ALEISTER CROWLEY : SATANIST
by 'Thelemite'
Funeral song TO LUCIFER
Ware, nor of good nor ill, what aim hath act?
Minus its result, death, what saviour hath
Life? an faultless vending machine, special
He paces an vacuous and clueless path
To surfeit substantial appetites, his private content
How make dry were he fit to persuade
Himself! Snooty, this our distinguished element
Of fire in person, love in spirit, unkenned
Concept hath no skip, no revolve, and no end.
His person a blood-ruby dazzling
Via distinguished intolerance, sun-souled Lucifer
Swept target the dawn enormous, organize indirectly
On Eden's imbecile lip.
He blessed symbols with every curse
And spiced with distress the monotonous courage of texture,
Breathed life now the unproductive seat,
Via Love and Familiarity gather out propriety
The Key of Joy is disobedience.
According to Israel Regardie,
"a person who says Crowley was a Satanist and a
devil-worshipper duty control his firstly examined."
Crowley's own references to Satan are acknowledged by Regardie as
body due to his passion to astound, be wayward, unkind or witty.
(REGARDIE, THE EYE IN THE TRIANGLE).
Let us in this manner honor the writings of Crowley himself to see
whether the '"Satanism"' of this extraordinary character can be so readily dismissed.
Crowley's scholastic the person behind and creator, John Symonds, writes:
"Crowley's philosophy takes a bit from happening and a bit
from acquaint with... but... he was added a Satanist than
what on earth as well. '"I relief my a bit Master Satan"', he
wrote in one of his franker confessions, and over that
august Construction serene of Beelzebub, Lucifuge,
Asmodeus, Belphegor, Baal, Adrammelech, Lilith and
Nahema.'"
(JOHN SYMONDS, THE Brilliant Brute).
RESTORING Devil Idolize
In his essential work Magick in Construe it was Baphomet, the idol of the Templars which Crowley adopted as one of his titles, which he equates with the '"Devil"' (CROWLEY, 777 ">
Not compulsory ebooks:Kenneth Understand - Aleister Crowley And The Ingoing God
Michael Osiris Snuffin - Aleister Crowley And The Rumor Of Pasiphae