The Temple of Set II

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The Temple of Set II Page 31

by Michael A Aquino


  entitled No Longer on the Map: Discovering Places That Never Were (NY: Viking Press, 1972).

  This book recounts the most famous, infamous, and occasionally slapstick cases of continents, islands, sea-

  passages, cities, and civilizations whose existence was at one time taken for granted - and then which, after the

  wasting of lots of time, money, and sailing expeditions, were grudgingly and ruefully acknowledged to be puffs of

  fluff.Fortunately Atlantis and Mu/Lemuria are not in the book, else there would be room for little besides in view of

  the mammoth amount of material penned about those two turkeys. But there are chapters on El Dorado, the

  Northwest Passage, a variety of R’yleh-like now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t islands, the Seven Cities of Cibola, a

  variety of other geographical curiosities.

  Now the fun thing about Australia is that it was presumed to be there long before it was discovered. The story

  begins with the Alexandrian Greek astronomer and geographer Claudius Ptolemy. In his day sensible scientists

  knew the world ( ge) was round, and it was proposed by Krates of Mallos in the 2nd century BCE that there had to be

  roughly equal land-masses on all surfaces in order to “balance” the known portion ( oikoumene). Otherwise the

  world wouldn’t stay upright [the Greeks hadn’t got gravity, orbital rotation, etc. quite worked out yet].

  Ptolemy is most famous in history for his bright but wrong idea that the Sun and planets revolve around the

  Earth. He had another wrong idea about Terra Australis, which appears for the first time on a 1482 edition of one of

  his maps as a gigantic land mass occupying the bottom of the globe, and of which Africa is a northern peninsula. [In

  the 7th century BCE an Egyptian Pharaoh had sent a Phoenician expedition around the Cape of Good Hope, but

  Ptolemy shrugged that off. To be fair to him, so did Herodotus. Ignoring inconvenient data is not only a modern

  phenomenon.]

  It is commonly supposed that medieval Europeans thought the world was flat. In fact, following the authority of

  Aristotle, it was assumed [in learned circles, at least] to be spherical. Since God could hold the planet together in any

  way He chose to, however, it was no longer thought necessary to have land masses just for the sake of weight-

  distribution. Australia went off the map.

  Besides, argued theologians, God would not have been so wasteful of space to create all that land without

  people, and if there were people there, they would be heathen and in need of conversion, and if no one could get to

  them, they couldn’t be converted, which was outrageous. There couldn’t possibly be any other people besides those

  within reach of Christianity. It was definitely better to keep Australia off the map.

  [A little later America was (re)discovered, and there were indeed native people there. Some theologians

  proposed that these “Indians” were not true people but an evil race created by the Devil. Orthodox dogma said that

  only God could create, however, so the native inhabitants of the Americas went on to receive the blessings of the

  Christian missionary efforts. As this issue of the Scroll goes to press, the Catholic Church is proceeding to canonize

  Junipero Serra for his California missionary activities, despite the protests of native Americans who recall the

  religious persecution of their ancestors somewhat less reverently.]

  Terra Australis was decreed not to exist because it was unreachable, and it was unreachable because the

  equator was decreed to be uncrossable because it was thought to be hot and burnt-out. One day someone sailed

  across it at sea and noticed that he didn’t burn up. After the general astonishment died down, enthusiasts such as

  Portugal’s Prince Henry the Navigator commissioned all sorts of mapping expeditions.

  Once Columbus rediscovered America, it seemed that old Krates was right. There had to be more land sprinkled

  around the globe until one got round to the oikoumene again. In the 16th & 17th centuries CE Terra Australis

  Incognita was re-added to the map. So far no one had actually bumped into it yet.

  There were a couple of near-misses. In 1545 the Spaniard Inigo Ortis de Retes discovered New Guinea and

  supposed it to be a northern peninsula of TAI. The Peruvian Alvaro de Mendana de Neyra found some islands in

  1567, which he named the Solomons in hopes that he would find similar treasure there. [Perhaps it was lunchtime

  when Captain Cook reached Hawaii.]

  In 1603, having fired up the Pope and Philip III of Spain with tales of Pacific treasures to be reaped, de Retes’

  lieutenant, Pedro Fernandes de Quieros, went out to try again. He came back with wild tales about a new continent

  larger than Europe and packed with more gold than Peru. He called it Austrialia del Espiritu Santo and said that he

  had formally laid the cornerstone for a city named New Jerusalem there. Actually he had found the New Hebrides,

  but no one believed him anyway.

  Meanwhile the cartographers were having fun. On the maps of the time TAI was positioned everywhere from

  underneath Africa to underneath South America, and everywhere in between. Guesses ranged from island-size to

  - 137 -

  something big enough to reach from Cape Horn to the Cape of Good Hope. The famous Turkish Piri Reis map joins

  South America to TAI, places 6-horned oxen there, and adds the notation that “the Portuguese infidels have

  recorded it in their maps”.

  In 1613 the Dutchman Dirck Hartog published his sighting of the Australian coast, and thereafter the Dutch

  poked around a bit. In 1629, in the best European tradition, they took a whirl at starting a colony. Captain Francis

  Pelsart set off from Java with a small fleet. Unfortunately he took a Haarlem pirate by the name of Jerome Cornelius

  along. The expedition crashed on the Abrolhos Islands (in Portuguese: “Keep-Your-Eyes-Open Islands”). Ramsay

  reports how it all turned out:

  Exactly what happened then is not clear; whether Pelsart took some of the party and sailed back to get

  help, or whether Cornelius held his mutiny on land and drove out Pelsart and those loyal to him. In any case

  Cornelius ended up in control. He killed some 40 of the men to save water supplies, took over all of the

  women for himself and his followers, and held a brief reign that was a succession of drunken orgies. He also

  killed several more of the men on suspicion of disloyalty to him, including the two ship’s carpenters, and

  was thus unable to carry out his plan of salvaging material from the wrecks, building another ship, and

  becoming a pirate. When Captain Pelsart and his men unexpectedly returned, Cornelius was overthrown

  and was summarily tried and hanged.

  As colonizing goes this was not exactly a high point. The Dutch more or less said to Hell with it, and the rest of

  the world agreed. Cartographers of the 17th century were accustomed to map only known areas, leaving unexplored

  areas blank. So Australia went back off the map for another 100 years.

  Of course everyone knew it was still down there somewhere. The fantasy writers of the day knew a good thing

  when they saw it, grinding out many tales set there of which Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels is the best-known.

  The basket-cases checked in too: In 1676 the Franciscan monk Gabriel de Foigny, already notorious for his

  scandalous life, published La Terre Australe Connue in which he revealed that the natives of Australia were

  hermaphrodites who used a special breed of long-nosed pigs to root in straight lines, thereby tilling the ground for

/>   them.

  This nonsense went on until 1768, with a succession of maps showing TAI here, there, or nowhere, and New

  Zealand and Tasmania similarly growing or shrinking in size at the whim of the cartographer. Finally the famous

  Captain Cook went down to explore and chart the area, and he got a grip on Australia. It went back on the map, and

  in reasonably correct proportions, and thereafter its exploration, settlement, and political history leaves the realm of

  magic and enters that of conventional history.

  ____________________________________________________

  Part V: Classified Introduction to PERRO: The Novel114

  XXXVIII/2003

  Paul Kantner shot bolt-upright in his bed, his eyes frozen and unfocused, teeth clenched: awake. Yes, awake -

  It had happened again.

  The panic began to recede. He felt his muscles relax; he saw the room, smelled perspiration, tasted blood,

  realized with annoyance that he must have bitten his lip. He swung his body off the bed, scowled at the twisted

  sheets, and walked unsteadily into the bathroom.

  The cold shower helped his body, but the ghost of the dream was still there:

  * * *

  He was standing on Hollywood Boulevard. It had to be the Boulevard, because nowhere else could you feel

  that sodden atmosphere of dreams, glamor, failure, corruption - at once the thrill of being There, at the nerve center

  of Fame, yet you can’t touch it, your fingers press against the cold stars of the dead stars; they are an eternity away.

  But above him -

  Above him - it had somehow been there all along - the ... machine. Machine? What other word ..? It was high,

  distant, perhaps ten thousand feet in the air. But he couldn’t be sure, because it enveloped the entire Los Angeles

  Basin like some gigantic black amoeba of leathermetal, pulsing quietly, wetly. But it was not endless, because there

  to the far south was still a sliver of bright blue sky.

  Transfixed, he clutched the hand - her hand, Lilith’s hand; she was there with him, her hair cascading in the

  electric wind of the machine, her face darkly glowing in its blazing pulses. He had turned, then, slowly, to smile at

  her: This is a great dream.

  But she shook her head and laughed. “It’s no dream, lover.”

  114 [The unclassified version by Paul Kantner, within the novel, can be ordered from the Jefferson Starship website:

  http://www.jeffersonstarshipsf.com/main.htm]

  - 138 -

  It was somehow very important that he answer her, but he was whirled away to stare at a 1949 Mercury, garish

  in candy-apple paint, cruising down the Boulevard toward them, its ancient AM radio blaring tinny, low-fi music

  (though he couldn’t make out the tune). Now the car was still, but the music must have continued, because two

  youths, a boy in a plastic bodysuit and a girl with green hair, were suddenly beside it, music-swaying, staring up at

  the machine. They obviously didn’t see the door.

  But Paul did, because Lilith guided his eyes to it. Curving down from, yet oddly separate from the machine, a

  rectangle forcing the sky apart around it, distorting everything, even Lilith’s still-waving hair, which was now

  angular. Moving in angles, with electricity, she drew him towards the opening.

  The Boulevard remained an inert spectator, motionless save for the dancing forms next to the Mercury, silent

  but for the music which must have been there for them. Falling towards the door in the sky, Paul looked slowly to

  one side, then the other, and was rewarded, preposterously, with reflections of Lilith and himself, both in leather

  S&M costumes, in Frederick’s of Hollywood’s display-window. But it was too hot to be wearing them, he knew,

  because he was gasping with the heat, tearing the leather away from his body that now shone, like Lilith’s, with wet

  electricity, which he also tried to brush from his arms, but it ran ahead of his fingers over his body.

  Lilith, now completely a sculpture of electrical angles, was pulling him, finally, ultimately, through the -

  * * *

  Paul Kantner turned off the shower, ran a towel impatiently over his body, and padded back out into the

  bedroom, where Albert Einstein smiled fuzzily at him, riding, as always, his bicycle across the M.I.T. campus, frozen

  forever in that faded wall-poster. Paul rummaged in the bedside drawer for his rimless, rectangular glasses - as

  much his trademark as Indiana Jones’ fedora, he supposed - and winked back at a now-crisp Albert through them.

  The Sun, he saw from his window, had just crept above Mount Diablo over in the East Bay, and was sending

  warm rays of golden light across San Francisco to break, finally, against the red towers of the Bridge. He never

  ceased to marvel at the contrast between the two worlds on either side of the Golden Gate: the bustling cosmopolis

  to the east, the Tolkienesque crags and seascape to the west.

  For perhaps the tenth time in so many days he considered the dream, or nightmare, or whatever-it-was. At

  first he had dismissed it as the reverie of a brain pretty well saturated, he granted, with science-fiction imagery. But

  now a slight worry had begun to creep in. The same dream, too many times. What the hell.

  He sat down on the mangled bed, found the phone on the floor next to it, buried under a pillow. At last it was

  the date; the thing should finally be here. He began to dial ...

  * * *

  It had begun with Blows Against the Empire, that 1970 spaceflight-of-fancy album which had won Paul

  Kantner both a Hugo Award nomination (which he knew about) and a Defense Intelligence Agency file (which he

  didn’t).

  DIA, located across the Anacostia River from Washington, D.C., was the Defense Department’s in-house

  answer to the civilian Central Intelligence Agency. CIA, after years of more sensationalism and media glamor than it

  cared for, had been rewarded with a good deal of Executive and Congressional watchdoggery. DIA reported only to

  the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, because it had so-far-successfully maintained that its only

  concerns were strategic national defense intelligence.

  But in the aftermath of the 1969 Apollo-11 Moon-landing, the National Aeronautics & Space Administration’s

  civilian funding for its sensible but unglamorous Space Shuttle program had begun to dry up. NASA did what many

  another desperate agency has done under such circumstances; it went knocking on the doors of the Pentagon. Could

  DoD help with the bills?

  Yes, it could. But there was a price. Those old, quaint ideas about peaceful use of space, about shuttles to carry

  civilian research and commercial packages, even tourists, as a possible prelude to orbital space colonies? - off the

  table. The shuttles will now be doing - our business. Special satellites. For intelligence, for secure communications,

  for space-based defense. You don’t have a need to know exactly what they do. Your job is just to get them up there

  and keep them there.

  None of which was known by, or of the slightest concern to Paul Kantner when he wrote and sang a series of

  songs about hijacking the United States’ first functional spaceship for pacifistic planetary touring. However DIA,

  which now had assumed a counterintelligence mission regarding the “new” NASA, decided that it was concerned

  about him. Was he serious? Wasn’t that Jefferson Airplane of his one of those agitation-bands that had worked

  right along with Jane Fonda and Daniel Berrigan to fuck up the Vietnam War? Turn an entire generation of once-r />
  well-bred Eisenhower kids into long-haired acidheads? Now that the war is falling to pieces, are we going to have to

  worry about interference with our space programs?

  In April 1971 the Kantner file was tasked to the Missile & Space Intelligence Command (MSIC) of DIA’s

  ambiguously-named Directorate for Analysis & Production (DI), where it was eventually Compartmented and

  ultimately, on January 17, 1972, designated with an MJ-prefix, removing it instantly from DIA’s normal Intelligence

  Library tracking system.

  DI/MSIC/MJ agents thus carefully followed the progress of Kantner and his band, now the Jefferson Starship,

  through the 1970s. Their tours, interviews, lyrics, and private lives were annotated to the file and scheduled for

  periodic analysis.

  - 139 -

  By 1975 MJ’s interest had lessened somewhat. The NASA security issues raised by Blows showed no signs of

  materializing, and while several additional Kantner space-themes had been introduced, all were clearly in the realm

  of fantasy. That was, until ...

  _____________________

  Part VI: PERRO Alive!

  Leaked from highly-suspect sources 2013 under blanket anonymity.

  All the following strictly denied by all the individuals and organizations herein.

  Exactly thirty years ago PERRO introduced the idea of covert mass mind control by technological means

  (“Fred”). As developed in that record and novel, Fred, a “black box” connected between guitars and amplifiers, was

  used to create a sort of dreamy ecstasy in concert crowds unaware of the device. A malicious U.S. government

  became aware of its effectiveness, and sought to steal both it and presumably the telepaths (Paul Kantner and Grace

  Slick, alias “Lilith”) for Cold War black operations exploitation. After Grace paid a psychically-revitalizing visit to

  Mount Shasta, the two of them fled to Australia, and then, cornered by pursuers, into space.

  This made me wonder whether something like that were indeed possible, and that set me on the research path

  that ultimately resulted in my MindWar (MW) project. Not a plug-in amplifier box, but an entire interrelated system

  of physical forces, capable of not just inducing vague, aimless euphoria, but reaching right back into the core of

 

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