Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Gerald Yorke

 

 

 

Ivy Cottage,

Knockout, Kent

 

 

November 7th, 1929.

 

 

Care Frater:

 

Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

 

Stephenson [P.R. Stephenson] seems quite bewildered about the filing cabinet, and I suppose he will not be in town next week: so I wish you would attend to it immediately upon your return to London.

     

I am assuming that you will be down on Monday. Better please confirm.

     

I went over to see Marie [Maria de Miramar] yesterday and found her perfectly all right. But I think she wants two or three days more of absolute rest, and the fact that she doesn't like it is an additional argument. A good deal of that trouble was play-acting, and our prompt and firm action will tend to prevent a recurrence.

     

I have heard nothing from Starr [Meredith Starr]. I was expecting him down here this week.  I wish you would send him a wire to come down one day for lunch, as early as possible.

     

I wish I could have a copy of Magick [Magick in Theory and Practice] as far as it is issued. A bloke may come from Oxford to talk to me about these matters.

 

Love is the law, love under will.

 

Yours fraternally

 

666.

 

 

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