THE CRY OF THE HAWK
Hoor hath a secret fourfold name; it is Do What Thou Wilt.3
Four words: Naught--One--Many--All.
Thou--Child!
Thy
Name is holy.
Thy
Kingdom is come.
Thy
Will is done.
Here
is the Bread.
Here
is the Blood.
Bring us through Temptation!
Deliver us from Good and Evil!
That Mine as Thine be the Crown of the Kingdom, even now.
ABRAHADABRA.
These ten words are four, the Name of the One.
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COMMENTARY (B)
The "Hawk" referred to is Horus.
The chapter begins with a comment on Liber Legis III, 49.
Those four words, Do What Thou Wilt, are also identified
with the four possible modes of conceiving the universe; Horus unites these.
Follows a version of the "Lord's Prayer", suitable
to Horus. Compare this with the version in Chapter 44. There are ten
sections in this prayer, and, as the prayer is attributed to Horus, they are called four,
as above explained; but it is only the name of Horus which is fourfold; He himself is one
This may be compared with the Qabalistic doctrine of the Ten
Sephiroth as an expression of Tetragrammaton (1 plus 2 plus 3 plus 4 = 10).
It is now seen that this Hawk is not Solar, but Mercurial;
hence the words, the Cry of the Hawk, the essential part of Mercury being his Voice; and
the number of the chapter, B, which is Beth the letter
of Mercury, the Magus of the Tarot, who has four weapons, and it must be remembered that
this card is numbered 1, again connecting all these symbols with the Phallus.
The essential weapon of Mercury is the Caduceus.
NOTE
(3) Fourteen letters. Quid Voles Illud Fac. Q.V.I.F. 196 = 142.
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