Aleister Crowley's legacy goes beyond providing the likes of Somerset Maughm and Dennis Wheatley models for villains in novels; beyond scowling from the cover of the Beatles's SGT. PEPPER's album; beyond providing Led Zeppelin¹s Jimmy Page a collector's hobby and pastime; and beyond giving Ozzy Osbourne something to sing about. His influence surrounds us. In advertising, film, music, literature, art -- his paintings anticipated the very best of the Expressionist and Brutarian schools with bold splashes of vibrant color and unsettling forms and portraits -- Crowley's imagery and referents touch us many times each day. He remains a pivotal, compelling presence; he might have fared better had we tried to understand him primarily as an artistic type, rather than as an occultist, but that choice was largely his to make, and choose he did. Popular culture would be much different had Aleister Crowley not offered his imprint.
Incidentally, Stanley Kubrick¹s final film, EYES WIDE SHUT, may well have been intended as a revelation of sex magic still being practiced today, but the released version is a hodge-podge of unfinished scenes, bad rehearsals, and pointless if beautiful images. Those numbed by it lacked context to sort out those hints, winks, and nudges, but the signals were there for those with the code and it's a shame Kubrick died before making his final cut. And he died, please note, as mysteriously and conveniently, for some, as the prostitute in the movie.
Despite all this, however, the final word of the movie emphasizes a message Crowley would have recognized and applauded, even as it left most audiences bored, puzzled, and taken aback. And no, the word was not "Love," as the Beatles might have claimed. The word was an imperious command and a desperate plea: "Fuck." It may be our best, even our only, chance at redemption, is the message. All we need is love? Not quite.
Crowley snarled at mere love and insisted upon will, even as he trumped Nietzsche's atheism with a new theism focused on each of us. He meant that cognizance, being aware and willing things, is more important than a bland, mushy, all-encompassing hippie-dippie haze of lovey-dovey feelings. It allows each of us to aspire to godhood. Thelema comes from the Greek for "will", and his principles have informed discussions of a wide range of occult and religious endeavor, from Gnosticism and Sephiroth and Qabbalah studies to Rosicrucianism and even unto Anton Szandor LaVey¹s Church of Satan, silly as that bit of hedonism would have seemed to Crowley.
And yet, it was Crowley's willingness to play to the hilt the role of AntiChrist that early on saw him branded The Wickedest Man on Earth and so on. That he was bisexual in an age even less tolerant than our own did nothing to help Crowley's acceptance; he was alive during Oscar Wilde¹s public flogging over a homosexual affair, remember. Tolerance was not anyone¹s watchword.
Crowley was excoriated and pilloried by tabloids in England and in newspapers and magazines the world over in a campaign of bile unequaled even by the right-wing spew against Bill Clinton. It cost him his reputation as a gentleman, it cost him safe haven in many countries, and it ended up costing him even a chance at making a modest living as a writer. By the time the attacks had reached their heights of stridency and hysteria, Crowley lacked funds to bring lawsuits for libel and slander, and so he remained stoic, even devilishly insouciant, and modified his own behavior not a whit.
This too cost him, as few could afford the public castigation any link with him would bring. He ended up destitute much of his life, once he¹d gone through the modest fortune he'd inherited, and he lived off sponging, frequent moves to duck dunning landlords, and the occasional sale of a bit of writing or his services as a teacher of magic tradition. His few followers contributed what they could, but it was very little.
Lawrence Sutin has now given us two biographies of men who claimed contact with higher intelligences. (Can L. Ron Hubbard be far behind in this string of investigations?) Visionaries, loons, or simply sad examples of genius gone awry -- one's reaction to the subjects of his biographies is left to each reader, but it's compelling, important work on neglected, misconstrued, remarkable people that Sutin offers.
If there is any lack in Do What Thou Wilt it lies in the slender photograph section. As one reads, one craves glimpses of Crowley's many Scarlet Women, for instance, or the sight of his Abbey, decorated with original paintings and murals.