STAR MAGIC

 

Great clouds of water have been discovered passing in outer space. These are the debris of light; these are the raw substance of planets and suns and local lakes. These are a shield beyond which we cannot see our own ends, but a magic that is pure energy, pure gravitation, raining down upon us.

The images are in the temple are in order; the trees are in the field; the field is planted beneath, and beneath the field the seasons are planted; the sky is sown; this is the city of Hermes, of the sun.

What are the stars?

Are they the forgotten kingdoms of earth? Are they living beings, the anima, to which we in the microcosm correspond? Are they the limitations, end-points of the universe? Or the marks that anywhere, any point given as center, Adocentyn, is limitless, its possibilities infinite? Does size (macro-micro) matter? Or is the universe the same everywhere, from a star to droplet, winding thru local skies deep into the density of consciousness? Is a bee hive also the city of the sun?

The stars are a veil, an arras that hangs down over another universe; it appears to be a curtain woven with flowers, a tapestry of horsemen and castle; it appears to be a gown, a robe sewn with the zodiac, but as we approach it, it is too hot to touch; it dissolves into planets and suns; we thought we were within an arm's length of touching it, but now it lies beyond us a billion, and a billion more, light years away. We take a step back, and the curtain hangs loosely, hiding an adjacent room. We are born and find the stars at hopeless distances, but behind them is another universe, closer to the earth, one that we can hold in our hands as a deck of cards, and deal, one after another, without changing our place, star by star coming up into the masked sky. Lift the veil, and beneath it is a woman's face, a fire burning, a bright yellow field of grain; a king sits on his throne motionless for twenty-five thousand years; this is a star; this is one portion of the mapped sky. Lift the angel on the Star Card and the five senses are lifted too, plucked like buds from their earthly counterparts; it is a single picture, but the cards drawn from it are unlimited. The tarot clings like flesh to the throbbing underbelly, the exposed sheath of nerves; rip up the card and the blood flows from the wound; a spring dance of odd colors forms, a mushroom grows. The card lies over an always-burning fire, and the veil is made not of red pomegranates but electrons, and we cannot touch them and cannot eat them. The card lies between neuron and image, between astrum and star. Lift the card without touching it; look thru the image into another image; the woman becomes a naked dancer, a winged sorceress; the woman opens the door of a constellation and lets you into a room. You climb the staircase to an attic, and out beyond it lies a field, a sky above the sky. The lines along which the universe opens are infinite. Behind Botticelli's canvas lies the surface of the planet Venus, a surface unknown to the scientists and obscured by hot clouds; from deep beneath the mists (just today) a spaceship suddenly stops sending, and enters totally the arcanum. Twenty-six million miles and a boiling chamber of clouds lie between the astronomer and the birth of Venus in foam; he cannot go there in his body; he sends a spaceship; the sensual coordinates are confused; the distances are too great; the primavera is missed and the spaceship smashes. The planet lies on the surface of astral magic, is visible thru a pagan rite, the Two Flute Maidens dancing jewels and corn. And beneath the Mariner craters is another surface of Mars, a series of towns and lakes, boats on the canals, a series of optical illusions named continents and oceans after famous astronomers, Kepler Land, Hooke Sea. This is not the telescope, but the dissolution of a black sky in a blue sky, a dark chemical solution in which a dark crystal grows, a mirror, a deck of sunny day-cards. This is the deeper image of which Robert Kelly once wrote, and still is engaged in ceaseless production of shape thru his own instrument. These are local magical exercises tuning in a cosmic power greater than locale.

The sun is in the grass: thousands of dandelions over a hill, Seurat's orange dots of materia. The pagan curtain of color and growth covers the hillside, the landing of the orange star. The power of the universe lies behind this image; the power of the universe generates and sustains it. From the ninth floor of the Physics-Astronomy Building the dandelions in the field are dense as stars, galaxies clustering where land, moisture is more fertile, spread out from the immediate source, bright orange of suns burning wherever they are.

And by the forest the first phlox, soft purple containers of a slow seeding; down the hill are trilliums, three white petals, monocot leaves. We climb down to the stream itself, muddily flowing, almost a marsh; the marigolds are bright yellow with the marsh salts, the powers that flood downstream; a big bullfrog sits on the cistern, croaking, blowing himself up; the first leaves of skunk cabbage line the far bank; in the distance a clump of early may-apple leaves. We climb the hill and walk back up the road, past redbud, past bluebells, a few sprouts of asparagus coming up thru leaves beside last year's tall thready stems. The apple tree is blossoming with thousands of stamens and the petals are falling to the wind. In the distance another redbud, the flowers loose like haze on the shape of the tree, and the whole misty appearance like the opening of a door into mythology. It is the penetration [of all this] we seek.

We are now in an old garden, where the asparagus once grew and from where the few seeds scattered to the road-side. The ochre is wild mustard; the light greens are mixed, carrot-tops, the beginnings of Queen Anne's Lace, and a few Dutchman's Britches. A tether-ball game lies silent, semi-wound; five kittens are running in the flowerbeds, a decaying fence, and in the distance, haze, like myth, redbud.

We drive back along the river where the poor people sit catching carp and catflsh. The first stars are quickly covered by low-flying clouds, lightning, the planet sealing. A scrape of static runs across the announcer as he gives the Reds at bat in the top of the third, Gary Gentry pitching for the Mets. It is dark, and a hard wind blows thousands of seeds across our windshield, across our dinner table as we sit on the porch, seeds in the iced tea and the potatoes, seeds of all the trees crossing in the storm. There is no light, but the seeds are light, or they contain it; they contain a grove of trees, an endless clone of planets. There is no light but for two candles and lightning which reveals a chemically-unstable world. And then the soft fall of seeds is burst by the heavier fall of rain. We are inside, the dishes are washing, the cats come rushing in the window, wet, and lie on the red rug licking their fur.

There are clouds of water and the crystal itself is wet, the darkness where we cannot go but are already, body I call to, penetration, sleep, dream, where the powers are concentrated like juice, oak seeds and maple seeds, light of another sugary summer, planet on top of sun; we come together, come, and fall apart, into legumes, and melt back into a previous sleep, body, that is always previous, there always. We are here only as long as, we are here in a circle, we are here and have certain powers, the rains return/the stream returns, the seasons each year.

There is first a physical magic, and it streams with orgasm; the stars are giant hydrogen furnaces showering the earth with information so dense and ambiguous it takes total consciousness and fifty generations to sop up one second; we cannot escape this hot breath, physical proximity of the heavens, carnal nearness of one star. It is mutational, tidal, magnetic: physical, and all our thoughts are anyway part of the chemical flux of the body; the chemical downstream is unbroken from galaxy to brain, single carbon atoms in interstellar stellar wastes, sparkling as water, milk, plasm, air, eye, from brain back to galaxy.

But there is an astral magic which seeks, by the power of talismans and imagos, earthbound and made of light, to penetrate light, change the birth signs and the malefics. There is an astral magic which seeks to leave the body and become light, at which speed the ends of the universe become the walls we pass thru, a thin haze, myth, and then dream. In astral magic the stars are the deeper images which the pilgrim must learn; their power as stars, enough to light and bombard the universe, is trivial compared to the angelic power of the astrals that lies behind them or thru them. Is not this power physical too?

Physical magic starts at the flesh and moves in, and back, moves thru the wet orgasm to the amniotic waters of our race, of all protein species on earth. Physical magic begins with a physical first cause, as genes, or a binary code for deeper structures (to n-deep) on the brain. In physical magic man cannot survive the power of the stars and the planets closer to the sun, and on those further from the sun he will freeze. Astral magic lays upon these stars, and the flesh, a series of cards, decans, a stellar and constellar sequence of images, and on these cards are pictures, highly stylized, of what we could not otherwise know, are climates of rich dark magic in which we could never physically live; and beneath the cards, placed just so on the lap of the magician, lies not just his flesh, but the flesh/fabric of the universe; beneath his gown of suns and moons are the powers of suns and moons, are his molecules and electrons, are (because he wears it).

Astral magic ignores sociopolitical realities and seeks the millenium at once, as the Ghost Dance bringing back the buffalo; the magician, by his magic, cleanses the face of the sky and builds a temple; the ancient stars are returned to power. But the temple lies in counter-reformation Italy, denying all that is real, that exists, Spain's power as well (which, if the stars are right, will be channelled into prior nodes).

In physical magic the words find their power in the resounding chambers of the lungs, in the re-echoing of sound, and sound, thru the tonal cartilege of the body. This is the chant of Orpheus, of Moses in the Egyptian temple. In astral magic the words have another terrific power because their link to the past is unbroken, and they go back and back like a chain of pure links, and we pull on the whole chain strung in deep waters thru which we cannot see, and the words we speak reach the words at the bottom, the pelagic depths, the base of the neural pool in the Star Card, and there they go further, back like Bridey Murphy remembering a previous life in a hypnotic spell, back into a previous form of the same language, Old Irish. The words become prelinguistic fragments and take on velocity; they leave the earth because they define such a departure; they become large and summon the angels and archangels of our beginning, and other debris, all that lies in the chain. It is astral magic, for it cuts the worldweave in a circle, a Fluddian cosmos with elements of symmetry and heliocentricity the eye cannot see and the numbers of ordinary mathematics cannot find. There are relationships hidden in relationships, and anagrams come flying out of the pod, flowers that are contained within a dark earth, as seeds buried in a hot sky, and never flower, except with the changing climate, bloom among old stars. When Bruno speaks of the infinite universe, he means the infinite zoological spiritual life of the universe, the endless centers of spirits and influences, the Pawnee psuche kosmou.

There are conditions and operants, and beyond the sphere of the body lies another sphere, air; man is a monkey, a clever animal with power over the magicals; he has means; beyond air, air is fire, the sphere of the sun passes within; outside it, planets; outside them, stars; beyond all such physical spheres, the invisible reigns, the lesser angels followed by the magical names and superior powers.

The homeopath drinks from the flower the accumulated deposit of six billion years of starlight on protoplasm, is healed by the physical substance; the magician receives his power immediately and directly and without six billion years in between. The power is in the collection of talismans, not the actual body of Christ, but ikons, seals, Renaissance paintings, Pleistocene Christ on cave walls. The lovers stand in the forest and the planet Jupiter is above their heads, magnified fifty times its visible size, with four moons. The power of Venus whizzes thru the pagan spring, above our heads the watery planet in the astrals, its power pulled thru by a chain of words, talismans, abracadabra to the weak. There is a demonic compulsion to astral magic; the magician tugs and tugs, by words and charms, at something he knows is there, a second body of light. But beyond the angels lies, must lie the source of physical matter itself, and the passage from there to here can only be physical. It becomes a puppet show, and a mechanical demon is worked by an incredible assortment of cogs, wheels, springs, and strings, a stage prop demon; he fools the populace that knows nothing of the non-stellar properties of numbers and believes all such workings to be the same violent trade magic. The hermetic brings his mathesis into the world of mechanics and idols, hence begins the current use of the word "magic." Here the power of the talisman ceases, for the magician has sold the greater possibility to a lesser flurry of spooky effects. He had traded the powerful star dragons for harmless Halloween witches, and he will be seen years later lost in an infinite universe of another's making and playing with rocket ships rather than astral bodies. Bruno's infinite is reached in a flash of invocation, of proper conjunction; the egg zero cracks and the numbers dance thru each other. It is a hermetic (not a Copernican) truth that the sun is in the center no matter where we stand, and once we know this, the rest of the numbers fall into place (as they did for Copernicus), and the earth moves because it could not possibly, in the midst of such magic, stand still. We seek out the associations of the bullfrog with angels, not by his direct bodily power (for in that case we would note how large he is puffed, how he will frighten the female into submission by such distension, torsion of organs); we are not talking about the immediate and wet frog; we are speaking of stars, which are really fires billions of times his size; the frog is a suppliant, a sign; thru being aware of his shape and its associations with other shapes we are closer to the stars already. And the universe is expanding, pouring out thru its debris at the edges, disappearing into another universe where the stars become the astrals and demonology replaces astrology. The universe is expanding, destroying its suburbs in fantastic explosions, but the earth is part of the contracting universe, that runs from the distance of the galaxies and falls, splashes in the stream, with utter tautness, pumping heart motion, contracts from nameless clouds of fire and water, croaks, gives sperm, midges clinging to rocks beneath waterfalls and sucking the food that rushes by. Here the zodiac is retained; here are retained the harmonies of the planets; here we live as angels among pans, inhabitants of local fields and streams, vedas, rains, lightnings, winds, markers of a chain which also, clonally, by germ plasm, is unbroken, and goes back to the beginning, a physical magic whose etymology also lies in the stars. The stars become the astrals; physical magic becomes astral magic, and the angels appear simultaneously as products of our erotic bodies and mathesis of emblems and ikons; the angels are our lovers on earth; the angels also lie behind them, reclining numerically. Thru Botticelli is revealed a pagan and undiscovered planet, a hidden moon of the Renaissance, mapped but unnamed, beyond Iceland and closer to the sun, Isis retaining all her points in an expanding universe, retaining her Hebrew and Egyptian ties even as she is a Navaho corn goddess and sits in a church in New Mexico, even as she is the virgin planet of the Pope and the mother of Aeneas. The chain is unbroken though the universe expands and the galaxies are torn apart. The chain is unbroken, the grape juice hardening in wine bottles, the dandelion wine fermenting in the urn, storing the physic of this particular sun. The power crosses the whole chain, connecting the origins and ends of the expanding universe with the propinquity of the contracting universe and all its lesser powers; there is no distinction between the food we eat and the power too lethal to touch. The initial goal of all magic is true moisture, orgasm; protein begins by replicating itself, an endless mirror of flesh, at the end of which a man stands in the desert chanting. The star leads six billion years to a star. As bloody beings we cannot escape powers we are made of; the Shakesperian stage dummies have led to whole moving circuses, great machineries running unattended in the factories; the power of lightning is sucked in thru a talisman, a kite, into a key, the Rosetta Stone, to Egyptian, the dating of Hermes as an A.D. magus; what is drawn in thru the key becomes tame house current and runs the affairs of the church as well. The whole machinery of our civilization is demonic. But even as we are magicians, our magic is linked to a physical tide, the full orgiastic burst, rosewater and rain in the atmosphere, our cloudy atmospheric bodies; we must run off downstream and we must convert all our organs to one flood; and still we are not allowed to forget that this flood is the world ocean we have never left chemically, is filled with lizards, snails, starfish, the magician's, or accompanist; and still our whole body is renewed, autonomically, without the magician's conscious exercise, and this is what we are made of, this is our power, why we make magic, and still we cannot escape this body. As the girl said, sometimes it is so overpowering it is as though my body were someone else and it were compelling me, so the motions of childbirth compel us to breathe, breathe, and not to push, or the dream without bottom that follows the world ocean and in which all magicians swim like salty fish; this is Bruno's dream: animals, zoas indistinguishable from stars, angelics, qabbalistic angels, made of light and falling thru light, the bullfrog blown up to effect, the powers released into a stream; on a carpet of blood the baby flows out, the magus in his lifesuit; body opens the gates.....

 


-- Richard Grossinger --