Konx Om Pax ~ Essays in Light

$66.00

Konx Om Pax

Essays in Light

 

by

Aleister Crowley

 

 

Undated (1982)

Yogi Publications

108 pp

Softcover

Very Good condition

Out of stock

Description

Konx Om Pax: Essays in Light is a publication by British occultist Aleister Crowley, first published in 1907.

The title, Konx Om Pax, is a phrase said to have been pronounced in the Eleusinian Mysteries to bid initiates to depart after having completed the tests for admission to the degree of epopt (seer). The origin and meaning of this phrase are obscure, although numerous theories have been proposed. S. L. MacGregor Mathers claimed the phrase was derived from Khabs-am Pekht, which in the Egyptian language means roughly “light in extension” or “light rushing out in a single ray”, which is used in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn’s Vernal and Autumnal Equinox ceremonies. This is the meaning which Crowley ascribes to the phrase within the book.

Includes the following essays by Aleister Crowley:

The Wake World
An allegory for the ascent of a magical practitioner through the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, accompanied by their Holy Guardian Angel. It was originally written by Crowley as a bedtime story for his daughter, Lola Zaza, with Crowley relating himself as the “Fairy Prince”, a guide through the schema and sounding much like Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

Thien Tao, or, the Synagogue of Satan
This parodic essay casts a Crowley character (Master Kwaw) as a Taoist advisor to the Japanese “Daimio” (daimyō) in a time of crisis. Kwaw advises a course of study in which people shall be taught the antithesis of their natural tendencies: the prostitute to learn chastity, the prude to learn sexual expression, the religious bigot to learn Huxley’s materialism, the atheist to learn ceremonial magick.

Ali Sloper, or, the Forty Liars: A Christmas Diversion
A play that is over-presented with title credits, but is generally a simple dialogue based on Crowley’s conversation with a friend and his wife on Christmas Day. With only two main speakers Crowley satyrizes himself as “Bowley”, with the whole a means to present his inserted essay Ameth.

Stone of the Philosophers Which Is Hidden in the Mountain of Abiegnus
A satirical conversation between a number of men, including “a socialist” and “a doctor”, each one contributing a poem into their philosophical debate. Here Crowley takes the stance as “Basil Gray”; the work contains La Gitana, his popular love poem.

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