Aleister Crowley at Boleskine House
Aleister Crowley was born Edward Alexander Crowley, on 12 October 1875, in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, England. Crowley was an occultist, prolific writer, mystic, astrologer, poet, painter, hedonist, and social provocateur, as well as an expert mountaineer and chess master.
An influential and controversial character, Crowley is known today for his occult writings, including The Confessions of Aleister Crowley, Magick without Tears and The Book of the Law.
The latter work was apparently ‘received’ by Crowley from a an entity named Aiwass in Cairo, Egypt in 1904, and represents the fundamental sacred text of his philosophical / religious / occult system known as Thelema, whose central concept was ‘Do What Thou Wilt shall be the whole of The Law’.
During his lifetime Crowley was vilified by the popular press as ‘The Wickedest Man in the World’, and the tabloids regularly carried sensational stories of his latest shocking exploits in occult experimentation. Naturally, when he purchased a mysterious old mansion on the shores of Loch Ness, allegedly to perform some strange secret rites, the press were fascinated.
The Myth of Black Magic at Boleskine House
Boleskine House is located on the south-eastern shore of Loch Ness, close to the village of Foyers, Inverness shire, Scotland. The mansion was constructed in the late 18th century by Archibald Fraser. According to a local legend, there was once a church on the site, which caught fire trapping its whole congregation inside, burning them all to death. Aleister Crowley purchased the foreboding Boleskine House in 1899 and styled himself ‘Laird of Boleskine and Abertarff’. He remained there until 1913, and bizarre tales of odd goings on at Boleskine House during his occupancy are legion, though the majority probably originate in local folklore.
One story concerns a local butcher who called at the house for the meat order while Crowley was involved in the lengthy difficult ritual of Abramelin (see below). The butcher’s incessant ringing of the bell broke Crowley’s concentration and, irritated and frustrated, he hastily scrawled the meat order on the nearest piece of paper, which happened to have a spell written on the back. Shortly afterwards, when the butcher was cutting up the meat for Crowley’s order back at his shop, he apparently lost concentration and sliced all the fingers off his right hand with the cleaver. Other stories tell of the unexplained disappearance of Crowley’s housekeeper and a local workman who went out of his mind after being tormented by the dark spirits conjured up by Crowley’s rituals.
Ritual Magic
The actual magical ritual which Crowley attempted to perform at Boleskine had nothing to do with black masses or black magic. It is known as the ‘Abramelin Operation’, taken from ‘ The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage’, a famous grimoire (book of magical knowledge), dating back to at least the middle of the 15th century. Crowley seems to have become aware of the ritual from the 1897 translation of the book by occultist Samuel Liddel Mathers, one of the founders of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which Crowley had joined in 1898, before falling out with most of its members, including Mathers, a few years later. The purpose of performing the lengthy and intense Abramelin ritual was for the magician to communicate with his ‘Holy Guardian Angel’ or Higher Self.
Unfortunately for Crowley and those around him the Abramelin rites seem to have succeeded mainly in summoning ‘demons’ or ‘the Abramelin devils’ as Crowley calls them. During Crowley’s occupancy there were reports of a heavy, oppressive atmosphere at Boleskine, dark eerie shadows filled the house, fierce winds blew through the rooms despite calm weather outside, and strange figures were seen in the area. There is also a legend of an underground passage way linking the house with a nearby graveyard, said to have been utilised by Crowley for some unknown reason, perhaps to scare off intruders.
Crowley later sold Boleskine House and it subsequently had a series of private owners including, in the 1970s, Led Zeppelin guitarist and Crowley fanatic Jimmy Page. Even today the property retains a slightly sinister atmosphere. To many modern occultists the geographical and spiritual significance of Boleskine remains extremely important. In fact, practitioners of Thelema, Crowley’s religious philosophy, are still instructed to ‘turn and face north to Boleskine’ when conducting certain magical ceremonies.
Sources and Further Reading
Booth, M. A Magick Life: The Life of Aleister Crowley. Coronet Books. 2001.
Crowley, Aleister. The Confessions of Aleister Crowley, Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1979.
Kaczynski, R. Perdurabo: The Life of Aleister Crowley. New Falcon Publications. 2003.
Sutin, L. Do What Thou Wilt: A Life of Aleister Crowley. Griffin Trade Paperbacks. 2002.
Replies
yes i know the group , one of them is friends with london's James casbolt, who is very intelligent also, i remember he made a few vids exposing truth.... truth is stranger than fiction as they say, aha :)
Dawn, how did u hear about it? i mean who reported this story / made it public do u know? :)
yes i believe he isnt fully human... a part of him is that *other* type of dna , which is what is in the bush bloodline ;)
yes exactly MOL, all religions are based on a higher perspective of physics ;)
the prime creator does exist , and within us... and within all... as u said... however some humans do not possess the *soul* aspect which links them to *god*/prime creator, and this is also a separate issue... lol
im not sure what *category* crowley falls into.... or what family line ... he is from... however it is clear he is definately not fully human ;)
that is my conclusion ;)
yes Dawn, i can see resemblences between the bush and crowley dna... lol
Apparantly he did his first time travelling in the 1920's and is considered a warlock...Crowley had joined other magic societies before branching out on his own, and endorsing sex magic (sex without orgasm for magic rituals) and enduring bad press, madness, hopelessly addicted to cocaine and heroin...
He was writing about a creature known as 'LAM' and gives a ritual to evoke the creature within to enter into out world.
Crowley also did a painting of the creature in New York in 1919,...
here it is:
(some purpote it being certain negative grey aliens and his connection to them)
I got close to Boleskine House, I made it as far as Urquart Castle which is nearly directly oppisite on the other side of the loch... .
Apparently Crowley did some pretty strange things, like learning to talk backwards, to walk backwards and even eat human fecies or excrement as part of a Magick ritual.. so he ate his own poo poo, not just his own... sounds digusting, depraved and insane but who is anyone to judge the actions of another... its just that some folk will go to extreme lenghts to expand their conciousness..
I had Boleskine House in my mind when I visited that Castle, unfortunitly I never made it to the house itself.. I heard a story that a terrified maid reported seeing Crowleys head floating around inside the house.. imagine staying the night in it..
LOL me too but for some reason I get short tempered while reading Crowley and a few others. One of my "demons" I guess. I rather enjoy Masonic, Rosicrucian, Hermetic, Merovingian and Alchemical teachings though. I'd really like to learn QBLH too. I refuse to "study" these subjects though. I more of read it into the subconscious and let higher self draw upon the wealth of information gleaned for the greatest advancement of my "source mission" here on this plane.
I am very much on your plane here in regards to Crowley. For the right person his teachings are a great source of wisdom and growth. I personally am empathic to his internal pain and it's not a good fit for ME.
I'm just trying to help those with the "evil Aleister" perception gain a different perspective. My personal journey has led to the more [traditional] Hermetic route with influences by R.A. Wilson, Tim Leary an Alan Watts.
Would you be A:.A:. by chance or just a fan? (no judgement, just curiosity)
Crowley, other than his magick, dealt with subconscious not unlike Jesus himself. Both were well versed in QBLH and Egyptian Mystery School teachings. Hear me out before I'm crucified.
Satan translates[non modern] to=the judge; Lucifer was a refrence to Venus which appeared before the sun being referenced "the light bringer".
When Jesus meditated in the desert and dealt with Satan he was conquering Ego, his personal judge. Crowley did the same, although his demons were stronger than his will to release himself. I personally don't read Crowley because I have my own "demons" and don't need a method to conquer them from one who failed. Being Crowley was so adept I do believe he followed the core concepts of Jesus which are encoded in the bible but stumbled because he never truly conquered ego. Was he "evil?" I'd say no more evil than you and I. Confused by his knowledge on this plane? VERY much so!!!
http://www.lawofone.info/results.php?c=People&su=Aleister+Crowley
Alive and kicking..