• Memorandum re "Stipend"

    From Bill D@RICKSBBS to All on Thu Apr 16 06:20:45 2026
    [Aleister Crowley]

    Memorandum re "Stipend"

    1. Originally the idea was to dash off a pack of cards from (a) the
    elaborate "Equinox" descriptions (b) mediaeval packs, as The Equinox
    did not describe the 22 Trumps. We thought that a day apiece would
    be enough for the 40 small cards; two days apiece for the 16 court
    cards and 11 weeks for the 22 Trumps. This was thought to be an
    outside estimate--say 6 months in all, allowing for holidays &
    interruptions.

    2. The "Stipend" [L]2 weekly had nothing to do with my work on the
    Tarot, which was practically a full-time job. It was to cover my
    doing shopping and odd commissions for her--in many cases I paid the
    cost out of my own pocket. But principally it was to use me as a
    tame "Brains Trust".
    I instructed her in astronomy and astrology, mysticism, Yoga,
    geometry, algebra, history, literture, chemistry and what not.
    I even criticised--very fruitfully--her own efforts at
    painting.
    _______

    This work, carried out sometimes by correspondence--very
    voluminous--sometimes by direct verbal instruction, had nothing to
    do with my Tarot work, which was entirely covered by my 2/3 interest
    in the property.

    ________

    Note that the stipend and instruction have continued since the
    completion of the work on the Tarot.





    [a related sheet of conditions]

    Essential Condition of Peace.

    The cards are not to be sold without the book.
    If the book can be printed without illustrations it need not
    cost more than [L]300.
    If Lady Harris likes, she can give it away with the cards, I do
    not want any money out of it: and she can say she wrote it, I don't
    care.
    But I will not allow the cards to be issued so that they can be
    used only for gambling or fortune-telling.
    The new catalogue, full of grotesque blunders which discredit
    the scholarship of the Work, must be withdrawn.




    [Actually written by Crowley, to himself; the "Society" is
    fictitious as such.]



    An open letter to Alestair Crowley

    SOCIETY OF HIDDEN MASTERS

    Dear Sir

    For many years we have watched your career with benevolent
    interest; wile we have been unable to approve many of your
    activities in particular your policy of revealing secret knowledge
    which we consider dangerous if in the possession of untrained and
    uninitiated people. We have always respected your passionate
    integrity, your fanatical (and in our opinion, indiscreet) love of
    Truth.

    I our view, this mistaken policy has been responsible for many
    of your own personal mishaps. For this reason we re surprised that
    you should acquiesce, even by silence, in so blatant and impudent a
    hoax as the exhibition of Tarot Cards at the Royal Society of
    Painters in Water Colours, 26/7 Conduit Street, W.1. beginning 4th
    August 1942.

    We hereby challenge you to deny any of the statements here
    following:--

    1. During the winter of 1898/9 you were entrusted by the Order of
    A..A.. with the Secret Lecture on the Tarot, giving the initiated
    attributions.

    2. You published these attributions at the command of the Secret
    Chiefs of the order in a Book of Reference numbered 777 in 1909.

    3. You issued the Official Lecture of the Order on the Tarot, in the
    Equinox Vol. I Nos VII and VIII, March and September 1912.

    4. You have made the Tarot your continual study and used it daily,
    since the Winter of 1898/9.

    5. You have made the Tarot the skeleton or schema of all your
    writings on mystical and magical subjects. We would instance
    particularly "Ambrosia", "Magi Hortus Rosarum" (The Wake-World),
    "The Vision and the Voice", "Theory and Practice of Magick".

    6. You have been recognized everywhere in Europe and America (even,
    to a less extent, in India) as the supreme Authority on the Tarot;
    that is, by serious students of the subject.

    7. You have contemplated the construction and publication of a
    properly designed and executed pack, based on the Equinox
    information ever since the issue of the grotesque and falsified
    parody which appeared under the auspices of the later A.E. Waite.

    6. In a series of conversations in 1937 beginning at Mr. Clifford
    Bax' chambers in Albany St., W.1., you suggested to Lady Harris that
    she might be able to carry out this work. Although she very rightly
    protested that her knowledge of the subject hardly extended beyond
    the name, you, with the imbecile optimism characteristic of you,
    persuaded her that the descriptions of the cards given in the
    Equinox would be sufficient guide, and persuaded her to make the
    attempt.

    9. It became obvious almost at once that the Equinox designs were
    artistically impracticable. Lady Harris very properly asked you to
    take the whole subject in hand ab ovo esque ad umbilicum. You
    thereupon agreed to devote your whole knowledge to the work of
    designing an entirely original pack of cards, incorporating the
    results of your 39 years of constant study of the subject with your
    profound--if at times unacceptably unorthodox--knowledge of
    comparative religion, mathematical physics, philosophy and Magick.
    Also nthat you should compose a Treatise explaining the subject in
    full. It appears from a notice in the Exhibition that there is a
    proposal to publish the cards as a pack without this book. To do so
    would limit their use to fortune-telling, a form of fraud against
    which you have constantly set your face your whole life long. We
    refuse to believe that you have now consented to prostitute the
    Sacred Wisdom of Thoth to this base and dishonest purpose and we
    insist upon this point being made clear.

    10. On May 11, 1938, Lady Harris became officially your disciple,
    and was permitted to affiliate to the other Order of which you are
    Head, the O.T.O.

    11. You made an agreement with Lady Harris by which you were to have
    a 66 2/3% interest in the work.

    12. For the next four years approximately, Lady Harris prepared
    water-colours of the cards. She did this from your rough sketches
    and descriptions under your continual direction, subject to your
    constant and repeated corrections. In some cases you made her redraw
    and re-paint a card which you found unsatisfactory as many as five
    or six times. She has, when left to herself, no sense of dignify or
    congruity; one of us has seen some attempts which you rejected, for
    instance, her ideal figure for "The Fool", the Holy Ghost, was Harpo
    Marx. Did you really pass this and Trump I? She gave the Sphinx in
    Trump X a French cabahy sabre! And her first conception of "The Lord
    of the Winds and the Breezes; the King of the Spirits of the Air",
    was a clown in plate armour, waving rapier and dagger, sprawling
    over a demented nag, diving through a paper screen in a circus!

    13. You left Lady Harris a comparatively free hand in respect of
    insignificant details; but at no time did she contribute a single
    idea of any kind to any card, and she is in fact almost as ignorant
    of the Tarot and its true meaning and use as when she began. We
    cannow however, blame you for this.

    14. You have followed with as much fidelity as was possible the
    traditional designs of the mediaeval packs; but you have notably
    enriched and revivified some of them, especially the Trumps, with
    your scholarship, as observed above in paragraph 9.

    15. In every trump you have not only incorporated symbols
    illustrating the doctrines of Payne Knight, Hargrave Jennings,
    Arthur Eddington, J.G. Frazer, Bertrand Russell, J.W.N. Sullivan,
    Eliphaz Levi and how many others! --but introduced very many ideas
    purely personal to yourself and based on your own personal magical
    experience--see "The Vision and the Voice", "The Paris Working" etc.

    16. In certain cases, in order to make sure that your doctrine of
    the New Aeon is clearly manifest as the spiritual-magical basis of
    the whole work, you have given new names to the cards. Notably
    Trumps XI, XIV, and numerous "small" cards. You have made the final
    correction to the attributions--Trumps IV and XVII, according to the
    Book fo the Law given to you in Cairo April 8, 9, and 10 1904. You
    have used "The Stele of Revealing" (see "The Book of the Law" Chap.
    I 49, III 19) to replace "The Last Judgment" (Trump XX) to affirm
    the supersession of the Aeon of Osiris the Dying God by that of
    Horus the Crowned and Conquering Child. The entire composition is
    soaked in and reeks of your own private and personal point of view
    with regard to Magick.

    17. You undertook this Work with two main motives:--

    1. That it should serve as a Magical Atlas of and Guide to the
    Universe, for this "New Aeon of Horus", that is, for the next
    2,000 years.
    2. That its undeniable beauty and majesty should be an
    intelligible vindication of the whole of your life's work.
    You rightly foresaw that sooner or later it would be clear
    that you are the sole responsible author of the Work and Lady
    Harris only your more or less docile and intelligent
    instrument.

    18. You and Lady Harris were at first agreed that the Work should be
    put forth anonymously. She wrote to a friend "I intend to remain
    anonymous when the cards are shown". You had, of course, pointed out
    that any student of the subject would recognise your authorship at a
    glance.

    19. Too well aware that in the past your work has been stolen and
    exploited by unscrupulous rascals and also that doctrinal argument
    of a lightly technical kind may all too frequently prove rather hard
    for a jury, you took the precaution of introducing certain symbols
    into the designs of susch a character that the most stupid would be
    compelled to acknowledge your authorship of the Work.

    Your conduct is abominable and inexcusable to allow Lady Harris
    to issue a catalogue crammed with the grossest errors of fact,
    blunders of scholarsip, irrelevancies and absurdities; to allow her
    to make herself the laughing-stock of London by larying claim to the
    authorship of pictures of which all artists know her to be utterly
    incapable, her work having been that of a wealthy amateur persistent
    enough to acquire a good technique but with no personality, no
    "message" groping in Bloomsbury forgs for the parasitic adulation of
    a gaggle of sycophants.

    We can understand your passionate wish to get these cards
    exhibited, even by a subterfuge, but you had no right to sacrifice
    Lady Harris and you have no right to lend yourself, even by silence
    to the perpetration of a hoax transparent and nausient as it must
    naturally be, which affects the honour of the Fraternity of Art and
    Letters.

    We repeat that we are surprised; for whatever your faults, you
    have always been honourable and truthful with more than ancient
    Roman rigour. You must speak now.

    for the Society of Hidden Masters.

    Justus M.
    Sic vos non vobis.
    Sunur evique.





    [1st page of letter missing--this is Crowley's "reply" to the letter
    from the Society of Hidden Masters.]

    Their estimate in paragraph 6 is exaggerated: it depends on the
    definition of "serious students."
    Nor would it be useful to deny them, as in every case their
    truth is guaranteed by evidence independent of my asseveration,
    internal evidence of documents easily accessible.

    _________

    I do however most strenuously deny participation in the hoax.
    This was perpetrated by Lady Harris without my knowledge or consent;
    I only learnt of the exhibitions, in the first case several days
    after the opening, from information supplied by loyal friends.
    This letter is to authorize and to request you to publicize its
    substance, either by a letter addressed to the Times and other
    newspapers, or as you in your best judgment may see fit.

    Believe me,

    Gentlemen,

    Yours faithfully,

    Aleister Crowley

    Bill Dean
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    ---
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