KNOWEST
thou that old queen of the world who is on the march always and
wearies never? Every uncurbed passion, every selfish pleasure,
every
licentious energy of humanity, and all its tyrannous weakness, go
before the sordid mistress of our tearful valley, and, scythe in
hand, these indefatigable labourers reap their eternal harvest.
That
queen is old as time, but her skeleton is concealed in the wreckage
of women's beauty, which she abstracts from their youth and love.
Her
skull is adorned with lifeless tresses that are not her own.
Spoliator of crowned heads, she is embellished with the plunder of
queens, from the star-begemmed hair of Berenice to that-white, but
not with age-which the executioner sheared from the brow of Marie
Antoinette. Her livid and frozen body is clothed in faded garments
and tattered winding-sheets. Her bony hands, covered with rings,
hold
diadems and chains, scepters and crossbones, jewels and ashes. When
she goes by, doors open of themselves; she passes through walls;
she
penetrates to the cabinets of kings; she surprises the extortioners
of the poor in their most secret orgies; she sits down at their
board, pours out their wine, grins at their songs with her gumless
teeth, takes the place of the lecherous courtesan hidden behind
their
curtains. She delights to hover about sleeping voluptuaries; she
seeks their caresses, as if she hoped to grow warm in their
embrace;
but she freezes all those whom she touches and herself never
kindles.
At times, notwithstanding, one would think her seized with frenzy;
she stalks slowly no longer; she runs; if her feet are too slow,
she
spurs a pale horse and charges all breathless through multitudes.
Murder rides with her on a russet charger; shaking his mane of
smoke,
fire flies before her with wings of scarlet and black; famine and
plague follow on diseased and emaciated steeds, gleaning the few
sheaves which remain to complete her harvest.After
this funereal procession come two little children, radiating with
smiles and life, the intelligence and love of the coming century,
the
dual genius of a newborn humanity. The shadows of death fold up
before them, as does night before the morning star; with nimble
feet
they skim the earth and sow with full hands the hope of another
year.
But death will come no more, impiteous and terrible, to mow like
dry
grass the ripe blades of the new age; it will give place to the
angel
of progress, who will gently liberate souls from mortal chains, so
that they may ascend to God. When men know how to live they will
die
no longer; they will transform like the chrysalis, which becomes a
splendid butterfly. The terrors of death are daughters of
ignorance,
and death herself is only hideous by reason of the rubbish which
covers her, and the sombre hues with which her images are
surrounded.
Death, truly, is the birth-pang of life. There is a force in Nature
which dieth not, and this force perpetually transforms beings to
preserve them. It is the reason or word of Nature. In man also
there
is a force analogous to that of Nature, and it is the reason or
word
of man. The word of man is the expression of his will directed by
reason, and it is omnipotent under this leading, for it is
analogous
to the word of God Himself. By the word of his reason man
becomes conqueror of life, and can triumph
over death. The entire life of man is either the parturition or
miscarriage of his word. Human beings who die without having
understood or formulated the word of reason, die devoid of eternal
hope. To withstand successfully the phantom of death, we must be
identified with the realities of life. Does it signify to God if an
abortion wither, seeing that life is eternal? Does it signify to
Nature if unreason perish, since reason which never perishes still
holds the keys of life? The just and terrible force which destroys
abortions eternally was called by the Hebrews Samael; by other
easterns, Satan; and by the Latins, Lucifer. The Lucifer of the
Kabalah is not an accursed and ruined angel; he is the angel who
enlightens, who regenerates by fire; he is to the angels of peace
what the comet is to the mild stars of the spring-time
constellations. The fixed star is beautiful, radiant and calm; she
drinks the
celestial perfumes
and gazes with love upon her sisters; clothed in her glittering
robe,
her forehead crowned with diamonds, she smiles as she chants her
morning and evening canticle; she enjoys an eternal repose which
nothing can disturb, and moves solemnly forward without departing
from the rank assigned her among the sentinels of light. But the
wandering comet, dishevelled and of sanguinary aspect, plunges
hurriedly from the depths of heaven and flings herself athwart the
peaceful spheres, like a chariot of war between the ranks of a
procession of vestals; she dares to face the burning spears of the
solar guardians, and, like a bereft spouse who seeks the husband of
her dreams during widowed nights, she penetrates even unto the
inmost
sanctuary of the god of day; again she escapes, exhaling the fires
which consume her and trailing a long conflagration behind; the
stars
pale at her approach; constellate flocks, pasturing on flowers of
light in the vast meadows of the sky, seem to flee before her
terrible breath. The grand council of spheres assembles, and there
is
universal consternation; at length the loveliest of the fixed stars
is commissioned to speak in the name of all the firmament and offer
peace to the headlong vagabond.
“
My
sister,” she thus commences,
“why dost thou disturb the harmony of the spheres? What evil have
we wrought thee? And why, instead of wandering wildly, dost thou
not
fix thy place like us in the court of the sun? Why dost thou not
chant with us the evening hymn, clothed like ourselves in a white
garment, fastened at the breast with a diamond clasp? Why float thy
tresses, adrip with fiery sweat, through the mists of the night?
Ah,
wouldst thou but take thy place among the daughters of heaven, how
much more beautiful wouldst thou be! Thy face would burn no longer
with the toil of thine incredible flights; thine eyes would be
clear,
thy smiling countenance white and red like that of thy happy
sisters;
all the stars would know thee, and, far from fearing thy flight,
would rejoice at thine approach; for then thou wouldst be made one
with us by the indestructible bonds of universal harmony, and thy
peaceful existence would be one voice more in the canticle of
infinite
love.”And
the comet replies to the fixed star: “Believe not, O my sister,
that I am permitted to wander at will and vex the harmony of the
spheres! God hath appointed my path, even as thine, and if it
appear
to thee uncertain and vagrant, it is because thy beams cannot
penetrate far enough to take in the circumference of the ellipse
which has been allotted for my course. My fiery hair is God's
beacon;
I am the messenger of the suns, and I renew my strength continually
in their burning heat, that I may dispense it on my journey to
young
worlds which have as yet insufficient warmth, and to ancient stars
which have grown cold in their solitude. If I weary in my long
travellings, if my beauty be less mild than thine own, and if my
garments are not unspotted, yet am I a noble daughter of heaven,
even
as thou art. Leave me the secret of my terrible destiny, leave me
the
dread which surrounds me, curse me even if thou canst not
comprehend;
I shall none the less accomplish my work, and continue my career
under the impulse of the breath of God! Happy are the stars which
rest, which shine like youthful queens in the peaceful society of
the
universe! I am the proscribed, the eternal wanderer, who has
infinity
for domain. They accuse me of setting fire to the planets, the heat
of which I renew; they accuse me of terrifying the stars which I
enlighten; they chide me with breaking in upon universal harmony,
because I do not revolve about their particular centres, though I
join them one with another, directing my gaze towards the sole
centre
of all the suns. Be reassured, therefore, O beauteous fixed star! I
shall not impoverish thy peaceful light; rather I shall expend in
thy
service my own life and heat. I shall disappear from heaven when I
shall have consumed myself, and my doom will have been glorious
enough! Know that various fires burn in the temple of God, and do
all
give Him glory: ye are the light of golden candelabra; I am the
flame
of sacrifice. Let us each fulfil our destinies.”Having
uttered these words, the comet tosses back her burning hair,
uplifts
her fiery shield and plunges into infinite space, seeming to be
lost
for ever.Thus
Satan appeared and disappeared in the allegorical narratives of the
Bible. “Now there was a day,” says the book of Job, “when the
sons of God came to present them selves before the Lord, and Satan
came also among them. And the Lord said unto Satan: ‘Whence comest
thou?’ Then Satan answered the Lord, and said: ‘From going to and
fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it.’” A Gnostic
gospel, discovered in the East by a learned traveller of our
acquaintance, explains the genesis of light to the profit of
Lucifer,
as follows:
“
Self-conscious
truth is living thought. Truth is thought as it is in itself, and
formulated thought is speech. When Eternal Thought desired a form,
it
said: ‘Let there be light.’ Now, this Thought which speaks is the
Word, and the Word said: ‘Let there be light,’ because the Word
itself is the light of minds. The untreated light, which is the
Divine Word, shines because it desires to be seen. When it says:
‘Let
there be light!’ it ordains that eyes shall open; it creates
intelligences. When God said: ‘Let there be light!’ Intelligence
was made, and the light appeared. Now, the Intelligence which God
diffused by the breath of His mouth, like a star given off from the
sun, took the form of a splendid angel, who was saluted by heaven
under the name of Lucifer. Intelligence awakened, and comprehended
its nature completely by the understanding of that utterance of the
Divine Word: ‘Let there be light!’ It felt itself to be free
because God had called it into being, and, raising up its head,
with
both wings extended, it replied: ‘I will not be slavery.’ ‘Then
shalt thou be suffering,’ said the Untreated Voice. ‘I will be
liberty,’ replied the light. ‘Pride will seduce thee,’ said the
Supreme Voice, ‘and thou wilt bring forth death.’ ‘I needs must
strive with death to conquer life,’ again responded the created
light. Thereupon God loosed from His bosom the shining
cord which restrained the superb angel, and beholding him plunge
through the night, which he furrowed with glory, He loved the
offspring of His thought, and said with an ineffable smile: ‘How
beautiful was the light!’
“
God
has not created suffering; intelligence has accepted it to be free.
And suffering has been the condition imposed upon freedom of being
by
Him who alone cannot err, because He is infinite. For the essence
of
intelligence is judgement, and the essence of judgement is liberty.
The eye does not really possess light except by the faculty of
closing or opening. Were it forced to be always open, it would be
the
slave and victim of the light, and would cease to see in order to
escape the torment. Thus, created Intelligence is not happy in
affirming God, except by its liberty to deny Him. Now, the
Intelligence which denies, invariably affirms something, since it
is
asserting its liberty. It is for this reason that blasphemy
glorifies
God and that hell was indispensable to the happiness of heaven.
Were
the light unrepelled by shadow, there would be no visible forms. If
the first angels had not encountered the depths of darkness, the
child-birth of God would have been incomplete, and there could have
been no separation between the created and essential light. Never
would Intelligence have known the goodness of God if it had never
lost Him. Never would God's infinite love have shone forth in the
joys of His mercy had the prodigal Son of Heaven remained in the
House of His Father. When all was light, there was light nowhere;
it
filled the breast of God, who was labouring to bring it forth. And
when He said: ‘Let there be light!’ He permitted the darkness to
repel the light, and the universe issued from chaos. The negation
of
the angel who at birth refused slavery constituted the equilibrium
of
the world, and the motion of the spheres commenced. The infinite
distances admired this love of liberty, which was vast enough to
fill
the void of eternal night and strong enough to bear the hatred of
God. But God could hate not the noblest of His children, and He
proved him by His wrath only to confirm him in His power. So also
the
Word of God Himself, as if jealous of Lucifer, willed to come down
from heaven and pass triumphantly through the shadows of hell. He
willed to be proscribed and condemned; He premeditated that
terrible
hour when He should cry, in the throes of His agony: ‘My God, My
God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?’ As the star of the morning goes
before the sun, the rebellion of Lucifer announced to new-born
Nature
the coming
incarnation of God. Possibly Lucifer, in his fall through night,
carried with him a rain of suns and stars by the attraction of his
glory. Possibly our sun is a demon among the stars, as Lucifer is a
star among the angels. Doubtless it is for this reason that it
lights
so calmly the horrible anguish of humanity and the long agony of
earth -because it is free in its solitude and possesses its
light.”Such
were the tendencies of the heresiarchs in the early centuries.
Some,
like the Ophites, adored the demon under the figure of a serpent;
others, like the Cain-ites, justified the rebellion of the first
angel and that of the first murderer. All those errors, all those
shadows, all those monstrous idols of anarchy which India opposes
in
its symbols to the magical Trimurti, have found priests and
worshippers in Christianity. The demon is mentioned nowhere in
Genesis; an allegorical serpent deceives our first parents. Here is
the common translation of the sacred text: “Now, the serpent was
more subtle than any beast of the field which the Lord God had
made.”
But this is what Moses says:This
signifies, according to the version of Fabre d'Olivet: “Now,
original attraction (cupidity) was the entraining passion of all
elementary life (the interior activity of Nature), the work of
Jhoah,
the Being of beings.” But herein Fabre d'Olivet is beside the true
interpretation, because he was unacquainted with the grand keys of
the Kabalah. The word Nahash, explained by the symbolical letters
of
the Tarot signifies rigorously
14
NUN.-The power which produces combinations.
5
HE.-The recipient and passive producer of forms.
21
SHIN.-The natural and central fire equilibrated by double
polarization.
Thus,
the word employed by Moses, read kabalistically, gives the
description and definition of that magical Universal Agent,
represented in all theogonies by the serpent; to this Agent the
Hebrews applied the name of OD when it manifested its active force,
of Ob when it exhibited its passive force, and of AOUR when it
revealed itself wholly in its equilibrated power, as producer of
light in heaven and gold among metals. It is therefore that old
serpent which encircles the world and places its devouring head
beneath the foot of a Virgin, the type of initiation -that virgin
who
presents a little new-born child to the adoration of three Magi and
receives from them, in exchange for this favour, gold, myrrh and
frankincense. So does doctrine serve in all hieratic religions to
veil the secret of natural forces which the initiate has at his
disposal. Religious formulae are the summaries of those words full
of
mystery and power which make the gods descend from heaven and
become
subject to the will of men. Judea borrowed its secrets from Egypt;
Greece sent her hierophants and later her theosophists to the
school
of the great prophets; the Rome of the Caesars, mined by the
initiation of the catacombs, collapsed one day into the Church, and
a
symbolism
was reconstructed with the remnants of all worships which had been
absorbed by the queen of the world. According to the Gospel
narrative, the inscription which set forth the spiritual royalty of
Christ was written in Hebrew, in Greek and in Latin: it was the
expression of a universal synthesis. Hellenism, in fact, that grand
and beauteous religion of form, announced the coming of the Saviour
no less than the prophets of Judaism. The fable of Psyche is an
ultra-Christian abstraction, and the cultus of the Pantheons, by
rehabilitating Socrates, prepared altars for that unity of God, of
which Israel had been the mysterious preserver. But the synagogue
denied its Messiah, and the Hebrew letters were effaced, at least
for
the blinded eyes of the Jews. The Roman persecutors dishonoured
Hellenism, and it could not be restored by the false moderation of
the philosopher Julian, surnamed perhaps unjustly the Apostate,
since
his Christianity was never sincere. The ignorance of the Middle
Ages
followed, opposing saints and virgins to gods, goddesses and
nymphs;
the deep sense of the Hellenic mysteries was less understood than
ever; Greece herself did not only lose the traditions of her
ancient
cultus but separated from the Latin Church; and thus, for Latin
eyes,
the Greek letters were blotted out, as the Latin letters
disappeared
for Greek eyes. So the inscription on the Cross of the Saviour
vanished entirely, and nothing except mysterious initials remained.
But when science and philosophy, reconciled with faith, shall unite
all the various symbols, then shall the magnificences of the
antique
worships be restored to the memory of men, proclaiming the progress
of the human mind in the intuition of the light of God. But of all
forms of progress the greatest will be that which, restoring the
keys
of Nature to the hands of science, shall enchain for ever the
hideous
spectre of Satan, and, explaining all abnormal phenomena, shall
destroy the empire of superstition and imbecile credulity. To the
accomplishment of this work we have consecrated our life, and do
still devote it in the most toilsome and difficult researches. We
would emancipate altars by overthrowing idols; we desire the man of
intelligence to become once more the priest and king of Nature, and
we would preserve by explanation all images of the universal
sanctuary.The
prophets spoke in parables and images, because abstract language
was
wanting to them, and because prophetic perception, being the
sentiment of harmony or of universal analogies, translates
naturally
into images. Taken literally by the vulgar, these images become
idols
or impenetrable mysteries. The sum and succession of such images
and
mysteries constitute what is called symbolism. Symbolism comes
therefore from God, though it may be formulated by men. Revelation
has accompanied humanity in all ages, has been transfigured with
human genius but has ever expressed the same truth. True religion
is
one; its dogmas are simple and within the reach of all. At the same
time, the multiplicity of symbols has been a book of poesy
indispensable to the education of human genius. The harmony of
outward beauties and the poetry of form must reveal God to the
infancy of man; but soon Venus had Psyche for her rival and Psyche
enchanted Love. It came about therefore that the cultus of form
yielded perforce to those ambitious dreams which adorned already
the
eloquent wisdom of Plato. Thus was the advent of Christ prepared
and
was therefore also expected; it arrived because the world awaited
it;
and to become popular, philosophy transformed into belief.
Emancipated by belief itself, the human mind protested speedily
against the school which sought to materialize its signs and the
work
of Roman Catholicism was solely an undesigned provision for the
emancipation of consciences and the establishment of the bases of
universal association. All these things were the regular and normal
development of divine life in humanity; for God is the great Soul
of
all souls, that immovable Centre about which gravitate all
intelligences like a cloud of stars.Human
understanding has had its morning; its noon shall come, and the
waning follow; but God will be ever the same. It seems, however, to
dwellers on earth that the sun rises youthful and timid in the
morning, shines with all its power at midday and goes wearied to
rest
in the evening. Nevertheless, it is earth which revolves, while the
sun is motionless. Having faith therefore in human progress, and in
the stability of God, the free man respects religion in its past
forms, and no more blasphemes Jupiter than Jehovah. He still
salutes
lovingly the radiant image of the Pythian Apollo and discovers its
fraternal resemblance to the glorified countenance of the risen
Redeemer. He believes in the great mission of the Catholic
hierarchy,
and finds satisfaction in observing the popes of the Middle Ages
who
opposed religion as a check upon the absolute power of kings; but
he
protests with the revolutionary centuries against the servitude of
conscience which the pontifical keys would enchain. He is more
protestant than Luther, since he does not even believe in the
infallibility of the Augsbourg Confession, and more Catholic than
the
Pope, for he has no fear that religious unity will be broken by the
malevolence of courts. He trusts in God rather than Roman policy
for
the salvation of the unity idea; he respects the old age of the
Church, but he has no fear that she will die; he knows that her
apparent death will be a transfiguration and a glorious
assumption.The
author of this book calls upon the eastern Magi to come forward and
recognize once again that Divine Master Whose cradle they saluted,
the Great Initiator of all the ages. All His enemies have fallen;
all
those who condemned Him are dead, those who persecuted Him have
passed into sleep for ever; but He is for ever alive. The envious
have combined against Him, agreeing on a single point; the
sectaries
have united to destroy Him; they have crowned themselves kings and
proscribed Him; they have become hypocrites and accused Him; they
have constituted themselves judges and pronounced His sentence of
death; they have turned murderers and executed Him; they have
forced
Him to drink hemlock, they have crucified Him, they have stoned
Him,
they have burned Him and cast His ashes to the wind; then have they
turned scarlet with terror, for He stands erect before them,
impeaching them by His wounds and overwhelming them by the radiance
of His scars. They believed that they had slain Him in His cradle
at
Bethlehem, but He is alive in Egypt. They carry Him to the summit
of
the mountain to cast Him down; the mob of His destroyers encircles
Him and triumphs already in His certain destruction. A cry is
heard:
is not that He who is shattered on the rocks of the abyss? They
whiten and look at one another; but He, calm and smiling with pity,
passes through the midst of them and disappears. Behold another
mountain which they have just dyed with His blood! Behold a Cross,
a
sepulchre and soldiers guarding His tomb! Madmen! The tomb is
empty,
and He whom they regard as dead is walking peaceably between two
travellers on the road to Emmaus. Where is He? Whither does He go?
Warn the masters of the world! Tell the Caesars that their power is
threatened! By whom? By a pauper who has no stone on which to lay
His
head, by a Man of the People condemned to the death of slaves. What
insult or what madness! It matters not. The Caesars marshal all
their
power; sanguinary edicts proscribe the fugitive; everywhere
scaffolds
rise up; amphitheaters open, crowded with lions and gladiators;
pyres
are lighted; torrents of blood flow; and the Caesars, believing
themselves victorious, dare add another name to those they rehearse
on their trophies. Then they die, and their own apotheosis
dishonours
the gods whom they defended. The hatred of the world confounds
Jupiter and Nero in a common contempt. Temples transformed into
tombs
are cast down over proscribed ashes, and above the debris of idols,
above ruins of empires, He only, He whom the Caesars indicted, whom
so many satellites pursued, whom so many executioners tortured, He
only lives, alone reigns, alone triumphs!Notwithstanding,
His own disciples speedily misuse His name; pride enters the
sanctuary; those who should proclaim His resurrection seek to
immortalize His death, that they may feed, like ravens, on His
ever-renewing flesh. In place of imitating Him in His sacrifice and
shedding their blood for their children in the faith, they chain
Him
in the Vatican, as upon another Caucasus, and become the vultures
of
this divine Prometheus. But what signifies their evil dream? They
can
only imprison His image; He Himself is free and erect, proceeding
from exile to exile and from conquest to conquest. It is possible
to
bind a man but not to make captive the Word of God; speech is free,
and nothing can repress it. This living speech is the condemnation
of
the wicked, and hence they seek to destroy it; but it is they only
who die, and the Word of Truth remains to judge their memory!
Orpheus
may have been rent by bacchantes; Socrates may have quaffed the
poisoned cup; Jesus and His apostles have perished in the utmost
tortures; John Hus, Jerome of Prague, and innumerable others, have
been burned; St. Bartholomew and the massacres of September may
have
had in turn their victims; Cossacks, knouts and Siberian deserts
are
still at the disposal of the Russian Emperor; but the spirit of
Orpheus, of Socrates, of Jesus and of all martyrs will live for
ever
in the midst their dead persecutors, will stand erect amidst
decaying
institutions and collapsing empires. It is this Divine Spirit, the
Spirit of the only Son of God, which St. John represents in his
Apocalypse, standing between golden candlesticks, because He is the
centre of all lights; having seven stars in His hand, like the seed
of a new heaven; and sending down speech upon the earth under the
symbol of a two-edged sword. When the wise in their discouragement
sleep through the night of doubt, the Spirit of Christ is erect and
vigilant. When the nations, weary of the labour which emancipates
them, lie down and dream over their chains, the Spirit of Christ is
erect and protesting. When the blind partisans of sterilized
religions cast themselves in the dust of old temples, the Spirit of
Christ is erect and praying. When the strong become weak, when
virtues are corrupted, when all things bend and sink down in search
of a shameful pasture, the Spirit of Christ is erect, gazing up to
heaven and awaiting the hour of His Father.Christ
signifies priest and king by excellence. The Christ-initiator of
modern times came to form new priests and new kings by science and,
above all, by charity. The ancient Magi were priests and kings, and
the Saviour's advent was proclaimed to them by a star. This star
was
the magical Pentagram, having a sacred letter at each point. It is
the symbol of intelligence which rules by unity of force over the
four elementary potencies; it is the Pentagram of the Magi, the
Blazing Star of the Children of Hiram, the prototype of
equilibrated
light. Towards each of its points a beam of light ascends, and from
each a beam goes forth; it represents the Grand and Supreme Athanor
of Nature, which is the body of man. The magnetic influence issues
in
two rays from the head, from either hand and either foot. The
positive ray is balanced by the negative. The head corresponds with
the two feet, each hand with a hand and foot, each of the two feet
with the head and one hand. This ruling sign of equilibrated light
represents the spirit of order and harmony; it is the sign of the
omnipotence of the Magus, and hence, when broken or incorrectly
drawn, it represents astral intoxication, abnormal and
ill-regulated
projections of Astral Light and therefore bewitchments, perversity,
madness-all that, in a word, which the Magi term the Signature of
Lucifer. There is another signature which also symbolizes the
Mysteries of Light, namely, the Sign of Solomon, whose talismans
bear
on one side the impression
of his seal which we have given in our “Doctrine,” and on the
other the following signature which is the hieroglyphic theory of
the
composition of magnets and represents the circulatory law of the
lightning.Rebellious
spirits are enchained by the exhibition of the five-pointed Blazing
Star or the Seal of Solomon, because each gives them proof of their
folly and threatens them with a sovereign power capable of
tormenting
them by their recall to order. Nothing tortures the wicked so much
as
goodness. Nothing is more odious to madness than reason. But if an
ignorant operator should make use of these signs without knowing
them, he is like a blind man who discourses of light to the blind,
an
ass who would teach children to read.
“
If
the blind lead the blind,” said the Great and Divine Hierophant,
“both fall into the pot.”And
now a final word to recapitulate this entire introduction. If you
be
blind like Samson when you cast down the pillars of the temple, its
ruins will crush you. To command Nature we must be above Nature, by
resistance of her attractions. If your mind be perfectly free from
all prejudice, superstition and incredulity, you will rule spirits.
If you do not obey blind forces, they will obey you. If you be wise
like Solomon, you will perform the works of Solomon; if you be holy
like Christ, you will accomplish the works of Christ. To direct the
currents of the inconstant light, we must be established in the
constant light. To command the elements, we must have overcome
their
hurricanes, their lightnings, their abysses, their tempests. In
order
to DARE we must KNOW; in order to WILL, we must DARE; we must WILL
to
possess empire and to reign we must Be SILENT.