The 13 Gates of the Necronomicon
Necronomicon
"Tyson isn't the first writer to attempt a full `translation' of the forbidden text, but his may be the most comprehensive."-Publishers Weekly
"Occult nonfiction author Tyson remains true to Lovecraft's spirit in this tribute to a master of horror."-LibraryJournal
"Scholarly horror, marvelously illustrated."-Kirkus
"This exhaustively researched volume reproduces and connects the details of the mythology originally created by the eldritch author."-www.Fangoria.com
Grimoire of the Necronomicon
"Grimoire of the Necronomicon is a classic treatment of an esoteric subject, and it deserves a wide reading audience. As an active Master of the Temple in the Golden Dawn, I found the information Tyson shared with the reader both educational and entertain- ing."-Lee Prosser, www.GhostVillage.com
Alhazred
"[For any reader] who appreciates Lovecraft's mythos, this homage to his work is a respectful tribute as well as an entertaining novel with a good mix of adventure and horror. -www.MorbidOutlook.com
Necronomicon Tarot
`Anne Stokes has done an excellent job of bringing together the essence of H.P. Lovecraft's work, along with the storyline presented by Donald Tyson, into a stunning deck."-Aeclectic Tarot, www.Aeclectic.net
"[Necronomicon Tarot] is most pleasantly creepy, and Lovecraft would have loved it." Colin Wilson, co-author of The Necronomicon: The Book of Dead Names
Portable Magic
"This is a refreshing change from deck-specific tarot guides or those which assume lots of room to lay out cards or lots of time to interpret results, and will attract any Wiccan with a small space and little time."-Midwest Book Review
Enochian Magic for Beginners
"[This is] a must read for anyone interested in the origins of our modern day practices ... a valuable first study and basic reference book on the Magic of the Angels."-The Wiccan/ Pagan Times, wwwtwpt.com
Donald Tyson is a resident of Nova Scotia, Canada. After graduating university, he developed an interest in the tarot, which led him to study all branches of the Western esoteric tradition. His first book, The New Magus, was published in 1988. He has written about such varied subjects as the runes, crystal and mirror scrying, astral travel, spirit evocation, spirit familiars, the theory of magic, the Kabbalah, and the Necronomicon. He designed the popular Necronomicon Tarot card deck, illustrated by Anne Stokes, and is the inventor of rune dice. In his spare time he enjoys hiking, kayaking, and woodworking.
The Messenger (Llewellyn January 1990)
Ritual Magic: What It Is & How To Do It (Llewellyn January 1992)
Three Books of Occult Philosophy (Llewellyn January 1992)
Scrying For Beginners (Llewellyn February 1997)
Enochian Magic for Beginners: The Original System of Angel Magic (Llewellyn September 2002)
Familiar Spirits: A Practical Guide for Witches & Magicians (Llewellyn January 2004)
The Power of the Word: The Secret Code of Creation (Llewellyn March 2004)
1-2-3 Tarot: Answers In An Instant (Llewellyn October 2004)
Necronomicon: The Wanderings of Alhazred (Llewellyn December 2004)
Alhazred: Author of the Necronomicon (Llewellyn July 2006)
Portable Magic: Tarot Is the Only Tool You Need (Llewellyn October 2006)
Soul Flight: Astral Projection and the Magical Universe (Llewellyn March 2007)
Grimoire of the Necronomicon (Llewellyn August 2008)
Runic Astrology (Llewellyn 2009)
The Fourth Book of Occult Philosophy (Llewellyn 2009)
The hand-painted grayscale illustrations in this book were created by my wife, jenny, who is a better graphic artist than I am. They were done according to my specifications, so please direct any praise to her, and any blame to me. The black-and-white line drawings are my own work.
Introduction ... 1
Gasterg Gates: prrsogs
First Gate: The Great Races ... 17
Second Gate: Unique Personalities . . . 45
Third Gate: Gods and Devils ... 107
Fourth Gate: Monsters ... 149
SuWerg Gates: places
Fifth Gate: Human Habitations ... 173
Sixth Gate: Alien Dwellings ... 217
Seventh Gate: The Dreamlands ... 231
Eighth Gate: Other Worlds ... 253
1Ilesterg Gates: Triggs
Ninth Gate: Books ... 269
Tenth Gate: Talismans ... 297
Eleventh Gate: Oddities ... 315
Twelfth Gate: Abominations ... 345
nortIerg Gate: Sorceries
Thirteenth Gate: Rites and Incantations ... 365
Mythos Works by Lovecraft ... 385
Bibliography ... 403
Index ... 405
The City of the Book
"For he who passes the gateways always wins a shadow, and never again can he be alone. "
-H. P. Lovecraft, The Book
he unique mythology created by the American writer of horror fiction, Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-193 7) will in this work be referred to as the Necronomicon mythos. The more common title, the Cthulhu mythos, is inaccurate since Cthulhu is not the central figure of the tales, nor does he represent all aspects of the mythos. Lovecraft intertwined four thematic threads in his stories, only one of which directly concerns Cthulhu. However, the Necronomicon book touches upon all four of them. These threads cannot be easily separated since they cross over at various points like a woven fabric, but they can be distinguished.
One thread, of which Cthulhu is a part, concerns alien races from distant star systems or other dimensions of space and time that contested with each other for the rule of the primordial Earth long before the evolution of mankind. They still wait in secret places for the stars to "come right" in the heavens so that they can emerge and displace us as masters of this world. These beings are not evil. They are merely aloof from the concerns of humanity. They regard us as we might regard a species of bacteria.
Another mythic thread involves ancient sorceries, demons, witches, and the dark doings of magicians. Even though Lovecraft himself claimed to have contempt for occultism and a disinterest in religion, he was inherently mystical in his thinking. His stories are filled with references to witchcraft and black magic. Lovecraft looked upon magic as a kind of alien science. A handful of human beings were capable of manipulating it, but could never truly understand it, and if they tried, they usually went insane. The author of the Necronomicon, Abdul Alhazred, was characterized by Lovecraft as the mad Arab poet of Yemen-but whether his study of magic drove him mad, or whether his madness enabled his grasp of occult secrets hidden from sane men, is not made clear.
Another thread of the mythos is concerned with the exploration of the dreamlands by dream travelers-those who remain conscious and aware while dreaming. Today, this is known as lucid dreaming, and is generally accepted as a real phenomenon. In Lovecraft's time lucid dreaming was not widely recognized. Lovecraft wrote about men who consciously explore the mysterious and dangerous lands of their dreams in the same way that waking men embarked on expeditions to distant and unknown regions of the Earth. More powerful dreamers can go further into the dreamlands, and can learn arcane secrets available through no other source, for the dreamlands hold much lore of both men and alien races that has been lost to the material world over the centuries through neglect, decay, fires, wars and geological upheavals.
The final thread of the mythos is a dark one occupied with death, decay, corruption, the grave, ghouls, and the reanimation of the dead. These subjects fascinated Lovecraft to the point of obsession. By writing about them, he exorcised them from his own nightmares. Both his
father and his mother had gone insane, and ended their days locked up in an asylum. Lovecraft always dreaded the possibility that his own mind, so strangely unlike the minds of other men, would eventually fall prey to this hereditary weakness. Related to his dread of madness was a horror of genetic degeneration from inbreeding, or breeding with things not quite human, resulting in deformity, idiocy, and even cannibalism. Lovecraft suffered from the neurotic conviction that his own face was hideously deformed, a fixation instilled into him at a young age by his mother. This caused him to avoid the daylight and crowds, and instead wander the streets of his native Providence late at night and linger alone in graveyards. He was fascinated with the past, with graves and monuments, and with old buildings, and half-believed himself the reincarnation of an Englishman from the eighteenth century.
There are many ways to approach this strange and often frightening mythological universe. It is possible to read all of Lovecraft's stories and poems for the details and hints of lore they contain. More prosaic minds might prefer to study the shelves of books of literary criticism that delve analytically into the artistic merit and psychological meaning of Lovecraft's fiction. Another avenue to understanding lies in the history of Lovecraft's personal life and his interactions with other fantasy writers of his period, expounded in such exhaustive detail in Lovecraft's thousands of letters and in his nu merous biographies. Yet another approach is through role-playing games set within the Lovecraft mythos. Finally, there are those who choose to employ Lovecraft's writings as the basis for a system of practical magic, and as the foundation for a new religion.
The use of Lovecraft's story elements to compose a workable and coherent system of modern ritual magic is of comparatively recent vintage. Kenneth Grant, the leader of one branch of the Ordo Templi Orientis, may be regarded as one of the godfathers of this curious child of the mythos. In 1994 he published the book The Outer Gateways, which examines the Lovecraft mythos in a serious way as the partial basis for a new system of esoteric belief and practice. On the first page of the first chapter of the book, he made this bold statement: "Said to have been written by a mad Arab named Al Hazred, the Necronomicon actually exists on a plane accessible to those who either consciously like Crowley, or unconsciously like Lovecraft have succeeded in penetrating it."
Grant suffered a good deal of derision and criticism for asserting the reality of the Necronomicon. He is regarded as a serious occultist, and his ideas about Lovecraft's mythos caused him to lose credibility in some quarters. However, in retrospect it was inevitable that sooner or later Lovecraft's mythos would catch the attention of Western magicians. It is pregnant with meaning on all levels, and provides a cohesive set of gods and devils that are in many ways surprisingly modern. The Old Ones are beings that dwell in the spaces between the stars, and who travel through the aether of space, or through dimensional portals between worlds. They have much in common with the modern mythology of UFOs, which supposes that the Earth was visited in the past, and continues to be observed, by beings from other worlds who remain in the shadows, but who sometimes abduct human beings for study, or transport them to their worlds for instruction. Almost a century ago Lovecraft wrote much the same thing about the races he called the Mi-Go and the Yithians.
Those who claim to be abducted by UFOs sometimes vanish through portals, or are lifted up on beams of light into disk-shaped ships, just as in the Bible the Old Testament prophets were said to be lifted and carried through the sky to other dimensions of reality by whirlwinds or strange chariots of fire. The aliens subject those they abduct to scientific tests, probing them in a clinically dispassionate way as a human scientist might probe a white lab rat. The terror of the abductees does not touch the emotions of the aliens, who seem devoid of compassion. Similarly, Lovecraft's Old Ones are indifferent to the needs or fears of human beings. They use them for various purposes when humans are able to provide useful services, but just as casually discard them when they prove troublesome.
Another feature of the spontaneous modern mythology of UFO visitations and abductions is the use of human women to breed a race of hybrid children, who share genetic components from both species, and who possess physical characteristics both human and alien. This is a very ancient myth. Demons were said in early Christian lore to visit women in their beds and impregnate them, so that the women gave birth to monsters. Even earlier than this, the ancient Greeks and Egyptians believed that the gods sometimes engendered children on mortal women, and in the Book of Enoch mention is made of the Watchers who lusted after mortal women and who descended to Earth to take them as wives.
The same theme of human-alien hybrids recurs in Lovecraft's mythos. The Old Ones impregnate mortal women to breed hybrids that they can employ as their agents on the earth. The Deep Ones seek to breed children with the men and women of the town of Innsmouth, whom they take in marriage. Why they need these hybrids is not clear, but it may be speculated that they are required to reinvigorate the genetic material of the Deep Ones, to prevent it falling into decadence and decay.
These similarities between Lovecraft's mythos and the spontaneous modern mythology of UFOs serve to illustrate that Lovecraft's fiction contains material of deep significance on the subconscious level that may be employed for various purposes, among them religious worship and practical magic. Lovecraft, through his dreams, tapped into a wellspring of meaning, which he cloaked in terms of interactions between humanity and dwellers in the depths-not only the depths of the oceans and the earth, but the depths of space and time, the depths of other dimensions of reality. The true depths tapped into by Lovecraft were those of the subconscious mind.
Lovecraft's universe is epitomized in his greatest creation, the dreaded Necronomicon, a book of the dead that the modern world refuses to let die. The Necronomicon is the beating heart of the mythos, and to study the book is to study the mythos. The Necronomicon is neither wholly fiction nor wholly real, but an uncanny merging of truth and fantasy that is almost impossible for the mind to capture or express, since the boundaries that define it continue to evolve. No one can say exactly what the Necronomicon contains. It is a history of the ages on Earth before the rise of mankind. It is the xenobiology of alien races from beyond the stars. It is a textbook of arcane chemistry. It is a grimoire of the necromantic arts. It is poetry, it is philosophy, it is the blasphemous bible of Lovecraft's demon-haunted world.
Those who would dismiss the Necronomicon as no more than a fictional device created by Lovecraft on the spur of the moment to serve as window-dressing for his fantasies have failed to consider the history of this book of the dead that refuses to die. Why would individuals have taken it upon themselves to enter its title in the card catalogs of major world libraries and in the lists of rare book dealers and auction houses? As a mere joke? Perhaps that is what they told themselves at the time, unaware that they served as the instruments of a higher purpose.
What is true of the Necronomicon is equally true of the Old Ones, the race of gods from alien stars that ruled this planet for aeons before human beings stood erect and learned to fear them. The Old Ones are dismissed by cynics as no more than a fantasy of Lovecraft's, yet they continue to resonate with undiminished power in the human psyche more than seven decades after the death of their creator. Did Lovecraft really create the Old Ones, or did he merely glimpse them moving through the terrifying caverns and sea depths of his nightmares? Was the Necronomicon a fantasy, or the echo of a book that stands on the shelves of libraries not of this world?
There are many who believe that Lovecraft was a sleeping prophet who traveled between dimensions and across the gulfs of space and time in his dreams. Lovecraft himself mentions in numerous letters that he drew upon his dreams for the subjects of his stories. The very name "Necronomicon" was not invented by Lovecraft, but was heard by him in a dream. Its philological structure has defied analysis, leading to dozens of different interpretations, but it carries an undeniable resonance in the mind, as do many of the topics of Lovecr
aft's stories.
It may be that Lovecraft's lost cities and alien worlds exist, as does the Necronomicon itself, slightly out of phase with our mundane reality, yet accessible by sensitive minds in dreams, where the boundaries between dimensions are crossed. For Lovecraft, dreams were more real than reality. He wrote himself into several of his stories in the character of Randolph Carter, an explorer of dreams who possessed the ability to remain selfaware and travel where he desired. There seems little doubt that Lovecraft was engaged in unconscious astral projection, and that many of his vivid dreams represented travel across the astral planes.
The Necronomicon has astral reality. So do the Old Ones and their horrifying broods and servants, and the other races that ruled the Earth in its infancy. Whether Lovecraft perceived an existing reality and recorded it in his stories, or whether the power of his stories resonating in millions of human minds created the astral reality, is a chickenand-egg puzzle that may never be solved. I suspect it is both-that the Old Ones and the Necronomicon existed in some form on the astral level before Lovecraft wrote them down, but that by capturing the popular imaginations of millions, Lovecraft was able to bring them more firmly into our local astral environment, where they presently subsist, so close to our physical reality that it is almost possible to reach out and touch them.
One of the purposes of this book is to gather the essential elements of Lovecraft's mythos that lend themselves to use in practical esoteric ways such as dream scrying, astral projection, and spirit communication. It is not a grimoire of mythos magic. Those looking for a grimoire will find it in my Necronomicon Grimoire (Llewellyn, 2008). The present book is a compendium of source material upon which such a system of magic can be built by those who wish to construct it. The material gathered here is the matrix for the Necronomicon, which existed only on the astral level until Lovecraft scried its name in his dream travels and recorded a description of it and a scattering of its contents in his fiction.