Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Gerald Yorke
Ivy Cottage, Knockout, Kent
November 12th, 1929.
Care Frater:
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
I wrote to you on Saturday to send my easel and the portamanteau containing tubes of paint, etc. from storage. Regardie [Israel Regardie] tells me that you professed to be ignorant of this whole matter, and that you did not know anything about this easel and could not imagine what storage. I should have thought that a moment's reflection would have led you to suspect that since I asked you to send me something from storage, that storage must be a storage from which I could not get anything without your signature. This is indeed actually the case. I refer to the storage in the Harrow Road. The easel and paints were sent with the pictures. I want them down here. Would you be so good as to write Dixon and ask him to send them to me.
I make an effort and say no more.
Love is the law, love under will.
Yours fraternally
666.
P.S. I fear 666 will be permanently prostrated by so violent an effort.
358. [Israel Regardie]
|