Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Ethel Archer
3, Great James Street.
30th. Sept. 1912.
Dear Wieland,
I enclose herewith cheque as requested. We shall be very glad to see you back however. I am in urgent need of repose: we have averaged two ceremonies a day for the whole of the past week.
You ought to have explained to Power fully. You might tell him that of course nothing is any use in Spalding, but that it is his fault that Spalding is Spalding, and you might tell Perry that we are doing exactly what he suggests should be done.
You do not tell me the only thing that interests me, which is how you are.
Yours ever,
Crowley.
P.S.—I shall want to know when you are coming back, definitely. I am enclosing you a record of some Dutch dog; I refuse to read his writing. Love to everybody in Spalding. A.C.
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