ONE OF ALEISTER CROWLEY’S FIRST BOOKS ON MAGIC
CROWLEY, Aleister. The Book of the Goetia of Solomon the King, translated into the English Tongue by a Dead Hand and Adorned with Diverse Other Matters. Boleskine, Foyers, Inverness: Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth, 1904. Tall quarto, original printed paper wrappers respined in black cloth at an early date and laid down on new endpapers, uncut.
First edition of one of Crowley’s first works on magic, including his introductory essay “The Initiated Interpretation of Ceremonial Magic,” illustrated with three full-page plates of magical symbols and seals.
British mystic Aleister Crowley was “colorful, eccentric, flamboyant, and deliberately shocking… His principal concerns consisted of his researches into ways of accelerating human evolution through increasing human intelligence by techniques of concentrating the mind one-pointedly, stimulating the central nervous system, and maximizing and mapping hitherto unexplored regions of the brain. This initially led him to ceremonial magic and London’s Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, members of which included W.B. Yeats, Arthur Machen, and its leader, S.L. Mathers… His concerns led to a campaign of vilification in the press and Crowley was dubbed the ‘wickedest man in the world” (DNB). Mathers is the “Dead Hand” who supplied the purported translation contained in Goetia; Crowley edited Mathers’ work and supplied the Introduction and various commentaries. Yorke 55(a). Bookplate.
Light scattered foxing. Expert paper repair to inner hinge and lower corner of front wrapper; two small tears to upper corner of half title and title page. A very good copy of this scarce item.