THE RITE OF VENUS

  THE RITE OF VENUS

    OFFICERS

VENUS.®MDRV¯ Blue Robe.®MDNM¯

TAURUS. ®MDRV¯Orange Robe.®MDNM¯

LIBRA. ®MDRV¯Green Robe.®MDNM¯

PISCES. ®MDRV¯Crimson Robe.®MDNM¯

LUNA IN TAURUS. ®MDRV¯Silver Robe.®MDNM¯

SATURN IN LIBRA. ®MDRV¯Black Robe.®MDNM¯


®MDRV¯No officer has any weapon. Venus is enthroned, and on her right are Libra and Saturn in Libra, on her left Taurus and Luna in Taurus, while at her feet lies Pisces. Her throne is an oyster-shell, as in the picture by Botticelli. Before it a vei

. Without, an altar; and without the temple, a further veil.®MDNM¯


PRELUDE

®MDRV¯Full light. VENUS, seated before altar, LIBRA and TAURUS at its sides.®MDNM¯

VENUS. 7777777.

LIBRA. 7777777.

TAURUS. 7777777.

VENUS. Brother Libra, I command thee to declare the Secret of Venus.

®MDRV¯LIBRA recites Swinburne's "Hertha." [All present recline and sleep.]®MDNM¯


I am that which began;

  Out of me the years roll;

Out of me God and man;

  I am equal and whole;

God changes, and man, and the form of them bodily;

I am the soul.


Before ever land was,

  Before ever the sea,

Or soft hair of the grass,

  Or fair limbs of the tree,

Or the flesh-colored fruit of my branches, I was,

and thy soul was in me.


First life on my sources

  First drifted and swam;

Out of me are the forces

  That save it or damn;

Our of me man and woman, and wild-beast and bird:

before God was, I am.


Beside or above me

  Nought is there to go;

Love or unlove me,

  Unknow me or know,

I am that which unloves me and loves; I am stricken,

and I am the blow.


I the mark that is missed

  And the arrows that miss,

I the mouth that is kissed

  And the breath in the kiss,

The search, and the sought, and the seeker, the soul

and the body that is.


I am that thing which blesses

  My spirit elate;

  That which caresses

  With hands uncreate

My limbs unbegotten that measure the length of the

measure of fate.


But what thing dost thou now,

  Looking Godward, to cry

"I am I, thou art thou,

  I am low, thou art high"?

I am thou , whom thou seekest to find him; find

thou but thyself, thou art I.


I the grain and the furrow,

  The plough-cloven clod

And the ploughshare drawn thorough,

  The germ and the sod,

The deed and the doer, the seed and the sower, the

dust which is God.


Hast thou known how I fashioned thee,

  Child, underground?

Fire that impassioned thee,

  Iron that bound,

Dim changes of wter, what thing of these hast

thou known of or found?


Canst thou say in thine heart

  Thou hast seen with thine eyes

With what cunning of art

  Thou wast wrought in what wise,

By what force of what stuff thou wast shapen, and

shown on my breast to the skies?


Who hath given, who hath sold it thee,

  Knowledge of me?

Has the wilderness told it thee?

  Hast thou learnt of the sea?

Hast thou communed in spirit with night? have

the winds taken counsel with thee?


Have I set such a star

  To show light on thy brow

That thou sawest from afar

  What I show to thee now?

Have ye spoken as brethren together, the sun and the

mountains and thou?


What is here, dost thou know it?

  What was, hast thou known?

Prophet nor poet

  Nor tripod nor throne

Nor spirit nor flesh can make answer, but only thy

mother alone.


Mother, not maker,

  Born, and not made;

Though her children forsake her,

  Allured or afraid,

Praying prayers to the God of their fashion, she stirs

not for all that have prayed.


A creed is a rod,

  And a crown is of night;

But this thing is God,

  To be man with thy might,

To grow straight in the strength of thy spirit, and

live out thy life as the light.


I am in thee to save thee,

  As my soul in thee saith;

Give thou as I gave thee,

  Thy life-blood and breath,

Green leaves of thy labor, white flowers of thy

thought, and the red fruit of thy death.


Be the ways of thy giving

  As mine were to thee;

The free life of thy living,

  Be the gift of it free;

Not as servant to lord, nor as master to slave, shalt

thou give thee to me.


O children of banishment,

  Souls overcast,

Were the lights ye see vanish meant

  Always to last,

Ye would know not the sun overshining the shadows

and stars overpast.


I that saw where ye trod

  The dim paths of the night

Set the shadow called God

  In your skies to give light;

But the morning of manhood is risen, and the shadow-

less soul is in sight.


The tree many-rooted

  That swells to the sky

With frondage red-fruited,

  The life-tree am I;

In the buds of your lives is the sap of my leaves: ye

shall live and not die.


But the Gods of your fashion

  That take and that give,

In their pity and passion

  That scourge and forgive,

They are worms that are bred in the bark that falls

off; they shall die and not live.


My own blood is what stanches

  The wounds in my bark;

Stars caught in my branches

  Make day of the dard,

And are worshipped as suns till the sunrise shall

tread out their fires as a spark.


Where dead ages hide under

  The live roots of the tree,

In my darkness the thunder

  Makes utterance of me;

In the clash of my boughs with each other ye hear

the waves sound of the sea.


That noise is of Time,

  As his feathers are spread

And his feet set to climb

  Through the boughs overhead,

And my foilage rings round him and rustles, and

branches are bent with his tread.


The storm-winds of ages

  Blow through me and cease,

The war-wind that rages,

  The spring-wind of peace,

Ere the breath of them roughen my tresses, ere one

on my blossoms increase.


All sounds of all changes,

  All shadows and lights

On the world's mountain-ranges

  And stream-riven heights,

Whose tongue is the wind's tongue and language of

storm-clouds on earth-shaking nights;


All forms of all faces,

  All works of all hands

In unsearchable places

  Of time-stricken lands,

All death and all life, and all reign and all ruins,

drop through me as sands.


Though sore be my burden

  And more than ye know,

And my growth have no guerdon

  But only to grow,

Yet I fail not of growing for lightnings above me or

deathworms below.


These too have their part in me,

  As I too in these;

Such fire is at heart in me,

  Such sap is this tree's,

Which hath in it all sounds and all secrets of infinite

lands and of seas.


In the spring-colored hours

  When my mind was as May's

There brake forth of me flowers

  By centuries of days,

Strong blossoms with perfume of manhood, shot out

from my spirit as rays.


And the sound of them springing

  And the smell of their shoots

Were as warmth and sweet singing

  And strength to my roots;

And the lives of my children made perfect with

freedom of soul were my fruits.


I bid you but be;

  I have need not of prayer;

I have need of you free

  As your mouths of mine air;

  That my heart may be greater within me, beholding

the fruits of me fair.


More fair than strange fruit is

  Of faiths ye espouse;

In me only the root is

  That blooms in your boughs;

Behold now your God that ye made you, to feed him

with faith of your vows.


In the darkening and whitening

  Abysses adored,

With dayspring and lightning

  For lamp and for sword,

God thunders in heaven, and his angels are red with

the wrath of the Lord.


O my sons, O too dutiful

  Toward Gods not of me,

` Was not I enough beautiful?

  Was it hard to be free?

For behold, I am with you, am in you and of you;

look forth now and see.


Lo, winged with world's wonders,

  With miracles shod,

With the fires of his thunders

  For raiment and rod,

God trembles in heaven, and his angels are white

with the terror of God.


For his twilight is come on him,

  His anguish is here'

And his spirits gaze dumb on him,

  Grown gray from his fear;

And his hour taketh hold on him stricken, the last

of his infinite year.


Thought made him and breaks him,

  Truth slays and forgives;

But to you, as time takes him,

  This new thing it gives,

Even love, the beloved Republic, that feeds upon

freedom and lives.


For truth only is living,

  Truth only is whole,

And the love is his giving

  Man's polestar and pole;

Man, pulse of my center, and fruit of my body, and

seed of my soul.


One birth of my bosom;

  One beam of mine eye;

One topmost blossom

  That scales the sky;

Man, equal and one with me, man that is made of me, man that is I.


VENUS. Having ears they hear not. Brothers Taurus and Libra, let the veil be drawn.                      ®MDRV¯[They do so.®MDNM¯


PART I

®MDRV¯[Twilight. VENUS is enthroned on high, swathed in masses of red hair and roses. The altar is covered with roses; there is a small flame thereon.]®MDNM¯

LIBRA.

Daughter of Glory, child

Of Earth's Dione mild

By the Father of all, the AEgis-bearing King~!

Spouse, daughter, mother of God,

Queen of the blest abode

In Cyprus' splendour singly glittering.

Sweet sister unto me,

I cry aloud to thee!

I laugh upon thee laughing, O dew caught up from sea!


Drawn by sharp sparrow and dove,

And swan's wide plumes of love,

And all the swallow's swifter vehemence,

And, subtler that the Sphinx,

The ineffable iynx

Heralds thy splendour swooning into sense,

When from the bluest bowers

And greenest-hearted hours

Of Heaven thou smil'st toward earth, a miracle of flowers!~


Down to the loveless sea

Where lay Persephone

Violate, where the shade of earth is black,

Crystalline out of space

Flames the immortal face!

The glory of the comet-tailed track

Blinds all black earth with tears.

Silence awakes and hears

The music of thy moving come over the starry spheres.


Wrapped in rose, green, and gold,

Blues many and manifold,

A cloud of incense hides thy splendour of light;

Hides from the prayer's distress

Thy loftier loveliness,

Till thy veil's glory shrouds the earth from night;

And silence speaks indeed,

Seeing the subtler speed

Of its own thought than speech of the Pandean reed!

®MDRV¯[LIBRA returns.®MDNM¯

VENUS. 7777777.

SATURN. Amen.

VENUS. 333-1-333.

LUNA. Amen.

VENUS. 1-55555-1.

LIBRA ®MDRV¯and®MDNM¯ PISCES. Amen.

VENUS. Brother Saturn, what is the hour?

SATURN. Twilight.

VENUS. Sister Pisces, from whose house are we come out?

PISCES. From the House of Death.

VENUS. Brother Taurus, what is stronger than death?

TAURUS. Love.

VENUS. Brother Libra, what is the place?

LIBRA. The Mountain of Venus, that hangeth from the navel of the Universe over the Great Abyss.

VENUS. Let us celebrate the Rite of Venus.

®MDRV¯LUNA plays a waltz tune. The PROBATIONERS dance together.]®MDNM¯

VENUS. Childrenj of Love, what is the hour?

ALL. ®MDRV¯[A confused murmur.]®MDNM¯ It is the hour of love.

®MDRV¯[ALL sink down together. The lights go out. A long pause.]®MDNM¯


PART II

VENUS. ®MDRV¯(Awaking.)®MDNM¯ 333-1-333.

   ®MDRV¯[Venus is brilliantly illuminated; the rest remain dark.

®MDNM¯VENUS. Little brother, what is the hour?

PISCES. The dawn is at hand.

VENUS. Little brother, what is the place?

TAURUS. It is the holy mountain of our Lady Venus.

VENUS.Children, awake and rejoice.

LIBRA. Awake and rejoice.

PISCES. How shall we rejoice?

TAURUS. As our Lady hath appointed.

LIBRA. As you like it.

PISCES. Wherein shall we rejoice?

TAURUS. In our Lady Venus.

LIBRA. In what you will.

TAURUS. Thy will, our Lady, and not ours be done!

PISCES. Mistress, let the adorations be performed!

VENUS. Children, array yourselves before me, and rejoice in the adorations of my beauty.

®MDRV¯[They form, each with his partner. Libra disappears behind veil. TAURUS recites invocation.]®MDNM¯

TAURUS.

Salutation to Hathor, holy cow in the pastures of Evening.

Salutation to Hathor, in the Mountain of the West; in the land of perfect

Peace, Salutation.

A devouring fire is thy soul, and the corpses of the dead are enkindled at thy

breath.

Salutation to Hathor, the child of Isis and of Nephthys!

Salutation to Hathor, the bride of Apis, of Apis that hath the beetle upon his

tongue!

A devouring fire is thy soul, and the corpses of the dead are enkindled at thy

breath.

Salutation to Hathor, whose necklace is of the Souls of the blessed ones of          

Amennti.

Salutation to Hathor, whose girdle is of the Souls of the blessed ones of Seb!

Salutation to Hathor, whose sandals are of the Souls of the blessed ones of Nu!

A devouring fire is thy soul, and the corpses of the dead are enkindled at thy

breath.

                                         ®MDRV¯[Returns to his throne.®MDNM¯

VENUS. Brother Libra, art thou silent?        ®MDRV¯[A pause.®MDNM¯

       Brother Libra, where art thou?

  ®MDRV¯LIBRA, still hidden, recites from Swinburne's "Atalanta."

®MDNM¯ We have seen thee, O Love

  thou art fair; thou art goodly, O

Love;

Thy wings make light in the air as the

wings of a dove.

Thy feet are as winds that divide the

stream of the sea;

Earth is thy covering to hide thee, the

garment of thee.

Thou art swift and subtle and blind as

a flame of fire;

Before thee the laughter, behind thee

the tears of desire;

And twain go forth beside thee, a man

with a maid;

Her eyes are the eyes of a bride whom

delight makes afraid;

As the breath in the buds that stir is

her bridal breath:

But Fate is the name of her; and his

name is Death.


For an evil blossom was born

  Of sea-foam and the frothing of blood,

    Blood-red and bitter of fruit,

      And the seed of it laughter and

tears,

And the leaves of it madness and scorn;

  A bitter flower from the bud,

    Sprung of the sea without root,

      Sprung without graft from the

years.


The weft of the world was untorn

  That is woven of the day on the

night,

  The hair of the hours was not white

Nor the raiment of time overworn,

  When a wonder, a world's delight,

A perilous goddess was born;

  And the waves of the sea as she came

Clove, and the foam at her feet,

    Fawning, rejoiced to bring forth

  A fleshly blossom, a flame

Filling the heavens with heat

    To the cold white ends of the north.


And in air the clamorous birds,

  And men upon earth that hear

Sweet articulate words

    Sweetly divided apart,

  And in shallow and channel and mere

The rapid and footless herds,

    Rejoiced, being foolish of heart.


For all they said upon earth,

  She is fair, she is white like a dove,

    And the life of the world is her

breath

Breathes, and is born at her birth;

  For they knew thee for mother of love,

    And knew thee not mother of death.


What hadst thou to do being born,

  Mother, when winds were at ease,

As a flower of the springtime of corn,

  A flower of the foam of the seas?

For bitter thou wast from thy birth,

  Aphrodite, a mother of strife;

For before thee some rest was on earth,

    A little respite from tears,

  A little pleasure of life;

For life was not then as thou art,

    But as one that waxeth in years

  Sweet-spoken, a fruitful wife;

    Earth had no thorn, and desire

No sting, neither death any dart;

  What hadst thou to do amongst

these,

    Thou, clothed with a burning fire,

Thou, girt with sorrow of heart,

  Thou, sprung of the seed of the

seas

As an ear from a seed of corn,

    As a brand plucked forth of a pyre,

As a ray shed forth of the morn,

  For division of soul and disease,

For a dart and a sting and a thorn?

What ailed thee then to be born?


Was there not eveil enough,

  Mother, and anguish on earth

  Born with a man at his birth,

Wastes underfoot, and above

  Storm out of heaven, and dearth

Shaken down from the shining thereof,

    Wrecks from afar overseas

  And peril of shallow and firth,

    And tears that spring and increase

  In the barren places of mirth,

That thou, having wings as a dove,

  Being girt with diesire for a girth,

    That thou must come after these,

That thou must lay on him love?


Thou shouldst not so have been born:

  But death should have risen with

thee,

    Mother, and visible fear,

      Grief, and the wringing of hands,

And noise of many that mourn;

  The smitten bosom, the knee

    Bowed, and in each man's ear

      A cry as of perishing lands,

A moan as of people in prison,

  A tumult of infinite griefs;

      And thunder of storm on the

sands,

    And wailing wives on the shore;

And under thee newly arisen

  Loud shoal and shipwrecking reefs,

      Fierce air and violent light;

    Sail rent and sundering oar,

      Darkness, and noises of night;

Clashing of streams in the sea,

Wave against wave as a sword,

    Clamor of currents, and foam;

      Rains making ruin on earth,

    Winds that wax ravenous and roam

  As wolves in a wolfish horde;

Fruits growing faint in the tree,

      And blind things dead in their

birth:

    Famine, and blighting of corn,

    When thy time was come to be

born.


       ®MDRV¯[LIBRA appears and confronts her.®MDNM¯


All these we know of; but thee

  Who shall discern or declare?

In the uttermost ends of the sea

  The light of thine eyelids and hair,

    The light of thy bosom as fire

      Between the wheel of the sun

  And the flying flames of the air?

    Wilt thou turn thee not yet nor have pity,

But abide with despair and desire

  And the crying of armies undone,

      Lamentation of one with another

    And breaking of city by city;

  The dividing of friend against friend,

      The severing of brother and brother;

  Wilt thou utterly bring to an end?

      Have mercy, mother!


VENUS. Nay, brother, thou art the chiefest of my chosen.

LIBRA. Alas.

VENUS. Yea, brother: in the end all turn to me, and all return to me.


Isis am I, and from my life are fed

  All showers and suns, all moons that wax and wane;

All stars and streams, the living and the dead,

  The mystery of pleasure and of pain.

I am the mother!~ I the speaking sea!

I am the earth and its fertility!

      Life, death, love, hatred, light, darkness, return to me--

To me!


Hathoor am I, and to my beauty drawn

  All glories of the Universe bow down,

The blossom and the mountain and the dawn,

  Fruit's blush, and woman, our creation's crown.

I am the priest, the sacrifice, the shrine,

I am the love and life of the divine!

      Life, death, love, hatred, light, darkness are surely mine--

Are mine!


Venus am I, the love and light of earth,

  The wealth of kisses, the delight of tears,

The barren pleasure never come to birth,

  The endless infinte desire of years.

I am the shrine at which thy long desire

Devoured thee with intolerable fire.

      I was song, music, passion, death, uponthy lyre--

Thy lyre!


I am the Grail and I the Glory now:

  I am the flame and fuel of thy breast;

I am the star of God upon thy brow;

  I am thy queen, enraptured and possessed.

Hide thee, sweet river; welcome to the sea,

Ocean of love that shall encompass thee!

      Life, death, love, hatred, light, darkness, return to me--

to me~!


  ®MDRV¯[PISCES performs a sleepy sinuous dance by herself, and returns to Venus' throne lapsed into herself, and as if exhausted.]®MDNM¯


Rise, rise my knight! My king! My love, arise!

See the grave avenues of Paradise,

The dewy larches bending at my breath,

Portentous cedars prophesying death!


®MDRV¯[She is interrupted by the Violin of the throned LUNA, who plays her unutterable melody.®MDNM¯®FN1Romance in D: Beethoven.¯  ®MDRV¯PISCES manifests distress.]®MDNM¯

VENUS. Brother Libra, what is this song?

LIBRA.

My soul is an enchanted boat,

Which, like a sleeping swan, doth float

    Upon the silver waves of thy sweet singing;

And thine doth like an angel sit

Beside a helm conducting it,

    Whilst all the winds with melody are ringing.

It seems to float ever, for ever,

Upon that many-winding river,

Between mountains, woods, abysses,

A paradise of wildernesses!

    Till, like one in slumber bound,

    Borne to the ocean, I float down, around,

    Into a sea profound, of ever-spreading sound.


Meanwhile thy spirit lifts its pinions

In music's most serene dominions;

    Catching the winds that fan that happy heaven.

And we sail on, away, afar,

Without a course, without a star,

    But by the instinct of sweet music driven;

Till through Elysian garden islets

By thee, most beautiful of pilots,

Where never mortal pinnace glided,

The boat of my desire is guided;

    Realms where the air we breathe is love,

    Which in the winds and on the waves doth move,

    Harmonising this earth with what we feel above.


We have past Age's icy caves,

And Manhood's dark and tossing waves,

    And Youth's smooth ocean, smiling to betray:

Beyond the glassy gulphs we flee

Of shadow-peopled Infancy,

    Through Death and Birth, to a diviner day;

A paradise of vaulted bowers,

Lit by downward-gazing flowers,

And watery paths that wind between

Wildernesses calm and green,

    Peopled by shapes too bright to see,

    And rest, having beheld; somewhat like thee;

    Which walk upon the sea, and chant melodiously!


®MDRV¯[VENUS manifests distress. PISCES slips away to the throne of LUNA.]®MDNM¯

                         ®MDRV¯[LUNA plays her conquering melody.®MDNM¯®FN1Polonaise in D: Wienawski.¯

VENUS.Oh! Oh!

LIBRA. Holier than pleasure in pain; nobler is abstinence than indulgence; from sloth and faith we turn to toil and science; from the tame victories of the body to the wild victories of the mind.

VENUS. It is the ruin of the temple.

LIBRA. For from thee cometh the Utterance of the Present; but of the Future no word.

VENUS. And thou wilt?

LIBRA. The Word.

®MDRV¯[SATURN comes out and dances his dance, and falls, clasping the hem of LIBRA'S robe.]®MDNM¯

VENUS. Who is this? These are not my dances; these footsteps tread not my measures; not me he worships by the paces and pauses of his feet!

                  ®MDRV¯[LUNA plays a wild and horrible melody.®MDNM¯®FN1Witches' Dance: Paganini.¯

          ®MDRV¯[SATURN drags LIBRA backwards into the dusk.

[The PROBATIONERS  group similarly; MARS with MARS and VENUS with VENUS. Some, too, stand isolated.]®MDNM¯

VENUS. Brother Taurus, art thou faithful, thou alone?

TAURUS. ®MDRV¯[Seductively yet ironically.]®MDNM¯ Knowest thou not me?

VENUS. Yea, my beloved, Lord of all my doves.

TAURUS. Venus, our Lady~!

VENUS. Come unto me!

                        ®MDRV¯[She half rises and draws him to her.®MDNM¯

TAURUS. Within the veil?

VENUS. There is no veil before my shrine!

®MDRV¯[She unfastens his robe. As it falls he leaps up with the Caduceus, as MERCURY, and tramples her beneath his feet.]®MDNM¯

TAURUS. In the Beginning was the Word; and the Word was with God; and the Word was God!

®MDRV¯[All come forward; SATURN and LIBRA linked; LUNA and PISCES linked; and bow to him.]®MDNM¯

LUNA. The Treason is accomplished.

PISCES. The mind is nobler than the body.

SATURN. Friendship is holier than love.

LIBRA. Nature is overcome by wit.

PISCES. How shall we adore thee?

TAURUS. As you like it.

SATURN. What shall we sacrifice?

TAURUS. What you will.

®MDRV¯[LUNA plays a moto perpetuo,®MDNM¯®FN1Moto perpetuo: Ries.¯®MDRV¯ ALL bowing in adoration to MERCURY.]®MDNM¯

LIBRA. Brother, what is the hour?

PISCES. Dawn.

LIBRA. Let us depart unto the work of the day.

ALL. Amen.


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