I shall attempt
to analyse the text of each version of the Charge to identify sources, based on
the sources identified above. It should be borne in mind that in doing this I
am treating the Charge as a single literary composition by Gardner and
Valiente, using as sources both the earlier version, which itself draws on
texts from other sources.
These texts are
in places quoted directly, which is my first level of influence (as above) on
the Charge by these texts. I have arbitrarily allowed as direct quotation
passages which have either been altered merely to fit the context of the Charge
(for example third person changed to first), passages which have had particles
or words such as ‘behold’ added to fit the form of the Charge, and passages
which I feel someone who knew the original source could reasonably be expected
to recognise (as did Doreen Valiente). This rule and the decisions I have made
based on it are not infallible in a text as heavily edited as the Charge; the
‘keep pure your highest ideal...’ passage is an example of this.
In the
changes made by Valiente for the verse and final prose versions of the Charge,
the influence of these direct quotations is still present, but at one remove,
so I shall also try to identify these passages.
There remain a
number of passages which do not have any obvious literary source, and I shall
also identify these. I would tentatively identify them as Gardner and Valiente’s own composition. For
the purpose of this analysis I have disregarded my third level of influence –
ideas found in other texts likely to have been known to Gardner and which appear to have had an
influence on the Charge, because the connection between these possible sources
and the text of the Charge is too tenuous to prove that they were used.
After I have
identified the likely sources for the Charge, I will compare the three
different versions’ uses of these sources.
Passages directly quoting Aradia
Whenever you have need of anything, once in the month, and better it be when
the moon is full. Then ye shall assemble in some secret place and adore the
spirit of me who am Queen of all Witcheries. There ye shall assemble, ye who
are fain to learn all Sorcery, yet have not won its deepest secrets, to those
will I teach things that are yet unknown. And ye shall be free from slavery,
And as a sign that ye be really free, ye shall be naked in your rites, both men
and women, And ye shall dance, sing, feast make music, and love, all in my
praise. (109 words)
Passages directly quoting Crowley: Law of Liberty
For ecstasy is mine, and joy on earth. For love is my law. Keep pure
your highest ideal: strive ever toward it. Let naught stop you or turn you aside.
to taste even on earth the elixir of immortality. Say “Let ecstasy be mine, and
joy on earth even to me, To Me” For I am a gracious Goddess. I give
unimaginable joys, on earth certainty, not faith while in life! And upon death,
peace unutterable, rest, and ecstasy, nor do I demand aught in sacrifice. I
love you: I yearn for you: page or purple, veiled or voluptuous. I who am all
pleasure, and purple and drunkenness of the innermost senses, desire you, put
on the wings, arouse the coiled splendour within you, “Come unto me.” For I am
the flame that burns in the heart of every man, and the core of every Star. Let
it be your inmost divine self who art lost in the constant rapture of infinite
joy. Let the rituals be rightly preformed with joy and beauty. Remember that
all acts of love and pleasure are my rituals. So let there be beauty and
strength, leaping laughter, force and fire within you. (198 words)
Passages directly quoting Crowley: Liber Cordis Cincti
Serpente
And if thou sayest, I have journied unto thee, and it availed me not,
Rather shalt thou say, I called upon thee, and I waited patiently, and Lo, Thou
wast with me from the beginning For they that ever desired me, shall ever
attain me, even to the end of all desire (52 words)
Passages directly quoting Crowley: Khabs Am Pekht
There is a Secret Door that I have made to establish the way (13 words)
Passages with no known literary source
Listen to the words of the Great Mother, who of old was also called
among men Artemis: Astarte: Dione: Melusine: Aphrodite and by many other names.
At mine Altars the youth of Lacedaemon and Sparta made due sacrifice. Hear ye the words
of the Star Goddess. (46 words)
Discussion
First to compare the proportions of direct quotation
and original material in this version:
Total word count
|
418 words
|
Direct quotation
|
372 words (89%)
|
Material with no source identified
|
46 words (11%)
|
And now to compare the different sources for
quotations as proportion of the whole Charge:
Total word count
|
418 words
|
Direct quotation from Aradia
|
109 words (26.08%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Law of Liberty
|
198 words (47.37%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente
|
52 words (12.44%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Khabs Am Pekht
|
13 words (3.11%)
|
And finally to compare the relative proportions within
the quoted material of the sources used for the quotations:
Total direct quotation
|
372 words
|
Direct quotation from Aradia
|
109 words (29.3%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Law of Liberty
|
198 words (53.23%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente
|
52 words (13.98%)
|
Direct quotation from Crowley:
Khabs Am Pekht
|
13 words (3.49%)
|
Total Crowley
quotation
|
263 words (70.7%)
|
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