The Book Of Lies

THE BOOK OF LIES -------Aliester Crowley

March 21st, 1992 e.v. key entry by Frater E.A.D.N., San Diego, California.

O.T.O.

Ouroboros Camp

El Cajon, CA

USA

Pages in the original are marked thus at the bottom: [page number]

Comments and descriptions are also set off by ().

THE BOOK OF LIES

Aliester Crowley

THE BOOK OF LIES

WHICH IS ALSO FALSELY

CALLED

BREAKS

THE WANDERINGS OR FALSIFICATIONS

OF THE ONE THOUGHT OF

FRATER PERDURABO

(Aleister Crowley)

WHICH THOUGHT IS ITSELF

UNTRUE

A REPRINT

with an additional commentary to each chapter.

"Break, break, break At the foot of thy stones, O Sea!

And I would that I could utter The thoughts that arise in me!"

(OPPOSITE: Photo of FRATER PERDURABO on his ass.) COMMENTARY (Title Page)

The number of the book is 333, as implying dis-persion, so as to correspond with the title, "Breaks" and "Lies".

However, the "one thought is itself untrue", and therefore its falsifications are relatively true. This book therefore consists of statements as nearly true as is possible to human language.

The verse from Tennyson is inserted partly because of the pun on the word "break"; partly because of the reference to the meaning of this title page, as explained above; partly because it is intensely amusing for Crowley to quote Tennyson.

There is no joke or subtle meaning in the publisher's imprint.

FOREWORD

THE BOOK OF LIES, first published in London in 1913, Aleister Crowley's little master work, has long been out of print. Its re-issue with the author's own Commentary gives occasion for a few notes. We have so much material by Crowley himself about this book that we can do no better that quote some passages which we find scattered about in the un-published volumes of his "CONFESSIONS." He writes:

"...None the less, I could point to some solid achievement on the large scale, although it is com-posed of more or less disconnected elements. I refer to THE BOOK OF LIES. In this there are 93 chapters: we count as a chapter the two pages filled re-respectively with a note of interrogation and a mark of exclamation. The other chapters contain sometimes a single word, more frequently from a half-dozen to twenty paragraphs. The subject of each chapter is determined more or less definitely by the Qabalistic import of its number. Thus Chapter 25 gives a revised ritual of the Pentagram; 72 is a rondel with the refrain

~Shemhamphorash', the Divine name of 72 letters; 77 Laylah, whose name adds to that number; and 80, the number of the letter Pe, referred to Mars, a panegyric upon War. Sometimes the text is serious and straightforward, sometimes its obscure oracles demand deep knowledge of the Qabalah for inter-pretation, others contain obscure allusions, play upon words, secrets expressed in cryptogram, double or triple meanings which must be combined in order

[5]

to appreciate the full flavour; others again are subtly ironical or cynical. At first sight the book is a jumble of nonsense intended to insult the reader. It requires infinite study, sympathy, intuition and initiation. Given these I do not hesitate to claim that in none other of my writings have I given so pro-found and comprehensive an exposition of my philosophy on every plane...."

"...My association with Free Masonry was there-fore destined to be more fertile that almost any other study, and that in a way despite itself. A word should be pertinent with regard to the question of secrecy. It has become difficult for me to take this matter very seriously. Knowing what the secret actually is, I cannot attach much importance to artificial mysteries. Again, though the secret itself is of such tremendous import, and though it is so simple that I could disclose it...in a short paragraph, I might do so without doing much harm. For it cannot be used indiscriminately...I have found in practice that the secret of the O.T.O. cannot be used unworthily...."

"It is interesting in this connection to recall how it came into my possession. It had occurred to me to write a book `THE BOOK OF LIES, WHICH IS

ALSO FALSELY CALLED BREAKS, THE

WANDERINGS OR FALSIFICATION OF THE

THOUGHT OF FRATER PERDURABO WHICH

THOUGHT IS ITSELF UNTRUE. .