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Aleister Crowley
1875-1947
pseudonyms:
Khaled Khan, Frater Perdurabo, H.D. Carr, "A Gentleman of the University
of Cambridge"
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English
writer and occult figure, popularly known as "the Great Beast" or
"The Wickedest Man in the World", by the media because of his fascination
for sex magic and degradation, drug taking and hedonism. Crowley's
famous motto was 'Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The
Law.Love is the law.Love under will.
Crowley was born in Leamington, Warwickshire. His parents belonged
to a strict Puritan sect known as the Plymouth Brethren. After his
father died Crowley abandoned all aspects of Christianity and considered
his mother a 'religious bigot'. On the other hand, she called him
'The Beast'. It was said that Crowley killed his first cat at the
age of 11, and later rumours linked him with infanticide and cannibalism.
Inheriting his father's brewing fortune, Crowley studied at Trinity
College at Cambridge, devoting his time to poetry and occultism.In
1898 he joined The Hermetic order of the Golden Dawn, which also
counted poet W.B. Yeats as its member.
During the next few years Crowley became a member of the group's
inner conclave, but after quarrels concerning the control of the
group, he was expelled from it. He claimed to have experienced a
vision in Egypt, prophesying a new era for humanity. He led a group
of followers to Sicily, established 'black magic temples' in Italy
and England, and wrote numerous books. Crowley's early works include
many volumes of poetry and books with mythological or mystical themes,
among them Songs of the Spirit (1898), Aceldama (1989),
The Soul of Osiris (1901), Tannhäuser (1902), The
God-Eater (1903),and Oracles (1905). In 1903 he married
Rose Kelly, his first wife, but still had a ring of mistresses,
and in 1909 he started a relationship with the poet Victor Neuberg.
From
1915 to 1919 Crowley lived in the United States, and in the 1920s
he moved to a hillside villa in Sicily. Crowley hoped the Cefalu
villa 'Abbaye de Theleme', would be a world centre for the study
of the occult. In 1921 he was consecrated a god by his followers.
After the mysterious death of one of his magical brothers, a 23-year-old
Oxford undergraduate Raoul Loveday, he was soon expelled by Mussolini
or the Italian authorities. Loveday died when he killed a cat and
drank its blood. The dead man's wife, Betty May, informed on Crowley's
degraded activities.
Crowley's later years were shadowed by poor health, drug addiction,
and desperation for money. In 1929 he married his second wife, Maria
Ferrari de Miramar, and earned his living mostly by publishing obscure
writings. Crowley spent his last years in a boarding house in Hastings,
addicted to heroin and alcohol. His final act was to curse the doctor
who refused to give him more heroin. He died on December 1, 1947,
and was cremated in Brighton. (According to some rumours' the doctor
died within twenty-four hours after the magician.) Crowley's ashes
were sent to followers in the United States.
As a writer Crowley was prolific. His novels, The Diary of a
Drug Fiend (1922) and Moonchild (1929), are partly based
on his personal life and egomaniac hallucinations. Moonchild
is a roman à clef, in which two societies of rival magicians
quarrel over an experiment to incarnate a supernatural being. Among
his most famous occult writings are The Book of Lies (1913),
Magick in Theory and Practice (1929), and Book of Law
(1938).
After
his death several unpublished writings have been released, including
The Confessions of Aleister Crowley, his autobiography, a
self-portrait of the man, who also gained a reputation as a mountaineer.
Most of all, he tried to achieve supremacy in the occult world,
not only based on the knowledge of magic (or 'magick' as he preferred
to call it), but also in personal revelations.
Crucial was his vision in Egypt in 1904, when according to Crowley's
own account, his spiritual alter ego Aiwass dictated what became
known as The Book of the Law. Crowley claimed that mankind has lived
through two great aeons: that of Isis, the prehistoric age of the
dominance of Woman, and that of Osiris, the age of the dominance
of the male principle and of the great religions. The present aeon
was the commencement of that of Horus and self-will. The third age
would be a New Age of Youth, based on union of female and male energies.
Thus sex was central to Crowley's magical practice, both in heterosexual
and homosexual forms.
Crowley claimed to be reincarnation of the French occultist known
as Eliphas Lévi. One of Crowley's most notorious projects - a conjuration
of Pan employing his Oscar Wilde -style 'Hymn to Pan' - was lifted
from Edgar Jepson's thriller No. 19 (1910). According to
Kenneth Grant, his magical theories correspond very closely with
the schema of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythos.
Eliphas Lévi (1810-75, original name Alphonse-Louis Constant)
a Paris shoemaker's son, expelled from the church for heresy,
who worked as a journalist. Lévi was a key figure in the occult
revival of the 19th-century. He wrote widely on Qabalah and Tarot.
Among his works are Dogma and Ritual of High Magic (1856) and
The History of Magic. - see also: Umberto Eco and Foucault's Pendulum,
Arthur Conan Doyle, whose interest in magic was far from the rational
thinking of his best-known fictional character, Sherlock Holmes.-
W. Somerset Maugham's novel The Magician depicts the lightly disguised
character of Crowley. - The author can also be found from the
novels of Dennis Wheatley and Colin Wilson. - note: after
rock star Jimmy Page started collecting Crowley's writings, they
have become hard to obtain.
For
further reading: Magic of My Youth by A. Calder-Marshall (1951);
Aleister Crowley by C.R. Cammell (1951, rev. ed. 1969); The Great
Beast by J. Symonds (1952); The Romantic Agony by M. Praz (1956);
Magic Aleister Crowley by J. Symonds (1958); Aleister Crowley:
A Memoir of 666 by A. Burnett-Rae (1971); The Legend of Aleister
Crowley by P.R. Stephenson (1983); The Legacy of the Beast by
J. Symonds (1988); The King of the Shadow Realm by J. Symonds
(1988); Aleister Crowley by C. Wilson (1989)
NOTE: The American avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger
is known to be supporter of Aleister Crowley's occult theories.
Anger's most famous film is Scorpio Rising (1964). Much of the
works have been done in Europe, mainly in France, but abandoned
during production and never exhibited. Among his other films are
Fireworks (1947), Invocation of my Demon Brother
(1969), Rabbit's Moon (1971), Lucifer Rising (1973,
rev. edition 1980). Books: Hollywood Babylon (first published
in France in 1958), Hollywood Babylon II (1984).
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Selected works:
- ACELDAMA, 1898
- JEPHTHAH, 1898
- JEZEBEL, 1898
- AHAB, 1898
- THE MOTHER'S TRAGEDY, 1898
- SONG'S OF THE SPIRIT, 1898
- THE
TALE OF ARCHAIS, 1898
- WHITE STAIN, 1898
- THE SOUL OF OSIRIS,
1901
- TANNHÄUSER; A STORY OF ALL TIME, 1902
- ALICE: AN ADULTERY,
1903
- THE STAR AND THE GARTER, 1903
- THE GOD-EATER, 1903
- THE
ARGONAUTS, 1904
- SNOWDROPS FROM A CURATE'S GARDEN, 1904
- THE
SWORD OF A SONG, 1904
- WHY JESUS WEPT, 1904
- ROSA MUNDI, 1904
- ORACLES, 1905
- ORPHEUS; A LYRICAL LEGEND, 1905, 2 vol.
- THE
WORKS OF ALESTEIR CROWLEY, 1905-07 (3 vols.)
- CARGOYLES, 1906
- ROSA COELI, 1907
- ROSA INFERNI, 1907
- KONX OM PAX, 1907
-
CLOUDS WITHOUT WATER, 1909
- AMPHORA, 1909
- ALEXANDRA, 1909
-
THE RITES OF ELEUSIS, 1910
- THE WINGED BEETLE, 1910
- AMBERGRIS,
1910
- THE HIGH HISTORY OF GOOD SIR PALAMEDES, 1912
- HOUSEHOLD
GODS, 1912
- MORTADELLO, 1912
- THE BOOK OF LIES, 1913,
- THE
SAVIOUR, 1918
- THE DIARY OF A DRUG FRIEND, 1922
- SONGS FOR ITALY,
1923
- THE SPIRIT OF SOLITUDE, 1929
- MAGICK IN THEORY AND PRACTICE,
1929
- MOONCHILD, 1929
- THE CONFESSIONS OF ALEISTER CROWLEY,
1929-30 (2 vols.)
- THE STRATAGEM AND OTHER STORIES, 1930
- THE
EQUINOX OF THE GODS, 1937
- THE BOOK OF THE LAW, 1938
- TEMPERANCE,
1939
- THUMBS UP!, 1942
- THE BOOK OF THOTH, 1944
- OLLA, 1947
- THE CONFESSIONS OF ALESTEIR CROWLEY, 1969 (rev. ed. 1979)
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THE BOOK OF THOTH, 1969
- AHA, 1969
- 777 REVISED, 1970
- SHIH
YI, 1971 (?)
- THE VISION AND THE VOICE, 1972
- THE MAGICAL RECORD
OF THE BEAST 666, 1972
- THE HEART OF THE MASTER, 1973
- KHING
KANG KING, 1973
- MAGICK WITHOUT TEARS, 1973
- MAGICK, 1973
-
THE SOUL OF THE DESERT, 1974
- A SPRING SNOWSTORM IN WASTDALE,
1974
- CROWLEY ON CHRIST, 1974
- THE COMPLERE ASTROLOGICAL WRITINGS,
1974
- ALESTEIR CROWLEYS'S ASTROLOGY, 1974
- GEMS FROM THE EQUINOX,
1974
- THE EQUINOX OF THE GODS, 1974
- ORPHEUS, 1974
- MAGICAL
AND PHILOSOPHICAL COMMENTARIES ON THE BOOK OF LAW, 1974
- THE
LAW IS FOR ALL, 1975
- THE METHOD OF SCIENCE - THE AIM OF RELIGION,
1980
- THE BANNED LECTURE, 1981
- 777AND OTHER QABBALISTIC WRITINGS,
1982
- MAGICK AND MYSTICISM, 1982
- THE WORLD'S TRAGEDY, 1985
- EIGHT LECTURES ON YOGA, 1985
- SELECTED POEMS, 1986
- THE SCRUTINIES
OF SIMON IFF, 1987
- AEGYPT, 1987
- GOLDEN TWIGS, 1988
- THE ALESTERI
CROWLEY SCRAPBOOK, 1988
- PORTABLE DARKNESS, 1989
- AMRITA, 1990
- LIBER ALEPH, 1991
- THE SCENTED GARDEN OF ABDULLAH THE SATIRIST
OF SHIRAZ, 1991
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biblion This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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