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The Aeon of horus & set
printed in mektoub vol.3, num 6
The Organization [The Brotherhood of SeTh] that had contact me
described itself as Thelemic, yet the mythos it glorifies is the brotherhood
of Horus and Set. I had to point out that not only did Horus reject
Set's advances, he avenged his manhood by tricking the latyter into
a form of self-emasculation. Further, if Crowley had contemplated
the union of these two deities, why would he have added to the above:
"There is perhaps a magical second meaning to this verse [As
brothers, fight ye! III:59], a reference to the ritual of which we
find hints in the lengends of Cain and Abel, Esau and Jacob, Set and
Osiris, etv. The elder brother within us, the Silent Self, must slay
the younger brother, the conscious self, and he must be raised again
incorruptable. --James M. Martin, "Gynergy, homosex and the Vama
Marg" in Marylin Medusa #2 c. 1992
Response written 11 March 1993e.v.:
1. "Glorifies the brotherhood of Horus and Set." Well, yes
and no. Were they even brothers, and if another relation existed, which
is the more fundamentaly important to the work at hand. There were,
fo course, two Horuses (primary, at least, with many aspects ranging
the gap between the two), Horus the Elder (brother of Osiris, Nepthys,
Set and Isis) and Horus the Younger (son of Osiris and Isis), and at
time it is very difficult to determine which is being talked of historically.
Most modern material and translations group the two together and thereby
much confusion is clandestinely generated. The conflation of the two
Horuses is, I think, a large problem in pop Egyptology. Two conflicting
traditions existed in Dynastic Egypt: 1) Set as Horus's uncle and 2)
Set as Horus's brother.
2. I get the feel, from your words, that a (mythic) focus on Set is
anti-Thelemic. It is my opinion, actually, that the relation between
the two is of primary import to the interpretation of the new Aeon.
Any understnading of Horus is impossible without an understanding of
Set. Dynastic succession was predicated on both. A pharaoh
ruled by "the Set and Horus." If one was absent, then succession
was interrupted. The Memphite ritual play shows their fighting to be
merely representative of the distrubance between Heaven and Earth caused
by the removal of the moderatore, the pharaoh. the pharaoh was ruler
because he word both the white and red crowns (of Upper and Lower Egypt).
At the end of the battle, it is important that the conflict is resolved.
The resolution brings Horus, a sky god, into an earthly realm by giving
him the throne; Set gets a new relation to the sky, because he is adopted
by Ra-Herakhty [Ra-Hoor-Khuit]. The entrance to the temple of Ptah was
flanked by the plant emblems of both Horus and Set, because only by
their cooperative efforts was stability maintained. Kom Ombos architectually
represents the relation between the two gods: the temple is split into
two halves, Set and Horus, the two halves being united to form the templ
whole.

Temple of Kom Ombos, Antonio Beato, c. 1890
Crowley, himself, points to Set as being the third 31 needed to complete
the Aeonic equation. Shin = fire and Teth = Serpent. The Fiery Serpent,
i.e. Kundalini. Their combination through the tarot trumps, Atu XX and
Atu XI, represents the totality of Liber AL, the Gods, Sh, and the people,
Teth. These form the third 31, AL and LA being the first two which make
up 93 [LAShTAL]. (The Equinox of the Gods pp. 100-103]
3. The crown of the North is Horus and the South is Set, West (the
dead) being Osiris and Isis the East. Can there be balance if three
exist on the Square without the forth?
4. It is also not entirely correct to say that Horus rejected Set's
advances. There are several versions where Isis told Horus he could
not refuse his brother/uncle, but conseled against penetration, as this
would disturb the balance between the two (placing one hierarchically/sexually
above the other). There are yet other versions of the myth which depict
Horus actually seeking out Set, desirous of his brother's embraces.
It is modern Egyptologist's bias against Set, which have elevated the
first myth above the others in standard mythologies.
These are just notes on an ongoing avenue. I can give a brief sketch
of my personal view of the connection between Horus and Set in Thelemic
terms. Are you familliar with Camille Paglia's Sexual Personae?
The introduction is of the most relevance here; what she describes as
the cthonic, nature as dark and lethal ("the dark crossroads of
Hecate") is Set. He represents the cthonic, while Horus represents
the sky. In both physical and psychological sense, Horus is the light
and Set is the dark (night) side. Set, then, is the dark/inner half
of one's nature. In this way, pseudo-Freudian sense, Set must be understood,
delved into. When sex is repressed the natural erupts (Reich)--the more
it is repressed the more violent the eruption. I take the riots in LA
as a very good example of a Set-aeon "eruption." As shown
in the succession myths and rituals, the balance between Set and Horus
must be maintained. The reference from the Holy Books I would point
to is "I reveal unto you a great mystery..." Liber XC 33-44.
The alchemical wedding of Horus and Set.
Liber CCCLXX, line 7: "Set is his holy covenant..." What
does it mean to be a covenant? A covenant is a promise against something,
yes? Set is the promise against civil unrest and cosmic disaster.
There is also another particular relation between Horus and Hapocrates,
and Set and Apep. It has a particular relation to Liber LXV.
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