Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Martha Küntzel

 

     

 

Ivy Cottage,

Knockholt, Kent.

 

 

November 29th, 1929.

 

 

Dear Little Sister:

 

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

 

I have just got your letter of the 19th. We have got the drink and the truffles all right. I have no doubt that this time we shall make a success of things. You can tell Meisenbach that I have no objection to being responsible for the 106 marks. But I shall be glad if he would do things in the ordinary business way, and wait until I am able to accompany the remittance with an order for a number of lithographs. Tell him that I shall have to talk to Mr. Goldston [at the Mandrake Press] about the matter, but that I cannot do this for some days because of my being in the country.

     

It was very good and very naughty of you to send Yorke [Gerald Yorke] that money. It does, as a matter of fact, appear to have been an inspiration because it was very badly wanted at just that moment.

     

I am very pleased to hear of the newspaper business. The third and fourth section [of Magick in Theory and Practice] have not as yet arrived from Paris. But of course you have practically the whole of their contents either in manuscript or in the Equinox.

 

Love is the law, love under will.

 

Yours fraternally,

 

 

666 / anl [Israel Regardie]

 

 

[111]