
Aleister Crowley - Black Magic 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 '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.
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.
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.
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.
© Copyright 2006 by Brian A. Haughton. All
Rights Reserved.
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