A WORD CONCERNING THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT
THE EDITOR and the Publishers anticipate that there will be a demand at
first for privileged views of the original NECRONOMICON, whether out of
curiosity's sake, or by nervous experimenters who will be certain that
we did not copy a sigil correctly, etc.
Let us hasten to state at this point that the original Ms. is neither the
property of the Editor, nor the Publishers. We were given the right to
translate and publish this work, with as much additional and explanatory
material as needed, but not the right to hold the MS. up to public inspection.
We regret that this is the case, but we also feel that it might be advisable,
in reference to the dangerous character of the work involved. Perhaps one
day a book will be written on the hazards of possessing such an original
work in one's home or office, including the fearful hallucinations, physical
incapacities, and emotional malaise that accompanied this work from the
onset of the translation to the end of its final published form.
Therefore, as a matter of policy, we cannot honour any requests to see
the NECRONOMICON in its original state.
Read this section carefully.
In the interim period between the translation and the publication of this
work, the Editor, along with a circle of initiates in another discipline,
undertook to experiment with the rituals and forces outlined in the NECRONOMICON.
In using the material alone, or within a Western ceremonial structure (such
as the Golden Dawn system) we came upon startling discoveries in both cases:
there are no effective banishings for the forces invoked in the NECRONOMICON
itself! The rituals, incantations, formulae of this Book are of ancient
origin, comprising some of the oldest written magickal workings in Western
occult history. the deities and demons identified within have probably
not been effectively summoned in nearly six thousand years. Ordinary exorcisms
and banishing formulae have thus far proved extremely inadequate: this,
by experienced magicians. Hence, the following recommendations.
The religion of the ancient Sumerian peoples seems to have been lunar-oriented,
a religion - or religion - magickal structure - of the night, of darkness
in a sense. Invocations using solar formulae have proved thus far effective
in successfully banishing NECRONOMICON demons and intelligences. For instance,
the Kaddish prayer of the Jewish faith contains some solar elements that
have proved resilient to inimical genii, and the vibration of the Lord's
Prayer for Christians is also a workable method.
We suggest that individual operators utilise an equivalent solar (i.e.,
positive light) invocation from their own religion or the religion of their
ancestors, should the no longer have a religion or should they have changed
it in their lifetime.
For best practical purposes in the beginning - for those intent on actually
using the rituals contained herein - it is advisable to take especial care
in the construction of the magickal circle and of all magickal defences.
A preliminary period of purification is well in order before attempting
anything in this grimoire. Persons of unstable mental condition, or unstable
emotional condition, should not be allowed, under any circumstances, to
observe one of these rituals in progress. That would be criminal, and perhaps
in suicidal. One of our colleagues was fearfully attacked by his dog directly
following a fairly simple and uncomplicated formula from this book. This
is definitely not a Gilbert chemistry set.
The method of the NECRONOMICON concerns deep, primeval forces that seem
to pre-exist the normal archetypal images of the tarot trumps and the Golden
Dawn telesmatic figures. These are forces that developed outside the Judeo-Christian
mainstream, and were worshipped and summoned long before the creation of
the Qabala as we know it today. Hence, the ineffectiveness of the Golden
Dawn banishing procedures against them. They are not necessarily demonic
or qliphotic in the sense that these terms are commonly understood in the
West, they just simply represent power sources largely untapped and thus
far ignored by twentieth-century, mainstream consciousness.
The results of any experimentation with this book, as well as practical
suggestions concerning its rituals, are welcomed by the publishers.
BIBLIOGRAPHY & SUGGESTED READING LIST
(by no means complete, but representative. alphabetically by author)
Name | Book | Published |
---|---|---|
Bernhard, Bennet and Rice. | New Handbook of the Heavens | New York, 1948 |
Budge, E.A. | Amulets and Talismans | New York, 1970 |
Crowley, A. | Book Four | Texas, 1972 |
The Book of Thoth | New York, 1969 | |
Liber AL vel Legis | New York, 1977 | |
Magick | New York | |
Cumont, F. | Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism | New York, 1956 |
Dornseiff. | Das Alphabet in Mystik and Magie | Stoicheia 7, Leipzig, 1925 |
Drower, E.S. | The Book of the Zodiac | London,1949 |
Fairservis, W.A. | The Origins of Oriental Civilisation | New York, 1959 |
Fossey, C. | La Magie Assyrienne | Paris, 1902 |
de la Fuye, A. | "Le Pentagramme Pythagoricien, sa diffusion, son emploi dans la syllabaire cuneiforme." Babyloniaca | Paris, 1934 |
Genouillac | "Les dieux de l'Elam" Recueil de Travaux relatifs a la philologie et a l'archaeologie Egyptiennes et Assyriennes. | Paris, 1904 (ed. Maspero) |
Grant, K. | Aleister Crowley and the Hidden God | New York, 1974 |
The Magical Revival | New York, 1973 | |
Gray, J. | Near Eastern Mythology | New York, 1969 |
Griffith & Thompson | The Leyden Papyrus | New York, 1974 |
Hooke, S.H. | Babylonian and Assyrian Religion | Oklahoma, 1975 |
Middle Eastern Mythology | New York, 1975 | |
King, L. | Babylonian Magic and Sorcery | London, 1896 |
Kramer, S.N. | History Begins At Sumer | New York, 1959 |
Mythologies of the Ancient World (ed) | New York, 1961 | |
Sumerian Mythology | Pennsylvania, 1972 | |
Laurent | La Magie et la Divination chez les Chaldeo-Assyriennes | Paris, 1894 |
Lenormant, F. | Science Occult; La Magie chez les Chaldeens | Paris, 1874 |
Lovecraft, H.P. | Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos | New York, 1973 |
At The Mountains of Madness | New York, 1973 | |
The Dunwich Horror | New York, 1963 | |
The Lurker at the Threshold (with August Derleth) | New York, 1971 | |
Mason, H. | Gilgamesh (ed.) | New York, 1972 |
Neugebauer, O. | The Exact Sciences in Antiquity | New York, 1969 |
Pritchard, J. | Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament | Princeton, 1958 |
The Chaldean Oracles of Zoroaster "Sapere Aude" | New York | |
Seignobos, S. | The World of Babylon | New York, 1975 |
Seligmann, K. | Magic, Supernaturalism, and Religion | New York, 1968 |
Shah, I. | Oriental Magic | New York, 1973 |
The Secret Lore of Magic | New York, 1972 | |
The Sufis | New York, 1973 | |
Tallqvist, K.L. | "Die Assyrische Beschworungsserie Maqlu nach dem originalem im British Museum Herausgegeben" Acta Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae | Helsingfors, 1895 |
Thompson, R.C. | Reports of the Magicians and Astrologers of Nineveh and Babylon | London, 1900 |
Semitic Magic | London, 1904 | |
The Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia | London, 1904 |