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The Caretaker
The Caretaker

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Crowley - 3/dec/2024

CROWLEY TIME


THESIS: If the Golden Dawn were trying to extract the “active ingredient” from religion, Crowley was the first to realize they were still beholden to the christian regime of signs.


YOUNG CROWLEY: 


Edward Alexander Crowley was Born in 1875 in Warwickshire England to a family of wealthy and pious alcohol magnates. The Crowleys were members of the Plymouth Brethren, a low church known for being some of the strictest religious fundamentalists in England. Young Edward did not seem to mind this. It wasn’t until his father died in 1875, and his more religiously overbaring mother came into more control of his life, that he began to tack away from his religious upbringing. 


In 1895, he began studying at the prestigious Trinity College, where he would develop a knack for the liberal arts, and irresponsible use of his family fortune. He would publish a book of poetry –at great personal expense– that received generally favorable reviews. This would make him a regular in england's avante-garde arts and cultural scene. A meeting with the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn would be inevitable. 


He would be initiated as a Neophyte at the Isis-Urania Temple in London in 1898. Here he would meet English Buddhist convert Allan Bennet, who would show him the ropes of ceremonial magic, and GD founder Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers. It was around this time that Mathers would publish his translation of the Book of Abramelin the Mage, which would be a watershed text for Crowley. 


The Book of Abramelin is one of those kitchen sink texts. It serves as a short overview of occult history up to the fifteenth century or so, but crucially in a narrative form. This type of text would prove to be Crowley’s specialty. Be it a consequence of his literary education, or a quirk of personality, Crowey had a genius for the narrative elements of magic. His ability to summarize a complex idea with an elegant term would carry him far. 


He was initiated as a neophyte in the Isis-Urantia temple of the Golden Dawn, where he would quickly and enthusiastically climb the ranks. All the while, he would pay special attention to the Book of Abramelin. 


KICKED OUT OF THE GOLDEN DAWN


The turn of the century would mark a tumultuous year for the Golden Dawn. An internal feud would pressure mathers to resign as leader of the organization. Crowley would eventually side with him, and the two would be expelled. 


The result of this was a Crowley with a head full of ritual magic, a lot of money, and no obligations. It was time to travel. He would bring Bennet along for the first few legs of the journey, traveling to Mexico and then India to study buddhism and Yoga. 


In 1902, he would indulge one of his other great passions: Mountaineering. He would attempt to summit K2. 


In 1903 he would marry Rose Kelly, a medium and fellow diehard occult enthusiast. In the spring of 1904, the two would put Crowley in contact with Aiwass, his own personal guardian angel. (is aiwass his GA or is that something different) Who would dictate to him the Book of the Law. This would be the foundational text of Crowley’s new religion: Thelema. 


1905 he travels across china, during this travel he performs the ritual of the Augoeides, which is a continuation, in another form, of the ritual of Abramelin for the attainment of the knowledge of his Holy Guardian Angel. Notably, this ritual takes place in an “imaginative” or “astral” form, meaning that as Crowley travelled, he was performing the ritual in his mind. 


Upon his return from England, he publishes three works. A collection of his poetry, Collected Works. A collection of essays called Conx Om Pax, and a book on Golden Dawn correspondences, the Liber 777. 


THE ABORTED ARGENTUM ASTRUM


1907ish he meets  John Frederick Charles Fuller, who helps Crowley start his own esoteric order, the A∴A∴ (the initials are usually interpreted as “Astrum Argentinum”, or “Argenteum Astrum”, i.e. Silver Star).


Also in 1909, together with his disciple Victor B. Neuburg (1883-1940), he “explores” the magical system of → John Dee, through an important series of invocations and astral travels in the desert of Algeria. He publishes these experiences as a text called The Vision and The Voice


Crowley was never a quiet person, his constant desire to make enemies was the source of both fame and infamy. Back in england, his political enemies (who) made accusations of homosexuality in Crowley. This was true. The man was a prolific bisexual. Unfortunately these political attacks would continue to tarnish his reputation for the rest of his life, with expensive consequences. 


Come 1910, WWI is brewing and Aleister Crowley had penises on the mind. His study of tantric practices in India led him to a novel conclusion: All the pageantry and theater of the Golden Dawn’s rituals could be shortcutted with sex. Bare with me a moment. Think about it. Everything about the Golden Dawn rituals, all the swords and robes and ritual altars were themselves based on the same basic ingredients: The four elements, the seven classical planets, the ten sephirot, the twelve signs of the zodiac, etc etc. History is rife with occultists who tie these elements to sections of the body. Kether already means crown, Agrippa writes that the stomach is ruled by the sun, the body is an alchemical microcosm of some greater divine whole, etc etc. The temple is not necessary, because the body is the temple. 


Perhaps not what Agrippa or Moshe de Leon had in mind for their work, but one could say the same for the folks they were citing. But in Crowley’s case, it takes two to tango. He needed folks to help with experimentation. Enter singer and occultist Theodor Reuss, and his magnificent moustache. Mr. Reuss was of a similar practical and experimental bent as crowley; meaning, he was willing to get naked for wizard reasons. This made him and Crowley fast friends. Their main shared interest was starting yet another fringe para-masonic order to explore sexual magic. They called it the Ordo Templi Orientis, the Order of the Eastern Star. OTO for short. 







NOTES



Lets see what Hanegraaf has to say about Crowley.







As a result, he drew ideas and inspiration from many disparate sources, both Western and Eastern, and blended them into his own peculiar system. His Western sources include ceremonial magic, astrology, the Tarot, Kabbalah, Egyptian lore, John Dee’s Enochian system, and → alchemy; his Eastern ones include yoga, Buddhism, Taoism, and the I-Ching. Two aspects stand out as fundamental in his work: magic (which, for various reasons, he chose to spell “Magick”) and Thelema.





Riley’s notes:


I think the places to start understanding the doctrines/innovations/cosmology/ethics/rituals he came up with would be 

There’s a lot in the equinox but that would be like individual essays im telling you you to read which is hairier



Comments

Crowley was tremendously influential for a lot of things, but I'm rather curious if he was the or just a major source of the popularity of sex magic within occult circles, or if someone else was the primary driver of that.

Jason Blackthorn


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