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Mogg Morgan Mandrake Speaks Review 2008
An excellent review of the Red Goddess has
just appeared in Mandrake Speaks, the Mandrake Press of Oxford newsletter.
An indepth look at the text by the highly regarded Mogg Morgan:
The Red Goddess by Peter
Grey (review)258pp,
Hardback 2008 £37 + p&p
This is a beautiful, provocative, thought-provoking book, one man’s
journey in search of the obscure object of his desire – full of
odd typography, robust, sometimes rough language and a £37 price
tag.
Using the latest research from books such as "Strange Angel"
, "Love and Rockets" and "The Unknown God" the author
blends his own narrative around that which he sees as the three pillars
of the Babalonian mythos – Enochian Magick, Aleister Crowley and
Jack Parsons. Thus one reads: "Eunuchs have been used traditionally
to serve the Goddess, often as sodomitic dog priests. That name is not
a slur but most likely comes from their dog position sex. These were important
priests who served the ancient Love Goddess by sacrificing their reproductive
power. They are no longer men. They cannot penetrate the mystery. I will
not advocate the joys of self castration or the smooth root of the Skopsie,
but it is certainly one way to serve Our Lady. I prefer Magick with the
balls to push shaft deep into the crimson petals of the Goddess."
Babalon is modern goddess, one of the most recent to emerge from the cauldron
of serendipity. Even so, some, Peter Grey amongst them, would claim she
has antique roots. She remerged in the modern world via the writings of
Aleister Crowley, who is also responsible for renovating the old English
spelling as Babalon, which has a significant numerology of 156 as opposed
to 165. For Babylon, is an ancient Mesopotamian city, the Bête Noire
of the ancient Hebrews, and therefore a natural cipher for corruption
and hubris in the strange apocalyptic end game of the Biblical New Testament.
I’m talking of the Book of Revelation, a book that exerted a powerful
influence on Crowley’s imagination and one way or another figured
large in his new Thelemic mythos.The Book of Revelation is widely believed
to contain much hidden and indeed Kabbalistic symbolism, So no surprise
that the "anti-gods" of that book turn out to be, according
to Thelemites, the true corrective of the modern age.
The goddesses of ancient Babylon were Innana, Ishtar and Astarte. These
are "Red Goddesses" in more ways than one – and possible
role models for the modern woman who is powerful, self sufficient and
above all sexual. Whether modern "scarlet woman" is, as Herodotus
suggested, willing to give herself to any man for any small coin, seems
unlikely these days somehow. So in as much as the author of Revelation
was saying that it’s the goddesses that really bring society down,
Crowley and the Thelemites say the opposite.Few would argue that Peter’s
Red Goddess is a Mesopotamian creation. Most of us accept Mesopotamia,
as the "cradle of civilization" and the dispersal hub for many
important things, writing, astrology, technology, religion, etc etc.
I must admit my own dealings with "The Red Goddess" are in her
Egyptian territory (see "The Bull of Ombos") Peter devotes a
short chapter to the exploration of her possible Egyptian roots, although
this is maybe a clear example of where the works of the Victorian Egyptophile
Gerald Massey provide an inadequate guide to the material.AFAIK, Egypt,
did indeed benefit from early contacts with Mesopotamia before the rise
of the Pharaohs (i.e. 4000BCE) but its main development was independent.
So for example although writing may have been invented in Mesopotamia,
it was also invented quite independently in Egypt, presumably for the
same imperative. The earliest reference in Egypt to the Semitic goddesses
Astarte and Anat belongs to the reign of Thutmoses c1500bce, both love
goddesses were married to ultimate "Red Bull" Seth. But my Egyptian
"Red Goddess" has to be Hathor, a goddess as old as time, goddess
of the cattle cult (hence the horns) she is indeed sensual, sexual and
intoxicated. (See "Hathor’s Secrets") When old man Ra
is down in the dumps she lifts her skirts and gives him a laugh.Having
said something of the mythology of Innana et al, Peter soon leaves behind
the ancient world. I definitely wanted more info on Mesopotamian religion,
as his analysis is consistently interesting and engaging.
He then follows the tracks of the Belle Dame Sans Merci, through the writings
of her numerous modern devotees, including John Dee, Marquis de Sade,
Jack Parsons and indeed many a modern mage, including his own dealing
with she who must be obeyed, which brings to mind the lines of the song
"my knuckles are bleeding and my knees are raw". This reworking
of the Crowleyian material on the nature of the scarlet women, is seen
largely through his poetry and forms "The Red Goddess’ "
vibrant core.Peter has no time for the post modern obsession with transgender
and reclaiming the "blossoms of bone". "Eunuchs" he
tells us, "cannot penetrate the mystery." But there again for
me, Babalon might be like "post porn modernist" Annie Sprinkle
–the love of whose life is famously the tortured Les, a female to
male transsexual.
So all in all an interesting and provocative monograph; worthy I would
think of some wider circulation. It might be that this first edition which
is perhaps aimed at the "collector" for whom "the medium
is the message." Its white wibeline cover with red embossing is very
striking; there are tipped in illustrations, one in colour. And indeed
interior text is black and occasional red. Even so I’d be happy
to read it in a standard hardback "Starfire" mode or even a
good trade paperback. But whatever way you read it, it’s definitely
worth a spin. [Mogg]
Back>>
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RED
GODDESS SOLSTICE EDITION
The passionate history of Babalon, the Holy Whore.
More >>
MANDRAKE
SPEAKS REVIEW 2008
Review of The Red Goddess by Mogg Morgan of Mandrake of Oxford.
More >>
AVALONIA
REVIEW
Review of The Red Goddess by Sorita D'Este
of Avalonia Books.
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DR
JULIAN VAYNE REVIEW
Review of The Red Goddess by Chaos Magick
author Dr Julian Vayne.
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RED GODDESS DEVOTEE EDITION

The limited 49 copy fine binding
edition.
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