Correspondence from Charles Stansfeld Jones to Aleister Crowley
P.O. Box 70. Vancouver. B.C.
February 13th 1918 E.V.
My Beloved Father,
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
I have received no reply at all from Lazenby [Charles Lazenby] to whom I wrote, in guarded terms, on the 30th alt., sending the letter in duplicate so as to insure if possible its delivery. It may be of course that he has written to you without letting me know. I am getting used to writing letters to which no replies are forthcoming. For some reason or other I have received absolutely no letters this year except a brief note from you and one from my mother in England. I trust in your case there is nothing I have said or done to incur your paternal displeasure, I have no right of course to question your exceptionally long silence, but I am now quite at a loss to understand it, although, if necessary, I am prepared to wait patiently the solution of the problem.
I have been striving to improve financial conditions which, as you know, have always been one of the great drawbacks here; so far with very little success. As a matter of fact we've been pretty badly up against it lately, though I hope things may change a bit with the new moon. The matters of which I wrote are all hanging fire rather badly, or of course it may be the time is not quite ripe as they are not entirely off. It seems to take quite a while for initiations to work out on all planes, mentally etc there was undoubtedly a great breaking up and readjustment, materially, things seem to be taking the same course, but although the first part seems clearly through, the second has yet to manifest.
Love is the law, love under will.
With Filial and Fraternal Greetings,
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