
For your entertainment and personal pleasure I now pass on some eminantly useful occult knowledge, long forgotten by such as we. Taken from a 1913 publication titled The Book of Ceremonial Magic by Arthur Edward Waite, this spell is sure to liven-up a dull evening at home. (As always, please remember that The Nonist is not responsible for any demonic possessions, ghoul maulings, or imp slaps, so conjure with care.) See below to learn…
How to Cause the Appearance of Three Ladies or Three Gentlemen in One’s Room After Supper.
1. Preparation
Abstain for three days from the hidden offices, and then shall your spirit be fortified. On the fourth day, you shall cleanse and prepare your chamber as soon as it is morning, immediately after dressing, the whole fasting. But see you do it in such a way that it will not be liable to disarrangement during the remainder of the day. Note that there must be no hangings, nor anything set crosswise, no tapestries, no hanging clothes, hats, bird-cages, bed curtains, &c. Above all, let the appointments be clean in every respect.
2. Ceremony
After supper pass in secret to your chamber, made ready as above; kindle a good fire; place a white cloth on the table, round which set three chairs, and before each chair, upon the table, let there be a wheaten roll and a glass full of fresh clear water. Lastly, draw up a chair and settee to the side of the bed and retire to rest, uttering the following conjuration:
Besticitum consolatio, veni ad me vertat Creon, Creon, Creon, cantor laudem omnipotentis et non commentur. Stat superior carta bient laudem omviestra principiem da montem et inimicos meos ô prostantis vobis et mihi dantes que passium fieri sincisibus.
The three persons, having arrived, will rest themselves near the fire, drinking, eating and finally thanking him or her who has entertained them; for if it be a young lady who performs this ceremony, three gentlemen will come; but if it be a man, three young ladies will appear. The said three persons will draw lots among each other to know which of them shall remain with you. If a man be the operator, she who wins will place herself in the arm-chair which you have set by the bed, and she will remain and commune with you until midnight, at which hour she will depart with her companions, without any need of dismissal. As regards the two others, they will keep themselves by the fire, while the other entertains you. So long as she remains you may question her upon any art or science, or upon what subject soever, and she will immediately give you a positive answer. You may also inquire of her whether she is aware of any hidden treasure, and she will instruct you as to its locality and the precise time suited to its removal. She will even appear there with her companions to defend you against the assaults of the Infernal Spirits who may have it in their possession. At parting, she will present you with a ring, which, worn on the finger, will render you lucky at play, while if it be placed upon the finger of any woman or girl, you shall there and then have your will with them. Observe, however, that you must leave your window open in order that they may enter.
This ceremony may be repeated frequently at the will of the operator. It must be acknowledged that the above experiment offers a large return for very small pains in the preparation, and hence it is very popular.
!
I don’t know, there’s just something about the specificity of this that cracks me up.
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Dated: 07.10 Comments: 0 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

Today I punched someone in the face. Sounds crazy I know, but it’s a fact. I was returning to the office with a co-worker, after lunch, when I was asked by a squatter/punk-type guy whether I “had any money for blah blah blah.” I responded with a simple and brusque “no” returning to my conversation (which, of all things, was about mega-churches). Said guy, unhappy with my response and lack of interest evidently, proceeded to kick me in the back of the leg. Weird right? So I turned on my heels and punched him full-on in the head.
“You what?” Yeah, ridiculous I know.
Believe me, I’m not proud of it, no matter what the The Boxer of Quirinal image above might lead you to think (I had to choose some image after all). It just happened. Instinct, or too many years of pent-up anger, I don’t know. There was a loud thwapping sound. The guy put his hand to his head, looked at me in grimacing confusion, and then continued on his way, as did I. The bizarre episode only lasted about 20 seconds. And yet…
I have not had a violent physical confrontation with another human in years. Many years. I can’t even remember the last to be honest. I imagine punching someone in the face probably once a day but am just not that kind of guy, or at least don’t think of myself as such.
In as much this interlude has effectively left a whole host of odd, forgotten, emotional and psychological shockwaves rippling through my mind. My general comfort-level is such that an argument between my girlfriend and I can make me lose my appetite. But actually punching a stranger full-on in the face, even if in retaliation? The whole thing just makes me feel out of sorts, and if I’m being honest, the testosterone-fueled invigoration, the vague embarrassment, the regret at losing my cool, the painful hand, the feeling of having stepped, however briefly, into the twilight zone (or reality you might argue)... I’d just as soon do without it.
We live, obviously, in a violent world. Violence is entertainment, news, comedy, tragedy, hobby, and profession here on planet Earth, today just as it always has been. So I guess feeling obliged, as an individual, to punch someone in the face every decade or so ought not to be so surprising. Perhaps, really, I ought to just count myself lucky, that the world has required so little violence from me to this point.
Anyhow, I’m not much of a diarist, as you know, and I apologize for this rude interruption of flow, but this episode is as curious and unexpected as any out-of-left-field ephemera I might normally be sharing. For me at least. So I thought I’d take the opportunity to ask you, my genteel and eminently civilized readers, when was the last time you actually had a violent physical confrontation with someone? And how did it leave you feeling?
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Dated: 07.09 Comments: 11 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

SciAm has an interesting article up about a saucer-shaped IFO called the wingless electromagnetic air vehicle (WEAV) that will (read might) “propel itself using electrodes that cover its surface to ionize the surrounding air into plasma.” Professor Subrata Roy says, “All of the materials needed to make this aircraft currently exist and plasma is the most abundant form of matter in the universe. If we can somehow tap into that in the future we should be able to fly anywhere.” I say, “perfect excuse for an artist’s conception.” More coverage here.
Dated: 07.08 Comments: 0 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

A notorious tease, he may pretend
not to be aware of you.
Just wait.
He must speak first. Then
you may begin to praise him.
Remember:
sincerity and naturalness
count for more than wit.
His jokes may strike you as
abstruse.
Only laugh if he does.
Gifts?
They say he’s mad for art,
but whether in the melting
elegiac mode of, say, this
Vase of Poppies
or, turning the mirror
to his own face, a bronze skull
gorging on a snake—
that is a matter of taste.
In any case, the expense
is what he notices.
What to wear.
Some authorities
still insist on black.
But really, in this modern age,
your best is all that is required.
—Tom Disch
Also: On Genius from Camp Concentration.
Dated: 07.08 Comments: 1 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

Ape Resistance. Imagine, if you will an already backward-leaning country, by some strange cast of the die, sliding full-tilt into dogmatic lunacy. Imagine the ascendance of a bona-fide Theocratic state which, above all, ruthlessly “discourages” any mention of evolution or natural selection. Imagine a scientific and non-believer community driven “underground.” The resultant resistance would need a clandestine symbology to identify one another in back-alleys and call others of like mind to arms, something to spray on cathedral walls and wheat paste across incense clouded metropoli.
In advance of this highly improbable possibility I hereby nominate a few pop-cultural symbols heretofore without specific meaning but none the less widely recognized as related to, respectively, the chimpanzee, the orangutan, and the gorilla. These are the symbols worn by the civilized primates on The Planet of the Apes and as such a film would surely be purged from the collective consciousness under an evolution-denying Theocracy, I believe they make the perfect samantics-free but association-rich pro-Darwinian statement. And now you, dear reader, can make that statement from the comfort of your own t-shirt.
Whether it is, in fact, a few of these t-shirts, surviving after humanity obliterates itself, that ultimately inspires the future planet-ruling ape civilization to adopt these symbols in the first place… (Pantheistic solipsism and all that) well, who can tell?
See below for all three designs.

Chimp Resistance, printed in white. See all your options here.

Orangutan Resistance, printed in medium grey. See all your options here.

Gorilla Resistance, printed in dark grey. See all your options here. Or check out all of the Nonist’s offerings.
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Dated: 07.06 Comments: 0 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

Some Geo. Mather’s Sons Inks: (left to right, top to bottom) Jacqueminot Red. Photo Brown. Old Gold. Fine Chocolate. Blue Black—Deep. Magenta. Peacock Blue. Permanent Purple—Bluish. Persian Orange. Carminated Red. Gloss Black. Light Green.
Slightly adapted from the handsome Price List of Type, Printing Machinery and Material. Manufactured and for Sale by the Printer’s Warehouse, G. Edw. Osborn & Co. 398 State St., - New Haven Conn. 1892.
Dated: 07.06 Comments: 0 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

If you’ve never seen E. Elias Merhige’s hallucinatory and gorgeous film Begotten, well, here it is. Admittedly this is a film not best watched on a computer screen on a lazy summer Sunday afternoon. This is a film meant to be watched alone, in February, at 2 am, on the biggest screen you’ve got, with the lights out and alarmingly potent chemicals of some kind coursing through your system. This is the full version, however, and almost certain to be taken down, so I figured I’d post it while the posting was good. Alternately, if you are faint of heart or simply have no patience for “experimental” film, you might try the yakety-yak version.
Dated: 07.06 Comments: 0 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

Came across a terrific bit of primate related reading today which I wanted to pass on. It’s a pdf titled PrimatePoetics hosted over at SocialFiction. The pamphlet posits that non-human primates have long been observed to use their own type of language in the wild, and that in captivity, those primates being taught human language, through signs, are in effect creating a new language altogether.
Quote: Our language, when it is passed on to a different species, becomes a new language. PrimatePoetics is born from the realization that this language should be appreciated in its own right, as the greatest revolution in literature since the invention of written Chinese 4000 years ago.
Regardless of your take on this assertion the pdf is well worth a read in that it’s a primer of sorts of the history of primate language study and offers an overview, on an “ape-by-ape basis,” of relevant milestones. Very interesting stuff. The illustration above is, of course, a visualization of what I imagine the great apes will say to us once they master their facility for language.
Dated: 07.05 Comments: 1 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

The image you see above is evidently a cabalistic (or qabalistic) symbol of the infinite. It contains within itself all the lines and curves necessary to represent the numbers 1 through 10, as is clearly visible by the added indicators in black. In Hermetic Qabalistic tradition the numbers themselves are representations of the 10 planes of reality, emanations arising from the Ain Suph (or infinite), which are collectively called the Sephiroth. These, as commonly depicted in the Tree of Life are called: Kether (1), Chokhmah (2), Binah (3), Daath, Chesed (4), Geburah (5), Tiphareth (6), Netzach (7), Hod (8), Yesod (9), Malkuth (10), and are each considered to be an emanation of the divine energy (or “divine light’) which ever flows from the unmanifest into manifestation.
Perhaps it is simply that I am uninitiated into the great mysteries, or that I am a disbelieving spiritually bereft heathen, but the “divine” use I immediately imagined for this symbol was something altogether different…

Makes a rather handsome digital clock display does it not?
Would work nicely in elevators as well I’d imagine.
Now, I understand that some of my readers may in fact be initiates into the deep complexities of these ancient and esoteric arts (perhaps some tenth-level clerics or pop singers lurk among us!) and in as much I wish to be as sensitive to their beliefs as I can manage. I certainly do not wish to offend! Live and let live (especially when dealing with wizards and mages and knowers of the unknowable). Be that as it may I really do feel that this symbol, no matter its origins, could be of real practical use to the digital display world…
So I offer this alternate design by way of sensitive compromise.

Sure, the buttons don’t do anything and the manual is written in an abstruce hermetic language (backwards most likely, in faded goat’s blood, only visible in a mercury mirror, on the solstice, by sheep’s fat candlelight) but still, it looks cool!
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Dated: 07.05 Comments: 2 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »

In case you missed it cover art for the third series of radically redesigned Penguin Classics have seen the light of day over at We Made This. You can see them in all their monochromatic glory here. (Thanks Pierce) Pictured above are two of my faves. On the left Orwell’s Books V. Cigarettes, and on the right, to my mind possibly one of the most perfect book covers ever created, Walter Benjamin’s The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. Both are by David Pearson. Check out series I and II, and hell, check out these for good measure.
Dated: 07.05 Comments: 1 Permanent link to this post: ≡ Email this post: »