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-
-
- Rolling Stone Orchard.
- Chipping Campden.
-
- Jan. 7, 1940
-
-
- Dear Aleister,
-
- The 26 cards have gone to be mounted, so we are beginning to be
- terrifyingly finished. There are several I should like to try again,
- but none of them are what I have hoped to be able to do. Therefore
- tonight I am the victim of the most profound hump, and I think in
- future I had better stick to mechanical typing. Also I have been
- reading your truly magical Liber L.X.V. Oh no, I do not pretend to
- apprehend it, only it is like music, and the only kind of writing I
- want to read, only it makes me feel as if I lived in a desert and I
- am mighty thirsty. Shall I never get on a bit? Yoga practices I
- never seem to advance in. I cannot live more quietly, but even then
- the business of living takes time. I am positively alarmed at the
- prospect of the end of this work, as if I do not get any more handed
- to me, I shall have to return to the awful life I have escaped from
- in my conscience during the last 2 years, and I doubt if I can. I do
- not think the ritual of Magic is much good to me, I seem to have to
- draw everything I want to understand. Thank you beyond words for all
- your help patience and understanding. At any rate, thanks to that,
- you have penetrated a slight amount and in the far distance I can
- see a bit what the Wisdom of the past and the present might mean. I
- do wish I could do better, I feel like a lump of undigested suet.
- No. 2 Disks is on the stocks, is the serpent's eye to be red? It
- is a bit awkward, as there are several colours introduced in that
- card which do not belong to Jupiter and Capricorn, I mean the 4
- element colours and they make inharmonious patches. Did you say
- anything about jewels on the serpent? I think you will like him. The
- vile lettering will have to start again, it makes me cross and ache
- all over.
- I am longing to have a go at Mercury, but I am determined to do
- the Universe first. I have told the man not [to] fasten any cards in
- the frames, so we can look at them very carefully, it will be awful,
- but I must get them as nearly right as I can, tho the bother is that
- watercolours are the devil to alter, even if I were sure that the
- addition was going to fit in with the design, and altho I can redo,
- it is not possible to regain the memory of the emotion and one tends
- to produce a bad copy.
-
- Yours ever Frieda
-
- [P.S.] What happened in 1547 because I woke up today saying "Don't
- forget 1547". Has it any sense?
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Rolling Stone Orchard
-
- Jan. 28, 1940
-
-
-
- Dear Aleister,
-
- Thank you for your letter.
- The No. 5 is also done.
- About the Stafford Galleries. I think the best way of handling
- Ala Story will be for me to invite her for the weekend, show her the
- cards & let the suggestion that she should show them come from her.
- Percy has offered to drive her down & it was all fixed up, when she
- developed a cold & could not come. She is an erratic cove & from
- long experience of her I am sure she is more likely to function if
- she is allowed to think she is the originator of any business
- scheme. In spite of her alluring manners she is fundamentally a very
- capable business woman & she won't be persuaded to do anything that
- will not mean publicity or money.
- There is one more thing--I do not think those cards will sell
- if you include any sort of ritual. People generally are afraid of
- being made fools of, getting bad luck by associating with black
- magic, especially at these times, when all the world is crossing
- itself to avert the evil eye, & the secular business man, whose
- money you need if the cards are to be reproduced, simply will not
- touch anything in the nature of a stunt for fear of offending his
- general public.
- I humbly suggest that we let Ala advertise it in her own way,
- keeping very much in the background, for my part anonymously & so
- stimulate the curiousity of the public & the critics. The whole
- production will be unusual enough to make a mark, that is if I have
- done my part well enough, & I have observed that a well staged
- mystery is a magic of great value in attracting attention. I would
- even like to suggest that you do not sign your work either. To
- those, who know your lucid prose & classic style, it will be
- unmistakable, to the general public, it will be taken as a shock,
- but, without the suspicion that you, Aleister Crowley, are either
- attempting to pull their leg or poisoning them with some dangerous
- new creed in the attempt to raise funds or the wind. In my case I
- should be acused of trying to learn them, & anyhow why should we
- respect this insane art when "Percy Harris ought to have the poor
- thing locked up, he can afford it, only he is too mean."
- THE WEATHER. I don't find it too bad. It is really lovely to
- look at. The trees are incased in ice, I have never seen anything
- like it, & living & walking, everything ordinary has assumed a rare
- & dignified aspect with the elements completely out of control.
- Also, the howling wind, & this new invention "icisny" which is
- neither raining or snowing, keeps everyone away, so I can read,
- paint, or cook to my entire satisfaction, also slither up & down the
- ladder to my studio which provides the necessary exercise & danger
- to stimulate me & keep me warm.
- But it is much too cold for you to brave the train, also I am
- not quite ready to show enough work I should like to have the
- Universe done first, so I shall stop & take another brood on it.
- The still life I sent you is the favorite "eat" of the
- Cotswold. I ate mine after posting some to you & I must confess,
- though tasty & strong meat for us babes, it did seem a bit tough,
- but I hoped your genius would lead you to discover how to cook them,
- I only baked mine in butter.
-
- Goodnight
-
- Yours fraternally
-
- Frieda Harris
-
- [P.S] I should like hours of brain-picking with you. I have 1000 of
- things I want to ask you, I shall never remember when I see you!
- Qaballa, Chinese, Eddington medley & questions & demands for your
- sage & onion explanations pierce the ether all round me.
-
- Have you by any chance heard G.P. Wodehouse's masterpiece on the
- wireless [...]! Saturday afternoons.
-
-
-
-
-
- [first portion of letter apparently missing]
-
-
- Do not forget those pictures are set now & difficult to alter.
- I have no stimulus from you about the Princes--but I am doing
- an oil when I can extract a few minutes, so they can wait your
- Breath.
- A few pointers seem to indicate a journey to Devonshire in
- early December or November. Liman North Devonshire Aleister Torquay
- & Raufman at Minehead. If I can I want to take the short course of
- geometry 3 weeks in Dec. under Raufman at Minehead. It will clarify
- some of my geometrical conceptions. He has sent me very good notes
- on the cone.
- So I hope to see you soon. Don't, Aleister, say "like me a
- little". If I may aspire to such a position, your are my friend &
- when my friends are rude to me I cannot remember it. They remain the
- cone, the eye, the node, from which is generated all the pleasure I
- have in life.
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
- Au revoir
-
- Frieda Harris
-
- 93 93/93
-
- [P.S.] I don't know. I think this little a bit savvy don't you--it
- is late. I feel as flat as the sole I ate for supper. Carelessly
- cooked it was & so, so, dull. [small drawing of a flat sole]
-
-