AC

Author

Aleister Crowley

/aleister-crowley-quotes-and-sayings

80 Quotes
24 Works

Author Summary

About Aleister Crowley on QuoteMust

Aleister Crowley currently has 80 indexed quotes and 24 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

777 and Other Qabalistic Writings of Aleister Crowley Aleister Crowley and the Practice of the Magical Diary Cocaine: Impressions & Opinions Collected Works of Aleister Crowley Diary of a Drug Fiend Eight Lectures on Yoga Jezebel, and other tragic poems Little Essays Toward Truth Magick in Theory and Practice Magick Without Tears Magick: Liber ABA: Book 4 Moonchild The Best of the Equinox, Volume I: Enochian Magick The Book of the Law The Complete Astrological Writings The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagiography The Drug and Other Stories The Equinox, Volume III, Number I The Psychology of Hashish: An Essay on Mysticism The Scented Garden Of Abdullah The Satirist Of Shiraz The Soul of the Desert The Vision and the Voice: With Commentary and Other Papers Visions & Voices: Aleister Crowley's Enochian Visions with Astrological & Qabalistic Commentary White Stains & the Nameless Novel: Flowers of Eros and Evil

Quotes

All quote cards for Aleister Crowley

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The Magician should devise for himself a definite technique for destroying "evil." The essence of such a practice will consist in training the mind and the body to confront things which case fear, pain, disgust, shame and the like. He must learn to endure them, then to become indifferent to them, then to become indifferent to them, then to analyze them until they give pleasure and instruction, and finally to appreciate them for their own sake, as aspects of Truth. When this has been done, he should abandon them, if they are really harmful in relation to health and comfort.

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Aleister Crowley

Magick: Liber ABA: Book 4

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For, indeed, this is the great horror, solitude, when the soul can no longer bathe in the ever-changing mind, laugh as its sunlit ripples lap its skin, but, shut up in the castle of a few thoughts, paces its narrow prison, wearing down the stone of time, feeding on its own excrement. There is no star in the blackness of that night, no foam upon the stagnant and putrid sea. Even the glittering health that the desert brings to the body, is like a spear in the soul's throat. The passionate ache to act, to think: this eats into the soul like a cancer. It is the scorpion striking itself in its agony, save that no poison can add to the tortue of the circling fire; no superflux of anguish relieve it by annihilation. But against these paroxisms is an eightfold sedative. The ravings of madness are lost in soundless space; the struggles of the drowning man are not heeded by the sea.

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Aleister Crowley

The Soul of the Desert

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In Astrology, the moon, among its other meanings, has that of "the common people," who submit (they know not why) to any independent will that can express itself with sufficient energy. The people who guillotined the mild Louis XVI died gladly for Napoleon. The impossibility of an actual democracy is due to this fact of mob-psychology. As soon as you group men, they lose their personalities. A parliament of the wisest and strongest men in the nation is liable to behave like a set of schoolboys, tearing up their desks and throwing their inkpots at each other. The only possibility of co-operation lies in discipline and autocracy, which men have sometimes established in the name of equal rights.

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It is a terrible error to let any natural impulse, physical or mental, stagnate. Crush it out, if you will, and be done with it; or fulfil it, and get it out of the system; but do not allow it to remain there and putrefy. The suppression of the normal sex instinct, for example, is responsible for a thousand ills. In Puritan countries one inevitably finds a morbid preoccupation with sex coupled with every form of perversion and degeneracy.

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Each being is, exactly as you are, the sole centre of a Universe in no wise identical with, or even assimilable to, your own. The impersonal Universe of Nature is only an abstraction, approximately true, of the factors which it is convenient to regard as common to all. The Universe of another is therefore necessarily unknown to, and unknowable by, you; but it induces currents of energy in yours by determining in part your reactions. Use men and women, therefore, with the absolute respect due to inviolable standards of measurement; verify your own observations by comparison with similar judgements made by them; and, studying the methods which determine their failure or success, acquire for yourself the wit and skill required to cope with your own problems.

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Lisa was thinking, as she climbed the apparently unending staircase, the she had taken pretty long odds. She had not hesitated to buck the Tiger, Life. Simon Iff had warned her that she was acting on impulse. But--on the top of that--he had merely urged her to be true to it. She swore once more that she would stick to her guns. The black mood fell from her. She turned and looked upon the sea, now far below. The sun, a hollow orb of molten glory, hung quivering in the mist of the Mediterranean; and Lisa entered for a moment into a perfect peace of spirit. She became once with Nature, instead of a being eternally at war with it.