Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Gerald Yorke
Hotel Metropole, Bruxelles, Belgique
May 15, 1929 [Dictated May 12th].
Care Frater:
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
I am sending you herewith a letter from Miss Küntzel [Martha Küntzel] of a somewhat cheering nature. Also a copy of part of a long letter to Germer [Karl Germer]. The rest of the letter deals only with his Magical Record. I expect you will be writing him yourself next week.
I see no particular reason why I should not come to England. If there should be any legal hitch about my domestic arrangements in Brussels,* I might even want to come on the way to Paris. But it would be extremely stupid to do this without adequate funds, and of course we must be extremely careful to avoid any public action in England of any kind until we have exposed the truth through the medium of the French courts.
Love is the law, love under will.
Yours fraternally
666.
*Regardie [Israel Regardie] writes this A.M. he must be resident in Brussels 3 weeks. But perhaps the papers could be sent down here—or—?
Gerald York, Esq., 9, Mansfield Street, London, W.1.
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