Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Gerald Yorke

 

 

 

Ivy Cottage,

Knockout, Kent

 

 

Dec. 6th, 1929.

 

 

Care Frater:

 

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

 

I wish you had let me know immediately the results of the Tattersall and Lutyens inerviews. Please note that it might, at any moment, be important that I should be able to use such information, for in an emergency an hour earlier or later in any such question might make a week's difference in New York. Nothing particular has happened. I am only explaining that it might happen, one day.

     

Foreman [N. J. N. Foreman] was down here last night, and we discussed the U. B. question. We came to the conclusion that Nick [Lieutenant Colonel John Carter] must be barking up the wrong tree. We cannot understand their running a magazine or starting a temple at Manchester. I think he must be mixing up two societies. I am not writing to him about it, but the next time you see him you might bring up the matter again.

 

Love is the law, love under will.

 

Yours fraternally

 

666.

 

P.S. R.M.W. here. Expect you Tuesday.

 

 

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