, Book of Thoth by Aleister Crowley 

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to carry on his action; he has no means of modifying it according to circumstances.
If he fails in his first effort, he has no resource.
In the Yi King, the fiery part of Fire is represented by the 51st hexagram, Kan. The
signification there given is entirely in accordance with the doctrine of the Tarot, but
great emphasis is laid on the startling, perilous, and revolutionary character of the
events cognate. The Querent is advised to be apprehensive, yet cool, resolute and
energetic: to beware of untimely action, but to go forward with tense confidence in
his own ability.
All these correspondences of the Yi King are to be studied in that book (S.B.E. vol.
XVI) and reference is here made to the text when important passages are too long to
be conveniently quoted.
QUEEN OF WANDS
The Queen of Wands represents the watery part of Fire, its fluidity and colour. Also,
she rules in the Zodiac from the 21st degree of Pisces to the 20th degree of Aries.
Her crown is topped with the winged globe and rayed with flame. Her long red
golden hair flows down upon her armour of scaled mail. She is seated upon a throne
of flame, ordered into geometrical light by her material power. Beneath the throne
the surging flames are steady. She bears a wand in her left hand; but it is topped
with a cone suggestive of the mysteries of Bacchus. She is attended by a couchant
leopard upon whose head she lays her hand. Her face expresses the ecstasy of one
whose mind is well in-drawn to the mystery borne beneath her bosom.
The characteristics of the Queen are adaptability, persistent energy, calm authority
which she knows how to use to enhance her attractiveness. She is kindly and
generous, but impatient of opposition. She has immense capacity for friendship and
for love, but always on her own initiative.
There is as much pride in this card as in the Knight, but it lacks the spontaneous
nobility which excuses that error. It is not true pride, but self-complacent vanity and
even snobbery.
The other side of her character is that she may have a tendency to brood, come to a
wrong decision thereon, and react with great savagery. She may be easily deceived;
then she is likely to shew herself stupid, obstinate, tyrannical. She may be quick to
take offence, and harbour revenge without good cause. She might turn and snap at
her best friends without intelligible excuse. Also, when she misses her bite, she
breaks her jaw!
In the YI King, the watery part of Fire is represented by the 17th hexagram, Sui. It
indicates reflection upon impulse, and the consequently even flow of action. There is
great capacity for lucid conception and steady prosecution of work; but this is only at
the bidding, and under the guidance, of some creative mind. There is a tendency to
be fickle, even disloyal; the ideas which she obeys make no deep or permanent
impression. She will "cleave to the little boy and let go the man of age and
experience" or the reverse (lines 2 and 3) without realizing what she is doing. There
is liability of fits of melancholy, which she seeks to cure by bouts of intoxication, or
by panic-stricken outbursts of ill-considered fury.
PRINCE OF WANDS
The Prince of Wands represents the airy part of Fire, with its faculty of expanding
and volatilising. He rules from the 21st degree of Cancer to the 20th degree of Leo.
He is a warrior in complete armour of scale mail, but his arms are bare on account of
his vigour and activity. He wears a rayed crown surmounted by a lion's head winged,
and from this crown depends a curtain of flame. On his breast is the sigil of To Mega
Therion. In his left hand he bears the Phoenix wand of the Second Adept in the
Ritual of 5°=6° of R.R. at A.C.), the wand of Power and Energy, while with his other
arm he reins the lion which draws his chariot, the chariot which is fortified by a
wheel radiating flame. He rides upon a sea of flames, both waved and salient.
The moral qualities appropriate to this figure are swiftness and strength. But he is
sometimes inclined to act on impulse; sometimes easily led by external influences;
sometimes, especially in trifles, a prey to indecision. He is often violent, especially in
the expression of an opinion, but he does not necessarily hold the opinion about
which he is so emphatic. He states a vigorous proposition for the sake of stating it.
He is in fact very slow to make up his mind thoroughly on any subject, but always
sees both sides of every question. He is
essentially just, but always feels that justice is not to be attained in the intellectual
world. His character is intensely noble and generous. He may be an extravagant
boaster, while slyly laughing both at the object of his boast and at himself for
making it. He is romantic, especially in matters of history and tradition, to the point
of folly, and may engineer "stunts" or play elaborate practical jokes. He might select
some inoffensive nobody, and pursue him for years with every weapon of ridicule) as
Swift tormented the unhappy Partridge, all without the least animus, ready to give
the shirt off his back, should his victim be in need. His sense of humour is
omnivorous, and may make him a mysterious figure, dreaded without reason by
people who actually know nothing about him but his name-as a symbol of Terror.
This is due to the influence of the last decan of Cancer upon this card. One of his
greatest faults is pride; meanness and pettiness of any kind he holds in infinite
scorn. His courage is fanatically strong, and his endurance indefatigable. He is
always fighting against odds, and always wins in the long-the very long-run. This is
principally due to his enormous capacity for work, which he exercises for its own
sake, "without lust of result"; perhaps his haughty contempt for the world at large-
which however coexists with profound and ecstatic respect for "every man and every
woman" as "a star"-is responsible for this.
When this card is badly dignified, the character degenerates. Each of the qualities
mentioned above is found in its antithesis. There is great cruelty in him, partly
sadistic and partly due to callousness arising from indifference-and, in a sense,
laziness! So too he may be intolerant, prejudiced and idle-principally because it
saves trouble. He may furthermore be an empty boaster and a great coward.
In the YI King, the airy part of Fire is represented by the 42nd Hexagram, Yi, which
signifies addition, increase. Full of virtue, and confident therein, he contemplates
work of stupendous scope, often with the idea expressed in line 5: "with sincere
heart seeking to benefit all below". In this he may achieve immense success. But this
course is fraught with commensurate danger. "We see one to whose in crease none
will contribute, while many will seek to assail him. He observes no regular rule in the [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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