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Do What Thou Wilt

Page 61

by Lawrence Sutin


  “They would laugh…” Lawrence Sutin, interview with Daphne Harris, March 1990.

  “I treated him…” Ibid.

  “He stole sugar…” Ibid.

  “this house will…” Rod Davies, “Crowley in Hastings: Last Days of the Great Beast,” Warburg Collection.

  “Then out of the blue…” Ibid.

  “dressed in a magnificent…” Ibid.

  “I was eight…” Oliver Wilkinson, “Aleister Crowley Rest In?”, in Colin Wilson, ed. Men of Mystery: A Celebration of the Occult (London: Star Books, 1977), p. 95.

  “Aleister Crowley has…” Ibid., p. 94.

  “Crowley’s belief in…” Ibid., p. 99.

  “in return for magical…” Quoted in Symonds, The Beast 666, p. 578.

  “The paunchy, seedy…” Kenneth Grant, Remembering Aleister Crowley (London: Skoob Books, 1991), pp. 61–62.

  “He would draw a…” Kenneth Grant, The Magical Revival (New York: Weiser, 1972), p. 93.

  “Crowley told me…” Kenneth Grant, Remembering Aleister Crowley, p. 47.

  “exoteric”, “esoteric” Kenneth Grant, The Magical Revival, pp. 2–3.

  “I was beginning…” Kenneth Grant, Remembering Aleister Crowley, p. 41.

  “Dion Fortune—Public Bat…” Crowley, March 30, 1939, diary entry, 1939 Diary, O.T.O. Archives.

  “My mentality always…” Dion Fortune, letter to Crowley, January 8, 1942, quoted in Janine Chapman, Quest for Dion Fortune (York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1993), p. 153.

  “Crowley was sixteen…” Ibid., p. 156.

  “With her I had…” Crowley, letter to Frederic Mellinger, n.d. [c. March 1946], O.T.O. Archives.

  “Probably the best way…” The Story of Dion Fortune as told to Charles Fielding and Carr Collins (Star & Cross Publication, distributed by Weiser, 1985), p. 157.

  “The acknowledgment…” Dion Fortune, letter to Crowley, March 14, 1945, quoted in Kenneth Grant, Remembering Aleister Crowley, pp. 33–4.

  “The only man…” Gerald B. Gardner, Witchcraft Today (New York: Magical Childe, 1982), p. 47.

  “I accepted the challenge…” Doreen Valiente, The Rebirth of Witchcraft (London: Robert Hale, 1989), p. 61.

  “borrowed wholesale…” Aidan A. Kelly, Crafting the Art of Magic, Book 1: A History of Modern Witchcraft, 1939–1964 (Saint Paul: Llewellyn, 1991), p. 174.

  “he had been inside…” Gerald B. Gardner, Witchcraft Today, p. 47.

  “refused to be bossed…” J. L. Bracelin, Gerald Gardner: Witch (London: Octagon Press, 1960), p. 174.

  “a dirty-minded…” Quoted in Doreen Valiente, Witchcraft for Tomorrow (London: Robert Hale, 1983), p. 17.

  “I tried to steady…” E. M. Butler, Paper Boats: An Autobiography (London: Collins, 1959), pp. 167–8.

  “and his voice…” Ibid., p. 168.

  “it would need a Kafka…” Ibid., p. 169.

  “Yet there he sat…” Ibid., p. 171.

  “‘It was a revelation…” Ibid., p. 173.

  “Hubbard broke up black magic…” The Church of Scientology, letter to London Sunday Times, December 28, 1969.

  “methods for evoking…” Kenneth Grant, The Magical Revival, p. 164.

  “I have my elemental!” Jack Parsons, letter to Crowley, February 23, 1946, O.T.O. Archives.

  “I am particularly…” Crowley, letter to Jack Parsons, March 27, 1946, O.T.O. Archives.

  “direct touch with One…” Jack Parsons, letter to Crowley, March 6, 1946, O.T.O. Archives.

  “You have got me…” Crowley, letter to Jack Parsons, April 19, 1946, O.T.O. Archives. Note that “the idiocy of these goats” is the correct transcription of Crowley’s language here, rather than “the idiocy of these louts” as stated in Symonds, The Beast 666, p. 572.

  “I doubt whether anyone…” Crowley, letter to Gerald Yorke, March 27, 1946, O.T.O. Archives.

  “Hardly pausing in his…” James Laver, Museum Piece, p. 228.

  “something we do…” Ibid.

  “very important and you…” Crowley, letter to Aleister Ataturk, May 30, 1947.

  “The best models…” Ibid.

  “This is a good world…” Quoted in Clifford Bax, Some I Knew Well (London: Phoenix House, 1951), p. 54.

  “I had always felt…” Louis Wilkinson [pseud. Louis Marlow], Seven Friends, p. 53.

  “Freida Harris told me…” Symonds, The Beast 666, p. 585.

  “Crowley is alleged…” Gerald Suster, The Legacy of the Beast: The Life, Work and Influence of Aleister Crowley (York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1989), p. 75.

  “Crowley used to pace…” Ibid., p. 76.

  “It was the gods…” Snoo Wilson, videotaped interview with Patricia MacAlpine, O.T.O. Archives.

  “Crowley tried to get…” London Sunday Express, December 1947, O.T.O. Archives.

  “Here rests beneath…” Crowley, May 1, 1944, diary entry, 1944 Diary, typescript, O.T.O. Archives.

  SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

  The reader interested in a broader listing of books and other publications by and about Aleister Crowley may consult the endnotes hereto, as well as the extensive bibliographical references in Magick (listed below). The purpose of the present bibliography is to provide a basic (and necessarily subjective) guide to further reading in the key texts of a most prolific author.

  The fundamental works of Aleister Crowley include:

  The Book of the Goetia of Solomon the King, trans. S. L. Mathers, ed. Aleister Crowley, Foyers, UK: Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth, 1904; illustrated second revised edition, ed. Hymenaeus Beta, York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1995, 1997. Contained herein is one of Crowley’s finest essays, “The Initiated Interpretation of Ceremonial Magic.”

  The Book of the Law. (See Magick below.)

  The Book of Lies which is also falsely called Breaks. Frater Perdurabo [pseud.]. London: Wieland, 1913, rpt. York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1993.

  The Book of Thoth: A Short Essay on the Tarot of the Egyptians, The Master Therion [pseud.]. London: O.T.O., 1944, rpt. York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1993.

  The Collected Works of Aleister Crowley, Foyers, UK: Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth, 3 vols., 1905–7, rpt. Des Plaines, IL: Yogi Publication Society [c. 1974]. Despite its grand title, readers should note that these volumes are principally devoted to Crowley’s early poetical works (through 1907) and, even within that period, exclude his most erotically charged verse.

  The Confessions of Aleister Crowley. London: Mandrake, 1929 (only two of the projected six volumes issued); one-volume edition, ed. John Symonds and Kenneth Grant, London: Jonathan Cape, 1969 and New York: Hill and Wang, 1970, rpt. London and New York: Arkana, 1989.

  Diary of a Drug Fiend. London: Collins, 1922; rpt. York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1994.

  Eight Lectures on Yoga, Mahatma Guru Sri Paramahansa Sivaji [pseud.]. London: O.T.O., 1939; rev. second edition ed. Hymenaeus Beta, Scottsdale, AZ: New Falcon, 1991.

  Gems from the Equinox, ed. Israel Regardie, St. Paul: Llewellyn, 1974; rpt. Las Vegas: Falcon, 1989.

  Liber Aleph vel CXI. The Book of Wisdom or Folly, ed. Karl Germer and Marcelo Motta, The Equinox III (6), Barstow, CA: Thelema Publishing Co., 1961; revised second edition, ed. Hymenaeus Beta, York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1991.

  Little Essays Toward Truth. London: O.T.O., 1938; rev. second edition, ed. Hymenaeus Beta and A. W. Iannotti, Scottsdale, AZ: New Falcon, 1996.

  Magick. Book 4, Parts I-IV (coauthors: Mary Desti and Leila Waddell), second revised edition, ed. Hymenaeus Beta, York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1997. This most useful volume contains Book 4 (1912–3); Magick in Theory and Practice (1930); The Equinox of the Gods (1936) and The Book of the Law. A scholarly introduction and extensive notes and bibliography by Hymenaeus Beta are also included.

  Moonchild. London: Mandrake, 1929; rpt. York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1992.

  The Scented Garden of Abdullah the Satirist of Shiraz (Bagh-i-muattar). London: privately printed, 1910; facsimile reprint with introduction by Martin
Starr, Chicago: Teitan Press, 1991.

  The Secret Rituals of the O.T.O., ed. with introduction by Francis King. New York: Weiser, 1973.

  777 and Other Qabalistic Writings, ed. Israel Regardie. York Beach, ME: Weiser: 1993.

  Thelema: The Holy Books of Thelema, ed. Hymenaeus Alpha and Hymenaeus Beta, corrected second printing, York Beach, ME: Weiser, 1990, 1997.

  White Stains, London, 1898; second edition, ed. John Symonds, London: Duckworth, 1973, 1993.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abbey of Thelema

  abortion

  Abra-Melin Operation; in China; completion of; Holy Guardian Angel and

  Abra-Melin text

  Abuldiz (spirit)

  Aceldama (Crowley)

  Acton, William

  Adams, Evangeline

  Agrippa, Cornelius

  Ahab and Other Poems (Crowley)

  Ahitha, Soror. See Minor, Roddie

  Aiwass (spirit)

  alchemists/alchemy

  Alexander VI, Pope

  Alice: An Adultery (Crowley)

  Allied Enterprises

  Alolstrael’s Visions (Hirsig)

  Amalantrah Working

  Ambergris (Crowley)

  Ananda, Swami Vive. See Sprengel, Anna

  Anatomy of the Body of God, The (Achad)

  Ancient Order of Oriental Templars. See Ordo Templis Orientis (O.T.O.)

  Androcles and the Lion (Shaw)

  androgyny

  Anger, Kenneth

  Anglicanism (Church of England). See also Christianity

  anhalonium. See peyote

  animal sacrifices

  Anu

  Ape of Thoth

  Apollonius of Tyre

  Appeal to the American Republic, An (Crowley)

  “Arabella, red-headed”

  Archer, Ethel

  archetypes

  Argenteum Astrum; Crowley’s degrees in; Crowley’s desire for new students; disarray within; Norman Mudd as Probationer in; Ordo Templis Orientis (O.T.O.) and; Samadhi (yogic state) and; training of students and

  asceticism

  Aschaetzsch, Louise

  astral travel/visions

  astrology

  “At the Fork of the Roads” (Crowley)

  atheism

  Augoeides Invocations; hashish and; Holy Guardian Angel and

  Augustine, Saint

  automatic writing

  Babalon Working

  Back, Ivor

  Bagh-i-Muattar. See Scented Garden, The (Crowley)

  Baker, Julian

  Ballad of Reading Gaol, The (Wilde)

  Banks, Viola

  Banned Lecture, The. Gilles de Rais (Crowley)

  Baphomet tradition

  Barron, William George

  Barron-Hirsig, Alexander

  Barth, Otto Wilhelm

  Bartlett, Paul Wayland

  Barton, Blanche

  Bass, Kasimira

  Bataille, Georges

  Baudelaire, Charles

  Beardsley, Aubrey

  Beast, The (play)

  Beast of Revelation

  Beaton, Mary

  Beaverbrook, Lord

  Bell, Clive

  Ben Brahim, Mohammed

  Ben Mohammed, Dridi Salah

  Bennett, Allan; Bornless Ritual and; break with Crowley; Buddhism and; in Burma; critics of; in Crowley’s literary work; Crowley’s studies under; move to India; Shiva worship and; witchcraft and

  Bennett, Arnold

  Bennett, Frank

  Bergson, Mina

  Bernard, Pierre

  Berridge, Edward

  Besant, Annie

  bestiality

  Beta, Hymenaeus

  Bible

  Bickers, Betty

  bisexuality; Crowley’s relationship with Neuberg and; poetry and; pseudonyms and; shame and

  Bishop, Anne

  Bishop, Emily Bertha. See Crowley, Emily (mother of A.C.)

  Bishop, Tom Bond (uncle of A.C.)

  black magic; as an accusation; compared to revival meetings; Crowley’s disavowal of; L. Ron Hubbard and; libel trial and; likened to mortal sin. See also magic

  Black Mass

  Blackwood, Algernon

  Blakeney, T.S.

  blasphemy

  Blavatsky, H.P.; Crowley’s painted portrait of; as inspiration for W. B. Yeats; Jack the Ripper and

  blood sacrifice

  Bloomsbury circle

  Boleskine House; Abra-Melin Operation and; Crowley’s purchase of; mortgaging of; New Aeon and; purchased by Jimmy Page

  Book Four (Crowley and Desti)

  Book of Antichrist, The (Parsons)

  Book of Babalon (Parsons)

  Book of Black Magic and Pacts, The (Waite, ed.)

  Book of Correspondences (Crowley and Mathers)

  Book of Lies, The (Crowley)

  Book of Results, The (Crowley)

  Book of Shadows (Gardner)

  Book of the Heart Girt with a Serpent, The (Crowley)

  Book of the Law, The (Crowley); Adolf Hitler and; Book Four and; Cakes of Light and; in Cefalù retreat; commentary on; Crowley’s subconscious and; on drug use; Grant on; kabbalism and; key salutations of; moonchild and; New Aeon and; original manuscript found; puritanism and; reception of; on Scarlet Woman

  Book of the Sacred Magic of Abra-Melin the Mage, The. See Abra-Melin text

  Book of Thoth, The (Crowley)

  Borgia, Alexander

  Bornless Ritual

  Bracelin, J.L.

  British Alpine Club

  British Empire

  Brook, Peter

  Brooksmith, Pearl

  Bruno, Giordano

  Buddha (Gautama)

  Buddhism; Allan Bennett and; Crowley as early Western student of; Crowley’s commitment to; Four Noble Truths of; in Japan; loss of appeal of; “orthodox”; phenomenal existence and; sexual magic and; Theravada

  Burnett-Rae, Alan

  Burton, Sir Richard

  Busch, Bertha

  Butler, E. M.

  Butterfly Net, The (Crowley). See Moonchild (Crowley)

  Butts, Mary

  Byron, Lord

  Cabell, James Branch

  Cagliostro, Count

  Cakes of Light

  Calder-Marshall, Arthur

  Cambridge University

  Camel, The

  Cameron, Marjorie

  Cammell, Charles R.

  cannabis

  Carter, Colonel (Scotland Yard detective)

  Casino Royale (Fleming)

  Cat, the

  Cavendish, Richard

  Cayenne, Louis Eugène de

  Cecil, Robert

  Cefalù (Sicily), Abbey of Thelema at; failure of; Kenneth Anger’s pilgrimage to; libel trial and

  Cephaloedium Working

  Chamberlain, Neville

  Chambre des Cauchemars

  Champney, Rev. H. d’Arcy

  Chapman, Jeanne

  Chat Blanc, Le (cafe)

  Chat Blanc (cafe)

  Chéron, Jane

  chess; Crowley’s recommendation of to his son; Crowley’s renunciation of

  Chesterton, G.K.

  Chioa Khan (Crowley pseudonym)

  Choronzon

  Christianity; Christ and; continuing hold on Crowley; Crowley’s literary assault on; gender and; lingering outlook of; magic and; moral meaning and; redemption and grace; rejection of; release from; Yeats on. See also Anglicanism; Roman Catholicism

  Church of England. See Anglicanism

  Church of Scientology

  Churchill, Winston

  City of Dreadful Night, The (Thompson)

  “City of God, The” (Crowley)

  clairvoyance

 
Cloud Upon the Sanctuary, The (Von Eckartshausen)

  Clouds Without Water (Crowley)

  cocaine; Crowley’s addiction to; legality of; withdrawal from

  Collected Works (Crowley)

  Collegium Pansophicum

  Collie, Norman

  Confessions (Crowley); on Abra-Melin Operation; on astrology; Beast of Revelation and; on birth of Lola Zaza; on black magic; on Book of the Law; on Cambridge years; on Crowley’s father; Crowley’s temple in; on dealing with natives; on death of daughter Anne Léa (Poupée); on death of daughter Nuit; on Earl of Tankerville; on Esopus Island retirement; on Golden Dawn power struggle; on hashish; on invisibility; on Kanchenjunga expedition; Leah Hirsig and; on lineage of magi; on Looking Glass libel case; on Loveday incident (Cefalù); on magic; on marriage to Rose Kelly; on Mathers; on patriotism; publication of; on relationship with Pollitt; review of (1970); on Rose Kelly; on sexual magic; on spiritual sex; on spiritual wandering; on the Thirty Aethyrs; on Viereck; on women; writing of

  Confessions of a Barbarian (Viereck)

  Constant, Alphonse Louis

  Conway, Sir Martin

  Coomaraswamy, Ananda K.

  Court de Gebelin, Antoine

  Cowie, George M.

  Cremers, Victoria

  “Crime of Edith Cavell, The” (Crowley)

  Crowley, Aleister: as artist; attempt to contact Adolf Hitler; as the “Beast”; in Berlin; birth and childhood of; birth of first child; bisexuality of; British Intelligence involvement of; in Ceylon; as chess player; in China and Japan; class status of; critics of; cultural legacy of; death of; death of daughter Nuit; deported from France; diplomatic career ambitions; education; in Egypt; extravagance of; fascism and; feigned suicide of; financial bankruptcy; Golden Dawn and; health problems of; heroin and cocaine addiction of; homosexuality and; in India and Burma; inherited fortune of; legal cases involving; legend and rumors concerning; love affairs of; magic (“magick”) and; marriage to Maria Teresa de Miramar; marriage to Rose Kelly; Mathers and; in Mexico; as mountain climber; in New York; in North Africa; Ordo Templis Orientis (O.T.O.) and; in Paris; past lives of; patriotism and; poetry of; pseudonyms of; public image of; racial views of; relationship with Neuberg; in Russia; views on women; voice recordings of; W. B. Yeats and; will and testament of; witchcraft and; World War One activities of; World War Two activities of; W.S. Maugham and; yoga and

  Crowley, Aleister Ataturk (son of A.C.)

  Crowley, Anne Léa (Poupée) (daughter of A.C.); death of

 

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