Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Gerald Yorke
Hotel Metropole, Bruxelles, Belgique
June 6th, 1929
Care Frater:
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
Yours of the 4th. Bar accidents, I cross by the express, Osten-Dover. Perhaps you can meet me at Victoria Station. Arrives 4:40 P.M.
I don't think the First Avenue is a good place. It is too far from my business centres. I will try and get some information in the course of the day about more central places.
My papers can't arrive from Scotland til tomorrow at the earliest, so it seems that I shall have to leave de M [Maria de Miramar] in cold storage. Personally, I think she ought to be in a nursing home for a month, and if I can persuade her to do that I will.
I quite agree with you about my coat. But I do wish you would cease to imagine that I enjoy present conditions. It is like sitting on the Baltoro Glacier waiting for two consecutive fine days, which never turned up.
I shall badger Ogden [C. K. Ogden], Earp [Tommy Earp] and such people at once, for reviewing or reading for publishers.
Love is the law, love under will.
Yours fraternally
666
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