Liber XIII vel
Graduum Montis Abiegni
A Syllabus of the Steps Upon the Path
A.·. A.·. Publication in Class D
51. Let not the failure and the pain turn aside the worshippers. The foundations of the
pyramid were hewn in the living rock ere sunset; did the king weep at dawn that the crown
of the pyramid was yet unquarried in the distant land?
52. There was also an humming-bird that spake unto the horned cerastes, and prayed him
for poison. And the great snake of Khem the Holy One, the royal Urĉus serpent, answered
him and said:
53. I sailed over the sky of Nu in the car called Millions-of-Years, and I saw not any
creature upon Seb that was equal to me. The venom of my fang is the inheritance of my
father, and of my father's father; and how shall I give it unto thee? Live thou and thy
children as I and my fathers have lived, even unto an hundred millions of generations, and
it may be that the mercy of the Mighty Ones may bestow upon thy children a drop of the
poison of eld.
54. Then the humming-bird was afflicted in his spirit, and he flew unto the flowers,
and it was as if naught had been spoken between them. Yet in a little while a serpent
struck him that he died.
55. But an Ibis that meditated upon the bank of Nile the beautiful god listened and
heard. And he laid aside his Ibis ways, and became as a serpent, saying Peradventure in an
hundred millions of millions of generations of my children, they shall attain to a drop of
the poison of the fang of the Exalted One.
56. And behold! ere the moon waxed thrice he became an Urĉus serpent, and the poison
of the fang was established in him and his seed even for ever and for ever.
- Liber LXV, Cap. V
I. The Probationer. His duties are laid down in Paper A, Class D. Being without,
they are vague and general. He receives Liber LXI and LXV.
[Certain Probationers are admitted after six months or more to Ritual XXVIII.]
At the end of the Probation he passes Ritual DCLXXI, which constitutes him a Neophyte.
2. The Neophyte. His duties are laid down in Paper B, Class D. He receives Liber
VII.
Examination in Liber O, caps. I-IV, Theoretical and Practical.
Examination in The Four Powers of the Sphinx. Practical.
Four tests are set.
Further, he builds up the magic Pentacle.
Finally he passes Ritual CXX, which constitutes him a Zelator.
3. The Zelator. His duties are laid down in Paper C, Class D. He receives Liber
CCXX, XXVII, and DCCCXIII.
Examination in Posture and Control of Breath (see Equinox No. 1). Practical.
Further, he is given two meditation-practices corresponding to the two rituals DCLXXI
and CXX.
(Examination is only in the knowledge of, and some little practical acquaintance with,
these meditations. The complete results, if attained, would confer a much higher grade.)
Further, he forges the magic Sword.
No ritual admits to the grade of Practicus, which is conferred by authority when the
task of the Zelator is accomplished.
4. The Practicus. His duties are laid down in Paper D, Class D.
Instruction and Examination in the Qabalah and Liber DCCLXXVII.
Instruction in Philosophical Meditation (Gnana-Yoga).
Examination in some one mode of divination: e.g., Geomancy, Astrology, the
Tarot. Theoretical. He is given a meditation-practice on Expansion of Consciousness.
He is given a meditation-practice in the destruction of thoughts.
Instruction and Examination in Control of Speech. Practical.
Further, he casts the magic Cup.
No ritual admits to the grade of Philosophus, which is conferred by authority when the
Task of the Practicus is accomplished.
5. The Philosophus. His duties are laid down in Paper E, Class D.
He practices Devotion to the Order.
Instruction and Examination in Methods of Meditation by Devotion (Bhakti-Yoga).
Instruction and Examination in Construction and Consecration of Talismans, and in
Evocation.
Theoretical and Practical.
Examination in Rising on the Planes (Liber O, caps. V, VI). Practical.
He is given a meditation-practice on the Senses, and the Sheaths of the Self, and the
Practice called Mahasatipatthana.
(See "The Sword of Song", "Science and Buddhism".)
Instruction and Examination in Control of Action.
Further, he cuts the Magic Wand.
Finally, the Title of Dominus Liminis is conferred upon him.
He is given meditation-practices on the Control of Thought, and is instructed in
Raja-Yoga.
He receives Liber Mysteriorum and obtains a perfect understanding of the Formulae of
Initiation.
He meditates upon the diverse knowledge and power that he has acquired, and harmonises
it perfectly.
Further, he lights the Magic Lamp.
At last, Ritual VIII admits him to the grade of Adeptus Minor.
6. The Adeptus Minor. His duty is laid down in Paper F, Class D.
It is to follow out the instruction given in the Vision of the Eighth Aethyr for the
attainment of the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel.
[NOTE. This is in truth the sole task; the others are useful
only as adjuvants to and preparations for the One Work.
Moreover, once this task has been accomplished, there is no more need of human help or
instruction; for by this alone may the highest attainment be reached.
All these grades are indeed but convenient landmarks, not necessarily significant. A
person who had attained them all might be immeasurably the inferior of one who had
attained none of them; it is Spiritual Experience alone that counts in Result; the rest is
but Method.
Yet it is important to possess knowledge and power, provided that it be devoted wholly
to that One Work.]
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