Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Charles Stansfeld Jones
1123 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY
Office of the Contributing Editor.
August 28, 1917
Sir Stansfeld Jones P.O. Box 70, Vancouver, B.C.
My beloved son,
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
I am glad that you received what I sent you. It might be a good thing for you to read that Bernard Shaw business in public. Of course, you could not do it all in one lecture, but I think it would attract people and perhaps lead to greater things. A should not try to draw any conclusions from two isolated experiments. Weather is tricky.
Many thanks for Lazenby's [Charles Lazenby] letter. I am replying to it and using the matter for our October number [of the International]. I did reply about Johanson. I said that I thought he was an ass and a bore. I should like to know whether conscription is likely to affect you. I do not know what the new law is, but I take it that the Madonna and the Bambino are entirely dependent on you.
Love is the law, love under will.
Your father blesses thee.
Θ
AC / RBG
|