Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Everard Feilding

 

     

 

Au Cadrau Bleu

Chelles, S. et M.

 

 

June 9, 1924 E.V.

 

 

Dear Feilding,

 

I have not got your letter, and only hear that you have written to me through a Muddy channel. I am therefore free to explain that it is in my opinion the characteristic of the class of people deserving a certain appellation that they should stand by any other person of that class if harried by vermin of the type of the Right Honourable Lord Beaverbrook. (The judgment is provisional: pending enquiry.) I am giving him a second chance to behave decently out of mere politeness to the Coburgs which courtesy I hope you will appreciate, being so closely connected to the Hapsburgs.

     

You will gather from the above that I am feeling slightly better.

 

Yours,

 

Aleister Crowley

 

 

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