup of joyfulness?
Where is the
caressing hand, the touch that soothed, the voice that strengthened
my heart in times of
distress, the consoling counsel, the quiet laugh that
dispelled God-given
hurt? Though he has gone to glory, yet my heart shrinks,
aching with solitary
grief.
I will keep him,
that he wander not in the darkness; for he has been loved and
cannot be alone for
evermore. I will keep him, that he be not despaired and
condemned to walk
with himself; for he is a man who has loved beyond himself.
He has stepped from
his body as one steps from a mantle. He has left it as one
leaves a discarded
garment.
His future is in my
hands and I shall live in such wise that none can deny our
reunion. There is a
subtle something, I know that, that ties us together still.
May I be given
strength never to break the loving link which comforts me through
the long night and
sorrowful days.
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
THE SCROLL OF
HERAKAT
Great God of Wisdom,
help me in my transcription of these writings, that they
may be a true
record; for I am not learned in letters, as was Sopher. I am
unskilled even as a
scribe.
Man is a
battleground, he is torn apart in the struggle between his two selves.
He dwells in the
dark night of ignorance.
From Ramakui of the
seven cities, Land of Copper, came the People of the Light
and they brought
with them, out of their transparent temples, the light that
shines, when
darkness falls, without being lit. Led by the Old Bald-Headed One,
he whose name is not
spoken, they came out of the West at the sunsetting. They
came from the place
where now the sun goes down; in the days when the Western
wilderness was green
and sand had not replaced the waters; when the outlands
nourished cattle and
sheep fed where now there is nought but rock and stone. The
Tirdinians welcomed
them not, but they passed safely through the westward places
to the land of
Ansibyah, and were succoured and fed. They brought to the people
many things, for
wise they were and learned. They were men of wisdom.
Truth is not for the
multitude, dirty hands despoil fine linen. The high born
have their estates
and the lowly ones have their appointed places. Truth is not
sold in the
marketplace, nor can riches alone obtain it. Few entered the great
chambers to die and
to live. The temples were fine shells, but the kernel was
dead inside. Men
lacked the foods of life.
The True God was
guarded and hidden by the false gods. He spoke in the hearts of
the wise, but the
people heard the voice in the stone. Their ears were closed to
all but the voices
of men. Small places there were in olden times for all gods,
the pillars were not
yet stood up. The stones were not yet in their places and
the House of Hidden
Secrets was not yet in the land.
Then temples were
built in splendour and priests were comforted in mansions.
Great gardens and
fields were the property of the gods of men. They had great
herds of cattle in
their pastures. Within the worship and ritual, amid the pomp
enshrining the
little gods, shone the light of Truth which was the revelation of
The True God. It was
known to few and fewer understood it.
Seven years men
being chosen waited and were called. Seven years they served and
seven years they
ministered at the feet of their Masters of Instruction. They
were passed into
bleak caverns to die and know God, and called forth with the
sure knowledge of
Truth. Thus, men were made servants of The One True God. Thus,
they knew the Truth
which may not be written, for many read who are not with us
in God.
There were writings
which speak truly, but they are no longer with us. The
Arisen Ones know the
secrets of the lesser gods who are no more than these. The
Great Scales weigh
the soul by its appearance in the Netherworld, and this its
place is appointed.
Its virtues from its food, but no man eats the filth that is
his.
He who devours souls
is but the dark cave of horror which opens to receive dark
souls into
affinitive darkness. The Rakima watches in silence; patiently it
sits, waiting for
the day of the Destroyer. It will come in a hundred
generations, as is
written in the Great Vault.
All men are not
equal in heart and spirit. Is the Southern Man learned, or the
Ambric Man brave?
The Land of Incense bestows all good things upon its
inhabitants, yet
they are not great. The Land of Bright Waters raises nothing
but trees and grass,
yet its people are strong and the lion does not equal them
in courage.
Above are the waters
of Heaven and below are the waters of the Dark Region, yet
there are not two
waters but one. There is the fire above and the fire below,
yet there are not
two fires but one. The Lady of Ladies is arrayed in a radiant
garment, when it
dims the great trial begins. Her footsteps do not waver, her
path is straight,
but beware when she wavers and is inconsistent.
Great Mistress of
the Stars, let us abide in peace, for we fear the revelation
of your horns.
Remain ever constant as a good wife to the Lord of the Day. When
women are as men and
inconsistent as women, the hour approaches when the Great
Lady will wander.
When man and woman meet as one in likeness, the Fiery Heralds
will appear in the
darkness of the sky vault.
Man twirls the drill
in his hand; he is the master of fire, but the day comes
when fire will leap
forth from the heart of the stone and consume him. Men read
the Great Book of
the Master of the Hidden Temple. They die and take it with
them, but there is
no power in their words, and who but we, the Enlightened
Ones, know the
hidden meanings? It is not for those dead to the Earth, who step
forth in the
Netherworld, but for those who died and remain with us.
Men make offerings
for their fathers after the custom of their fathers. The
motions are those of
their fathers' fathers' fathers, but their hearts remain
locked. It is
foolishness.
In the First Book it
is written: "Words that do not produce deeds are as
thistledown on the
wind. They were better never uttered".
The soul of man is
as a bird that knows of a place to which it must journey, but
which it has never
seen yet it departs on the appointed day. Men have gods in
Heaven and gods on
Earth, but Heaven is for gods and earth for men. Thus did we
write our own doom.
In the Secrets of
the Soul it is written: "The soul of man is not a small thing
inside him, but
wraps him about. It is greater than the boundaries of the Lands
of the Reed and the
Lily, and reaches out beyond the stars".
To live, man must
believe in his soul. Belief comes not from outside teaching
but from listening
to its whispers, unbelief comes from stopping the ears to its
murmurs. Read the
Sacred Writings diligently and hear the voice of the
Instructing Master
with receptive heart, so you may furnish your soul with
nourishment, and it
shall not wither from any lack of sustenance.
The seed of Truth
came to the black fertile land in olden times and was planted
in well watered
soil. Pontas was not yet born. It grew not in the light of the
sun, for ignorant
men would cut it down. In the dark places it flourished. Earth
is a strange place
and stranger the creature who rules it. Then came the dawn of
a brighter day. The
tree was goodly and its leaves filled both the Land of the
White Crown and the
Land of the Red Crown. In a day of darkness men came who
exposed it, and the
king said, "Cut it down, lest it choke us with wisdom".
The tree died, but
its seeds falling into the red soil lived and from them
saplings grew. They
were sheltered under the strong arm of the East. Then came
one who was Lord of
the Sweet Breeze, one who had sat beneath the Tree of Life,
and he raised up a
city to the Veiled Truth. Over the great road it was, by way
of Lados it lay.
He revealed the
Light of Truth darkly to the people, but they were people of the
night and even its
dim flame consumed them. The child of good intentions may be
fair or dark.
The Guardians of
Truth covered the bright flame and even its glow was seen no
more by the people.
No unlearned man again saw the light.
A treasure in the
hands of a few is great to each. Shared among many it has
little value for
one. We had been told the ways of men from olden times, but we
heeded not the
warning.
Now the Truth is
scattered to the four quarters of the Earth. Thus it was
foretold it should
be, therefore it is appointed. A tree scatters its seeds by
the thousand, yet
but one may spring to life, and that may lay long in the soil.
These writings have
been re-written with diligent care. They have been
transcribed exactly
as they are and no thought or belief of mine has gone into
them. May those to
whom they come as a heritage be no less circumspect in
dealing with them.
THE BOOK OF THE SONS OF FIRE
this being
THE FOURTH BOOK OF THE BRONZEBOOK
Being all that remains of the Sacred Writings formerly
contained in the Great
Book of the Sons of Fire
Chapter 1 -
THE RECONSTRUCTED CHAPTER
Chapter 2 -
THE HIBSATHY
Chapter 3 -
THE BROTHERHOOD
Chapter 4 -
AMOS
Chapter 5 -
THE LAWS OF AMOS
Chapter 6 -
THE TALE OF HIRAM
Chapter 7 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 1
Chapter 8 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 2
Chapter 9 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 3
Chapter 10 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 4
Chapter 11 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 5
Chapter 12 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 6 (Incomplete and Fragmentary)
Chapter 13 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 7
Chapter 14 -
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 8
Chapter 15 -
THE BOOK OF KADMIS
Chapter 16 -
THE RECONSTRUCTION BY KADAIRATH
Chapter 17 -
PART OF A MARRIAGE PLEDGE
Chapter 18 -
THE MASIBA AMENDMENTS
Chapter 19 -
THE LETTER OF MATA A SON OF AGNER
Chapter 20 -
THE TEACHINGS OF SADEK
Chapter 21 -
THE LAWS OF MALFIN
Chapter 22 -
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS RECONSTRUCTED - 1
Chapter 23 -
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS RECONSTRUCTED - 2
Chapter 24 -
THE LAST OF THE METAL PLATES
CHAPTER 1
THE RECONSTRUCTED CHAPTER
We took refuge with the sons of Uteno whose fathers
had been in the land many
generations, for they had come out of Egypt in the
days of Pharaoh Nafohia.
There on the borderland, we dwelt in caves above
Kathelim. We were without books
or possessions, but we were diligent and laboured to
make the land fruitful. We
knew ourselves as The Brothers in Light, but others
called us The Children of
Light, even as we are called to this day.
This is a good and fertile land, it is a wide land of
flowing streams where
wheat and barley increase a hundredfold. Figs and
pomegranates flourish here and
it is a land of olive groves and vineyards. All the
needs of life are supplied
with an overflowing bounty. It is a land where sheep
and cattle multiply without
fear and a land where the sickle of famine never
reaps. It is a land where even
an effortless search is rewarded with the materials of
copper, but it is not a
manless land.
We are not alone in this land and must live among
people whose ways are not our
ways. They have gods with many names and even now
those beside the sea strive
among themselves, for some say God is called Mamrah,
while others say he is
called Aneh. All about us men are in dispute and the
strife among them arises
out of the bounty of the land. Gaining their
livelihood with little effort they
have much time for argument and strife. We must build,
for these people, a court
of peace, the four pillars whereof shall be Love,
Consideration, Justice and
Truth.
The land of our fathers and our inheritance has been
lost to us forever. Their
homes have been returned to the sands and their altars
where they worshipped
cast down. Their temples have been destroyed and the
forms of worship practiced
there are no longer known. The songs once sung are now
mingled with the winds
and the voices of the singers are silent. The wisdom
once revered has departed,
the illuminating flame no longer burns and the lamps
lie broken in the dust. The
honoured writings have been used for kindling and the
sacred vessels turned into
vain ornaments. The very names held sacred by our
fathers are now defiled and
held to represent wickedness. Those who would have
been our brothers are sold
and their leaders slain. Those who would have been our
wives are violated and
degraded in servitude. Therefore, brothers, it is time
the memory of these
things was put aside and forgotten.
What cause have we for sorrow? We are in a bountiful
land, we have hope for the
future and an unshakable faith. Better by far than all
else, we have with us the
key to the ancient Portal of Communication. Our
memories must replace the books,
and decrees of former times. Let us, therefore, be
thankful for our blessings
and diligently preserve the flame from which the lamps
of Truth will one day be
relit.
In days gone by you have had leaders to guide you, but
before them were even
greater leaders whom you have not known. The
inspiration of their words is
something that must never be lost, it must be
preserved for all time. We must be
like a man who has traveled far with a heavy burden.
He rests and seeks among
the things he carries to find what can be discarded,
knowing he has still a long
way to go. The choice you must make has to be made
soon, for the years remaining
to our father cannot be plentiful.
We must establish a community where men can live
together and where they can
enjoy the companionship of women. Men always benefit
from united effort, but
this is inseparable from necessary restrictions. Let
the restrictions imposed be
such that no man can feel resentment because of the
restraints set upon him. Let
the only ordinances and restrictions imposed be
founded on the nature of man and
upon spiritual and moral values.
We must seek to assure freedom of action for every man
and woman, so long as it
does not prejudice the equal rights of others. We must
work for the benefit of
the many, but in doing so must not overlook the
provision of rewards for those
who serve best. The rewards must go to the men who are
best in all ways and not
to the worst. We must see that good lives are rewarded
and evil ones punished.
We must place the greatest value on things spiritual,
and no man must be unduly
rich or unduly poor.
We must provide for the sick and helpless, for the old
and incapable. We must
assure the integrity of the family. The first
objective must be the spiritual
goal, which is the only proper one for all men. After
that all instruction and
law should be bent towards an increasingly harmonious
relationship between every
living being. The upbringing of children must have as
its objective the
attainment of well balanced manhood and womanhood.
We must make men high-minded and above all pettiness.
They must be upright and
rejoice in their manhood. They must possess courage
and fortitude equal to any
trial, for there will be many. They must be prepared
to endure oppression and
persecution with self-control and a calmness which no
misfortune or calamity can
shake. They must also be such men that good fortune
and abundance does not
weaken them.
We must teach men to be quick in decision and
deliberate in judgement. Because
in numbers we are like two grains of sand in the
desert, we must seek converts
diligently. We must be a guiding light before the eyes
of all men, leading them
along the paths of honest labour rather than power. We
must teach men their duty
towards others, so that no man ever says, "Unless
I place my own welfare first
no other will".
We must seek out and accept suitable converts and they
must be particularly
precious to us. We must hold them in high regard, not
because they have accepted
our beliefs, the good within them can be developed
within their own, but because
they assume willingly and cheerfully the great duties
and obligations peculiar
to us. We must always remain a brotherhood engaged in
an organized quest for
Truth. We must ensure that the teachings we expound
are valid everywhere and
among all men as a code of goodness. If a brother
become powerful he must not
glory in that power, if wise in his wisdom or if rich
in his riches. If a
brother have to glory in something, then let it be in
the fact that he is always
the best of men. By this is not meant the victor in
the earthly struggle, but he
who best serves the purpose and good of mankind.
We found refuge in a place where men spoke our tongue,
though now they are no
more. The land of our fathers is denied to us, so we
must seek another, for a
man without a nation is more heavily afflicted than
any orphan. Egypt was a land
destined for greatness, its people should have led all
others towards the Great
Light. Egypt failed in its destiny because those who
were entrusted with power
and position proved unworthy. Its kings, who should
have reared families
dedicated to goodness and inspiration, betrayed their
trust to satisfy the
weaknesses of men. The leaders to godhood were misled
and became ensnared in the
deserts of worldliness, and those who followed them
were betrayed. The
priesthood became corrupt when it offered a life of
ease and abundance, instead
of a life of service and austerity. The ideals of man
were above reproach, but
man himself was unworthy of them. We have no need to
change ideals, but to
attain them we must change men. The sacred lore of
Egypt, enshrining the
treasure of the ages, was possessed by only a select
few who safeguarded it as
nothing else has ever been guarded, because of its
greatness. Not only this, but
even a little knowledge of it could be dangerous in
the hands of any who sought
to utilize it improperly.
Of all desirable things attainable by man, the
assurance of his immortality,
clear insight into the purpose behind his creation and
true knowledge of the
road towards the fulfillment of his destiny are the
greatest. Those were the
things so closely guarded, and just as they are the
most desirable things on
Earth, so are they the most highly priced and
difficult to attain. Religion
records the efforts of men, its doctrines and
inspiration are the measure of its
success or failure.
The paragraphs just written replace some difficult to
decipher and translate,
but they preserve the essence of what was recorded so
long ago. Much is too
fragmentary for use, a great amount is therefore lost.
There is one very
applicable fragment which states, 'unless they would
be open to mockery,
Revealers of Light must possess more than a dim, smoky
glimmer.'
CHAPTER TWO
THE HIBSATHY
These things must not be entrusted to common folk,
neither must they be degraded
by disclosing them to such as would profane them. They
were once reserved for
those who were exalted in wisdom and virtue. In those
days of Harempta, Mouth of
God on Earth, they were hidden from those in high
places.
This is one among the Lesser Mysteries, the Ritual of
the Twice Born. It is a
ceremony to regain spiritual vigour and to restore
spiritual power, whereby a
Chosen One dies and rises again. It is a grim
undertaking fraught with danger.
It is not for the spiritually weak or for the
faint-hearted. Not all survive to
walk again upon the friendly ground of Earth.
Only the older men who had completed the three cycles
of seven years were
accepted. They had to be men with wisdom and courage,
with the strength and
fortitude to survive. Other essentials were absolute
purity and complete
self-discipline. The ability for self-sacrifice and a
strict sense of duty were
demanded. Only men possessing all these qualities
could cross the border in
consciousness and return. To be deficient in any
essential quality meant death.
The Tree of Life has many branches and that which is
initiation bears the best
fruit. It is about this that your brother writes. It
began in that far away
glorious period before the days of wickedness which
caused men to walk in
darkness, in the days when they walked in the light of
Truth.
A House of Hidden Places was maintained, so that all
who had any part in
governing the lives of the people, whether as king or
priest or official, could
prove themselves worthy before becoming encumbered
with the office.
Later, it came about that the Hidden Places had to be
further secured and only
men long established in goodness could enter them.
Those in high places and
those with power shirked the austerities and dangers
demanded, and thereby they
cut themselves off from the light of Truth. The kings
and governors who ruled in
Egypt, during all the many long generations of
twilight and darkness, were born
to the frailties of the flesh. Seeing only through
earthly eyes they lacked the
clear guidance of revelation and knowledge. The Serif
Egg remains, it will give
up its secrets on the distant day when hatched under
the breast of
understanding. Then it will open its eyes, unfold and
spread its wings to reveal
the light of Truth.
The spirit of man is like an unweaned child which has
wandered away and become
lost among the rocks and cave. Unless it is found and given
sustenance from the
source of its life it will perish.
The first Temple of the Shrine of the Hidden Places
was built on the Scared
Heights. It was a temple within an inner court where
there were lesser temples
and the rooms of priests and teachers. The whole was
surrounded by a courtyard
and gardens, and beneath the main temple were the
three Caverns of Initiation.
Later the Temple of the Shrine of the Hidden Places
was built during a time when
the light was revealed throughout the land.
Though previously the shrines of the Twice Born had
been concealed in the
smaller temples, when Ramsis built the Great Temple of
Ramen it contained,
within itself, both temple and shrine of the All
Highest God. Also there were
Caverns of Initiation underneath. In the hall of the
temple which faced East and
West, between pillars of pure stone, was the portal of
the outer sanctuary. As
the sun rises in the East, to give life to the day, so
was the Devoted Priest
placed in the East of the sanctuary, to open the
services of worship and to
instruct, like a father, those who came to him with
understanding. In the
ceiling above the candidates was the symbol of the sun
and from it extended
seven hands. This represented the sun of life
dispensing the vitalizing forces
of life from their fount within the circle of creative
consciousness. Behind the
priest were representations of the ten rays of power
that flowed out from the
All Highest God when He created Earth, and which
became the attributes of His
Spirit. They are: Love, Foresight, Wisdom, Insight,
All Knowledge, Strength,
Resolution, Justice, Mercy and Courage.
Between the Devoted Priest and the wall behind him was
the triangular
representation of the three Sublime Essences -Supreme
Spirit, Soul Spirit and
Forming Spirit - the three parts of Spirit ever in
unity. The entrance to the
sanctuary was in the East and above this was a
representation of the Great Eye,
the secrets of which cannot be written. Before the
Devoted Priests was a hidden
doorway and this led down to the Marriage Chamber. In
this chamber were
performed the rites known as The Marriage of the Soul.
Here, too, spiritual
nourishment could be inhaled through fragrant smoke of
incense prepared from
secret essences and ingredients which activate life.
Here was learned the
profound Secret of the Soul, the secret that was in
the silence.
Behind the sacred place in the temple, behind the
place of flame, was the Thrice
Hidden Door and this led down to the Chambers of
Darkness, which were before the
Caverns of Initiation.
Before the first Chamber of Darkness there was an
antechamber containing a small
lamp and light. Cut on the walls were representations
of Life and Spirit. The
candidate had studied with the priests of the upper
temple for seven years and
been observed by one of the Twice Born for seven
years. Now, here in the
antechamber he became an Anointed One.
The Anointed One went into the first Chamber of
Darkness for testing by one of
the Twice Born of a lesser order. Here it was
discovered whether he truly
desired The Great Illumination and whether he had all
earthly desires and
ambitions under control. Here he was warned of the
dangers he would have to face
and was tested for courage and fortitude. Before him
now there was only one
choice, victory or death. This was the Chamber of the
Red Light.
Now the candidate and he who attended upon him stood
before the next door, and
the priest said to one who stood there. "Having
realized by command. He has awakened
the man within the man, and the eyes of inner vision
are open. He has made the
irrevocable decision and is one ready to go
forward". his own preparation,
that the external is unreal and having eliminated
earthly desires and
substituted spiritual ones, he who aspires stands
ready. He has tamed the wild
steed of his body, so that it is completely under his
The Anointed One was admitted into the second Chamber
of Darkness and here he
was uncovered and placed within a bath of cold water
where he remained for a
period determined by the burning of a lamp. This was
the Chamber of the Purple
Light.
From here the Anointed One passed into a small chamber
which was the entrance to
the Caverns of Initiation. He now stood before the
Portal of Restuah and recited
the Prayer Before the Portal, "O Unnamable God,
give me a burden of suffering to
bear and place about my shoulders the yoke of
tribulation. O God, fill the empty
spaces of my spirit with pain. O grant me such
fortitude that even under an
almost unendurable load of distress I may be willing
to lighten the burden and
suffering of another. Even as I stand prepared for the
awaiting test, I ask that
should I be returned to the light of Earth, I be
granted a share in the
afflictions of others, for I need the strength given
by suffering and sorrow,
and will welcome them for the benefits they
bestow". Then one who stood in this
place gave the Anointed One water to drink and said
this prayer, "O Unnamable
God, hear the prayer of the Anointed One. Strengthen
him with such courage and
fortitude that he will not fail in his hour of awful
trial, but shall pass
beyond the Place of Terror through the Portal of
Death, and so may shine with
the protecting radiance and therefore return unharmed
in spirit and body".
The Anointed One entered the first Cavern of
Initiation and was tested there in
such manner that no ordinary mortal could endure it.
After three days he came
out saying to one who stood there, "O acceptable
suffering, what has been
decreed is indeed best".
After passing through the first two Caverns of
Initiation the candidate became
an Enwrapped One, and in the last small Cavern of the
Lord of the Twice Born
released his spirit. The Enwrapped One was then placed
within the Womb of
Rebirth and there, within the tomb of stone, he was
left seven days. Here came
complete liberation of the spirit. It floated out
through the confining stone
and went as it willed. No words of men, however
learned, can ever describe this
experience.
The spirit of the Enwrapped One returned to the body
at the behest of the Lord
of the Twice Born, and he who had survived became a
Twice Born One. When led
forth into the Place of Glorification his face shines
with an inner beauty
indescribable. From that day onward his conduct and attitudes
are changed and he
is at peace with all men and with himself. He needs
nothing from earthly life
and seeks nothing. He accepts and enjoys whatever life
offers, for he has
learned the answer to the riddle of life and solved
the Secret of the Ages.
Your brother was one who underwent the Initiation of
the Twice Born, and he has
drawn the curtain aside a little to reveal only what
is permitted. It is little
enough but sufficient for you to understand why, when
kings and governors rose
to position and power, they declined the ordeal. It is
understandable, for the
final ordeal brought earthly life as close as possible
to extinction, without
complete severance of the spiritual umbilical cord.
Before this, went more than
twenty years arduous preparation. Yet long and
terrible though it was, the time
and austerity did not exceed the necessary limits by
even one jot. In sorrow
your brother must say that it was not an ordeal
required to obtain something man
has never possessed, it was to regain something he had
lost. It was, however
hard as it may seem, the lowest price payable for the
Secret of the Ages.
For long years he who aspired to become one of the
Twice Born had to practise
the awakening of his spirit and bring his body under
complete control. The first
thing to overcome was met long before any threshold
was approached, it was
something which lurked in the uncontrolled thoughts of
men. The frightening
experiences during the years of preparation had to be
modified and their effect
channeled off, otherwise the awakening spirit would
have been completely
overwhelmed. As the material body of man cannot come
too close to a blazing
fire, so cannot the spirit approach too close to the
sphere of divinity.
Having arisen from the Womb of Rebirth, the spirit is
completely freed from any
doubt about the immortality of man. Can a man doubt
the source of sunlight when
he can see the sun arising in glory before his eyes?
Having joined the Twice
Born each man has a choice, he can go on to higher development
within the Realms
of Light, or he can remain to help others. Your
brother chose to remain.
This wisdom of the Twice Born has spread to every
corner of the Earth, and
Caverns of Initiation are opened everywhere. But
increasingly, through the
years, men have declined to undergo the austerities
and trials essential to
bring them into the clear light of Truth. Therefore,
the places of initiation
decay and their secrets are lost, men grope in the
dark and try to open a door
to which they have no key. If a man has not the
courage or the time, the
inclination or the ability to sail to a far distant
land, then if he would know
about that land he must listen to those who have made
the journey. So it is with
those who would know the Secret of the Ages. Men
possess creed of little value
because they are unwilling to pay the price of
something better.
Your brother has no way of explaining his ultimate
experience to others.
Although he has looked upon the face of Truth and now
understands the purpose of
life, what he has seen must remain locked within the
heart. Though he no longer
has to be satisfied with belief alone, he cannot
extend his certainty to others.
Yet men forever seek him out hoping to share with him
the wonderful knowledge
which has so gloriously transformed his life. This he
tries to do, within the
limits imposed by his own expanded enlightenment,
beyond that he cannot go.
The spirit of the Twice Born can be liberated at will.
How often have you seen
your brother in a state of ecstasy which he cannot
describe? It is a state
beginning in quiet bliss, flowing outward in bright
radiance from an inner light
which can even illuminate the material darkness about
him. He hears the music of
the sacred spheres and sees the throbbing pulsations
of life heaving about him,
like waves upon the great seas. He becomes aware of an
inflowing of unspoken
knowledge from a surrounding power. It does not come
from any one point, but
appears to flow out of all things and to penetrate all
things. Material objects
lose their density and become visible within, they
become as though compounded
of ten thousand whirling spheres of brightness.
Colours are no longer dull and
restricted, they become infinite in depth and number.
The spirit becomes lost in
adoration and wonder at the beauty revealed in
everything. The soul is aware of
something glorious within all this and knows it for
the spirit outflowing from
its source.
There is a complete unconsciousness of others, for the
greater sight transcends
their material bodies. The spirits of men are seen in
a harmony of colours and
their bodies as whirling masses of power. The
experiencing soul is lost in a sea
of sensitivity and feeling. There is a swelling surge
of harmony, a sounding of
glorious chords. It is the sea that washes the shores
of eternity lapping upon
the nearer strand.
It is an experience that no one can give to another or
adequately describe to
him. It is the earned reward of those who have paid
the price. It is not he only
reward, for throughout the life of one who is Twice
Born there is boundless
feeling of wellbeing, sickness and disease are
unknown. There is an abiding love
for all men, a sense of brotherhood, and over all this
the certain knowledge of
the immortality of the soul and its unity with the
source.
The impressions received in moments of illumination
are everlasting. They fill
the spirit with a glorified splendour. There are
flashes of inspired visions,
and the future unrolls and can be read as the past.
There is a form of joyous
rapture experienced by those who have risen from the
Womb of Rebirth, and when
it comes it can no more be held back than the sun can
be stayed in its rising.
When the body of your brother lay enwrapped within the
Womb of Rebirth, his
spirit was carried out as on the wings of a serif and
became lost in a sphere
beyond understanding. He knew not which way to go or
what to seek. Then, like a
roll of distant thunder, there was a swelling sound
and there came an over
dazzling light. It grew steadily more brilliant until
your brother saw a
beautiful form of divine glory arrayed in a splendour
beyond all earthly bounds.
The cumbersome words of Earth cannot do justice to
what your brother wishes to
describe. It is like trying to sew a silk garment with
rope, or to eat
sweetmeats with a spade. Words are wholly inadequate
symbols. The vision of
glory which had been granted passed away and your
brother found himself in the
familiar sphere of the Spirit.
Once the mysterious border has been crossed it remains
open ever after and can
be recrossed almost at will. You are told of these
things because your brother
knows that the age of the Twice Born draws to its
close. Because of those who
have devoted their lives to the discovery of Truth,
there is progress in the
sphere of the spirit. Nothing has been lost, nothing
has been in vain; the Great
Gates are still closed, but they are no longer bolted.
Now they will open at a
knock. The road is better marked and the way more
clearly indicated. They who
lit the path have departed from Earth, but their
service has not ended. They
serve still in another place. While life on Earth
moves forward, life in the
sphere of the spirit does not stand still.
CHAPTER THREE
THE BROTHERHOOD
Brothers in belief, there are two roads through life,
the Road of Good and the
Road of Evil; they are not clearly defined roads and
often run side by side, and
sometimes cross each other. Those who travel without a
guide or in darkness
often mistake one road for the other. We are those who
have chosen to walk in
light, a brotherhood of men who travel the Road of
Good together in
companionship.
We are companions on the Great Path of the True Way,
and when an instructing
brother speaks of the Great Path of the True Way he
speaks of a double path. The
Companions of the Right Hand are those who bear the
burdens of earthly labour
and advancement, for they require strength, dexterity
and steadiness. The
Companions of the Left Hand are those who bear the
burdens of spiritual Labour
and enlightenment, things closer to the heart of man.
The brotherhood is separated into two parts. There is
an Earthly Brotherhood,
and though it may be small in numbers and have few
possessions, this will not
always be so. There is also a Heavenly Brotherhood
comprising certain of the
Twice Born and their followers who have gone before.
Their task is to clear the
Netherworld of demons and dark spirits and to prepare
the way for those who
follow. They are like men who enter a new country and
must clear it of wild
beasts and bring the land under control. It is the
task of those above and those
below to build a road joining the two territories.
Your brother is not well equipped to instruct in
earthly matters, and therefore
leaves it to another. The caravan moves quicker when
each man rides his own
camel. In spiritual matters the most important is that
each man should awaken
his own soul, a task far more difficult than it may
appear, but for which Earth
is the dedicated instrument.
The first objective to attain towards this end is
self-taming. Just as a horse
has to be broken in before it can be of any service,
so has the mortal body of
man to be tamed and brought under control. To do this
requires not only
self-discipline, but also the ability to rise above
earthly conditions. No easy
task, for the Earth is a hard taskmaster and worthy
adversary, and the mortal
body of man an unruly steed.
The duties, the obligations and the restraints by
which those who follow the
Great Path of the True Way direct their steps are not
imposed capriciously. They
are, in fact, no more than the bare essentials
covering the first steps. That is
why everyone, before admittance to the brotherhood,
must accept every obligation
and decree covering our way of life. We do not claim
to know the only path,
undoubtedly there are others, but we can claim to know
the best. The top of the
mountain may be reached by many paths, but the
shortest one is always the
hardest.
Supreme personal spiritual experience is undoubtedly
the best source for the
foundation of true spiritual faith. It begins with the
development of latent
spiritual powers through meditation. When you are
ready seek out a place of
solitude, a place that is away from the abodes of men,
a place that is restful
and quiet. Take a skin and a little food and water,
just sufficient for your
needs. now turn your thoughts inwards, harmonizing
them with the rhythm of the
body. Let your spirit seek harmony with the spirit
flowing about it, so that the
two become one. While at your meditations, neither
overeat nor undereat, for
there must be harmony in your eating and sleeping, in
your relaxation and
activity.
To become one who knows the joys of spiritual
self-consciousness, to have a
Truth-revealing vision transcending anything knowable
by the senses, to rise
above the bondage of pain and sorrow and to free the
spirit from the shackles of
the body at will, is something unattainable by
spiritual meditation alone.
Leading to this road is the path of moral
self-discipline and courage. The creed
that teaches spiritual things alone is as barren as
one concerned only with
earthly things.
Your brother will not set forth in writing all things
concerning the awakening
of the spirit, they would be of no use until the moral
foundation is laid. Such
teachings must remain within the higher circle of
those who travel the Right
Hand Path and not disclosed to the uninitiated.
Let the prayer upon your admission be always fresh in
your memories: "Great
Supreme Creator, Craftsman of Earth and of the
multiple spheres, grant that our
brother may always remain loyal. That he will, day by
day, become ever more
worthy and so dedicate and devote his life to the
service of mankind and the
completion of its purpose, that he shall forever walk
in the light of Truth.
Grant him the crown of wisdom, the garments of
knowledge, and let him be shod
with diligence. Grant him the strength to abide by our
instruction and
discipline, so that with these and by his own efforts
he may awaken within him
the true beauties of the spirit. Add your strength to
his weakness, that he may
overcome all selfish motives and unworthy desires.
Help him in his self-taming,
so that he may combat the tendency inherent in men
towards anger, greed and
self-pity. Strengthen him, that he may overthrow the
evils of talebearing,
malice and jealousy. Grant him the ability to see with
the eye of understanding
the defects and shortcomings of his brothers and to
emulate their goodness".
CHAPTER FOUR
AMOS
Amos led the congregation and the people down from the
mountains and brought
them into the land of Heth, a good land was opened up
before them. But Amos
warned the people that they were like gems among
pebbles, therefore they were
not to provoke the people who had accepted them
because of their skill.
Amos said, "We will build a city for ourselves
and our children, and within it a
temple for those who follow the light of the Right
Hand Path. The temple will be
like the pearl within an oyster, or the heart within
the body."
The congregation with Amos were the Children of Light
and the people were Kenim
who worshipped Yawileth, and Galbenim who worshipped
Eloah. But Amos taught the
people to walk in the light of Truth and said,
"To each of you his own god, but
above any god which can be named is something that
cannot be named and you shall
know it as The Supreme Spirit".
The Galbenim built the city and the temple, while the
Kenim set up forges among
the sons of Heth, and Amos went among them and saw
that all was well. The number
of those who followed the Right Hand Path and resided
about the temple was one
hundred and forty-four, and it was never any more or
any less. The number of
those who laboured in and about the city and dug the
soil or attended to sheep
and cattle, was two thousand four hundred and
thirty-five. The number of the
Kenim who followed Amos was eight hundred and twenty,
and the number of the
Galbenim was three thousand and fifteen. These were
the numbers of those who
could labour or bear arms.
As Amos went out among the sons of Heth he taught the
way of light, but they
would not listen to bis words. They were like men
walking a circle in darkness,
one behind the other, each having his hand on the
shoulder of the man in front.
Therefore, when the king of the sons of Heth came to
buy what Kenim had made,
Amos spoke to him about the way of light, and
sometimes the king listened. When
they came upon priests of the sons of Heth, Amos said,
"What manner of men are
these who prance about as though the ground were
covered with hot cinders?
Before their altars they are like drunkards who go
about shouting and singing.
They leap like horses kicking at the wind".
"What manner of spirit possess them, is it a spirit
of light or a spirit of
darkness? We have seen this often among your people,
it is seen even among the
princes and those who sit in judgement. Who can
understand the words that pour
from their lips? This is not prophecy but a
drug-induced delusion. The people
who listen to their words are as misguided as those
who resort to a tomb at
night and sit within a vault. If a spirit comes, it is
a restless one whose
words have little value, for they are hollow, empty
things".
"Surely the gods of such as these are demons in
disguise, whose powers are a
myth, for they are unhearing and unseeing things. They
are unfeeling idols
clothed in garments of delusion woven within the
tormented thoughts of men".
The king said, "I have seen your own holy men as
they sat beneath their trees
and they, too, acted in a manner strange to the eyes
of ordinary men. Where is
the difference?" Amos said, "Our holy men
sit in quietude, at peace within
themselves and if their mortal eyes are unseeing it is
because their spirits
roam freely as birds. There is a test whereby the
difference can be made known,
if you will agree to it". The king gave the sign
of consent.
Then a place of absolute darkness was prepared, a
place to which light could in
no manner be admitted. Into it went two priests of the
sons of Heth and two of
the Holy Ones from the congregation, the king and two
attendants, and Amos.
Then, while the king and his attendants watched, they
saw the Holy Ones radiate
a light that lit up the whole darkness, so that the
faces of all became visible.
The priests of the sons of Heth remained in darkness,
for their spirits were
feeble things without power. This is the test of true
illumination.
Because of this the king looked even more favourably
upon Amos and his people,
but he did not change his ways or seek to walk in the
light. For Amos refused to
perform acts of magic before his court or to foretell
the future, and the king
believed that magic could accomplish all things. He
believed there was an
effortless way to accomplish all things, if the secret
were known, and could not
understand that the secret was safeguarded behind the
doors of austerity and
self-discipline.
There was a city called Migdal within the kingdom and
some of the Kenim laboured
there for the temple. When Amos came to the city it
was the festival of its
great god and no man laboured, neither did the Kenim,
for it was the day when
their fires rested. When Amos sought the overseer of
the Kenim, he could not
find him and none of his people would say where he had
gone. But Amos found him
at the temple of Belath and awaited him in the
courtyard outside, and was filled
with anger against the overseer.
When the overseer came out Amos chided him, but the
overseer said, "What have I
done wrong? This place provides the food I eat, and is
its god not brother to
mine? There was a decision to be made, should a door
of brass be cast one way or
another? I sought an answer from the god by means
beyond the control of men".
Amos said, "Might not even the god answer
according to his own pleasure? By what
means was the decision sought?" The overseer
said, "By the ebin which only the
god could control". Amos said, "You say this
is beyond the control of men, it
may be so, but there are men who are more than men,
men even as this god whose
smallness I will prove. Come, let us put this matter
to the test".
Amos then sent an attendant in haste to bring back a
Holy Man of the
congregation, who was with his caravan. When the Holy
Man came, Amos showed the
overseer and the priests that such things were not
beyond the control of
enlightened men, for the Holy Man could foretell the
issue, whatever was done
with the ebin.
When Amos left the temple he took with him a woman
named Kedshot, whom he had
won from the priests, and made her free. The
degradation of women to serve the
temples was common in the land of Heth and Amos raised
his voice against it.
When next in the presence of the king, he said,
"The common feelings of all men
condemn fornication, and it is not allowed by your own
laws. Yet if fornication
is sanctified to your god the priests permit it for
their profit. Is it not true
that this wickedness is now so common in the temples
of Heth that the woman who
seeks to sell the services of her body in the drinking
booths can ask no more
than a handful of meal? " The king said,
"Such is the custom of Heth, which is
of long standing and cannot be changed". Amos
said, "Does the long standing of a
custom make it good?"
Amos said, "If your desire is to walk in the
light of Truth you must choose
between your form of worship and righteousness. You
must choose between your
gods of this land, and Truth. If a nation sow the wind
it must be prepared to
reap the whirlwind, for no other crop can spring from
such seed, except through
violation of laws which are never inconsistent".
The king said, "I have long
been patient with you, stranger with the unbridled
tongue, but do not overvex
me". Amos held his peace, for he had disregarded
his own command to his people.
Yet the king heard the words of Amos and was kindly
towards him. When the king
came to Lethsan to buy the wares of the Kenim, Amos
was there with them and the
king said to him, "The gods of Heth are many,
added to those of other places the
gods must be beyond counting. Why are there so many
and which one is it most
profitable to serve? The priests say each has power in
its own place, can this
be so among gods?" Amos said, "There is only
one God, but each man views Him
from a different standpoint and in his own light. It
is even so with lesser
things of Earth, how much more so with the greater
things of Heaven! A mountain
rises up from a plain and men see it from all sides,
and to each it appears
different. Some see it in daylight and others in
moonlight, some at dusk and
some at dawn, it is never alike to all men. Even so do
men view God in different
aspects. As no man knows the whole mountain but sees
it only in part, so men see
God in part, and each man names the part he sees according
to what he sees and
his understanding. Therefore, though it seems that the
gods are numerous because
of their names and differences, each is no more than a
part of the whole. There
is, in Truth, only one God, but what mortal man can
see Him in wholeness?"
The king said, "If this be so, as well it may be,
my eyesight is as good as
yours and I see just as far". Amos said, "He
who has ridden around the mountain
and climbed to its summit knows it best".
The city built by the Children of Light grew in
strength and the people
prospered under Amos and forgot their trials in
Enshamis. When Amos led them
into the land of Heth he was still a young man, but as
the people became many
and strong, so he became heavy in years. The king who
knew Amos died and the
young king did not look upon him with favour, for Amos
did not forbid the Kenim
to go out into other nations.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE LAWS OF AMOS
These are the decrees of Amos, which he made so that
justice should prevail in
the land of his people. That wickedness and wrongdoing
should be destroyed and
the strong prevented from oppressing the weak. Amos
said, "In the days that are
yet to come and for all future, let these decrees
remain as a memorial".
"When they are used in judgment, let the judges
have wisdom and give attention
to the words that are written. Let every judge seek to
root out the wicked and
evildoers from the land and promote the welfare of the
people. If he seek Truth
and Justice among these words, when they are before
him, let him remember that
no written words can serve him fully. Truth and
Justice are but dimly reflected
in the writings and laws of men and must be made
clearer by the light of
righteousness within his own heart".
'The seats of judgement are to be raised above all
small thoughts and unworthy
aims. If petty-minded men are permitted to argue over
the form of sentences or
pick out particular words for attention, then there
will be no end to pettiness.
Let no deduction or interpretation be made from the
decrees, which alters them".
"Judge every man with the scales weighed in his
favour. Do not be hasty in
rendering a decision, time will make it more just. Be
patient and calm in
speech, whatever the provocation. The impatient and
bad-tempered judge is an
unworthy judge who sits astride an untamed
horse."
"The words of a judge must be shaped to fit the
ears of his listeners. They must
be spoken at the right time and in the right manner.
His speech should not be
too long or too short and every word should be well
chosen."
"The frailties of men accompany judges to their
seats, therefore no judge shall
sit in judgement alone. Where no punishment is
provided by decree, then the
judges shall fix the punishment according to past
judgements. Where the words of
a decree refer to men, then women shall be treated in
the same manner, unless it
be otherwise stated elsewhere. A child is one whose
body has not reached manhood
or womanhood."
"When two persons stand before a judge he should
look upon them as though both
were likely to be in the wrong, and when they have
gone, as though both may have
been in the right. The motives of men are many and
strange, and even though they
bow to the judgement the dispute between them may not
be settled with justice."
"When a rich man and a poor man come before a
judge for a decision between them,
he cannot say in his heart, "How can I say the
poor man is wrong and the rich
man is right and add to the misery of the poor
man?" Neither can he say in his
heart, "How can I say the poor man is right and
the rich man is wrong, when the
rich man is powerful and I may be delivered into his
hand?"
"If there is a dispute between men the judges
shall not let one sit and the
other stand, or be patient with one and impatient with
the other. Both may sit
or both may stand and unless one be afflicted they
shall at all times be equal
before the judges."
"A judge shall never say anything that will
indicate a way to win his favour or
to obtain a favourable decision. If all men walked in
righteousness there would
beno need of judges to punish the wicked. Therefore,
righteousness is more
desirable than the laws of men. If all men walked in
the light of Truth there
would be no need of judges to settle disputes between
them. But as men see only
a pale reflection of Truth, and that distorted by
their own understanding of it,
there are times when two men in dispute each believes
truly that he is right. It
is then that they come before the judges, believing
them able to see Truth more
clearly. Let the judges be able to see Truth better
than any who come before
them."
"When a man comes before the judges, having his
life or freedom at stake or the
freedom of one of his family, then the judges shall
first hear reasons why they
should consider him innocent or in the right, and not
why they should consider
him guilty or in the wrong."
"Every man who comes before the pillars of the
judgement place to bear witness
shall be given a drink from the cup of marat and shall
swear the judgement oath
before the shrine and fire. Every man shall be allowed
two months to discover
those who speak for him, and if he ask for another two
months with reason it
shall not be denied him".
These are the decrees of Amos for the Children of
Light:
"It is decreed that no man shall worship in the
temple of any god or stand in
homage before any image or idol. No god shall be
joined with The Supreme Spirit
in worship and the whole of his devotion and worship
shall be given to The
Supreme Spirit."
"It is decreed that no man shall swear an oath in
the name of The Supreme Spirit
or in any other name which shall bind him to do
anything against the Scriptures
of The Supreme Spirit. Neither shall he swear an oath
which will incline his
loyalties and obligations away from those who walk in
their light. But as kings
and governors must be served, and loyalty and
obligation together with duty are
our declared principles, to swear to serve them well
or be faithful to a trust
or an obligation is not denied him. The only solemn
oath binding upon a man
shall be that sworn on his immortal soul, for to swear
in the name of The
Supreme Spirit is forbidden."
"It is decreed that no man shall sell or barter
spiritual knowledge or knowledge
of The Great Path of the True Way. He shall not come
into a sacred place or
enter into prayer while drunk. Neither shall he do
these things when unwashed,
unless he be a wayfarer or one who has come from a
distant place on the same
day. If water is unavailable to purify himself, clean
sand is not to be
despised."
"It is decreed that all those who truly follow
the Great Path of the True Way
and those who are of the Brotherhood of Men who serve
The Supreme Spirit shall
be called the Children of Light. If any among them
shall turn from the Children
of light through fear of others, then he is unworthy
and shall be cast out. He
shall not be numbered among them here or in Heaven,
where there is a special
place for the Children of Light. But those who remain
loyal to the Children of
Light, even though they have to flee to strange
places, if they continue to
struggle there is no wrong in them."
"It is decreed that if a man hear anything about
an evil deed or know something
about it and fail to disclose the knowledge before a
judge or to the judge's
servant, he shall not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that if any man will not bear
witness to murder, to theft or to
adultery, he shall not go unpunished. If he bear false
witness according to his
own understanding, before the flame and shrine, if it
be grievous he shall lose
his tongue."
"It is decreed that if any man make a false
accusation of adultery against his
wife, without just cause and without her acting
indiscreetly, he shall receive
seventy lashes."
"If any man slay another he shall die, unless it
be done in his own defence or
in defence of his house and family. He shall not die
if he who is slain be an
adulterer or a seducer of one within the household of
the slayer."
"It is decreed that if any man slay another in
anger, during an argument or
dispute, and if the fight be fair and equal, then he
shall be exiled. But if any
man slay another by lying in wait, or by guile or by
coming behind him, he shall
not live."
"It is decreed that revengers of blood shall be
appointed by the judges, and no
man shall revenge another of his own blood unless he
be appointed by the
judges."
"It is decreed that if a man slay another without
intent to slay, without hatred
or malice, then he shall not die for the
slaying."
"It is decreed that no man shall be put to death
by the word of one witness. If
a wife cause the death of her husband through neglect
or malice, she shall not
live. The law of blood shedding is: a freeman for a
freeman, a slave for a slave
and a woman for a woman. The free can be enslaved to
repay a death."
"It is decreed that when a man must die because
of his deed, it shall be by the
sword, by drowning or by entombment. A woman shall be
smothered or entombed or
drowned."
"It is decreed that if a man strike his father or
his mother or curse them, he
shall be seized and sold into slavery and the money
received shall be given to
his father and his brothers. But if a man stand
between bis father and his
mother and his sister because he fears for their
lives, then he shall not be
punished. In this case the matter shall not fail to
come before the judges, for
if the father be a man of such violence, how can he
claim to be numbered among
the Children of Light?"
"It is decreed that if a man seize upon another
to sell him into captivity, he
who seizes shall die. If a man smite another so that
he lose an eye or a tooth
or suffer any wound, and this without provocation,
then he who committed the
wrong shall make it good in kind, according to the
judgement."
"It is decreed that if the beast of any man
injure another man within its own
place of confinement, then there shall be no blame
upon the owner of the beast.
But if the beast be outside its place of confinement
and loose, he who owns the
beast shall make restitution in kind. If the beast has
been savage in times past
and this made known to he who owns it, and it strays
beyond the limits of its
enclosure to harm a man, then who owns it shall make
restitution to threefold
the damage. The beast shall also be slain, but the
carcass shall belong to he
who owned the beast."
"It is decreed that if a beast stray beyond the
limits of its confines and being
savage to the knowledge of he who owns it, if it cause
the death of any man,
then he who owns it shall die. But if it be so decreed
by the judges his life
may be ransomed."
"It is decreed that if a man shall cause death or
injury to the beast of any man
and the beast be within its proper place of
confinement or upon the lands of its
owner, then he who caused the death or injury shall
make restitution to
threefold its value. If the beast be outside the lands
of he who owns it and be
the cause of no danger or damage,
then he who caused its death shall make restitution to
its value. If it was
seeming that the beast would be the cause of danger or
much damage, then
providing there was no choice but to slay it, there
shall be no restitution, but
the carcass shall be returned to the owner."
"It is decreed that if the beast of any man cause
the death of another man's
beast, then the beast causing death shall be sold and
the money received divided
between the owners. But if the beast causing the death
was known to be savage
and its owner informed, then he shall make restitution
in full to the value of
the dead beast, but the carcass shall be his."
"It is decreed that if a man shall cause anything
growing within the pastures of
another or upon his cultivated land, to be damaged by
a negligent or purposeful
deed, then he shall make restitution twofold its value.
If a man find the beast
of another man going astray, he shall not pass it
unheeded but shall provide for
its return to its owner. Having done this he shall not
lose or go unrewarded,
but if the owner of the beast be a poor man, then bear
with him."
"It is decreed that if a man set off a fire he
shall make restitution for
whatever it consumes to a like value in kind. But if
he be careless or seek to
bide his deed, then he shall make restitution twofold.
If a thing be scorched or
there is a blackening of wood or stone, the amount to
be paid for restitution
shall be agreed by the judges. If the fire was caused
by accident, then he who
caused it shall make restitution to half the value of
whatever it consumes. The
fire a man handles is like the arrow he shoots, for
the bowman is liable, no
matter how far his arrow flies."
"It is decreed that if a man steal any beast or
fowl and dispose of it so that
it is not recovered, he shall make restitution of
threefold its value and shall
not go unpunished. But if the beast or fowl be
recovered and restored, then he
who stole it shall pay its value and shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a man give anything into
the keeping of another and that
thing be of gold or other metal, or of some other
nature and it be stolen, then
the thief, if caught, shall pay twice its value and
the money shall be divided
equally between he who owns it and he who held it. If
the thing is not restored
to its owner, then the thief, if caught, shall pay its
value threefold and one
part shall go to he who held it and two parts to he
who owned it. The thief
shall not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that if the thief is not found,
then he who held the thing in
safekeeping shall be brought before the judges and questioned
about his
integrity. If he took the thing for bis own use he
shall restore its value
twofold and shall not go unpunished. If he dealt with
it carelessly, then he
shall make restitution to its value, but if he was not
careless he shall not be
called upon to do so. But if he were paid for the
safekeeping of the thing, then
he shall restore its value."
"It is decreed that if a man give a beast or fowl
into the safekeeping of
another and it be stolen or injured and die, then if
he in whose keeping it was
be found careless in its keeping, he shall make
restitution of its value. If he
be not found careless, then he shall not be called
upon to make restitution. If
it be stolen from him and he be paid for its
safekeeping, then he shall make
restitution of its value. If the thief be found, he
shall make restitution to
threefold its value and shall not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that to take from a child, or from
a man who is both deaf and
dumb, or from a blind man, or from an idiot, is stealing
and shall be punished
as theft."
"It is decreed that if a man steal the boat of
another or push it into the water
so that it goes away or loose any rope that holds it,
so that it is lost, he
shall restore its value twofold and shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that if any man steal from a house
on fire or from a house
abandoned by flood, he shall become enslaved to the
owner."
"It is decreed that if a man steal from a temple
or holy place he shall be
whipped and sold into slavery and his price given to
the temple or holy place."
"It is decreed that for all manner of disputes
regarding beast or anything
without life, whether it be lost or not, where
different men make claim to own
it the dispute shall be decided by the judges. He whom
the judges decide to be
wrong shall pay its value to he who was the true
owner. If he who is wrong has
been malicious or avaricious, then he shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a man borrow a beast or
anything without life, the owner
not being with it, and it be lost or damaged or
injured or die, then he who
borrowed it shall make good its value. If a man find a
thing that was lost and
keep it, or he withhold from another that which is
rightly his, then he shall
restore it and make payment of its value in kind. If
he swear falsely about
these things, then he shall make restitution to
twofold its value. If the thing
be not restored he shall also restore its value."
"It is decreed that if a man make a false report
regarding another so that he be
harmed in substance, then he who did the harming shall
make restitution of
twofold the amount of damage done, according to the
decision of the judges. If
he knew not that the report was false, then the judges
shall judge him according
to his dealings in the matter. If it be not done
carelessly and with bad intent,
then he shall make a smaller payment and shall go to
the man he wronged and make
amends with words. It is an obligation on every man
hearing a report to discover
its truth before letting go. Carelessness with words
should not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that if any man bear false witness
against another and he be not
otherwise punished, or to a lesser extent, then he
shall bear upon himself the
punishment he would have brought down upon the other
and shall also make payment
as the judges decree."
"It is decreed that if a man take a bribe to turn
a judgement, then he and the
man who gave it shall make restitution twofold to he
who was wronged, and
neither shall go unpunished."
" It is decreed that no man who sits in judgement
in any place shall take a gift
or benefit from any man because of his position. If
any man seeking a decision
shall give a gift or benefit to another to speak words
in his favour, or shall
forbear to do anything that words may be turned, he
shall not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a man take advantage of
the ignorance of another, or gain
advantage from his dealings with an idiot, he shall
make threefold restitution.
If a man deceive another to his loss, or take anything
from him by violence or
threats, he shall make threefold restitution."
"It is decreed that if a man declare a falsehood
to the loss of another, the
loss shall be made good in kind twice its value. If a
man deceive another who
has entrusted him with goods, he shall make twofold
restitution. If a man
deliver a beast or thing without life, making payment
to another who deals with
them, if the one who deals with them or carries them
loses them or fails to
deliver, he shall make restitution of their value. If
he be found careless in
his dealings by the judges he shall make restitution
to twice their value, but
if he be waylaid or struck by powers above man he
shall not make payment."
"It is decreed that if a scribe alter a record or
make a false writing he shall
be punished with thirty lashes. If a man suffer loss
because of the scribe, the
loss shall be made good by twice its value. He who
does wrong or causes any
loss, be it done with purpose or without purpose, and
seeks to blame another who
is innocent, shall bear the guilt of his deed. He
shall not go unpunished for
his deceit and shall make payment to the man he sought
to blame."
"It is decreed that if a man have a maidservant
or slave and he seek to give her
to his son in marriage, he shall deal with her as a
daughter. If he smite a
manservant or a maidservant so that they lose blood or
cannot move about, or if
they suffer pain for three days, he shall be brought
before the judges and they
shall decide upon his dealings and bring justice to
the one injured. It shall be
within the power of the judges to free a slave from an
unworthy master and place
him with another, either as a slave or a
freeman."
"It is decreed that if a master die and all those
of his blood be absent, his
servant or slave shall send for them without delay. If
the servant or slave
steal anything with life or without life from the dead
man, he shall be whipped.
If a servant, he shall be made a slave. If one who is
of the same blood as the
dead man steal, he shall be denied his inheritance. If
he would not have
inherited, he shall make twofold restitution."
"It is decreed that a master shall not allow his
servant or slave to remain
unmarried if they wish to marry. No man or woman
having a child above the age of
marriage should forbid a marriage because of their
selfishness. It is their duty
to see that their child is not left without children.
The duty of a child
towards father and mother is great, but the duty to
marry is greater. If a man
have a slave who serves him loyally and is righteous,
he should set him free to
serve as a servant. Slavekeeping is not forbidden, but
it is not goodness, the
truly righteous man sustains the poor by finding work
for their hands. When a
land is divided into large portions worked by lowly
men and slaves, it is in a
weak condition and ripe for the plucking. It is a
truth that if men are so
oppressed with toil and servitude they lose the
manliness which would make them
rise against their oppressors, they will not have the
stomach to withstand those
who invade the land. But whether the land remains at
peace or is invaded, it is
no longer great."
"It is decreed mat the inheritance of a man shall
not go to his sons alone, for
the daughters are not to be denied their portion. If
he have no sons it shall
pass to his wives and daughters. If he have no wife or
daughter it shall pass to
his brothers. If he have no brother it shall pass to
his sisters. If he have no
sister it shall pass to his father's brothers. If his
father have no brother it
shall pass to the next nearest to him in blood, but
not to a woman."
"It is decreed that if a son or daughter be
adopted, they shall be as though
they were of the same blood as he who adopted them.
Those who stand together in
blood shall not be given their portion by decree, for
a man knows those of his
own blood best. The portions a man declares shall be
fair, when all his reasons
are known. If it be not thought fair the judges can
decide, but they must
remember that a man knows those of his blood
best."
"It is decreed that no woman having an
inheritance shall marry a man who is not
of the Children of light. If she does so her
possessions shall not go with her.
A man should not forget the portion for his father and
mother."
"It is decreed that if a man who bears witness to
an inheritance and its portion
shall change it so that a man suffer a loss, then he
shall make twofold
retribution and not go unpunished. If he who bears
witness fear that he who died
made an error and seek to adjust it, there shall be no
blame if he deal justly."
"It is decreed that if a man die without wife or
children his inheritance shall
go to his mother and father, and when they die to his
brothers and sisters. If
he have wives but no children the inheritance shall be
theirs, but if one die
while his mother and father live, her portion shall go
to them."
"It is decreed that no man shall be denied his
portion, if he be worthy and
righteous and not an idiot. A man's inheritance should
be shared out fairly
among all of his blood."
"It is decreed that if a wife die and have an
inheritance, the portion of her
husband shall be half and the other half she may leave
to her mother or father,
or to her brothers and sisters. But if she have
children, then the other half
shall be theirs."
"It is decreed that if a man die and have wife or
children, they shall not be
put out of their habitation. If a wife remarry and
there are others of her
husband's blood within the habitation who are not
children, she shall not remain
there."
"It is decreed that the wives of a man who has
died shall be able to marry again
after one year and no restraint shall be placed upon
them against remarriage."
"It is decreed that no man shall cause his
daughter or any other woman to remain
a maiden under oath. Strife between the children of
the same father to the same
mother is worse than bloodshed. These things are the
obligations of a father
towards his son: to teach him a craft, to teach him to
defend himself and his
wife and children, to teach him the wisdom of the
Sacred Books and to find him a
wife. These things are the obligations of a mother
towards her daughter: to
teach her housewifery and the care of children, to
teach her the craft of
clothes and to teach her the womanly virtues according
to the Sacred Books. A
father should never show favour to one son over
another. A child should be
instructed in the Sacred Books as soon as it is able
to talk. A wife should be
able to prepare flour and bake bread, cook food and
brew, gather herbs, wash and
mend clothes, keep her dwelling neat and clean. She
should be able to make all
things and do all things for the comfort of her
husband; to suckle his children
and work in linen, wool, pottery, basketry and
tapestry. If she brought one
maidservant from her father's house, she should give
her the least important of
the tasks, but no matter how many maidservants
accompanied her, she should never
neglect the care and upbringing of her children or be
idle. There is an excuse
for the poor woman whose children are wilful and
unruly, but none for the rich
woman who has all the time to devote to them. They and
her husband are her
greatest obligations and her most important concern.
The husband who permits his
wife to be slothful or idle inclines her towards
unfaithfulness. A man without a
wife may not be man, but one with an unchaste wife
certainly is not."
"It is decreed that a man shall not pledge his
daughter in marriage while she is
still young, but must wait until she can say
"yes" or "no" to his choice. A
worthless wife or one who is lewd, a wife who displays
herself immodestly before
other men, or is over wasteful, may be enslaved within
her own household but
cannot be sold outside of it. A woman may become an
inferior wife by decision of
the judges. It is intended that the pledges of
marriage shall be maintained
until death."
"It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife and
she be of good character, he
shall leave their dwelling or provide another suitable
for her until she marry
again. A man and wife shall not be intruded upon and
their enjoyment of each
other shall be unhampered by any other. Every child is
entitled to proper
shelter, bed, food, upbringing and instruction. If a child
have no father or
mother or if they be proven worthless, the judges
shall appoint a guardian for
it. If an unmarried woman become with child it shall
be a disgrace upon her
father who shall be called before the judges. If she
have no father, then her
mother or her brothers or the person having care of
her. If a wife fear she
cannot be trusted or remain faithful to her pledges
she shall not deceive her
husband but declare herself truly, and he shall decide
whether to put her away
or not. If he decide to keep her and she prove
unworthy, her punishment shall be
lessened. The punishment of an unfaithful wife is not
only for the deed but for
the deception."
"It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife
they shall not come together again
without renewing the pledges of marriage after they
have the permission of the
judges. If it be done it shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a wife fear for herself at
the hands of her husband, she
may come before the judges who will decide for her welfare.
Men should treat
their wives with kindness and generosity. It is the
duty of a wife to be
faithful to her husband; to be modest in the presence
of others and to be
prudent during her husband's absence. A wife must not
only be faithful, but she
must give her husband no cause to suspect her of
unfaithfulness. A wife must
never forget that marriage was ordained for the
benefit and protection of women.
Therefore, they have the greater obligation in
upholding it. Wanton women for
forncators and good women for good men, that is the
rule! Thus shall the cause
of mankind be advanced and calamity kept from the
heart. The upright man who
walks in the paths of duty and obligation is allowed
all things wholesome and
healthful. He should marry only a chaste woman who
would be a good mother to his
children. He should live with her in cleanliness of
heart and meet her without
the stain of fornication. It is not wholly good to
maintain a concubine, but an
unchaste woman may be kept as one or lain with if a
slave."
"It is decreed that before a man and woman come
to judges seeking a divorcement,
there shall have been a meeting between those of their
blood. There shall be a
man or woman of the wife's blood and a man or woman of
the husband's blood who,
between them, shall choose another not of their blood
to deliberate with them.
Let them try to reach agreement and strive to heal the
breacn with goodwill, and
if anyone have a grievance it should not be
hidden."
"It is decreed that before every marriage there
shall be an announcement of
betrothals in a public place. If anyone have something
to say regarding the man
or the woman, not in their favour, he shall declare it
to the nearest of their
blood and one who witnesses. If any man hide within
his breast something that
should be declared, or speak about it after the
marriage, he shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a man say a betrothed
woman is unchaste, without proper
cause, he shall be punished with twenty lashes and if
a woman do so she shall be
punished with twenty stripes. If a man know a
betrothed woman to be unchaste and
fail to make it known, he shall be punished with forty
lashes and shall make
repayment as the judges decide. If a woman, she shall
receive thirty stripes. No
marriage shall take place until seven weeks after the
betrothal. No fornication
shall be committed during this time, for it would be a
betrayal of marriage, and
your soul bears witness to your deeds."
"It is decreed that when a man takes to himself a
wife and is newly married he
shall not be called upon to take up weapons or to
serve away from home for one
year. If he is taken away he must not be separated
from his wife. A marriage is
the union of flesh with flesh and of spirit reaching
out to spirit. It shall be
witnessed by two men and two women and declared before
men by the man giving the
woman a ring and bangle and piece of silver, and by
her giving him a lock of
hair and piece of woven cloth."
"It is decreed that all women who are not unchaste
are women reserved for
marriage. They shall, be sought as wives with
respectful conduct and without
fornication or deceit. A man who seduces them shall
not go unpunished. It is not
wrong for a man to make a proposal of marriage to a
woman within the time she is
denied to him. A promise of marriage shall not be made
in secret, for such
promises often cover shame and deceit."
It is decreed that if a man accuse his wife of
adultery or lewdness and there be
no other witness, he shall swear three times on his
immortal soul that he speaks
the truth. His words shall be accepted, for if he
swear a falsehood he has
condemned himself and his soul to most grievous
punishment. But if the wife
likewise swear three times that the words sworn to by
the man were false, then
it shall not before the judges to decide which has
damned their soul. Both shall
go their own ways and if one speak to the other, that
one shall not go
unpunished; if they both speak, then both shall be
punished. The judges shall
receive reports on both and if one of them cease to
live a righteous life, that
one shall be cast out."
"It is decreed that if a man divorce a woman who
has done no grievous wrong, he
shall support her in the household of one of her blood
for six months. If the
woman be with child and she hide it from the father,
she shall not go
unpunished, neither shall they with whom she dwells.
If she be found with child,
then she shall be treated with kindness and
consideration and those of the
child's blood may seek a reconciliation between its
mother and father. Both must
act fairly towards the other and in righteousness and
good faith."
"It is decreed that a wife may be divorced once
and taken back, but if she be
divorced again she shall not be taken back. The things
a man gives his wife
during marriage remain hers. A woman who is divorced
without committing any
grievous wrong is to be treated kindly and generously
by her husband. A woman
shall not be divorced while carrying a child or
suckling it, unless it be the
child of adultery. If a man be called to high office
with the Elect of the
Children of Light and his wife prefer earthly things
to spiritual things, then
they may agree to a just and fair divorce. Such a
woman would be a burden, for
her soul is heavy with darkness."
"It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife he
shall put no restraint upon
her. She shall not take his heir with her and if
children go with her their
father shall sustain and clothe them. A true man makes
fair provision."
"It is decreed that if a man seduce a maiden he
shall endow her with goods as
though she were his wife and bestow upon her all the
benefits due to a wife. He
shall do this even though her father keep her from
him."
"It is decreed that if a man permit his wife to become
a whore, he shall be
declared unworthy of a wife and shall not marry. His
wife shall be removed from
him so that he has none, and he shall not go
unpunished. If a man permit his
daughter to become a whore he shall die."
"It is decreed that as a woman may be taken in
lust with her consent, if it be
done, both man and woman shall bear the guilt alike
and neither be more
deserving of punishment than the other. But if the
woman be a child or an idiot,
or if she be protected by the judges, it shall be as
though she were ravished
without consent. When a woman is taken with force it
shall be punished with
death. If the deed be done in the fields or in places
where women go away from
the abodes of men, or in a forest or uncultivated
place, or where no man can
hear her cry, then it shall be taken by the judges
that the deed was done
without her consent, unless otherwise proven. But the
woman shall explain her
presence alone. If it be done in the city, among
habitations, and the woman made
no call for help and did not cry out, it shall be
taken that she consented,
unless threatened with death or mutilation by a
weapon. Where there has been no
struggle, then it was with her consent, for no man can
take a woman without her
consent while she is conscious."
"It is decreed that if a man commit adultery with
his son's wife or his wife's
mother, both shall die by stoning. If a married women
commit adultery, both she
and the man with whom she committed it shall die. A
husband may ransom his wife,
but if he does he shall be cast out from the people,
lest he bring corruption
upon them. When a woman is ransomed from adultery he
who shared the blame with
her shall not die, but he shall not go unpunished.
When judging the adulterer or
adulteress, the whore and the whoremonger, deal with
them strictly and without
compassion, for they are the enemies of love. They
place man back among the
beasts. A fornicator should not marry a chaste woman,
but it is not forbidden. A
whore shall not marry among the Children of Light. The
sins of whoredom are not
unforgivable and those who truly show repentance over
many years may be accepted
back into the Children of Light. A woman who becomes a
whore to feed a starving
child has committed no great wrong. The wrongdoing is
by the people."
"It is decreed that no man shall permit a female
slave to engage in fornication
and it is his duty to keep her modest and free from
lewdness. If, after
marriage, slaves commit adultery they shall not be
punished to the extent of a
free person, for they have been brought up as slaves.
Though the punishment of a
slave be less, the master may be punished, if the
slave warranted punishment
because of his neglect."
"It is decreed that a man shall not be guilty of
adultery except with a married
woman. If a woman have three witnesses against her for
whoring, or she does not
deny it, she shall be shut up in a place alone where
no man can come at her.
There, she shall weave or work for her sustenance, and
if any man come to lie
with her he shall be punished. If the judges decree
and a man be found willing
to take her, with obligations for her keeping, she may
be enslaved to him. If a
whore run away from her place of confinement or from
her master she shall die."
"It is decreed that if a man have a woman slave
who is a maiden and the intended
wife of a freeman, he shall not lie with her. If a man
he with a slave and she
become with child, he shall not sell her or cease to
support her. If a woman
slave marry the slave of another master, then her
master shall not restrain her
unduly, but he shall meet with the master of her
husband and make an arrangement
concerning her that is fair and just."
"It is decreed that the punishment for whoring
shall not be upward of two years.
If a woman be accused of fornication and three bear
witness against her, she
shall be treated as a whore. A maiden cannot be guilty
of whoring after a man."
"It is decreed that the Children of Light shall
not deny their servants or their
slaves, or the ignorant among them, their own gods,
for they have no better
light. Even as the dim glow of an ember comforts a
child in darkness, so are
they comforted. The gods Teloth, Yole, Yahwelwa, Bel,
Behalim, Elim and all the
lesser gods of light may have a shrine in the city and
lands about it, to serve
those who would be blinded by a greater light. Better
the glow from rotted wood
than no light at all. Negil, Mudu, Hani, Neflim and
the gods of darkness shall
not be permitted to the servants and to the slaves and
to the ignorant. But the
stranger shall not be denied his god, for the Children
of Light are not denied
their light and dwell in peace among strangers."
"It is decreed that if the tongue of the stranger
stray to lewdness in the
presence of women, or he cast lustful looks upon them,
he shall be spoken to and
warned. If the warning is not heeded he shall be
dismissed, so that the women be
established in their goodness and be honoured among
men. In the lands of
strangers, where deceit is considered a virtue and
vanity a womanly charm, there
is no understanding of women who are modest and
restrained. Men treat women as
they find them, therefore women should restrain their
glances and conduct
themselves with modesty. They should not display too
much of their body or
reveal clothes that are not overgarments. They should
not reveal the nakedness
of their bosoms. It shall not be wrong for woman to
uncover before woman, or
before young children who'will grow to be men but have
not reached the age of
full talking."
"It is decreed that if a wife be guilty of
lewdness before the eyes of men, or
provoke them to lust after her, she shall not go
unpunished by her husband and
can lose her rights of inheritance. If any man
complain to the judges about her,
then her husband shall be called before them to
account for her. If a maiden be
proven guilty of lewdness, then her father or guardian
shall not go unpunished.
If a man be so punished he shall not revenge himself
on the maiden or her
mother, for the fault is not theirs alone and he must
bear his burden manfully.
It is well to deal with daughters kindly, so that they
are not estranged. In
chastising a daughter for something bad in her, do not
overlook the good. If the
wife of a man in high position be guilty of any
lewdness or other unwomanly
thing, her punishment shall be doubled, for she is
unworthy of her trust."
"It is decreed that if a man slander a woman who
is virtuous but careless, he
shall come before judges to swear to the truth of his
words. If he decline or
his words be proven against him he shall not go
unpunished. If the man swear,
then the woman shall be brought before the judges to
swear likewise that his
words are false, and if she decline, his words are
established. If both swear
they shall go out, but one soul has condemned itself
to punishment."
"It is decreed that when a woman is beyond the
age of childbearing it shall not
be wrong if she lay aside the garments of modesty,
providing she does not
degrade modesty or is unmarried. It shall not be done
so that she display some
part of her body not commonly displayed by women.
Neither shall she display any
ugliness, but what she does shall be done with decorum
and grace. No woman slave
shall be made to do any deed of lewdness and her
modesty shall be honoured. If
she be forced into lewdness or immodesty she shall
bear no sin, but he who
forced her shall not go unpunished. Lewd talk about
women and foul speech shall
not go unpunished,"
"It is decreed that the fat of a beast that has
died of itself or been torn by
another beast may be used, providing it is not eaten
or placed upon the body in
any way. The flesh may be given to another beast to
eat, but if any part of it
is given to a man without him knowing its nature, he
who gave it shall not go
unpunished. No man shall eat the flesh of the falcon,
the vulture, the eagle,
the crow, the raven, the ibis, the owl, the hawk, the
pelican, or of any bird
that wades in water and has legs greater than the
height of its body. These
creeping things shall not be eaten: the beetle, the
snail, the ant, the slug,
the grasshopper, all manner of lice and all creeping
things less in size than a
finger joint, and everything that creeps upon the
ground without legs. The cat,
the dog, the mouse, the mole, the weasel and the fox
shall not be eaten. To
overeat is as harmful as to starve. To fast is not an
empty deed and is
healthful for both spirit and body.
It teaches discipline and self-control as well as
moderation and frugality. Food
is never lacking in the places where justice holds
sway. Consume food slowly and
with content, for a restless stomach robs it of taste
and goodness. The man who
overeats is worse than the beast who knows no better.
If any man pollute food he
shall not go unpunished."
"It is decreed that if a man steal water from the
land of another or cause it to
run away, or if he pollute it, he shall not go
unpunished. If there be loss,
then he shall make threefold restitution. Water in
which there is a carcass
shall not be used to drink. A man may drink wine or
beer, or anything that is
not unwholesome, providing he maintains his
self-control and decency, but no
longer. He who causes strife or harm to another
because of something he has put
into his mouth, shall not go unpunished. Wine taken in
moderation is not wrong,
unless it lead the hand to wickedness. No fruitbearing
tree shall be cut down
until it ceases to bear or dies."
"It is decreed that no man shall leave a dead
beast undealt with. If he do so he
shall not go unpunished, for if it be not eaten or
used it must be buried. If a
man place anything that is foul into a storage pit or
among stored corn, he
shall make fourfold restitution and shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that no man shall cut his flesh
for adornment or make any mark
upon it which cannot be removed, though the ears of
men and women may be
pierced.
Circumcision such as the strangers practise is
mutilation and is forbidden."
"It is decreed that no man shall engage in usury,
but shall deal with men in
fairness and moderation. Payments and punishments
shall be decided by the
judges."
"It is decreed that no man shall associate with
another who deals with spells or
calls up the spirits of the dead. If he do he shall
not go unpunished and those
who practise sorcery shall be cast out."
"It is decreed that no man shall cheat in weight
or measure and he who does
shall make threefold restitution and not go
unpunished. No man shall take
advantage of the misfortune of another of his own
blood and shall not buy their
house, their field, their beast or anything without
life, to his own advantage.
No man should lend upon interest to another of his own
blood or to a friend, for
this is the cause of much strife."
"It is decreed that if a man remove a beast or a
fowl or a fish from a trap laid
by another, he is stealing. If a man is collecting
fruit from the top of a tree,
it is stealing to take whatever falls to the ground.
If a man borrow something
and sell it, or sell something in his keeping
belonging to another, it is
stealing. If a man do any of these things he shall
make restitution as though he
had stolen them."
"It is decreed that if a man receive a beast or
anything with life or without
life from another, and the two do not have proper
witnesses, whether it be sold
or given the two shall be punished by making payment
as the judges decide."
"It is decreed that no man shall cut the living
flesh from any beast or remove a
limb or a piece of hide while it lives, and if he do
he shall not go unpunished.
The law of life demands that men eat and that beasts
be slain for food, but this
should be done with least pain and distress to the
beasts. No beast shall be
tormented for the enjoyment of its suffering and shall
not be confined with
cruelty, and he who does so shall not go unpunished. A
beast and its young shall
not be slain within sight of each other, or where the
blood of the other can be
smclled. No man should partake of food or drink while
beasts in his charge go
unprovided and uncared for."
"It is decreed that if a man carry weapons
without the right to do so, he shall
be punished with thirty lashes. If another be hurt so
that blood is drawn
unjustly, restitution shall be made for any loss and
payment made according to
the decree of the judges. If a man who carries weapons
without the right wound
another grievously, he shall die. It is cowardly to
slay a man who has cast down
his weapons in surrender, or to slay a woman or child.
It is cowardly to torture
a man who is helpless in your power or a bound
captive. These things are
unworthy. Treat a captive with firmness and dignity.
When in battle raise your
thoughts above the spoil, look to Heaven for your
reward. Peace is the proper
course for all men to follow, but peace at any price
is a delusion. Therefore,
it may better become a man of peace to stir up the
righteous to fight. Ten
courageous men can overcome a hundred of lesser
courage. Prepare for war with
peace in your heart and with regret, but for the sake
of the cause press forward
resolutely. Be at peace within yourself through gain
or loss, advance or
retreat, victory or defeat. The peaceful man who
shouts "Peace at any price"
does not prevent war, he only steps aside to put
another to the fore who will
slay and be slain. That is contemptible and worse than
if he had stood his own
ground."
"It is decreed that if a man or woman be bound to
another for a debt or payment,
they shall be fed, clothed and given shelter. They
shall not be beaten or
ill-treated, but they should do a full day's work.
Their welfare shall be in the
hands of the judges."
"It is decreed that if two men enter upon the
same wrongdoing together, or one
against the other, both shall be punished alike,
except if one be in the power
of the other."
"It is decreed that games of chance played for
money shall be undertaken only in
moderation and if any man cheat or weigh the game
unfairly, he shall not go
unpunished."
"It is decreed that no man or woman who is of the
Children of Light shall marry
another who is not, for this is wrong against their
children, whose upbringing
is divided against itself. A slavewoman who believes
as her master is better for
a mate than a freewoman who does not, even though the
freewoman be more
pleasing. No man shall permit his maiden daughter to
marry a man who is not of
the Children of Light. A slave who is righteous and
walks in the light would be
better, even though he be unacceptable to her
father."
"It is decreed that if a man withhold from an
orphan or anyone under his care
that which is theirs, if it be done without cause or
to his benefit, he shall
not go unpunished and shall also make twofold
restitution. He shall not deny
them the right to marry, or if it be a man the right
to his own livelihood. If a
man or woman of a man's own blood be in his care
because they are an idiot or
incapable, then let not the burden of responsibihty
for their own sustenance
fall upon them. Keep them from harm, support them with
food and maintain them in
clothes. The man who is rich and powerful has a duty
to protect the destitute
and ailing woman from the afflictions of life and from
the wiles of men."
"It is decreed that if any man or woman die,
those who stand next to them in
blood shall be responsible for the disposal of the
body. Those who declare the
need to burn the body so that the departed one may use
its essence in Heaven,
indulge in a vain superstition."
"It is decreed that if anyone seek refuge within
the sanctuary of the temple, it
shall not be denied them, and if any violate this
sanctuary they shall not go
unpunished.The labours of the sanctuary shall not be
diminished."
"It is decreed that the measure within a logua
shall be equal to the water which
can be contained in twelve blown eggs of the
groundfowl. The weight of a silver
shekel shall be the same as barleycorns numbered
according to the days in the
year. The length of a cubit shall be the same as
forty-eight barleycorns. From
these all things shall be weighed and measured."
"It is decreed that a man may be declared to be
outside the law, and then though
he be liable to all restrictions and penalties which
it imposes, he can enjoy
none of it benefits or its protection. If a man be
declared fully beyond the
law, no other shall speak to him or supply him with
food or clothing or shelter.
If a man be declared an outlaw, he is to be slain on
sight. If exiled, he is to
be slain if he return from his place of exile."
"It is decreed that no man shall make an image of
any god or make anything in
the likeness of a god, but all objects of beauty can
be made. Anything can be
made bearing the likeness or image of a man, woman or
beast, providing it be
done with good taste and without obscenity."
"It is decreed that if anyone attempt to slay
another with poison, they shall
die, even though they have not succeeded. All who aid
them in the deed or seek
to hide it shall also die."
"It is decreed that if anyone take their own life
they shall not be buried or
burnt for three days."
"It is decreed that if a man die having no son or
daughter, and no one of his
own blood who can claim, a son or daughter born to his
wife after remarriage may
become his heir."
"Justice and Truth are not in the safekeeping of
the judges. They are, to those
who sit in judgement, as the sun is to other men.
Every man who comes before the
judges should walk in the light of Truth and Justice,
even though he speak
against himself or against those of his own blood. The
man who bears witness
should take no heed whether he be on the side of the
rich or the poor. He should
not follow the road of passion or the paths of his own
prejudices, lest he lose
the guiding light of Truth. The man who hides within
himself knowledge that
would assist the cause of Justice and Truth inflicts
an injustice upon his own
soul."
"A too hasty decision by the judges often
inclines towards injustice. Therefore,
when the judges have heard all and every word has been
spoken by those who have
a right to speak, the judges shall retire and pray.
Each should say, within his
heart, "I will consider my words carefully before
I speak and they will be
uttered in the purity of Truth, untainted by falsity
or hypocrisy. I will not be
harsh in my judgement and it will be bent towards a
benefit rather than a loss.
My speech will be directed towards the safeguarding of
others and be without any
taint of malice or evil intent."
CHAPTER SIX
THE TALE OF HIRAM
Thute, the son of Pelath, a freeman of Elanmora in the
land of the Hethim, wrote
these things in the harvest years of his life, when
his heart was filled with
wisdom and understanding. He who reads them with the
eyes alone will derive
little benefit, but he who receives them with an
enlightened and uplifted heart
will find a response within the depths of his own
spirit.
While Hiram Uribas, son of Hashem, was still a
beardless youth taking his
pleasure among the riches and splendour of his
father's house, a wise man came
from a faraway land. He came, not as a great man riding
with a rich caravan but
weary-footed, begging water and food. These were not
denied him and while he sat
in the shade, slaking his thirst and satisfying his
hunger, Hiram, the youth,
came up to him with courteous greetings. The wise man
was pleased and poured out
words like jewels, so that the young man became filled
with the desire for
wisdom and Truth, swearing that from that day forward
he would devote his life
to the search for them.
After the departure of the wise man, Hiram became
restless under his father's
roof and it was not long before he set off with a
bundle of food and skin of
water for Uraslim. Arriving there he slept in the
house of Gabel, a servant at
the temple of the Winged God of Fire, and from thence
he journeyed towards
Bethshemis, which lies past Tirgalud, on the road to
Egypt. Hiram was a young
man of his people, tall of stature, with a darting
bright-eyed glance. His long,
band-bound hair hung low on bis shoulders and his
stride was wide and firm.
He came upon Bethshemis close to nightfall, when it
was not good to enter the
city, and therefore as darkness closed about him he
prepared to lay himself down
beneath the wall of a vineyard. This was owned by a
wealthy widow who, seeing
the young man preparing for the night, sent men out to
bring him into her guest
house. The widow was neither old nor unbeautiful and
when she saw the comeliness
of the young man her heart was gladdened and she bade
him welcome. Hiram did not
depart with the light of the morning and it came to
pass that the widow offered
him a high place on her estates. Hiram accepted, for
he was young and pleased
with the honour, but in the course of time the widow
had become enamoured with
him and sought to make him her husband. Hiram sought a
way of release from this,
for he had already heard tales of the woman's many
lovers.
The widow said to Hiram, "Be my husband, for the
one I had has died and left no
heir. Let us enjoy the fruits of your manhood, for I
desire the seed of your
body, so that I may have a splendid son. I will give
you robes of blue and red
and they will be laced with chains of gold. You shall
ride in a high chariot
wheeled with brass and poled with copper. Many
servants will attend you and wise
men brought from East and West will fill your heart
with wisdom. You shall lack
nothing that satisfies your desires."
Hiram was not at ease with himself, for he was young
and lacked the wisdom to
deal with the situation. He answered the widow hastily
in these words, "You are
a woman of beauty and this alone makes you a desirable
treasure to men, but how
would it fare with me in marriage? It is said that you
have had many lovers and
they find you as a smouldering fire in a cold room, a
door restraining neither
wind nor sand, a roof that falls in upon the sleeper
beneath it, a boat that
drowns the boatman, the crust over a quicksand, water
that does not slake the
thirst and food that sits heavily on the stomach.
Which man did you ever love
with constancy, so that he walked in the joy of
contentment? Which man could
ever call you his?"
The words from his mouth stung the widow like hornets
and she flew into a rage
after the manner of women. She called upon her
servants and they beat Hiram with
sticks and drove him off her estate. With a little
more wisdom in his heart, he
continued on his way into Egypt and after many days he
arrived at the city of
On.
Hiram dwelt among the Southern Men on the outskirts of
the city, for many had
been captured during the wars and made slaves. When
lustfully aroused the bodies
of these men exude a sweet odour like honey, which no
man can detect and it
makes all women succumb to them. This is the manner in
which the nation of Egypt
sacrificed its purity. In the days when Hiram came to
Egypt the Pharaoh Athmos
ruled.
In those days Egypt was at war with the Abramites, for
their great red-headed
king had committed adultery with the wife of a prince
of Paran. The remorseful
king reaped as he had sown, for his favourite daughter
was ravished by her own
brother and his wives were humiliated and ravished
before the eyes of all men.
Because of the war, there was much coming and going of
strangers in the city of
On and Hiram went unnoticed.
Hiram dwelt long in Egypt and absorbed its wisdom, but
the thing which delighted
his heart the most was the tale of its long-hidden
treasures. He learnt about
the nest-burning bird whose wondrous many-hued egg
granted men the gift of
eternal life. He heard about the serpent pearls and
the bright jewels which
glowed with the light of the sun even on the darkest
night. All these things he
desired to possess for himself.
The nesting place of the nest-burning bird was among
the Mothbenim, eastward of
Egypt, but among the treasures of Egypt was one of its
eggs. The egg, the pearls
and the jewels were safeguarded in a dark cave upon an
island called Inmishpet,
which was set in the middle of a lake called Sidana.
In the waters of the lake
were fearsome watermonsters, part beast, part fish. On
the shores of the lake
dwelt the shapeshifting priests, guardians of the
treasures.
Northward of the lake was a broad pastureland where
the shepherd Naymin tended
the temple flocks, but Naymin was old and had no son
who would follow him.
Therefore, he took Hiram into his household and Hiram
became as a son to him,
tending the sheep of the temple, and no Egyptian was
with him.
One day, while the sheep still suckled their lambs,
Hiram was out in the
pastures, sitting near the cool waters because of the
heat. As he reclined in
the shade he played gay shepherd tunes on his flute
and in the many times he had
been there no one had ever disturbed him. Yet not far
away was the House of the
Virgins of Elre, but the maidens who dwelt there
rarely went abroad.
This day, however, Asu, daughter of the High Priest,
walked abroad and hearing
the melody of the flute drew near to listen, but Hiram
did not see her because
of the bush between them. The maiden sat down, taking
the sandals of her feet.
Hearing a cry from one of the sheep in the distance
Hiram stopped playing and
stood up, his back towards the maiden. She, seeing him
standing up, sought to
creep away before he saw her, but as she did so her
foot was pierced by a thorn
and she let out a cry of pain. Hiram turned and seeing
her distress hastened to
help her. He withdrew the thorn tenderly and carried
her down to the pool, so
that she could bathe the foot in cool waters. While
she did so he entertained
her with sweet melodies on his flute.
The maiden fell in love with Hiram and he with her,
but because she was a
dedicated virgin and daughter of the High Priest
neither could open the doors of
their heart. The maiden spent nights weeping, for she
had a love for which there
was no remedy. Hiram took his flock to other pastures,
but still their hearts
drew them back to the place of meeting and they met
again and yet again.
Now, the wife of Naymin noticed that Hiram pined as
with a sickness and she
spoke to him about it, and he told her of Asu, the
maiden from the House of the
Virgins of Elre. The wife of Naymin spoke words of
consolation for this hopeless
love, knowing they helped but little.
In the fullness of the year Hiram took his flock to
distant pastures around the
other side of the lake. While he was away the wife of
Naymin took herself down
to the place where he was wont to meet Asu, and one
day Asu came. She was known
to the wife of Naymin who was the gatherer of herbs
for the temple. They spoke
of many things, of Hiram and of the gods, of priests
and their ways and of
temples and those who served in them, of life and of
man and of woman.
Now, when Hiram returned it was nigh the feast of
sheepslaying and at this time
sacrifices of lambs were made to the watermonsters in
the lake. While away Hiram
had thought about Asu and about the treasure of Egypt,
both seemingly equally
unattainable. The wife of Naymin spoke to him rarely
and Hiram wondered, for
this is not the way of women.
On the eve of the feast of sheepslaying the lake boats
were prepared for the
annual pilgrimage to the island. Among these was the
great boat of Erab, kept in
memory of the day when the Scorcher of Heaven rose
with the sun, and earth was
overwhelmed. From this boat the sacrificial lambs were
offered to the
watermonsters and on it served Asu and eight virgins.
There, too, the High
Priest officiated.
Hiram had conceived a plan within his mind whereby, at
the risk of bis life, he
might possess himself of the treasures of Egypt. This
year, Naymin being now
frail, he alone would be in charge of the sacrificial
lambs, together with two
boy priests to assist him. They came from the Temple
of the Lake dedicated to
the Bright Bearded One who once saved Earth from
destruction through fiery hail
by making a third round.
On the night before the festival, Hiram slept with his
small flock beside the
boats and at first light they were put aboard. As the
sun rose upon high the
High Priest came with many other priests and princes,
and the virgins came also.
They offered sacrifices at the Temple of Departure and
then set out upon the
waters. In another boat were Naymin and his wife and
there were other boats
filled with people.
After making offerings upon the waters the boats
arrived at the island and
preparations were made for the Island Ceremony, which
lasted throughout the
night. The lambs were offered as darkness came and the
waters became red with
blood, and the watermonsters satiated with meat.
Now, the cave on the island was protected from men by
the Spirit of Mot, who had
died there in days long forgotten, and the priests
guarded its entrance. But
Hiram did not fear the Spirit of Mot, for it could do
no harm to one who carried
upon his body the same bloodscar as Mot had borne.
Hiram the stranger had been
so marked out from other men in his childhood.
At the sixth hour of the night three virgins entered
the cave to bring forth the
treasures, and with them went a priest protected by
sanctification in the blood
of a lamb. Five priests who were Guardians of the
Treasures and never left the
island also went into the cave with them, garbed in
skins and masked with the
heads of beasts. The treasures were brought forth and
placed upon the altar
against the rock wall beside the cave, so that all
might behold them. Over the
altar was laid a cloth of linen and gold. While the
people passed before the
treasures and danced and sang, priests came and went
in the cave.
Before the cave and away from the road leading down to
the lake, there was a
pathway which went down to the Pool of Purification.
Here, after the maidens had
bathed, men and women came down one by one to be
purified in its waters. They
then went through an opening into the lake and,
passing through the waters along
the shore where they rose not much above the waist,
ascended by steps through a
small arched temple back on the road. If they were
truly purified they were
never touched by watermonsters.
Never had a maiden been taken by the watermonsters,
but on this awful night,
while a maiden passed between pool and temple, there
was a loud cry of agony
quickly stifled. The island fell silent with forboding
and as the night passed
the name of Asu was whispered from mouth to mouth. The
treasures were carried
back in gloom and silence under a mantle of dread, and
the head of the High
Priest was bowed in sorrow and disgrace.
When the boats departed none noticed that Hiram was
missing, for his duty done
he could return in any boat. And none was the strange
craft that clove the
waters of the lake of Sidana that night. Hiram
returned to the shepherd hut of
Naymin and nothing was said to him, for Naymin thought
he had joined with the
people sorrowing in the temples, and always many
remained about for several
days.
When Hiram had refreshed himself he left Naymin who
was weary and weighed down
with age and sorrow, and prepared to return to his
flocks. In his grief, because
of the death of Asu, he could find solace nowhere,
except perhaps in the
familiar solitude among his sheep. But the wife of
Naymin said, "Let me walk
with you a little way, for I, too, suffer and yet must
seek herbs which are
needed and not easy to find." When they had gone
some distance, she said, "I go
this way, will you not accompany me and humour an old
woman who may need your
aid?"
Hiram did so, for the woman was even as his own
mother, though he could not
understand her strange manner. She brought him to a place in a hollow
enclosed
by thickets, and lo there was Asu. When the embraces
and the greetings were over
and the explanations given, the wife of Naymin said,
"Here you cannot remain.
There are clothes and food and no pursuers will follow
the maiden, and none will
query your departure. Go this night, taking thought
for nothing here, for you
are young, with a lifetime of joy before you, after
the pangs of parting have
passed."
Hiram said, "No gladness, no joy can ever surpass
what I now feel, yet this
thing increases a burden already upon me and is less
simple than it appears. For
this you must know, I have taken the treasures of
Egypt and hidden them in a
place where no man can find them. Who would suspect me
if I went about my task
without change, a shepherd with no thought beyond his
sheep and flute? The cry
may be raised even now, though I think another day
will pass first. Then who
could trace the passage of every man who has departed,
even though pursuit is
made in all directions? Why did you not tell me of
your plot?"
The wife of Naymin said, "How could you be told
of something which might not
have been or which you might have betrayed by glance
or bearing? We, too,
thought you no more than a simple shepherd with no
thought beyond flute-playing,
except love. What now will you flee with the maiden
and abandon the treasures?
Or shall she flee alone, for she is committed to
flight."
Hiram said, "I cannot abandon love for treasure,
but neither can I abandon this
treasure for lif e or let it corrupt. Therefore, let
Asu, the maiden disguise
herself and together we will depart to a safe place
without the treasure, none
suspecting she still lives. Then in the fullness of
time I will return and
recover the treasure, for no man can discover its
hiding place. However, I will
not depart in haste but wait and bid Naymin farewell
and go in the fullness of
time."
Hiram left Asu and returned with the wife of Naymin.
Coming in to Naymin Hiram
told him he had had a vision such as no man could
disregard and must go to the
land of his fathers, but would return before the
coming again of the season.
That night a great cry went up among the temples and
in the light of the morning
men came and questioned Naymin and those with him, but
found them simple
shepherds.
Hiram departed, taking the ass of Naymin and with him
went the wife of Naymin.
They were joined by Asu, cloaked as a beggar girl who
earned her food by
ungainly dancing, whose face was unwashed and clothes
unclean. They accompanied
men who hunted for the stolen treasures and their
possessions were open before
the eyes of all men. After seven days the wife of
Naymin returned.
Hiram and Asu went onwards until they came to Bethelim
near Fenis. beyond the
borders of Egypt, and they dwelt there among the
Kerofim. In the fullness of
time Hiram returned to Egypt and recovered the
treasures, bringing them inside
skins hidden within other skins filled with water and
oil.
Now, when Hiram had left Egypt and drawn nigh to
Bethelim, he saw that the
dwelling he had left no longer stood and the fields
about it were overgrown with
burning bushes. Within the burnt out ruins he found
remains and bones and knew
them for those of Asu and the Kerofim with whom she
dwelt. He saw that they had
died by the sword.
Hiram did not linger at the place of death and thought
to take himself to a
place of safety, but knowing the dangers of the land
he sought a place where he
hid the egg of the nest-burning bird and the pearls,
all except two, and most of
the jewels. Having secured them in safety, he went on
his way.
Hiram kept going until he came upon a small wooded
place nearly two days journey
away. Here, while he slept, two wild swine came and
swallowed three of the
jewels which he had tied in a piece of hide. Later he
lost one while fording a
river, and one was taken from him when he sought
shelter in a temple. Two pearls
and two jewels were taken from him by other priests
who placed them in the
treasury of their god. The remaining treasures which
he had with him were lost
when he was waylaid, and though his life was spared he
was left bleeding and
near to death. As Hiram lay by the roadside he was
succoured by wandering
metalworkers and brought back to health by them, for
they were men of his own
blood.
Hiram remained with the metalworkers for some years
and learned their craft. He
became skilled in the making of weapons and in their
use. In the fullness of
time he returned to the place where he had secreted
the treasures and recovered
them. He then went down to a city by the sea and took
ship to a far off land. No
man has seen him since, but it is said he married the
daughter of a king and
became a prince among foreign people.
This is the tale of Hiram. As written, it was a wordy
tale and well preserved
but without great import. It has imaginative
descriptions and indulged in
valueless flights of poetic fancy. Therefore, it is
rendered in outline and
reduced to a few paragraphs.
CHAPTER SIX
THE TALE OF HIRAM
Thute, the son of Pelath, a freeman of Elanmora in the
land of the Hethim, wrote
these things in the harvest years of his life, when
his heart was filled with
wisdom and understanding. He who reads them with the
eyes alone will derive
little benefit, but he who receives them with an
enlightened and uplifted heart
will find a response within the depths of his own
spirit.
While Hiram Uribas, son of Hashem, was still a
beardless youth taking his
pleasure among the riches and splendour of his
father's house, a wise man came
from a faraway land. He came, not as a great man
riding with a rich caravan but
weary-footed, begging water and food. These were not
denied him and while he sat
in the shade, slaking his thirst and satisfying his
hunger, Hiram, the youth,
came up to him with courteous greetings. The wise man
was pleased and poured out
words like jewels, so that the young man became filled
with the desire for
wisdom and Truth, swearing that from that day forward
he would devote his life
to the search for them.
After the departure of the wise man, Hiram became
restless under his father's
roof and it was not long before he set off with a
bundle of food and skin of
water for Uraslim. Arriving there he slept in the
house of Gabel, a servant at
the temple of the Winged God of Fire, and from thence
he journeyed towards
Bethshemis, which lies past Tirgalud, on the road to
Egypt. Hiram was a young
man of his people, tall of stature, with a darting
bright-eyed glance. His long,
band-bound hair hung low on bis shoulders and his
stride was wide and firm.
He came upon Bethshemis close to nightfall, when it
was not good to enter the
city, and therefore as darkness closed about him he
prepared to lay himself down
beneath the wall of a vineyard. This was owned by a
wealthy widow who, seeing
the young man preparing for the night, sent men out to
bring him into her guest
house. The widow was neither old nor unbeautiful and
when she saw the comeliness
of the young man her heart was gladdened and she bade
him welcome. Hiram did not
depart with the light of the morning and it came to
pass that the widow offered
him a high place on her estates. Hiram accepted, for
he was young and pleased
with the honour, but in the course of time the widow
had become enamoured with
him and sought to make him her husband. Hiram sought a
way of release from this,
for he had already heard tales of the woman's many
lovers.
The widow said to Hiram, "Be my husband, for the
one I had has died and left no
heir. Let us enjoy the fruits of your manhood, for I
desire the seed of your
body, so that I may have a splendid son. I will give
you robes of blue and red
and they will be laced with chains of gold. You shall
ride in a high chariot
wheeled with brass and poled with copper. Many
servants will attend you and wise
men brought from East and West will fill your heart
with wisdom. You shall lack
nothing that satisfies your desires."
Hiram was not at ease with himself, for he was young
and lacked the wisdom to
deal with the situation. He answered the widow hastily
in these words, "You are
a woman of beauty and this alone makes you a desirable
treasure to men, but how
would it fare with me in marriage? It is said that you
have had many lovers and
they find you as a smouldering fire in a cold room, a
door restraining neither
wind nor sand, a roof that falls in upon the sleeper
beneath it, a boat that
drowns the boatman, the crust over a quicksand, water
that does not slake the
thirst and food that sits heavily on the stomach.
Which man did you ever love
with constancy, so that he walked in the joy of
contentment? Which man could
ever call you his?"
The words from his mouth stung the widow like hornets
and she flew into a rage
after the manner of women. She called upon her
servants and they beat Hiram with
sticks and drove him off her estate. With a little
more wisdom in his heart, he
continued on his way into Egypt and after many days he
arrived at the city of
On.
Hiram dwelt among the Southern Men on the outskirts of
the city, for many had
been captured during the wars and made slaves. When
lustfully aroused the bodies
of these men exude a sweet odour like honey, which no
man can detect and it
makes all women succumb to them. This is the manner in
which the nation of Egypt
sacrificed its purity. In the days when Hiram came to
Egypt the Pharaoh Athmos
ruled.
In those days Egypt was at war with the Abramites, for
their great red-headed
king had committed adultery with the wife of a prince
of Paran. The remorseful
king reaped as he had sown, for his favourite daughter
was ravished by her own
brother and his wives were humiliated and ravished
before the eyes of all men.
Because of the war, there was much coming and going of
strangers in the city of
On and Hiram went unnoticed.
Hiram dwelt long in Egypt and absorbed its wisdom, but
the thing which delighted
his heart the most was the tale of its long-hidden
treasures. He learnt about
the nest-burning bird whose wondrous many-hued egg
granted men the gift of
eternal life. He heard about the serpent pearls and
the bright jewels which
glowed with the light of the sun even on the darkest
night. All these things he
desired to possess for himself.
The nesting place of the nest-burning bird was among
the Mothbenim, eastward of
Egypt, but among the treasures of Egypt was one of its
eggs. The egg, the pearls
and the jewels were safeguarded in a dark cave upon an
island called Inmishpet,
which was set in the middle of a lake called Sidana.
In the waters of the lake
were fearsome watermonsters, part beast, part fish. On
the shores of the lake
dwelt the shapeshifting priests, guardians of the
treasures.
Northward of the lake was a broad pastureland where
the shepherd Naymin tended
the temple flocks, but Naymin was old and had no son
who would follow him.
Therefore, he took Hiram into his household and Hiram
became as a son to him,
tending the sheep of the temple, and no Egyptian was
with him.
One day, while the sheep still suckled their lambs,
Hiram was out in the
pastures, sitting near the cool waters because of the
heat. As he reclined in
the shade he played gay shepherd tunes on his flute
and in the many times he had
been there no one had ever disturbed him. Yet not far
away was the House of the
Virgins of Elre, but the maidens who dwelt there
rarely went abroad.
This day, however, Asu, daughter of the High Priest,
walked abroad and hearing
the melody of the flute drew near to listen, but Hiram
did not see her because
of the bush between them. The maiden sat down, taking
the sandals of her feet.
Hearing a cry from one of the sheep in the distance
Hiram stopped playing and
stood up, his back towards the maiden. She, seeing him
standing up, sought to
creep away before he saw her, but as she did so her
foot was pierced by a thorn
and she let out a cry of pain. Hiram turned and seeing
her distress hastened to
help her. He withdrew the thorn tenderly and carried
her down to the pool, so
that she could bathe the foot in cool waters. While
she did so he entertained
her with sweet melodies on his flute.
The maiden fell in love with Hiram and he with her,
but because she was a
dedicated virgin and daughter of the High Priest
neither could open the doors of
their heart. The maiden spent nights weeping, for she
had a love for which there
was no remedy. Hiram took his flock to other pastures,
but still their hearts
drew them back to the place of meeting and they met
again and yet again.
Now, the wife of Naymin noticed that Hiram pined as
with a sickness and she
spoke to him about it, and he told her of Asu, the
maiden from the House of the
Virgins of Elre. The wife of Naymin spoke words of
consolation for this hopeless
love, knowing they helped but little.
In the fullness of the year Hiram took his flock to
distant pastures around the
other side of the lake. While he was away the wife of
Naymin took herself down
to the place where he was wont to meet Asu, and one
day Asu came. She was known
to the wife of Naymin who was the gatherer of herbs
for the temple. They spoke
of many things, of Hiram and of the gods, of priests
and their ways and of
temples and those who served in them, of life and of
man and of woman.
Now, when Hiram returned it was nigh the feast of
sheepslaying and at this time
sacrifices of lambs were made to the watermonsters in
the lake. While away Hiram
had thought about Asu and about the treasure of Egypt,
both seemingly equally
unattainable. The wife of Naymin spoke to him rarely
and Hiram wondered, for
this is not the way of women.
On the eve of the feast of sheepslaying the lake boats
were prepared for the
annual pilgrimage to the island. Among these was the
great boat of Erab, kept in
memory of the day when the Scorcher of Heaven rose
with the sun, and earth was
overwhelmed. From this boat the sacrificial lambs were
offered to the
watermonsters and on it served Asu and eight virgins.
There, too, the High
Priest officiated.
Hiram had conceived a plan within his mind whereby, at
the risk of bis life, he
might possess himself of the treasures of Egypt. This
year, Naymin being now
frail, he alone would be in charge of the sacrificial
lambs, together with two
boy priests to assist him. They came from the Temple
of the Lake dedicated to
the Bright Bearded One who once saved Earth from
destruction through fiery hail
by making a third round.
On the night before the festival, Hiram slept with his
small flock beside the
boats and at first light they were put aboard. As the
sun rose upon high the
High Priest came with many other priests and princes,
and the virgins came also.
They offered sacrifices at the Temple of Departure and
then set out upon the
waters. In another boat were Naymin and his wife and
there were other boats
filled with people.
After making offerings upon the waters the boats
arrived at the island and
preparations were made for the Island Ceremony, which
lasted throughout the
night. The lambs were offered as darkness came and the
waters became red with
blood, and the watermonsters satiated with meat.
Now, the cave on the island was protected from men by
the Spirit of Mot, who had
died there in days long forgotten, and the priests
guarded its entrance. But
Hiram did not fear the Spirit of Mot, for it could do
no harm to one who carried
upon his body the same bloodscar as Mot had borne.
Hiram the stranger had been
so marked out from other men in his childhood.
At the sixth hour of the night three virgins entered
the cave to bring forth the
treasures, and with them went a priest protected by
sanctification in the blood
of a lamb. Five priests who were Guardians of the
Treasures and never left the
island also went into the cave with them, garbed in
skins and masked with the
heads of beasts. The treasures were brought forth and
placed upon the altar
against the rock wall beside the cave, so that all
might behold them. Over the
altar was laid a cloth of linen and gold. While the
people passed before the
treasures and danced and sang, priests came and went
in the cave.
Before the cave and away from the road leading down to
the lake, there was a
pathway which went down to the Pool of Purification.
Here, after the maidens had
bathed, men and women came down one by one to be
purified in its waters. They
then went through an opening into the lake and,
passing through the waters along
the shore where they rose not much above the waist,
ascended by steps through a
small arched temple back on the road. If they were
truly purified they were
never touched by watermonsters.
Never had a maiden been taken by the watermonsters,
but on this awful night,
while a maiden passed between pool and temple, there
was a loud cry of agony
quickly stifled. The island fell silent with forboding
and as the night passed
the name of Asu was whispered from mouth to mouth. The
treasures were carried
back in gloom and silence under a mantle of dread, and
the head of the High
Priest was bowed in sorrow and disgrace.
When the boats departed none noticed that Hiram was
missing, for his duty done
he could return in any boat. And none was the strange
craft that clove the
waters of the lake of Sidana that night. Hiram
returned to the shepherd hut of
Naymin and nothing was said to him, for Naymin thought
he had joined with the
people sorrowing in the temples, and always many
remained about for several
days.
When Hiram had refreshed himself he left Naymin who
was weary and weighed down
with age and sorrow, and prepared to return to his
flocks. In his grief, because
of the death of Asu, he could find solace nowhere,
except perhaps in the
familiar solitude among his sheep. But the wife of
Naymin said, "Let me walk
with you a little way, for I, too, suffer and yet must
seek herbs which are
needed and not easy to find." When they had gone
some distance, she said, "I go
this way, will you not accompany me and humour an old
woman who may need your
aid?"
Hiram did so, for the woman was even as his own
mother, though he could not
understand her strange manner. She brought him to a place in a hollow
enclosed
by thickets, and lo there was Asu. When the embraces
and the greetings were over
and the explanations given, the wife of Naymin said,
"Here you cannot remain.
There are clothes and food and no pursuers will follow
the maiden, and none will
query your departure. Go this night, taking thought
for nothing here, for you
are young, with a lifetime of joy before you, after
the pangs of parting have
passed."
Hiram said, "No gladness, no joy can ever surpass
what I now feel, yet this
thing increases a burden already upon me and is less
simple than it appears. For
this you must know, I have taken the treasures of
Egypt and hidden them in a
place where no man can find them. Who would suspect me
if I went about my task
without change, a shepherd with no thought beyond his
sheep and flute? The cry
may be raised even now, though I think another day
will pass first. Then who
could trace the passage of every man who has departed,
even though pursuit is
made in all directions? Why did you not tell me of
your plot?"
The wife of Naymin said, "How could you be told
of something which might not
have been or which you might have betrayed by glance
or bearing? We, too,
thought you no more than a simple shepherd with no
thought beyond flute-playing,
except love. What now will you flee with the maiden
and abandon the treasures?
Or shall she flee alone, for she is committed to
flight."
Hiram said, "I cannot abandon love for treasure,
but neither can I abandon this
treasure for lif e or let it corrupt. Therefore, let
Asu, the maiden disguise
herself and together we will depart to a safe place
without the treasure, none
suspecting she still lives. Then in the fullness of
time I will return and
recover the treasure, for no man can discover its
hiding place. However, I will
not depart in haste but wait and bid Naymin farewell
and go in the fullness of
time."
Hiram left Asu and returned with the wife of Naymin.
Coming in to Naymin Hiram
told him he had had a vision such as no man could
disregard and must go to the
land of his fathers, but would return before the
coming again of the season.
That night a great cry went up among the temples and
in the light of the morning
men came and questioned Naymin and those with him, but
found them simple
shepherds.
Hiram departed, taking the ass of Naymin and with him
went the wife of Naymin.
They were joined by Asu, cloaked as a beggar girl who
earned her food by
ungainly dancing, whose face was unwashed and clothes
unclean. They accompanied
men who hunted for the stolen treasures and their
possessions were open before
the eyes of all men. After seven days the wife of
Naymin returned.
Hiram and Asu went onwards until they came to Bethelim
near Fenis. beyond the
borders of Egypt, and they dwelt there among the
Kerofim. In the fullness of
time Hiram returned to Egypt and recovered the
treasures, bringing them inside
skins hidden within other skins filled with water and
oil.
Now, when Hiram had left Egypt and drawn nigh to
Bethelim, he saw that the
dwelling he had left no longer stood and the fields
about it were overgrown with
burning bushes. Within the burnt out ruins he found
remains and bones and knew
them for those of Asu and the Kerofim with whom she
dwelt. He saw that they had
died by the sword.
Hiram did not linger at the place of death and thought
to take himself to a
place of safety, but knowing the dangers of the land
he sought a place where he
hid the egg of the nest-burning bird and the pearls,
all except two, and most of
the jewels. Having secured them in safety, he went on
his way.
Hiram kept going until he came upon a small wooded
place nearly two days journey
away. Here, while he slept, two wild swine came and
swallowed three of the
jewels which he had tied in a piece of hide. Later he
lost one while fording a
river, and one was taken from him when he sought
shelter in a temple. Two pearls
and two jewels were taken from him by other priests
who placed them in the
treasury of their god. The remaining treasures which
he had with him were lost
when he was waylaid, and though his life was spared he
was left bleeding and
near to death. As Hiram lay by the roadside he was
succoured by wandering
metalworkers and brought back to health by them, for
they were men of his own
blood.
Hiram remained with the metalworkers for some years
and learned their craft. He
became skilled in the making of weapons and in their
use. In the fullness of
time he returned to the place where he had secreted
the treasures and recovered
them. He then went down to a city by the sea and took
ship to a far off land. No
man has seen him since, but it is said he married the
daughter of a king and
became a prince among foreign people.
This is the tale of Hiram. As written, it was a wordy
tale and well preserved
but without great import. It has imaginative
descriptions and indulged in
valueless flights of poetic fancy. Therefore, it is
rendered in outline and
reduced to a few paragraphs.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 2
Lothan, Captain of Men of Valour, Victorious over the
Sons of the New Moon and
Guardian of the Hidden Wisdom. Maker of Roads in the
Red Lands and Builder of
the Secret Fort. By Abisobel, once Scribe of the God
Eloah in Ladosa, Keeper of
Records in the New Temple, to his Fathers in Wisdom at
the Temple of Iswarah,
Greetings. May you live long on Earth in prosperity,
peace and health, and
depart in knowledge.
We left the good land, hearts heavy-laden with grief.
The ships were five and I
looked to mine and found it good. It was built of
alonwood and stout-masted. All
about it, casks were lashed. Along the planking the
cords that moved were free,
but all clear spaces were filled with things wrapped
about and bound. There was
much leather for the sails and leathern scoops. There
were half a score of large
buckets of wood hooped about and handled with plaited
leather. Between the eyes
of the ship the guide pole was raised, beneath which
were stored all kinds of
unusual things made of wood and cordage used by men of
the sea. There was a
machine for slinging stones and another for hurling
fire.
There were high shieldguards which could be strapped
to the side. A store
contained every kind of weapon and much armour. There
were pots for cooking and
braziers.
There was a store behind the mast and in it were over
five score jars of oil and
not less of wine and vinegar. Casks of food there were
and more stored in
baskets. Many large pitchers were lashed about and
dried meat stored in cloth.
Dried dates and figs and small fruits there were in
large quantities. Water was
not lacking, nor the dishes for eating. There were
nets for fishing and hooks
for catching birds.
The chief among the men of the sea was skilled in the notched
stick called
'thumb of the night', which guided him across the
widths of the sea. We brought
up against Keftor, where Nebam departed, for they were
troublesome. Men of
Melkat came who had been wrecked, and we took a score
who were men of valour. We
passed many lands by the sea, where once broad
sea-girt Posidma reigned, before
blown apart by underworld fires. By the lands of
Hogburim we went over the wide
sea to the gate of Athlesan and beyond it across the
sea of Tapuim.
One ship and forty men and the households of six men
were lost on the way. Three
ships have I left, with one brought up on the land.
Twelve men have I lost in
battle and ten have gone with sickness. There are,
with me, two hundred fighting
men. One hundred and ten men of skill and one hundred
bondsmen. Sixty households
with their cattle and sheep and corn and tools and
wagons. All things with us
are numbered and the tally grows daily.
The encampment is well made and encircled with a wall
where water does not lie.
Trees and soil are the material of its construction.
Great trees are about us,
but no stone for building, for the soil is deep. The
waters rise not over the
fields where men have cut water passages, but there is
much rain.
Wild men are in the land, who write on their skins.
They are hairy ones whose gods are the plants of the
field. Their quarters are
like baskets over the ground and they are unwashed.
The women are like hellcats,
uttering wild cries among the trees, but the men are
quiet and come in silence.
They have temples of poles, roofed over in part and
encircled by great logs,
with logs laid over. Skins and painted leather are
hung about, but no cloth.
They place plants on altars, that their high gods may
consume the essence of
life within them and draw it back into themselves.
Virgins they keep in cages, why I know not, but the
women in cages are virgins
and well cared for. Is virginity uncaged like a hound
unleashed?
The wild men are unlearned and without soft speech.
They are cousins to the wild
dog, yet with children they are gentle. The children
of Fikol, the stoneworker,
were lost among the trees and wild beasts beset them
at night. The wild men
found them there and carried them away and fed them.
Then came the searchband of
men of valour upon the place, and the children, seeing
them, ran away from the
wild men. The men of valour slew the wild men,
thinking they had taken the
children, for they knew not their speech. Since then
we have seen their ways.
One hundred and ten of the wild people we have as
bondsmen and bondswomen. The
men work with the soil and wood about the encampment.
The wall I caused to be
built out into the water and it encloses a pier
against the bank, where ships
can moor.
Within the wall and circle of water I have built the
temple, but not all go in
there with me. We are not one people. The gates of the
temple are on pillars of
wood and turn on a stone, and wooden are the pillars
within. Great beams support
the roof, and the walls are of wood and mud brick. The
floor is of sand finely
raked, and before the heir the altar rests on stones.
There are no images
designed to confuse men, for though the temple is poor
it does not enshrine
ignorance. We have no evil men with us. There are men
of valour and men of
skill, men of the land and men of the sea, no more.
Beneath the altar is the Grave of Life, kept dry with
mortar. In its place is
the Great Chest of Mysteries and in the Urns of Life
are the records. Well kept
they are and safe from the unlearned, all the records
of the Eastern Quarter.
Thus all things have been done according to your
divining, and it is good.
(Between that just copied and that which follows there
was a full plate, but the
writing upon it was ineffective.)
In the land at the edge of the Earth there is little
sun and the people grow
sick with water. The dampness causes a sickness among
us, where the teeth become
loose in the gums and skin peels. Flesh puffs up and
holds the marks of fingers.
The people of the land beset us and we cannot find
them among the trees. Lothan
was slain, with twelve men of valour, three days
journey inland among the trees.
He died in the night. Two men were caught by the wild
men who burnt them in
cages.
Men have come in ships from the Land of the Sons of
Fire, who are our brothers.
Alman, the scribe, and Kora, the builder, came.
Hoskiah who is a man mighty in
battle, having gone from us brought them here by
Kedaris.
Of the Sons of Fire there are four hundred, but few
are fighting men. They are
not men of valour. They are men of the sea and
cultivators and men who trade.
There are builders among them and men skilled in the
ways of wood and stone, for
they came to establish a city in this place.
This, the Kingdom of the Trees, is no place for a city.
Trees shut us in and
hold us captive. They conceal those who lie in wait to
do us harm. A house is
built and trees take over the roof, and plants creep
over the walls. Corn is
planted and rots, while weeds smother other growing
food. Greyness is
everywhere, even the face of the sun is pale here.
Men shiver without heat and the air is not pure and
mixed with water. Wild dogs
lurk among the trees, to tear the unwary to pieces.
There are few stones and
they are covered with slime. The wild fruits and herbs
are poisonous and men
have died eating them. The wild men in this place eat
their own children and
anoint their bodies with the fat of the dead. There is
a race of men with great
hairy bodies and the heads of dogs, who carry children
off to feast on them.
Arutha, wife of Amora, died in the embrace of one.
They have hides that no arrow
can pierce.
The Book of Heaven is open to the Sons of Fire, in it
they found the road across
the waters. They are filled with the wisdom of
wanderers. As we came by the sea
in the hands of seafarers, so shall we go out. We long
for the welcome omens of
the shining arrows of the night. Our people are weary
and there is muttering
among the men of valour, for they fear the Spirit of
the Trees. His breath
surrounds us. His grey fingernails corrupt our
possessions. He has caused our
cattle to die and our crops to wither. Against him we
are powerless. He was
robbed of this land hewn out from among the trees, he
will never forget.
The Great Secrets and Sacred Wisdom are secured for
our children. We place them
and ourselves in the hands of the Sons of Fire. We
shall leave this place and
sail towards Hireh, towards the West, where lies the
Land of White Stone. There
we may build with stone and brick.
Here is the tally of our departure: Of those who came
with Lothan, ninety men of
valour and the households of thirty-five. There are
seventy men of valour who
came later, and those of the Sons of Fire. Eighty-two
men of skill and eight
households newly formed. There are the men of valour
who came with Hoskiah and
the households among them. There are nine households
which came later.
There are two hundred and forty bondsmen. Of these one
hundred and ten carry
slings and clubs. Some have fighting axes of stone and
stave shod with metal,
but there is no sharpened weapon among them.
One hundred and four among all the households are
children and unmarried women,
for many have died of the sickness belonging to this
place. There are slaves,
but most have died or perished among the trees.
The cattle are gone and there are a few sheep and
goats. There are, for each man
of valour, two measures of corn at morning and for
others one measure. Of corn
there are sixty great baskets. Of herbs dried by fire,
forty-five ankrim. There
is fish fried by fire and some meat.
There are a hundred and ten baskets of cuped nuts,
which are bitter and go sour.
The Men of the Trees eat them and for such people it
is proper food. There are
narah nuts which grow in this place, sweet but not
stomach filling, and nuts
which are good for cakes in quantities.
There is much weapon metal melted down and gold and
silver in pieces. There are
all kinds of tools for the men of skill and much
pottery in the households. But
much has gone to the Men of the Trees, and of cloth
there is little, and men are
clothed in skins and the woven fibre of plants.
The Harbour of Sorrow we leave behind and with four
ships sail towards the
sunsetting. One ship goes to the Land of the Sons of
Fire. Spirit of Lothan,
remain among us as we go far away among men who are
strangers to us!
CHAPTER NINE
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 3
The Sons of Fire came to the Land of Mists, they and
their households and their
cattle, and all the tools of craftsmen. With them came
others, men of Egypt and
men of Javen. Also strangers who were not as valiant as are the Sons
of Fire.
Many among them were sickly and distressed in their
hearts.
They took land among the barbarians and built a city
and a port at the place
called Sadel, near Saham, and cut roads about it into
the forests. But they were
kept in by the barbarians, and strangers in a strange
land. The city was a place
for buying and selling and men came and went. Ships
came bearing cloth and
pottery, instruments and weapons of war and all manner
of things. The ships went
away bearing things from the barbarians who dug in the
soil. The place of the
city was good, for it was fertile and well watered,
and the bay was guarded by a
great rock.
When he came, Hoskiah caused statutes to be set up for
the city and they were
kept in the courts of the temple. This record was made
at his command:
"It is unlawful for you to curse your father or
your mother, or their father or
their mother, or to raise your hand in anger against
them. If the forbidden be
done you shall be burnt with fire and iron upon the
left shoulder and a task and
time set upon you."
"It is unlawful for you to steal the reputation
of another man by lies. If the
forbidden be done you shall be branded by fire and
iron upon the lips of the
mouth."
"It is unlawful for you to defile the wife of
another man. If the forbidden be
done you shall be branded with fire and iron upon the
soles of the feet and upon
the backside and the armpits, and upon the mouth and
nose, and shall be cast out
from among us, unless bearing arms in war."
"It is unlawful for a wife to lie with any man
not her husband. If the forbidden
be done she shall suffer her time upon the adulteress'
saddle and shall not be
healed with skyfire."
"It is unlawful for you to penetrate a child in
lust. If the forbidden be done
you shall be castrated and the wound healed with iron
and fire."
"It is unlawful for you to place your hands
between the legs of a womanchild. If
the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the palm of the
left hand and upon the left cheek and between the
thighs."
"It is unlawful for you if, being a guest, you
defile the household of the man
who harbours you. If the forbidden be done with a free
man or a free woman you
shall be burnt with fire and iron on the soles of the
feet and in the armpits,
and shall die in the waters, after the custom of the
barbarians. If with a slave
or bondsman or bondswoman, you shall be bumt upon the
backside and the armpits,
and shall pay their price to their master."
"It is unlawful for you to speak falsehood
against another so that he suffer at
trial. If the forbidden be done you shall suffer the
same as he and be burnt
upon the tongue with iron and fire, and pay the
recompense set by the council."
"It is unlawful for you to give a daughter of
your house to the barbarians in
marriage, unless she be one who has brought shame upon
you. If the forbidden be
done you shall be dispossessed of your property and
household."
"It is unlawful for you to allow any man within
your household to fornicate with
the barbarians. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire
upon the left thigh. The man within your household
shall be burnt upon the soles
of his feet and in his armpits. If it be done again
you shall be burnt with iron
and fire upon the backside and dispossessed of a tithe
of your property. The man
within your household shall be blinded in the left eye
with iron and fire, and
bumt upon the soles of his feet."
"It is unlawful for you to allow any woman within
your household to fornicate
with a barbarian. If the forbidden be done and she be
a free worn an you shall
be dispossessed of your household and property, and
she shall die as women die.
If a slave or a bondswoman, you shall be dispossessed
of a tithe of your
property and she shall be burnt upon her private
parts, after the manner of
burning women."
"It is unlawful for you to fornicate with the
barbarians. If the forbidden be
done you shall be dispossessed of your property and
household and made a slave
of the council."
"It is unlawful for a woman to show her breasts
to the eyes of men not of her
household. If the forbidden be done she shall be burnt
between the breasts,
after the manner of burning women."
"It is unlawful for any woman to show her private
parts to any man, unless he be
her husband or master. If the forbidden be done she
shall be burnt daily, after
the manner of burning women, until each of the seven
points have been burnt. If
she do so with a man not of her household, then her
husband or master shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon his right thigh."
"It is unlawful for you to show your nakedness
wilfully to any woman or maiden
not of your household. If the forbidden be done you
shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the backside."
These are the statutes made because of the things done
before the eyes of the
barbarians who hold their women in high esteem:
"It is unlawful for you to slay or maim any man
or woman, or any child among us.
If the forbidden be done, then a life shall be taken
for a life, by water, after
the custom of die barbarians. A limb shall be taken
for a limb and an eye for an
eye. Except that if it be one among you who is a
bearer of arms in war, he shall
not be maimed so that he cannot fight, but he may be
slain for a slaying."
"It is unlawful for you to steal or dispossess by
deceit. If the forbidden be
done the harm done shall be restored double. If it be
done again to the same man
or another you shall also be burnt with iron and fire
upon the right forearm.
But if a man act foolishly so that he is easily
dispossessed, than only that
taken shall be restored in value."
"It is unlawful for you to wilfully destroy a
writing or record in writing, or
marks of meaning or namemarks. If the forbidden be
done you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon each palm of the hands and be
dispossessed of one quarter of
your property."
"It is unlawful for you to wilfully damage the
property of another man among us.
If the forbidden be done you shall make it good by
paying its value to the man
you wronged."
"It is unlawful for you to change worked iron
with the barbarians for other
things. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt
with iron and fire upon the
sole of the left foot and upon the palm of the right
hand."
"It is unlawful for you to deal deceitfully with
the barbarians or to steal from
them. Or to cause hurt to them or damage to their
property. If the forbidden be
done you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the
palm of the right hand. You
shall be cast out without weapons outside our boundary
in a place where you can
be taken by them, so they may deal with you according
to their own customs,"
"It is unlawful for you to increase gold or
silver with other substances. If the
forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of half
your property and
possession, and burnt upon the ears with iron and
fire."
"It is unlawful for you to enter secretly into
the habitation of another man or
within the enclosure about it. If the forbidden be
done you shall if within the
habitation, be blinded in the left eye with iron and
fire, and if it be done
again, in the right eye. If you enter secredy within
the enclosure about the
habitation you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon
the soles of the feet and
upon the backside. If you be found with weapon you
shall be made a slave to the
owner of the place."
"It is unlawful for you to use an animal for
lust. If the forbidden be done and
one penetrate the other, you shall be castrated and
the wound healed by iron and
fire. Unless a bearer of arms in war you shall be
driven out from among us, and
the animal shall die. If neither penetrate the other
you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon your private parts."
"It is unlawful for you to befoul the well of
another man or the clear water
from which he drinks. If the forbidden be done you
shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the backside."
"It is unlawful for you to cause damage to the herds
or the crops, the goods or
the property of another man. If the forbidden be done
you shall make good the
damage. If it be done again to him or another man you
shall also suffer burning
with iron and fire upon the sole of the left
foot."
"It is unlawful for a woman to sell herself for
the use of men, unless she first
proclaim herself a public woman by standing from dawn
to dusk, for two days, at
the market gate of the temple. If such be done no
guilt shall attach to her, but
if the forbidden be done she shall be burnt after the
manner of the burning of
women, upon the cheeks and on the arms and on the
belly. If she do it again
without proclaiming herself she shall be sold as a
slave. Her price shall be
given to the governor."
"It is unlawful for the wife or the bondswoman or
the slave of any man to sell
herself for the use of men. If the forbidden be done
the husband or master shall
be burnt with iron and fire upon the mouth and upon
the backside and upon the
soles of the feet, except it be done secretly from
him. The woman shall be sold
and her price given to the governor."
"It is unlawful for you, if a man with womanly
ways, to conduct yourself as
such, unless you first proclaim your nature by
standing from dawn to dusk, for
one day, at the market gate of the temple. If such be
done no guilt shall attach
itself to your conduct as a man with womanly ways. If
the forbidden be done you
shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the belly and
the backside, and sold in
the market place and your price given to the
governor."
"It is unlawful for an unprotected man with
womanly ways to be the master of a
household or to take a wife. He cannot own anything,
except it be required for
eating or sleeping, clothing and the practice of his
craft. He may own a
dwelling of one room, but if he bear arms in war he
may own a dwelling of any
size. If the forbidden be done he shall be burnt with
iron and fire on the
backside and chest, and sold as a slave and his price
given to the governor."
"It is unlawful for you to satisfy your lusts
with a man of your household. If
the forbidden be done you shall both be burnt with
iron and fire on both
armpits, unless one be in the hands of the
other."
"It is unlawful for a woman to slay her child or
let it die by neglect. If the
forbidden be done and the child be unweaned the woman
shall be sold into slavery
and her price given to the governor. If the child be
weaned a life shall be
taken for a life."
"It is unlawful for you, if the master of a
household, to go beyond our
boundaries for upwards of two days and one night,
unless you appoint a steward
in your place or have a son in manhood. If the
forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the sole of your right
foot and upon your
backside. If you be detained by force you shall not be
burnt."
"It is unlawful for you to touch a woman not of
your household upon her private
parts, unless she be a woman who sells herself to men.
If the forbidden be done
you shall be burnt with fire and iron upon the palm
and fingers of the right
hand, and upon the left cheek and upon the backside.
If it be done again you
shall also be blinded with iron and fire in the left
eye, and if again in the
right eye also."
"It is unlawful for you to take a woman not of
your household by force for lust,
unless she be a woman who sells herself to men. If the
forbidden be done you
shall be blinded by iron and fire in both eyes."
"It is unlawful for you to enter the sacred
places of the barbarians or their
temples, or to pass within a thousand paces of the
Rabukimra. You may attend
their festivals outside these places. If the forbidden
be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire on the sole of the left
foot,"
"It is unlawful for you to carry upon yourself or
to have within your household
the talismans of other gods. If the forbidden be done
you shall pay a tithe of
your possessions and property to the temple."
"It is unlawful for you, if a guest, to conceal a
weapon upon yourself or be in
the dwelling of your host, while within his
habitation. If the forbidden be done
you shall be burnt upon the muscle of your left arm
and upon the forehead."
"It is unlawful for you to act seemingly towards
an unlawful deed so that men
will say, "His thoughts are towards an unlawful
thing." If the forbidden be done
it shall be as though you had already done the
unlawful deed, except that the
council shall look upon you with mercy, if it be
deserved."
"It is unlawful for you to talk to another man
towards an unlawful deed. If the
forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the lower lip and
the left hand palm. The man among you who denounces
this thing shall not be
burnt."
"It is unlawful for you to he so that another man
be harmed. If the forbidden be
done and it be not serious, or without evil intent,
you shall pay recompense. If
it be more serious you shall be burnt upon the upper
lip and if more serious
still, upon the tongue."
"It is unlawful for you to allow a woman of your
household to be drunk in an
outside place. If the forbidden be done you shall, if
it happen twice, be burnt
with fire and iron upon the left thigh. If it happen
again you shall be burnt
upon the left armpit."
"It is unlawful for a stranger to remain within
our boundaries after sunset,
unless he be a guest within a household or under its
protection. Or unless he
remain within the strangers' court or he be
proclaimed. No man shall remain
beyond ten days, unless he be proclaimed. At this
proclaiming nothing of his
past deeds or his comings and goings shall be bidden,
and lies shall not be
told. If the forbidden be done he shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the
nose and placed beyond our boundaries. He shall not
return and his goods shall
be taken to the governor. As the sun goes down all men
shall bid the stranger be
gone and shall not hold him."
"It is unlawful for you to delay the departure of
a stranger when he must go and
has done no wrong. If the forbidden be done you shall
be burnt with iron and
fire upon the left backside."
"It is unlawful for a woman to depart from her
household or to remain outside
her home after sunset, unless she be protected. If the
forbidden be done and she
be a wife she shall be burnt upon the sole of the left
foot. If she be a slave
or bondswoman she shall be burnt upon the soles of
both feet, and if she be a
freewoman or servant woman she shall be burnt upon the
left leg. If she be a
virgin she shall be beaten with a leathern
throng."
"It is unlawful for a man to raise his hand
against the master of his household.
If the forbidden be done he shall, if a freeman, be
burnt with iron and fire
upon the right shoulder and upon the backside. If a
servant, upon both shoulders
and upon the backside, and if a slave or bondsman,
upon both shoulders and upon
the backside, and upon the soles of his feet. But if
the master be hurt so that
he is put to bed, then he who struck him shall be
seized and confined and shall
also be burnt on the body each day, until the master
be up again."
"It is unlawful for you to maim or mark in
chastisement beyond repair any woman
of your household, or any freeman within its
protection. If the forbidden be
done you shall be burnt with iron and fire, as the
council declare."
"It is unlawful for you to strike in chastisement
any woman not of your
household, or touch her in anger. If the forbidden be
done and she be without
marks, if a freewoman you shall be burnt with fire and
iron upon the right thigh
and the right armpit. If a maidservant, upon the right
armpit and if a slave or
bondswoman, upon the left thigh. But if she be marked
or maimed you shall make
payment to her master or her household and be burnt
according to the declaration
of the council."
"It is unlawful for you to drive a woman or a
child from your household
unlawfully. If the forbidden be done you shall
recompense the one driven out
with a fifth part of your property and possessions.
They may then enter any
other household and shall not be held back."
"It is unlawful for you, if placed in stewardship
or in guardianship, to do an
unfaithful thing against anyone under your care. Or to
cause loss or harm to the
man who trusted you. You shall not conduct yourself
unseemingly in the household
under your stewardship or cause the man who trusted
you to lose his reputation.
If the forbidden be done, and it be serious, the
council may put you to death by
water, after the custom of the barbarians, but if it
be less serious you shall
be burnt as the council declare."
"It is unlawful for you or any man or woman
within your household to eat
uncooked meat, unless it be dried by sun or fire, or
be pickled. Blood shall not
be drunk. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt
with iron and fire upon
the left forearm."
"It is unlawful for you to become drunk or
quarrelsome while among the
barbarians. Or to curse them in their hearing, or to
use unseemingly language in
their presence, or to talk against us to them. If the
forbidden be done, the
first time you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon
the left leg; the second
time you shall be burnt upon the left armpit, and the
third time, upon the lips
of the mouth. Each time of chastisement you shall be
bound from the time of
burning until sunset, and displayed on the
boundary."
"It is unlawful for you to pass water within the
temple enclosure, or to befoul
the grounds or floors there. If the forbidden be done
you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the backside and the soles of the
feet, and between the
thighs. If it be done again you shall be blinded in
both eyes."
"It is unlawful for you to spit or use foul
language within the temple
enclosure. Or to shout or raise your voice unseemingly
or act irreverently
there. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt
with iron and fire upon the
mouth and right ear."
"It is unlawful for you to destroy anything
within the temple enclosure. If the
forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the palms of the
hands and between the thighs. This may be increased to
death by water, according
to the custom of the barbarians, if the council think
it fitting."
"It is unlawful for you to steal anything from
within the temple enclosure. If
the forbidden be done you shall die by water, after
the custom of the
barbarians."
"It is unlawful for you to strike any priest or
servant of the temple or anyone
under its protection. If the forbidden be done you
shall be blinded by iron and
fire. But if you maim someone you shall die by water,
after the custom of the
barbarians. If it be a slave of the temple or a
bondsman, then for striking him
you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the soles
of the feet and between the
thighs. If he be maimed you shall be blinded in the
right eye."
"It is unlawful for you to be within the temple
enclosure at night, in secret.
If the forbidden be done you shall be blinded by iron
and fire."
"It is unlawful for you to carry weapons of metal
or sharpened weapons within
the temple enclosure, unless with the sanction of the
temple guardians. If the
forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the soles of the
feet and the palm of the left hand."
"It is unlawful to seize any wrongdoer within the
temple enclosure, unless it be
done by those who serve the temple. If the forbidden be
done he who commanded
the deed shall be blinded by iron and fire. Those who
did the deed shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the palms of the hands
and soles of the feet."
"It is unlawful to speak against the governor or
the council or the commanders
or princes, unless it be done before them or at the
market gate of the temple.
If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron
and fire upon each side of
the mouth. But no man shall suffer for anything he
says in public at the market
gate of the temple, except he talk about the God of
This Enclosure."
"It is unlawful for you to speak against the God
of This Enclosure within this
His enclosure. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt upon the tongue and
upon the mouth and driven out beyond our boundary, and
may not return for seven
years."
"It is unlawful for you to speak against any
priest of the temple, except before
the High Priest on the days when any man may speak
freely without fear. If the
forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the backside and
beneath the chin."
"It is unlawful for you to approach the Place of
the High Altar or the forbidden
place about it, or to touch the Sacred Treasures,
unless you be a priest or high
servant of the temple, or a man admitted by them. If
the forbidden be done you
shall be blinded by iron and fire."
"It is unlawful to take a virgin to wife if you
have a wife, but if without wife
you may marry a virgin. You shall not have more than
three wives. If the
forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of a
fourth part of your property
and possessions, which shall go to the wife you have
taken unlawfully."
"It is unlawful for you to have intercourse with
your mother, your daughter,
your father's sister or your mother's sister, your
brother's daughter or your
sister's daughter, your father's mother or your
mother's mother, your wife's
mother or your son's wife, whether they be by blood or
by law. If the forbidden
be done you shall die by water, after the custom of
the barbarians."
"It is unlawful for men to wear the garments of
women or women to wear the
garments of men, unless they have proclaimed their
natures. If the forbidden be
done men shall be burnt with iron and fire on the left
cheek. Women may not be
touched with iron made hot and therefore are to be
burnt with skyfire. All men
shall be burnt with iron and fire."
"Men may be put to death by water or fire and
women by water or by smothering.
Women shall not suffer chastisement so that their
blood flow. When men are
castrated it shall be done with a knife of
stone."
"Men shall be punished in a place where all men
may see them, but a woman shall
suffer away from the eyes of men, though she may
receive punishment at the hands
of a man. The punishment of a woman shall be witnessed
by two men of the council
and two women from the household she wronged."
"A man punished by burning shall suffer at high
noon and then be laid on his
back or his belly, according to which eases him most.
Each of his limbs shall be
drawn out and fastened to a stake and he shall be left
until midnight, and then
let go. A woman, having been punished, shall be placed
within a room which has a
pole lengthwise at sitting height and left there from
noon to midnight. Any man
or woman suffering punishment shall be allowed one
attendant after it be
inflicted, until their release. No man shall refuse to
let another go to attend
his friend."
"If a woman do something for which a man would be
punished she shall suffer
likewise, except that the burning shall be with
skyfire. The council shall not
overlook a suitable punishment for the master of her
household."
"If a man become indebted by trial and fail
within the season to pay whatever be
demanded of him, he and his possessions shall be seized
and given into the
keeping of those to whom he is indebted."
"A woman having been declared by her husband
before the council as unsuitable
for a wife, and the council having found this to be
so, she may remain within
his household without being his wife. Or she may
return to the household from
which she came or that of her father or her brother or
her father's brother or
mother's brother, as she wills. But she may not go
elsewhere and having chosen
where to go cannot choose again."
"It is unlawful for a man to use whatever force
and chastisements are necessary
to maintain order within his household. He may make
any adjustments within the
household to endow it with contentment, but all things
must be done with justice
and moderation. All disagreements within a household
shall be judged by its
master."
"That which be done by a wife or a daughter, a
youth or a child; or a servant or
his wife or his sons or his daughters, or his
servants; or by a freeman or his
wife or his sons or his daughters, or his servants or
slaves; or by a slave or a
bondswoman or a bondsman, or their wives or their sons
or their daughters,
within your household; or by a freewoman or by a guest
or by the stranger within
your gates, shall be as though it were done by the
master of the household and
both shall suffer alike. Except that the council shall
weigh all the actions of
the master of the household and set his punishment
according to them."
"If, upon marriage, it be found that a woman
taken to wife as a virgin be not a
virgin, evidence of this may be given at the Seat of
Truth before three
witnesses. One witness shall then go to her household
and declare this before
its master. Then, except the matter come before the
council, the woman may be
put aside as a wife and returned to her household, and
her bride price reclaimed
double. Or, if her husband choose, she may remain in
his household as wife or
concubine, but he may reclaim her bride price."
"If a woman be put aside by her husband as no
longer his wife and she remain in
his household, she shall be as a concubine."
"The rights of a concubine are those of a
bondswoman, but she is a bondswoman to
her master for life."
"When the master of a household dies his eldest
son shall become the master, and
brother shall follow brother, until there are no sons.
Then the brothers of the
master shall follow in the order of their ages, and
their sons, according to
their kinship. The new master shall provide for the
wives and concubines of his
father in the same manner as previously. His brothers
and sisters shall become
as sons and daughters. Within a household the death of
its master changes nought
but the master. After the death of its master a
household cannot divide, except
it be done lawfully by the new master after he has
been master for one year."
"All who stand at the market gate of the temple
shall be proclaimed by the
hours, and under the proclaimer's voice all men shall
cease exchanges and be
silent."
"A child may be adopted into house and household
according to the custom of the
Sons of Fire, and it may be one of us or a barbarian
from across the waters, or
a barbarian from outside our boundary. But if a
barbarian from outside our
boundary it shall not be adopted unless a foundling
under seven years if male,
or a child if female."
"If a man take a barbarian woman to wife and have
no other wife from among us
who is her superior, he shall not become the master of
a household, and a
younger son shall step over him."
"A man with womanly ways who has proclaimed
himself shall stand before us as a
woman and be treated as one. Except if he bear arms in
war he shall then stand
before us as a man, unless he choose otherwise."
"If the master of a household have within it a
woman who is not a virgin and is
a concubine or slave, and he give her to a guest or
another within the
household, that he may go in unto her, no wrong is
done."
"If a man be proclaimed a man with womanly ways,
an arrangement may be made with
the governor and a price paid to become bis protector.
He shall then enter the
household of the man who paid the price."
"A slave or bondsman may be bought for any woman
of your household. But if she
be a freewoman, then the slave shall be made free, and
if a bondsman the debt
paid so that he be free."
"If a woman be a concubine and within five years
of her loss of virginity or
admittance into your household have not become with
child, she shall pass into
the household of another after the custom of the Sons
of Fire, and returned
according to the same custom."
"During the proclaiming of a stranger his deeds,
good and bad, shall be made
known. All things about him shall be told to all
within hearing of the
proclaimer's voice. Any man may question the stranger
concerning such things and
if aught be hidden or lies told, the stranger shall be
dealt with lawfully by
the council."
"A virgin shall not be burnt, but is to be
whipped with wands and the council
shall set the number of stripes."
"A man who has been punished by trial three times
shall be driven out from among
us after the fourth punishment, unless he be a bearer
of arms in war."
"Records and writings, namemarks and marks of
meaning can be destroyed or
altered only by permission of the council and the
governor."
"The man who is the companion of thieves is
himself a thief at heart and may be
taken to trial if his companions steal."
"If the rightful master of a household be under
age of manhood, the council
shall appoint a steward and guardian for the household
and heir."
"A stranger may not enter our boundaries bearing
weapons of war made of metal.
But the lords of the barbarians about our boundaries
may come bearing weapons."
These are the statutes between the council and the
governor and men. Those
between man and man are in the keeping of the court of
the market place. There
are others between the court of the temple and men.
It was Hoskiah who set the statutes up and Racob
recorded them. I, Brigadan of
the Gulwa, preserved them, but many are unknown. Those
are the statutes of
Hoskiah.
This was misplaced from its text. "It was decreed
that the iron for burning
should not glow, neither should a blinding be made by
contact with metal but
should be through heat alone nor should it be
absolute."
CHAPTER TEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 4
Now, even in the days of Hoskiah the records were not
whole and Hoskiah caused
it to be that this was written. It was set down in the
manner of Kahadmos.
It is written, in the Book of Mithram: The True Man
has many quahties and among
the greatest is the inclination towards his duty. A
man has a duty to his soul,
to his God, to those who govern and to his household.
The weakling runs in battle and says, "See, I
have done my duty, I am alive."
The True Man stands resolute and grim, his enemies are
like chaff before the
wind, he is the master of life. Duty is the goddess of
manhood and she demands
no mean sacrifice.
The grim goddess says "Die", and the True
Man steps forward. The ranks of the
Everlasting Lords of Life open and he takes his place
among them.
Duty says, "Glory and honour will never be yours,
your miserable lot is to
labour in the brickpits, so that your wife and
children will not go hungry". The
True Man faces his task with fortitude and
cheerfulness.
Courage is the greatest quality of manliness, and duty
the greatest expression
of courage. What chastity is to woman duty is to man,
the willingly assumed
burden of their kind. Man and woman travel the same
road together, but each
bears a different burden.
Hoskiah said, 'This shall be added to the
records": Even the wild beasts have a
duty to perform, for duty is the handmaiden of life.
All things that have life
have a duty, for life itself is duty. When a man has
no obligations he is dead.
The greater the standing of a man the greater is his
duty. The Captain of Men
shall serve better than the footman. Greater men have
greater duties, lesser men
have lesser duties. Wherever there is life there is
danger.
It is written, in the Book of Mithram: The True Man is
generous in word and
deed, meanness has no place with him. He who gives
with one hand gathers with
the other.
It is also written thus: All men must seek to rise
above their estate. They
either rise or are cast down. Only man knows
discontent and seeks to improve his
lot, for discontent is the maker of men.
Hoskiah added this to the records: Aim your arrow
above your expectations. The
man who sends an arrow towards the moon shoots farther
than the one who sends it
to a treetop. Choose your bow according to your
strength. A strong bow without a
strong arm is of no more value than a weak bow. Judge
a man by his aim and not
by his bow. A plain bow for service, a fancy bow for
display. The strongest bow
ever made is useless without an arrow.
Hoskiah said, "These are things which are written
but have been lost. Let them
be recorded again" : Success is the child of
diligence and persistence. It
follows the footsteps of the wise, even as failure
dogs the foolish. Men have
the choice of either success or ease, they cannot have
both. To be beaten and
still not surrender, that is true victory.
Failure is the yardstick of success. It alone adds
value to achievement, but
there can be no real failure except through the
acceptance of failure.
These things were added to the records, but we cannot
tell when, though it is
said by Hoskiah: The manly spirit rejoices in freedom
and cannot bear the yoke
of servitude. It will admit no master who imposes his
will by force.
A man may submit to leadership and command in warfare,
and be a better man, for
true service is not servility. Never demand your
rights before you have earned
them.
A man is unworthy of freedom unless he also recognises
the rights of others to
freedom. The freeman is his own governor and his rule
is more rigorous than that
of a despot. The only man entitled to be free is the
one who governs himself
strictly and wisely.
Every nation moves either towards freedom or towards
servility, for none can
remain suspended between the two. It is free men, if
they are weak, who are the
greatest enemies of freedom. Great events do not make
either heroes or cowards,
they just unveil them to the eyes of men.
Hoskiah caused this to be written, saying, "This
too was once written but is now
lost to us by decay": The way of the evildoer is
the path of sleeplessness. The
wicked follow a road of darkness, they tread in
constant fear of falling.
The evildoer is caught by his own wrongdoing. He is
imprisoned by his own
wickedness. The evildoer becomes trapped in a snare of
his own making, he flees
when none pursues.
It is truly said: The wicked in heart praise the
wicked in deed. More men think
wicked thoughts than commit wicked deeds, for many who
would act are cowards.
Observe the man who talks much about the deeds of
wicked men, would he not be
among them did he not lack the courage?
This was written in records which were lost even in
the days of Racob: In a
hundred generations men will be less wicked, for such
was written in the Plans
of God. When a thousand years have passed, women will
be more fair, for this was
written in the Plans of God.
A day will come when a great nation will rise above
all others, to lead the
nations of the Earth, and it will survive even the Day
of Visitation. Much was
written of this nation, which is now lost.
As the generations pass, the Earth will become more
fruitful, for this was
written in the Plans of God.
The body of the Great God contains all that is and His
Spirit is contained in
all that is. The spirit is perfect, but the body is
imperfect.
Hoskiah said, "Let this now be written, for it
was written before". No man shall
walk in ways set against the will of the people. No
man shall bear an unjust
grudge or take personal vengeance unjustly.
These things shall be punished: If a man take a wife
before he be one score of
age, though he may have a concubine; if he empty his
body, except in private; if
he purify himself, except in flowing waters.
Because of his birth Hoskiah could not become governor
over the Sons of Fire,
but he sat equal with the governor at the council, for
he commanded all in this
place.
The council made these statutes and set them together
with those of Hoskiah: A
stranger, even a barbarian, may become one of us if he
be supported by three
members of the council, but he shall not sit in the
council, unless he has
carried arms in war for us. He shall not become one of
us until one year after
his proclaiming, and any man may come before the
council and speak his
objections to the acceptance of the stranger.
Each man shall have his assigned place at the council
and may speak at his time
according to his place. No man shall interrupt another
while he is speaking.
No man shall speak before his turn and any man having
spoken may speak again. If
a man has spoken twice and desires to speak again he
shall stand and remain
silent. If one man in five raise their hands for him
he may speak again, but if
they do not he shall be reseated and not speak. If
more than one man stand up at
a time those of lesser placement shall reseat
themselves. On the third time no
man shall speak, except on some matter spoken about by
one who came after him,
and he may not speak about any new thing. No man shall
speak beyond his own
time.
The old statute shall be changed, so that no man shall
sit on the council except
he be one score and five years old, but those over
three score years may remain
on the council. A man who has carried weapons of war
in battle shall take a
higher position than a man entering the council with
him who has not.
If a man go to sleep during a meeting of the council
he shall not come there
again for one season.
A man shall not leave a meeting of the council while
another is on his feet
speaking, and when a man goes outside no man shall
speak in debate.
A man shall not spit or laugh foolishly or make body
noises during a meeting of
the council. No man shall whisper or talk, except in
his talking time.
A man shall not revile another at a meeting of the
council. If a man wish to
make an accusation or call something into question he
shall state it when he is
speaking and ask that a time be made for it to be
debated.
This shall be the stranger's oath upon admittance:
"I swear before The God of
This Enclosure that I will dutifully follow His ways
and obey His commands. I
swear to be steadfast on the Great Path. I swear to
submit myself to all your
statutes and to remain faithful to you in warfare and
before the face of terror,
even under torment by the barbarians. This I swear for
all time."
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 5
"Supreme One Above Greatness, illuminate the
hearts of my people and let them
see the path ahead. Permit them to understand the
meaning of life. Make their
hearts fearful for the responsibility they carry with
regard to the future state
of their souls. To this end help them towards
achieving a humble spirit and a
kindly heart. Grant them some glimpse of eternity
while here on Earth, so that
they may better understand what lies before them.
Bestow upon them the ability
to make contact with the fount of wisdom and Truth and
let them draw near the
well of holiness to sip its waters. Help them to make
right judgements and guide
their hearts, so they hold fast to the teachings of
our Masters who have gone
before. Make them steadfast in the light and show them
the falsity that glitters
in the darkness. When they come to the end of their
journey, Supreme One Above
Greatness, grant them immortality in the Region of
Eternal Light. Incline
towards them in mercy, for You can even mitigate the
impress of wickedness upon
their everlasting souls".
"Our Masters taught that the soul of man is the
seed of a spirit implanted
within the body of a beast. Supreme One Above
Greatness, send down the
refreshing waters of Your wisdom and compassion upon
my people, that the seed
may be nourished within them, to spring to life in the
Land of Light. If the
seed wither within the body or be consumed by the
beast, we are condemned to the
doom of everlasting nothingness. Let none of my people
suffer this, for even the
most wicked among them will be missed by others in the
Region of Eternal Light".
"Supreme One Above Greatness, who reads the
hearts of men as an unrolled book,
what can I ask for myself? I who, though first in rank
among my people, fall far
below many of them in strength of soul. I am a man of
battles and not a man of
prayer, therefore I cannot know how I stand with
You."
"Indeed, Supreme One Above Greatness, I have
brought about much sorrow and
suffering in my days. The burden of my manhood has
weighed down heavily upon me.
But, Supreme One Above Greatness, I have never robbed
the widow or fatherless,
or struck at the helpless and those without
protection. I have not mocked the
afflicted or stood aside in fear when wickedness was
being done. I have slain no
man unless he has been my enemy and would have slain
me. When I served any man I
served him well. I have never deserted a friend in
distress or violated the
sanctity of another man's home. Yet, Supreme One Above
Greatness, I have done
much that men condemn and therefore cannot know my
standing before You. Yet,
however I stand in Your eyes do not consider me too
unworthy to plead for my
people."
"I was not born among those who are now my
people. I am not of their blood, and
once I called upon the God of My Fathers after the
manner of my fathers. Yet,
are You not the same Being, by whatever name called?
You are the Being before
Whom my spirit bows, the Sustainer of its strength.
You alone know the conflict
which has twisted my heart in its resting place, for I
cannot know what, indeed,
is Truth. I do not expect to know, being unworthy of
such knowledge. I did not
desert You, but sought only to see You more clearly
and serve You better. When I
could not understand You in one place, I sought You in
another. I looked for You
where there was more light. Amid the people of my
youth You seemed close, yet I
could not understand You, for they wished to enclose
You in a box. Now, though
You appear further away I see more clearly and know
Your nature."
"Supreme One Above Greatness, I cannot say, as
others do, that I have no doubts,
for indeed I am often torn with conflicting thoughts.
I do not doubt Your
existence, for I have been granted a manifestation of
its reality. But I am full
of doubts about my relationship with You. Then, too,
there is so much I cannot
understand, yet others turn to me for guidance. When I
make an error affecting
only myself I do not complain about the consequences,
but should I guide others
into error my heart will be torn apart."
"God of My Heart and Father of My Soul, incline
towards me a little, for of
myself I cannot reach You. Enlighten me, so that I may
lead others into the
light. Death and destruction I do not fear, not even
everlasting nothingness,
but I do fear being inadequate for my task. Supreme
One Above Greatness, give me
confidence and strength, I ask no more. If I cannot
find these with You I can
find them nowhere. Guide me, Supreme One Above
Greatness, what shall I do for my
people?"
This was not written for the eyes of men, but will he
who wrote it object if by
being recorded for men it adds even a mite to the
storehouse of goodness
available to men on Earth?
When Hoskiah was past three score years of age he sent
to Pelasi for the
remnants of the Children of Light. None of them came,
for they said it was not
meet for them to journey to the edge of the Earth to
dwell among barbarians.
They said, "We will retain the light here, for
out there it will surely be
extinguished".
Later, four ships did come, but they carried the
standards of Ashratem. With
them came Enos Husadim of the Sons of Dan, a learned
man from the slopes of the
mountain which rests in darkness and reaches up to the
limits of light. He knew
Hoskiah when a child. There came also one named Zodak,
who had dwelt in Twalus,
and he brought with him all the books of the Children
of Light. With Zodak came
many men who knew the mysteries of metal, and they
brought with them the light
of Amos. When they came, the spirit of Hoskiah had
already joined his fathers.
Before his spirit took wings Hoskiah wrote this for
the guidance of his people:
"My trusted ones, the time draws near for my
departure on the Great Voyage and I
cannot complete the tasks before my hands. In one
thing I have been neglectful,
for though the Chief Guardian of the Records, the time
I devoted to their care
was little enough. Thank the priests for their care. I
have recorded many
statutes needful for this place. Their like was known
before, but were not set
down for men to see. Now they are made known to the
ears of every man. Your
welfare and safety has ever been my first concern, but
I am a man of battle and
a commander of men, not a scribe and recorder".
"My trusted ones, we are few and the barbarians
about us are many. For a while
they are well kept in hand, for Cladwigen wishes us
well, and his sons are our
friends. We have toiled to raise a city and men come
and go freely among us.
Many ships come in their season. Yet stout warriors
who are not friendly press
down from the Northeast and therefore vigilance can
never be relaxed. We cannot
sleep peacefully side by side with the barbarians and
must ever be alert. Danger
hangs over us like a boulder upon the mountainside,
and our safety is like a
playstone in the hands of a child. The barbarians do
not forget that we are
strangers in this land and only while we serve a
purpose are we welcome".
"Yet, my trusted ones, with all the dangers
around us it is the dangers
threatening within that I fear the most. We are few
indeed against the numbers
of barbarians, yet we weaken ourselves with foolish
strife one with the other
and people with people. Our city is a place for buying
and selling, a place
where things are exchanged. Outside it is a market
place where men come and go
as they please and they buy and sell without
hindrance. We have laws for the
city and laws for the marketplace. Amongst us are many
craftsmen who exchange
the things they make with the barbarians who bring
things to eat. We have a good
life here, but it is not a life I fully understand. We
came from afar to set up
a city dedicated to the light, to hold the light. Yet,
is this such a city? Do
men seek the light and worship it, or do they seek
luxury and worship wealth and
possessions?"
"When some of us came from the Harbour of Sorrow
we were full of praise at our
deliverance from death, but amid the forests of
fruitfulness much of our
gratitude and will was lost. Why must men always be
better men in the face of
disaster and in the midst of privation, than in the
green fields of peace and
plenty? Does this not answer the questions of many who
ask why there is sorrow
and suffering on Earth? Why is it the lot of men to
struggle and suffer, if not
to make better men?"
"My trusted ones, my eyes may be clouded to the
things before them, but I am not
blind to your ways. Already our women cast their eyes
towards the barbarians,
and when women seek men outside their own kind it is a
sign of a people's
degeneracy. I read what is written and I fear for the
future."
"Many who are with us in the light will join us
and then we shall be stronger in
arms and strengthened in belief. (Annotation: How few
came!). Yet our destiny
lies among the barbarians. They are fine, upright men
endowed with courage, do
not belittle their ways, but bring them into the
light."
"Our city was not founded as a marketplace, a
place for exchanging only the
things of Earth. Neither did we come here as
conquerors, but as men seeking
refuge."
"My trusted ones, remember that the road of life
is not smooth, neither is the
way of survival a path of grass. The most needful
thing for any people who wish
to survive is self-discipline. Think less of gold and
more of the iron which
protects the gold. Remember, too, these words from the
Book of Mithram, The
keenest sword is useless unless it be held in the hand
of a resolute man. Also,
the man who has gold keeps it in peace if he tends his
bowstring."
The remainder of Hoskiah's words to the people has
been lost.
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 6
(Incomplete and Fragmentary)
Before we left Droidesh they brought living sheep and
goats and hung them upon a
tree standing in the place of assembly. Birds of
bright colours and things of
worked gold and silver were hung upon the branches.
Perfumes and oils with
garments. They danced about the tree and hewn wood was
brought and laid against
it. Three maidens came and it was lit and burnt as an
offering to success.
We went Northwards and came to a strand where many
ships were drawn up and armed
men such as we had not seen before were disputing
among themselves with great
noise.
We drew off, for they were foreign to us, but others
came behind and we were
taken in among them and brought before Albanik, the
Leader of Armed Men.
They pushed around about us and some cried out for
blood. They wished to take
our ships and possessions, but the leader said,
"Leave the deed until the
morning, for if blood flows now it will not cease with
the foreigners".
That night the wife of Albanik spoke to him and said,
"It would be a foolish
thing and an evil deed to slay these strangers, for
they have wisdom and are men
of learning. Why destroy something you may use to good
end?" The leader listened
to her advice, for he knew there were many wounded men
and none more skilled
than we to attend them. Because she was carrying a
child our lives were spared
and our goods restored to us.
The commander among the captains was a warrior who,
while hunting, had slain his
own father and so had to flee his own land. With him
he had taken the queen
captured by sly and subtle means, but we feared him
not, for Albanik looked upon
us with favourable eyes.
Of the warriors who came with us there were a score of
score of men from
Ilopinos. They wore helmets of bronze with plumes of
scarlet and purple. Their
shields were of bronze burnished, so that they shone
like the sun and were edged
with a band of hardened metal. In length they were two
and a half cubits, and in
width one and a half cubits. They had spears of
unknotted wood six cubits in
length, with blades of hard metal set in sockets.
Their swords were of pure hard metal worked in a
strange way, and in length one
and half cubits and in width three fingers breadth.
They were horn-handled and
bound about with wire of copper and silver. Some among
them were armed with war
javelins and darts. They had a curious dart that
turned over itself in flight,
and another that struck in from the side.
In battle they stood three and three to withstand the
rush of the enemy, but
they were weak in attack, for they moved heavily. With
them were slaves and six
score attendants who were plunderers of the
battlefield, pillagers of the land,
the cooks, the baggage keepers and the carriers of
burdens. The warriors were
the battle craftsmen.
In seven days all the ships sailed together and in
seven days came upon some
land by the sea. It was a place of the dead where all
was desolation. In the
centre of the land by the sea there stood a temple
which had fallen into itself,
for there were no people to keep it. The leaders and
the chief among them went
up to the temple and made sacrifices to their gods
whose voices they wished to
hear.
The daughter of Laben, the armourer, had hidden
herself in the opening behind
the flame and spoke to them in a strange tongue. They
heard her voice and
thought it came from a shadow god. She told them of
the land of her mother,
called Belharia, and bid them find their way there.
She told them to take the
Bethedan with them, for they brought good fortune and
were beloved by the gods.
The leaders went out from the temple believing they
had been granted a vision.
We sailed with a large company towards the West and
had nothing to fear, except
the whirlpool, for the Red Men with us knew the way of
the waters. For long days
we saw only the sea, and the landsighting birds all
came back.
We went out through the mouth of the sea into the sea
of the Great River. Past
the lands of white copper to the Place of Painted Men,
where we drew up the
ships and staked them.
Among the fighting men were some from Sparsia whose
leader was Korin, called the
axeman, but whom we named 'the cunning one'. These
went out into the forests to
hunt and the king of that place sent men to take them,
but they refused to go
and there was a loud dispute.
The bodyguard with the leader of the Painted Men were
bowmen and one shot an
arrow at Korin. He slewed aside behind his shield and
the arrow turned into the
throat of a Painted Man who held a sword against him.
This started a great fight
between forest and sea, and though surrounded by many
enemies Korin fought
through them. The battle was his because he went
forward through the forest and
attacked the houses of the Painted Men.
The ships were divided and those who wished to set up
the eagle and serpent went
to the Harbour of Giants in Belharia. The same giants
are builders of great
temples and they are six cubits tall.
The ship with Korin stayed with us and he hunted them
out of their caves and
slew them all, save one giantess. She came to us,
bound as a surety for the life
of the wife of Albanik.
We came to a bay on one side of which was a forest and
on the other a plain
where herds grazed. For the men of that place it was
the time of the feast of
fires and they held games upon the shore and ran races
in cleared land behind.
At this time they would not fight, so we met them in
peace. They wore garments
woven in two parts and belted with hide. They had caps
of skin or leather, and
the tunic which hung about them was darkly coloured in
blue, green and brown.
They enclosed their legs and feet in dressed skins
bound in front with throngs.
They had many ornaments of copper, but little gold or
silver, though their
armbands and brooches shone like silver. They had the
art of making copper like
silver or gold.
These people hold a great feast before the beginning
of the heat, when their god
Mago appears. Inside the god were the spirits of men
whom the god had eaten, and
their voices could be heard calling for deliverance
from darkness. Because of
the feast these people demanded the giantess, and she
was given over to them for
the days of feasting.
We did not know the ways of these people and when we
saw they wished us to drink
blood, we drew apart from them. The headman sent a
messenger to us and Korin and
the giantess wrestled together, but the giantess was
the stronger, so Korin
lured her towards the cliff edge. Korin taunted her
and laughed at her
clumsiness, and then at the break of the cliff he
tricked her, so that she
rushed forward. As she passed beside him he turned
behind her and pushed, so
that she fell over the cliff edge on to a large black
rock below. Her back was
broken. The same black rock was later split and taken
up to be worshipped.
In the place to which we came the deathless stars ride
high. The adze rests on
the morning and the watchman at the gate of the sky
sits at the eastern tiller
in the evening. The falcon is rarely seen clearly.
This is the Land of Dada.
We warned them, but they would not listen. They were
fasting before the battle,
the sacred fast before they ate the meat of the
offerings. We buried salt
beneath the floors of their houses, so that no man
would live there again. When
the horns sounded the alarm and danger threatened,
these shrewd bargainers came
running to us. Their faces were wet with the sweat of
fear and their lips
trembled. When the danger was past they came out with
chests puffed up and
tongues bragging about their deeds. They were the
first to push forward for a
share in the plunder.
Korin left to seek them. He took two ships but did not
return to his children.
The leader may be carried away, but the lowliest of
those who followed him has a
will which need never be broken. Now when men wish to
say a thing is impossible
they say, "Where is Korin?"
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 7
In the seven and twentieth year came Emos who was a
learned man, and with him
came Zadok who was one of us. Mosu, son of Shonthel,
came also and others in
four large ships. Keeta came in a ship apart.
They were welcomed and Keeta set up a place of
learning, and many came and sat
before him. When Keeta died, those whom he had taught
said, "Let us record the
knowledge of our master, so that it may be added to
the records and not lost."
We who are the pupils of Keeta and have been blessed
by him and purified by
water, shall be one. From this day we will call
ourselves by the name he gave
us, which is 'Bartha Hedsha Hethed' The meaning of the
words is lost.
God and goodness are one and alike. God is not a
person, but The Supreme Spirit.
He made the Earth so that it brought forth man and
woman, and they lived
together in a far away land where everything was
pleasant, even the forests.
Woman tempted man so that he ate something which was
part of God, and man was
punished, for he is responsible for woman.
Children were born in their generations and
multiplied, until Earth was filled.
They built cities of stone and cut channels for water
to flow away, and made
lakes. They were cunning workers in stone and in wood
and in ivory. They made
instruments from firestone and pottery in many
colours. They raised up temples
to the sunlight and worshipped inside many pillars,
but within the temples were
inner temples where greater things were known.
In the Land of Copper, which was the Land of The
Golden Light, one man in twelve
was a priest. There were priestesses who took care of
them and watched over the
sacred elements within the temples. The headdresses of
the priests were red and
they wore feathers and cloaks of black. They had
circlets of gold and beads of
silver, and there was a spiral of blackstones at their
waist.
There was war between those who lived within the city
and those who lived beyond
its limits. Those who lived within the city grew all
kinds of things and clothed
themselves with the labour of their hands. Those who
lived outside the city were
hairy hunters clad in the skin of wild animals.
Outside the grounds of the city there was a holy
mountain and priests lived
within it. The men of the city brought them herbs and
fruit with bread and wine.
The men who were not of the city brought them sheep
and goats and beasts of the
chase.
The men of the city loved wealth, like city dwellers,
and were less generous
than those who gained their food by strength and
hunting. The men of the city
held back portions of their dues and caused the
priests to look upon them less
kindly. When the great day of the sun came and the
High Priest gave his blessing
of fruitfulness, he withheld it from the city dwellers
and gave it only to the
hunters and herdsmen. That night, when those who had
received the blessings were
rejoicing beside the mountain, the city dwellers fell
upon them and slew many.
This was the cause of a great war in which many men
died.
Men did to men what their natures inclined them to do,
but they also ravaged
women and children. The evil grew in greatness, until
the land could no longer
contain it and had to be purged clean. Therefore, the
revenging dragon was
called up out of the heavenly abyss and it lashed the
land with fire and
thunder. The whole land was filled with its smoky
breath and men choked to
death.
The land was split apart between the city and the
mountain and the sea rolled in
upon it, so that the city was destroyed. The valleys
of the mountain were filled
with dead men and animals and with trees.
The High Priest survived with seven others who were
priests. He brought these,
together with one hundred and ten men and their wives
and children, into Labeth,
which is a land among high cliffs at the edge of the
Wide Plain.
Here the priests sought to preserve their wisdom and
knowledge and pass it on to
the children, but it became distorted and
misunderstood. They did not understand
the radiating power from the bodies of the dead, which
could guide the living.
Even we do not understand these things clearly.
The priests who came from the Land of Copper could
make their soul depart from
the body at their command and return as they willed.
When ignorant men saw
seemingly dead bodies return to life when the soul
came back into them, they
thought the same could happen to a dead body if kept
long enough. Even this
superstition stays with us.
Later, when they had left Labern, men believed that if
they kept a dead body so
that it remained whole, the soul would not finally
enter the Sphere of
Accounting. Such was the knowledge of their wickedness
and fear of their fate
that they used every art to prevent the body falling
apart and entering decay.
They may have believed that until the soul entered the
sphere above Earth it
remained flexible and capable of acting to counter
some of the ill-effects of a
life of wickedness and ignorance.
Later still the light of Truth dimmed until it could
scarce be seen, but always
there were the few within the many and the many hid
them. The light of the few
was a precious thing safeguarded with diligence and
care. The people knew the
many, but the few remained unknown, their treasure
safe. Gods multiplied, but
those who sought Truth among them could always find it
if they were sincere and
diligent seekers. It was then as it is now.
A nation was once made from the blood of kings and it
became great and good. The
light of Truth was revealed to this nation and it
rejoiced in the light, but in
a few generations it accepted the light as being
something to which it was
entitled by heritage. So the nation became careless in
the preservation of the
light, it was kept in a poorly built and neglected
shrine. The winds of
adversity came and the light was blown out.
Another nation was made from the blood of sturdy
herdsmen and the lamp of Truth
was lit among them. They, too, rejoiced in the light
for a few generations and
cherished it in a house of gold. Then a powerful king
coveted the house of gold
and came with many armed men and drove out the
guardians, together with their
light. The guardians built a house of reeds for the
light, but because the house
was so humble they no longer bothered to guard it
closely. Then some drunken men
came by, staggering like ships with broken steering
oars, and the house of reeds
was knocked over. The light within burst into an all
consuming flame, and not
only the house of reeds but the house of gold was
destroyed.
Still another nation was made out of slaves and they
lit a lamp from the Eternal
Flame which belongs to all men. Because they had no
veil over their light they
were blinded and thought it the only light. They
became arrogant and called
themselves 'The Chosen of God'. But it was they who
made the choice not He.
Though their god was a god above Earth and their god,
he was not the God of
Mankind, and though he serves The Supreme Spirit he is
not The Supreme Spirit.
So it is that the Children of Light understand that
the majority of men who seek
the light are like children playing about a brazier.
As a man long-confined in
darkness is blinded by the sunlight, so are most men
blinded when brought into
the presence of the Light of Truth, even though it be
heavily veiled. Only
gradually can men be brought out of darkness into
light.
Yet even the Children of Light have become divided
among themselves and one
institution became two. The institution of the East
claims it is the true
guardian of the written records, but now we have books
written even before those
copied by the scribes of Hoskiah. We are not the
Children of the Lesser Light
and we know the mysteries of the Hidden Light. Only we
in the cold north will
survive, for did not Amos write. "Our destiny
lies in a much bleaker land where
our seed will be planted in strange soil. It will lie
within the bosom of an
untamed land, until quickened to growth by the warmth
of the desires of men".
Keeta taught that this means we should not seek to
spread or reveal the light
until our day of destiny, which must lay ahead.
Therefore, those who say we must
multiply our strength or be lost like a bead among the
wheat harvest, are
mistaken. They talk against our destiny, which is
written and unalterable.
We know nothing of our first leader in Light, except
that he was a priest
warrior skilled with the spear, and he lived in times
of war. His name is not
recorded, for he said, "True Masters are to be
known by their works and not by
their names. They who seek to stand forth from other
men and raise themselves up
to increase their stature before the generations, seek
vain glory". He said, "I
am no more than the storehouse into which the harvest
is gathered. The good
grain within comes from many fields and is produced by
the labours of many men.
If I said all this is my own growing, I would lie.
Therefore, so that men cannot
attribute undeserved greatness to me I make myself
faceless and men may see as
they will."
In those days the Children of Light were sought out
and persecuted, and no man
knew another by his name, for the tools of the
tormentors awaited them. Many
were hung by the riverbank, feet uppermost, for the
governors said, "These
people read their books upside down". The women,
they consigned to houses of
pleasure, so that many died in their degradation.
We know that the first Leader of Light was among the
highborn of Egypt and his
name was struck on marble pillars. He was cast down
because he carried the lamp
of Truth and his name was removed from the records of
Egypt. He raised an army,
but it was like a goat attacking a wild bull and he
was slain in the great
marshlands lying near Ethiopia.
He wrote the book which is known to all and the Book
of Rites and Ceremonies,
which is known only to the elect. He did not write the
three books in the Lion
Urns, which we alone know, or the Book of The Secret Way.
He may have written
the Book of Instruction For The Children of The
Written Word Within The Children
of Light. The manner of keeping the book is taught
from generation to
generation. The books are our foundation, our shield
and our sword. They are our
promise and our hope, our guide and our defence.
It is said now, as in the days of our fathers and
their fathers in the
generations before them, that men steal our words and
light their lamps from our
flame. This may be so, but we have gathered seeds from
the flowers of wisdom
wherever they grew and planted them within our own
garden. Shall we then deny to
others what we ourselves have taken? Is it not written
that no man can make
Truth, but many can find it if they seek? Therefore,
is not Truth the property
of all men, even though most spurn it? For Truth is
not a pleasant draught.
Nevertheless, it is true also that we may keep the
Truth, as we find it, secured
to ourselves. If a man seek for unwrought gold and
find it, he has not made it,
yet it is still his. Is it not also written, 'Gold is
the treasure of a
lifetime, but Truth is the treasure of eternity. Gold
can nourish the body, but
it may poison the soul'.
Which do men treasure most in this place, gold or
wisdom? Is it not the earthly
thing they can hold in their hands and not the
treasure they can safeguard in
their hearts? The things they hold in their hands and
hearts are already being
weighed on the Scales of Fate and our destiny decreed
accordingly.
Many in this place, who seek the light and have gone
so far and no further,
declare this is not what they sought and go back
discarding what they have. Yet
if a man seek gold and find silver, does he throw it
away? Better half a loaf
than no loaf at all.
If gold were as plentiful as copper it would be valued
less than silver. Only
the things hard to obtain have value, and what is more
difficult to discover
than Eternal Truth, which must be sought beyond the
boundaries of Earth? Only
the beginning of the long road towards it is here and
it is this beginning you
must seek. Every journey has a beginning and an end,
and you can make your way
only in one direction. If you are dispirited, be
comforted by the knowledge that
you need only find the beginning of the road. Then,
having found it, let every
step you take be in the right direction. The journey
is long and the road rough
and stony, but do not turn back before you reach the
first staging post, you
will find new strength and encouragement there.
Our light was lit in the land of our beginnings. Many
books were made and kept
in four places, and we were in truth Children of The
Written Word. There were
scribes and readers, officials and guardians. There
were servants and those who
served in the courtyards.
Strangers came into the land of our beginnings and
brought practices which were
different but more acceptable. They promised an easier
road, they displayed
deceitful marvels, the usual baits thrown to the
ignorant. Their hands were
heavy against us, and what could we show except Truth
arrayed in her earthly
robes of simplicity? Even the princes turned against
their own customs and the
twin priesthoods of the undergods became earthlywise
and corrupt. Few were ready
to undergo the perils of initiation, no more were prepared
to accept the austere
life prescribed. As spiritual barrenness spread, evil
practices crept in to fill
the places vacated by the Sacred Mysteries. The
candidates accepted into the
body of light became fewer and fewer.
As the name, The Children of Light', is written in the
old characters, it may
also be read as The Children of The Written Word' and
this is a truth. We alone
preserve our secrets in this manner. The Children of
Light followed a destined
course by abandoning their altars in the land of their
beginnings, and went to
dwell among strangers where many ate at one table. We
do not know what befell of
their books, for those we have are rewritten. We know
the Children of The
Written Word went Northward after the scattering, but
we do not know what were
their journeyings.
We know about Lothan and Kabel Kai, designer of
houses, who sailed around the
edge of the Earth. With them was Raileb, the scribe,
who knew hidden mysteries.
They gathered the records, which were in Kindia, and
carried them the long sea
journey, believing the records safer among the
barbarians than among those who
sought to destroy them. If the records are destroyed
by barbarians it will be
done in ignorance and not in the knowledge of
wickedness. Many books were laid
open to the eyes of ignorant men and destroyed.
They came to the Harbour of Sorrow, which lies by the
Hazy Sea, away from the
Land of Mists. There great trees grew and smaller
trees upon them, and moss hung
from them like door curtains. It lay near the great
shallow waters South of the
Isle of Hawhige and North of the Sea Pass. Green
pearls are found there.
Many died in the Harbour of Sorrow, for it was a place
with a curse upon it,
which caused an evil sickness. The Sons of Fire came
with Hoskiah and saved
them, and they came to this place and built a city.
Labrun, the son of Koreb,
was governor.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 8
(This was originally transcribed in full, but many
portions of the written pages
are missing.)
The sister of Kabel Kai was born in the House of
Sothus and her name was
Amarahiti. There were four children and one still
remains among us. Amarahiti
was said to be a lovely-faced woman.
In the days when the city was being built, the
barbarians came and went freely
among us Many came but stood off and watched from
afar, for they did not
understand our ways. Among those who came was Cluth,
the son of Cladda and
brother of Cladwigen, and he talked with Amarahiti in
the days when she was
still in her father's household. In those days she sat
at the Place of the
Talking Stone, which still stands in its place, for
she was among those who
sought to know the speech of the barbarians.
In the season of fruitfulness the true wife of Cladda
was overcome with a
sickness which no one among her own people could cure,
not even the wise men or
priests who were able enough in such things.
Therefore, Cluth came to Ramana,
the mother of Amarahiti, who was known afar for her
skill with herbs. Amarahiti
came with Cluth, to speak for him. When Ramana
understood his needs she and
Amarahiti went with him, taking two armed men and men
of the barbarians. The
peace of Cladwigen went before them. They came to the
place where the true wife
of Cladda lay, on the evening of the second day. The
wise men and priests went
among the people, muttering against the women and dark
looks were cast upon
Ramana.
The mother of Amarahiti cleansed the sick woman with
ashes and made a brew of
herbs and bitter bark of the river ash. She sat by the
true wife of Cladda and
in the morning the sick body no longer burned, neither
did it consume itself.
When the priests of the barbarians heard about it they
declared it was not a
thing of goodness, but something brought about by evil
arts. They told people a
devil was loosed among them, whose trailing vapours
they saw going among the
huts. When darkness came that night there were loud
cries among the barbarians,
for many were seized with weakness and vomiting, but
this was something brought
about by the priests and not by the devil.
Among the barbarians the priests were held in high
regard and so the true wife
of Cladda sought to appease them. She called the
highest of the priests to her
and asked him what should be done to make the evil
depart and leave the people
in peace. The priest told her that if the two foreign
women were sent away,
their evil and the devil would depart with them. He
asked her to let her own
people treat her after their own manner. He told her
that the things which cured
sickness in another race would not cure sickness in
theirs. The true wife of
Cladda, seeking to avoid strife and being already half
cured, said it would be
done as he wished.
So Amarahiti and her mother departed, together with
their servants and the armed
men who accompanied them. On the night after they left
the true wife of Cladda
died, with vomit stopping in her throat. Then the
priests made their voices
heard among the barbarians and told them to behold the
work of the devil which
remained among them. They said it had not departed,
nor would it leave until it
was appeased. They spoke in such a manner that men of
the barbarians set out in
haste and came upon the women and Cluth, who with
armed men were preparing to
leave their camping place. When Cluth heard the words
of the priests spoken by
those who came he was dismayed and knew not what to
do. There was a man among
those who came, who spoke many words to Cluth, so that
he was stirred up against
our women. For Cluth was a barbarian and their ways
were his ways. (Here some
three hundred and fifty words are missing).
It resumes: Amarahiti turned her face towards Cluth
and told him that by
strength alone he had brought her to this distant
place and its stronghold. That
through his stubbornness her people had died and her
mother had been wounded.
She said that though the priests called for the
sacrifice of her modesty, after
the customs of his people, she was already made sacred
to a man of her own and
would rather die than be degraded. She asked him what
would be his pleasure, and
would it not be even less than that given by a woman
with a price, who would at
any rate be willing to please. What a small pleasure
that is set against the
pleasure women can really give. (Indistinct, then
several lines missing). Cluth
stood apart with his arms (Part missing). The priests
prepared the cage and
Amarahiti was fetched (some words missing) stood by
with dignified modesty. Her
mother sat apart before the image (large part lost
here).
It begins again: Away Cluth lay against the bole of
the tree and when they
fetched her to him he raised himself up. He hardly
stood, for he was bloodied
and weak. Amarahiti told him that never had woman
beheld a braver man, though a
foolish one. Down at the water's edge lay Kabel Kai
and the men who had cut the
lashings of the structure laved his wounds.
The old man who had read the omens and divided the
people bade those nearby to
carry Cluth to the riverbank. When they came nearby
Kabel Kai had disappeared
into the thickets of the forest. The men of Kelkilith
remained on the other
side.
They left the destroyed place and the buried dead
behind them and Amarahiti
stayed in the keeping of the priests of Cladwigen. In
this manner they came to
the place where Cladwigen and his warriors were
assembled to meet the enemy.
They were received joyfully, but there was sorrow for
Kabel Kai whose cunning
had carried the day. They feared for him, thinking he
had been taken by the
Wictas.
Cluth was slain in the battle with the Wictas and the
Men of Broad Knives at the
crossing of the river now called by the barbarians
Cluthradrodwin.
Kabel Kai was not taken, though he was sorely wounded.
His face was torn from
the blows of the spiked club, so that flesh hung loosely
down. He was twisted,
for his shoulder was broken when the logs fell upon
him. So he remained hidden
within the forest, the companion of beasts, for his
appearance caused men to
shudder.
When the leaves left the trees in the fall of the year
he came close in to the
city, near the boundary where Amarahiti was wont to
sit, by the side of the
flowing stream. In the winter he was clothed with
skins and moved hardly.
At the time of the midwinter feast of the barbarians
the people of the city met
them on common ground beyond the city and before the
forest. Fires were lit and
there was feasting and revelry. Gifts were exchanged
between the people of the
city and the barbarians. There was an image (part
missing).
Amarahiti was sorrowful because of this and withdrew
into some bushes close by
the stream. With her were the two hounds. The hounds
smelled out Kabel Kai, for
he had come close, being drawn by the warmth and
cheerfulness at the place of
feasting. They leaped upon him gladly, for they knew
him. Kabel Kai sought to
escape back into the forest, but Amarahiti caught him
by the hand. She looked at
him and fell on his neck with tears. She covered him
with her cloak of coney fur
and when her two attendants came they carried him to a
sheltered place close by
the stream. (Some five paragraphs are missing).
It goes on: The most skilful with herbs among them. In
the spring of the year
they returned as husband and wife and were welcomed
with a great feast. They
were remarried within the house of Kabel Kai.
The fortress of Cluth was built up again by Kabel Kai
according to his promise,
and the sons of Cluth live there in these days. It
stands on high ground rising
out of the waters, surrounded by a high wall of logs.
The city was built and finished with a wall which was
two walls of wood with
soil between. Men came in ships, with cloth and
pottery, with things of metal
and shells and beads. The barbarians gave much for
cloth dyed scarlet, for their
tree blue is not fast in cloth. Scarlet is made
nowhere except in the land of
The Sons of Fire, where a white fish turns scarlet
under the warmth of the sun.
Men say that those who bring the scarlet cloth declare
it to have been found in
this manner: A man was out hunting with his dog and
while they walked along the
strand the dog caught a fish which it carried to its
master in its mouth. The
man saw a scarlet stain on the dog's mouth and wiped
it away with a piece of
linen. When the colour could not be withdrawn from the
cloth it was taken to a
dyer who sought out the thing that had made it.
The temple was built within the city and raised up on
logs. Beside it was the
Place of Instruction and just before it was the Place
of Exchanging. It stands
today as a sanctuary and a centre for those who seek
the light. In its keeping
are the records of the Children of Light who are the
Children of the Written
Word.
But all is not well with the heart and spirit of the
city, which is the people.
A city lives not by the wood and stones with which it is
built. Therefore, since
the coming of Samon of the Barhedhoy and those who
follow Ameth, we who are the
heart of the Children of Light prepare our departure.
(Some words missing). By
the waters of Glaith not far distant where we may
dwell by ourselves.
The first books we leave in the temple with those who
guard them, but we have
made other books which will go with us. In another
place we will make them
incorruptible, (piece missing). This we leave with
you, as we also take it with
us, so that it may not be lost. The names are written
and the seals placed.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE BOOK OF KADMIS
By command of our master Lodas, son of Kadmis and
Karla, by the hand of
Orailuga, the writer born of the Hortheni. Set down in
the seven and eightieth
year of the temple, which is the fourth year in the
cycle of Balgren and the
nineth year of our oath.
As man moves in air, so does God move in goodness. As
God is incomprehensible to
man as mortal man but comprehensible to him as man in
spirit, so is God not a
Being with the mere attributes of men but The Supreme
Spirit among spirits. As
man stands at the apex of material creation, so is The
Supreme Spirit the
Ultimate Unity above the spiritual sphere.
From this day forward we shall be known as the Craftsmen
of The Supreme Spirit,
and this place, upon the waters of Glaith which we
call the Valley of Reeds,
known to those about us as Carsteflan, shall be called
the Smithy of The Supreme
Spirit.
The boundaries of the land pledged solely unto us are
the waters below, upward
of the markpost three thousand and two score set
paces. Downward of the markpost
one thousand and twelve set paces. In the water and
its divisions you may fish
and gather reeds and cut water herbage over to its
further bank.
Landward of the markpost, at four thousand four score
and ten paces is the stone
placed by Calraneh, set upright, and there is the
boundary to the East. Out ward
from this, two thousand and five hundred set paces on
each side is placed a
markstone set that all may recognise it. From these
stones to the markposts on
the waters edge are the boundaries North and South.
Within the boundaries the land shall be clear of trees
and shall be pastured and
sown, and therein we shall have our habitations. In
the forest about us may be
gathered wood, and swine may be fed there and we may
hunt.
The House of Men shall remain as before, but no longer
shall we be divided into
parts. Men shall be made men as they have been in the
past. If any man be in
years and without wife and children, or having a son
who is a man placed in his
stead, he may enter wholly into the House of Men.
No man shall absent himself from the House of Men at
his times, unless by
dispensation of the Houseruler, or if it be impossible
for him to be there. But
all time not served shall be served doubly later,
unless, with the dispensation
of the Houseruler, it is waived.
The Ruler outside the House of Men shall be a man
chosen by the council, which
shall be four men chosen in meeting together at noon,
one day before midwinter's
eve. The Ruler and the council shall govern and judge
in all things among us,
but they shall not alter these decrees, which shall
stand among us as a rock. We
will govern our lives by them and abide by them and
pass them on to those who
follow. These, together with the words of the Holy
Writ, are the candle stick
and container for the mortal Light of Truth which is
among us. They shall be
honoured by all who walk in that light, now and
henceforth.
They shall be written on copper made incorruptible and
placed within the sacred
urns, together with the records. Yet they shall remain
with us and be among us
written on tablets of wood.
We shall keep the decrees of Hoskiah and abide by them
and their punishments.
Though the punishments may be changed by the council,
so that men are lashed
with the whip and the women with leathern throngs or
wands of wood. We now have
with us the decrees of Amos and they alone shall stand
before those of Hoskiah.
All other laws shall stand according to the order of
their numbering. Where laws
are at variance one shall not be set against another,
but that which is latest
shall stand highest and the others be subordinate.
The decrees of the Old Law, which is not written,
shall be kept only if their
keeping be the custom in judgement. Let no man build a
habitation of brick or
stone upon these lands, for this is an unlawful thing
unto the people within
whom we dwell.
If any decree be set against another, the last written
decree shall prevail,
except between the decrees of Amos and Hoskiah. Let no
man change to his benefit
the brandmark upon the beast of another, for this is
an unlawful thing. If done,
the wrong shall be adjusted by restoring double the
value and if done again by
restoring treble.
Let no man among us worship otherwise than in the
manner of our brotherhood. To
the rituals nothing shall be added and nothing taken
away. Our beliefs shall be
supported manfully, without shame and with all our
strength. You shall not be
faint-hearted when danger threatens, nor indifferent
when hard-pressed. No man
among us shall be voiceless when our beliefs are
ridiculed, or remain passive
before their enemies. If anyone become a coward or
fail in this, he shall not be
numbered among us.
The works of men are imperfect and no man has ever
seen the Light of Truth in
absolute purity. Therefore, though two things within
the body of our written
records may appear contradictory, if not capable of
reconciliation through
greater understanding, the thing written later, unless
a manifest error, shall
be more acceptable. Be men of good faith, goodwill and
commonsense. Nothing
passing through the hands of many men escapes
contamination. Only sincerity and
diligence will maintain its purity. Nevertheless,
having established something,
uphold it steadfastly. In this sphere of falsity,
cling to every truth, as a man
swept out to sea by the river torrents clings to a
log.
All men held captive for anything they may have done,
and not yet brought before
the council or punished, shall be kept encaged at the
waters edge. A man may be
encaged as a punishment and the cage either covered or
uncovered. If a man must
die he may die either in clean or unclean waters, as
is done by the people who
surround us. No man shall draw blood to slay in
judgement.
A man shall take his brother's wife into his
household, if his brother die and
leave her unprotected. The unprotected of any man's
bloodkin or lawkin shall
become his responsibility. Inasmuch as the Lord of
Heaven mated with the Queen
of Heaven, brother and sister are not forbidden to
each other under the Old Law.
A man shall not gaze upon the nakedness of any of his
bloodkin or lawkin in
lust, and no woman shall expose her nakedness to any
man not her husband.
Punishments may be executed either by burning or the
cage.
Every man shall learn to fight and defend himself with
the axe, the bow, the
spear, the sword, the javelin or the sling, and all
weapons of the hand shall be
sharpened.
Every man among us shall know the words of the Holy
Writ by understanding of the
writings or by memory. They shall be cut into his
heart, as they are on copper
and wood.
The records shall now be written in the Sacred
Characters and not in letters of
the Sons of Fire. Line for line the letters of the
People of the Five Red Gods
shall be used, the letters from the skysigns seen by
the Master of Writing.
(Many following chapters are lost.)
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE RECONSTRUCTION BY KADAIRATH
The Master was seated at his table, and, about him in
a half circle, were those
he instructed, and he taught them in this manner:
"My brothers, these are the ordinances of living
and the laws which are the
ordinances of men. No law, whether it be of The
Supreme Spirit or of man, wholly
produces happiness and causes no sorrow. So, to be
worthy and good an ordinance
or law must produce more contentment and happiness
than it prevents. It must
also prevent more sorrow and confusion than it
produces, or it would be a work
of wickedness and a memorial to the follies of
men".
"Pleasure never comes unadulterated and no form
of goodness which man seeks to
promote is unencumbered with restriction. Nonetheless,
there is no form of
goodness which is unproductive of happiness in the
hands of those governed with
wisdom. Joy and sorrow, pain and pleasure, success and
failure are all moulding
processes operating on the spirits and natures of men.
Neither of the opposites
is of less importance than the other."
These were the things taught:
'The nature of every person is different and all tend
to drift towards the
circles which accord with their natures. Therefore, we
set a standard, which not
all will find acceptable, so that only those whose
natures demand the best find
our company congenial."
"Unless the soul of each man and woman is
developed and disciplined by the
restraints of spiritual and material decrees, it
cannot rise above its earthly
elements. As the earthly body must be kept fit by
discipline and self-control,
and become gross and weak through overindulgence or
indifference, so is the
spirit controlling the body required to exercise
restraint."
"Every law, whether arising in the sphere of the
spirit or the sphere of matter,
suppresses something arising out of the nature of man
and therefore calls for
the exercise of restraint and forbearance. Yet is it
not true that though every
just law restrains something within men and women, it
also restricts evil and
things which are not good? The less a law imposes upon
men and women and the
more it imposes upon the things detrimental to their
welfare, the better the
law. All laws are paid for out of treasury of freedom,
the lower the cost the
better the law."
"The laws of earthly rulers are kept by force of
arms, but the keeping of the
higher spiritual laws can only be ensured through
enlightenment and wisdom. The
causes of misjudgments, sorrow and remorse stem more
frequently from breaches in
spiritual laws than in earthly
ones."
"Moral laws and restraints are essential to the
progress and welfare of mankind.
When passions are unrestricted and weaknesses unfenced
by moral laws, various
forms of vice and perversions become accepted and sap
the stamina of nations.
When the abnormal is given free access to intrude upon
the normal, the nation
degenerates, the race is contaminated and mankind
suffers a reverse. The Great
Law places an obligation upon mankind to improve
itself. Every man and woman
must safeguard their heritage and raise themselves
above earthly sordidness.
This is one of the reasons for living. The struggle of
life is with man, the
struggle of man is with himself."
"Wise leaders in every land and age have made
laws restraining the weak and
abnormal from satisfying their carnal appetites and
immoral urges. If their own
uncontrolled desires were allowed freedom to dictate
their actions, then not
only would the weak and abnormal destroy themselves,
but they would be like a
cancer in the living body of mankind."
"The Sacred Books tell us that the nature of man
contains a sense of shame. This
is so, and it is there that he may also know the
meaning of decency and be proud
of himself as a man. It is there to make a better
state known to him, a state of
spiritual cleanliness and purity."
"Such knowledge does not come naturally to man,
any more than good pastures come
naturally to the husbandman. The city over the hill
was founded in goodness, and
its founders were not men who found pleasure in
wickedness. Nonetheless, as the
years passed it became apparent that all was not well
within its walls. Now,
because of the inclination of its inhabitants, the
city's days are numbered."
"Men come across the sea in ships from the South,
bringing things much sought
after by the people who surround us, who go into the
city to exchange the things
they have caught or grown, or which have been dug out
of the ground. Things are
exchanged in the marketplace of the city, but they are
for the enjoyment of the
body, not the satisfaction of the soul."
"Nonetheless, men will always be driven, by their
very natures, to seek for and
obtain things which do not satisfy any earthly
appetite. Such things are those
which delight the hearts of men by their beauty, or
bring inward joy and
contentment. Also things which bring pleasure to loved
ones and things which
inspire men to noble deeds. With all the earthliness
of man the things most
sought and desired are those which stir the forces
within the soul, and not the
forces within the body. When it is otherwise mankind
will slip backwards towards
the beasts."
This is rewritten in our tongue, through a rethinking
of the text by Anewidowl.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
PART OF A MARRIAGE PLEDGE
My name is Farsis, from the house of Golaith and I am
without wife. These are my
pledges to Awerit of Glendargi:
"Here, in the light of day, before The Supreme
Spirit and before all men, in the
sight of my father Bealin and your mother Goronway, I
establish you as my wife."
"I shall not fail to consult you before I take
another wife and you will never
be other than headwife. You will never lack for food
and clothing, though the
food may be uncooked and the cloth unwoven. A roof
shall always cover your head
and a weapon be ever ready for your protection. I will
always be considerate of
your wants and always careful in things relating to
your welfare. Whatever good
fortune comes it will be shared with you and our
children."
"I will protect you through every year of my life
and shelter you from every
calamity to the best of my ability. An insult to you
shall be an insult to me
and every man of my blood. As from this day, my house
is your house. What your
father and your father's house were to you before, now
am I and my house."
"Should greater duties call me from your side, I
will take every precaution for
your safety and welfare. Should I leave you, through
any change of heart or
darkening of thoughts, or should I slight the pledge
given here and take to
myself another woman in your stead, then, unless you
have brought shame on me
and my house by committing the great wickedness of
women, I shall pay to your
father's house twice the bridal price. I shall also
bestow upon you a half share
of our property and possessions joined together since
marriage. Each of our
children shall be given its proper portion of all my
property and possessions,
and it shall be established in the hands of the king's
servants."
"Whatever comes to you as bridal gifts or is
brought with you as your own shall
be yours. I shall always safeguard and defend it. I
will never take it to myself
so that you are deprived of it, unless for the one
wrong which defiles my house
and mocks my name. Whatever your father gives shall be
ours, after the custom of
the great laws."
"Your infirmities are accepted, to be shared with
you, and the children you bear
shall always be mine. No man shall ever mock you or
abuse you without my hand
being against him. No man shall ever wrongfully lay
hands upon you, for you are
mine, now and for always."
"I will not neglect the upbringing of our
children, but they shall be raised
according to my own light. You may follow your own
creed even as I follow mine,
each being tolerant towards the other."
Those are my pledges, my hand and my token.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE MASIBA AMENDMENTS
These are the lawful changes witnessed before Masiba:
"No man or woman shall own a slave, and no maiden
or woman shall enter the
household of another except as a wife or maidservant.
To possess a concubine is
no longer lawful. A maidservant shall be under the
protection of the master of
the household wherein she serves, and he shall render
her up in due time. If he
lay hands on her in anger he shall make due payment
for it, and if he seduce her
he shall forfeit to her household a third part of his
possessions and may be
otherwise dealt with lawfully."
"If anyone strike a half wit or injure one in any
way he shall be severely dealt
with lawfully. Courtfathers shall be appointed, who
will be protectors of
widows, orphans, half wits, the afflicted by fate and
those assigned to them.
The Courtfathers may be responsible themselves or they
may appoint guardians.
The property and possessions of any person may be
placed in their care. If the
Courtfathers act without good faith, deceitfully or carelessly
in their trust
they shall make restitution without stint and be
punished otherwise."
"If two men fight without weapons, using their
hands, without wood or stone
except that they may use staves or sticks, and one be
injured so that he keep to
his bed upward of three days, the other shall pay for
his loss of time and full
healing. If any man gain deceitfully by keeping to his
bed declaring himself to
be hurt sorely, he shall not keep his gains and shall
be punished otherwise. If
a man fight with wood and stone in his hands, or
unlawfully with weapons, he
shall be punished severely. If an armed man attack
another who is unarmed he
shall pay heavy compensation and be punished
severely."
"If, when men fight, a woman with child is hurt
so that she suffer, or if at any
time a man cause injury to a woman with child so that
either die, he shall pay
with his own life. If it can be doubted whether a man
caused an unborn child to
be stillborn he shall not die, but can be made to pay
compensation to the
husband of the woman,"
"After her punishment the life of an adulteress
shall be in the hands of her
husband. If he redeem her he may deal with her as he
wish. If he redeem her but
do not wish to deal with her, she shall still be
denied the status of wife."
"If a woman use a substance so that she may not
conceive, her husband may punish
her by whipping or beating, providing he does not draw
blood or maim."
"If a woman make a substance which prevents
conception, or give or convey this
substance to a woman, she shall be whipped with wands,
as before. From this time
the whipping shall be done on three days following
each other and she can be
made to pay compensation. If a man make, give or
convey this substance, he shall
be severely dealt with."
"If a woman cause her unborn child to be
stillborn, she shall be secluded in a
place of confinement for a month and whipped with ten
strokes of the wand every
third day. If anyone supply a potion to cause an
unborn child to die, they shall
be punished. If a woman, she shall suffer double the
punishment of a mother who
causes her child to be stillborn, and can be made to
pay compensation. If a man,
he shall be much more severly dealt with."
"If anyone poison an animal belonging to another,
that person shall pay
compensation to no less three times the value."
"The flesh of horse, squirrel and rat shall not
be eaten. The badger is a
creature sacred to our fathers because it was their
salvation, and it shall not
be slain."
"When a child stands on the threshold of manhood
and his manly organs become
active, he shall be made a man after the old custom.
He shall be handed over the
threshold stone and welcomed as in times past, but
this shall be the new
declaration: "I know without doubt what I am. I am
the seed of divinity
implanted within a body of flesh. I belong with those
who walk the Great Path of
the True Way and my place is beside them. I am a man
knowing manly ways and I
will do what is required of me as a man".
"My duty is to always protect those who walk with
me and never deny my beliefs.
I shall be steadfast even under persecution. The
tormentors' instruments will
not open my mouth. I undertake to bring at least one
convert into the light".
"My duty is to take a wife and beget children who
will be raised in the light of
the Great Path of the True Way. My duty is to provide
for them in every way
within my power and to instruct them in the paths of
wisdom."
"My duty is to learn a skilled craft. I will be
kind to animals, to vegetation
and to the soil.
I will not wilfully harm a wild creature or a tree. My
duty is to oppose all
forms of disorder and lawlessness. It is to learn the
purpose of life and to try
to understand the design of The Supreme Spirit Who
laid all things out in
orderliness. I know I must always keep my thoughts
clean, my words true and good
and my deeds manly."
"I know there is a path of evil. It is the way of
weakness and cowardice, which
leads to self-destruction. I will fight all forms of
wickedness and evil
wherever I find them and I know I cannot go manfully
through life without
opposition and struggle".
"I know that all men are born mortal and all must
die in body, but I believe I
am a soul with the potentiality of everlasting life.
If, during the trials of
life, I am assailed by doubt I will not remain passive
before it".
"I promise to obey the code of manliness and to
follow the paths of wisdom. My
tongue will ever speak true and my hand do good. I
know that just to do good is
not sufficient, but I must attack evil. My duty is to
oppose wicked men and
their ways, and I will abide in peace with my
brothers".
"My duty is to learn and to understand the
teachings of the Holy Writ, so that I
may direct my children by its light. I will uphold and
support the Brotherhood
all the days of my life and expound its teachings to
others. I acknowledge that
only by example can I be a true and worthy exponent.
"I will never oppress any man for his belief,
unless he first attack mine. Even
then I will bear him with tolerance, until his
oppression threatens to overwhelm
me. I will never agree to the conversion of men by
force, even for their own
good, for this is an evil thing. My only arguments
shall be example and
commonsense".
'The faith I hold shall not be something imprisoned
within my thoughts, but
something lived and expressed in deeds. I give thanks
for the knowledge that I
am a living soul, but I know full well the grave
responsibility I bear towards
my future being. I will not be a disgrace to Earth
when I pass to the greater
realm beyond."
"When I become a father of children I. shall
accept responsibility for their
wrongdoing, even as credit is claimed for their
goodness. I shall not seek to
blame others for my own failures. I shall be ever mindful
of the good things of
life and grateful for them. I shall suffer adversity
and affliction with
fortitude, rising above them like a man and not
cringing before them like a dog
under the stick of his master. Doubts, fears,
unnatural desires and unmanly
urges may lurk along my path, like forest demons which
waylay those who travel,
but I shall overcome them."
"I will not hide my contempt for the workers of
wickedness and servants of evil,
and though they may be in the seats of the mighty I
will accord them no respect.
I will never commend that which is wicked."
"I recognise that my soul and body compete for
the satisfaction of their
separate desires. I know that each day the body dies a
little, that every day it
draws nearer to the dark shore. Therefore, I will
follow the precepts of
prudence and each and every day will be a step forward
in the awakening of my
soul. I shall not punish my trueself for the sake of
satisfying a decaying
body".
"I will live in the light as revealed in the Holy
Writ, the Written Light as
revealed to the Brothers of the Book. I will live as a
man, acknowledging my
duties and obligations as a man, and I will die as a
man."
CHAPTER NINETEEN
THE LETTER OF MATA
A SON OF AGNER
The barbarian asks, "Who and What is The Supreme
Spirit?" Say unto him,
"Conceive it as a Being even above your greatest
god. If it helps in your
understanding, see The Supreme Spirit as a God
reflecting His image as yourself.
It is He who fills Heaven and Earth with His might,
and His powers are displayed
in the elemental forces. He is now as in the beginning
and will be no different
after the end. He formed men by building an earthly
structure around a heavenly
seed and into this he infused the vapours of life. He
maintains the order of the
Heavens and stabilises the land in the waters. His
breath is the breath of life
and He causes water to fall and greenery to
live". Say to the barbarian, "Look
about you and see God reflected as in a mirror. No
mortal man has ever looked
upon Him directly, but His reflection may be seen with
immunity".
The barbarian seeks a god he can see, but try and make
him understand this is
impossible, because of God's very greatness and the
littleness of man. Take the
barbarian out next time the sun shines at its strength
and ask him to gaze upon
it. He will be forced to admit that it is beyond his
powers to do so. Then say
unto him, "See, it is beyond your power to look
upon even the shield behind
which Haula hides himself because of his brightness.
Yet even this great god is
no more than a faint, far off reflection embodying the
ray carrying power from
The Supreme Spirit. How then could you hope to look
upon the source of power
itself?"
The barbarians are still children and these things do
not easily come within
their understanding. Because of this it may be best if
they were taught by
simple tales, like children, and so brought into the
hght gradually. A behef in
The Supreme Spirit is of no great importance. An
inquiry into His nature by the
ignorant is purposeless foolishness. It is of much
more importance to men that
they believe in their own souls. Belief in a god of
any sort without belief in
the immortality of man and his godlike-ness serves no
end. If a god existed
without man deriving any benefit from his existence,
it would be better for man
to ignore him. This, however, is not the case. Man
seeks unity and communion
with The Supreme Spirit only for his own benefit. Man
has a destiny founded in
something greater than himself, and hence his need for
that something.
The existence of a Supreme Being is not just something
to accept, believe in and
ignore. A belief, faith alone, cannot be ends in
themselves, for nothing exists
without purpose. Simple belief in a Supreme Being is
not enough, we must know
the purpose or intention of the Being. If we believe
this Supreme Being created
us, however this was brought about, we must seek to
discover the purpose behind
our creation. If we were created to serve some
purpose, to do something we were
intended to do, we must do it or earn our Creator's
displeasure. Does the potter
keep the pot useless for its purpose, or the smith
keep unwrought metal? Only
things which serve the purpose for which they were
intended are kept and
cherished.
Therefore, we who are brothers, were taught not only
to believe in a Supreme
Being but also in our similarity to Him. The Supreme
Spirit is not a stranger
beyond our ken, the powers of The Supreme Spirit
infuse every fibre of our
bodies.
If we have difficulties among the barbarians, the
difficulties here are no less.
The Truth we have seems not only unpalatable but also
indigestible. Men seek
tastier food, even though it is less sustaining, and
few replace the brothers
who depart. Would we serve better if we presented
Truth as a draught diluted
with water and honey?
The threat of the barbarian king is something upon
which you shall be
counselled. If you are threatened with the
alternatives of death or
transgressing our laws, you may transgress them within
reason and the bounds of
conscience. If, however, you are required to deny all
that you hold to be good
and true, to betray all that we hold sacred, then you
must accept death for the
sake of your soul. You will be informed about these
things by Kuin of Abalon who
comes later, so only the things you enquire about are
answered.
For the sake of the barbarians it is perhaps best to
call The Supreme Spirit,
'God, The God without a Name.' This will solve some
difficulties, and if the
barbarians think themselves superior because they
contain Him within a name, let
it be so and hold yourself in peace.
Say to the barbarians, "As the soul of man fills
his body, so does God fill His
domain. As the soul surrounds and contains the body,
so is it with God and his
creation. As the soul sees but cannot be seen, so does
God see without being
seen. As the soul feels, so does God. As the soul
oversees the nourishment of
the body, so does God revitalise the whole of His
habitation. As the soul
occupies an unfindable place within the body of man,
so is the residence of God
unfathomable. No man can know the seat of the soul and
no man can know the seat
of God."
The barbarians make images of God to make Him more
understandable. Are we much
better who make images of Him in our likeness within
our thoughts? Not perhaps
because we believe Him so, but to make Him more
understandable.
As man's understanding of God increases, so does God
recede; so that though
through the ages man comes to understand God better,
He ever keeps the same
distance away. We who dwell in the light of The
Supreme Spirit have come closer
to understanding, not because we are better men but
because we have devoted our
lives to the search. If any man seek carefully and
diligently enough he must
find whatever it is he seeks.
The rest of this letter is missing, but on a small
recovered scrap dealing with
buildings, it refers to Galheda. Elsewhere it is
stated Galheda rewrote it.
CHAPTER TWENTY
THE TEACHINGS OF SADEK
All men within the Brotherhood are to be taught to
live by these ordinances,
which provide for the discipline of the spirit:
Men shall be made to abstain from all manner of
wickedness and hold fast to all
that is good. They shall become speakers of Truth and
followers of uprightness,
and justice shall be upheld in their hands. The
virtues are staffs which will
aid man in his long journey through life to the gate
of his soul's unfolding.
There are guides upon the path, guideposts and places
of rest and shelter for
the weary. There is provender to be found by the
wayside and there are many
things to be discovered along the trackways. (About
two paragraphs missing).
The Master shall admit into the Brotherhood all who
have, by diligent study and
rigid self-rule, established themselves. They shall
become one with those who
climb the steps, and find their appointed place.
The Master shall instruct them in the School of Light
and Life, revealing unto
them all the secrets of their nature and the manner of
the soul's release. There
shall be no unnecessary chastisements here and no
particular rewards. Austerity
for its own sake shall not be practised.
Every man who comes under the Master's hand, led forth
by his nominator into the
presence of the acceptors, shall bring with him all
his skill, knowledge and
possessions. He shall have been properly observed,
judged and questioned before
coming before the acceptors, and shall not do so until
he has been here for one
year.
The next symbols shown are those representing the
Design and The Law, these are
the great unchanging things, lasting forever, they
were the same in the time of
our first forefather, as they will be in the time of
our last descendant. (Much
missing.)
No man shall remain within the Brotherhood, who does
not live by these our
ordinances. The man who walks in filth befouls not
only his own floor but also
the thresholds of his neighbours. Unless a man walk in
cleanliness of body and
purity of mind he shall not be counted among us, and
no one shall call him
brother.
The soul must be wrought with the hard smiting blows
of adversity and sorrow. It
must be gently moulded by the waters of humility and
charity, it must be chased
by understanding and patience. These are things which
form a shape of harmonious
beauty. But other things shape it in ugliness, these
are: falsehood and greed,
deceit and malice, cruelty and haughtiness, together
with other evil qualities.
The just reward of those who follow the path of ease
and indolence is
condemnation in the recesses of disgrace and shame.
There will be sorrowful
groans and tear-shedding in the misery of soul
loneliness.
These our ordinances are not made to provide for the
comfort and ease of man,
not even for his bodily welfare, but for the benefit
of his eternal soul. Here
his soul is to be purged and quickened to life by the
strong waters of wisdom
infused with the greatest amount of Truth he can
tolerate. Only by himself
submitting his soul to our discipline can any man
acquire benefit from our mode
of life.
Man was raised out of the womb of Earth to rule its
surface, but here the
existing powers gather into two camps of everlasting
hostility. Life opposes
death, the champions of light challenge the champions
of darkness, Truth
confronts falsehood. There is a leader of light and a
leader of darkness, a
commander of life and a commander of death. The
legions of wickedness oppose the
legions of the upright.
At birth all are cast out upon the battlefield of life
and join the legions
arrayed on one side or the other. According to his
rank in the legion of Truth,
so does a man fight against falsehood. By his standing
in the eyes of the
commander of light, so is a man placed in opposition
to his adversary in the
legion of darkness.
The wicked will be delivered to the sharp edge of the
sword, but the good will
be remembered. So it was in the first days, when our
ancestors left Kaburi and
followed the Master who guided them across the seas.
They came over the pathless
waters, forsaking soft living and delusions which
amused the eye.
The wicked are not only those who knowingly do wrong.
An evil man is one who
seeks to justify the wickedness and weaknesses of
others. The fires kindled
against them became a raging flame in which their
legions were swallowed up.
Now that you are invested with new life, open your
eyes and behold the works of
The Supreme Spirit with understanding. Always follow
the path you have been
shown, so that your steps lead you towards perfection.
Never incline towards degrading thoughts or look into
the eyes of lust, for
these things have led great men astray and brought
down mighty ones. Be clean in
all ways. Never profane the temple of man by lying
with a woman whose flow is
upon her. Be clean within and without, in body,
thought, word and deed.
Such things were done by those from whom we were
divided. They lit their temple
lamps in vain and the smoke from their dark altars was
blown aside. You shall
not be as those who walk in darkness. Though we are
oppressed on every side,
this is the time of travail heralding the birth of the
Great Master. You are not
like those who shall be cut off from the tree of life,
to fall to the ground and
return to nothingness. You shall always attend to the
welfare of your brother
and not deceive your neighbour.
You are to live in dedicated communities, marrying and
begetting children. Your
sons will grow up like strong oak trees and your
daughters modest like the
violet. Your sons are to wear swords and your
daughters a headdress with a veil
which may be drawn across the face.
So, too, shall it be with those who are counted with
us but are faint-hearted in
the performance of their obligations. They are men who
melt away in the furnace.
Here we do not practise discipline and austerity for
the futile mortification of
the flesh. We do these things for the sake of our
souls, even as a warrior
exercises to keep his muscles supple for the fray and
so preserve his life.
Ninety-two generations have to be born. Then gods and
men intermingled will do
battle, and there will be great carnage on that
catastrophic day when war is
waged in the red-hued darkness amid mighty blast. That
is the time of which it
is written, 'fire shall leap forth from the heart of a
stone'.
These things have been written about, so we concern
ourselves only with the
ordinances governing the Brotherhood. This is the
place to which you belong and
if you leave unsecured it will be upon your own head.
Those who declare that beyond the gate of death there
is a place of torment
where demon torturers inflict unspeakable agonies upon
the wicked, are led by a
misguiding light. Certainly, there is a gloomy place
of sorrow haunted by Dark
Spirits, but they do not inflict torment by fire. They
are there because they
are evil and their companionship is awful enough to
bear.
Do not come to us holding heathen gods in your heart,
even though they are
within a hidden and closed recess. Purge yourself of
all false beliefs outside
the gate.
Here all brothers are to practise the way to full soul
realisation in common.
Here Truth will bind one with the other. Humility,
modesty and justice will
govern our lives. There is to be no straying of heart
and eye towards improper
and unworthy things. Every man is to command or obey
according to his rank.
If anyone is found to have lied upon admittance,
whether it be about the past,
the tribal allegiances or possessions, amends are to
be made by labour. No
madman, no simpleton, no one who is blind, deaf or
dumb is to be admitted.
If anyone strike someone of higher rank or refuse to
obey instructions given,
then if the striker have rank it is to be lowered and
amends will be made by
labour and restraint of food. If anyone strike another
of equal rank, without
just cause, the rank of the striker is to be lowered
and amends made by labour.
If two men fight, the ranks of both are to be lowered.
If anyone lie with intent to deceive, or if injury or
sorrow be caused to
another, amends will be made by labour. If anyone
cause damage or loss to
something belonging to another or to all, amends will
be made by labour. If any
man expose himself improperly and heedlessly before
another he is to make amends
by labour.
If anyone defame another behind his back he is to make
amends by labour, but
anyone may accuse another to his face before
witnesses. If anyone rebuke another
in anger, amends will be made by labour. If anyone
bear a grudge and make it
known, an apology will be given with humility and
accepted with good grace.
If anyone speak filthily to the hearing of another,
amends will be made by
labour. If anyone wastes metal or cause the loss of
metal, amends will be made
by labour. If anyone bathe in water used by another or
in unclean water, amends
will be made by labour.
From the hour of darkness beginning the seventh day,
until the hour of darkness
beginning the first day, is a time of rest and
meditation. It is to be a time of
tranquillity for soul communion and sacred study. The
only labour to be
undertaken is the providing of provender for animals
and their care and
attention. Food may be eaten, but it is best if
prepared the day before.
Decorative trees and plants may be attended to;
relaxing pastimes may be
indulged in and all essential tasks undertaken. An
essential task is one which
cannot be done on any other day or is made absolutely
necessary by
circumstances. On the day of rest all are to wear
clean raiment, and the
chastisement of children is to be deferred until the
morrow.
The first concern of a man should be his wife and
children and anyone else under
his care. He should not cause them to go unfed or
underclothed to provide for
the needs of another. If anything belonging to anyone
or to all is lost or taken
away and hidden so that it is not known who has it,
the thing is to be made
accursed in the hands of its possessor. If later it is
found in the possession
of anyone, that person is to be expelled from the
Brotherhood, not for what has
been done but for the curse.
When something is found which has no owner, it is to
be taken to the sanctuary
and remain there for one month. If it remain unclaimed
it is to be restored to
the finder. No one is to take anything from an
outsider except for fair and full
payment, and no one is to join an outsider in buying
and selling.
We are ruled by a council and this is to be twelve men
and a master. There will
be a high council of five and a low council of seven
within the full council.
There will be a half council of four chosen by the
full council, to be judges in
disputes and overseers of chastisements.
The high council is to appoint headmen who will lead
the brothers in groups of
twelve. The low council will appoint beadles who will
report to it. All are to
obey the headmen and beadles and those of higher rank
than themselves, but they
may complain to the low council about any instruction
given them.
(The larger part of this and the next chapter are lost
and it has been difficult
to assign a proper place or order to anything. Perhaps
no more than a tenth of
the original remains.)
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
THE LAWS OF MALFIN
May your souls be enlightened by the Central Light.
May all you who assemble
between the great pillars at the appointed times be
cared for by The Supreme
Spirit, as you care for His earthly affairs. May He
keep you, as you keep His
laws. May you receive the grace of enlightenment from
the centre of the Sacred
Circle and may an eternal fountain open for you, from
which your souls may drink
and be refreshed. May you receive the gift of
everlasting regeneration.
These are the laws of the outsiders, which you have to
obey, and they can be
justly added to those you have, for right recognises
no origin. They are in two
parts: those which are to be wholly yours and those
which govern you among the
outsiders.
If one whose position requires him to bear witness to
a transaction give false
evidence concerning it, so that an outsider is at a
loss, he is to be bound and
given over to the outsiders. If an outsider suffer
loss the one causing it is to
be deprived of his rights and made to labour in the
place of captivity, until
the loss is made good and twice the amount has been
paid to the council. He must
not be re-established in his rights.
Only a man of good repute having no interest in the
things being judged, can
witness to it with immunity. If he accept a payment
his voice is not to be
heard.
No one who gambles or lends money, or who buys to
sell, or collects payments or
taxes may sit in judgement. Neither may a man whose
house is in turmoil or who
has been condemned in judgement.
No one may sit in judgement on a kinsman, a friend or
an enemy, unless no other
judge can be found. No one may attend upon a judge in
the absence of those who
oppose him, so that he may gain favour. The words of a
lying witness are to be
disregarded, unless otherwise proven.
If voices be raised in anger before the seat of
judgement, or anyone behave
unseemingly, the matter is to be left until the
morrow. When sitting in
judgement a judge must remember that it is more wicked
for a rich man to steal
than for a poor man. Or for the wellborn to act basely
than for the lowly to act
likewise. It is more wicked for the strong to strike
unjustly than for the weak
to do so.
If anyone by boisterous behaviour cause damage within
the grounds of a man's
dwelling place, or injure anyone, he shall go to the
place of captivity until
the damage or injury is made good, and the same amount
is to be paid to the
council.
Every landowner must have his land hedged in and if it
is not hedged, or the
hedges are broken, he will have no claim for any
damage caused there by strayed
animals, but they must be driven out without hurt or
harm. If anyone damage a
hedge or fence he will be responsible for anything
happening through the damage.
If anyone damage any property or cause harm to an
animal belonging to the
outsiders, he will be handed over to them.
If a man find a beast straying upon his land, he may
secure it and demand a
payment in compensation for loss or damage.
If anyone offend against the laws of the outsiders, he
will be given over to
them for judgement under the laws of the outsiders. No
one is to be given over
to the outsiders until he has been heard by his own
judges. If anyone is to be
judged by the outsiders a man from the council is to
sit with him.
If a man draw a weapon in an assembly of people he
shall surrender the weapon to
anyone who ranks above him. If he refuse to do so he
shall be seized and brought
before the judges for punishment. He may not recover
the weapon except by
payment of its value. If anyone threaten another with
a weapon, it is to be
taken from him and may not be recovered without
payment of its value to the
council.
Men are entitled to the privacy of their wives, men to
the privacy of men and
women to the privacy of women. A family is entitled to
the privacy of a family.
Anyone who commands another in his power to do a deed
shall stand as though he
did it himself.
If in company with a man whom many come to take and
slay or injure unlawfully,
then draw your weapon in his defence. If anyone use
the language of slaves in
your presence, it is not sufficient to remain silent.
If you do not rebuke him
because he is powerful, then depart from his company.
To do nothing is wrong,
for men are told not to remain passive before the face
of evil.
The scandalmonger and scaremonger may both be
delivered to the place of
captivity to requite the harm done. If no harm is done
the liar is still a
person without repute and his punishment is that he
will not be believed even
when he speaks truthfully.
Hypocrites are two-tongued loathsome creatures who,
like grass snakes, cannot be
grasped in the hands. If any establish themselves as
hypocrites, drive them out
and let them afflict the outsiders.
There are punishments prescribed for wrongdoing and
much advice given to prevent
it. Punishment is only acknowledgement of failure.
Wrongdoing arises from
failure to deal with weaknesses, failure in
upbringing, failure in teaching,
failure in establishing rules of conduct and failure
in discipline, whether
imposed by self or others. When a man comes before the
judges for punishment
they do more than half their duty when they condemn
him. They should also
enquire within themselves, "Wherein have the
people failed with this man? Was he
guided rightly or wrongly, and have we no
responsibility towards him?" Punishing
a wrongdoer without seeking out the cause of his deeds
is hypocritical justice.
If a man walk in darkness and stumble into a pit, is
he to blame? If a light
guide falsely or be too feeble to keep men from
stumbling, it is of no value.
Therefore, if a brother fall into a pit by the wayside
the bearers of light
cannot be guiltless.
These things are recorded unto you, so that in the day
of freedom you may not be
without law. That day will come as surely as the
sunrise. Never fear because
your numbers diminish. One wise man is better than a
pack of fools, and a stave
of solid oak better than a pillar of reeds.
The man who supplies weapons to another who uses them
in a wrongful deed is not
guiltless himself. If he knew their use he is no less
guilty. Anyone possessing
things wrongfully taken is not without guilt, and if
taken knowingly is no less
guilty. One who is not yet a man in age cannot be
equally guilty in robbery or
violence. Neither can a simpleton, a madman or a
woman.
If anyone bind another unlawfully or cause anyone to
lose his freedom, he shall
requite the harm done and may be delivered to the
place of captivity. Everyone
has the right to solitude and privacy, and those who
deny him it are not without
guilt. If anyone destroy the hair of a woman he must
requite the harm to the
limit of fullness.
If anyone come upon a thief in his deed, or upon someone
about an unlawful deed
and slay or injure him because of his resistance, no
wrong is done. If he submit
to capture and is slain or injured unlawfully, those
who do the deed must bear
the guilt. If a man come upon his wife in adultery and
slay both he has done no
wrong. If a man come upon another dealing wrongfully
with his son or daughter or
another child and he slay him, he has done no wrong.
If a man slay a thief in
the night or one who seeks to injure him, he does no
wrong. If a man find
another with his wife behind bolted doors and slay the
man, he has done no
wrong. If he come upon them in a secret place and slay
the man, he has done no
wrong. If a man commit a deed unlawfully, in lust, so
that he may be lawfully
slain, he may be castrated instead. If a man lay his
hand in any way upon a
virgin, without her consent, he is not guiltless.
If two men quarrel and one bear insult with
forbearance, the other must requite
him for the insult. A brother, a father or a son
coming upon his kinswoman in
adultery or behind bolted doors, is to stand as though
he were her husband.
If a man slay another who provoked him in fair
contest, he does so in
self-defence. The guilt of a deed done while drunk is
not lessened. If anyone
become drunk so that he cannot stand upon a stool, he
is not guiltless.
If anyone destroy a tree belonging to the outsiders
and not on common land he
must requite the outsiders its value. If anyone
destroy the tree of another he
will stand as though he stole it.
The man who is betrothed to a woman, coming upon her
in fornication or behind
bolted doors, is to stand as though he were her
husband. If he come upon her in
a secret place he is to stand as her husband. If
anyone, knowing a woman to be
unchaste, permit a man to marry her beheving her to be
chaste, he shall bear the
guilt and may be called upon to requite the husband.
At the trothing a man must pledge the father of his
betrothed, or the next of
kin to her father, that he will maintain and protect
her. The bride price is to
be paid seven days before the marriage and it is to
repay her father for
bringing her up with all the womanly virtues.
Marriage by deceit or force is not valid. It does not
bind the victim but binds
the other in every way, as though married. If a man
marry a woman by deceit he
is not guiltless and must requite the wrong. If a man
marry by force and she was
a virgin, he is to stand as though there were no
marriage, but the woman has all
the rights of a wife against his possessions.
A husband may punish his wife for these things
transgressing the law without
being punished by the law: Talking freely with men
while her husband is absent.
Cursing her husband or his house. Cursing her own
house. Talking loudly, so that
her voice carries to the habitation of another. For
slander and gossip. For
lewdness or immodesty. For betraying him in her talk.
For being slothful or
neglecting his children.
A wife is not wholly delivered into the hands of her
husband and he must provide
all things for her wellbeing and treat her with
affection and consideration. He
is to be tolerant of her shortcomings and overlook her
frailty as a woman. A man
has a duty to see that an adulterous wife is dealt
with.
If a wife become mad or sick or injured she cannot be
put aside, even though she
cannot be a wife to her husband. These things are the
dispensations of life and
must be borne together.
No man may know the nakedness of his sister. No man
may lie with his wife except
in a place of privacy. No one is to permit a mad man
or woman, a child or a
simpleton to slay a beast, but a bird may be slain by
a woman for food. The one
who permits the deed is not guiltless.
If the head is unclean it will lead to blindness. If
the garments worn are
unclean it will lead to madness. If the body is
unclean it will lead to sores
and sickness.
Eat to fill a third part of the stomach. Drink to fill
a third part and leave
the rest empty. Eat only when hungry and drink only
when thirsty. Always sit to
eat, taking two meals each day and three on the
seventh day. Do not overeat or
oversleep, for body rust is not an unreal thing.
The threshing place is not to be less than fifty paces
from a habitation. A
grave is not to be within a hundred paces, a carcass
yard within a hundred
paces, or a tannery within two hundred paces. The
midden is not be within fifty
paces and hogs within thirty paces. The privy hole is
to be within twenty paces
and is to be screened and covered. No beast except the
dog, the cat, the horse,
the cow, the goat and the ass may come within the
dwelling enclosure. The barn
must not adjoin the dwelling. Corn for eating may be
kept below ground, but corn
for sowing must be kept above ground. Water should not
be drunk under a roof
without herbs.
Roofs must not be thatched by bending the reeds under
a lath, but by laying them
straight over an underpinning. The middle and
pillarpost should rise a third
part above the crossbeam and either rest upon itself
or lie on the cumber. The
outer posts should be pegged and not bound. Inner
walls should be caulked with
moss and not with grass or bark. The roof should lie
down over the outer wall an
armslength and the openwork of the wall should not be
left unplastered. The
foundation should go down two cubits and rise one. The
door is to turn upon
itself, either to the side or upward and should not be
hung. The wall hangings
within should be of fibre or skin. Overlay outside
with wands of bethom.
Stones should not be pressed without heat and their
outer parts should be kept.
The herb offerings must be burnt on each day when the
sun does not show its
face. Flour must not be used to purify sharpened
metal. The offering log must be
burnt at its hour.
A man must teach his sons to swim, to ride and to
hunt. The stranger is not to
be denied a sleeping place and food at nightfall, but
he may not remain during
the day without labour. Any man who deals with metal
shall be as a brother.
Anyone may come before the high council for justice.
In all assemblies, opinions will be given first by
those of lower rank, so that
their words are not influenced by those of more
knowledgeable men. In the lands
of the outsiders you will abide by their law, but you
will keep your own law
within theirs. Where laws conflict, let conscience,
duty and the Holy Writ be
your guide.
(This is not the end, but the remaining writing on
three plates cannot be read.
It is transcribed in meaning and not in word.)
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS
RECONSTRUCTED - 1
If any who have joined in cause with you or become
allies act treacherously,
grant them no quarter. Deal with them in such a way
that their fate will be an
example restraining others from doing likewise. Never
join cause with anyone
proved treacherous or unreliable.
If any hold the same belief as you and have suffered
for it, they are your
brothers. Those who fight for the betterment of
mankind or suffer for it, are
your brothers. To surrender to the threats of those
who demand you abandon your
beliefs or ideals, is something which must not be
done. Any man who has fought
with you in battle is bound with you in the tie of
blood and becomes even as
your own kin.
Though you fight in the cause of Truth and justice, be
reluctant to commence the
bloodshed and never do so if any other means, except
cowardice or capitulation,
lie open to your hand. If, however, you truly believe
the foe will launch an
attack, you are justified in getting in the first
blow. You are answerable to
your own soul. When battle is joined, you may slay the
foe wherever you find
him. Never acknowledge defeat and never submit meekly
to domination. If the
battle goes against you, withdraw to fight again. The
live dog eats the dead
bear.
Never fight among yourselves, for such quarrelling is
worse than the bloodshed
of battle. Differences and arguments among you are to
be settled in an orderly
and just manner, so that there is no severance or
weakening among people. You
are the People of the Light, the Law and the Book.
In the place of captivity men and women will be kept
apart, for it is a place of
requital and retribution. They will no longer be free,
neither will they hold
the rights of the free. They are to labour according
to the judgement, but the
labour of their hands is to be accounted to them. Each
one must be used to get
the greatest benefits from their ability, and no one
must be kept even one day
over their requital.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS
RECONSTRUCTED - 2
These are the sayings of judges set down by the law
scribes, and all that
remains out of nearly eight hundred:
We have learned that whatever a woman does she should
not be cut off from her
household, for this leads to other wrongs. If a wife
be put aside for her
wrongdoing it may be well to let her remain under the
same roof without any
rights of wifehood.
We have learned that not only are there women who are
unworthy to be wives, but
there are men unworthy to be husbands. If marriage
remain open to such as these,
those who sit in judgement are not unblameworthy for
whatever follows.
Therefore, man or woman may be forbidden marriage.
It is the law that adultery being a furtive deed done
in deceit and betrayal, if
man and woman are found in a position for adultery it
would be as though they
were caught committing it. This can lead to
misjudgment. Therefore, when no
certainty of adultery can be seen and the woman can
only be found to be
indiscreet, she is not be dealt with as an adulteress.
It is better for men to
believe in the natural goodness of woman than
otherwise. Yet when a woman has
placed herself in a position where there can be no
doubt, the husband may decide
to keep her or not, but he must declare himself. If he
put her aside as a wife
the judges will decree whether she go or stay. If she
stay she may be bound to
her husband, though no longer his wife.
We have learned that though adultery is a loathsome
deed done in deceit while
displaying a hypocritical allegiance to love, it is
often not without
preventable cause. Therefore, an adulteress can suffer
a lesser punishment by
being bound into the care of her husband while ceasing
to be a wife, for she is
unworthy. Then she is to remain within his household
and submit to his
direction. He must maintain and protect her and not
allow her to wander. If she
wander he may restrain her as he will. If she commit
fornication while bound,
the man who was her husband is not blameworthy, for
she is under his restraint.
The three must suffer their own punishments.
We have learned that when men fear for their safety
and the sanctity of their
own wives, they are less inclined to act adulterously
with the wife of another.
Therefore, if a man be found in adultery and married
he will forfeit half his
possessions to the wronged husband, and bis wife will
also pass into the house
of the wronged husband, or if he have neither dwelling
nor land, he shall be
bound into the keeping of the wronged husband.
We have learned that the minds of men are like a maze
and therefore the rights
of marriage are to stand against all others and
prevail at all times. All
children born within a marriage union are equal in
rights. Their inheritance is
not to be diminished, even though they be the
offspring of adultery or incest,
for the wrongdoing was not theirs. Such children
should be received with mercy,
for they are helpless and will repay in full with love
and devotion.
We have learned that it is unwise to give a daughter
in marriage to an outsider,
for if her husband die she shall be given to his father
or his brother.
Therefore, no woman may be given in marriage to an
outsider, unless the contract
of marriage be heard by one of the council and given
his approval.
We have learned that these things should never be
taken from a man or shared:
His wife, excepting he commit adultery; his children,
his clothes, his
nightcovering, his weapons and his tools of craft.
We have learned that it is no longer necessary to
forbid the eating of swine's
flesh in this land and its eating is allowed, but the
flesh of horse is not to
beeaten except to prevent starvation.
We have learned that the soul departs with the last
breath and whatever is done
to the body does not affect the soul. Therefore, a
body may be either buried or
burned, but a high mound is not to be raised over the
body or the ashes. Only
husband and wife, parent and child, or brother and
sister may be buried in the
same grave within a graveyard. No one may be buried
within his habitation.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
THE LAST OF THE METAL PLATES
In the containers I have gathered together all the
books given into my care and
I have done all the things I was instructed to do, and
the work of my father is
now complete. The metal will stand the test of age and
the cutting is the finest
workmanship.
The five great bookboxes contain one hundred and
thirty-two scrolls and five
ring-bound volumes. There are sixty-two thousand four
hundred and eighty three
words in The Greater Book of the Egyptians and
eighty-one thousand six hundred
and twenty-six words in The Lesser Book of The
Egyptians, of which eight
thousand nine hundred and eleven are in The Book of
The Trial of The Great God
and six thousand one hundred and thirty-four are in
The Sacred Register, and
sixteen thousand and fifty-six are in The Book of
Establishment.
The Book of Magical Concoctions has six thousand eight
hundred and ten words and
this was the most difficult to remit, for it was a
work of mystery and hidden
things.
The Book of Songs and The Book of Creation and
Destruction were not worked under
my hand, but they are well constituted and will not
perish. The Book of
Tribulation was beaten under my eye and there are the
books in The Great Book of
The Sons of Fire which are not of my workmanship. I
helped in part where the
words were marked out and I struck them.
The Book of Secret Lore and The Book of Decrees are
joined into The Great Book
of The Sons of Fire and they, too, are enabled to last
forever.
The metal is as our masters desired, made cunningly by
the secret methods of our
tribe and it will never perish. The marks are cut so
that when seen to the right
of the light they stand out clearly.
The bookboxes are of twinmetal founded with strength
and turned with great heat,
so that there is no joint where the ends come
together. When closed and sealed
water cannot enter.
When you read these things in times ahead, think of us
who made the metal so
imperishable and cut the words on it with such care
and heavy labour, using such
skill that in the years of rest they have not been
eaten off. Observe its
brightness and wonder, for it will never tarnish.
We are the sons of The Sons of Fire, men so called
because fire was necessary to
their metalworking. Today we name our sons over the
fire and forge, as they did,
and each one of us belongs to the same fire.
Read carefully the sacred words which are written and
may they be a lodemark to
a greater life.
I, Efantiglan, and my father, attended to the making
of these books and their
covering containers. Those who mixed the metal and
worked it by forging and
those who cut upon it are members of our tribe, and it
is well made and will
last forever.
Malgwin recorded these books before they were
consigned to the future and the
name by which they were called is The Living Book For
The Living'.
incorporating
THE TREASURY OF LIFE
Compiled from writings preserved by
Amos,an Egyptian; Claudius Linus, a
Roman; and Vitico, a Gaul.
Chapter 1 - THE SCROLL OF EMOD
Chapter 2 - THE SCROLL OF KAMUSHAHRE
Chapter 3 - THE DESTROYER - PART 1 - FROM
THE GREAT SCROLL
Chapter 4 - THE DESTROYER - PART 2 - FROM
THE GREAT SCROLL
Chapter 5 - THE DESTROYER - PART 3 - FROM
THE SCROLL OF ADEPHA
Chapter 6 - THE DARK DAYS
Chapter 7 - THE THIRD OF THE EGYPTIAN
SCROLLS
Chapter 8 - THE FOURTH OF THE EGYPTIAN
SCROLLS
Chapter 9 - THE HALF SCROLL OF JASOP
Chapter 10 - THE SCROLL OF KULOK - FOURTH
SECTION
Chapter 11 - THE SIXTY-FOURTH EGYPTIAN
SCROLL
Chapter 12 - THE EIGHTY-SEVENTH SCROLL
Chapter 13 - THE NINETY-THIRD SCROLL
Chapter 14 - THE NINETY-SIXTH SCROLL
Chapter 15 - THE SCROLL OF KULOK - SECOND
AND THIRD SECTION
Chapter 16 - THE THE ONE HUNDRED AND ONE
SCROLL (SCROLL OF HOREMAKET)
Chapter 17 - THE SCROLL OF NETERTAT
Chapter 18 - THE PRAYER OF HAPU
Chapter 19 - THE ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTEENTH
SCROLL
Chapter 20 - THE COMMENTARY OF FRATER
ASTORUS
Chapter 21 - A SCROLL MARKED 'THE
NIGHTFIGHT'
Chapter 22 - THE LADY'S SCROLL (SCROLL OF NEFERMAKET)
Chapter 23 - THE ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY
SECOND SCROLL
Chapter 24 - AN EARLY EGYPTIAN SCROLL
Chapter 25 - THE SONG OF SACRIFICE - FROM
THE BOOK OF SONGS (part only and
confused with other writings)
Chapter 26 - THE SCROLL OF KABEL - FIRST
SECTION
Chapter 27 - AN UNNAMED AND UNNUMBERED
SCROLL
Chapter 28 - TWO COMBINED PORTIONS OF AN
UNNAMED SCROLL
Chapter 29 - THE SECOND SCROLL OF KISON
Chapter 30 - THE SCROLL OF PANUBIS
Chapter 31 - THE SCROLL OF THOTIS
Chapter 32 - THE SCROLL OF HARMOTIF
Chapter 33 - THE ANNEXED SCROLL 1
Chapter 34 - THE ANNEXED SCROLL 2
CHAPTER ONE
THE SCROLL OF EMOD
The writings from
olden days tell of strange things and of great happenings in
the times of our
fathers who lived in the beginning. All men can know of such
times is declared in
the Book of Ages, but the gods had their birth in events
and things which
were in the beginning.
It is told, in the
courtyards, that there was a time when Heaven and Earth were
not apart. Truth echoes
even there, for Heaven and Earth are yet joined in men.
It is written that
God once walked the earth with man and dwelt within a cave
above a garden where
man laboured. God encompasses all that is and cannot be
contained in a cave.
Look to the Sacred Writings for Truth.
It is told that
woman made God angry and He took Himself into the sky, removing
Heaven from man
because of his disgust for woman. It is also told that man
offended God by
imitating Him. These are tales made by man.
This is not wisdom,
for the Sacred Writings reveal the Plans of God and these
things cannot be as
told. It is the talk of the courtyard, it is the knowledge
of the outerplace.
Men talk of the land
of Oben, from whence they came. Not from Oben towards the
South came men, for
the great land of Ramakui first felt his step. Out by the
encircling waters,
over at the rim it lay.
There were mighty
men in those days, and of their land the First Book speaks
thus: Their dwelling
places were set in the swamplands from whence no mountains
rose, in the land of
many waters slow-flowing to the sea. In the shallow
lakelands, among the
mud, out beyond the Great Plain of Reeds. At the place of
many flowers
bedecking plant and tree. Where trees grew beards and had branches
like ropes, which
bound them together, for the ground would not support them.
There were
butterflies like birds and spiders as large as the outstretched arms
of a man. The birds
of the air and fishes of the waters had hues which dazzled
the eyes, they lured
men to destruction. Even insects fed on the flesh of men.
There were elephants
in great numbers, with mighty curved tusks.
The pillars of the
Netherworld we unstable. In a great night of destruction the
land fell into an
abyss and was lost forever. When the Earth became light, next
day, man saw man
driven to madness.
All was gone. Men
clothed themselves with the skins of beasts and were eaten by
wild beasts, things
with clashing teeth used them for food. A great horde of
rats devoured
everything, so that man died of hunger. The Braineaters hunted men
down and slew them.
Children wandered
the plainland like wild beasts, for men and women became
stricken with a
sickness the passed over the children. An issue covered their
bodies which swelled
up and burst, while flame consumed their bellies. Every man
who had an issue of
seed within him and every woman who had a flow of blood
died.
The children grew up
without instruction, and having no knowledge turned to
strange ways and
beliefs. They became divided according to their tongues.
This was the land
from whence man came, the Great One came from Ramakui and
wisdom came from
Zaidor.
The people who came
with Nadhi were wise in the ways of the seasons and in the
wisdom of the stars.
They read the Book of Heaven with understanding.
They covered their
dead with potter’s clay and hardened it, for it was not their
custom to place
their dead in boxes.
Those who came with
the Great One were cunning craftsmen in stone, they were
carvers of wood and
ivory. The High God was worshipped with strange light in
places of great
silences. They paid homage to the huge sleeping beast in the
depths of the sea,
believing it to bear the Earth on its back; they believed its
stirrings plunged
lands to destruction. Some said it burrowed beneath them.
In Ramakui there was
a great city with roads and waterways, and the fields were
bounded with walls
of stone and channels. In the centre of the land was the
great flat-topped
Mountain of God.
The city had walls
of stone and was decorated with stones of red and black,
white shells and
feathers. There were heavy green stones in the land and stones
patterned in green,
black and brown. There were stones of saka, which men cut
for ornaments,
stones which became molten for cunning work.
They built walls of
black glass and bound them with glass by fire. They used
strange fire from
the Netherworld which was but slightly separated from them,
and foul air from
the breath of the damned rose in their midst.
They made eye
reflectors of glass stone, which cured the ills of men. They
purified men with
strange metal and purged them of evil spirits in flowing fire.
We dwell in a land
of three peoples, but those who came from Ramakui and Zaidor
were fewer in
numbers. It was the men of Zaidor who built the Great Guardian
which ever watches,
looking towards the awakening place of God. The day He comes
not its voice will
be heard.
In olden times, when
men lived in the ground, there came the Great One whose
name is hidden. Son
of Hem, Son of the Sun, Chief of the Guardians of Mysteries,
Master of Rites and
Spoken Word. Judge of Disputes, Advocate of the Dead,
Interpreter of the
Gods and Father of Fishermen. From the West, from beyond
Mandi, came the
Great One arrayed in robes of black linen and wearing a
head-dress of red.
Who taught men the
secret of writing and numbers, and measurement of the years?
Who taught the ways
of the days and months, who read the meaning of clouds and
writing of the
nightlights?
Who taught the
preservation of the body? That the soul might commune with the
living, and that it
might be a doorway to the Earth?
Who taught that
light is Life?
Who taught the words
of God, which spoke to men and hid things from them, which
stood in the place
of Truth for those with understanding? Which spoke to the
priests, the scribes
and the people differently according to their
enlightenment.
Who taught that
beyond the visible is the invisible, beyond the small the
smaller and beyond
the great the greater, and all things are linked together in
one?
Who taught the song
of the stars, which now no man knows, and the words of the
waters, which are
lost?
Who taught men to
grow corn and to spin, to make bricks and fashion stone after
a cunning manner?
Who taught men the
rituals of sea shells, and the reading of their mysteries and
the manner of their
speech?
Who taught men the
nature and knowledge of God, but in the years left to him
could not bring them
to understanding? Who, then, veiled the great secrets in
simple tales which
they could remember and in signs which would not be lost to
their children's
children?
Who brought the
Sacred Eye from the distant land and the Stone of Light made of
water, by which men
see God, and the firestone which gathers the light of the
sun before the Great
Shrine?
He died in the
manner of men, though his likeness is that of god. Then they cut
him apart, that his
body might make fertile the fields, and took away his head,
that it might bring
them wisdom. His bones they did no paint red, for they were
not as those of
others.
These are the words
of the Scared Writings, recorded after the old custom. As
they are, so let
them be; for that which is recorded remains with you.
The stone of Light
and the firestone were stolen in the days of disaster and
none now knows their
resting place, therefore the land is empty.
CHAPTER TWO
THE SCROLL OF
KAMUSHAHRE
In this fertile
black land there are those who worship the sun and they call it
the greatest and the
most bountiful among all gods, the Seer of Heaven, the of
the squalid manner
in which men dwelt before the Golden One led his people
hence.
He came to this
fertile land. Now it is a pleasant place with many great cities
and contented
villages; there is the great broad river of fresh water which
rises and falls in
its due seasons. Channels there are and waterways which lead
the fertilising
waters unto the growing things, the herbage and the trees. There
are flocks of sheep
and herds of cattle on the green pastures.
It was not ever
thus. In the days before Harekta came all was barren and
desolate. Nought
divided the wilderness from the swamplands filled with reeds.
Then there were no
cattle or sheep and the land knew not the hand of man, it lay
untilled and
unwatered.
No land was sown,
for they who dwelt in it knew not the making of waterways, nor
did they know how to
command the water and make it flow at their behest. There
were no cities and
men dwelt in holes in the ground or in places where the rock
was cleft. They
walked in their nakedness or clothed themselves with leaves or
bark, while at night
they covered themselves with the skin of wild beasts. They
fought with the
jackal for food and snatched dead things from the lion. They
pulled roots from
out of the ground and sought for sustenance among things that
grew in the mud.
They had none to rule over them, nor had they leaders to guide.
They knew not
obligation or duty. None spoke to them about their manner of life
and none knew the
way of Truth. They were truly unenlightened in those days.
Then came the
servant of the Sun and he it was who brought the people together
and put rulers over
them. He set Ramur up as king over the whole land. He showed
them, man and woman,
how to dwell together in contentment as husband and wife,
and he divided their
tasks between them.
He instructed men in
the sowing of corn and the growing of herbs. He instructed
them in the tilling
of the ground and the manner of cutting the waterways and
channels. He it was
who showed men the ways of the beasts of the field. He
instructed men in
the working of gold and silver and the making of vessels from
clay. He instructed
men in the hewing and cutting of stone and the building of
temples and cities.
The making of linen and the dying of cloth that forms
garments ever
pleasing to the eyes, he did not teach. Neither did he instruct
them in the making
of bricks or the working of copper.
Then, when he
departed he bade the people not to weep, for though he went to his
father, the sun
would adopt them as his children and all could become sons of
the sun. Thus many
became sons and servants of the sun and they believed what
they had heard, that
the sun was their father and the light of goodness
overlooking the
whole land. It is this light that sustains all living things,
but within it is the
greater light which sustains the spirit. It is the light
that enlightens the
hearts of men. There are lesser lights that guide men about
their daily tasks
and shield them from harm, there are unseen lights that
influence men for
good or ill, but it is the Great Light that banishes coldness
and makes all men
warm. The warmth it bestows ripens the harvests of man and
makes his herds
yield their increase.
It oversees the
whole activity of men on Earth as it journeys the skies from one
end to the other,
thus it knows the needs of all men. Therefore, be like the
sun, be far-seeing
and foresighted, be regular in your comings and goings while
about your daily
tasks.
When their guide and
leader left, the people knew themselves as children of the
sun. They were
warlike and subdued other people in its name, and brought them
under its rule. Then
great temples were raised up to it and for a time it
displaced the
greater gods which the people of this land had set up in their
ignorance. The One
True God it never displaced, for the True God was ever hidden
from the eyes of the
profane and ignorant.
Then some priests
among those who followed the rule of the sun stole its spirit
and brought it down,
so that it enlivened the statues and images of their gods.
Thus the spirit
which enlivens all the lesser gods is but the one spirit held in
captivity, and not
many as the people think.
Then came the Wise
Ones from the East and they caused the people to have other
thoughts. They were
men who knew the ways of Heaven and asked of the people, "Is
the sun spirit
indeed supreme, is this not a thing requiring much thought?
Consider its
movements, are they not more like those of one who is directed in
his comings and
goings? Does it move about freely as it wills, or is it
restricted and held
to its appointed path, like a yoked ox, or as the ass
treading out corn? Does
it rise up from the Netherworld as it wills or go down
into the cavern of
darkness by its own decree? Is its path not more like that of
a stone hurled forth
by the hand of man? Is it not like a boat controlled by the
will of a man,
rather than a free-ranging god? Is it not more like a slave under
the direction of a
master?" These things disturbed the hearts of people, some
pondered upon them,
but others, in the manner of men, cried death to those who
deny the truth of
these things.
However, because of
the things said the worship of the older gods grew in
strength, for the
people had never turned from Usira who was with them before
the first water
channel was cut. He was not the god of the high born but of the
lowly people.
Thisis a land of two
peoples, of two nations, two priesthoods, two streams of
wisdom and two
hierarchies of gods. It is a land where the light of Truth burns
brightly, thought
hidden away from the eyes of all but a few. It is the Land of
Dawning on Earth.
CHAPTER THREE
THE DESTROYER - PART
1
FROM THE GREAT
SCROLL
Men forget the days
of the Destroyer. Only the wise know where it went and that
it will return in
its appointed hour.
It raged across the
Heavens in the days of wrath, and this was its likeness: It
was as a billowing
cloud of smoke enwrapped in a ruddy glow, not distinguishable
in joint or limb.
Its mouth was an abyss from which came flame, smoke and hot
cinders.
When ages pass,
certain laws operate upon the stars in the Heavens. Their ways
change, there is
movement and restlessness, they are no longer constant and a
great light appears
redly in the skies.
When blood drops
upon the Earth, the Destroyer will appear and mountains will
open up and belch
forth fire and ashes. Trees will be destroyed and all living
things engulfed.
Waters will be swallowed up by the land and seas will boil.
The Heavens will
burn brightly and redly, there will be a copper hue over the
face of the land,
followed by a day of darkness. A new moon will appear and
break up and fall.
The people will
scatter in madness. They will hear the trumpet and battle cry of
the Destroyer and
will seek refuge in the den in the Earth. Terror will eat away
their hearts and
their courage will flow from them like water from a broken
pitcher. They will
be eaten up in the flames of wrath and consumed by the breath
of the Destroyer.
Thus in the Days of
Heavenly Wrath, which have gone, and thus it will be in the
Days of Doom when it
comes again. The times of its coming and going are known
unto the wise. These
are the signs and times which shall precede the Destroyer's
return: A hundred
and ten generations shall pass into the West and nations will
rise and fall. Men
will fly in the air as birds and swim in the seas as fishes.
Men will talk peace
one with another, hypocrisy and deceit shall have their day.
Women will be as men
and men as women, passion will be a plaything of man.
A nation of
soothsayers shall rise and fall and their tongue shall be the speech
learned. A nation of
law givers shall rule the Earth and pass away into
nothingness. One
worship will pass into the four quarters of the Earth, talking
peace and bringing
war. A nation of the seas will be greater than any other, but
will be as an apple
rotten at the core and will not endure. A nation of traders
will destroy men
with wonders and it shall have its day. Then shall the high
strive with the low,
the North with the South, the East with the West, and the
light with the
darkness. Men shall be divided by their races and the children
will be born as
strangers among them. Brother shall strive with brother and
husband with wife.
Fathers will no longer instruct their sons and their sons
will be wayward.
Women will become the common property of men and will no longer
be held in regard
and respect.
Then men will be ill
at ease in their hearts, they will seek they know not what,
and uncertainty and
doubt will trouble them. They will possess great riches but
be poor in spirit.
Then will the Heavens tremble and the Earth move, men will
quake in fear and
while terror walks with them the Heralds of Doom will appear.
They will come
softly, as thieves to the tombs, men will no know them for what
they are, men will
be deceived, the hour of the Destroyer is at hand.
In those days men
will have the Great Book before them, wisdom will be revealed,
the few will be
gathered for the stand, it is the hour of trial. The dauntless
ones will survive,
the stout-hearted will not go down to destruction.
Great God of All
Ages, alike to all, who sets the trials of man, be merciful to
our children in the
Days of Doom. Man must suffer to be great, but hasten not
his progress unduly.
In the great winnowing, be not too harsh on the lesser ones
among men. Even the
son of a thief has become Your scribe.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE DESTROYER - PART
2
FROM THE GREAT
SCROLL
O Sentinels of the
Universe who watch for the Destroyer, how long will your
coming vigil last? O
mortal men who wait without understanding, where will you
hide yourselves in
the Dread Days of Doom, when the Heavens shall be torn apart
and the skies rent
in twain, in the days when children will turn grey-headed?
This is the thing
which will be seen, this is the terror your eyes will behold,
this is the form of
destruction that will rush upon you: There will be the great
body of fire, the
glowing head with many mouths and eyes ever changing. Terrible
teeth will be seen
in formless mouths and a fearful dark belly will glow redly
from fires inside.
Even the most stout-hearted man will tremble and his bowels
be loosened, for
this is not a thing understandable to men.
It will be a vast
sky-spanning form enwrapping Earth, burning with many hues
within wide open
mouths. These will descend to sweep across the face of the
land, engulfing all
in the yawning jaws. The greatest warriors will charge
against it in vain.
The fangs will fall out, and lo, they are terror-inspiring
things of cold
hardened water. Great boulders will be hurled down upon men,
crushing them into
red powder.
As the great salt
waters rise up in its train and roaring torrents pour towards
the land, even the
heroes among mortal men will be overcome with madness. As
moths fly swiftly to
their doom in the burning flame, so will these men rush to
their own
destruction. The flames going before will devour all the works of men,
the waters following
will sweep away whatever remains. The dew of death will
fall softly, as grey
carpet over the cleared land. Men will cry out in their
madness, "O
whatever Being there is, save us from this tall form of terror, save
us from the grey dew
of death."
CHAPTER FIVE
THE DESTROYER - PART
3
FROM THE SCROLL OF
ADEPHA
The Doomshape,
called the Destroyer, in Egypt, was seen in all the lands
whereabouts. In
colour it was bright and fiery, in appearance changing and
unstable. It twisted
about itself like a coil, like water bubbling into a pool
from an underground
supply, and all men agree it was a most fearsome sight. It
was not a great
comet or a loosened star, being more like a fiery body of flame.
Its movements on
high were slow, below it swirled in the manner of smoke and it
remained close to
the sun whose face it hid. There was a bloody redness about
it, which changed as
it passed along its course. It caused death and destruction
in its rising and
setting. It swept the Earth with grey cinder rain and caused
many plagues, hunger
and other evils. It bit the skin of men and beast until
they became mottled
with sores.
The Earth was
troubled and shook, the hills and mountains moved and rocked. The
dark smoke-filled
Heavens bowed over Earth and a great howl came to the ears of
men, borne to them
upon the wings of the wind. It was the cry of the Dark Lord,
the Master of Dread.
Thick clouds of fiery smoke passed before him and there was
an awful hail of hot
stones and coals of fire. The Doomshape thundered sharply
in the Heavens and
shot out bright lightings. The channels of water were turned
back unto themselves
when the land tilted, and great trees were tossed about and
snapped like twigs.
Then a voice like ten thousand trumpets was heard over the
wilderness, and
before its burning breath the flames parted. The whole of the
land moved and
mountains melted. The sky itself roared like ten thousand lions
in agony, and bright
arrows of blood sped back and forth across its face. Earth
swelled up like
bread upon the hearth.
This was the aspect
of the Doomshape called the Destroyer, when it appeared in
days long gone by,
in olden times. It is thus described in the old records, few
of which remain. It
is said that when it appears in the Heavens above, Earth
splits open from the
heat, like a nut roasted before the fire. Then flames shoot
up through the
surface and leap about like fiery fiends upon black blood. The
moisture inside the
land is all dried up, the pastures and cultivated places are
consumed in flames
and they and all trees become white ashes.
The Doomshape is
like a circling ball of flame which scatters small fiery
offspring in its
train. It covers about a fifth part of the sky and sends
writhing snakelike
fingers down to Earth. Before it the sky appears frightened,
and it breaks up and
scatters away. Midday is no brighter than night. It spawns
a host of terrible
things. These are things said of the Destroyer in the old
records, read them
with a solemn heart, knowing that the Doomshape has its
appointed time and
will return. It would be foolish to let them go unheeded. Now
men say, "Such
things are not destined for our days". May the Great God above
grant that this be
so. But come, the day surely will, and in accordance with his
nature man will be
unprepared.
THE BRITAIN BOOK
Chapter 1 - (Salvaged Parts)
Chapter
2 - JESUS 1
Chapter 3 - JESUS 2
Chapter 4 - THE WRITINGS OF ARISTOLAS
Chapter 5 - THE WRITINGS OF ABARIS
Chapter 6 - THE WRITINGS OF EMRIS SKINLAKA
Chapter 7 - THE CORRYGORSED
Chapter 8 - NOBILITY
Chapter 9 - SHARDS OF WISDOM
THE BRITAIN BOOK
CHAPTER ONE
(Salvaged Parts)
To my stalwart son,
always well beloved I greet you heartily, desiring to hear
of your welfare. Be
not displeased at my going from Kelshaw or my manner of
departure, for I
first gave your mother and sister over to good keeping in the
hands of the
goodmistress Cotter.
Verily, such tidings
were brought to me by diverse persons of the Craft on
matters of our
abiding concern, that I was beholden to come hitherwards. Nor
durst I now go hence,
for the charge remains, lying heavily upon my breast.
As for Hempshill he
lied to us, for he is a knave and a churlish one, and we
were fools to be
deceived by his wiles and bis tongue speaking such wild
language. I will
entreat with the bailiff and mayhap he who stands in the lord's
place will abide my
supplication.
As we planned, you
do thereafter, but I pray you beware in what manner you walk,
for those among whom
we walk are full black-hearted and enwrapped in the ways of
wickedness. They desire
an end to all things in which we hold fast, but are not
as staunch that they
will set upon you in a manly way but will start out upon
you like lurking
footpads. Beware, too, what you eat and drink and trust not
even they who speak
fair unto you, for the hands of all outsiders are against
us.
Send me tidings of
Long Will and goodwife Abigail, and of John the Cordwainer
and John of the
Wildwood band, and others who stood in at the tithing ere you
departed. It is to
my abiding contentment that we have been able to acquit the
Wanderers in full
good measure, for their braziers did their work right stoutly
in a cunning manner.
Had we a clerk among us, then it could have been wrought to
more avail; but no
matter, for their hand was firm and they faithfully followed
the marks.
Now, take you the
secured budget and go against Lewlaw, and leave it there in
the cell under the
Grimsbarrow where Alain the Pedlar secured his hoard.
*******************
In the Books of
Britain it is written: Ilyid came seaborne in a ship of Tarsis
from across the sea
of Wicta,
setting up at
Rafinia in the land of the Wains. From thence to the river Tarant
which flows between
the Kingdom of Albany and the Kingdom of Korin, Albany being
the land between the
Isen and the Ikta. Passing Ivern and Insels, south of the
Kathebelon, and then
past Dinsolin to take water at the town where ships traded,
standing at the foot
of the red cliff between the two white ones around the
extreme of the world
to the northern Ikta in Siluria. Here they were unwelcome,
but were permitted
to take water and wood and to trade for meat and grain.
Sailing thence
towards the rising sun, they came to the place beyond Sabrin
called Summerland.
They were coldly
welcomed by Homodren of the Chariots, but in the Kingdom of
Arviragus they came
under the mantle of the High Druid of the south whose ear
was inclined towards
them, for he understood full well the nature of the
three-faced god. The
king heard their words but did not take them to heart,
saying they differed
little from what was there.
Then were the
shipborne wanderers given land over from the Isle of Departure,
saying that could
they live where no one else could because of the spirits, then
their holiness would
be established before all the people. The strangers were
sorely tried by the
Druids, but the spirits troubled them not. Nor did the
sickness of the
place come upon them, and the people wondered. They were
troubled because of
where the strangers were, and were stirred up by the
Druthin, but the
shield of Arviragus protected them.
Now, eastward and to
the north there was a lake and between this and the Isle of
Departure there was
a swampland and there was a village of houses that stood out
above the water, and
the moonmaidens and moonmatrons who served the dead dwelt
there. Among these
was Islass the Dreamer who was sacred to the guardian of this
place.
Islass was the
daughter of the queen's youngest sister and a holder of the
king's favour, and
when she attended him she divulged her dreams. It happened
that she dreamed the
same dream thrice, and this was its manner as she told it
to the king:
"Behold, I saw a moon which had three changing faces and as I
watched the changes
the moon itself changed and became a sun, and within this
sun was a face of a
god. As I looked long on this sun, another sun appeared and
such was its
brilliance that the first sun appeared inferior in brightness. Then
the two became one
and its brilliance filled the sky. In the midst of this I saw
the king and many
Druthin and priests of the strangers. Then I saw a great
battlesword and the
brilliance faded as did the figures, and only the sword
remained, from which
blood dripped drop by drop. Then, too, it faded."
The king took heed
of the dream and gave the strangers land beside the
Summerhouse of the
King, which could be reached by ships. Inland from here, the
gifted land extended
to the tree now called the Great Oak which still stands,
and thence to the
hill south of the residence where Ilyid, being wearied, rested
against a great
stone. Beyond this was an avenue of standing trees and oak trees
placed one and one,
and the gifted land came up against this.
It extended
southward to the holy vineyard which was fenced about. The fruit of
these vines was
small and bitter in the mouth. The strangers built huts for
shelter on the
hillside, high enough to be free of the tides. They settled down
and learned the
language, though Ilyid and two of the women spoke it strangely.
The words of the
strangers fell on deaf ears, for the people were content with
the gods they knew
and did not wish to weary their minds with the words of the
new ones. When the
strangers gathered in praise of The One True God the
tribesmen stoned
them and shouted abuses, but Ilyid perservered and while later
the people still
would not believe that The God of whom he spoke was more
powerful than their
gods, they would sit around and listen to his stories.
Now, when the
strangers were granted the land, the Druthin disputed this with
the king and said
that they wanted a divine sign that their gods approved. Ilyid
said, "Give me
but half a year". At the witnessing of this the Druthin set up a
holistone and Ilyid
struck his staff into the soil to mark the covenant.
The following Eve of
Summer there was a gathering and it was found that a small
green shoot was
coming up from the ground beside the staff, which was an
offshoot of the
staff. The king decreed that this was a sign that the land
accepted the
strangers, but these took it as a sign that what they taught fell
on fertile ground
and would take root.
Here, the strangers,
now called the Wise Ones, were free from the yoke of Rome
and from the
intolerance of the Jews. They were not subject to immoral customs
and were among the
right-living people, simple but pure in mind and body. Close
by was a place for
trading in
metals, slaves, dogs
and grain. Here, Ilyid built himself a house unlike any
others, for it was
square and in two parts, more stone than timber. This place
was called Kwinad.
Here, on twelve
portions of land, the wise strangers dwelt in peace and they
built a church which
was a full sixty feet long by a full twenty-six feet wide.
At one end was a
statue four feet high, carved from a beech trunk. The roof was
thatched with reeds,
after the manner of the Britons. The walls were of wicker
overlaid with
plaster of chalk and mud.
Ilyid is buried
outside the forked path before the church, and on his tomb was
written, "I
brought Christ to the Britons and taught them. I buried Christ and
now here my body is
at rest".
Islass was the first
convert, and it is said that she alone knew the secret of
the Holy Hawthorn.
What this may be, none can know now. It is said that when the
Druthin murmured
against the staff of Ilyid, she placed a twig in water and it
flowered.
Here, in this holy
place, under the direct guidance of God, our father founded
the first church in
Britain. It is said it was not built by human hands, which
is true, and from
here shall come that which will be the salvation of mankind in
the years to come.
Here was the resting place for the souls of the dead, where
they received their
last sustenance before passing through the glass wall. From
here ran the old
road to the place of light where me bright-winged spirits flew
freely in the place
called Dainsart in the old tongue.
CHAPTER TWO
JESUS 1
This is the true
record of events concerning Jesus, son of Joseph and Mary,
which we have
received by the hands of several who have lived within the circle
of His Light, and
more especially from one who is our earthly father in the
faith. He being not
the least among the articulate ones who knew Jesus, and a
person of no mean
estate, both in the distant land from whence he came and in
this more virile
land.
For Jesus came to
fulfil the desires and longings of men expressed in certain
Holy Books, but more
so in many unlettered hearts. For it is written that such
is the nature of
things, the tree springing from the yearning of men shall not
fail to bear fruit.
For the Holy Books can be likened to an egg containing the
embryonic hopes and
desires of men.
In the Sacred Books
of the Idewin it is written: The Son of Man is the shepherd
of men and we know
how diligently a shepherd tends his flocks.' Jesus came not
as a shepherd to
drive, but as one bearing a guiding lantern to show the way. It
is also written:
'The Son of Man is the deliverer of men', and while we know
from what we have to
be delivered, those who lived in His land misunderstood the
meaning.
From the Book of the
Holy Mark (whose wife was one of our own fair race, her
father being a Roman
waykeeper whose wife was barren, and having this homeborn
lady, her mother, as
a slave, had by her a child whom he later adopted and
raised as a lady of
estate), we learn much. But clearer to our understanding is
that knowledge
concerning Dyid imparted to us by our earthly father.
Aristolas taught
that Ilyid had been one who commanded with the ships of Rome,
but was not without
ships himself. So it was that when Jesus went down to the
Western Sea of the
Jews, which is not the Sea of the Setting Sun, He being one
skilled with His
hands, worked on them. Jesus was brawnily built and not one to
take money without
labour.
Jesus, our Master, Light
of our Life was hung on the shameful cross in His
twenty-seventh year,
this being the one thousand and ninety-ninth year of
Britain, in the
reign of Tiberius, ruler of the Roman lands to the east.
Within a year, Ilyid
and others departed from their homeland shore by ship, and
though this was
demasted in a heavy storm it made safe haven in Sankel. There,
he and his son were
joined by several other holy persons. They tarried awhile
before crossing to
Laidlow, from whence they took a ship to Tarsis.
In the year of
Britain one thousand one hundred and twelve, our father came from
Rome with others,
because of the decrees of Claudius, ruler of all the Romans to
the east, seeking
refuge beyond the oppression of Roman might where the true
light could burn
undisturbed. But the circle of Roman might spread ever wider,
like a thrown
fisherman's net.
Thirteen years after
our Master was hung on the cross, the Romans came to the
fair land of
Britain, and the might of their legions prevailed over the brave
Caradew, great
battleking of all the Britons. He was the leader of fighting men
such as will not be
seen again. He was carried off, betrayed by an irrational
woman, an honourable
peace offering to appease the argument of might, together
with the British
fount of knowledge and wisdom. With him went the allwise Fran,
being held in
honourable captivity until returned to the land of light at the
intercession of our
father, for those whom he befriended had not forgotten him.
For Ilyid taught
that the greatest wrong man can commit against man is the
betrayal of a
friend.
Now, the daughter of
Caradew was Gladys, red-haired, blue-eyed and slim, who
married Pudens,
Commander of the Legions .beloved of Paul the Martyred in God,
who died in the one
thousand one hundred and thirty year of Britain. Lein, son
of Caradew, brother
of Gladys, being the first Christian in Rome.
In the year of
Britain one thousand one hundred and twenty-seven, there was a
great outbreak of
fighting and many men sought refuge within the enclosure of
Ilyid, for the free
Britons had risen, having been given an assurance of victory
by no less than the
battlegoddess herself.
Calling on Amaraith
and Kamulose, the Britons followed their battlequeen whose
heart was afire
because of the rape of her daughters. She stood tall in stature
and was serene of
face, speaking deep but melodiously. She knew the mastery of
letters and spoke
three tongues. She had fair hair hanging to her hips when not
battlegirded. Her
head was circled by a golden war coronet and her tunic was of
green and brown
interwoven in the manner of men. She wore a short cloak of
purple. Thus she
spoke before the battle: -
"I speak to you
as a woman whose house has been violated and her daughters
dishonoured. We have
been dealt with unjustly and I appeal to you not only as a
queen but more so as
a woman. Britons who honour their womenfolk cannot regard
this lightly. Unlike
the squirming Roman Nierotes, I do not rule over servile
and docile unmanly
men who are less than men, nor like he who rules over pedlars
and hucksters. Nor
am I like the cowardly man/woman Nero who surrounds himself
with perverts and
half-men and slaves who satisfy obscene desires. Such is the
nature of the vile
culture these foreigners have introduced to our fair land".
"I am not such
as these whose minds are fevered with an evil ferment. I rule
over true men,
little schooled in craftiness and deceit, real men born to fight
and withstand
adversity. The code they live by is that of manliness. True men
indeed who, in the
cause of freedom, willingly heed the call to arms and stake
their lives on the
outcome. They willingly offer themselves as a sacrifice for
the future of their
womenfolk and children and their lands and property".
"As the leader
of this brave breed of men I fervently plead for the assistance
of your strong right
arms. Let us not shirk the task or shun the opportunity to
strike a blow for
freedom. I pray the gods of war, the overseers of battles, for
victory. We have the
duty to stamp out these infections on our land, these
ruthless enemies
whose reputation is infamous. They are perverters of justice,
promoters of
depravity and servants of greed".
"They are a
race who enjoys unmanly pleasures, who delights in the infliction of
pain on the helpless
but cringes like a dog at the prospect of its own
suffering. Whose
approbation is more to be feared and its friendship more to be
shunned than its
enmity. Never will I surrender to people whose ways I abhor,
nor will I ever desire
to live to see my countrymen treated as servile serfs.
May the Great Godly
Powers be with us now in the great testing time, as we gird
ourselves to face
the issue".
Those brave,
inspiring words were of no avail and Britain was lost, but the
spirit could not be
quenched and manliness was maintained. It is not in victory
that a race finds
greatness but in defeat. The knowledge of Christ came, not
through peace and
prosperity but through persecution. That which is written is
not a tale of
victory, but of the glory that resides in defeat. The books which
are the recipe for
victory are written by defeated men.
I, Elfed, write
these things, but they are not from my own heart but come from
the hand of others.
This is that Elfed who married Marcella, maid of Ilted,
after the death of
her husband who tripped over a stone and fell on a spike and
died bent like a
bow.
CHAPTER FOUR
THE WRITINGS OF
ARISTOLAS
This is an account
of the coming of certain Wise Strangers to the sea-girt realm
of Britain. Taken
from the Books of Britain and re-written into the appendices
to the Bronzebook.
This being that part safeguarded by Rowland Gasson.
After our Lord died,
having been hung on the cross outside the city walls of
Jerusalem, Joseph of
Abramatha took Mary, the mother of Jesus into his home
until John could
make suitable arrangements. Then he was called Guardian of the
Lady, which title
became confused in Britain with that of Guardian of the Sacred
Vessel.
Aristolas wrote
these things in the Sacred Island, and this is his prayer: "In
silence, hands
uplifted, heart humbled and mind stilled, Your servant presumes
to come into Your
Presence, Great Understanding One. Grant me the abounding joy
of union with Your
Spirit. Grant that all my deeds be in harmony with the Great
Law and that I learn
to acquire wisdom, so I may illuminate the hearts of men".
"Let me embrace
Your Spirit in full knowledge of my twofold nature. Guide my
feet towards the
Great Law by which all true seekers find the light. As long as
my body and spirit
remain together, so long will I preach to men, seeking always
to awaken a response
in their hearts. Bless me with sweetness of speech and
harmony of voice.
Help keep me from the grip of greed and from the loud-mouthed
futilities and
frivolities of illiterate men. Spare me the sad companionship of
the sanctimonious
ones".
"God ot my
heart, Sun of my life, Keeper of my circle of content, fill this
place with the
divine emanations from Your Being. Attune with the Circle of
Truth and the Circle
of Light. Make me receptive to the lessons and inspirations
of life."
Joseph, our father
in faith, came across the storm-tossed seas to the place
called Balgweith,
and from thence to Taishan where he met the envoy of the king
who was sorely
troubled. For the Chief of All Druthin, called Trowtis, was away
at the meeting place
of his god, where he came in a wondrous way every nineteen
years. There, the
ceremony lasted three moons.
When Trowtis
returned, he met Joseph at the place now called Henmehew, because
of the strange tree
that grows there. The Druthin held a feast of welcome in the
place called
Nematon, which is below the great hill. The Chief of All Druthin
washed his face, his
hands and his feet, then a white goat was led out and
sacrificed on a
four-horned altar. Trowtis washed his hands again and made an
offering of salted
barley cakes and gave some to Joseph, called Ilyid by the
people here.
Then the goat's
thighs were burnt on the altar while a lesser priest mixed the
sacrificial blood
with water and black wine. Then barley cakes and a chalice
containing the
blood, wine and water were passed through three sacred horns
before being given
to the chiefs present. Then youths danced around the fire
over the sacrificial
pit.
Then priests of a
lower order prepared tables for a feast while the common
people sat around on
logs made smooth at the top. The sacrificial beast, having
been first offered
to the gods of this place, was eaten by the common folk. All
except the liver,
which, being the seat of blood and life was kept for the
diviners. These
found that the right wing of the liver was broken, so they
prophesied that no
enemy would enter the land.
Now, the king called
together a great conclave of the people, and the Druthin
were there. The king
said to our father, "Speak now before the people. Tell us
of your ways and we
will judge whether they be worthy". Joseph spoke a tongue
understandable to
these people, but he spoke slowly and not after their fashion.
Our father said,
"As the light came first and called the eye into being to see
it, so it is with
God who is the already existing light. The heart does not
create the thought,
but the thought produced the heart. This, so it could
manifest, for the
heart is created to serve thought in the world of effects. The
world of causes lies
in another kingdom". The Druthin said, 'The light we know
and have, these
things are not strange to us. All light comes from an original
crystal which is
always virgin, and we say the behaviour of light is the
fore-ordained symbol
to man".
Joseph, our father,
said, "I have not come to batter down your house of hope,
for it has many
pleasing features, even as ours. So let us not disagree but take
the best from both
and, discarding what is less good, fashion something of value
to all. Let us weigh
one thing against the other, rejecting that which less
clearly shows the
way".
The king said to the
Chief of All Druthin, "Do we not have the source of light
in a grail egg?
" The Druthin replied, "The sun shines not and the Esures
(servants of Light)
will not come without the presence of the Great Gleamer
which provides their
sustenance. There can be no incarnation of light on Earth
unless there be,
behind it, a greater light".
Joseph said,
"When I was shipbound I had a vision of God, the eyes of my spirit
were opened and I
saw Him in all His glory. Then I understood that there was no
difference between
the nature of His Spirit and the spirits of men, only that
His was of an infinitely
greater purity. This I knew for sure: God and man are
of the one essence.
I knew we are all rays of the One Light, sparks from the One
Flame. Yet the flame
is not the fire, for what flame can call itself into
being?"
Joseph said,
"If fire can be contained in wood, to leap forth when two pieces
are heated through
rubbing together, yet remain hidden within the wood, then
surely it can be so
with the soul within man".
The Chief of All
Druthin said, "Often have I thought on this. All men are alike
in nature and all
aspire to the same goal. All seek to make the same journey's
end, only the route
differs. Therefore, let us not argue whether men should
follow your road or
mine, but find between us a path better than either".
One priest said,
"What of the worlds within the ever moving circles?" Joseph
replied, "The
hidden worlds are numbered as sands on the seashore. If a man
concerns himself
with many things, he benefits none and derives no benefit
himself. Let us
concern ourselves with this world first".
The Druthin said,
"Who can change the natures of men, for these are fixed by the
gods". Joseph
answered, "All things can be changed, but not always for the
better. Change and
life are inseparable".
Joseph went on to
say, "Because you are folk who work the land, bringing it to
fruitfulness, you
are not to be despised. Let the newcomers with their armed
might say as they
will, you are workers with God. Were not the Sons of God also
called the Sons of
the Plough? Did they not fight against the Sons of Men who
were hunters eating
raw flesh like the beasts and worshipping serpents which
crawl on their
bellies? Always there have been some who worship things of
insensitive wood and
stone, grovelling in the dust at their feet, and those who
worship the highest
they can see, the sun and the stars. Others reach out even
beyond these".
One of the Druthin
asked, "What know you of the Eye of God in men?" Joseph
replied, "What
is written in the heart is the Eye of God in men, this sees
everything. Knowing
right from wrong it puts things in instant perspective. Men
in whom this eye is
closed are little better than the beasts of the field and
forest. I come as
one who opens the eyes of such as these".
In the beginning the
king had listened in silence and was tolerant, because he
felt he could
indulge these strangers. Now, as he saw that their teachings might
prevail, he became
angry and unreasonable, as it happens in instances such as
these. He said,
"Who gives you authority to speak in this manner? Who sent you
and do you come to
spy on us ? To whom do you make report?"
Joseph said,
"Know this, great king. I am a servant of The Great God of Light. I
am sent in order to
build a church here where it will serve your people well. I
will establish a
place of light unto them. I come to teach the perfect
commandments. Ask
among your own about me, for I am not unknown to them. I have
no human teacher
from whom I learned the wisdom from whence I got these things.
I lived in the light
of Christ but learned tardily. Then I had a message from
God Himself, 'Go
preach to those who dwell at the edge of the Earth'".
The king said,
"How comes it that these things have been revealed to you, while
the same God who
reigns here has not revealed them to us, even though we were
the lords of this
land? Are you a man of significance this side of the wide
waters?"
Joseph answered,
"Those who are established in The God of light need no mentors
and they take pride
in their insignificance, for it is said, The first shall be
last and the last
first. The lowly shall be raised up and the haughty cast
down'. We do not
seek after gold or worldly possessions. Of myself I have no
power, but I have
power from God. It is God who commands and it is He who makes
a true man of
God."
There was much
talking and long discourses on the nature of God, and the Druthin
challenged Joseph to
produce Him, saying, "Though you decry our images, yet we
do have likenesses
of our gods while you lack even these. Your words are mere
puffs of wind".
These things and
more were said, and the Druthin believed, but tardily. Then, at
the midsummer
festival the Chief of All the Druthin collapsed on the
processional walk,
denying himself the reviving draught prepared by Islass his
daughter. He died in
the arms of Joseph our father. It was he who received the
moon chalice and the
light of Britain. The Druthin held the secrets of the Great
Temple of the Stars,
and theirs was the royal isle in the Kingdom of Kevinid.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE WRITINGS OF
ABRAIS
I write in terrible
times. My people have been driven to black despair and the
most cruel of foes
has taken our fair land. The wisdom which flows through my
pen, tutored by
Isbathaden the Younger, is as set into writing by our father
Aristolas and by the
great ones who gave us the Annals Romanorum which we hold
in part, clinging
like the thundervine to what is left.
I am no weaver of
words and if fine phrases bedeck what I transcribe, they are
the work of better
hands than mine. I am not as a teller of tales who sits
before the hallfire,
a waster of words like women over the fuller's tub. Those
who wear the red
robes of nobility have passed over the misty seas and the land
lies barren of
learning. The Firthreig have taken over the dwellings of the
wise, and the three
pillars of progress - wisdom, courage and beauty - no longer
stand against
Maermagic.
I speak of one named
Jesus who was Hesus come to Earth as a godling, the much
abused One, but does
not the lawman whose case is bad abuse his opponent? I
speak of those who
followed Him and suffered in the dark days of oppression. The
anger of the people
smouldered against the just ones, as Jesus had foretold
while still in the
body. Then the time came when the dragon of disaster awoke,
thirsting for blood,
and it began to stalk its prey while liemongers fanned the
smouldering embers
of hatred into flame.
The king of the land
was stirred up to anger and the hatred of the people became
an all consuming
fire. The wolves came out of their dark forest and suddenly
fell upon the flocks
of innocent sheep and rent them apart. Wild bears burst
among the sheepfolds
and ravaged them. Evil-motivated ones came and cut down the
apple-bearing trees,
and the starglint nights were woeful. Beast trampled the
flower gardens while
eaglehawks swooped down among the dovecotes. The earthen
ones broke.
.
The culled-out
servants of The High God entered the arena of vile entertainment,
like children before
their teachers. They were thrown into the path of the
lions. Some they
equipped with weapons and forced to fight with bears. Women
were scented with
the smell of heat-angered beasts and children stood frozen
with fright. Their
bodies were shredded like the paper of Egypt.
They moaned pitifully,
like oxen awaiting the slaughter and their children were
murdered before
their eyes. They were raised up by throngs on the wrists, their
feet pressing on
thorns or on heated plates, or over small fires. Many were
thrown into prisons
to die of hunger, thirst and cold.
In the days when the
Druthin looked darkly on the enlightened ones, the Hammer
of God said to the
king, "It is in the nature of people placed such as we to
fear those who wield
the weapons, but we have One who is more to be feared than
you and He is One to
whom I look up. I stand in awe of The Great One who is
strong enough to
overlook your present power, but who will surely call you to
account in the life
to come". The king said, "Where is your temple?" The reply
was, "A true servant
of God has no need of a temple built of wood and stone".
It was to tell of
such things that the Anointed One came, to awake sleeping men
drunk with the heavy
droughts of sensuality and lewdness. He came to open the
eyes of men to their
carnal degradation which corrupts their spiritual natures.
He came to open
their eyes to their divine destiny and to show them the hidden
sparks of divinity
captive and suffering in the carnal natures of apathetic men.
There are those who
prefer the dregs of darkness to the living power of light
which flows from
Jesus, Son of Dewi, Sap of the Trees, Sweetness of the Fruits
and Perfume of the
Flowers, Bread of Heaven and Shepherd of Souls. He is the
River of Sweet
Waters arising at the Spring of Truth.
I am an unworthy one
in the telling of these tales. Great Inspirer, give me a
ray of inspiration
to raise my voice, as it were, from the mystic cauldron,
sister vessel to the
ice-clear chalice. I will lay the dowry of the mystic maid
at the feet of the
discriminating ones. The smoothness of my lay flows from the
bubbling brew from
out of the great cauldron. I am one of God's inspired and not
numbered among mere
poets yapping at the heels of high-browed bards
I am not one
aspiring to the noble chair, whose words must be proved by
privilege and truth.
Where are the grave, high-browed druids of the past and the
wonder-making bards
? Those who thrive today cannot rise to the sky heights of
song, even though
their melody-making wings ache with fluttering. They are like
the food pot
placidly bubbling over the red greying coals.
O Comforter of the
comely tribes, welcome me into the lush dominions of field
and forest. O
Champion of the thrusting sharp spear, hear my petition thrown out
into the
three-circled expanses of power. Let us feast at the overflowing
cauldrons of peace
and let us, your people, sleep in the downy, heather-scented
beds of
tranquillity. Protect the holy sanctuary of the blue-gowned bards where
valour is honoured
and chastity cherished. The raging assailants, protectors of
slothful ways,
labourers of concealed mysteries, surround us. We call on the
guardian bulwark of
celestial power to become the smasher of shields.
How straightly
comfortable a scribe am I, who reconciles the mystic daughter
with the lowly
mother! Who places the crystal-clear chalice beside the
blood-filled golden
cup! Who combines the divine circle with the eternal cross
and the sorrowful
son with the triumphant fighting father!
In the beginning,
only the Absolute existed in the firmament, called Nuvrie by
the Britons and
Kewgant by the Welsh of the west. The Spirit of life spread
outwards from the
hub to form Gwinvidon, the region of light and the circle of
spirituality. This
opened out to Andon, which is the circle of germinal
existence, at the
inner edge of which was the circle of corporeality. This
spread out to Abred,
which is the material plane and the circle of trial,
testing and
tribulation. It is a place of experiment and experience for gaining
knowledge, wisdom
and spirituality. Below this is Anoon, the sea of souls. Here
is the lake of
unspecialised soul stuff, which is forged and fashioned in Abred
and perfected in
Gwinvidon. In Abred was the Garden of Karahemish through which
flowed the river Nara.
Here dwelt Keili and Kithwin. Here were born Derwiddon,
the first of the
Druthin, Gwinidendon who composed the first song, and Tydain
who was the first
bard.
It is said that
there were two classes of druids: the Dryones who were masters
of medicine and
divination, and the Druthin who were superior and gifted with
twinsight and magic.
The first had their seat at Abri, while the Druthin had
their seat at
Innisavalon, the island of indestructible apples.
The druids believed
in the One Supreme Being, but also held that there was a
body of lesser
Beings. They believed in a fairyland of Nature Spirits which
manifested to
mortals. All happenings were motivated by an interplay of unseen
rays from The
Source. Therefore, the running of a hare, flight of birds, fall of
leaves, patterns in
sand, the sound of waters, were meaningful.
Their seven deadly
sins were: hypocrisy, theft, cowardice, fornication,
gluttony, indolence
and extortion. Above all precepts were the three manly
qualities: honour,
courage and manliness, and the three womanly qualities of
decency, decorum and
chastity. There were female temple attendants but no female
druids. The druids
who taught were called Nemids. There were Waiths who knew the
secrets of Nature,
and these would not eat birds. Once every three years there
was a firewalking.
Under the great
night reflector, only four animals appear as ghosts: the dog,
cat, horse and hare.
The ghosts of these could be forewarners of the crack of
doom.
Will-o-the-wisps haunt the marshlands, but few are enlivened by ansis.
Nick-o-the-nights
haunt the stony places and fells.
Joseph Idewin and
his brave band came to flowering Britain three years after the
death of Jesus. He
converted Gladys, sister of Caradew, who married a Roman, and
her sister Aigra who
was the wife of Salog, lord of Karsalog. After landing, he
and his band passed
through an avenue of oaks and standing stones. They first
built huts over
against the holy vineyard where the fruits were bitter.
After all the saints
had gone to their rest, the first church and its
surroundings became
a wild place, a refuge for wild creatures. Then, as the land
remained holy,
saints came from Gaul, who restored it, and one was Fairgas the
Briton, who had
served at this place as a youth. Idewin was buried in a shirt of
fine linen which he
had worn when burying Jesus and which was stained with three
spots of blood on
the chest. He was buried by the two-forked cross. The saints
had lived in twelve
huts around a never diminishing well at the foot of the holy
hill.
Joseph Idewin was
related to Avalek whose kingdom bordered that of Arviragus,
through Anna the
Unfaithful. He converted Claudia Rufina, the daughter of
Caradew previously
called Gladys, who married Pudens, a Roman, and had a
daughter Pudentia.
In his twenty-eighth year, Caradew was betrayed to the Romans
by Arisia, queen of
Bryantis. He married Genuissa, daughter of Claudius, to bind
the peace agreement.
The name 'Caradew1 means 'filled with love', but he
preferred to use a
warrior name.
Gladys, sister of
Caradew, married Aulus Plautius, a Roman commander. Caradew
held an estate in
Siluria and he was made warchief when Guiderius, son of
Kimbelin, was slain
by a slingshot, near the river Thames.. In the year 59 of
our Lord, the
British rose up under Woadica, the horsefighter, who died nearly
three years later
when Gulgaes became warchief.
Caradew went forth
with the bright, flashing, sharp-pointed spears of war.
Bards, renowned
judges of excellence, sang his praise. Even druids of the three
great circles
launched their eloquence in the five dialects and four tongues.
Dancers from the
steep mount gaily preceded him, and diviners from the
high-pillared gates
declared wise oracles.
I am one who lived
in those brave days. It is my right to be the master singer,
for I stand in the
last line of blood from the golden strong-armed kings of old.
My father's father
was a bard of the high enclosure, prince of the true tribe,
high-caller of the
Kimwy, a giant of song born of melodic race, light-tongued,
harp-voiced.
Well fitted am I to
sing Caradew's praise. Excepting great Keili and the
all-seeing diviners
of the land, and sagacious druids of the fine woven gold
chains, and chiefs
of the splendid wars, I am first above all to open his mouth
in honour. He
honoured all blue-gowned bards, singing bards of the land,
guardians of the
storehouses of winged words. Guests such as I were never
wanting for
provision while Caradew reigned, a high king over the wide land of
heroes. He paid them
well in sleek, fleet-limbed coursers, chasers of the
wind-borne hare.
The valorous druids,
feared by foes, the flowing-robed judges of disputes, said,
"Let songs be
composed, with melodious refrains to praise the savage-subduing
heroes".
The power of the
bard is in the uplifted shield shaking before the tumult,
high-riding on the
battleleader's shoulder. It is in the quivering hare
crouching in the
bracken-buried hallow. It is in the soft-sighing promise of a
fair-skinned maiden.
In the finely-shaped form of the terrible spear-blade. In
the bright-bladed
sword clashing in the heat of the conflict. In the homely,
comforting abode of
the family.
I have sung my last
lay, the wonder days have gone and strangers walk the land.
The high-hearted
bards have gone to their rewards and the diviners' mouths have
been sealed. Now it
is the fashion to hear the babbled words of Brandigan of
Walsogo.which stand
before the Resounding Halls, by the stream of sorrow, at the
very gates of hell.
The purifying
Kolgarth fires remain as transmuters to Heaven. Happy is the
flame-borne one. Our
fathers of old believed that fire was a form of creature
which had to be fed
with fuel, given share of the food and in stressful times
the sacrifice of a human.
They who read the flames and embers are no longer with
us, for they have
been supplanted by the omen readers.
As dogs can see
happenings in the world of spirits, then whatever they do is
important, and a
wise man watches them and takes heed. For if a dog sleeps
before the fire, all
is well, be at peace. If he sleeps on a bed, then beware.
To sleep in a corner
means strife and to howl means a death. To crouch and
whimper indicates
the presence of a spirit.
Happy are the bright
spirits in Elendon, the glorious sky isle where they await
their call to
return. All here have the Kailight around their heads. Come night
and they visit Earth
in their dreams. If there be confusion in dreaming, then
there is confusion
in the daily round of life. Dream without confusion, and see
clearly and know you
live well.
Seek not to dream
through the spotted elfincap, though it give enormous
strength, visions
and the gift of prophesy. Do not dream with the dungchild, as
did the seers of
olden times. Do not look through the window of the egg vessel.
These things are
forbidden to you. Nor may you consult the tree- bound maiden
who, in truth, is
the viper-blown Glainid. That which was done on the high night
of Summer shall be
done no more.
Gems from the
serpent must not be sought, nor may you follow the swanship,
though that which it
bears within itself may be yours. Even.so it is unwise to
bring the majestic
sun down to incarnate in a stone, Know the secret of the
sunship and all
wisdom will be the reward. Seek it at Karelen.
Those worthy ones
who could drink from the Gloryglian are no longer a voice for
the land, but there
is a new chalice at the well. The phoenix sleeps in the
holyhole of
Karperal. If a man would know the mystery of hie, the secret of
these things, he
must climb the Mountain of Tears in the Vale of the Dead, at
the trysting place
of the sun and the moon chalice. Thence must he go to the
Place of Brandigan,
following the path of mysteries. If he does by the
wanderer's way, he
is lost.
The secret of Dwyva
is known to the Knights of Karwidrin, who sit within the
Sacred Circle. They
fight the never-ending war with the Powers of Darkness. It
is victory in the
conflict of the soul which entitles the warrior to drink the
cup of immortality.
The Knights of Karwidrin seek in a never-ending quest. The
wisdom of the way by
which knights and their ladies live is, 'Let men follow the
natures and ways of
men, and women follow the natures and ways of women, and let
each serve the other
rightly'.
The heart of Britain
is the moon chalice which was brought here by the hands of
the Chief of the
Kasini. He came shipborne to Rafinia, which is by the Mount of
Lud, against
Ardmoal. Passing Insdruk, he came to Itene where he hid the
treasure in Trebethew.
It was not captured, as men say, nor could it decay. In
the fullness of time
it came to Kargwen. There it was kept secure with the Grail
stone and the
ever-virgin vessel which was brought down the rays of the sun.
Thus it was that
these treasures of Egypt came to Britain. This was the secret
of Britain.
CHAPTER SIX
THE WRITINGS OF
EMRIS SKINLAKA
The master was born
under the sign of the Churls wain, at Dinsolin, called Insel
by the Sons of Fire,
in the year that the warwolves drove back the Children of
the Horse. His
father was one of the ornaments of Hew. In his youth he was a
battle-blooded
warrior.
He was a dashing
leader into the thick of the fray, a dauntless captain in the
heat of the battle.
The bearer of the battle-hammer was the great-hearted
valiant warrior.
He stood stern and
steadfast in the grim work of blood-letting. Proud as the
high-flying death
eagle he stood.
A dark doomsbird
flew over the land when the daring hawk gave battle. Behind
came the sharp
extractors of blood, the thrusting spears darting eagerly to the
thrust. Like ripples
across a pond, further and further spread the dying groans
of doom-gathered
men. The spear horde stood firm to protect the Vale of
Tadwylch. It was a
testing time of manhood.
Knightly men will
read these words with a swelling heart. They will feel for the
heroic brides of
bloody spears, for the shattered shields and splintered hafts.
The valiant captain
of men sounds the red horn and sweeps over the fearsome foe
like foaming seas.
They were consumed by his bright-burning breath, like the
fierce bush flame
raging through the brown bracken.
The horse-vaulting
warriors rode in for the final assault. The patron of the
blue-bound bards
swept the foe before him. Raising the red shield, holding high
the sharp-slashing
sword enjewelled with the ruby-red blood of warriors. It was
a proud day for the
ruler of the battle, the leader of strong, mail-clad
spearmen, the scion
of an illustrious race.
Only real men know
the exultation of victory. They cheered the battlechief
irresistible in the
war rush. His spears dismayed the blood-thirsting,
frightening
foreigners. He wielded the dreadful blade of battle which tested the
manliness of men.
Those were brave days. Now, only mean-minded, faint-hearted
buffoons lampoon the
heroes of renown. Where are the manly men, where the chaste
ladies?
We were blameless
for the outflowing tide of blood and entitled to the peace of
the plough. The
reward of the warrior is the tranquillity of old age. The pillar
of battle, whose
hands once wielded the hard-downslashing swords, the dragon
chief, is due the
peace of aged infirmity. If he is found among the gentle
women, is it of any
account? For he has established his manhood before men.
Thus spoke the master
in the court of the king: "I am a man who has never
shirked his duty. I
have stood fast in the fray. I have struck many a mighty
blow. Am I any less
qualified to speak on things of the spirit because I was
what I was? I have
stood at the gateway of the grave and I have slept the sleep
of inspiration. As
my arm weakens, my spirit strengthens. I am no longer a man
of war but a man of
peace. But let no man say before me that I am a shirker at
the manly test. I am
no lesser a man now. Hear my words and let your heart
judge".
"If a man
followed a sunbeam to its source he would find the sun; and likewise,
if he followed his
mind he would find The Divine Source from whence it came.
From The High God
flows the inspiring spark in men which kindles the flame of
Wisdom, Truth and
Goodness. Likewise does the mind project its thoughts and
plans which are
given form when expressed in words. When a man's thoughts come
from a spiritual
mind they reflect the nature of The Spirit Above All Spirits.
When they are
stimulated by desires, feelings and urges, they reflect only the
influence of matter
on mind".
"Individual man
is not a separate being cut off from all others, living isolated
in his own
enclosure. All things are in unity, and the thoughts and feelings of
others, living or
dead, pass through men like water through the gills of a fish.
No man is cut off
from the free flow of life, which purpose is to bring forth
new forms of life,
absorbing the old and outworn and replacing it with the new".
"Have faith,
for this is the child of study and diligence. If, however, adopted
by credulity or
apathy, it becomes a useless thing. Faith is not an excuse but
an expression of
hope. If made the refuge of the gullible, it is a thing of
little moment. Faith
is the spear of the wise and the crutch of the foolish".
The king said to the
master, "Why do you, who are of warrior estate, entertain
uncouth and ignorant
men? Some say you even prefer their company to that of the
wise and
highborn". The master replied, "Sire, I will tell you how a Teacher
greater than I dealt
with such a question. In aland across the waters, a wealthy
man gave a feast to
which this Great Teacher was invited. As was the custom
there, outside the
feasting place was gathered a motley crowd of hangers on,
drunkards, thieves,
deceivers and harlots. Now, when the prime feast was over
the Teacher went and
sat among the outsiders and talked to them, in a manner to
their understanding,
concerning uplifting things."
"Those within
and the disciples of this Man were aggrieved because of this and
sent out two men who
said to the Great Teacher, Tolerant Master, is this a wise
thing You do? The
word of such doings will spread quickly and when they hear of
the company You keep
prudent men will shun You'. The Great Man replied, 'A
worthy man never
fails to do his duty wherever he may be, and what I am entails
a duty to minister
to such as these. As to My reputation, have I not taught that
reputation is
subservient to service? These, being God's children, are our
brothers, yet their
lives contain more problems unknown to you. Because you have
no knowledge of the
nature of their burden, you, considering yourselves wise,
cannot disclaim
understanding and sympathy' ".
" These sinners
are openly guilty, but such honesty is capable of transmutation
into shame and shame
into remorse. Those within are clever enough to cover up
their guilt, and
their duplicity and dishonesty cannot lead to shame and
remorse, for they
believe only that they are more clever than those here.
Suppose those
within, who despise these sinners, were to stand forth stripped of
the hypocritical
overlay covering their sins? What do you think you would see? I
tell you, the inner
aspect of many of those within is more hideous than that of
many here
without'".
" 'For those
within have much and therefore should be above temptation, yet I
tell you that the
man with most is often the most avaricious. The distortions of
sin are not caused
only by deeds done, but also by the suppressed wish and
desire1".
" 'I say to
those who sit at the fleshpots, you covet the wealth of others. You
envy the house or
wife of your neighbour. Lewd thoughts burn in your minds when
you gaze on the
figures of women, so that your bodies lust after them. You
practise deceit
every day, wishing for wealth, position and fame. The man who
covets in his heart
suffers as a thief, and she who lusts in her heart is a
harlot' ".
Those within heard
these words, but held their peace and were silent. The master
said to those who
were beside him, "Their own hearts accuse them, for the hearts
of the pure do not
make such accusations. The impure cover the evil polluting
their hearts with
hypocritical displays of righteousness. They hide their true
thoughts by
displaying loathing for things their hearts long to do. They revile
others for their
sins, but this is hypocrisy. They hug their worldly reputations
won by deceit, but
were the mask to be torn aside they would be seen as
wallowers in the
mire of secret sinful thoughts and hidden vices".
One day, the master
went to the encampment of the idol worshippers and said to
one there, "Why
do you worship images of wood and stone?" The idol worshipper
replied, "So
that it will provide me with food and shelter and keep me from
harm". The
master said, "How can it do this when it cannot even move of itself?"
Said the idol
worshipper, "Whom do you serve?" The master answered, "I serve
The
Great God Above All
Gods who can feed His worshippers everywhere". Said the
other, "See
now, your own actions contradict your words, for if your God is
everywhere why have
you left your home beyond the great forest to wander here?"
The master replied,
"I am not here to serve God alone but also to serve you. I
bring wholesome fare
as a gift of comradeship".
Wayfaring with some
waytamers, the master looked into a pool with all its life
and said, "What
an imagination God has!" They said to him, "You have been taught
in the shadow of the
Great Master and may gaze on that which casts the shadow,
but how will it go
with our children and their children who know only the shadow
of a shadow?"
The master said, "Behind every shadow there is substance. If you
see a shadow,
believe there is substance somewhere".
There was a dyer with
them and he used the unripe berries of the buckthorn,
which were for
dying, as a purge. Dyers' greenweed gives a yellow dye, and wood
mixed with this and
lime gives a good green. The waytamers had a nightlight
which they made by
heating a few oyster shells in the fire until they became
white. Then they
heated them in a container with double their weight in
brimstone, for three
hours, until they became red. This made a light in the
night.
Many times the
master spoke wise words and his followers wrote them down, for he
knew the way of
words. He said, "When the wind blows it discovers every opening.
Keep your eyes and
ears fully open before marriage and halfshut afterwards. Even
a thief does not
steal from his own neighbours. What does the wolf care if the
sheepfold be
destroyed. Progress is the creation of discontented people. A wise
man learns to love
the lovable and to hate the hateful, but more important is to
know the difference.
A child should behave towards his parents so they have no
anxiety except as to
his health, and confidence in the wisdom of his actions".
"No law
whatsoever can ever unman a man or devirtue a woman. For the way wenders
the old law holds
good. It is said that he who kills another unlawfully, who
steals or robs with
violence, or rapes or seduces a maid or matron, shall be
placed in a wicker
cage with others and burnt. Now this does not apply, but he
shall be hanged at
the crossroad".
"It is not
unlawful for a husband to kill his wife's seducer. It is unlawful to
require that a wife
shall lick ash off a spearhead to establish her virtue. The
first God-given
right of man was the right to maintain his family inviolate, and
it is the duty of
the rulers to uphold that right. The seven qualities of
manliness are : courage,
fortitude, kindness, integrity, truthfulness,
consideration and
protectiveness".
A stranger accosted
the master and said, "I don't like your methods". The master
answered, "Is
that so, well actually I am not too satisfied with them myself.
Tell me, how do you
inspire men to live in harmony among themselves?" The
stranger said,
"I don't." Said the master, "I prefer the way I do it to the way
you don't".
The stranger said,
"You are unbending in your teachings. Is it not wise to
follow the path of
moderation?" The master answered, "I am not interested in
moderate faith or
moderate goodness, moderate honesty or moderate virtue. There
can be no moderation
in things of vital importance. The moderate man is not for
me. Would you eat a
moderately fresh egg, or want to live in a house that keeps
out most of the wind
and rain? Would you be satisfied with most of your wages or
with moderate work
from your servants ? I am not a moderate man, but one who
plants his standard
firmly. A standard of moderate morality is no standard at
all. Could an army
of moderate fighting men secure the land?"
The master went on
to say, "Man lives for two things: the acquisition of
knowledge and skill,
and the refining of the spirit through experience. He who
commands by his
integrity is like the pole star which remains constant while
others revolve
around it. To give you the essence of my teachings I would say:
Let all your
thoughts be wholly good".
One asked of the
master, "Who shall be our teachers?" The master replied, 'They
who, by revitalising
the old wisdom of their forefathers in this land and adding
to this new
knowledge, are suitable". When they asked who should preach, he
said, "He who
should not preach what he desires others to practise is one to
whom these practices
are not normal. To learn without thinking is futile, to
think without
learning is profitless".
"Wisdom does
not consist of what a man knows, but of recognising the limits of
his knowledge.
Listen always but speak seldom. Maintain silence when in doubt
and you will seldom
get into trouble. Keep your eyes open, but forget what you
should not have
seen. Never gossip, and shun all gossipmongers".
The master was
asked, "How should a master deal with his servants?", and he
replied, "Promote
those who are worthy and reward their loyalty, and train those
who are incompetent.
To know what is right and not to do it is cowardice. Wealth
and station are
desired by every man, but if these can be acquired or retained
only to the
detriment of his service to his creed, he must relinquish them.
Poverty and
subordination are disliked by all, but if they can be avoided only
to the detriment of
his creed, he must accept them with good grace".
Become paladins
among the people, making the words of these writings the cause
you serve. The
inspiration is divine, but the medium is human. In the past the
pure light of Truth
was concealed, from the multitude of the people, in riddles
and a fog of jargon.
Parables satisfied the people's understanding. Religion
degenerated because
in its higher aspects it was not understood by the mass of
the people, and
there was a fear of casting pearls before swine, hence the
mysteries and the
need for ceremonial, images and symbols. People more readily
worship representations
of God, because they cannot comprehend Him and shirk the
effort of trying to.
God cannot be represented by things of this world to the
understanding of the
aristocratic soul.
There are Adamites
whose souls slumber within, and Godmen who are the ultimate
earthly beings.
These are mysteries held close and safeguarded by the Knights of
Karwidrin, but which
came to our master through Gwalgwin of the white hawk
crest, and Gwalanad
the Summer Hawk. Also, through Palader of the spears and
Lancelot, he who
carried the mystic spear of Lot. They who are ready will read
these things with
understanding.
Words are mysterious
things within which can be hidden profound things, but
enlightenment does
not come easily or from mere reading of what is written.
Greatness declined
during the great peace when knights were lax and
pleasure-seeking.
Men forgot their past unity and there were quarrels and
rebellion. Peace is
a fatal sickness to the Sons of Brittania. It was said of
their battlechief
that he lost every lesser battle and won every big one.
The art of the
scribe came to Britain with the high-browed one who taught
Gwilidun of Ivern
who had seven sub-scribes. He said to the king, 'This strange
art will make the
Britons wiser and will improve their memories, for it is the
very essence of
memory which has been brought to this island". The king said,
"Most
wonderful, but while you may be prepared to bestow this, have you the
ability to judge the
worth of this art? Should not this he with another? The
potter lacks the
ability to judge the worth of his own pots, or the knight his
own horse.
Therefore, the ability to judge the usefulness or harm of this new
thing should surely
he with another. Now, you who are the master of letters have
been so swayed by
your affection for them that you endow them with powers quite
the opposite of what
they actually possess. For this new thing will not increase
the range of memory,
but will lead to forgetfulness in the mind of those who
learn this strange
art. It encourages men to cease to practise their memory. Are
the legs of a
horseman equal to those of a man who walks? With time men will put
their trust in
writing and these strange signs will discourage memory. They are
not instruments of
memory but of reminding. Those who learn to read many things
without proper
instruction will then give an appearance of knowing many things
of which they are in
fact ignorant. They will be hard to get along with, since
they will not be
wise but only appear so".
So it was that the
art of writing did not come easily to Britain. Yet always
there had been the
letters on stone and the brand sticks, but these were not for
ordinary men. Give
an ass oats and he will run after thistles. Such is the
nature of man, and
never went out an ass that came home a horse.
The king had
imprisoned one of the master's followers and when the master sought
the king's ear his
retainers drove him off. He returned, but this time they
turned loose the
hunting dogs upon him. The master stood firm and made no move,
saying in his heart
that if God decreed that the hounds should maul him, so let
it be. The hounds
stopped before him and refused to obey the urging of those who
trained them. This
filled the heart of the king with wonder, for he knew the
nature of the dogs
of Britain, and he released the prisoner.
It was at this place
that the master was challenged to produce his God. They
said, "Though
you decry our images, yet do we have likenesses of our gods while
you lack even this.
Your words are no more than puffs of wind". The master said,
"These are the
words of the report, to few has the arm of God been revealed. Did
it not shoot up
before your eyes as a sapling from a staff, and did not the
withered staff take
root in alien soil? Even so will it be with my words".
"I heard the
Spirit of God in the nightwatches, saying, 'Go, carry My words of
Truth to the
unbelievers and it will be like the rain that ends the drought. My
words shall strike
deep into fertile soil. Its beauty shall be like the holly
tree. Its fragrance
shall fill the land like the scent wafted from a new-mown
meadow. You, My
servant, will plant a tree which shall shelter all nations'".
"You say, 'Show
us the road', and I say go a little way and you will come to a
fork in the road,
take the turn to the right. Go awhile along this until you
come to an inn. Pass
this and take the next road bearing left. A little further
along this road you
will come to a village, and beyond this a lane to the left.
A mile along this
lane is a rise from whence you will see your destination
ahead".
"A man who has
been provided with this most complete directions possible from my
intimate knowledge
of the area, may lose his way and become lost. Another man
comes along later
and is given exactly the same information, and he reaches his
destination. No
doubt the first man will revile his informant and seek to place
blame wholly upon
him, declaring the directions to have been misleading. The
other will declare
how comprehensive they were".
"My words
direct those who listen with understanding, along the road of man's
destiny. This road
will not change about and will always be there. Here, too,
there is one who
knows the road well and gives clear instructions. Yet some
become lost while
others get there safely. I am only the shower of the way, the
light on the path. I
instruct all the same".
"Did I ever say
to you that if you followed me I would make every secret known
and reveal every
hidden mystery? I did not, for this is not for all men. Suppose
a man was pierced in
the breast with an arrow and his friends were to summon a
physician skilled in
such matters. What if the man said, 'I will not have the
arrow withdrawn
until I know who fired it and from what manner of bow it came;
whether the archer
be fair or dark, tall or short. I would know his name and his
tribe; I want to
know whether the arrow is fletched with feamers of a goose or
of a fowl'".
"Such a man
would die and all his queries would serve him not one jot. The man's
life would come to
an end, but still the great question which he overlooked
would go unanswered:
Why was the arrow fired? It is equally foolish to say, 'I
will not accept the
teachings of this man until I know from whence he came, who
is his father, what
is his estate' ".
"A man wishes
to know what the land of Egypt is like, but does not wish to
endure the
discomforts and dangers of the voyage. Yet when others who have made
the journey tell him
about it, he says, 'I will not believe this until I have
seen it with my own
eyes'. So there is only the choice of making the voyage or
accepting the word
of those who have done so. None can justly say, 'Because I
have not seen it for
myself, because I decline to face the dangers and
discomforts, the place
does not exist'".
The master was
asked, "How shall we live to be in accord with the way of God?"
He replied,
"Say not that you live for God, for whatever man does serves man;
God is served only
by serving men. Follow the words of the wise and do not chase
after fools. Learn
about the ways of life and enjoy them to the full. Life is
meant to be lived
with excitement and joy, but never for mere pleasure or
self-satisfaction.
Discipline your daily doings and let these not become
burdensome. Earn a congenial
livelihood and in all things you do be honest,
diligent and
careful".
"Let not your
thoughts be the sport of every wind that blows. This thought may
come to you: 'I know
imperfect conditions may be put aside. I know impure things
can be discarded'.
But a man may even be blessed with the good things of life
and yet remain
sorrowful and melancholy, for this he is by nature. Happiness and
cheerfulness are not
things flowing from affairs of the day or through
circumstances. The
sorrows of a sad man come from within".
"Things of the
daily round of life should be directed in the knowledge of what
is for your own
good. There must be an understanding of the way of the path. Be
upright,
conciliatory in speech and rational in bearing; mild but not meek and
with no vain
conceit. Be content having few material wants, frugal and composed
in mind. Be
discreet, neither insolent nor avaricious. Do no mean thing, for
this is not the way
of a knightly man. Never act deceitfully or scorn another
unjustly. Be free
from sloth and spread goodwill to all".
"Many will
merely read these things which will go in one ear and out of the
other. There is no
virtue in just reading them, they have to be lived by to be
of value. Wisdom can
be given to men, but this, of itself, does not make them
wise. Wisdom is like
a handful of seeds plucked from the seedbag. There is no
value in them unless
they be sown, nurtured and reaped".
"Be ever
mindful of what is done. Know the body as it deals with the outside. A
man thinks to
himself, 'This body I wear as a garment is what I make of it'. He
does not neglect the
body and is always aware of its existence and activities.
This awareness is
called mindfulness. Through bodily contemplation a state of
mindfulness is
reached."
"The mindful
man is ever conscious of every action and its consequences. He
knows what he does,
whether standing still or engaged in some activity. Whatever
the body does he is
aware of it and he has it under control. He knows his body
to be filled with a
variety of contents, he regards it as a pedlar's bag.
Examine the body
daily, in contemplation, and thus develop mindfulness".
"Contemplate
the body made of earthly elements in solitude and know that which
contemplates is the
spirit. Think of the body as if dead. What enlivens it? What
is life? Be mindful
of all your feelings. If experiencing something unpleasant,
be mindful that this
is so. Be mindful of all the activity about you, of the
sighing of the wind,
of the song of birds, the rustle of grass and the whispers
of leaves".
"Know the
difference between that which is generated by the body and that which
is generated by the
spirit. Abide in the mindfulness of feelings. Teach the body
to know itself more
fully and to comprehend more of its surroundings. When a man
is mindful of what
flows from the body and what flows from the spirit, then he
knows he is body and
soul".
"Be mindful of
what is good and what is bad. Thoughts become confused when
undirected; so, like
horses they must be kept in hand through the restrictions
of bridle and reins.
There are lofty thoughts and base thoughts; thoughts which
arise through the
prompting of the body urges and thoughts which arise through
the purifying
prompting of love".
"The wise man
dwells in mindfulness of all things, not overlooking the urges
towards indolence,
illwill, resentment, worry and wavering indecision. Be
mindful of ideas and
ideals. Be mindful of the full working of the eyes, the
nose, the mouth, the
cars and the skin".
"The true way
is the overcoming of self and the mastery over earthly conditions,
for as a man changes
himself so does he change his condition. Man must be able
to say, This is of
me and this is not of me. This is me or this is not me'. He
must divide himself
in two in mindi illness, knowing what is of the Earth and
what is of the
spirit".
"He must travel
the great path, conscious of his twinself. He should observe
others, whether or
not they have the quality of mindfulness. He must be
self-possessed by
his own spirit. The self-possessed man acts with composure,
mindful and
self-aware. The man of turmoil is he who goes abroad with senses
unguarded. Without
mindfulness he is unsteady and unstable in thought.".
"The godly life
is one which attracts friendship, which is the appreciated
revelation of
beauty. It is the search for beauty in all things. The holy
prophet, in his
austere, dank, dark cell, is not truly holy. The long-faced
preacher is not
truly holy".
"The godly life
is associated with beauty. Whenever a man reaches out after the
beauty found in
purity of spirit, he is uplifted. It is by not understanding the
true nature of
godliness that men have become entangled like fowls in a net.
They are like
leather covered with mildew, like logs encased with moss".
"Godliness is
attained by abandoning worthless things, by not falling into the
fallacies of
unchastity, by the repulse of sensuality and the repudiation of
evil. This can be
done by mindfulness of such things".
"When a master
takes an apprentice, he gives the first lesson: 'Come and be
disciplined, learn
restraint and obligation. Learn right behaviour'. When the
pupil is controlled,
then he gets the second lesson. The master says, 'Seeing
things with the eye,
do not be misled by their outward appearance. Be mindful as
to what they do to
you. See with your mind all that the eye sees, and so it is
with all the senses.
Be aware of everything, experience all things, but do not
become immersed in
anything'".
"For man is
shut off from the spirit by mindlessness. As he becomes more aware
of the material
things and happenings about him, so does he more and more become
mindful of the
spirit. He who says, 'I have no feeling of the spirit', is a man
of small
mindfulness. He is mindful of what is at his hand, but unmindful of
what lies beyond.
What lies beyond forms a veil through which he cannot see. How
can a man mindful
only of what holds his immediate attention be aware of the
world beyond his
narrow confines?"
"Be like the
spirit-filled Earth who accepts unto herself all the foulness which
you cast out of your
body and cleanses and purifies it. She is neither disgusted
nor delighted, but
transmutes it. Water accepts both foul and fair, for from its
embrace both emerge
together in goodness. The wind is not disgusted with the
foul smells of
Earth, but mixes them with the essences of earthlife so they are
sources of
fragrance".
"Practise
kindness, compassion, poise and decorum. Contemplate beauty and banish
ugliness.
Contemplate virtue and goodness, and banish carnality. Contemplate the
eternal and banish
impermanence. For all things of Earth must decay and pass
away, and it is the
destiny of every human being to embark on the dark
adventure".
Thus the master
spoke and he said, "You must accept any intelligent person into
the sheepfold.
Accept all who are willing to follow the light of our way. I say
this, not desiring
to win followers or wishing to turn others from their ways if
they walk in light.
I seek only those who walk in darkness or seek a better
light".
"For all
journey towards The One Light, but not seeing it in its perfection they
must travel by the
reflection they see. Each sees a different reflection and
therefore men
dispute among themselves as to the nature of the truth behind it
all. Be not one who
indulges in such futile foolishness".
"Never judge
virtue by outward appearance, for then the evildoer as well as the
saint may lay claim
to it. An artful imposter may gain more admiration than is
given to the zeal of
a saint. Do not nourish the cankerworms of malice, hatred,
envy and jealousy
within your bosom".
"It is truly
said that the heart of man is a labyrinth. Goodness is not merely a
matter of right
action, it includes bravely enduring and surmounting
difficulties. The
final test of character is when trouble comes in strength.
Then the question is
not so much whether a man does what is right, as to whether
he can stand up,
with integrity, to what life does to him. The anvil stands
steady when the hammer
falls".
"Manliness
involves recovery from every moral failure. It involves the retention
of honour. What
honour is to man, chastity is to woman. Honour and manliness
endow a man with
inner strength. His slightest word, his very presence, bring
peace and leave
others strengthened. No man or woman, no matter how humble, can
be really good
without the Earth being better for it, without someone being
helped and comforted
by that goodness".
"Words such as
these blow against the whirlwind of human nature, yet they are
the stuff of the
spirit. When the breaths of the multitude blow back the
whirlwind, then has
lif e fulfilled its purpose. Say not that the days of
victory of good will
be brought in with a griffin's egg".
"No man is free
who does not control his own movements. No man is free who is
not master of
himself. Fear is the tribute the mind of man pays to guilt. He who
has never been
guilty knows no fear. To see the path of duty and not to follow
it is the way of the
coward. A man tarnishes the lustre of his greatest actions
when he applauds
them himself".
"No man is more
vile than he who causes a woman to shed tears from the heart,
tears generated in
remorse and regret. Every maid has the potential for
ladyhood. A lady
never flaunts her estate, but ever remains modest and reserved.
She covers her
virtue with ladylike ways, for as a veil adds to beauty so is
chastity enhanced by
being veiled. The wise woman pays no notice to the spider's
lullaby from the
lips of hypocritical men who speak of love. The spider loves
its prey".
"Babblers are
not wanted. Shun the Sophists and their sophistry, and be chary of
divinators. Avoid
the Paynim and be as strong as a bull, light as a hawk, swift
as a deer and
tenacious as a salmon. If things go against you, never despair. To
be vanquished and
still not surrender, that is victory indeed! Avoid the
talebearer and do
not listen to the witches' whisper. Be prudent, giants step
off the path in the
realm where a dwarf is king".
"Avoid the
daydreamer and the moneyluster, the vagabond and the woman
fascinator. Avoid
the honeytongued hypocrite, for it were better you took a
viper to your bosom
than to open your heart to one such as these. Do not become
a griffin".
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE CORRYGORSED
To you, Nathaniel,
son of my brother Will Smith, and to Andrew, his half
brother, I leave two
books of integrity and others in portions. The bare words
are unimportant, but
what they convey is as jewels in a crown of gold. Yet, even
this is not the
crown itself which should be sought in the Karnamard at
Nantladiwen. I am
not an unlettered
man, but I lack the
virtue of subtleness in writing of things best hidden.
Inasmuch as the
ferocious bloodseekers close in upon us and Christian folk do in
their zeal deem it
fit to claim for their own persons of innocent blood,
persecuting them
with ratchet, rope and brand even unto death, I charge you, my
assigns, to protect
the several Holy Books even unto your death. Believing full
well that evil
cannot triumph over good and the dark days of fearborn hatred
will pass, keep them
secure under the most sacred oaths now foresworn.
The said Holy Books,
of themselves innocent, fill the base hearts of our enemies
with craven fear,
even as the lamp-bearing lackey causes scuttling among the
rats in the larder.
What dire secret do they hide closeted within their breasts,
occasioning such
terror that limbs quake when innocent wisdom is mentioned in
their presence?
In all the land no
place remains comfortable and the free-spirited are as hares
hunted by whippets
running into the talebearing wind. Before the doomsmen come
we made our peace
and can await our call to sacrifice in patience. The jewels
are safely hidden.
These things, which follow, are found in The Book of
Recitals.
There are three
adornments of life: Love, Truth and Beauty.
There are three
things of which God is The Source: Life, Wisdom and Power.
There are three
things which men must get from living: The greatest benefit, the
greatest knowledge
and the greatest experience.
There are three
causes in which it is fitting that men should risk their lives:
In establishing
Truth, in upholding Justice and in seeking Liberty.
There are three
paramount qualities to which all else should be subordinate:
Love, Truth and
Good.
There are three
things men should place above themselves: Their faith, their
race and humankind.
There are three
things a man should value above his life and possessions: His
family, his honour
and his reputation.
There arc three
principles of government: Effective security of life and person,
security of
possessions and dwelling, and security of personal rights.
There are three
things a government must hold inviolate: A man's family, his
dignity and his
opinion.
There are three
things the government must provide: Education, Justice and
Safety.
There are three
pillars of the state: The questing scholar, the diligent
craftsman and the
incorruptible official.
There are three
unities: One God, One Truth and One Creation.
There are three things
for which the Earth exists: The development of souls, the
fulfilment of the
destiny of man and the manifestation of life.
There are three
things man must give to life: Beauty, Stability and Harmony.
There are three
things woman must give to life: Love, Goodness and Compassion.
There are three
things only God can do: Constantly renew Himself in the infinite
Circle of Eternity,
remain unchanging while impregnating every state of
changeability, and
encompass everything existing.
There are three
things required of men: The ability to change that which is
changeable, to
accept that which is unchangeable and to know the difference.
There are three
virtues of maidenhood: Prudence, Modesty and Decorum.
There are three
virtues of wifehood: Faithfulness, Industriousness and
Motherliness.
There are three
graces: Faith, Hope and Love.
There are three
things to know about God: He must be sought for, He cannot be
given anything by
man which increases His Greatness and He dwells within His own
Law.
There are three
rights of man: Freedom to move, to enjoy privacy and to speak
his mind.
There are three
things God requires of man: Effort,
Courage and
Reverence for the sacred.
There are three
duties of woman: To reproduce the race, inspire mankind and
beautify life.
There are three
duties of man: To protect the race, strive for progress and
elevate humankind.
There are three
things which distort the soul: Malice, Deceit and Sensuality.
There are three
rules which govern a man's relationships with others: What he
requires in another,
what he forbids in another and what he regards with
indifference as
being entirely the concern of another.
There are three
things which shatter a man's life: An unfaithful wife, invasion
by foreigners and a
crippling disease.
There are three
principles of greatness: Obedience to the law, concern for the
welfare of the
community and the ability to suffer with fortitude all the blows
of fate.
There are three
states of being: That of God in the Great Circle, that of Spirit
in the Outer circle
and that of matter in the Inner Circle.
There are three
duties of parenthood: To protect, to cherish and to educate the
child.
There are three
duties of a child towards its parents: Obedience, Respect and
Loyalty.
There are three
qualities of a husband: Consideration, Protectiveness and Care.
There are three
essentials of manhood: Courage, Fortitude and Honour.
There are three
qualities of womanhood: Loyalty, Decency and Gentleness.
There are three
jewels of womanhood: Modesty, Decorum and Circumspection.
There are three
prime qualities of the Real Man: The ability to maintain
self-control, the
ability to remain calm under stress and provocation, and the
ability to not stand
too rigidly upon his rights.
There are three
things in men that other men hate: Saying one thing with the
mouth while holding
something quite different in the heart, withholding evidence
in favour of another
to the detriment of another, and spreading scandal and
gossip.
There are three
things that hold the state in cohesion: Effective protection for
everyone and their
property, just punishment when due, and a proper blend of
punishment and
mercy.
There are three
obligations of men in war: To kill and not be killed, to destroy
the enemy and his
possessions, and to survive the onslaught.
There are three
types of persons who cannot bear arms: A bondsman, a boy under
fifteen and a public
idiot.
There are three
kinds of stone for which removal is death: A council stone, a
session stone and a
guide stone.
There are three things
the punishment for which shall be greater than a simple
death: Killing a
kinsman, killing a child or virgin, and killing an idiot.
There are three
things for which the trumpet sounds three times: The counting of
heads and numbering
of families, the horns of harvest and the horns of war.
There are three
persons who can demand hospitality: The traveller from afar, the
afflicted or orphan
and the bard.
There are three
groups entitled to freedom of movement and maintenance: Chiefs
of tribes and their
retinue, druids and their followers, and judges and the
retainers of their
courts.
There are three
types who can claim citizenship: Those who bring new land under
cultivation, those
who work with metals and those who bear arms.
There are three
basic protections: Protection of lif e and person, protection of
possessions and
dwelling and protection of natural privileges.
There are three
types of persons who forfeit life: One who betrays his country,
race or kindred, one
who kills another through viciousness, lust or gain, and
one who injures a
child for life.
There are three
things which are indivisible and unchangeable: The Supreme
Being, Truth and
Reality.
There is one God,
one Truth and one Reality.
There are three
necessities of man: Change, Suffering and Choice.
There are three
tests to determine a free man: He has equal rights with every
other man, he has no
more obligation to the government than it has to him, and
he has freedom to
come and go.
There are three
things essential to united nationhood: The same language, same
rights for all and
the same race.
There are three
things which are private, untouchable and sacred to every man:
His wife, his
children and his tools of trade.
There are three
persons in the family exempt from menial or heavy work: The
small child, the
aged man or woman, and the sick and afflicted.
There are three
civil birthrights: The right to free movement, the right of
protection for
family, possessions and liberty, and the right to equality in
privilege and
restriction.
There are three
requirements for social stability: Security of life and limb,
security of family
and possessions, and security of traditions and culture.
There are three
foundations of the nation: National solidarity, national courage
and national pride.
There are three
things a man can legally be compelled to do: Fulfil his family
obligations, attend
a law court and serve in the military in times of national
peril.
There are three
things for which a man can be called a traitor: Aiding the
enemy, meekly submitting
to an enemy, and betraying his race.
There are three
things no law can deny: Water from a spring, river or lake, wood
from a decayed or
naturally fallen tree or branch, and unused stone.
There are three
forms of sonship: A son born within a marriage, a son born
outside a marriage
but publicly acknowledged by the father, and a son by
adoption.
There are three
types of thieves not to be punished: A woman compelled to steal
by her father or
husband, a young child and a starving person who steal to
eat.There are three
things which must remain open and free to all: Rivers, roads
and places of
worship.
It is said that
Alfred, the Homeborn, re-wrote these things, but it is also said
that what was is
lost and he put this in.
CHAPTER EIGHT
NOBILITY
Nobility and honour
are words much abused, but in truth nobility is not bestowed
by birthright but
resides in the soul, and honour is not a thing bartered among
kings but comes from
a sense of goodness. Men sell their honour for gold, and
nobility is
conferred on those who have done nothing more than their duty. This
is wrong.
When titles are
given as the reward of true selfless service, when he who serves
his fellows well is
ennobled, both giver and receiver are raised in stature, and
the realm benefits.
When they who
inherit titles also inherit the virtues which earned these, then
all is well; but
when he who inherits, to whom they descend, is unlike he who
earned them, then
they can no longer be borne with honour.
Honour and nobility,
in their true sense, are not things which can inevitably be
inherited, they are
not in the blood. The man who, being without merit himself,
appeals to the
actions of his ancestors for his justification, is like a thief
claiming
justification in possession. What good is it to the blind that his
parents could see,
or what benefit to the deaf that his grandfather heard? Is
this more foolish
then that a mean-hearted man should claim nobility because his
forbears were noble?
A man who serves the people well has no need of ancestors.
The noble mind does
not derive pleasure in receiving honours, but in deserving
them. Is it not
better that men say, "Why has this man not been honoured by the
king? " than to
ask why he has been?
I speak to knights
who, surely of all men, are the most noble. Eat slowly and
with good manners,
even if alone at the table. Do not gulp down ale or water,
for food hastily
eaten sits on an uncomfortable stomach. Though we must feed our
bodies, even as
animals have to, we are not as they and must do so with good
manners. This is
also a knightly discipline which will enhance the light of your
soul.
This soul has an
inner stronghold, an unassailable keep, which remains
impregnable against
all outside influences. It is an inner zone of silence, so
that even in the
most crowded street, amid the din of commerce, the hustle and
hassle of everyday
life, in joy, sorrow, success and failure there is always an
inner sanctuary, a
place of retirement, a retreat to which one can always
retire, assured that
no intruder can assail anyone there. This is the citadel of
the soul, against
which all the tempests and turmoils of life's storms may beat
in vain. Within, all
will be serene, peaceful and secure, and if it be well
built nothing can
ever overthrow it.
Loyalty is an
attribute of the knightly man. It is expressed in deed and
service. Be
audacious in confrontation. It is a bold mouse that pulls the cat's
whiskers. Be
renowned for what you achieve, not for what you are. The renown of
a bowman is not
earned by bis bow, but by bis aim.
Those who seek to
shun the battle of life because of cowardice or selfishness,
find that their
attempts to run away are in vain, for the Law compels them to
engage. Because
human destiny, individual and collective, is bound to the rock
of the Law, that
which is avoided is enforced.
I come before the
dire days to carry a sword against evils which threaten our
race, and to direct
the struggle of man into correct channels. Be true to
yourself and answer
accordingly to your own inner knowledge. Are your God-given
qualities, which all
possess, marshalled to carry out the Designs of God?
The rallying call
has sounded and it echoes in every responsive heart. Arm
yourself for the
fray with the God-given powers within. Align them to fight on
the side of good.
The call has gone out and the inner forces of every Real Man
are required to
rally to the cause of humankind.
If everyone in the
world would rally their own special forces within and throw
these into the
battle on the side of good, the Earth would overflow with
goodness.
Men and women are
apathetic, instead of taking up the sword against evil they
stand aside like
menials. So evil grows and the main cause of the present sorry
state of the people
is man's lack of fighting spirit. In war it is the cause
that counts and it
is not enough to resist evil. It must be attacked.
When you have
conquered the weakness within yourself and assumed full control,
you are a true
knight ready to go out and fight. The trumpet has sounded and the
rallying cry rings
out, so do not seek the place of protection. Do not hesitate
in this dramatic
hour. Say not that these things foreshadow things in days far
ahead, or that they
are residue from the past.
Cease all disagreement
among yourselves. Unite as comrades in arms. There will,
of course, be
arguments and differences, but be men enough not to let them
divide you. We are
in our present sorry state because of past disunity and
disobedience to the
Law. Do not allow the knights of right to be disarmed, and
fight against the
Realm of Darkness.
It is a manifest
thing that kingdoms divided against themselves are destroyed by
more united forces.
Yet is not the Kingdom of God divided against itself?
Truth and faith are the
handmaidens of love. They bring confidence, and how can
a man stand
steadfast unless he has confidence, for in confidence is strength.
The qualities of
knighthood are such that those who have them can look the world
in the eye. They
have no furtive deeds to hide within where they eat away at a
knight's integrity.
Praise no day until
nightfall, no wife until she is buried, no sword until
blooded, no maid
until married and no ale until drunk. Never be a talebearer,
for this is
despicable in a man.
Persons who, within
themselves, are really enemies often come garbed as friends,
and among these are
the following: He who takes little care to hide his
intentions to rob or
violate and does it brazenfaced; he who gives a little with
the intention of getting
much back in return; he who puts on a friendly front
out of fear and he
who acts friendly to serve his own ends.
The man with the
well greased mobile tongue can be distinguished in this manner:
He is inclined to
talk much about himself and his past accomplishments, or he
will fill your ears
with boasts about his future deeds; he' assails your ears
with empty words and
with the sweet draught of flattery. Walk warily, for these
are false-fronted
friends and when their friendship is put to the test it falls
apart like rotten
wood. When called upon for assistance in time of need they
plead their own
misfortunes and handicaps as excuses for standing aside.
The smooth-tongued
hypocrite glosses over the misdeeds of others. He excuses
unworthiness and
sings your praises before your face, in your hearing, but
reviles you behind
your back. Avoid all such as these, for their friendship is
worthless.
The other to avoid
is the wastrel. He will be a pleasant companion in the
drinking parlours.
He will be your amiable companion in the places of pleasure,
where there is
gaiety and laughter. He will be a charming companion at feasts
and festivals. He
will be quick to suggest gambling and dissipation and all
things that lead to
sloth.
Here are the earmarks
of a true-hearted friend: He will help you when help is
really needed and
requires real sacrifice on his part; he remains unchanged
amidst the
fluctuations of fortune; he is the one who is not afraid to tell you
what is for your own
good; he is the one who declares his friendship and loyalty
in the company of
those who condemn you.
True friends are few
and are treasures indeed. A true friend watches over you
when you falter on
the way. He keeps a watchful eye on your property and
interests when you
are indisposed. He is your refuge in times when you are in
fear, and your
consolation in distress. He is your reassurance in doubt. He
never deserts you in
need.
A true friend tells
you his secrets and never under any circumstances reveals
yours. He never
forsakes you in times of trouble and would sacrifice almost
anything for you.
In earthly armies
rules and commands must be obeyed, there is no other way to
conduct a campaign.
It is so in the army of good, each and every man can rise by
his own efforts and
perseverance.
Be as ready to take
orders as to give them, for no man has the qualities of
leadership who
cannot also obey. All soldiers in the Holy Army must be well
disciplined. How
otherwise can the battle be won? If we falter in this, the
infidel and heretic
will prevail and the long weary journey be abortive.
Be ever loyal to
your comrades placed in authority. Trust them and change only
when, by direct and
personal contact and knowledge, you find them false and
wanting. True
friendship is the greatest of all gifts.
In the courts and
castles of the land, women, as apart from ladied, because of
their physical
weakness have been made to appear of lesser importance; but a
true knight, while
honouring ladyhood, treats all women with respect and
chivalry. It is
chivalry which distinguishes our times from all others.
A true knight is
decorous at all times and circumspect in the presence of
womenfolk, for he
honours the delicacy of their ways. Always, however,
womanliness is
required to respond to and foster the chivalry in men. A
mannish-mannered
woman is the declared enemy of chivalry.
A knight embodies
the criteria for manhood. He concentrates on mannish things
and mannish ways. He
does not meddle in the affairs of womankind.
A true lady is a
rare and lovely jewel. What the word 'lady' means is hard to
define, but one
meaning is that a lady is a woman in whose private presence a
man acts with
decorum and reserve. He shields her from crudity and lewdness.
A knight understands
the economy of life. It is too easy to long for a certain
conclusion, perhaps
that the suffering of a loved one will end. However, it may
be a case where only
endurance and fortitude will heal and benefit the spirit.
Pain purifies and
strengthens, and sometimes it is better to suffer than to
sleep.
True knighthood
demands not only nobility of spirit, but also nobility in attire
and manners. It is
an attitude towards others. The duties of man to man are
almost as important
as those of man to God where the obligations entail the
stewardship of God's
earthly estate.
Man chooses as he
will and it is entirely up to him whether or not he does a
thing. Of what
benefit is a high position to a man who uses the power he has
over the lives of
others only for purposes of boosting his own arrogance and
false pride; who
uses it only for his own pleasure and not to serve others.
God has given man
shepherds to guide him and indicate the path. But these
shepherds cannot, of
themselves alone, gain such leadership and guidance unless
inspired by the
Spirit of God. Man must be guided according to his spiritual
needs and not
according to his worldly needs.
Therefore, God has
ordained a means whereby these shepherds may be found, and He
has told them what
to teach the people and in what manner to accord with their
understanding and
acceptance. The way is complex, as can be seen through these
writings.