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Aleister Crowley

Aleister Crowley (/ˈælɪstər ˈkrli/;[1] born Edward Alexander Crowley; 12 October 1875 – 1 December 1947) was an English occultist, philosopher, ceremonial magician, poet, painter, novelist, and mountaineer. He founded the religion of Thelema, identifying himself as the prophet entrusted with guiding humanity into the Æon of Horus in the early 20th century. A prolific writer, he published widely over the course of his life.

Aleister Crowley
Aleister Crowley in 1925
Born
Edward Alexander Crowley

(1875-10-12)12 October 1875
Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, England
Died1 December 1947(1947-12-01) (aged 72)
Hastings, East Sussex, England
Resting placeAshes buried in Hampton, New Jersey
Education
Occupations
  • Occultist
  • poet
  • novelist
  • mountaineer
Spouses
  • (m. 1903; div. 1909)
  • Maria Teresa Sanchez
    (m. 1929)
Children5
Signature

Born to a wealthy family in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, Crowley rejected his parents' fundamentalist Christian Plymouth Brethren faith to pursue an interest in Western esotericism. He was educated at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, where he focused his attentions on mountaineering and poetry, resulting in several publications. Some biographers allege that here he was recruited into a British intelligence agency, further suggesting that he remained a spy throughout his life. In 1898, he joined the esoteric Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, where he was trained in ceremonial magic by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers and Allan Bennett. He went mountaineering in Mexico with Oscar Eckenstein, before studying Hindu and Buddhist practices in India. In 1904, he married Rose Edith Kelly and they honeymooned in Cairo, Egypt, where Crowley claimed to have been contacted by a supernatural entity named Aiwass, who provided him with The Book of the Law, a sacred text that served as the basis for Thelema. Announcing the start of the Æon of Horus, The Book declared that its followers should "Do what thou wilt" and seek to align themselves with their True Will through the practice of magick.

After the unsuccessful 1905 Kanchenjunga expedition and a visit to India and China, Crowley returned to Britain, where he attracted attention as a prolific author of poetry, novels, and occult literature. In 1907, he and George Cecil Jones co-founded an esoteric order, the A∴A∴, through which they propagated Thelema. After spending time in Algeria, in 1912 he was initiated into another esoteric order, the German-based Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.), rising to become the leader of its British branch, which he reformulated in accordance with his Thelemite beliefs. Through the O.T.O., Thelemite groups were established in Britain, Australia, and North America. Crowley spent the First World War in the United States, where he took up painting and campaigned for the German war effort against Britain, later revealing that he had infiltrated the pro-German movement to assist the British intelligence services. In 1920, he established the Abbey of Thelema, a religious commune in Cefalù, Sicily where he lived with various followers. His libertine lifestyle led to denunciations in the British press, and the Italian government evicted him in 1923. He divided the following two decades between France, Germany, and England, and continued to promote Thelema until his death.

Crowley gained widespread notoriety during his lifetime, being a drug user, bisexual, and an individualist social critic. Crowley has remained a highly influential figure over Western esotericism and the counterculture of the 1960s, and continues to be considered a prophet in Thelema. He is the subject of various biographies and academic studies.

Early life

Youth

 
Aleister Crowley was born as Edward Alexander Crowley at 30 Clarendon Square in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, on 12 October 1875.

Crowley was born Edward Alexander Crowley at 30 Clarendon Square in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, on 12 October 1875.[2] His father, Edward Crowley (1829–1887), was trained as an engineer, but his share in a lucrative family brewing business, Crowley's Alton Ales, had allowed him to retire before his son was born.[3] His mother, Emily Bertha Bishop (1848–1917), came from a Devonshire-Somerset family and had a strained relationship with her son; she described him as "the Beast", a name that he revelled in.[4] The couple had been married at London's Kensington Registry Office in November 1874,[5] and were evangelical Christians. Crowley's father had been born a Quaker, but had converted to the Exclusive Brethren, a faction of a Christian fundamentalist group known as the Plymouth Brethren; Emily likewise converted upon marriage. Crowley's father was particularly devout, spending his time as a travelling preacher for the sect and reading a chapter from the Bible to his wife and son after breakfast every day.[6] Following the death of their baby daughter in 1880, in 1881 the Crowleys moved to Redhill, Surrey.[7] At the age of 8, Crowley was sent to H.T. Habershon's evangelical Christian boarding school in Hastings, and then to Ebor preparatory school in Cambridge, run by the Reverend Henry d'Arcy Champney, whom Crowley considered a sadist.[8]

In March 1887, when Crowley was 11, his father died of tongue cancer. Crowley described this as a turning point in his life,[9] and he always maintained an admiration of his father, describing him as "my hero and my friend".[10] Inheriting a third of his father's wealth, he began misbehaving at school and was harshly punished by Champney; Crowley's family removed him from the school when he developed albuminuria.[11] He then attended Malvern College and Tonbridge School, both of which he despised and left after a few terms.[12] He became increasingly sceptical regarding Christianity, pointing out inconsistencies in the Bible to his religious teachers,[13] and went against the Christian morality of his upbringing by smoking, masturbating, and having sex with prostitutes from whom he contracted gonorrhea.[14] Sent to live with a Brethren tutor in Eastbourne, he undertook chemistry courses at Eastbourne College. Crowley developed interests in chess, poetry, and mountain climbing, and in 1894 climbed Beachy Head before visiting the Alps and joining the Scottish Mountaineering Club. The following year he returned to the Bernese Alps, climbing the Eiger, Trift, Jungfrau, Mönch, and Wetterhorn.[15]

Cambridge University: 1895–1898

Having adopted the name of Aleister over Edward, in October 1895 Crowley began a three-year course at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was entered for the Moral Science Tripos studying philosophy. With approval from his personal tutor, he changed to English literature, which was not then part of the curriculum offered.[16] Crowley spent much of his time at university engaged in his pastimes, becoming president of the chess club and practising the game for two hours a day; he briefly considered a professional career as a chess player.[17] Crowley also embraced his love of literature and poetry, particularly the works of Richard Francis Burton and Percy Bysshe Shelley.[18] Many of his own poems appeared in student publications such as The Granta, Cambridge Magazine, and Cantab.[19] He continued his mountaineering, going on holiday to the Alps to climb every year from 1894 to 1898, often with his friend Oscar Eckenstein, and in 1897 he made the first ascent of the Mönch without a guide. These feats led to his recognition in the Alpine mountaineering community.[20]

For many years I had loathed being called Alick, partly because of the unpleasant sound and sight of the word, partly because it was the name by which my mother called me. Edward did not seem to suit me and the diminutives Ted or Ned were even less appropriate. Alexander was too long and Sandy suggested tow hair and freckles. I had read in some book or other that the most favourable name for becoming famous was one consisting of a dactyl followed by a spondee, as at the end of a hexameter: like Jeremy Taylor. Aleister Crowley fulfilled these conditions and Aleister is the Gaelic form of Alexander. To adopt it would satisfy my romantic ideals.

Aleister Crowley, on his name change.[21]

Crowley had his first significant mystical experience while on holiday in Stockholm in December 1896.[22] Several biographers, including Lawrence Sutin, Richard Kaczynski, and Tobias Churton, believed that this was the result of Crowley's first same-sex sexual experience, which enabled him to recognize his bisexuality.[23] At Cambridge, Crowley maintained a vigorous sex life with women—largely with female prostitutes, from one of whom he caught syphilis—but eventually he took part in same-sex activities, despite their illegality.[24] In October 1897, Crowley met Herbert Charles Pollitt, president of the Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club, and the two entered into a relationship. They broke apart because Pollitt did not share Crowley's increasing interest in Western esotericism, a break-up that Crowley would regret for many years.[25]

In 1897, Crowley travelled to Saint Petersburg in Russia, later saying that he was trying to learn Russian as he was considering a future diplomatic career there.[26] In October 1897, a brief illness triggered considerations of mortality and "the futility of all human endeavour", and Crowley abandoned all thoughts of a diplomatic career in favour of pursuing an interest in the occult.[27]

In March 1898, he obtained A.E. Waite's The Book of Black Magic and of Pacts, and then Karl von Eckartshausen's The Cloud Upon the Sanctuary, furthering his occult interests.[28] That same year, Crowley privately published 100 copies of his poem Aceldama: A Place to Bury Strangers In, but it was not a particular success.[29] Aceldama was issued by Leonard Smithers.[30] That same year, Crowley published a string of other poems, including White Stains, a Decadent collection of erotic poetry that was printed abroad lest its publication be prohibited by the British authorities.[31] In July 1898, he left Cambridge, not having taken any degree at all despite a "first class" showing in his 1897 exams and consistent "second class honours" results before that.[32]

The Golden Dawn: 1898–1899

 
Crowley in Golden Dawn garb, 1910

In August 1898, Crowley was in Zermatt, Switzerland, where he met the chemist Julian L. Baker, and the two began discussing their common interest in alchemy.[33] Back in London, Baker introduced Crowley to George Cecil Jones, Baker's brother-in-law and a fellow member of the occult society known as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which had been founded in 1888.[34] Crowley was initiated into the Outer Order of the Golden Dawn on 18 November 1898 by the group's leader, Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers. The ceremony took place in the Golden Dawn's Isis-Urania Temple held at London's Mark Masons Hall, where Crowley took the magical motto and name "Frater Perdurabo", which he interpreted as "I shall endure to the end".[35]

Crowley moved into his own luxury flat at 67–69 Chancery Lane and soon invited a senior Golden Dawn member, Allan Bennett, to live with him as his personal magical tutor. Bennett taught Crowley more about ceremonial magic and the ritual use of drugs, and together they performed the rituals of the Goetia,[36] until Bennett left for South Asia to study Buddhism.[37] In November 1899, Crowley purchased Boleskine House in Foyers on the shore of Loch Ness in Scotland. He developed a love of Scottish culture, describing himself as the "Laird of Boleskine", and took to wearing traditional highland dress, even during visits to London.[38] He continued writing poetry, publishing Jezebel and Other Tragic Poems, Tales of Archais, Songs of the Spirit, Appeal to the American Republic, and Jephthah in 1898–99; most gained mixed reviews from literary critics, although Jephthah was considered a particular critical success.[39]

Crowley soon progressed through the lower grades of the Golden Dawn, and was ready to enter the group's inner Second Order.[40] He was unpopular in the group; his bisexuality and libertine lifestyle had gained him a bad reputation, and he had developed feuds with some of the members, including W. B. Yeats.[41] When the Golden Dawn's London lodge refused to initiate Crowley into the Second Order, he visited Mathers in Paris, who personally admitted him into the Adeptus Minor Grade.[42] A schism had developed between Mathers and the London members of the Golden Dawn, who were unhappy with his autocratic rule.[43] Acting under Mathers' orders, Crowley—with the help of his mistress and fellow initiate Elaine Simpson—attempted to seize the Vault of the Adepts, a temple space at 36 Blythe Road in West Kensington, from the London lodge members. When the case was taken to court, the judge ruled in favour of the London lodge, as they had paid for the space's rent, leaving both Crowley and Mathers isolated from the group.[44]

Mexico, India, Paris, and marriage: 1900–1903

In 1900, Crowley travelled to Mexico via the United States, settling in Mexico City and starting a relationship with a local woman. Developing a love of the country, he continued experimenting with ceremonial magic, working with John Dee's Enochian invocations. He later claimed to have been initiated into Freemasonry while there, and he wrote a play based on Richard Wagner's Tannhäuser as well as a series of poems, published as Oracles (1905). Eckenstein joined him later in 1900, and together they climbed several mountains, including Iztaccihuatl, Popocatepetl, and Colima, the latter of which they had to abandon owing to a volcanic eruption.[45] Leaving Mexico, Crowley headed to San Francisco before sailing for Hawaii aboard the Nippon Maru. On the ship, he had a brief affair with a married woman named Mary Alice Rogers; saying he had fallen in love with her, he wrote a series of poems about the romance, published as Alice: An Adultery (1903).[46]

 
Crowley during the K2 Expedition, 1902

Briefly stopping in Japan and Hong Kong, Crowley reached Ceylon, where he met with Allan Bennett, who was there studying Shaivism. The pair spent some time in Kandy before Bennett decided to become a Buddhist monk in the Theravada tradition, travelling to Burma to do so.[47] Crowley decided to tour India, devoting himself to the Hindu practice of Rāja yoga, from which he claimed to have achieved the spiritual state of dhyana. He spent much of this time studying at the Meenakshi Temple in Madura. At this time he also wrote poetry which was published as The Sword of Song (1904). He contracted malaria, and had to recuperate from the disease in Calcutta and Rangoon.[48] In 1902, he was joined in India by Eckenstein and several other mountaineers: Guy Knowles, H. Pfannl, V. Wesseley, and Jules Jacot-Guillarmod. Together, the Eckenstein-Crowley expedition attempted K2, which had never been climbed. On the journey, Crowley was afflicted with influenza, malaria, and snow blindness, and other expedition members were also struck with illness. They reached an altitude of 20,000 feet (6,100 m) before turning back.[49]

Having arrived in Paris in November 1902, he socialized with his friend the painter Gerald Kelly, and through him became a fixture of the Parisian arts scene. Whilst there, Crowley wrote a series of poems on the work of an acquaintance, the sculptor Auguste Rodin. These poems were later published as Rodin in Rime (1907).[50] One of those frequenting this milieu was W. Somerset Maugham, who after briefly meeting Crowley later used him as a model for the character of Oliver Haddo in his novel The Magician (1908).[51] He returned to Boleskine in April 1903. In August, Crowley wed Gerald Kelly's sister Rose Edith Kelly in a "marriage of convenience" to prevent her from entering an arranged marriage; the marriage appalled the Kelly family and damaged his friendship with Gerald. Heading on a honeymoon to Paris, Cairo, and then Ceylon, Crowley fell in love with Rose and worked to prove his affections. While on his honeymoon, he wrote her a series of love poems, published as Rosa Mundi and other Love Songs (1906), as well as authoring the religious satire Why Jesus Wept (1904).[52]

Developing Thelema

Egypt and The Book of the Law: 1904

Had! The manifestation of Nuit.
The unveiling of the company of heaven.
Every man and every woman is a star.
Every number is infinite; there is no difference.
Help me, o warrior lord of Thebes, in my unveiling before the Children of men!

The opening lines of The Book of the Law

In February 1904, Crowley and Rose arrived in Cairo. Claiming to be a prince and princess, they rented an apartment in which Crowley set up a temple room and began invoking ancient Egyptian deities, while studying Islamic mysticism and Arabic.[53] According to Crowley's later account, Rose regularly became delirious and informed him "they are waiting for you." On 18 March, she explained that "they" were the god Horus, and on 20 March proclaimed that "the Equinox of the Gods has come". She led him to a nearby museum, where she showed him a seventh-century BCE mortuary stele known as the Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu; Crowley thought it important that the exhibit's number was 666, the Number of the Beast in Christian belief, and in later years termed the artefact the "Stele of Revealing."[54]

According to Crowley's later statements, on 8 April he heard a disembodied voice claiming to be that of Aiwass, the messenger of Horus, or Hoor-Paar-Kraat. Crowley said that he wrote down everything the voice told him over the course of the next three days, and titled it Liber AL vel Legis or The Book of the Law.[55] The book proclaimed that humanity was entering a new Aeon, and that Crowley would serve as its prophet. It stated that a supreme moral law was to be introduced in this Aeon, "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law," and that people should learn to live in tune with their Will. This book, and the philosophy that it espoused, became the cornerstone of Crowley's religion, Thelema.[56] Crowley said that at the time he had been unsure what to do with The Book of the Law. Often resenting it, he said that he ignored the instructions which the text commanded him to perform, which included taking the Stele of Revealing from the museum, fortifying his own island, and translating the book into all the world's languages. According to his account, he instead sent typescripts of the work to several occultists he knew, putting the manuscript away and ignoring it.[57]

Kanchenjunga and China: 1905–06

Returning to Boleskine, Crowley came to believe that Mathers had begun using magic against him, and the relationship between the two broke down.[58] On 28 July 1905, Rose gave birth to Crowley's first child, a daughter named Lilith, with Crowley writing the pornographic Snowdrops from a Curate's Garden to entertain his recuperating wife.[59] He also founded a publishing company through which to publish his poetry, naming it the Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth in parody of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. Among its first publications were Crowley's Collected Works, edited by Ivor Back, an old friend of Crowley's who was both a practicing surgeon and an enthusiast of literature.[60] His poetry often received strong reviews (either positive or negative), but never sold well. In an attempt to gain more publicity, he issued a reward of £100 for the best essay on his work. The winner of this was J. F. C. Fuller, a British Army officer and military historian, whose essay, The Star in the West (1907), heralded Crowley's poetry as some of the greatest ever written.[61]

 
Kanchenjunga, as seen from Darjeeling

Crowley decided to climb Kanchenjunga in the Himalayas of Nepal, widely recognized as the world's most treacherous mountain. The collaboration between Jacot-Guillarmod, Charles Adolphe Reymond, Alexis Pache, and Alcesti C. Rigo de Righi, the expedition was marred by much argument between Crowley and the others, who thought that he was reckless. They eventually mutinied against Crowley's control, with the other climbers heading back down the mountain as nightfall approached despite Crowley's warnings that it was too dangerous. Subsequently, Pache and several porters were killed in an accident, something for which Crowley was widely blamed by the mountaineering community.[62]

Spending time in Moharbhanj, where he took part in big-game hunting and wrote the homoerotic work The Scented Garden, Crowley met up with Rose and Lilith in Calcutta before being forced to leave India after non-lethally shooting two men who tried to mug him.[63] Briefly visiting Bennett in Burma, Crowley and his family decided to tour Southern China, hiring porters and a nanny for the purpose.[64] Crowley smoked opium throughout the journey, which took the family from Tengyueh through to Yungchang, Tali, Yunnanfu, and then Hanoi. On the way, he spent much time on spiritual and magical work, reciting the "Bornless Ritual", an invocation to his Holy Guardian Angel, on a daily basis.[65]

While Rose and Lilith returned to Europe, Crowley headed to Shanghai to meet old friend Elaine Simpson, who was fascinated by The Book of the Law; together they performed rituals in an attempt to contact Aiwass. Crowley then sailed to Japan and Canada, before continuing to New York City, where he unsuccessfully solicited support for a second expedition up Kanchenjunga.[66] Upon arrival in Britain, Crowley learned that his daughter Lilith had died of typhoid in Rangoon, something he later blamed on Rose's increasing alcoholism. Under emotional distress, his health began to suffer, and he underwent a series of surgical operations.[67] He began short-lived romances with actress Vera "Lola" Neville (née Snepp)[68] and author Ada Leverson,[69] while Rose gave birth to Crowley's second daughter, Lola Zaza, in February 1907.[70]

The A∴A∴ and The Holy Books of Thelema: 1907–1909

With his old mentor George Cecil Jones, Crowley continued performing the Abramelin rituals at the Ashdown Park Hotel in Coulsdon, Surrey. Crowley claimed that in doing so he attained samadhi, or union with Godhead, thereby marking a turning point in his life.[71] Making heavy use of hashish during these rituals, he wrote an essay on "The Psychology of Hashish" (1909) in which he championed the drug as an aid to mysticism.[72] He also claimed to have been contacted once again by Aiwass in late October and November 1907, adding that Aiwass dictated two further texts to him, "Liber VII" and "Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente", both of which were later classified in the corpus of The Holy Books of Thelema.[73] Crowley wrote down more Thelemic Holy Books during the last two months of the year, including "Liber LXVI", "Liber Arcanorum", "Liber Porta Lucis, Sub Figura X", "Liber Tau", "Liber Trigrammaton" and "Liber DCCCXIII vel Ararita", which he again claimed to have received from a preternatural source.[74] Crowley stated that in June 1909, when the manuscript of The Book of the Law was rediscovered at Boleskine, he developed the opinion that Thelema represented objective truth.[75]

Crowley's inheritance was running out.[76] Trying to earn money, he was hired by George Montagu Bennett, the Earl of Tankerville, to help protect him from witchcraft; recognizing Bennett's paranoia as being based in his cocaine addiction, Crowley took him on holiday to France and Morocco to recuperate.[77] In 1907, he also began taking in paying students, whom he instructed in occult and magical practice.[78] Victor Neuburg, whom Crowley met in February 1907, became his sexual partner and closest disciple; in 1908 the pair toured northern Spain before heading to Tangier, Morocco.[79] The following year Neuburg stayed at Boleskine, where he and Crowley engaged in sadomasochism.[80] Crowley continued to write prolifically, producing such works of poetry as Ambergris, Clouds Without Water, and Konx Om Pax,[81] as well as his first attempt at an autobiography, The World's Tragedy.[82] Recognizing the popularity of short horror stories, Crowley wrote his own, some of which were published,[83] and he also published several articles in Vanity Fair, a magazine edited by his friend Frank Harris.[84] He also wrote Liber 777, a book of magical and Qabalistic correspondences that borrowed from Mathers and Bennett.[85]

Into my loneliness comes—
The sound of a flute in dim groves that haunt the uttermost hills.
Even from the brave river they reach to the edge of the wilderness.
And I behold Pan.

The opening lines of Liber VII (1907), the first of the Holy Books of Thelema to be revealed to Crowley after The Book of the Law.[86]

In November 1907, Crowley and Jones decided to found an occult order to act as a successor to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, being aided in doing so by Fuller. The result was the A∴A∴. The group's headquarters and temple were situated at 124 Victoria Street in central London, and their rites borrowed much from those of the Golden Dawn, but with an added Thelemic basis.[87] Its earliest members included solicitor Richard Noel Warren, artist Austin Osman Spare, Horace Sheridan-Bickers, author George Raffalovich, Francis Henry Everard Joseph Feilding, engineer Herbert Edward Inman, Kenneth Ward, and Charles Stansfeld Jones.[88] In March 1909, Crowley began production of a biannual periodical titled The Equinox. He billed this periodical, which was to become the "Official Organ" of the A∴A∴, as "The Review of Scientific Illuminism".[89]

Crowley had become increasingly frustrated with Rose's alcoholism, and in November 1909 he divorced her on the grounds of his own adultery. Lola was entrusted to Rose's care; the couple remained friends and Rose continued to live at Boleskine. Her alcoholism worsened, and as a result she was institutionalized in September 1911.[90]

Algeria and the Rites of Eleusis: 1909–1911

In November 1909, Crowley and Neuburg travelled to Algeria, touring the desert from El Arba to Aumale, Bou Saâda, and then Dā'leh Addin, with Crowley reciting the Quran on a daily basis.[91]: 186–202  During the trip he invoked the thirty aethyrs of Enochian magic, with Neuburg recording the results, later published in The Equinox as The Vision and the Voice. Following a mountaintop sex magic ritual, Crowley also performed an evocation to the demon Choronzon involving blood sacrifice, and considered the results to be a watershed in his magical career.[92] Returning to London in January 1910, Crowley found that Mathers was suing him for publishing Golden Dawn secrets in The Equinox; the court found in favour of Crowley. The case was widely reported in the press, with Crowley gaining wider fame.[93] Crowley enjoyed this, and played up to the sensationalist stereotype of being a Satanist and advocate of human sacrifice, despite being neither.[94]

The publicity attracted new members to the A∴A∴, among them Frank Bennett, James Bayley, Herbert Close, and James Windram.[95] The Australian violinist Leila Waddell soon became Crowley's lover.[96] Deciding to expand his teachings to a wider audience, Crowley developed the Rites of Artemis, a public performance of magic and symbolism featuring A∴A∴ members personifying various deities. It was first performed at the A∴A∴ headquarters, with attendees given a fruit punch containing peyote to enhance their experience. Various members of the press attended, and reported largely positively on it. In October and November 1910, Crowley decided to stage something similar, the Rites of Eleusis, at Caxton Hall, Westminster; this time press reviews were mixed.[97] Crowley came under particular criticism from West de Wend Fenton, editor of The Looking Glass newspaper, who called him "one of the most blasphemous and cold-blooded villains of modern times".[98] Fenton's articles suggested that Crowley and Jones were involved in homosexual activity; Crowley did not mind, but Jones unsuccessfully sued for libel.[99] Fuller broke off his friendship and involvement with Crowley over the scandal,[100] and Crowley and Neuburg returned to Algeria for further magical workings.[101]

The Equinox continued publishing, and various books of literature and poetry were also published under its imprint, like Crowley's Ambergris, The Winged Beetle, and The Scented Garden, as well as Neuburg's The Triumph of Pan and Ethel Archer's The Whirlpool.[102] In 1911, Crowley and Waddell holidayed in Montigny-sur-Loing, where he wrote prolifically, producing poems, short stories, plays, and 19 works on magic and mysticism, including the two final Holy Books of Thelema.[103] In Paris, he met Mary Desti, who became his next "Scarlet Woman", with the two undertaking magical workings in St. Moritz; Crowley believed that one of the Secret Chiefs, Ab-ul-Diz, was speaking through her.[104] Based on Desti's statements when in trance, Crowley wrote the two-volume Book 4 (1912–13) and at the time developed the spelling "magick" in reference to the paranormal phenomenon as a means of distinguishing it from the stage magic of illusionists.[105]

Ordo Templi Orientis and the Paris Working: 1912–1914

 
Crowley in ceremonial garb, 1912

In early 1912, Crowley published The Book of Lies, a work of mysticism that biographer Lawrence Sutin described as "his greatest success in merging his talents as poet, scholar, and magus".[106] The German occultist Theodor Reuss later accused him of publishing some of the secrets of his own occult order, the Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.), within The Book. Crowley convinced Reuss that the similarities were coincidental, and the two became friends. Reuss appointed Crowley as head of the O.T.O's British branch, the Mysteria Mystica Maxima (MMM), and at a ceremony in Berlin Crowley adopted the magical name of Baphomet and was proclaimed "X° Supreme Rex and Sovereign Grand Master General of Ireland, Iona, and all the Britons".[107] With Reuss' permission, Crowley set about advertising the MMM and re-writing many O.T.O. rituals, which were then based largely on Freemasonry; his incorporation of Thelemite elements proved controversial in the group. Fascinated by the O.T.O's emphasis on sex magic, Crowley devised a magical working based on anal sex and incorporated it into the syllabus for those O.T.O. members who had been initiated into the eleventh degree.[108]

In March 1913, Crowley acted as producer for The Ragged Ragtime Girls, a group of female violinists led by Waddell, as they performed at London's Old Tivoli theatre. They subsequently performed in Moscow for six weeks, where Crowley had a sadomasochistic relationship with the Hungarian Anny Ringler.[109] In Moscow, Crowley continued to write plays and poetry, including "Hymn to Pan", and the Gnostic Mass, a Thelemic ritual that became a key part of O.T.O. liturgy.[110] Churton suggested that Crowley had travelled to Moscow on the orders of British intelligence to spy on revolutionary elements in the city.[under discussion][111] In January 1914, Crowley and Neuburg settled into an apartment in Paris, where the former was involved in the controversy surrounding Jacob Epstein's new monument to Oscar Wilde.[112] Together Crowley and Neuburg performed the six-week "Paris Working", a period of intense ritual involving strong drug use in which they invoked the gods Mercury and Jupiter. As part of the ritual, the couple performed acts of sex magic together, at times being joined by journalist Walter Duranty. Inspired by the results of the Working, Crowley wrote Liber Agapé, a treatise on sex magic.[113] Following the Paris Working, Neuburg began to distance himself from Crowley, resulting in an argument in which Crowley cursed him.[114]

United States: 1914–1919

By 1914, Crowley was living a hand-to-mouth existence, relying largely on donations from A∴A∴ members and dues payments made to O.T.O.[115] In May, he transferred ownership of Boleskine House to the MMM for financial reasons,[116] and in July he went mountaineering in the Swiss Alps. During this time the First World War broke out.[117] After recuperating from a bout of phlebitis, Crowley set sail for the United States aboard the RMS Lusitania in October 1914.[118] Arriving in New York City, he moved into a hotel and began earning money writing for the American edition of Vanity Fair and undertaking freelance work for the famed astrologer Evangeline Adams.[119] In the city, he continued experimenting with sex magic, through the use of masturbation, female prostitutes, and male clients of a Turkish bathhouse; all of these encounters were documented in his diaries.[120]

 
May Morn, one of Crowley's paintings from his time in the US. He explained it thus: "The painting represents the dawning of the day following a witches' celebration as described in Faust. The witch is hanged, as she deserves, and the satyr looks out from behind a tree."[121]

Professing to be of Irish ancestry and a supporter of Irish independence from Great Britain, Crowley began to espouse support for Germany in their war against Britain. He became involved in New York's pro-German movement, and in January 1915 German spy George Sylvester Viereck employed him as a writer for his propagandist paper, The Fatherland, which was dedicated to keeping the US neutral in the conflict.[122] In later years, detractors denounced Crowley as a traitor to Britain for this action.[123]

Crowley entered into a relationship with Jeanne Robert Foster, with whom he toured the West Coast. In Vancouver, headquarters of the North American O.T.O., he met with Charles Stansfeld Jones and Wilfred Talbot Smith to discuss the propagation of Thelema on the continent. In Detroit he experimented with Peyote at Parke-Davis, then visited Seattle, San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Los Angeles, San Diego, Tijuana, and the Grand Canyon, before returning to New York.[124] There he befriended Ananda Coomaraswamy and his wife Alice Richardson; Crowley and Richardson performed sex magic in April 1916, following which she became pregnant and then miscarried.[125] Later that year he took a "magical retirement" to a cabin by Lake Pasquaney owned by Evangeline Adams. There, he made heavy use of drugs and undertook a ritual after which he proclaimed himself "Master Therion". He also wrote several short stories based on J.G. Frazer's The Golden Bough and a work of literary criticism, The Gospel According to Bernard Shaw.[126]

 
A drawing by Crowley of Lam

In December, he moved to New Orleans, his favourite US city, before spending February 1917 with evangelical Christian relatives in Titusville, Florida.[127] Returning to New York City, he moved in with artist and A∴A∴ member Leon Engers Kennedy in May, learning of his mother's death.[128] After the collapse of The Fatherland, Crowley continued his association with Viereck, who appointed him contributing editor of arts journal The International. Crowley used it to promote Thelema, but it soon ceased publication.[129] He then moved to the studio apartment of Roddie Minor, who became his partner and Scarlet Woman. Through their rituals, which Crowley called "The Amalantrah Workings", he believed that they were contacted by a preternatural entity named Lam. The relationship soon ended.[130]

In 1918, Crowley went on a magical retreat in the wilderness of Esopus Island on the Hudson River. Here, he began a translation of the Tao Te Ching, painted Thelemic slogans on the riverside cliffs, and—he later claimed—experienced past life memories of being Ge Xuan, Pope Alexander VI, Alessandro Cagliostro, and Eliphas Levi.[131] Back in New York City, he moved to Greenwich Village, where he took Leah Hirsig as his lover and next Scarlet Woman.[132] He took up painting as a hobby, exhibiting his work at the Greenwich Village Liberal Club and attracting the attention of the New York Evening World.[133] With the financial assistance of sympathetic Freemasons, Crowley revived The Equinox with the first issue of volume III, known as The Blue Equinox.[134] He spent mid-1919 on a climbing holiday in Montauk before returning to London in December.[135]

Abbey of Thelema: 1920–1923

Now destitute and back in London, Crowley came under attack from the tabloid John Bull, which labelled him traitorous "scum" for his work with the German war effort; several friends aware of his intelligence work urged him to sue, but he decided not to.[136] When he was suffering from asthma, a doctor prescribed him heroin, to which he soon became addicted.[137] In January 1920, he moved to Paris, renting a house in Fontainebleau with Leah Hirsig; they were soon joined in a ménage à trois by Ninette Shumway, and also (in living arrangement) by Leah's newborn daughter Anne "Poupée" Leah.[138] Crowley had ideas of forming a community of Thelemites, which he called the Abbey of Thelema after the Abbaye de Thélème in François Rabelais' satire Gargantua and Pantagruel. After consulting the I Ching, he chose Cefalù (on Sicily, Italy) as a location, and after arriving there, began renting the old Villa Santa Barbara as his Abbey on 2 April.[139]

 
The dilapidated Abbey of Thelema in Cefalù, Sicily in 2017

Moving to the commune with Hirsig, Shumway, and their children Hansi, Howard, and Poupée, Crowley described the scenario as "perfectly happy ... my idea of heaven."[140] They wore robes, and performed rituals to the sun god Ra at set times during the day, also occasionally performing the Gnostic Mass; the rest of the day they were left to follow their own interests.[141] Undertaking widespread correspondences, Crowley continued to paint, wrote a commentary on The Book of the Law, and revised the third part of Book 4.[142] He offered a libertine education for the children, allowing them to play all day and witness acts of sex magic.[143] He occasionally travelled to Palermo to visit rent boys and buy supplies, including drugs; his heroin addiction came to dominate his life, and cocaine began to erode his nasal cavity.[144] There was no cleaning rota, and wild dogs and cats wandered throughout the building, which soon became unsanitary.[145] Poupée died in October 1920, and Ninette gave birth to a daughter, Astarte Lulu Panthea, soon afterwards.[146]

New followers continued to arrive at the Abbey to be taught by Crowley. Among them was film star Jane Wolfe, who arrived in July 1920, where she was initiated into the A∴A∴ and became Crowley's secretary.[147] Another was Cecil Frederick Russell, who often argued with Crowley, disliking the same-sex sexual magic that he was required to perform, and left after a year.[148] More conducive was the Australian Thelemite Frank Bennett, who also spent several months at the Abbey.[149] In February 1922, Crowley returned to Paris for a retreat in an unsuccessful attempt to kick his heroin addiction.[150] He then went to London in search of money, where he published articles in The English Review criticising the Dangerous Drugs Act 1920 and wrote a novel, Diary of a Drug Fiend, completed in July. On publication, it received mixed reviews; he was lambasted by the Sunday Express, which called for its burning and used its influence to prevent further reprints.[151]

Subsequently, a young Thelemite named Raoul Loveday moved to the Abbey with his wife Betty May; while Loveday was devoted to Crowley, May detested him and life at the commune. She later said that Loveday was made to drink the blood of a sacrificed cat, and that they were required to cut themselves with razors every time they used the pronoun "I". Loveday drank from a local polluted stream, soon developing a liver infection resulting in his death in February 1923. Returning to London, May told her story to the press.[152] John Bull proclaimed Crowley "the wickedest man in the world" and "a man we'd like to hang", and although Crowley deemed many of their accusations against him to be slanderous, he was unable to afford the legal fees to sue them. As a result, John Bull continued its attack, with its stories being repeated in newspapers throughout Europe and in North America.[153] The Fascist government of Benito Mussolini learned of Crowley's activities, and in April 1923 he was given a deportation notice forcing him to leave Italy; without him, the Abbey closed.[154]

Later life

Tunisia, Paris, and London: 1923–1929

Crowley and Hirsig went to Tunis, where, dogged by continuing poor health, he unsuccessfully tried again to give up heroin,[155] and began writing what he termed his "autohagiography", The Confessions of Aleister Crowley.[156] They were joined in Tunis by the Thelemite Norman Mudd, who became Crowley's public relations consultant.[157] Employing a local boy, Mohammad ben Brahim, as his servant, Crowley went with him on a retreat to Nefta, where they performed sex magic together.[158] In January 1924, Crowley travelled to Nice, France, where he met with Frank Harris, underwent a series of nasal operations,[159] and visited the Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man and had a positive opinion of its founder, George Gurdjieff.[160] Destitute, he took on a wealthy student, Alexander Zu Zolar,[161] before taking on another American follower, Dorothy Olsen. Crowley took Olsen back to Tunisia for a magical retreat in Nefta, where he also wrote To Man (1924), a declaration of his own status as a prophet entrusted with bringing Thelema to humanity.[162] After spending the winter in Paris, in early 1925 Crowley and Olsen returned to Tunis, where he wrote The Heart of the Master (1938) as an account of a vision he experienced in a trance.[163] In March Olsen became pregnant, and Hirsig was called to take care of her; she miscarried, following which Crowley took Olsen back to France. Hirsig later distanced herself from Crowley, who then denounced her.[164]

According to Crowley, Reuss had named him head of the O.T.O. upon his death, but this was challenged by a leader of the German O.T.O., Heinrich Tränker. Tränker called the Hohenleuben Conference in Thuringia, Germany, which Crowley attended. There, prominent members like Karl Germer and Martha Küntzel championed Crowley's leadership, but other key figures like Albin Grau, Oskar Hopfer, and Henri Birven backed Tränker by opposing it, resulting in a split in the O.T.O.[165] Moving to Paris, where he broke with Olsen in 1926, Crowley went through a large number of lovers over the following years, with whom he experimented in sex magic.[166] Throughout, he was dogged by poor health, largely caused by his heroin and cocaine addictions.[167] In 1928, Crowley was introduced to young Englishman Israel Regardie, who embraced Thelema and became Crowley's secretary for the next three years.[168] That year, Crowley also met Gerald Yorke, who began organising Crowley's finances but never became a Thelemite.[169] He also befriended the journalist Tom Driberg; Driberg did not accept Thelema either.[170] It was here that Crowley also published one of his most significant works, Magick in Theory and Practice, which received little attention at the time.[171]

In December 1928 Crowley met the Nicaraguan Maria Teresa Sanchez (Maria Teresa Ferrari de Miramar).[172] Crowley was deported from France by the authorities, who disliked his reputation and feared that he was a German agent.[173] So that she could join him in Britain, Crowley married Sanchez in August 1929.[174] Now based in London, Mandrake Press agreed to publish his autobiography in a limited edition six-volume set, also publishing his novel Moonchild and book of short stories The Stratagem. Mandrake went into liquidation in November 1930, before the entirety of Crowley's Confessions could be published.[175] Mandrake's owner P.R. Stephenson meanwhile wrote The Legend of Aleister Crowley, an analysis of the media coverage surrounding him.[176]

Berlin and London: 1930–1938

In April 1930, Crowley moved to Berlin, where he took Hanni Jaegar as his magical partner; the relationship was troubled.[177] In September he went to Lisbon in Portugal to meet the poet Fernando Pessoa. There, he decided to fake his own death, doing so with Pessoa's help at the Boca do Inferno rock formation.[178] He then returned to Berlin, where he reappeared three weeks later at the opening of his art exhibition at the Gallery Neumann-Nierendorf. Crowley's paintings fitted with the fashion for German Expressionism; few of them sold, but the press reports were largely favourable.[179] In August 1931, he took Bertha Busch as his new lover; they had a violent relationship, and often physically assaulted one another.[180] He continued to have affairs with both men and women while in the city,[181] and met with famous people like Aldous Huxley and Alfred Adler.[182] After befriending him, in January 1932 he took the communist Gerald Hamilton as a lodger, through whom he was introduced to many figures within the Berlin far left; it is possible that he was operating as a spy for British intelligence at this time, monitoring the communist movement.[183]

I have been over forty years engaged in the administration of the law in one capacity or another. I thought that I knew of every conceivable form of wickedness. I thought that everything which was vicious and bad had been produced at one time or another before me. I have learnt in this case that we can always learn something more if we live long enough. I have never heard such dreadful, horrible, blasphemous and abominable stuff as that which has been produced by the man (Crowley) who describes himself to you as the greatest living poet.

Justice Swift, in Crowley's libel case.[184]

Crowley left Busch and returned to London,[185] where he took Pearl Brooksmith as his new Scarlet Woman.[186] Undergoing further nasal surgery, it was here in 1932 that he was invited to be guest of honour at Foyles' Literary Luncheon, also being invited by Harry Price to speak at the National Laboratory of Psychical Research.[187] In need of money, he launched a series of court cases against people whom he believed had libelled him, some of which proved successful. He gained much publicity for his lawsuit against Constable and Co for publishing Nina Hamnett's Laughing Torso (1932)—a book he claimed libelled him by referring to his occult practice as black magic[188]—but lost the case.[189] The court case added to Crowley's financial problems, and in February 1935 he was declared bankrupt. During the hearing, it was revealed that Crowley had been spending three times his income for several years.[190]

Crowley developed a friendship with Deidre Patricia Doherty; she offered to bear his child, who was born in May 1937. Named Randall Gair, Crowley nicknamed him Aleister Atatürk. He died in a car accident in 2002 at the age of 65.[191] Crowley continued to socialize with friends, holding curry parties in which he cooked particularly spicy food for them.[192] In 1936, he published his first book in six years, The Equinox of the Gods, which contained a facsimile of The Book of the Law and was considered to be volume III, number 3, of The Equinox periodical. The work sold well, resulting in a second print run.[193] In 1937, he gave a series of public lectures on yoga in Soho.[194] Crowley was now living largely off contributions supplied by the O.T.O.'s Agape Lodge in California, led by rocket scientist John Whiteside "Jack" Parsons.[195] Crowley was intrigued by the rise of Nazism in Germany, and influenced by his friend Martha Küntzel believed that Adolf Hitler might convert to Thelema; when the Nazis abolished the German O.T.O. and imprisoned Germer, who fled to the US, Crowley then lambasted Hitler as a black magician.[196]

Second World War and death: 1939–1947

 
Crowley specified that Grady McMurtry succeed his chosen successor as Head of O.T.O., Karl Germer.

When the Second World War broke out, Crowley wrote to the Naval Intelligence Division offering his services, but they declined. He associated with a variety of figures in Britain's intelligence community at the time, including Dennis Wheatley, Roald Dahl, Ian Fleming, and Maxwell Knight,[197] and claimed to have been behind the "V for Victory" sign first used by the BBC; this has never been proven.[198] In 1940, his asthma worsened, and with his German-produced medication unavailable, he returned to using heroin, once again becoming addicted.[199] As the Blitz hit London, Crowley relocated to Torquay, where he was briefly hospitalized with asthma, and entertained himself with visits to the local chess club.[200] Tiring of Torquay, he returned to London, where he was visited by American Thelemite Grady McMurtry, to whom Crowley awarded the title of "Hymenaeus Alpha".[201] He stipulated that though Germer would be his immediate successor, McMurty should succeed Germer as head of the O.T.O. after the latter's death.[202] With O.T.O. initiate Lady Frieda Harris, Crowley developed plans to produce a tarot card set, designed by him and painted by Harris. Accompanying this was a book, published in a limited edition as The Book of Thoth by Chiswick Press in 1944.[203] To aid the war effort, he wrote a proclamation on the rights of humanity, Liber Oz, and a poem for the liberation of France, Le Gauloise.[204] Crowley's final publication during his lifetime was a book of poetry, Olla: An Anthology of Sixty Years of Song.[205] Another of his projects, Aleister Explains Everything, was posthumously published as Magick Without Tears.[206]

In April 1944 Crowley briefly moved to Aston Clinton in Buckinghamshire,[207] where he was visited by the poet Nancy Cunard,[208] before relocating to Hastings in Sussex, where he took up residence at the Netherwood boarding house.[207] He took a young man named Kenneth Grant as his secretary, paying him in magical teaching rather than wages.[209] He was also introduced to John Symonds, whom he appointed to be his literary executor; Symonds thought little of Crowley, later publishing negative biographies of him.[210] Corresponding with the illusionist Arnold Crowther, it was through him that Crowley was introduced to Gerald Gardner, the future founder of Gardnerian Wicca. They became friends, with Crowley authorising Gardner to revive Britain's ailing O.T.O.[211] Another visitor was Eliza Marian Butler, who interviewed Crowley for her book The Myth of the Magus.[212] Other friends and family also spent time with him, among them Doherty and Crowley's son Aleister Atatürk.[213]

On 1 December 1947, Crowley died at Netherwood of chronic bronchitis aggravated by pleurisy and myocardial degeneration, aged 72.[214] His funeral was held at a Brighton crematorium on 5 December; about a dozen people attended, and Louis Wilkinson read excerpts from the Gnostic Mass, The Book of the Law, and "Hymn to Pan". The funeral generated press controversy, and was labelled a Black Mass by the tabloids. Crowley's body was cremated; his ashes were sent to Karl Germer in the US, who buried them in his garden in Hampton, New Jersey.[215][216]

Beliefs and thought

 
Aleister Crowley's rendition of the Unicursal Hexagram, the symbol of Thelema

Crowley's belief system, Thelema, has been described by scholars as a religion,[217] and more specifically as both a new religious movement,[218] and as a "magico-religious doctrine".[219] It has also been characterized as a form of esotericism and Modern Paganism.[220] Although holding The Book of the Law—which was composed in 1904—as its central text, Thelema took shape as a complete system in the years after 1904.[221]

In his autobiography, Crowley claimed that his purpose in life had been to "bring oriental wisdom to Europe and to restore paganism in a purer form", although what he meant by "paganism" was unclear.[222] Crowley also wrote in the 4th Book of Magick about a great pagan Umbral fleet ruled by Ottovius that would be handed down to the great Spartan. The esoteric nature of this was also unclear. Crowley's thought was not always cohesive, and was influenced by a variety of sources, ranging from eastern religious movements and practices like Hindu yoga and Buddhism, scientific naturalism, and various currents within Western esotericism, among them ceremonial magic, alchemy, astrology, Rosicrucianism, Kabbalah, and the Tarot.[223] He was steeped in the esoteric teachings he had learned from the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, although pushed further with his own interpretations and strategies than the Golden Dawn had done.[224] Crowley incorporated concepts and terminology from South Asian religious traditions like yoga and Tantra into his Thelemic system, believing that there was a fundamental underlying resemblance between Western and Eastern spiritual systems.[225] The historian Alex Owen noted that Crowley adhered to the "modus operandi" of the Decadent movement throughout his life.[226]

Crowley believed that the twentieth century marked humanity's entry to the Aeon of Horus, a new era in which humans would take increasing control of their destiny. He believed that this Aeon follows on from the Aeon of Osiris, in which paternalistic religions like Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism dominated the world, and that this in turn had followed the Aeon of Isis, which had been maternalistic and dominated by goddess worship.[227] He believed that Thelema was the proper religion of the Aeon of Horus,[221] and also deemed himself to be the prophet of this new Aeon.[228] Thelema revolves around the idea that human beings each have their own True Will that they should discover and pursue, and that this exists in harmony with the Cosmic Will that pervades the universe.[229] Crowley referred to this process of searching and discovery of one's True Will to be "the Great Work" or the attaining of the "knowledge and conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel".[230] His favoured method of doing so was through the performance of the Abramelin operation, a ceremonial magic ritual obtained from a 17th-century grimoire.[231] The moral code of "Do What Thou Wilt" is believed by Thelemites to be the religion's ethical law, although the historian of religion Marco Pasi noted that this was not anarchistic or libertarian in structure, as Crowley saw individuals as part of a wider societal organism.[232]

Magick and theology

Crowley believed in the objective existence of magic, which he chose to spell "Magick", an older archaic spelling of the word.[233] He provided various different definitions of this term over his career.[234] In his book Magick in Theory and Practice, Crowley defined Magick as "the Science and Art of causing change to occur in conformity with Will".[235] He also told his disciple Karl Germer that "Magick is getting into communication with individuals who exist on a higher plane than ours. Mysticism is the raising of oneself to their level."[236] Crowley saw Magick as a third way between religion and science, giving The Equinox the subtitle of The Method of Science; the Aim of Religion.[237] Within that journal he expressed positive sentiments toward science and the scientific method,[238] and urged magicians to keep detailed records of their magical experiments, "The more scientific the record is, the better."[239] His understanding of magic was also influenced by the work of the anthropologist James Frazer, in particular the view that magic was a precursor to science in a cultural evolutionary framework.[240] Unlike Frazer, however, Crowley did not see magic as a survival from the past that required eradication, but rather he believed that magic had to be adapted to suit the new age of science.[238] In Crowley's alternative schema, old systems of magic had to decline (per Frazer's framework) so that science and magic could synthesize into magick, which would simultaneously accept the existence of the supernatural and an experimental method.[241] Crowley deliberately adopted an exceptionally broad definition of magick that included almost all forms of technology as magick, adopting an instrumentalist interpretation of magic, science, and technology.[242]

To [Crowley] the greatest aim of the magician was to merge with a higher power connected to the wellsprings of the universe, but he did not trouble himself too much to define that power consistently; sometimes it was God, sometimes the One, sometimes a goddess, and sometimes one's own Holy Guardian Angel or higher self. In the last analysis he was content for the nature of divinity to remain a mystery. As a result, he wrote at times like an atheist, at times like a monotheist, and at others like a polytheist.

R. Hutton[243]

Sexuality played an important role in Crowley's ideas about magick and his practice of it,[244] and has been described as being central to Thelema.[245] He outlined three forms of sex magick—the autoerotic, homosexual, and heterosexual—and argued that such acts could be used to focus the magician's will onto a specific goal such as financial gain or personal creative success.[246] For Crowley, sex was treated as a sacrament, with the consumption of sexual fluids interpreted as a Eucharist.[247] This was often manifested as the Cakes of Light, a biscuit containing either menstrual blood or a mixture of semen and vaginal fluids.[248] The Gnostic Mass is the central religious ceremony within Thelema.[249]

Crowley's theological beliefs were not clear. The historian Ronald Hutton noted that some of Crowley's writings could be used to argue that he was an atheist,[234] while some support the idea that he was a polytheist,[243] and others would bolster the idea that he was a mystical monotheist.[250] On the basis of the teachings in The Book of the Law, Crowley described a pantheon of three deities taken from the ancient Egyptian pantheon: Nuit, Hadit, and Ra-Hoor-Khuit.[222] In 1928, he made the claim that all true deities were derived from this trinity.[222] Jason Josephson-Storm has argued that Crowley built on 19th-century attempts to link early Christianity to pre-Christian religions, such as Frazer's Golden Bough, to synthesize Christian theology and Neopaganism while remaining critical of institutional and traditional Christianity.[251]

Both during his life and after it, Crowley has been widely described as a Satanist, usually by detractors. Crowley stated he did not consider himself a Satanist, nor did he worship Satan, as he did not accept the Christian world view in which Satan was believed to exist.[252] He nevertheless used Satanic imagery, for instance by describing himself as "the Beast 666" and referring to the Whore of Babylon in his work, while in later life he sent "Antichristmas cards" to his friends.[253] In his writings, Crowley occasionally identified Aiwass as Satan and designated him as "Our Lord God the Devil" at one occasion.[254] The scholar of religion Gordan Djurdjevic stated that Crowley "was emphatically not" a Satanist, "if for no other reason than simply because he did not identify himself as such".[255] Crowley nevertheless expressed strong anti-Christian sentiment,[256] stating that he hated Christianity "as Socialists hate soap",[250] an animosity probably stemming from his experiences among the Plymouth Brethren.[253] He was nevertheless influenced by the King James Bible, especially the Book of Revelation, the impact of which can be seen in his writings.[257] He was also accused of advocating human sacrifice, largely because of a passage in Book 4 in which he stated that "A male child of perfect innocence and high intelligence is the most satisfactory victim" and added that he had sacrificed about 150 every year. This was a tongue-in-cheek reference to ejaculation, something not realized by his critics.[258]

Personal life

Crowley considered himself to be one of the outstanding figures of his time.[259] The historian Ronald Hutton stated that in Crowley's youth, he was "a self-indulgent and flamboyant young man" who "set about a deliberate flouting and provocation of social and religious norms", while being shielded from an "outraged public opinion" by his inherited wealth.[259] Hutton also described Crowley as having both an "unappeasable desire" to take control of any organisation that he belonged to, and "a tendency to quarrel savagely" with those who challenged him.[259] Crowley biographer Martin Booth asserted that Crowley was "self-confident, brash, eccentric, egotistic, highly intelligent, arrogant, witty, wealthy, and, when it suited him, cruel".[260] Similarly, Richard B. Spence noted that Crowley was "capable of immense physical and emotional cruelty".[261] Biographer Lawrence Sutin noted that Crowley exhibited "courage, skill, dauntless energy, and remarkable focus of will" while at the same time showing a "blind arrogance, petty fits of bile, [and] contempt for the abilities of his fellow men".[262] The Thelemite Lon Milo DuQuette noted that Crowley "was by no means perfect" and "often alienated those who loved him dearest."[263]

Political views

Crowley enjoyed being outrageous and flouting conventional morality,[264] with John Symonds noting that he "was in revolt against the moral and religious values of his time".[265] Crowley's political thought was studied by academic Marco Pasi, who noted that for Crowley, socio-political concerns were subordinate to metaphysical and spiritual ones.[223] He was neither on the political left nor right but perhaps best categorized as a "conservative revolutionary" despite not being affiliated with the German-based movement of the same name.[266] Pasi described Crowley's fascination to the extreme ideologies of Nazism and Marxism–Leninism, which aimed to violently overturn society: "What Crowley liked about Nazism and communism, or at least what made him curious about them, was the anti-Christian position and the revolutionary and socially subversive implications of these two movements. In their subversive powers, he saw the possibility of an annihilation of old religious traditions, and the creation of a void that Thelema, subsequently, would be able to fill."[267] Crowley described democracy as an "imbecile and nauseating cult of weakness",[268] and commented that The Book of the Law proclaimed that "there is the master and there is the slave; the noble and the serf; the 'lone wolf' and the herd".[232] In this attitude, he was influenced by the work of Friedrich Nietzsche and by Social Darwinism.[269] Although he had contempt for most of the British aristocracy, he regarded himself as an aristocrat and styled himself as Laird Boleskine,[270] once describing his ideology as "aristocratic communism".[271]

Views on race and gender

Crowley was bisexual, but exhibited a preference for women,[272] with his relationships with men being fewer and mostly in the early part of his life.[234] In particular he had an attraction toward "exotic women",[273] and claimed to have fallen in love on multiple occasions; Kaczynski stated that "when he loved, he did so with his whole being, but the passion was typically short-lived".[274] Even in later life, Crowley was able to attract young bohemian women to be his lovers, largely due to his charisma.[275] He applied the term "Scarlet Woman" to various female lovers whom he believed played an important role in his magical work.[276] During homosexual acts, he usually played 'the passive role',[277] which Booth believed "appealed to his masochistic side".[278] An underlying theme in many of his writings is that spiritual enlightenment arises through transgressing socio-sexual norms.[279]

Crowley advocated complete sexual freedom for both men and women.[280] He argued that homosexual and bisexual people should not suppress their sexual orientation,[234] commenting that a person "must not be ashamed or afraid of being homosexual if he happens to be so at heart; he must not attempt to violate his own true nature because of public opinion, or medieval morality, or religious prejudice which would wish he were otherwise."[281] On other issues he adopted a more conservative attitude; he opposed abortion on moral grounds, believing that no woman following her True Will would ever desire one.[282]

Biographer Lawrence Sutin stated that "blatant bigotry is a persistent minor element in Crowley's writings".[283] Sutin thought Crowley "a spoiled scion of a wealthy Victorian family who embodied many of the worst John Bull racial and social prejudices of his upper-class contemporaries", noting that he "embodied the contradiction that writhed within many Western intellectuals of the time: deeply held racist viewpoints courtesy of society, coupled with a fascination with people of colour".[284] Crowley is said to have insulted his close Jewish friend Victor Benjamin Neuburg, using antisemitic slurs, and he had mixed opinions about Jewish people as a group.[285] Although he praised their "sublime" poetry and stated that they exhibited "imagination, romance, loyalty, probity and humanity", he also thought that centuries of persecution had led some Jewish people to exhibit "avarice, servility, falseness, cunning and the rest".[286] He was also known to praise various ethnic and cultural groups, for instance he thought that the Chinese people exhibited a "spiritual superiority" to the English,[287] and praised Muslims for exhibiting "manliness, straightforwardness, subtlety, and self-respect".[288]

Both critics of Crowley and adherents of Thelema have accused Crowley of sexism.[289] Booth described Crowley as exhibiting a "general misogyny", something the biographer believed arose from Crowley's bad relationship with his mother.[290] Sutin noted that Crowley "largely accepted the notion, implicitly embodied in Victorian sexology, of women as secondary social beings in terms of intellect and sensibility".[291] The scholar of religion Manon Hedenborg White noted that some of Crowley's statements are "undoubtedly misogynist by contemporary standards", but characterized Crowley's attitude toward women as complex and multi-faceted.[292] Crowley's comments on women's role varied dramatically within his written work, even that produced in similar periods.[292] Crowley described women as "moral inferiors" who had to be treated with "firmness, kindness and justice",[293] while also arguing that Thelema was essential to women's emancipation.[294]

Intelligence work

Biographers Richard B. Spence and Tobias Churton have suggested that Crowley was a spy for the British secret services and that among other things he joined the Golden Dawn under their command to monitor the activities of Mathers, who was known to be a Carlist.[295] Spence suggested that the conflict between Mathers and the London lodge for the temple was part of an intelligence operation to undermine Mathers' authority.[296] Spence has suggested that the purpose of Crowley's trip to Mexico might have been to explore Mexican oil prospects for British intelligence.[297] Spence has suggested that his trip to China was orchestrated as part of a British intelligence scheme to monitor the region's opium trade.[298] Churton suggested that Crowley had travelled to Moscow on the orders of British intelligence to spy on revolutionary elements in the city.[111]

Spence and Sutin both claim that Crowley's pro-German work in the United States was actually a cover for him being a double agent for Britain, citing his hyperbolic articles in The Fatherland to make the German lobby appear ridiculous in the eyes of the American public.[299] Spence also claims that Crowley encouraged the German Navy to destroy the Lusitania, informing them that it would ensure the US stayed out of the war, while in reality hoping that it would bring the US into the war on Britain's side.[300]

Legacy and influence

"[H]e is today looked upon as a source of inspiration by many people in search of spiritual enlightenment and/ or instructions in magical practice. Thus, while during his life his books hardly sold and his disciples were never very numerous, nowadays all his important works are constantly in print, and the people defining themselves as "thelemites" (that is, followers of Crowley's new religion) number several thousands all over the world. Furthermore, Crowley's influence over magically oriented new religious movements has in some cases been very deep and pervasive. It would be difficult to understand, for instance, some aspects of Anglo-Saxon neo-paganism and contemporary satanism without a solid knowledge of Crowley's doctrines and ideas. In other fields, such as poetry, alpinism and painting, he may have been a minor figure, but it is only fair to admit that, in the limited context of occultism, he has played and still plays a major role."

Marco Pasi, 2003.[301]

Crowley has remained an influential figure, both amongst occultists and in popular culture, particularly that of Britain, but also of other parts of the world. In 2002, a BBC poll placed Crowley seventy-third in a list of the 100 Greatest Britons.[302] Richard Cavendish has written of him that "In native talent, penetrating intelligence and determination, Aleister Crowley was the best-equipped magician to emerge since the seventeenth century."[303] The scholar of esotericism Egil Asprem described him as "one of the most well-known figures in modern occultism".[304] The scholar of esotericism Wouter Hanegraaff asserted that Crowley was an extreme representation of "the dark side of the occult",[305] adding that he was "the most notorious occultist magician of the twentieth century".[306] The philosopher John Moore[who?] opined that Crowley stood out as a "Modern Master" when compared with other prominent occult figures like George Gurdjieff, P. D. Ouspensky, Rudolf Steiner, or Helena Blavatsky,[307] also describing him as a "living embodiment" of Oswald Spengler's "Faustian Man".[308] Biographer Tobias Churton considered Crowley "a pioneer of consciousness research".[309] Hutton noted that Crowley had "an important place in the history of modern Western responses to Oriental spiritual traditions",[310] while Sutin thought that he had made "distinctly original contributions" to the study of yoga in the West.[311]

Thelema continued to develop and spread following Crowley's death. In 1969, the O.T.O. was reactivated in California under the leadership of Grady Louis McMurtry;[312] in 1985 its right to the title was unsuccessfully challenged in court by a rival group, the Society Ordo Templi Orientis, led by Brazilian Thelemite Marcelo Ramos Motta.[312] Another American Thelemite is the filmmaker Kenneth Anger, who had been influenced by Crowley's writings from a young age.[313] In the United Kingdom, Kenneth Grant propagated a tradition known as Typhonian Thelema through his organisation, the Typhonian O.T.O., later renamed the Typhonian Order.[314] Also in Britain, an occultist known as Amado Crowley claimed to be Crowley's son; this has been refuted by academic investigation. Amado argued that Thelema was a false religion created by Crowley to hide his true esoteric teachings, which Amado claimed to be propagating.[315]

Several Western esoteric traditions other than Thelema were also influenced by Crowley, with Djurdjevic observing that "Crowley's influence on twentieth-century and contemporary esotericism has been enormous".[316] Gerald Gardner, founder of Gardnerian Wicca, made use of much of Crowley's published material when composing the Gardnerian ritual liturgy,[317] and the Australian witch Rosaleen Norton was also heavily influenced by Crowley's ideas.[318] More widely, Crowley became "a dominant figure" in the modern Pagan community.[319] L. Ron Hubbard, the American founder of Scientology, was involved in Thelema in the early 1940s (with Jack Parsons), and it has been argued that Crowley's ideas influenced some of Hubbard's work.[320] The scholars of religion Asbjørn Dyrendel, James R. Lewis, and Jesper Petersen noted that despite the fact that Crowley was not a Satanist, he "in many ways embodies the pre-Satanist esoteric discourse on Satan and Satanism through his lifestyle and his philosophy", with his "image and ought" becoming an "important influence" on the later development of religious Satanism.[321] For instance, two prominent figures in religious Satanism, Anton LaVey and Michael Aquino, were influenced by Crowley's work.[322]

Crowley also had a wider influence in British popular culture. After his time in Cefalù which had brought him to public attention in Britain, various "literary Crowleys" appeared: characters in fiction based upon him.[323] One of the earliest was the character of the poet Shelley Arabin in John Buchan's 1926 novel The Dancing Floor.[323] In his novel The Devil Rides Out, the writer Dennis Wheatley used Crowley as a partial basis for the character of Damien Morcata, a portly bald defrocked priest who engages in black magic.[324] The occultist Dion Fortune used Crowley as a basis for characters in her books The Secrets of Doctor Taverner (1926) and The Winged Bull (1935).[325] He was included as one of the figures on the cover art of The Beatles' album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967),[312] and his motto of "Do What Thou Wilt" was inscribed on the vinyl of Led Zeppelin's album Led Zeppelin III (1970).[312] Led Zeppelin co-founder Jimmy Page bought Boleskine in 1971, and part of the band's film The Song Remains the Same was filmed in the grounds. He sold it in 1992.[326] Though David Bowie makes but a fleeting reference to Crowley in the lyrics of his song "Quicksand" (1971),[312] it has been suggested that the lyrics of Bowie's No. 1 hit single "Let's Dance" (1983) may substantially paraphrase Crowley's 1923 poem "Lyric of Love to Leah".[327] Ozzy Osbourne and his lyricist Bob Daisley wrote a song titled "Mr. Crowley" (1980).[328] A prophetic quote about the coming of the New Aeon borrowed from Crowley's work Magick in Theory and Practice (1911) has been featured as the opening introduction to the video game Blood Omen: Legacy of Kain (1996).[329] Crowley began to receive scholarly attention from academics in the late 1990s.[310]

Bibliography

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ NLS Other Writings: Say How, A-D - National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled (NLS) | Library of Congress 7 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine: "Crowley, Aleister (AL-is-tər KRŌ-lē)"
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  3. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 2–3; Sutin 2000, pp. 31–23; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 4–8; Churton 2011, pp. 14–15.
  4. ^ Booth 2000, p. 3; Sutin 2000, pp. 18–21; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 13–16; Churton 2011, pp. 17–21.
  5. ^ Booth 2000, p. 3; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 13–14; Churton 2011, p. 17.
  6. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 3–4, 6, 9–10; Sutin 2000, pp. 17–23; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 11–12, 16.
  7. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 6–7; Kaczynski 2010, p. 16; Churton 2011, p. 24.
  8. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 12–14; Sutin 2000, pp. 25–29; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 17–18; Churton 2011, p. 24.
  9. ^ Booth 2000, p. 15; Sutin 2000, pp. 24–25; Kaczynski 2010, p. 19; Churton 2011, pp. 24–25.
  10. ^ Booth 2000, p. 10; Sutin 2000, p. 21.
  11. ^ Sutin 2000, pp. 27–30; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 19, 21–22.
  12. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 32–39; Sutin 2000, pp. 32–33; Kaczynski 2010, p. 27; Churton 2011, pp. 26–27.
  13. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 15–16; Sutin 2000, pp. 25–26; Kaczynski 2010, p. 23.
  14. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 26–27; Sutin 2000, p. 33; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 24, 27; Churton 2011, p. 26.
  15. ^ Booth 2000, pp. 39–43; Sutin 2000, pp. 30–32, 34; Kaczynski 2010, pp. 27–30; Churton 2011, pp. 26–27.
  16. ^ Booth 2000, p. 49; Sutin 2000, pp. 34–35; Kaczynski 2010, p. 32; Churton 2011, pp. 27–28.
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Further reading

  • Gillavry, D. M. (2014). "Aleister Crowley, the Guardian Angel and Aiwass: The Nature of Spiritual Beings in the Philosophies of the Great Beast 666" (PDF). Sacra. Brno: Masaryk University. 11 (2): 33–42. ISSN 1214-5351. S2CID 58907340. (PDF) from the original on 27 June 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  • Crowley, Aleister., John. Symonds, and Kenneth. Grant. The Confessions of Aleister Crowley:  an Autohagiography. 1989. London: Arkana.
  • Tully, Caroline (2010). "Walk Like an Egyptian: Egypt as Authority in Aleister Crowley's Reception of The Book of the Law" (PDF). The Pomegranate: The International Journal of Pagan Studies. London: Equinox Publishing. 12 (1): 20–47. doi:10.1558/pome.v12i1.20. hdl:11343/252812. ISSN 1528-0268. S2CID 159745083. (PDF) from the original on 10 January 2022. Retrieved 10 January 2022.

External links

aleister, crowley, born, edward, alexander, crowley, october, 1875, december, 1947, english, occultist, philosopher, ceremonial, magician, poet, painter, novelist, mountaineer, founded, religion, thelema, identifying, himself, prophet, entrusted, with, guiding. Aleister Crowley ˈ ae l ɪ s t er ˈ k r oʊ l i 1 born Edward Alexander Crowley 12 October 1875 1 December 1947 was an English occultist philosopher ceremonial magician poet painter novelist and mountaineer He founded the religion of Thelema identifying himself as the prophet entrusted with guiding humanity into the AEon of Horus in the early 20th century A prolific writer he published widely over the course of his life Aleister CrowleyAleister Crowley in 1925BornEdward Alexander Crowley 1875 10 12 12 October 1875Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire EnglandDied1 December 1947 1947 12 01 aged 72 Hastings East Sussex EnglandResting placeAshes buried in Hampton New JerseyEducationMalvern CollegeTonbridge SchoolEastbourne CollegeTrinity College CambridgeOccupationsOccultistpoetnovelistmountaineerSpousesRose Edith Kelly m 1903 div 1909 wbr Maria Teresa Sanchez m 1929 wbr Children5SignatureBorn to a wealthy family in Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire Crowley rejected his parents fundamentalist Christian Plymouth Brethren faith to pursue an interest in Western esotericism He was educated at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge where he focused his attentions on mountaineering and poetry resulting in several publications Some biographers allege that here he was recruited into a British intelligence agency further suggesting that he remained a spy throughout his life In 1898 he joined the esoteric Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn where he was trained in ceremonial magic by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers and Allan Bennett He went mountaineering in Mexico with Oscar Eckenstein before studying Hindu and Buddhist practices in India In 1904 he married Rose Edith Kelly and they honeymooned in Cairo Egypt where Crowley claimed to have been contacted by a supernatural entity named Aiwass who provided him with The Book of the Law a sacred text that served as the basis for Thelema Announcing the start of the AEon of Horus The Book declared that its followers should Do what thou wilt and seek to align themselves with their True Will through the practice of magick After the unsuccessful 1905 Kanchenjunga expedition and a visit to India and China Crowley returned to Britain where he attracted attention as a prolific author of poetry novels and occult literature In 1907 he and George Cecil Jones co founded an esoteric order the A A through which they propagated Thelema After spending time in Algeria in 1912 he was initiated into another esoteric order the German based Ordo Templi Orientis O T O rising to become the leader of its British branch which he reformulated in accordance with his Thelemite beliefs Through the O T O Thelemite groups were established in Britain Australia and North America Crowley spent the First World War in the United States where he took up painting and campaigned for the German war effort against Britain later revealing that he had infiltrated the pro German movement to assist the British intelligence services In 1920 he established the Abbey of Thelema a religious commune in Cefalu Sicily where he lived with various followers His libertine lifestyle led to denunciations in the British press and the Italian government evicted him in 1923 He divided the following two decades between France Germany and England and continued to promote Thelema until his death Crowley gained widespread notoriety during his lifetime being a drug user bisexual and an individualist social critic Crowley has remained a highly influential figure over Western esotericism and the counterculture of the 1960s and continues to be considered a prophet in Thelema He is the subject of various biographies and academic studies Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Youth 1 2 Cambridge University 1895 1898 1 3 The Golden Dawn 1898 1899 1 4 Mexico India Paris and marriage 1900 1903 2 Developing Thelema 2 1 Egypt and The Book of the Law 1904 2 2 Kanchenjunga and China 1905 06 2 3 The A A and The Holy Books of Thelema 1907 1909 2 4 Algeria and the Rites of Eleusis 1909 1911 2 5 Ordo Templi Orientis and the Paris Working 1912 1914 2 6 United States 1914 1919 2 7 Abbey of Thelema 1920 1923 3 Later life 3 1 Tunisia Paris and London 1923 1929 3 2 Berlin and London 1930 1938 3 3 Second World War and death 1939 1947 4 Beliefs and thought 4 1 Magick and theology 5 Personal life 5 1 Political views 5 2 Views on race and gender 6 Intelligence work 7 Legacy and influence 8 Bibliography 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditYouth Edit Aleister Crowley was born as Edward Alexander Crowley at 30 Clarendon Square in Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire on 12 October 1875 Crowley was born Edward Alexander Crowley at 30 Clarendon Square in Royal Leamington Spa Warwickshire on 12 October 1875 2 His father Edward Crowley 1829 1887 was trained as an engineer but his share in a lucrative family brewing business Crowley s Alton Ales had allowed him to retire before his son was born 3 His mother Emily Bertha Bishop 1848 1917 came from a Devonshire Somerset family and had a strained relationship with her son she described him as the Beast a name that he revelled in 4 The couple had been married at London s Kensington Registry Office in November 1874 5 and were evangelical Christians Crowley s father had been born a Quaker but had converted to the Exclusive Brethren a faction of a Christian fundamentalist group known as the Plymouth Brethren Emily likewise converted upon marriage Crowley s father was particularly devout spending his time as a travelling preacher for the sect and reading a chapter from the Bible to his wife and son after breakfast every day 6 Following the death of their baby daughter in 1880 in 1881 the Crowleys moved to Redhill Surrey 7 At the age of 8 Crowley was sent to H T Habershon s evangelical Christian boarding school in Hastings and then to Ebor preparatory school in Cambridge run by the Reverend Henry d Arcy Champney whom Crowley considered a sadist 8 In March 1887 when Crowley was 11 his father died of tongue cancer Crowley described this as a turning point in his life 9 and he always maintained an admiration of his father describing him as my hero and my friend 10 Inheriting a third of his father s wealth he began misbehaving at school and was harshly punished by Champney Crowley s family removed him from the school when he developed albuminuria 11 He then attended Malvern College and Tonbridge School both of which he despised and left after a few terms 12 He became increasingly sceptical regarding Christianity pointing out inconsistencies in the Bible to his religious teachers 13 and went against the Christian morality of his upbringing by smoking masturbating and having sex with prostitutes from whom he contracted gonorrhea 14 Sent to live with a Brethren tutor in Eastbourne he undertook chemistry courses at Eastbourne College Crowley developed interests in chess poetry and mountain climbing and in 1894 climbed Beachy Head before visiting the Alps and joining the Scottish Mountaineering Club The following year he returned to the Bernese Alps climbing the Eiger Trift Jungfrau Monch and Wetterhorn 15 Cambridge University 1895 1898 Edit Having adopted the name of Aleister over Edward in October 1895 Crowley began a three year course at Trinity College Cambridge where he was entered for the Moral Science Tripos studying philosophy With approval from his personal tutor he changed to English literature which was not then part of the curriculum offered 16 Crowley spent much of his time at university engaged in his pastimes becoming president of the chess club and practising the game for two hours a day he briefly considered a professional career as a chess player 17 Crowley also embraced his love of literature and poetry particularly the works of Richard Francis Burton and Percy Bysshe Shelley 18 Many of his own poems appeared in student publications such as The Granta Cambridge Magazine and Cantab 19 He continued his mountaineering going on holiday to the Alps to climb every year from 1894 to 1898 often with his friend Oscar Eckenstein and in 1897 he made the first ascent of the Monch without a guide These feats led to his recognition in the Alpine mountaineering community 20 For many years I had loathed being called Alick partly because of the unpleasant sound and sight of the word partly because it was the name by which my mother called me Edward did not seem to suit me and the diminutives Ted or Ned were even less appropriate Alexander was too long and Sandy suggested tow hair and freckles I had read in some book or other that the most favourable name for becoming famous was one consisting of a dactyl followed by a spondee as at the end of a hexameter like Jeremy Taylor Aleister Crowley fulfilled these conditions and Aleister is the Gaelic form of Alexander To adopt it would satisfy my romantic ideals Aleister Crowley on his name change 21 Crowley had his first significant mystical experience while on holiday in Stockholm in December 1896 22 Several biographers including Lawrence Sutin Richard Kaczynski and Tobias Churton believed that this was the result of Crowley s first same sex sexual experience which enabled him to recognize his bisexuality 23 At Cambridge Crowley maintained a vigorous sex life with women largely with female prostitutes from one of whom he caught syphilis but eventually he took part in same sex activities despite their illegality 24 In October 1897 Crowley met Herbert Charles Pollitt president of the Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club and the two entered into a relationship They broke apart because Pollitt did not share Crowley s increasing interest in Western esotericism a break up that Crowley would regret for many years 25 In 1897 Crowley travelled to Saint Petersburg in Russia later saying that he was trying to learn Russian as he was considering a future diplomatic career there 26 In October 1897 a brief illness triggered considerations of mortality and the futility of all human endeavour and Crowley abandoned all thoughts of a diplomatic career in favour of pursuing an interest in the occult 27 In March 1898 he obtained A E Waite s The Book of Black Magic and of Pacts and then Karl von Eckartshausen s The Cloud Upon the Sanctuary furthering his occult interests 28 That same year Crowley privately published 100 copies of his poem Aceldama A Place to Bury Strangers In but it was not a particular success 29 Aceldama was issued by Leonard Smithers 30 That same year Crowley published a string of other poems including White Stains a Decadent collection of erotic poetry that was printed abroad lest its publication be prohibited by the British authorities 31 In July 1898 he left Cambridge not having taken any degree at all despite a first class showing in his 1897 exams and consistent second class honours results before that 32 The Golden Dawn 1898 1899 Edit Crowley in Golden Dawn garb 1910 In August 1898 Crowley was in Zermatt Switzerland where he met the chemist Julian L Baker and the two began discussing their common interest in alchemy 33 Back in London Baker introduced Crowley to George Cecil Jones Baker s brother in law and a fellow member of the occult society known as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn which had been founded in 1888 34 Crowley was initiated into the Outer Order of the Golden Dawn on 18 November 1898 by the group s leader Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers The ceremony took place in the Golden Dawn s Isis Urania Temple held at London s Mark Masons Hall where Crowley took the magical motto and name Frater Perdurabo which he interpreted as I shall endure to the end 35 Crowley moved into his own luxury flat at 67 69 Chancery Lane and soon invited a senior Golden Dawn member Allan Bennett to live with him as his personal magical tutor Bennett taught Crowley more about ceremonial magic and the ritual use of drugs and together they performed the rituals of the Goetia 36 until Bennett left for South Asia to study Buddhism 37 In November 1899 Crowley purchased Boleskine House in Foyers on the shore of Loch Ness in Scotland He developed a love of Scottish culture describing himself as the Laird of Boleskine and took to wearing traditional highland dress even during visits to London 38 He continued writing poetry publishing Jezebel and Other Tragic Poems Tales of Archais Songs of the Spirit Appeal to the American Republic and Jephthah in 1898 99 most gained mixed reviews from literary critics although Jephthah was considered a particular critical success 39 Crowley soon progressed through the lower grades of the Golden Dawn and was ready to enter the group s inner Second Order 40 He was unpopular in the group his bisexuality and libertine lifestyle had gained him a bad reputation and he had developed feuds with some of the members including W B Yeats 41 When the Golden Dawn s London lodge refused to initiate Crowley into the Second Order he visited Mathers in Paris who personally admitted him into the Adeptus Minor Grade 42 A schism had developed between Mathers and the London members of the Golden Dawn who were unhappy with his autocratic rule 43 Acting under Mathers orders Crowley with the help of his mistress and fellow initiate Elaine Simpson attempted to seize the Vault of the Adepts a temple space at 36 Blythe Road in West Kensington from the London lodge members When the case was taken to court the judge ruled in favour of the London lodge as they had paid for the space s rent leaving both Crowley and Mathers isolated from the group 44 Mexico India Paris and marriage 1900 1903 Edit In 1900 Crowley travelled to Mexico via the United States settling in Mexico City and starting a relationship with a local woman Developing a love of the country he continued experimenting with ceremonial magic working with John Dee s Enochian invocations He later claimed to have been initiated into Freemasonry while there and he wrote a play based on Richard Wagner s Tannhauser as well as a series of poems published as Oracles 1905 Eckenstein joined him later in 1900 and together they climbed several mountains including Iztaccihuatl Popocatepetl and Colima the latter of which they had to abandon owing to a volcanic eruption 45 Leaving Mexico Crowley headed to San Francisco before sailing for Hawaii aboard the Nippon Maru On the ship he had a brief affair with a married woman named Mary Alice Rogers saying he had fallen in love with her he wrote a series of poems about the romance published as Alice An Adultery 1903 46 Crowley during the K2 Expedition 1902 Briefly stopping in Japan and Hong Kong Crowley reached Ceylon where he met with Allan Bennett who was there studying Shaivism The pair spent some time in Kandy before Bennett decided to become a Buddhist monk in the Theravada tradition travelling to Burma to do so 47 Crowley decided to tour India devoting himself to the Hindu practice of Raja yoga from which he claimed to have achieved the spiritual state of dhyana He spent much of this time studying at the Meenakshi Temple in Madura At this time he also wrote poetry which was published as The Sword of Song 1904 He contracted malaria and had to recuperate from the disease in Calcutta and Rangoon 48 In 1902 he was joined in India by Eckenstein and several other mountaineers Guy Knowles H Pfannl V Wesseley and Jules Jacot Guillarmod Together the Eckenstein Crowley expedition attempted K2 which had never been climbed On the journey Crowley was afflicted with influenza malaria and snow blindness and other expedition members were also struck with illness They reached an altitude of 20 000 feet 6 100 m before turning back 49 Having arrived in Paris in November 1902 he socialized with his friend the painter Gerald Kelly and through him became a fixture of the Parisian arts scene Whilst there Crowley wrote a series of poems on the work of an acquaintance the sculptor Auguste Rodin These poems were later published as Rodin in Rime 1907 50 One of those frequenting this milieu was W Somerset Maugham who after briefly meeting Crowley later used him as a model for the character of Oliver Haddo in his novel The Magician 1908 51 He returned to Boleskine in April 1903 In August Crowley wed Gerald Kelly s sister Rose Edith Kelly in a marriage of convenience to prevent her from entering an arranged marriage the marriage appalled the Kelly family and damaged his friendship with Gerald Heading on a honeymoon to Paris Cairo and then Ceylon Crowley fell in love with Rose and worked to prove his affections While on his honeymoon he wrote her a series of love poems published as Rosa Mundi and other Love Songs 1906 as well as authoring the religious satire Why Jesus Wept 1904 52 Developing Thelema EditEgypt and The Book of the Law 1904 Edit Had The manifestation of Nuit The unveiling of the company of heaven Every man and every woman is a star Every number is infinite there is no difference Help me o warrior lord of Thebes in my unveiling before the Children of men The opening lines of The Book of the Law In February 1904 Crowley and Rose arrived in Cairo Claiming to be a prince and princess they rented an apartment in which Crowley set up a temple room and began invoking ancient Egyptian deities while studying Islamic mysticism and Arabic 53 According to Crowley s later account Rose regularly became delirious and informed him they are waiting for you On 18 March she explained that they were the god Horus and on 20 March proclaimed that the Equinox of the Gods has come She led him to a nearby museum where she showed him a seventh century BCE mortuary stele known as the Stele of Ankh ef en Khonsu Crowley thought it important that the exhibit s number was 666 the Number of the Beast in Christian belief and in later years termed the artefact the Stele of Revealing 54 According to Crowley s later statements on 8 April he heard a disembodied voice claiming to be that of Aiwass the messenger of Horus or Hoor Paar Kraat Crowley said that he wrote down everything the voice told him over the course of the next three days and titled it Liber AL vel Legis or The Book of the Law 55 The book proclaimed that humanity was entering a new Aeon and that Crowley would serve as its prophet It stated that a supreme moral law was to be introduced in this Aeon Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law and that people should learn to live in tune with their Will This book and the philosophy that it espoused became the cornerstone of Crowley s religion Thelema 56 Crowley said that at the time he had been unsure what to do with The Book of the Law Often resenting it he said that he ignored the instructions which the text commanded him to perform which included taking the Stele of Revealing from the museum fortifying his own island and translating the book into all the world s languages According to his account he instead sent typescripts of the work to several occultists he knew putting the manuscript away and ignoring it 57 Kanchenjunga and China 1905 06 Edit Returning to Boleskine Crowley came to believe that Mathers had begun using magic against him and the relationship between the two broke down 58 On 28 July 1905 Rose gave birth to Crowley s first child a daughter named Lilith with Crowley writing the pornographic Snowdrops from a Curate s Garden to entertain his recuperating wife 59 He also founded a publishing company through which to publish his poetry naming it the Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth in parody of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Among its first publications were Crowley s Collected Works edited by Ivor Back an old friend of Crowley s who was both a practicing surgeon and an enthusiast of literature 60 His poetry often received strong reviews either positive or negative but never sold well In an attempt to gain more publicity he issued a reward of 100 for the best essay on his work The winner of this was J F C Fuller a British Army officer and military historian whose essay The Star in the West 1907 heralded Crowley s poetry as some of the greatest ever written 61 Kanchenjunga as seen from Darjeeling Crowley decided to climb Kanchenjunga in the Himalayas of Nepal widely recognized as the world s most treacherous mountain The collaboration between Jacot Guillarmod Charles Adolphe Reymond Alexis Pache and Alcesti C Rigo de Righi the expedition was marred by much argument between Crowley and the others who thought that he was reckless They eventually mutinied against Crowley s control with the other climbers heading back down the mountain as nightfall approached despite Crowley s warnings that it was too dangerous Subsequently Pache and several porters were killed in an accident something for which Crowley was widely blamed by the mountaineering community 62 Spending time in Moharbhanj where he took part in big game hunting and wrote the homoerotic work The Scented Garden Crowley met up with Rose and Lilith in Calcutta before being forced to leave India after non lethally shooting two men who tried to mug him 63 Briefly visiting Bennett in Burma Crowley and his family decided to tour Southern China hiring porters and a nanny for the purpose 64 Crowley smoked opium throughout the journey which took the family from Tengyueh through to Yungchang Tali Yunnanfu and then Hanoi On the way he spent much time on spiritual and magical work reciting the Bornless Ritual an invocation to his Holy Guardian Angel on a daily basis 65 While Rose and Lilith returned to Europe Crowley headed to Shanghai to meet old friend Elaine Simpson who was fascinated by The Book of the Law together they performed rituals in an attempt to contact Aiwass Crowley then sailed to Japan and Canada before continuing to New York City where he unsuccessfully solicited support for a second expedition up Kanchenjunga 66 Upon arrival in Britain Crowley learned that his daughter Lilith had died of typhoid in Rangoon something he later blamed on Rose s increasing alcoholism Under emotional distress his health began to suffer and he underwent a series of surgical operations 67 He began short lived romances with actress Vera Lola Neville nee Snepp 68 and author Ada Leverson 69 while Rose gave birth to Crowley s second daughter Lola Zaza in February 1907 70 The A A and The Holy Books of Thelema 1907 1909 Edit With his old mentor George Cecil Jones Crowley continued performing the Abramelin rituals at the Ashdown Park Hotel in Coulsdon Surrey Crowley claimed that in doing so he attained samadhi or union with Godhead thereby marking a turning point in his life 71 Making heavy use of hashish during these rituals he wrote an essay on The Psychology of Hashish 1909 in which he championed the drug as an aid to mysticism 72 He also claimed to have been contacted once again by Aiwass in late October and November 1907 adding that Aiwass dictated two further texts to him Liber VII and Liber Cordis Cincti Serpente both of which were later classified in the corpus of The Holy Books of Thelema 73 Crowley wrote down more Thelemic Holy Books during the last two months of the year including Liber LXVI Liber Arcanorum Liber Porta Lucis Sub Figura X Liber Tau Liber Trigrammaton and Liber DCCCXIII vel Ararita which he again claimed to have received from a preternatural source 74 Crowley stated that in June 1909 when the manuscript of The Book of the Law was rediscovered at Boleskine he developed the opinion that Thelema represented objective truth 75 Crowley s inheritance was running out 76 Trying to earn money he was hired by George Montagu Bennett the Earl of Tankerville to help protect him from witchcraft recognizing Bennett s paranoia as being based in his cocaine addiction Crowley took him on holiday to France and Morocco to recuperate 77 In 1907 he also began taking in paying students whom he instructed in occult and magical practice 78 Victor Neuburg whom Crowley met in February 1907 became his sexual partner and closest disciple in 1908 the pair toured northern Spain before heading to Tangier Morocco 79 The following year Neuburg stayed at Boleskine where he and Crowley engaged in sadomasochism 80 Crowley continued to write prolifically producing such works of poetry as Ambergris Clouds Without Water and Konx Om Pax 81 as well as his first attempt at an autobiography The World s Tragedy 82 Recognizing the popularity of short horror stories Crowley wrote his own some of which were published 83 and he also published several articles in Vanity Fair a magazine edited by his friend Frank Harris 84 He also wrote Liber 777 a book of magical and Qabalistic correspondences that borrowed from Mathers and Bennett 85 Into my loneliness comes The sound of a flute in dim groves that haunt the uttermost hills Even from the brave river they reach to the edge of the wilderness And I behold Pan The opening lines of Liber VII 1907 the first of the Holy Books of Thelema to be revealed to Crowley after The Book of the Law 86 In November 1907 Crowley and Jones decided to found an occult order to act as a successor to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn being aided in doing so by Fuller The result was the A A The group s headquarters and temple were situated at 124 Victoria Street in central London and their rites borrowed much from those of the Golden Dawn but with an added Thelemic basis 87 Its earliest members included solicitor Richard Noel Warren artist Austin Osman Spare Horace Sheridan Bickers author George Raffalovich Francis Henry Everard Joseph Feilding engineer Herbert Edward Inman Kenneth Ward and Charles Stansfeld Jones 88 In March 1909 Crowley began production of a biannual periodical titled The Equinox He billed this periodical which was to become the Official Organ of the A A as The Review of Scientific Illuminism 89 Crowley had become increasingly frustrated with Rose s alcoholism and in November 1909 he divorced her on the grounds of his own adultery Lola was entrusted to Rose s care the couple remained friends and Rose continued to live at Boleskine Her alcoholism worsened and as a result she was institutionalized in September 1911 90 Algeria and the Rites of Eleusis 1909 1911 Edit In November 1909 Crowley and Neuburg travelled to Algeria touring the desert from El Arba to Aumale Bou Saada and then Da leh Addin with Crowley reciting the Quran on a daily basis 91 186 202 During the trip he invoked the thirty aethyrs of Enochian magic with Neuburg recording the results later published in The Equinox as The Vision and the Voice Following a mountaintop sex magic ritual Crowley also performed an evocation to the demon Choronzon involving blood sacrifice and considered the results to be a watershed in his magical career 92 Returning to London in January 1910 Crowley found that Mathers was suing him for publishing Golden Dawn secrets in The Equinox the court found in favour of Crowley The case was widely reported in the press with Crowley gaining wider fame 93 Crowley enjoyed this and played up to the sensationalist stereotype of being a Satanist and advocate of human sacrifice despite being neither 94 The publicity attracted new members to the A A among them Frank Bennett James Bayley Herbert Close and James Windram 95 The Australian violinist Leila Waddell soon became Crowley s lover 96 Deciding to expand his teachings to a wider audience Crowley developed the Rites of Artemis a public performance of magic and symbolism featuring A A members personifying various deities It was first performed at the A A headquarters with attendees given a fruit punch containing peyote to enhance their experience Various members of the press attended and reported largely positively on it In October and November 1910 Crowley decided to stage something similar the Rites of Eleusis at Caxton Hall Westminster this time press reviews were mixed 97 Crowley came under particular criticism from West de Wend Fenton editor of The Looking Glass newspaper who called him one of the most blasphemous and cold blooded villains of modern times 98 Fenton s articles suggested that Crowley and Jones were involved in homosexual activity Crowley did not mind but Jones unsuccessfully sued for libel 99 Fuller broke off his friendship and involvement with Crowley over the scandal 100 and Crowley and Neuburg returned to Algeria for further magical workings 101 The Equinox continued publishing and various books of literature and poetry were also published under its imprint like Crowley s Ambergris The Winged Beetle and The Scented Garden as well as Neuburg s The Triumph of Pan and Ethel Archer s The Whirlpool 102 In 1911 Crowley and Waddell holidayed in Montigny sur Loing where he wrote prolifically producing poems short stories plays and 19 works on magic and mysticism including the two final Holy Books of Thelema 103 In Paris he met Mary Desti who became his next Scarlet Woman with the two undertaking magical workings in St Moritz Crowley believed that one of the Secret Chiefs Ab ul Diz was speaking through her 104 Based on Desti s statements when in trance Crowley wrote the two volume Book 4 1912 13 and at the time developed the spelling magick in reference to the paranormal phenomenon as a means of distinguishing it from the stage magic of illusionists 105 Ordo Templi Orientis and the Paris Working 1912 1914 Edit Crowley in ceremonial garb 1912 In early 1912 Crowley published The Book of Lies a work of mysticism that biographer Lawrence Sutin described as his greatest success in merging his talents as poet scholar and magus 106 The German occultist Theodor Reuss later accused him of publishing some of the secrets of his own occult order the Ordo Templi Orientis O T O within The Book Crowley convinced Reuss that the similarities were coincidental and the two became friends Reuss appointed Crowley as head of the O T O s British branch the Mysteria Mystica Maxima MMM and at a ceremony in Berlin Crowley adopted the magical name of Baphomet and was proclaimed X Supreme Rex and Sovereign Grand Master General of Ireland Iona and all the Britons 107 With Reuss permission Crowley set about advertising the MMM and re writing many O T O rituals which were then based largely on Freemasonry his incorporation of Thelemite elements proved controversial in the group Fascinated by the O T O s emphasis on sex magic Crowley devised a magical working based on anal sex and incorporated it into the syllabus for those O T O members who had been initiated into the eleventh degree 108 In March 1913 Crowley acted as producer for The Ragged Ragtime Girls a group of female violinists led by Waddell as they performed at London s Old Tivoli theatre They subsequently performed in Moscow for six weeks where Crowley had a sadomasochistic relationship with the Hungarian Anny Ringler 109 In Moscow Crowley continued to write plays and poetry including Hymn to Pan and the Gnostic Mass a Thelemic ritual that became a key part of O T O liturgy 110 Churton suggested that Crowley had travelled to Moscow on the orders of British intelligence to spy on revolutionary elements in the city under discussion 111 In January 1914 Crowley and Neuburg settled into an apartment in Paris where the former was involved in the controversy surrounding Jacob Epstein s new monument to Oscar Wilde 112 Together Crowley and Neuburg performed the six week Paris Working a period of intense ritual involving strong drug use in which they invoked the gods Mercury and Jupiter As part of the ritual the couple performed acts of sex magic together at times being joined by journalist Walter Duranty Inspired by the results of the Working Crowley wrote Liber Agape a treatise on sex magic 113 Following the Paris Working Neuburg began to distance himself from Crowley resulting in an argument in which Crowley cursed him 114 United States 1914 1919 Edit By 1914 Crowley was living a hand to mouth existence relying largely on donations from A A members and dues payments made to O T O 115 In May he transferred ownership of Boleskine House to the MMM for financial reasons 116 and in July he went mountaineering in the Swiss Alps During this time the First World War broke out 117 After recuperating from a bout of phlebitis Crowley set sail for the United States aboard the RMS Lusitania in October 1914 118 Arriving in New York City he moved into a hotel and began earning money writing for the American edition of Vanity Fair and undertaking freelance work for the famed astrologer Evangeline Adams 119 In the city he continued experimenting with sex magic through the use of masturbation female prostitutes and male clients of a Turkish bathhouse all of these encounters were documented in his diaries 120 May Morn one of Crowley s paintings from his time in the US He explained it thus The painting represents the dawning of the day following a witches celebration as described in Faust The witch is hanged as she deserves and the satyr looks out from behind a tree 121 Professing to be of Irish ancestry and a supporter of Irish independence from Great Britain Crowley began to espouse support for Germany in their war against Britain He became involved in New York s pro German movement and in January 1915 German spy George Sylvester Viereck employed him as a writer for his propagandist paper The Fatherland which was dedicated to keeping the US neutral in the conflict 122 In later years detractors denounced Crowley as a traitor to Britain for this action 123 Crowley entered into a relationship with Jeanne Robert Foster with whom he toured the West Coast In Vancouver headquarters of the North American O T O he met with Charles Stansfeld Jones and Wilfred Talbot Smith to discuss the propagation of Thelema on the continent In Detroit he experimented with Peyote at Parke Davis then visited Seattle San Francisco Santa Cruz Los Angeles San Diego Tijuana and the Grand Canyon before returning to New York 124 There he befriended Ananda Coomaraswamy and his wife Alice Richardson Crowley and Richardson performed sex magic in April 1916 following which she became pregnant and then miscarried 125 Later that year he took a magical retirement to a cabin by Lake Pasquaney owned by Evangeline Adams There he made heavy use of drugs and undertook a ritual after which he proclaimed himself Master Therion He also wrote several short stories based on J G Frazer s The Golden Bough and a work of literary criticism The Gospel According to Bernard Shaw 126 A drawing by Crowley of Lam In December he moved to New Orleans his favourite US city before spending February 1917 with evangelical Christian relatives in Titusville Florida 127 Returning to New York City he moved in with artist and A A member Leon Engers Kennedy in May learning of his mother s death 128 After the collapse of The Fatherland Crowley continued his association with Viereck who appointed him contributing editor of arts journal The International Crowley used it to promote Thelema but it soon ceased publication 129 He then moved to the studio apartment of Roddie Minor who became his partner and Scarlet Woman Through their rituals which Crowley called The Amalantrah Workings he believed that they were contacted by a preternatural entity named Lam The relationship soon ended 130 In 1918 Crowley went on a magical retreat in the wilderness of Esopus Island on the Hudson River Here he began a translation of the Tao Te Ching painted Thelemic slogans on the riverside cliffs and he later claimed experienced past life memories of being Ge Xuan Pope Alexander VI Alessandro Cagliostro and Eliphas Levi 131 Back in New York City he moved to Greenwich Village where he took Leah Hirsig as his lover and next Scarlet Woman 132 He took up painting as a hobby exhibiting his work at the Greenwich Village Liberal Club and attracting the attention of the New York Evening World 133 With the financial assistance of sympathetic Freemasons Crowley revived The Equinox with the first issue of volume III known as The Blue Equinox 134 He spent mid 1919 on a climbing holiday in Montauk before returning to London in December 135 Abbey of Thelema 1920 1923 Edit Now destitute and back in London Crowley came under attack from the tabloid John Bull which labelled him traitorous scum for his work with the German war effort several friends aware of his intelligence work urged him to sue but he decided not to 136 When he was suffering from asthma a doctor prescribed him heroin to which he soon became addicted 137 In January 1920 he moved to Paris renting a house in Fontainebleau with Leah Hirsig they were soon joined in a menage a trois by Ninette Shumway and also in living arrangement by Leah s newborn daughter Anne Poupee Leah 138 Crowley had ideas of forming a community of Thelemites which he called the Abbey of Thelema after the Abbaye de Theleme in Francois Rabelais satire Gargantua and Pantagruel After consulting the I Ching he chose Cefalu on Sicily Italy as a location and after arriving there began renting the old Villa Santa Barbara as his Abbey on 2 April 139 The dilapidated Abbey of Thelema in Cefalu Sicily in 2017 Moving to the commune with Hirsig Shumway and their children Hansi Howard and Poupee Crowley described the scenario as perfectly happy my idea of heaven 140 They wore robes and performed rituals to the sun god Ra at set times during the day also occasionally performing the Gnostic Mass the rest of the day they were left to follow their own interests 141 Undertaking widespread correspondences Crowley continued to paint wrote a commentary on The Book of the Law and revised the third part of Book 4 142 He offered a libertine education for the children allowing them to play all day and witness acts of sex magic 143 He occasionally travelled to Palermo to visit rent boys and buy supplies including drugs his heroin addiction came to dominate his life and cocaine began to erode his nasal cavity 144 There was no cleaning rota and wild dogs and cats wandered throughout the building which soon became unsanitary 145 Poupee died in October 1920 and Ninette gave birth to a daughter Astarte Lulu Panthea soon afterwards 146 New followers continued to arrive at the Abbey to be taught by Crowley Among them was film star Jane Wolfe who arrived in July 1920 where she was initiated into the A A and became Crowley s secretary 147 Another was Cecil Frederick Russell who often argued with Crowley disliking the same sex sexual magic that he was required to perform and left after a year 148 More conducive was the Australian Thelemite Frank Bennett who also spent several months at the Abbey 149 In February 1922 Crowley returned to Paris for a retreat in an unsuccessful attempt to kick his heroin addiction 150 He then went to London in search of money where he published articles in The English Review criticising the Dangerous Drugs Act 1920 and wrote a novel Diary of a Drug Fiend completed in July On publication it received mixed reviews he was lambasted by the Sunday Express which called for its burning and used its influence to prevent further reprints 151 Subsequently a young Thelemite named Raoul Loveday moved to the Abbey with his wife Betty May while Loveday was devoted to Crowley May detested him and life at the commune She later said that Loveday was made to drink the blood of a sacrificed cat and that they were required to cut themselves with razors every time they used the pronoun I Loveday drank from a local polluted stream soon developing a liver infection resulting in his death in February 1923 Returning to London May told her story to the press 152 John Bull proclaimed Crowley the wickedest man in the world and a man we d like to hang and although Crowley deemed many of their accusations against him to be slanderous he was unable to afford the legal fees to sue them As a result John Bull continued its attack with its stories being repeated in newspapers throughout Europe and in North America 153 The Fascist government of Benito Mussolini learned of Crowley s activities and in April 1923 he was given a deportation notice forcing him to leave Italy without him the Abbey closed 154 Later life EditTunisia Paris and London 1923 1929 Edit Crowley and Hirsig went to Tunis where dogged by continuing poor health he unsuccessfully tried again to give up heroin 155 and began writing what he termed his autohagiography The Confessions of Aleister Crowley 156 They were joined in Tunis by the Thelemite Norman Mudd who became Crowley s public relations consultant 157 Employing a local boy Mohammad ben Brahim as his servant Crowley went with him on a retreat to Nefta where they performed sex magic together 158 In January 1924 Crowley travelled to Nice France where he met with Frank Harris underwent a series of nasal operations 159 and visited the Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man and had a positive opinion of its founder George Gurdjieff 160 Destitute he took on a wealthy student Alexander Zu Zolar 161 before taking on another American follower Dorothy Olsen Crowley took Olsen back to Tunisia for a magical retreat in Nefta where he also wrote To Man 1924 a declaration of his own status as a prophet entrusted with bringing Thelema to humanity 162 After spending the winter in Paris in early 1925 Crowley and Olsen returned to Tunis where he wrote The Heart of the Master 1938 as an account of a vision he experienced in a trance 163 In March Olsen became pregnant and Hirsig was called to take care of her she miscarried following which Crowley took Olsen back to France Hirsig later distanced herself from Crowley who then denounced her 164 According to Crowley Reuss had named him head of the O T O upon his death but this was challenged by a leader of the German O T O Heinrich Tranker Tranker called the Hohenleuben Conference in Thuringia Germany which Crowley attended There prominent members like Karl Germer and Martha Kuntzel championed Crowley s leadership but other key figures like Albin Grau Oskar Hopfer and Henri Birven backed Tranker by opposing it resulting in a split in the O T O 165 Moving to Paris where he broke with Olsen in 1926 Crowley went through a large number of lovers over the following years with whom he experimented in sex magic 166 Throughout he was dogged by poor health largely caused by his heroin and cocaine addictions 167 In 1928 Crowley was introduced to young Englishman Israel Regardie who embraced Thelema and became Crowley s secretary for the next three years 168 That year Crowley also met Gerald Yorke who began organising Crowley s finances but never became a Thelemite 169 He also befriended the journalist Tom Driberg Driberg did not accept Thelema either 170 It was here that Crowley also published one of his most significant works Magick in Theory and Practice which received little attention at the time 171 In December 1928 Crowley met the Nicaraguan Maria Teresa Sanchez Maria Teresa Ferrari de Miramar 172 Crowley was deported from France by the authorities who disliked his reputation and feared that he was a German agent 173 So that she could join him in Britain Crowley married Sanchez in August 1929 174 Now based in London Mandrake Press agreed to publish his autobiography in a limited edition six volume set also publishing his novel Moonchild and book of short stories The Stratagem Mandrake went into liquidation in November 1930 before the entirety of Crowley s Confessions could be published 175 Mandrake s owner P R Stephenson meanwhile wrote The Legend of Aleister Crowley an analysis of the media coverage surrounding him 176 Berlin and London 1930 1938 Edit In April 1930 Crowley moved to Berlin where he took Hanni Jaegar as his magical partner the relationship was troubled 177 In September he went to Lisbon in Portugal to meet the poet Fernando Pessoa There he decided to fake his own death doing so with Pessoa s help at the Boca do Inferno rock formation 178 He then returned to Berlin where he reappeared three weeks later at the opening of his art exhibition at the Gallery Neumann Nierendorf Crowley s paintings fitted with the fashion for German Expressionism few of them sold but the press reports were largely favourable 179 In August 1931 he took Bertha Busch as his new lover they had a violent relationship and often physically assaulted one another 180 He continued to have affairs with both men and women while in the city 181 and met with famous people like Aldous Huxley and Alfred Adler 182 After befriending him in January 1932 he took the communist Gerald Hamilton as a lodger through whom he was introduced to many figures within the Berlin far left it is possible that he was operating as a spy for British intelligence at this time monitoring the communist movement 183 I have been over forty years engaged in the administration of the law in one capacity or another I thought that I knew of every conceivable form of wickedness I thought that everything which was vicious and bad had been produced at one time or another before me I have learnt in this case that we can always learn something more if we live long enough I have never heard such dreadful horrible blasphemous and abominable stuff as that which has been produced by the man Crowley who describes himself to you as the greatest living poet Justice Swift in Crowley s libel case 184 Crowley left Busch and returned to London 185 where he took Pearl Brooksmith as his new Scarlet Woman 186 Undergoing further nasal surgery it was here in 1932 that he was invited to be guest of honour at Foyles Literary Luncheon also being invited by Harry Price to speak at the National Laboratory of Psychical Research 187 In need of money he launched a series of court cases against people whom he believed had libelled him some of which proved successful He gained much publicity for his lawsuit against Constable and Co for publishing Nina Hamnett s Laughing Torso 1932 a book he claimed libelled him by referring to his occult practice as black magic 188 but lost the case 189 The court case added to Crowley s financial problems and in February 1935 he was declared bankrupt During the hearing it was revealed that Crowley had been spending three times his income for several years 190 Crowley developed a friendship with Deidre Patricia Doherty she offered to bear his child who was born in May 1937 Named Randall Gair Crowley nicknamed him Aleister Ataturk He died in a car accident in 2002 at the age of 65 191 Crowley continued to socialize with friends holding curry parties in which he cooked particularly spicy food for them 192 In 1936 he published his first book in six years The Equinox of the Gods which contained a facsimile of The Book of the Law and was considered to be volume III number 3 of The Equinox periodical The work sold well resulting in a second print run 193 In 1937 he gave a series of public lectures on yoga in Soho 194 Crowley was now living largely off contributions supplied by the O T O s Agape Lodge in California led by rocket scientist John Whiteside Jack Parsons 195 Crowley was intrigued by the rise of Nazism in Germany and influenced by his friend Martha Kuntzel believed that Adolf Hitler might convert to Thelema when the Nazis abolished the German O T O and imprisoned Germer who fled to the US Crowley then lambasted Hitler as a black magician 196 Second World War and death 1939 1947 Edit Crowley specified that Grady McMurtry succeed his chosen successor as Head of O T O Karl Germer When the Second World War broke out Crowley wrote to the Naval Intelligence Division offering his services but they declined He associated with a variety of figures in Britain s intelligence community at the time including Dennis Wheatley Roald Dahl Ian Fleming and Maxwell Knight 197 and claimed to have been behind the V for Victory sign first used by the BBC this has never been proven 198 In 1940 his asthma worsened and with his German produced medication unavailable he returned to using heroin once again becoming addicted 199 As the Blitz hit London Crowley relocated to Torquay where he was briefly hospitalized with asthma and entertained himself with visits to the local chess club 200 Tiring of Torquay he returned to London where he was visited by American Thelemite Grady McMurtry to whom Crowley awarded the title of Hymenaeus Alpha 201 He stipulated that though Germer would be his immediate successor McMurty should succeed Germer as head of the O T O after the latter s death 202 With O T O initiate Lady Frieda Harris Crowley developed plans to produce a tarot card set designed by him and painted by Harris Accompanying this was a book published in a limited edition as The Book of Thoth by Chiswick Press in 1944 203 To aid the war effort he wrote a proclamation on the rights of humanity Liber Oz and a poem for the liberation of France Le Gauloise 204 Crowley s final publication during his lifetime was a book of poetry Olla An Anthology of Sixty Years of Song 205 Another of his projects Aleister Explains Everything was posthumously published as Magick Without Tears 206 In April 1944 Crowley briefly moved to Aston Clinton in Buckinghamshire 207 where he was visited by the poet Nancy Cunard 208 before relocating to Hastings in Sussex where he took up residence at the Netherwood boarding house 207 He took a young man named Kenneth Grant as his secretary paying him in magical teaching rather than wages 209 He was also introduced to John Symonds whom he appointed to be his literary executor Symonds thought little of Crowley later publishing negative biographies of him 210 Corresponding with the illusionist Arnold Crowther it was through him that Crowley was introduced to Gerald Gardner the future founder of Gardnerian Wicca They became friends with Crowley authorising Gardner to revive Britain s ailing O T O 211 Another visitor was Eliza Marian Butler who interviewed Crowley for her book The Myth of the Magus 212 Other friends and family also spent time with him among them Doherty and Crowley s son Aleister Ataturk 213 On 1 December 1947 Crowley died at Netherwood of chronic bronchitis aggravated by pleurisy and myocardial degeneration aged 72 214 His funeral was held at a Brighton crematorium on 5 December about a dozen people attended and Louis Wilkinson read excerpts from the Gnostic Mass The Book of the Law and Hymn to Pan The funeral generated press controversy and was labelled a Black Mass by the tabloids Crowley s body was cremated his ashes were sent to Karl Germer in the US who buried them in his garden in Hampton New Jersey 215 216 Beliefs and thought EditMain article Thelema Aleister Crowley s rendition of the Unicursal Hexagram the symbol of Thelema Crowley s belief system Thelema has been described by scholars as a religion 217 and more specifically as both a new religious movement 218 and as a magico religious doctrine 219 It has also been characterized as a form of esotericism and Modern Paganism 220 Although holding The Book of the Law which was composed in 1904 as its central text Thelema took shape as a complete system in the years after 1904 221 In his autobiography Crowley claimed that his purpose in life had been to bring oriental wisdom to Europe and to restore paganism in a purer form although what he meant by paganism was unclear 222 Crowley also wrote in the 4th Book of Magick about a great pagan Umbral fleet ruled by Ottovius that would be handed down to the great Spartan The esoteric nature of this was also unclear Crowley s thought was not always cohesive and was influenced by a variety of sources ranging from eastern religious movements and practices like Hindu yoga and Buddhism scientific naturalism and various currents within Western esotericism among them ceremonial magic alchemy astrology Rosicrucianism Kabbalah and the Tarot 223 He was steeped in the esoteric teachings he had learned from the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn although pushed further with his own interpretations and strategies than the Golden Dawn had done 224 Crowley incorporated concepts and terminology from South Asian religious traditions like yoga and Tantra into his Thelemic system believing that there was a fundamental underlying resemblance between Western and Eastern spiritual systems 225 The historian Alex Owen noted that Crowley adhered to the modus operandi of the Decadent movement throughout his life 226 Crowley believed that the twentieth century marked humanity s entry to the Aeon of Horus a new era in which humans would take increasing control of their destiny He believed that this Aeon follows on from the Aeon of Osiris in which paternalistic religions like Christianity Islam and Buddhism dominated the world and that this in turn had followed the Aeon of Isis which had been maternalistic and dominated by goddess worship 227 He believed that Thelema was the proper religion of the Aeon of Horus 221 and also deemed himself to be the prophet of this new Aeon 228 Thelema revolves around the idea that human beings each have their own True Will that they should discover and pursue and that this exists in harmony with the Cosmic Will that pervades the universe 229 Crowley referred to this process of searching and discovery of one s True Will to be the Great Work or the attaining of the knowledge and conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel 230 His favoured method of doing so was through the performance of the Abramelin operation a ceremonial magic ritual obtained from a 17th century grimoire 231 The moral code of Do What Thou Wilt is believed by Thelemites to be the religion s ethical law although the historian of religion Marco Pasi noted that this was not anarchistic or libertarian in structure as Crowley saw individuals as part of a wider societal organism 232 Magick and theology Edit Crowley believed in the objective existence of magic which he chose to spell Magick an older archaic spelling of the word 233 He provided various different definitions of this term over his career 234 In his book Magick in Theory and Practice Crowley defined Magick as the Science and Art of causing change to occur in conformity with Will 235 He also told his disciple Karl Germer that Magick is getting into communication with individuals who exist on a higher plane than ours Mysticism is the raising of oneself to their level 236 Crowley saw Magick as a third way between religion and science giving The Equinox the subtitle of The Method of Science the Aim of Religion 237 Within that journal he expressed positive sentiments toward science and the scientific method 238 and urged magicians to keep detailed records of their magical experiments The more scientific the record is the better 239 His understanding of magic was also influenced by the work of the anthropologist James Frazer in particular the view that magic was a precursor to science in a cultural evolutionary framework 240 Unlike Frazer however Crowley did not see magic as a survival from the past that required eradication but rather he believed that magic had to be adapted to suit the new age of science 238 In Crowley s alternative schema old systems of magic had to decline per Frazer s framework so that science and magic could synthesize into magick which would simultaneously accept the existence of the supernatural and an experimental method 241 Crowley deliberately adopted an exceptionally broad definition of magick that included almost all forms of technology as magick adopting an instrumentalist interpretation of magic science and technology 242 To Crowley the greatest aim of the magician was to merge with a higher power connected to the wellsprings of the universe but he did not trouble himself too much to define that power consistently sometimes it was God sometimes the One sometimes a goddess and sometimes one s own Holy Guardian Angel or higher self In the last analysis he was content for the nature of divinity to remain a mystery As a result he wrote at times like an atheist at times like a monotheist and at others like a polytheist R Hutton 243 Sexuality played an important role in Crowley s ideas about magick and his practice of it 244 and has been described as being central to Thelema 245 He outlined three forms of sex magick the autoerotic homosexual and heterosexual and argued that such acts could be used to focus the magician s will onto a specific goal such as financial gain or personal creative success 246 For Crowley sex was treated as a sacrament with the consumption of sexual fluids interpreted as a Eucharist 247 This was often manifested as the Cakes of Light a biscuit containing either menstrual blood or a mixture of semen and vaginal fluids 248 The Gnostic Mass is the central religious ceremony within Thelema 249 Crowley s theological beliefs were not clear The historian Ronald Hutton noted that some of Crowley s writings could be used to argue that he was an atheist 234 while some support the idea that he was a polytheist 243 and others would bolster the idea that he was a mystical monotheist 250 On the basis of the teachings in The Book of the Law Crowley described a pantheon of three deities taken from the ancient Egyptian pantheon Nuit Hadit and Ra Hoor Khuit 222 In 1928 he made the claim that all true deities were derived from this trinity 222 Jason Josephson Storm has argued that Crowley built on 19th century attempts to link early Christianity to pre Christian religions such as Frazer s Golden Bough to synthesize Christian theology and Neopaganism while remaining critical of institutional and traditional Christianity 251 Both during his life and after it Crowley has been widely described as a Satanist usually by detractors Crowley stated he did not consider himself a Satanist nor did he worship Satan as he did not accept the Christian world view in which Satan was believed to exist 252 He nevertheless used Satanic imagery for instance by describing himself as the Beast 666 and referring to the Whore of Babylon in his work while in later life he sent Antichristmas cards to his friends 253 In his writings Crowley occasionally identified Aiwass as Satan and designated him as Our Lord God the Devil at one occasion 254 The scholar of religion Gordan Djurdjevic stated that Crowley was emphatically not a Satanist if for no other reason than simply because he did not identify himself as such 255 Crowley nevertheless expressed strong anti Christian sentiment 256 stating that he hated Christianity as Socialists hate soap 250 an animosity probably stemming from his experiences among the Plymouth Brethren 253 He was nevertheless influenced by the King James Bible especially the Book of Revelation the impact of which can be seen in his writings 257 He was also accused of advocating human sacrifice largely because of a passage in Book 4 in which he stated that A male child of perfect innocence and high intelligence is the most satisfactory victim and added that he had sacrificed about 150 every year This was a tongue in cheek reference to ejaculation something not realized by his critics 258 Personal life EditCrowley considered himself to be one of the outstanding figures of his time 259 The historian Ronald Hutton stated that in Crowley s youth he was a self indulgent and flamboyant young man who set about a deliberate flouting and provocation of social and religious norms while being shielded from an outraged public opinion by his inherited wealth 259 Hutton also described Crowley as having both an unappeasable desire to take control of any organisation that he belonged to and a tendency to quarrel savagely with those who challenged him 259 Crowley biographer Martin Booth asserted that Crowley was self confident brash eccentric egotistic highly intelligent arrogant witty wealthy and when it suited him cruel 260 Similarly Richard B Spence noted that Crowley was capable of immense physical and emotional cruelty 261 Biographer Lawrence Sutin noted that Crowley exhibited courage skill dauntless energy and remarkable focus of will while at the same time showing a blind arrogance petty fits of bile and contempt for the abilities of his fellow men 262 The Thelemite Lon Milo DuQuette noted that Crowley was by no means perfect and often alienated those who loved him dearest 263 Political views Edit Crowley enjoyed being outrageous and flouting conventional morality 264 with John Symonds noting that he was in revolt against the moral and religious values of his time 265 Crowley s political thought was studied by academic Marco Pasi who noted that for Crowley socio political concerns were subordinate to metaphysical and spiritual ones 223 He was neither on the political left nor right but perhaps best categorized as a conservative revolutionary despite not being affiliated with the German based movement of the same name 266 Pasi described Crowley s fascination to the extreme ideologies of Nazism and Marxism Leninism which aimed to violently overturn society What Crowley liked about Nazism and communism or at least what made him curious about them was the anti Christian position and the revolutionary and socially subversive implications of these two movements In their subversive powers he saw the possibility of an annihilation of old religious traditions and the creation of a void that Thelema subsequently would be able to fill 267 Crowley described democracy as an imbecile and nauseating cult of weakness 268 and commented that The Book of the Law proclaimed that there is the master and there is the slave the noble and the serf the lone wolf and the herd 232 In this attitude he was influenced by the work of Friedrich Nietzsche and by Social Darwinism 269 Although he had contempt for most of the British aristocracy he regarded himself as an aristocrat and styled himself as Laird Boleskine 270 once describing his ideology as aristocratic communism 271 Views on race and gender Edit Crowley was bisexual but exhibited a preference for women 272 with his relationships with men being fewer and mostly in the early part of his life 234 In particular he had an attraction toward exotic women 273 and claimed to have fallen in love on multiple occasions Kaczynski stated that when he loved he did so with his whole being but the passion was typically short lived 274 Even in later life Crowley was able to attract young bohemian women to be his lovers largely due to his charisma 275 He applied the term Scarlet Woman to various female lovers whom he believed played an important role in his magical work 276 During homosexual acts he usually played the passive role 277 which Booth believed appealed to his masochistic side 278 An underlying theme in many of his writings is that spiritual enlightenment arises through transgressing socio sexual norms 279 Crowley advocated complete sexual freedom for both men and women 280 He argued that homosexual and bisexual people should not suppress their sexual orientation 234 commenting that a person must not be ashamed or afraid of being homosexual if he happens to be so at heart he must not attempt to violate his own true nature because of public opinion or medieval morality or religious prejudice which would wish he were otherwise 281 On other issues he adopted a more conservative attitude he opposed abortion on moral grounds believing that no woman following her True Will would ever desire one 282 Biographer Lawrence Sutin stated that blatant bigotry is a persistent minor element in Crowley s writings 283 Sutin thought Crowley a spoiled scion of a wealthy Victorian family who embodied many of the worst John Bull racial and social prejudices of his upper class contemporaries noting that he embodied the contradiction that writhed within many Western intellectuals of the time deeply held racist viewpoints courtesy of society coupled with a fascination with people of colour 284 Crowley is said to have insulted his close Jewish friend Victor Benjamin Neuburg using antisemitic slurs and he had mixed opinions about Jewish people as a group 285 Although he praised their sublime poetry and stated that they exhibited imagination romance loyalty probity and humanity he also thought that centuries of persecution had led some Jewish people to exhibit avarice servility falseness cunning and the rest 286 He was also known to praise various ethnic and cultural groups for instance he thought that the Chinese people exhibited a spiritual superiority to the English 287 and praised Muslims for exhibiting manliness straightforwardness subtlety and self respect 288 Both critics of Crowley and adherents of Thelema have accused Crowley of sexism 289 Booth described Crowley as exhibiting a general misogyny something the biographer believed arose from Crowley s bad relationship with his mother 290 Sutin noted that Crowley largely accepted the notion implicitly embodied in Victorian sexology of women as secondary social beings in terms of intellect and sensibility 291 The scholar of religion Manon Hedenborg White noted that some of Crowley s statements are undoubtedly misogynist by contemporary standards but characterized Crowley s attitude toward women as complex and multi faceted 292 Crowley s comments on women s role varied dramatically within his written work even that produced in similar periods 292 Crowley described women as moral inferiors who had to be treated with firmness kindness and justice 293 while also arguing that Thelema was essential to women s emancipation 294 Intelligence work EditBiographers Richard B Spence and Tobias Churton have suggested that Crowley was a spy for the British secret services and that among other things he joined the Golden Dawn under their command to monitor the activities of Mathers who was known to be a Carlist 295 Spence suggested that the conflict between Mathers and the London lodge for the temple was part of an intelligence operation to undermine Mathers authority 296 Spence has suggested that the purpose of Crowley s trip to Mexico might have been to explore Mexican oil prospects for British intelligence 297 Spence has suggested that his trip to China was orchestrated as part of a British intelligence scheme to monitor the region s opium trade 298 Churton suggested that Crowley had travelled to Moscow on the orders of British intelligence to spy on revolutionary elements in the city 111 Spence and Sutin both claim that Crowley s pro German work in the United States was actually a cover for him being a double agent for Britain citing his hyperbolic articles in The Fatherland to make the German lobby appear ridiculous in the eyes of the American public 299 Spence also claims that Crowley encouraged the German Navy to destroy the Lusitania informing them that it would ensure the US stayed out of the war while in reality hoping that it would bring the US into the war on Britain s side 300 Legacy and influence Edit H e is today looked upon as a source of inspiration by many people in search of spiritual enlightenment and or instructions in magical practice Thus while during his life his books hardly sold and his disciples were never very numerous nowadays all his important works are constantly in print and the people defining themselves as thelemites that is followers of Crowley s new religion number several thousands all over the world Furthermore Crowley s influence over magically oriented new religious movements has in some cases been very deep and pervasive It would be difficult to understand for instance some aspects of Anglo Saxon neo paganism and contemporary satanism without a solid knowledge of Crowley s doctrines and ideas In other fields such as poetry alpinism and painting he may have been a minor figure but it is only fair to admit that in the limited context of occultism he has played and still plays a major role Marco Pasi 2003 301 Crowley has remained an influential figure both amongst occultists and in popular culture particularly that of Britain but also of other parts of the world In 2002 a BBC poll placed Crowley seventy third in a list of the 100 Greatest Britons 302 Richard Cavendish has written of him that In native talent penetrating intelligence and determination Aleister Crowley was the best equipped magician to emerge since the seventeenth century 303 The scholar of esotericism Egil Asprem described him as one of the most well known figures in modern occultism 304 The scholar of esotericism Wouter Hanegraaff asserted that Crowley was an extreme representation of the dark side of the occult 305 adding that he was the most notorious occultist magician of the twentieth century 306 The philosopher John Moore who opined that Crowley stood out as a Modern Master when compared with other prominent occult figures like George Gurdjieff P D Ouspensky Rudolf Steiner or Helena Blavatsky 307 also describing him as a living embodiment of Oswald Spengler s Faustian Man 308 Biographer Tobias Churton considered Crowley a pioneer of consciousness research 309 Hutton noted that Crowley had an important place in the history of modern Western responses to Oriental spiritual traditions 310 while Sutin thought that he had made distinctly original contributions to the study of yoga in the West 311 Thelema continued to develop and spread following Crowley s death In 1969 the O T O was reactivated in California under the leadership of Grady Louis McMurtry 312 in 1985 its right to the title was unsuccessfully challenged in court by a rival group the Society Ordo Templi Orientis led by Brazilian Thelemite Marcelo Ramos Motta 312 Another American Thelemite is the filmmaker Kenneth Anger who had been influenced by Crowley s writings from a young age 313 In the United Kingdom Kenneth Grant propagated a tradition known as Typhonian Thelema through his organisation the Typhonian O T O later renamed the Typhonian Order 314 Also in Britain an occultist known as Amado Crowley claimed to be Crowley s son this has been refuted by academic investigation Amado argued that Thelema was a false religion created by Crowley to hide his true esoteric teachings which Amado claimed to be propagating 315 Several Western esoteric traditions other than Thelema were also influenced by Crowley with Djurdjevic observing that Crowley s influence on twentieth century and contemporary esotericism has been enormous 316 Gerald Gardner founder of Gardnerian Wicca made use of much of Crowley s published material when composing the Gardnerian ritual liturgy 317 and the Australian witch Rosaleen Norton was also heavily influenced by Crowley s ideas 318 More widely Crowley became a dominant figure in the modern Pagan community 319 L Ron Hubbard the American founder of Scientology was involved in Thelema in the early 1940s with Jack Parsons and it has been argued that Crowley s ideas influenced some of Hubbard s work 320 The scholars of religion Asbjorn Dyrendel James R Lewis and Jesper Petersen noted that despite the fact that Crowley was not a Satanist he in many ways embodies the pre Satanist esoteric discourse on Satan and Satanism through his lifestyle and his philosophy with his image and ought becoming an important influence on the later development of religious Satanism 321 For instance two prominent figures in religious Satanism Anton LaVey and Michael Aquino were influenced by Crowley s work 322 Crowley also had a wider influence in British popular culture After his time in Cefalu which had brought him to public attention in Britain various literary Crowleys appeared characters in fiction based upon him 323 One of the earliest was the character of the poet Shelley Arabin in John Buchan s 1926 novel The Dancing Floor 323 In his novel The Devil Rides Out the writer Dennis Wheatley used Crowley as a partial basis for the character of Damien Morcata a portly bald defrocked priest who engages in black magic 324 The occultist Dion Fortune used Crowley as a basis for characters in her books The Secrets of Doctor Taverner 1926 and The Winged Bull 1935 325 He was included as one of the figures on the cover art of The Beatles album Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band 1967 312 and his motto of Do What Thou Wilt was inscribed on the vinyl of Led Zeppelin s album Led Zeppelin III 1970 312 Led Zeppelin co founder Jimmy Page bought Boleskine in 1971 and part of the band s film The Song Remains the Same was filmed in the grounds He sold it in 1992 326 Though David Bowie makes but a fleeting reference to Crowley in the lyrics of his song Quicksand 1971 312 it has been suggested that the lyrics of Bowie s No 1 hit single Let s Dance 1983 may substantially paraphrase Crowley s 1923 poem Lyric of Love to Leah 327 Ozzy Osbourne and his lyricist Bob Daisley wrote a song titled Mr Crowley 1980 328 A prophetic quote about the coming of the New Aeon borrowed from Crowley s work Magick in Theory and Practice 1911 has been featured as the opening introduction to the video game Blood Omen Legacy of Kain 1996 329 Crowley began to receive scholarly attention from academics in the late 1990s 310 Bibliography EditMain article List of works by Aleister CrowleyReferences EditFootnotes Edit NLS Other Writings Say How A D National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled NLS Library of Congress Archived 7 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Crowley Aleister AL is ter KRŌ le Booth 2000 pp 4 5 Sutin 2000 p 15 Kaczynski 2010 p 14 Booth 2000 pp 2 3 Sutin 2000 pp 31 23 Kaczynski 2010 pp 4 8 Churton 2011 pp 14 15 Booth 2000 p 3 Sutin 2000 pp 18 21 Kaczynski 2010 pp 13 16 Churton 2011 pp 17 21 Booth 2000 p 3 Kaczynski 2010 pp 13 14 Churton 2011 p 17 Booth 2000 pp 3 4 6 9 10 Sutin 2000 pp 17 23 Kaczynski 2010 pp 11 12 16 Booth 2000 pp 6 7 Kaczynski 2010 p 16 Churton 2011 p 24 Booth 2000 pp 12 14 Sutin 2000 pp 25 29 Kaczynski 2010 pp 17 18 Churton 2011 p 24 Booth 2000 p 15 Sutin 2000 pp 24 25 Kaczynski 2010 p 19 Churton 2011 pp 24 25 Booth 2000 p 10 Sutin 2000 p 21 Sutin 2000 pp 27 30 Kaczynski 2010 pp 19 21 22 Booth 2000 pp 32 39 Sutin 2000 pp 32 33 Kaczynski 2010 p 27 Churton 2011 pp 26 27 Booth 2000 pp 15 16 Sutin 2000 pp 25 26 Kaczynski 2010 p 23 Booth 2000 pp 26 27 Sutin 2000 p 33 Kaczynski 2010 pp 24 27 Churton 2011 p 26 Booth 2000 pp 39 43 Sutin 2000 pp 30 32 34 Kaczynski 2010 pp 27 30 Churton 2011 pp 26 27 Booth 2000 p 49 Sutin 2000 pp 34 35 Kaczynski 2010 p 32 Churton 2011 pp 27 28 Booth 2000 pp 51 52 Sutin 2000 pp 36 37 Kaczynski 2010 p 23 Kaczynski 2010 p 35 Booth 2000 pp 50 51 Symonds 1997 p 13 Booth 2000 pp 53 56 Sutin 2000 pp 50 52 Kaczynski 2010 p 35 42 45 50 51 Churton 2011 p 35 Crowley 1989 p 139 Symonds 1997 p 14 Booth 2000 pp 56 57 Kaczynski 2010 p 36 Churton 2011 p 29 Sutin 2000 p 38 Kaczynski 2010 p 36 Churton 2011 p 29 Booth 2000 pp 59 62 Sutin 2000 p 43 Booth 2000 pp 64 65 Sutin 2000 pp 41 47 Kaczynski 2010 pp 37 40 45 Churton 2011 pp 33 24 Spence 2008 pp 19 20 Sutin 2000 p 37 Kaczynski 2010 p 35 Churton 2011 pp 30 31 Booth 2000 pp 57 58 Sutin 2000 pp 37 39 Kaczynski 2010 p 36 Booth 2000 pp 58 59 Sutin 2000 p 41 Kaczynski 2010 pp 40 42 Symonds 1997 pp 14 15 Booth 2000 pp 72 73 Sutin 2000 pp 44 45 Kaczynski 2010 pp 46 47 Smith T D Arch 2007 Aleister Crowley s Aceldama The Book Collector 56 no 2 Summer pp 213 237 Symonds 1997 p 15 Booth 2000 pp 74 75 Sutin 2000 pp 44 45 Kaczynski 2010 pp 48 50 Booth 2000 pp 78 79 Sutin 2000 pp 35 36 Booth 2000 pp 81 82 Sutin 2000 pp 52 53 Kaczynski 2010 pp 52 53 Booth 2000 pp 82 85 Sutin 2000 pp 53 54 Kaczynski 2010 pp 54 55 Booth 2000 pp 85 93 94 Sutin 2000 pp 54 55 Kaczynski 2010 pp 60 61 Churton 2011 p 35 Booth 2000 pp 98 103 Sutin 2000 pp 64 66 Kaczynski 2010 pp 54 55 62 64 67 68 Churton 2011 p 49 Booth 2000 pp 103 05 Sutin 2000 pp 70 71 Kaczynski 2010 pp 70 71 Churton 2011 p 55 Symonds 1997 p 29 Booth 2000 pp 107 11 Sutin 2000 pp 72 73 Kaczynski 2010 pp 68 69 Churton 2011 p 52 Booth 2000 pp 114 15 Sutin 2000 pp 44 45 Kaczynski 2010 pp 61 66 70 Booth 2000 pp 115 16 Sutin 2000 p 71 72 Kaczynski 2010 p 64 Symonds 1997 p 37 Booth 2000 pp 115 16 Sutin 2000 pp 67 69 Kaczynski 2010 pp 64 67 Booth 2000 p 116 Sutin 2000 pp 73 75 Kaczynski 2010 pp 70 73 Churton 2011 pp 53 54 Booth 2000 p 118 Sutin 2000 pp 73 75 Kaczynski 2010 pp 74 75 Churton 2011 p 57 Booth 2000 pp 118 23 Sutin 2000 pp 76 79 Kaczynski 2010 pp 75 80 Churton 2011 pp 58 60 Booth 2000 pp 127 37 Sutin 2000 pp 80 86 Kaczynski 2010 pp 83 90 Churton 2011 pp 64 70 Booth 2000 pp 137 39 Sutin 2000 pp 86 90 Kaczynski 2010 pp 90 93 Churton 2011 pp 71 75 Booth 2000 pp 139 44 Sutin 2000 pp 90 95 Kaczynski 2010 pp 93 96 Churton 2011 pp 76 78 Booth 2000 pp 144 47 Sutin 2000 pp 94 98 Kaczynski 2010 pp 96 98 Churton 2011 pp 78 83 Booth 2000 pp 148 56 Sutin 2000 pp 98 104 Kaczynski 2010 pp 98 108 Churton 2011 p 83 Booth 2000 pp 159 63 Sutin 2000 pp 104 08 Kaczynski 2010 pp 109 15 Churton 2011 pp 84 86 Booth 2000 pp 164 67 Sutin 2000 pp 105 07 Kaczynski 2010 pp 112 13 Churton 2011 p 85 Booth 2000 pp 171 77 Sutin 2000 pp 110 16 Kaczynski 2010 pp 119 24 Churton 2011 pp 89 90 Booth 2000 pp 181 82 Sutin 2000 pp 118 20 Kaczynski 2010 p 124 Churton 2011 p 94 Booth 2000 pp 182 83 Sutin 2000 pp 120 22 Kaczynski 2010 pp 124 26 Churton 2011 pp 96 98 Booth 2000 pp 184 88 Sutin 2000 pp 122 25 Kaczynski 2010 pp 127 29 Booth 2000 pp 184 88 Sutin 2000 pp 125 33 Booth 2000 p 188 Sutin 2000 p 139 Kaczynski 2010 p 129 Booth 2000 pp 189 194 95 Sutin 2000 pp 140 41 Kaczynski 2010 p 130 Churton 2011 p 108 Booth 2000 pp 195 96 Sutin 2000 p 142 Kaczynski 2010 p 132 Churton 2011 p 108 Booth 2000 p 190 Sutin 2000 p 142 Kaczynski 2010 pp 131 33 Booth 2000 pp 241 42 Sutin 2000 pp 177 79 Kaczynski 2010 pp 136 37 139 168 69 Booth 2000 pp 201 15 Sutin 2000 pp 149 58 Kaczynski 2010 pp 138 49 Churton 2011 pp 111 12 Booth 2000 pp 217 19 Sutin 2000 pp 158 62 Kaczynski 2010 pp 151 52 Booth 2000 p 221 Sutin 2000 pp 162 63 Booth 2000 pp 221 32 Sutin 2000 pp 164 69 Kaczynski 2010 pp 153 54 Churton 2011 pp 115 18 Booth 2000 pp 232 35 Sutin 2000 pp 169 71 Kaczynski 2010 pp 155 56 Churton 2011 pp 118 21 Booth 2000 pp 235 36 239 Sutin 2000 pp 171 72 Kaczynski 2010 pp 159 60 Churton 2011 p 121 Kaczynski 2010 p 160 Booth 2000 p 246 Sutin 2000 p 179 Kaczynski 2010 pp 159 60 173 74 Booth 2000 pp 236 37 Sutin 2000 pp 172 73 Kaczynski 2010 pp 159 60 Churton 2011 p 125 Booth 2000 pp 239 40 Sutin 2000 pp 173 74 Kaczynski 2010 pp 157 60 Booth 2000 pp 240 41 Sutin 2000 pp 173 175 76 Kaczynski 2010 p 179 Churton 2011 p 128 Booth 2000 pp 251 52 Sutin 2000 p 181 Kaczynski 2010 p 172 Kaczynski 2010 pp 173 75 Sutin 2000 pp 195 96 Kaczynski 2010 pp 189 90 Churton 2011 pp 147 48 Booth 2000 p 243 Booth 2000 pp 249 51 Sutin 2000 p 180 Booth 2000 p 252 Booth 2000 pp 255 62 Sutin 2000 pp 184 87 Kaczynski 2010 pp 179 80 Churton 2011 pp 129 30 142 43 Booth 2000 pp 267 68 Sutin 2000 pp 196 98 Booth 2000 pp 244 45 Sutin 2000 pp 179 181 Kaczynski 2010 pp 176 191 92 Churton 2011 p 131 Booth 2000 pp 246 47 Sutin 2000 pp 182 83 Kaczynski 2010 p 231 Churton 2011 p 141 Booth 2000 pp 254 55 Churton 2011 p 172 Kaczynski 2010 p 178 Booth 2000 pp 247 48 Sutin 2000 p 175 Kaczynski 2010 p 183 Churton 2011 p 128 Crowley 1983 p 32 Booth 2000 pp 263 64 Sutin 2000 p 207 Booth 2000 pp 265 67 Sutin 2000 pp 192 93 Kaczynski 2010 pp 183 84 Churton 2011 p 144 Booth 2000 pp 270 72 Sutin 2000 pp 198 99 Kaczynski 2010 pp 182 83 194 Churton 2011 p 148 Owen A Aleister Crowley in the Desert in The Place of Enchantment British Occultism and the Culture of the Modern Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press 2004 pp 186 202 Archived 13 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Booth 2000 pp 274 82 Sutin 2000 pp 199 204 Kaczynski 2010 pp 193 203 Churton 2011 pp 149 52 Booth 2000 pp 282 83 Sutin 2000 pp 205 06 Kaczynski 2010 pp 205 08 Churton 2011 p 160 Booth 2000 pp 283 84 Kaczynski 2010 pp 210 11 Booth 2000 p 285 Sutin 2000 pp 206 07 Kaczynski 2010 pp 211 13 Churton 2011 p 160 Booth 2000 pp 286 89 Sutin 2000 pp 209 12 Kaczynski 2010 pp 217 28 Churton 2011 pp 161 62 Booth 2000 p 289 Sutin 2000 p 212 Kaczynski 2010 p 225 Churton 2011 p 163 Booth 2000 pp 291 92 Sutin 2000 pp 213 15 Kaczynski 2010 pp 229 34 Churton 2011 p 164 Booth 2000 pp 293 94 Sutin 2000 p 215 Kaczynski 2010 pp 234 Churton 2011 p 164 Booth 2000 pp 289 90 Sutin 2000 pp 213 14 Kaczynski 2010 pp 229 30 Churton 2011 pp 163 64 Sutin 2000 pp 207 08 Kaczynski 2010 pp 213 15 Booth 2000 p 297 Booth 2000 pp 297 301 Sutin 2000 pp 217 22 Kaczynski 2010 pp 239 248 Churton 2011 pp 165 66 Booth 2000 p 301 Sutin 2000 pp 222 24 Kaczynski 2010 pp 247 50 Churton 2011 p 166 Booth 2000 p 302 Sutin 2000 pp 224 25 Kaczynski 2010 p 251 Booth 2000 pp 302 05 Sutin 2000 pp 225 26 Kaczynski 2010 pp 251 25 Booth 2000 p 306 Sutin 2000 p 228 Kaczynski 2010 p 256 Booth 2000 pp 308 09 Sutin 2000 pp 232 34 Kaczynski 2010 pp 261 65 Booth 2000 pp 309 10 Sutin 2000 pp 234 35 Kaczynski 2010 p 264 a b Churton 2011 pp 178 82 Booth 2000 p 307 Sutin 2000 p 218 Kaczynski 2010 pp 266 67 Booth 2000 pp 313 16 Sutin 2000 pp 235 40 Kaczynski 2010 pp 269 74 Booth 2000 pp 317 19 Sutin 2000 pp 240 41 Kaczynski 2010 pp 275 76 Booth 2000 p 321 Booth 2000 pp 321 22 Sutin 2000 p 240 Kaczynski 2010 p 277 Churton 2011 p 186 Booth 2000 p 322 Kaczynski 2010 p 277 Booth 2000 p 323 Sutin 2000 p 241 Kaczynski 2010 p 278 Churton 2011 pp 187 89 Booth 2000 pp 323 34 Booth 2000 p 325 Sutin 2000 pp 243 44 Kaczynski 2010 p 341 Booth 2000 pp 326 30 Sutin 2000 pp 245 47 Kaczynski 2010 pp 283 84 Sutin 2000 p 247 Booth 2000 pp 330 33 Sutin 2000 pp 251 55 Kaczynski 2010 pp 288 91 295 97 Churton 2011 pp 198 203 Booth 2000 p 333 Sutin 2000 pp 255 57 Kaczynski 2010 pp 298 301 Booth 2000 pp 333 35 Sutin 2000 pp 257 61 Kaczynski 2010 pp 304 09 Booth 2000 pp 336 38 Sutin 2000 pp 261 62 Kaczynski 2010 pp 309 13 Booth 2000 p 338 Sutin 2000 p 263 Kaczynski 2010 pp 313 16 Booth 2000 pp 339 40 Sutin 2000 pp 264 66 Kaczynski 2010 p 320 Booth 2000 pp 342 44 Sutin 2000 pp 264 67 Kaczynski 2010 pp 320 30 Booth 2000 pp 344 45 Sutin 2000 pp 267 72 Kaczynski 2010 pp 330 31 Booth 2000 pp 346 50 Sutin 2000 pp 274 76 Kaczynski 2010 pp 338 43 Booth 2000 pp 344 45 Sutin 2000 pp 274 76 Kaczynski 2010 pp 340 41 Booth 2000 p 351 Sutin 2000 p 273 Kaczynski 2010 pp 342 44 Booth 2000 pp 351 52 Sutin 2000 p 277 Kaczynski 2010 p 347 Booth 2000 pp 355 56 Sutin 2000 p 278 Kaczynski 2010 p 356 Churton 2011 p 246 Booth 2000 p 357 Sutin 2000 p 277 Kaczynski 2010 p 355 Booth 2000 pp 356 60 Sutin 2000 pp 278 79 Kaczynski 2010 pp 356 58 Churton 2011 p 246 Booth 2000 pp 360 63 Sutin 2000 pp 279 80 Kaczynski 2010 pp 358 59 Churton 2011 pp 246 48 Booth 2000 p 365 Booth 2000 p 368 Sutin 2000 p 286 Kaczynski 2010 p 361 Booth 2000 pp 365 66 Sutin 2000 pp 280 81 Kaczynski 2010 pp 365 372 Booth 2000 p 367 Booth 2000 pp 366 369 70 Sutin 2000 pp 281 82 Kaczynski 2010 pp 361 62 Churton 2011 pp 251 52 Booth 2000 p 368 Sutin 2000 pp 286 87 Booth 2000 pp 372 73 Sutin 2000 p 285 Kaczynski 2010 pp 365 66 Churton 2011 p 252 Booth 2000 pp 371 72 Sutin 2000 pp 286 87 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18 Kaczynski 2010 p 405 Churton 2011 p 274 Sutin 2000 p 317 Booth 2000 pp 410 12 Sutin 2000 p 319 Booth 2000 pp 412 17 Sutin 2000 pp 319 20 Kaczynski 2010 pp 413 15 Churton 2011 pp 287 88 Booth 2000 p 418 Sutin 2000 pp 323 Kaczynski 2010 p 417 Churton 2011 p 323 Booth 2000 pp 419 20 Sutin 2000 p 322 Kaczynski 2010 pp 417 18 Churton 2011 p 289 Booth 2000 pp 423 44 Sutin 2000 pp 324 28 Kaczynski 2010 pp 418 19 Churton 2011 pp 291 92 332 Booth 2000 pp 425 26 Sutin 2000 pp 332 34 Kaczynski 2010 pp 426 27 430 33 Booth 2000 pp 429 30 Booth 2000 p 426 Sutin 2000 pp 336 37 Kaczynski 2010 pp 432 33 Churton 2011 p 309 Booth 2000 pp 427 28 Sutin 2000 p 335 Kaczynski 2010 pp 427 29 Churton 2011 p 299 Booth 2000 pp 428 29 Sutin 2000 pp 331 32 Kaczynski 2010 p 423 Churton 2011 pp 296 98 Pasi 2014 pp 72 76 Booth 2000 p 431 Sutin 2000 p 339 Kaczynski 2010 pp 426 428 29 Churton 2011 pp 308 09 Booth 2000 pp 430 31 Sutin 2000 pp 340 41 Kaczynski 2010 pp 433 34 Churton 2011 p 310 Booth 2000 pp 432 33 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Edit Asprem Egil 2008 Magic Naturalized Negotiating Science and Occult Experience in Aleister Crowley s Scientific Illuminism Aries Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism Leiden Brill Publishers on behalf of the European Society for the Study of Western Esotericism 8 2 139 165 doi 10 1163 156798908X327311 ISSN 1567 9896 Asprem Egil 2013 Arguing with Angels Enochian Magic and Modern Occulture Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 978 1 4384 4191 7 OCLC 809317694 Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P 2012 Introduction In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 3 14 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Booth Martin 2000 A Magick Life The Biography of Aleister Crowley London Coronet Books ISBN 978 0 340 71806 3 OCLC 59483726 Cavendish Richard 1978 Crowley and After A History of Magic London Sphere Books pp 167 79 ISBN 0 7221 2214 4 OCLC 16423603 Churton Tobias 2011 Aleister Crowley The Biography London Watkins Books ISBN 978 1 78028 012 7 OCLC 701810228 Crowley Aleister 1989 The Confessions of Aleister Crowley An Autohagiography London Arkana ISBN 978 0 14 019189 9 OCLC 19865968 Crowley Aleister 1983 The Holy Books of Thelema 1st paper ed York Beach Maine Samuel Weiser ISBN 0 87728 686 8 OCLC 30592109 Djurdjevic Gordan September 2019 Wishing You a Speedy Termination of Existence Aleister Crowley s Views on Buddhism and Its Relationship with the Doctrine of Thelema Aries Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism 19 2 212 230 doi 10 1163 15700593 01902001 ISSN 1567 9896 S2CID 204456438 Djurdjevic Gordan 2014 India and the Occult The Influence of South Asian Spirituality on Modern Western Occultism New York City Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 40498 5 OCLC 870285576 Doyle White Ethan 2016 Lucifer Over Luxor Archaeology Egyptology and Occultism in Kenneth Anger s Magick Lantern Cycle PDF Present Pasts 7 1 1 10 doi 10 5334 pp 73 ISSN 1759 2941 Archived PDF from the original on 22 September 2017 Drury Nevill 2012 The Thelemic Sex Magick of Aleister Crowley In Drury Nevill ed Pathways in Modern Western Magic Richmond CA Concrescent Scholars pp 205 245 ISBN 978 0 9843729 9 7 OCLC 814283519 DuQuette Lon Milo 2003 The Magick of Aleister Crowley A Handbook of Rituals of Thelema San Francisco Weiser ISBN 978 1 57863 299 2 OCLC 52621460 Dyrendal Asbjorn 2012 Satan and the Beast The Influence of Aleister Crowley on Modern Satanism In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 369 394 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Dyrendal Asbjorn Lewis James R Petersen Jesper Aa 2016 The Invention of Satanism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518110 4 OCLC 908934971 Evans Dave 2007 The History of British Magick After Crowley n p Hidden Publishing ISBN 978 0 9555237 0 0 OCLC 183145633 Freeman Nick 2018 The Black Magic Bogeyman 1908 1935 In Ferguson Christine Radford Andrew eds The Occult Imagination in Britain 1875 1947 Abingdon and New York Routledge pp 94 109 ISBN 978 1 4724 8698 1 Granholm Kennet 2013 Ritual Black Metal Popular Music as Occult Mediation and Practice PDF Correspondences 1 1 5 33 ISSN 2053 7158 Archived PDF from the original on 6 November 2016 Hamnett Nina 2007 Laughing Torso Reminiscences of Nina Hamnett London Hildreth ISBN 978 1 4067 2874 3 OCLC 1156889313 Hanegraaff Wouter J 2012 Foreword In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp vii x ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Hanegraaff Wouter 2013 Western Esotericism A Guide for the Perplexed London Bloomsbury Press ISBN 978 1 4411 8713 0 OCLC 777652932 Hayward Rhodri 2017 Part III Beyond medicine Psychiatry and religion In Eghigian Greg ed The Routledge History of Madness and Mental Health Routledge Histories 1st ed London and New York Routledge pp 137 152 doi 10 4324 9781315202211 ISBN 978 1 315 20221 1 LCCN 2016050178 Hedenborg White Manon 2020 The Eloquent Blood The Goddess Babalon and the Construction of Femininities in Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 006502 7 OCLC 1127052266 Hutton Ronald 1999 The Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285449 0 OCLC 41452625 Hutton Ronald 2012 Crowley and Wicca In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 285 306 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Josephson Storm Jason 2017 The Myth of Disenchantment Magic Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 40336 6 OCLC 958780609 Kaczynski Richard 2010 Perdurabo The Life of Aleister Crowley 1st ed Berkeley California North Atlantic Books Lachman Gary 2014 Aleister Crowley Magick Rock and Roll and the Wickedest Man in the World New York Penguin Random House ISBN 978 0 399 16190 2 OCLC 869460695 Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 31 July 2020 Landis Bill 1995 Anger The Unauthorised Biography of Kenneth Anger New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 016700 4 OCLC 32429525 Medway Gareth J 2001 Lure of the Sinister The Unnatural History of Satanism New York and London New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 5645 X OCLC 42643579 Moreman Christopher M 2003 Devil Music and the Great Beast Ozzy Osbourne Aleister Crowley and the Christian Right The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 3 1 1 12 doi 10 3138 jrpc 5 1 004 ISSN 1703 289X Morgan Mogg 2011 The Heart of Thelema Morality Amorality and Immorality in Aleister Crowley s Thelemic Cult The Pomegranate The International Journal of Pagan Studies 13 2 163 83 doi 10 1558 pome v13i2 163 ISSN 1528 0268 Moore John 2009 Aleister Crowley A Modern Master Oxford Mandrake ISBN 978 1 906958 02 2 OCLC 652037939 Owen Alex 2012 The Sorcerer and His Apprentice Aleister Crowley and the Magical Exploration of Edwardian Subjectivity In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 15 52 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Pasi Marco 2003 The Neverendingly Told Story Recent Biographies of Aleister Crowley Aries Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism 3 2 224 45 doi 10 1163 157005903767876928 ISSN 1567 9896 Pasi Marco 2014 1999 Aleister Crowley and the Temptation of Politics Ariel Godwin translator Durham Acumen ISBN 978 1 84465 696 7 OCLC 872678868 Pegg Nicholas 2 November 2016 The Complete David Bowie New Edition Expanded and Updated Titan Books ISBN 978 1 78565 533 3 OCLC 774591703 Richmond Keith 2012 Through the Witch s Looking Glass The Magick of Aleister Crowley and the Witchcraft of Rosaleen Norton In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 307 34 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 Spence Richard B 2008 Secret Agent 666 Aleister Crowley British Intelligence and the Occult Port Townsend Washington Feral House ISBN 978 1 932595 33 8 OCLC 658217241 Sutin Lawrence 2000 Do What Thou Wilt A Life of Aleister Crowley New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 25243 4 OCLC 43581537 Symonds John 1997 The Beast 666 The Life of Aleister Crowley London Pindar Press ISBN 978 1 899828 21 0 OCLC 60232203 The Newsroom 23 November 2007 House of the unholy The Scotsman Archived from the original on 16 September 2015 The United Press 13 April 1934 Confessed Genius Loses Weird Suit The Pittsburgh Press Archived from the original on 19 May 2016 Urban Hugh B 2012 The Occult Roots of Scientology L Ron Hubbard Aleister Crowley and the Origins of a Controversial New Religion In Bogdan Henrik Starr Martin P eds Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 335 68 ISBN 978 0 19 986309 9 OCLC 820009842 van Luijk Ruben 2016 Aleister Crowley or the Great Beast 666 Children of Lucifer The Origins of Modern Religious Satanism Oxford Studies in Western Esotericism New York Oxford University Press pp 306 314 ISBN 978 0 19 027512 9 OCLC 933273961 Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 31 May 2020 Further reading EditGillavry D M 2014 Aleister Crowley the Guardian Angel and Aiwass The Nature of Spiritual Beings in the Philosophies of the Great Beast 666 PDF Sacra Brno Masaryk University 11 2 33 42 ISSN 1214 5351 S2CID 58907340 Archived PDF from the original on 27 June 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Crowley Aleister John Symonds and Kenneth Grant The Confessions of Aleister Crowley an Autohagiography 1989 London Arkana Tully Caroline 2010 Walk Like an Egyptian Egypt as Authority in Aleister Crowley s Reception of The Book of the Law PDF The Pomegranate The International Journal of Pagan Studies London Equinox Publishing 12 1 20 47 doi 10 1558 pome v12i1 20 hdl 11343 252812 ISSN 1528 0268 S2CID 159745083 Archived PDF from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 10 January 2022 External links EditAleister Crowley at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Works by Aleister Crowley at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Aleister Crowley at Internet Archive Works by Aleister Crowley at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Aleister Crowley Collection at the Harry Ransom Center University of Texas Aleister Crowley and the Abbey of Thelema in Cefalu at WondersOfSicily com with photos Perdurabo Where is Aleister Crowley film on the Abbey of Thelema by Carlos Atanes Aleister Crowley at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aleister Crowley amp oldid 1152827300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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