Aleister Crowley And the Practice of the Magical Diary
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This important collection includes Aleister Crowley's two most important instructional writings on the design and purpose of the magical diary, John St. John and A Master of the Temple. These were the only two works regarding the magical diary published in Crowley's lifetime. Both were first published in Crowley's immense collection of magical instruction, The Equinox. John St. John chronicles Crowley's moment-by-moment progress during a 13-day magical working. Crowley referred to it as "a perfect model of what a magical record should be." A Master of the Temple is taken from the magical diary of Frater Achad at a time when he was Crowley's most valued and successful student. It provides an invaluable example of a student's record, plus direct commentary and instruction added by Crowley.
With commentary and introductory material by editor James Wasserman, Aleister Crowley and the Practice of the Magical Diary is the most important and accessible instruction available to students of the occult regarding the practice of keeping a magical diary.
This revised edition includes a new introduction by Wasserman, a foreword by noted occult scholar J. Daniel Gunther, revisions throughout the text, a revised reading list for further study, plus Crowley's instructions on banishing from Liber O.
J. Daniel Gunther
J. Daniel Gunther is a life-long student of esotericism, mythology, and religion. A longtime member of A;. A;., the teaching Order established by Aleister Crowley, he is considered one of the foremost authorities in the ?eld, and serves on the editorial board of The Equinox, and acts as a consultant and advisor for numerous occult publications.
Read more from J. Daniel Gunther
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Aleister Crowley And the Practice of the Magical Diary - J. Daniel Gunther
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
The first edition of this book was published in 1993. I had been asked by Christopher Hyatt of New Falcon Publishing to suggest a book by or about Aleister Crowley that needed to be published.
What was missing from the growing body of Thelemic literature? I immediately proposed a book on the Magical Diary, composed of Crowley's two most important published sets of instructions. I also suggested that someone add his own experience with the practice. I then forgot about it until a few months later when he asked me to create the book I had described.
Over the years, many people have praised this work as a true missing ingredient. So many of us are uneasy about committing our personal thoughts to paper. And Crowley's repeated insistence on this practice might be dismissed as simply his personal preference as a writer. However, the diary practice came relatively naturally to me. Some 35 years after starting, I am happy I did.
In preparing this new edition for publication, many possibilities suggested themselves. Since the first edition of this book was published, Caliph Hymenaeus Beta of Ordo Templi Orientis has done some masterful work in putting out original editions of other Crowley diaries. He initiated a series of Crowley's collected diaries, beginning in 1998, with Equinox IV, 2, The Vision and the Voice and Other Papers (which includes the Paris Working diary mentioned here). Crowley's American diaries from 1914–1919 will appear as Equinox IV, 3, The Diary of a Magus and Other Papers. A volume of his earlier diaries from 1898–1908 is also in preparation.
There are numerous unpublished diaries of Crowley's students around, and they make for fascinating reading. Keith Richmond has released an excellent book of Frank Bennett's diaries. And Michael Kolson has labored well on a diary of Victor Neuberg, as well as other historical diary material. We also have some fascinating diaries in manuscript of Crowley's female students. Over time, I hope many other books will make their way to published form.
In fact, we are especially looking forward to the first publication of the second part of the diary presented here, Frater Achad's A Master of the Temple, Liber CLXV, as edited by Aleister Crowley and Hymenaeus Beta, in the long awaited reconstruction of the Equinox, Volume 3, Number 2, to be released by Thelema Media. (This book will also include the definitive publication of Achad's most important paper, Liber XXXI, which caused Crowley to proclaim him as the Magical Son promised in The Book of the Law, particularly verses I:55–56 and III:47.
Yet with all this wealth of new material — either now available, in production, or in manuscript — the two books included here, John St. John and A Master of the Temple (Part 1), are the only instructions on the proper use and form of the Magical Diary specifically published by Crowley during his lifetime. After some research and soul searching, I decided to keep this book what it has always been — the best introduction to the Magical Diary for either a beginning or more advanced practitioner, with the least amount of extraneous information.*
When it was reprinted in 2004, I reviewed my decade-old introduction to see how it needed be updated and improved. What I read were the very honest and revealing words of someone who had loved and practiced Thelema to the best of his ability his entire life. There was little to add, and a simple reprint seemed in order.
However, with the interest expressed by Redwheel/Weiser, I am delighted to have the opportunity to try to improve on this book, while being careful not to throw out the proverbial baby with the bath water. The most important improvement is the Foreword by my friend J. Daniel Gunther. The quality and extent of his service to Thelema is a largely untold story at this moment, and it is with much gratitude and delight that his work appears here. All those interested in Thelema will welcome the forthcoming publication of his most important book, The Inward Journey, to follow, we hope, before too much longer.
I have modified my introduction where I think it may help, while consciously avoiding removing some of the more personal parts that still cause me to wince. I have also taken the opportunity to translate foreign terms employed by Crowley, footnoting them in John St. John within editorial brackets. In A Master of the Temple, I have added very few footnotes, also in editorial brackets, and marked with my initials to clearly identify the speaker. Most of the footnotes in A Master of the Temple are Crowley's own. Liber O vel Manus et Sagittae has been added to the appendix. It is an excellent instruction and, like Liber E vel Exercitiorum, also included, highlights the importance of the diary in practice and gives some guidance as to what to include. O.T.O. Frater Superior Hymenaeus Beta provided a 1942 letter from Crowley to American disciple and Agapé Lodge member Roy Leffingwell that offers concise instruction in the Diary practice. He has also allowed me to include his Tree of Life design to help illustrate the relationship between concepts discussed in the text. The reader may refer to this glyph for unfamiliar references to follow the connections between number, planet, astrological sign, Tarot card, A A Grade, part of the Soul, and the four Worlds of the Qabalah — all of which Crowley dances through so deftly. Photos of Crowley making the Sign of Blind Force and Jones in his Asana have been returned to John St. John and A Master of the Temple, while The Silent Watcher image from Equinox I, 1 has been included in the appendix. On a lighter note, an alphabetical glossary of the foods recorded in John St. John has been compiled to highlight the sophisticated fare enjoyed by this Adept during his Operation. Finally, I have updated the bibliographical data.
While the goal of this book has always been to let Crowley describe in his own words his thought on the practice of keeping the Magical Diary, I still believe it is important to offer the (perhaps unsolicited) experience of someone who took Crowley's teaching to heart. Thus far my apologia for including my own contribution.
I thank Dr. Christopher S. Hyatt, who tricked me into writing this; Michael Miller for his investment in the first printing; Genevieve Mikolajczak who typed the manuscript, helped with countless proofreading cycles, and contributed her insightful critique throughout its creation; and Nancy Wasserman for a great deal of both help and patience in bringing this book to the light of day. Thanks are also due to my Brothers Martin Starr and William Breeze for their invaluable support and assistance with this (and most of the other projects of my life). Michael Kolson has contributed valuable ideas in numerous discussions. I am indebted to J. Daniel Gunther for his friendship and guidance. Gwynneth Cheers has used her culinary skills to elucidate upon the sophisticated fare Crowley took such pains to record. I am also grateful for the encouragement so freely offered by Brenda Knight, Kat Sanborn, and Michael Conlon of Redwheel/Weiser.
While Hymenaeus Beta and Martin P. Starr have raised the editorial bar to just about where it belongs for the Crowley literary corpus, the first person to teach me proper respect for this material, especially the Class A writings, was my Instructor Marcelo Motta. Although we had a stormy relationship and a stormier parting, I am honor bound to pay my respects to him, and to express my gratitude for the insights and disciplines he shared with me.
Finally, my thanks to the readers of the first edition whose enthusiasm has been heartening.
Love is the law, love under will.
—James Wasserman
2005 e.v.
* The two volume edition of the full 10 volumes of The Equinox (published by Weiser in 1998) includes an appendix of Crowley's marginal annotations to John St. John, to which the interested reader is referred.
INTRODUCTION
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
The Record is both chart and log to the bold Sea-Captains of The Voyage Marvelous. (MT, p. 131)
‘Excuse the interruption,’ she said, ‘but the Magical Record is always the first consideration in the Abbey.’ (Sister Athena to Unlimited Lou and Sir Peter in DDF, p. 320)
A LEISTER CROWLEY insisted on the importance of the Magical Diary in his particular system of attainment. Through the years, I have met many fellow students who have overlooked this instruction. On the other hand, I have enjoyed keeping my own magical diary along the lines Crowley suggested for well over three decades. This introduction is an attempt to communicate the value of the magical diary practice, primarily in Crowley's own words, as well as through my experience. The collection itself contains his two most important instructions and models of the magical diary, John St. John (1909) and A Master of the Temple (1919). These were both edited by Crowley for publication, and are officially designated as A A libri (or books), Liber DCCCLX and Liber CLXV respectively. I have also added other relevant materials from Crowley's published writing, which are included in the appendix.
A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF ALEISTER CROWLEY
Aleister Crowley (1875–1947) was the greatest magician of the twentieth century. His all-pervasive influence on modern magical thought is consistent with his position as the Prophet or Logos of the current Age. A controversial figure to say the least, Crowley has both devoted followers and ardent enemies.
His parents were fundamentalists, members of the Plymouth Brethren, a literalist Protestant sect in which his father was a preacher. Shortly after his father's death, Crowley rebelled against the strictness of the group — which prompted his mother to identify him with the Beast 666 of Revelation. He suffered greatly in childhood from her rabid orthodoxy and that of the other sect members who surrounded him. Much of the poignancy of this period of his life is captured in The World's Tragedy.
After attending Cambridge, he began his formal occult training in 1898 in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Founded ten years earlier, this magical order included some of the leading lights of English occult and literary society, including two of its founders, William Wynn Westcott and S. L. MacGregor Mathers, the poet W. B. Yeats, novelist Arthur Machen, and occult writer Arthur Edward Waite. Another notable member was the brilliant engineer Allen Bennett, who was later to become a Buddhist monk. Crowley rose rapidly through the ranks of the Golden Dawn, and began to study on a personal basis with Bennett.
The Golden Dawn became beset with dissensions and the assorted behavioral dramas familiar to members of magical societies. Crowley, never one to avoid a good fight, became a key player in the shakeup. Ultimately wearied by the behavior of his fellow aspirants and in need of a change of scenery, he began to travel extensively in 1900. He went to the United States, Mexico, Hawaii, Ceylon, Burma, India, the Himalayas, Egypt, France, and back to England. In 1903, he met and married Rose Edith Kelly, and they took off on a honeymoon to Paris, Cairo, and Ceylon.
On their return journey to England in 1904, they stopped in Cairo again where an event occurred that changed Crowley's life, and marked a profound nexus point in the evolution of the human species. On March 20, 1904, directed by his wife's telepathic contact with a Higher Intelligence, he performed an invocation of Horus, the Egyptian God of Force and Fire. Again directed by her instructions, on April 8, 9, and 10, he received the three chapters of The Book of the Law in three hour-long sessions of direct voice communication.
The Book of the Law announces the planetary transition to the Aeon of Horus (popularly called the Age of Aquarius). The book provides the new formulas and the moral code appropriate for this period. The revelation can be summarized simply in the two phrases most often quoted from the book, Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law,
and Love is the law, love under will.
Crowley's concept of the True Will has been blasphemed for over a century by the now familiar ululations of yellow journalists and other media hysterics. Crowley's actual thought on the True Will was so exalted that he describes the moral code of The Book of the Law as the most austere ever proposed to mankind. The reader is referred to The Equinox of the Gods and The Law Is for All to begin an investigation of the subject.
The rest of Crowley's life was spent in relation to the Book of the Law. Initially he rebelled against it. Some five years later, he began his conscious surrender to the Forces responsible for the message — propagating, interpreting, and serving Them through his personal magical and mystical practices, his writings, his work with students, and his efforts in the magical societies of A A and O.T.O.
Crowley formulated the A A in 1907 with George Cecil Jones at the direction of the Spiritual Hierarchy responsible for the guidance of mankind. The best description of the event is The History Lection
in Liber LXI vel Causae, published in Equinox Vol. III, No. 1; The Holy Books of Thelema; and Gems from The Equinox. The A A consists of a series of Grades corresponding to the Sephiroth of the Tree of Life (see diagram on page liv). The Tree of Life system, descended from the Jewish Qabalists, became the basis of the workings of the Western esoteric tradition. The Tree is a diagram that graphically describes the Universe as composed of 10 spheres or Sephiroth, which correspond to the numbers 1 to 10, connected by 22 Paths, which correspond to the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The Tree of Life model forms the basis of all occult practice from Tarot to Path working, ritual magic to astrology. An excellent introduction to the system is The Mystical Qabalah by Dion Fortune, where she essentially analyzes Crowley's masterpiece 777 in prose form.
The Grades of A A are arranged in three sections on the Tree of Life. These consist of the Outer Order of G.D. or Golden Dawn, Inner Order of R.C. or Rose Cross, and Higher Order of S.S. or Silver Star. Its official organ is The Equinox, which began publishing in the Spring of 1909. The motto of A A , boldly included on the logo of The Equinox, is The Method of Science, The Aim of Religion.
The magical system it teaches is called Scientific Illuminism.
Crowley insisted on all students keeping a magical diary. The diary is a formal requirement of the Outer College of A A (see Liber CLXXXV in Equinox IV, 1, Commentaries on the Holy Books), and a necessary part of most practices. One Star in Sight,
the manifesto of A A first published in Magick in Theory and Practice, gives numerous instances in its descriptions of the Grades from Ipsissimus to Probationer of the relevance of the diary at all levels of attainment. Crowley believed the diary accompanies the Magician through his entire career. In support of this statement, one could cite his description of the Magus and Master of the Temple Grades in One Star in Sight,
where he mentions both his own and Frater Achad's diaries.
The Equinox
Among the duties that Crowley accepted was the encapsulating of the ancient wisdom teachings in a sort of Rosetta stone
designed to survive the dark ages he saw looming before mankind. He called The Equinox the Encyclopedia of Initiation.
Volume I of the series contained 10 numbers, some 4000 pages, published twice annually for five years at the Spring and Fall Equinoxes. It includes a wealth of practical magical instruction as well as exalted and inspired texts, combined with poetry, short stories, book reviews and other accoutrements of a literary journal. Volume II of the series is designated a Volume of Silence.
Crowley commenced with Volume III, No. 1 in the United States in 1919. Volume III was published quite sporadically. No. 2 was never released in Crowley's lifetime although page proofs survived. (It is finally to be published under the editorship of Hymenaeus Beta of O.T.O.) Equinox III, Nos. 6–10 were also posthumously issued by the O.T.O.
In Number 1 of both Volume I and Volume III of The Equinox, Crowley devoted a considerable amount of space to his instructions on the magical diary. (Both are included in the present collection.) Equinox I, 1 included as a special supplement Liber DCCCLX, John St. John, being The Record of the Magical Retirement of G.H. Frater O.M. It served as a perfect model of what a magical record should be, in respect of the form.
(MTP, p. 207). It is Crowley's diary of a Greater Magical Retirement, lasting 13 days, whose purpose was the conscious invocation of the Holy Guardian Angel within the context of normal
urban life in Paris. It was written with the ultimate intention of being published. It is also the record of his writing and using for the first time the Ritual Pyramidos.
The second diary instruction included here is Liber CLXV, A Master of the Temple, which first appeared in Equinox III, 1. It is an edited version of a portion of the magical diary of Frater Achad, Charles Stansfeld Jones, extending from 1907 to 1913. It includes an extensive commentary by Crowley on Jones's work. Jones's diary and Crowley's comments were used as an example of A A in action. It became the basis for an analysis of Scientific Illuminism and a direct endorsement of Crowley's instructions in the Magical Record. It also demonstrates the method a Teacher can use to comprehend and direct the Student to ferret through the complexes that bind him, as long as the student provides clear and honest evidence of himself in the Record. The second part of this diary is included in Equinox III, 2.
The Temple of Solomon the King
This massive text was published as a serial that ran throughout nine of the ten numbers of The Equinox, Volume I. It was a history and analysis of Crowley's magical career, taken from his magical diary. Captain (later Major-General) J. F. C. Fuller did the editing and writing for at least the first four installments. His motto in A A was Per Ardua (By Labor) and he was the Neophyte Frater P.A. referred to in A Master of the Temple. He broke with Crowley in 1911 midway through The Equinox series.
The Temple of Solomon the King presented the basic metaphysical principles and intellectual components of the Western Magical Tradition, including an extensive review of the teachings of the Golden Dawn order. It also contained an analysis and overview of both the Buddhist and Yogic systems of attainment and their relevance to the work of A A , along with extensive records of Crowley's practices with these systems extracted from his magical diaries.
The section of The Temple of Solomon the King published in Equinox I, 4 includes detailed charts condensing Crowley's meditation and concentration exercises of the periods under examination, as well as numerous verbatim transcriptions from his scrupulously maintained journals. The journals describe magical practices, yoga, meditation and concentration exercises, dream records, and daily observations. The installment in Equinox I, 8 contains a deeply moving account of Crowley's Augoeides invocation of 1906. The Augoeides refers to the Higher Genius, Holy Guardian Angel, or Divine Self, the union with whom is the Great Work. Crowley's persistence in the face of illness, personal tragedy, and the frustrations of a very full life form an epic document. It was determined not to include that record in this collection only because it was not published specifically as a magical diary instruction. However the reader is encouraged to pursue it and will be rewarded with a real insight into the majesty of this man Aleister Crowley.
A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF FRATER ACHAD
Charles Stansfeld Jones, Frater Achad, (1886–1950) was, at one time, the most promising pupil of Aleister Crowley, who considered him to be the child prophesied in The Book of the Law. See, among other verses, chapter 3, verse 47: but one cometh after him, whence I say not, who shall discover the Key of it all…. It shall be his child & that strangely.
Jones did in fact discover the Qabalistic key to The Book of the Law in the word AL whose number is 31, which he discusses in a brilliant essay extracted from his diary and known as Liber XXXI.
Crowley felt Frater Achad was his magical son when he learned that on June 21, 1916, Jones took the Oath of the Abyss and claimed to be reborn into the Third Order of A A as a Master of the Temple. Jones's announcement coincided with a period when Crowley was acutely concerned with producing a magical heir. Nine months earlier, he had performed a magical operation to beget a child, which he had interpreted as a physical child. But Jones's announcement of a magical birth fit perfectly into Crowley's world view.
In addition, Crowley felt Jones's attainment validated the method of training he had taught mankind through A A Jones was also deeply involved with the O.T.O., becoming the X° Grand Master of North America some years after founding the continent's first O.T.O. group in Canada.
In 1918, Crowley wrote Liber Aleph. Although he was still convinced Jones was his magical son, chapter 166 of the book contains evidence of Crowley's fears for him even at this early date. Shortly after delivering the manuscript of Liber XXXI to Crowley in 1919, Jones began to exhibit ever-increasing symptoms of mental imbalance and megalomania. He and Crowley became progressively estranged. In Q.B.L., The Egyptian Revival, and The Anatomy of the Body of God, published between 1922 and 1925, Jones turned the paths of the Tree of Life upside down in conjunction with new revelations he was experiencing. In 1928 he traveled to England where he joined the Roman Catholic Church. He was finally expelled from O.T.O. by Crowley in 1936. In 1948, soon after Crowley's death, Achad announced that the Age of Aquarius, which he named Ma-Ion, had superseded the Aeon of Horus after a mere 44 years.
In addition to his Qabalistic books, Achad wrote several smaller monographs on various subjects, and an exquisite collection of poetry, XXXI Hymns to the Star Goddess. Whatever may have been the psychological imbalances that ultimately destroyed him, his discovery of the key to The Book of the Law was never in dispute. Nor can one doubt the sincerity and intensity of his efforts to perform the Great Work, particularly after reading his magical record in A Master of the Temple.
A BRIEF AUTOBIOGRAPHY
I was born in 1948 and first encountered the teachings of Aleister Crowley in college toward the end of 1967. I began at that time to keep scattered notes of my Qabalistic studies, but it was a fledgling effort, with