THE NORTHERN DAILY MAIL

Hartlepool, Durham, England

12 April 1934

(Page 5)

 

Counsel’s Court Invitation to Mr. Crowley.

 

CEFALU RITUAL.

 

Plaintiff Denies Cat Was Killed in Ceremony.

 

 

The “black magic” libel action again came before Mr. Justice Swift and a special jury in the King’s Bench Division to-day.

     

Mr. Aleister Crowley, the author, claimed damages against Miss Nina Hamnett, authoress of a book entitled “Laughing Torso,” and Messrs. Constable and Company, Ltd., the publishers and Messrs. Charles Whittingham and Briggs, the printers.

     

Mr. Crowley complained that the book imputed that he practised “black magic,” and he said this was a libel upon him. The defence was a plea of justification.

     

At the material time Mr. Crowley had a villa on the mountainside at Cefalu, Sicily, which was known as the “Abbey of Thelema.” He denied that he practiced “black magic” there.

     

In evidence he admitted that he called himself Beast 666 and The Master Therium (the great wild beast), both out of the Apocalypse.

     

Miss Hamnett was once a student of his, but he denied that he supplied any of the information on which she based the statements in the book of which he complained.

     

He also denied that a baby mysteriously disappeared, as the defence alleged, from the “Abbey of Thelema.”

 

CEREMONIES AT THE VILLA

 

Mr. Martin O’Connor, for Miss Hamnett, resuming his cross-examination yesterday, invited Mr. Crowley to try his magic in court.

     

“You stated yesterday,” said Mr. O’Connor, that as a result of early experiments you invoked certain forces, with the result that some people were attacked by unseen assailants.

     

Try your magic now on my learned friend (pointing to Mr. Hilbery). I am sure he will not object.

     

“I would not attack anyone,” replied Mr. Crowley. “I absolutely refuse.”

     

Mr. Justice Swift—We cannot turn this court into a temple, Mr. O’Connnor.

     

“On a later occasion,” continued Mr. O’Connor to the plaintiff, “you said you succeeded in rendering yourself invisible. Would you like to try that on now, for if you don’t I shall denounce you as an imposter.”

     

Mr. Crowley: You can ask me to do anything you like. It won’t alter the truth.

     

Counsel then dealt with the ritual observed in the ceremonies at the villa at Cefalu.

     

Mr. Crowley denied that a cat was killed in the ceremony and that part of the cat’s blood was drunk by a person taking part.

    

 “There was no cat, no animal, no blood, and no drinking,” he declared.

 

“AMID THE HEATHER”

 

Mr. Eddy next asked Mr. Crowley about a passage in his “Confessions” [The Confessions of Aleister Crowley]—concerning which he had been cross-examined—and said the passage referred to a village girl and showed that M. Crowley “went roaming with her amid the heather.”

     

“How old were you?” asked Mr. Eddy.

     

“I was a boy 15 or 16,” replied Mr. Crowley. “Roaming the heather with anyone is a terrible offence in itself in the surroundings in which I was brought up,” he added.

     

Merely to look at a girl across the street was considered an offence and dealt with in the most severe way.

     

Mr. Crowley’s family were Plymouth Brethren.

     

Mr. Crowley agreed that he had studied black magic, though only as a student.”

     

I was just coming out from years of abominable torture,” he explained. “I wanted to find out what a church was like, and I sneaked secretly into a church at the danger of incurring the severest penalty, because among the Plymouth Brethren even the idea of entering a church might have incurred damnation.”

     

Mr. Eddy (Mr. Crowley’s counsel): Have you at any time practised black magic?—No.

     

What is the object of the magic you believe in?—My particular branch is the raising of humanity to higher spiritual development.

 

“SPIRIT OF MAGNANIMITY”

 

Mr. Eddy asked Mr. Crowley why he indulged in German propaganda in America during the war.

     

Mr. Crowley: In order to destroy it. I reported my activities to the chief of our organization. Captain (later commodore) Guy Gaunt, and was in communication with the Hon. Everard Feilding. I came back immediately after the war, and, if I had been a traitor, I should have been shot—and a good job too.

     

Carl Germer [Karl Germer] a German merchant living in England admired Mr. Crowley very highly. He had seen Mr. Crowley invoke the spirit of magnanimity.

     

Mr. Justice Swift: You are sure it was the spirit of magnanimity which came, and not the spirit of hospitality?

 

Witness: I believe so.

     

The case for Mr. Crowley was concluded.

     

Mr. Malcolm Hilbery (for the printers and publishers) said the question for the jury was whether passages in “Laughing Torso,” of which complaint was made, would be read by any reasonable person as worsening the character of Mr. Crowley.

     

What right had a man to complain of injury to a reputation which he had described himself as being that of the worst man in the world?