Correspondence from Aleister Crowley to Montgomery Evans

 

     

 

Ivy Cottage,

Knockholt, Kent,

 

 

Dec. 19th, 1929.

 

 

Dear Montgomery:

 

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

 

Your letter of December 1st has just reached me.

     

What you say is very interesting about the panic. I thought they were trying to bluff it through as usual.

     

Sorry about Raynor. She is too decorative to be wasted in this way. As for Elizabeth, perhaps it is the best thing.

     

Awfully glad about Bob. I wish you'd go and give him my love.

     

I don't know why you did not get the Hag [The Confessions of Aleister Crowley]. I signed a copy for you well over a month ago. Anyhow, I raised hell last Monday, and I believe the first two volumes have been sent over.

     

Very glad you will be here in May. What I want to do is to get out of this damn country and come back then.

          

We have had filthy weather, but to-day is beautiful old fashioned English winter. But I am very much under the weather.

     

Love is the law, love under will.

 

Yours ever

 

A.C.

 

 

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