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				| 
                THE 
				EQUINOX 
                 
                VOLUME 
                I, 
                NUMBER 
                IX 
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				Title: | 
                The 
                Equinox (Volume I, Number IX).  
                The Official Organ of the A\A\ |  | 
				
				 
				
				
				Upper Cover 
				
				
				
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				State (b)   
				 
				
				 
				
				
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				Contents   
				
				 
				
				
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				Variations: | 
					
						| 
						
						
						State (a): | 
						50 
                        “deluxe edition” subscription copies bound in white 
                        buckram.1 
						Upper cover stamped in gilt ‘THE EQUINOX’ within a gilt 
                        frame that is crossed horizontally by 16 gilt lines.2 
						 Spine stamped in gilt horizontally across the spine 
						[within a gilt frame] ‘THE | EQUINOX| [6 horizontal 
						lines] | VOLUME I | NUMBER IX | [8 rules] | 
                        
                        ¤ 
                        IN 
                        
                        ^ 
                        | AN IX’2 
						Top 
						edge gilt.5 
						The 
						Deluxe editions were slightly larger than the standard 
						issue due to the pages not being trimmed.5 |  
						| 
						
						
						State (b): | 
                        
                        1000 copies for the early numbers and less (probably 
						500) for later numbers.3 
                        Bound 
						in decorated papered boards.1  
						 
                        Upper cover has an Equinox “coat of arms” design.2 
                        Spine has a white paper label lettered in black within a 
						black frame ‘THE | EQUINOX | VOLUME ONE | NUMBER NINE 
						|[horizontal rule] | LONDON | 33 AVENUE STUDIOS | 76 FULHAM 
                        ROAD | SOUTH KENSINGTON | S.W.’2 
                        9 1/2” x 7 3/8”.2 |  
						| 
						
						
						State (c): | 
                        
                        1000 copies for the early numbers and less (probably 
						500) for later numbers.3 
                        Bound 
						in decorated papered boards.1  
						 
                        
                        Upper cover lettered in black ‘THE EQUINOX’ within a 
                        black 
                        frame that is crossed horizontally by 16 black lines.7 
                        
                        Spine has a white paper label lettered in black within a 
						black frame ‘THE | EQUINOX | VOLUME ONE | NUMBER NINE 
						|[horizontal rule] | LONDON | 33 AVENUE STUDIOS | 76 FULHAM 
                        ROAD | SOUTH KENSINGTON | S.W.’2 
                        
                        9 1/2” x 7 3/8”.2 |  |  |  
				| 
				
				Publisher: | 
				Wieland 
                and Co.1 3 Great James Street, Gray's Inn.2 |  |  
				| 
				
				Printer: | 
				Richard 
                Clay & Sons, Limited, Brunswick Street, Stamford Street, W.D., 
				and Bungay, Suffolk.2 |  |  
				| 
				
				Published At: | 
				London.1 |  |  
				| 
				Date: | 
				March 
                1913.1 |  |  
				| 
				
				Edition: | 
				1st 
                Edition. |  |  
				| 
				Pages: | 
				xxvi + 313 
                + xxi Advertisements.2 |  |  
				| 
				Price: | 
				Priced at 
                1 guinea6 for the subscriber‘s edition and 10 shillings 
				& sixpence2 for the 
                regular edition. |  |  
				| 
				
				Remarks: | 
				Edited by 
                Soror Virakam and Frater Lampada Tradam.1 
				The title 
				page is printed in black and red.2 
				Some of the 
                “deluxe edition” subscription copies have a color 
                frontispiece of the Equinox “coat of arms” design which is not 
				present in the standard editions.4 |  |  
				| 
				
				Pagination:2 | 
					
						| 
						
						Page(s) | 
						  |  
						| 
						[  
                        i] | 
						
                        The Equinox |  
						| 
						
                        [ii-iv] | 
						‘This 
                        page reserved for Official Pronouncements by the 
                        Chancellor of the A\A\’ |  
						| 
                        [  
                        v] | 
						
                        ‘I. N . R. I. | BRITISH SECTION OF THE | ORDER OF 
                        ORIENTAL TEMPLARS | O.T.O.’ |  
						| 
						[  
                        vi] | 
						
                        
                        Blank |  
						| 
						
                        [vii-xv] | 
						
                        
                        Text |  
						| 
						[  
                        xvi] | 
						
                        Blank |  
						| 
						[  
                        xvii] | 
						
                        Half-title |  
						| 
						[  
                        xviii] | 
						
                        ‘The Editor will be glad to consider contributions and 
                        to return such as are unacceptable if stamps are 
                        enclosed for the purpose.’ |  
						| 
						[  
                        xix] | 
						
                        Title-page |  
						| 
						[  
                        xx] | 
						
                        Blank |  
						| 
						[  
                        xxi] | 
						
                        Contents |  
						| 
						[  
                        xxii] | 
						
                        Blank |  
						| 
						
                        [xxiii-xxv] | 
						
                        Editorial |  
						| 
						
                        [xxvi] | 
						
                        Blank |  
						| 
						
                        [1-313] | 
						
                        Text |  
						| 
						
                        [i-xxi] | 
						
                        Advertisements |  |  |  
				| 
				
				Contents: | 
                  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    Editorial |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    The Temple Of Solomon The King (Continued) |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    Lines To A Young Lady Violinist On Her Playing In A Green 
                    Dress Designed By The Author |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    Energized Enthusiasm |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    The “Titanic” |  
                    | 
                    - | A Literattooralooral Treasure-Trove |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    Threnody |  
                    | 
                    - | Dischmatal By Night |  
                    | 
                    - | A 
                    Quack Painter |  
                    | 
                    - | At 
                    Sea |  
                    | 
                    - | 
                    Cancer? |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    Dumb! |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    The Vitriol-Thrower |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    The Fairy Fiddler |  
                    | 
					- | An 
                    Evocation Of Bartzabel The Spirit Of Mars |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    The Testament Of Magdalen Blair |  
                    | 
					- | Ercildoune |  
                    | 
					- | Athanasius Contra Decanum |  
                    | 
					- | My 
                    Crapulous Contemporaries. No. Vii. A Galahad In Gomorrah |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    How I Became A Famous Mountaineer |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    The Tango: A Sketch |  
                    | 
					- | 
                    The Big Stick |  |  |  
				| 
				Author’s 
				
				Working 
				 
				Versions: |  |  |  
				| 
				Other 
				
				Known 
				
				Editions: |  |  |  
				| 
				
				
				Bibliographic 
				
				Sources: | 
					
						| 
						
						1. | 
						Gerald 
						Yorke,  
						
						“A 
						Bibliography of the Works of Aleister Crowley” 
						(Expanded and Corrected by Clive Harper from Aleister 
						Crowley, the Golden Dawn and Buddhism:  
						Reminiscences and Writings of Gerald Yorke, Keith 
						Richmond, editor, The Teitan Press, York Beach, ME, 
						2011, pp. 53-54.    |  
						| 
						
						2. | 
						
						Personal observation of the item. |  
						| 
						3. | 
						
						Weiser Antiquarian Books, Catalog # 97, “Aleister 
						Crowley.  Used and Rare Books and Ephemera.” |  
						| 
						
						4. | 
						J. 
						Edward Cornelius, The Aleister Crowley Desk 
						Reference, The Teitan Press, York Beach, Maine, 
						2013, p. 110. |  
						| 
						
						5. | 
						
						Weiser Antiquarian Books, Catalog # 26, “Aleister 
						Crowley Rarities.  Books and Manuscripts.” |  
						| 
						
						6. | 
						
						Martin Booth, A Magick Life, Hodder and 
						Stoughton, London, 2001, p. 266. |  
						| 
						
						7. | 
						
						Weiser Antiquarian Books, Catalog # 53, “Aleister 
						Crowley, Victor Neuburg & Friends.” |  |   |  
				| 
				Comments 
				by 
				
				Aleister 
				 
				Crowley: | 
                     
                “The 
                Equinox” should have been, on its merits, a very successful 
                venture. Frank Harris had generously given me one of the best 
                stories he ever wrote, “The Magic Glasses”. Fuller had 
                contributed a gargantuan preface to
                The 
                Temple of Solomon the King (the title of the 
                story of my magical career), a series of sublimely eloquent 
                rhapsodies descriptive of the various possible attitudes towards 
                existence. There were three important instructions in Magick; 
                the best poem of its kind that I had so far written, “The Wizard 
                Way”; “At the Fork of the Roads”, a true and fascinating story 
                of one of my early magical experiences;
                The 
                Soldier and the Hunchback ! and ? which I still think 
                one of the subtlest analyses that has ever been written on 
                ontology, with its conclusion: that ecstatic affirmation and 
                sceptical negation are neither of them valid in themselves but 
                are alternate terms in an infinite series, a progression which 
                is in itself a sublime and delightful path to pursue. 
                Disappointment arises from the fear that every joy is transient. 
                If we accept it as such and delight to destroy our own ideals in 
                the faith that the very act of destruction will encourage us to 
                rebuild a nobler and loftier temple from the debris of the old, 
                each phase of our progress will be increasingly pleasant. “pi 
                alpha mu phi alpha gamma epsilon pi alpha gamma gamma epsilon nu 
                epsilon tau omega rho”, “All devouerer, all begetter”, is the 
                praise of Pan. 
                    
				— The Confessions of Aleister Crowley.  
				New York, NY.  Hill and Wang, 1969.  Page 603. 
                ______________________________ 
                  
                     The 
                supplement to the first number of
                The 
                Equinox is a plain reprint of my Magical Record 
                in Paris, mentioned above. I have omitted no detail of my 
                doings. My dinners, my dalliance and my other diversions are 
                described as minutely as my Magick, my mantras and my 
                meditations. Nothing of the sort had ever been published before. 
                It is a complete demonstration of the possibility of achieving 
                the most colossal results in conditions which had hitherto been 
                considered an absolute bar to carrying on even elementary work. 
                It proves my proposition that the efficacy of traditional 
                practices is independent of dogmatic and ethical considerations; 
                and, moreover, that my sceptical formulae based on a purely 
                agnostic viewpoint, and on the facts of physiology and 
                psychology, as understood by modern materialists, were entirely 
                efficacious. 
                    
                In summary, let me add that
                The 
                Equinox was the first serious attempt to put 
                before the public the facts of occult science, so-called, since 
                Blavatsky’s unscholarly hotch-poch of fact and fable, Isis 
                Unveiled. It was the first attempt in history to treat the 
                subject with scholarship and from the standpoint of science. No 
                previous book of its kind can compare with it for the perfection 
                of its poetry and prose; the dignity and sublimity of its style, 
                and the rigidity of its rule never to make any statement which 
                could not be proved as precisely as the mathematician exacts. I 
                confess to being entirely proud of having inaugurated an epoch. 
                From the moment of its appearance, it imposed its standards of 
                sincerity, scholarship, scientific seriousness and aristocracy 
                of all kinds, from the excellence of its English to the 
                perfection of its printing, upon everyone with ambition to enter 
                this field of literature. 
                    
                It did not command a large public, but its influence has been 
                enormous. It is recognized as the standard publication of its 
                kind, as encyclopedia without “equal, son, or companion”. It has 
                been quoted, copied and imitated everywhere. Innumerable cults 
                have been founded by charlatans on its information. Its 
                influence has changed the whole current of thought of students 
                all over the world. Its inveterate enemies are not only unable 
                to ignore it, but submit themselves to its sovereignty. It was 
                thus entirely successful from my personal point of view. I had 
                put a pearl of great price in a shop window, whose other 
                exhibits were pasted diamonds and bits of coloured glass for the 
                most part, and at best, precious stones of the cheaper and 
                commoner kind. From the moment of its appearance, everyone had 
                to admit 
                — for the most part with hatred and envy in their 
                hearts
                — that the sun had appeared in the slum and put to 
                shame the dips and kerosene lamps which had lighted it till 
                then. It was no longer possible to carry on hole-in-the-corner 
                charlatanism as heretofore. 
                    
                I printed only one thousand and fifty copies, the odd fifty 
                being bound subscription copies at a guinea, and the rest in 
                boards at five shillings. Had I sold a complete edition straight 
                out without any discounts my return would thus have been three 
                hundred pounds. The cost of production was nearer four hundred. 
                Similar figures apply to the other nine numbers. In this way I 
                satisfied myself that no one could reproach me with trying to 
                make money out of Magick. As a matter of fact, it went utterly 
                against the grain to take money at all. When anyone showed 
                interest in my poetry or my magical writings, the attitude so 
                delighted me that I felt it utterly shameful to have any kind of 
                commercial transaction with so noble an individual, and I used, 
                as often as not, to beg him to accept the book as a present. 
                     — The Confessions of Aleister 
                Crowley.  
				New York, NY.  Hill and Wang, 1969.  Pages 604-605. 
                ______________________________ 
                       To 
                return to
                The 
                Equinox, there was no question of selling even 
                that small edition even at that pitiful price. I have never had 
                any idea of how to do business. I can make plans, both sound and 
                brilliant; but I cannot force myself to take the necessary steps 
                to put them into practice. My greatest weakness is that as soon 
                as I am sure that I can attain any given object, from climbing a 
                mountain to exploiting a beauty spot, I lose interest. The only 
                things I complete are those of which (as for instance, poetry 
                and Magick) I am not the real author but an instrument impelled 
                by a mysterious power which sweeps me away in effortless 
                enthusiasm which leaves no room for my laziness, cynicism and 
                similar inhibiting qualities to interfere. 
				    
                I did try to get a few booksellers to stock
                The 
                Equinox but found myself immediately up against a 
                blank wall of what I must call Chinese conventionality. I 
                remember hearing of an engineer in the East who wanted to built 
                himself a house and employed a Chinese contractor. He pointed 
                out that the work would be much easier by using bricks of a 
                different size to that which the man was making. He obeyed, but 
                a day later went back to the old kind. The engineer protested, 
                but the man explained that his bricks were of a “heaven-sent” 
                size. 
				    
                So I found that the format of
                The 
                Equinox shocked the bookseller; worse still, it 
                was not a book, being issued periodically, nor a magazine, being 
                to big and well produced! I said, “What does it matter? All I 
                ask you to do is to show it and sell it.” Quite useless. 
				    
				— The Confessions of Aleister Crowley.  
				New York, NY.  Hill and Wang, 1969.  Pages 605-606.  |  |  
				| 
				
				Reviews: | 
				    
                
                The new 
				number of “The Equinox” continues to keep up the tradition of 
				the earlier numbers as to size, the mystical nature of its 
				contents, and the unintelligibility of many of its articles. . . 
				—Review of Reviews, date unknown. 
                ______________________________ 
                  
				    
                
                Here is 
                the weirdest muddle that one could well stumble across in this 
                most muddled age. . . . Powerfully individualistic, descending 
                sometimes nearly to the level of the sordid, soaring sometimes 
                to the heights of genius, the matter could not be reviewed 
                properly in twenty times the space that we can give it. . . . 
                Those who are certain of their sanity and the breadth of their 
                viewpoint should read this magazine when they get the 
                opportunity.  Theosophists will find the few references to 
                Theosophy anything but complimentary. . . . 
				—Theosophy in Scotland, date unknown. 
                ______________________________ 
                  
				    
                
                The 
                Equinox is permanent in its stately size and type, continuous in 
                its periodical character, permanent—in the value of its 
                contents. 
				—Vanity Fair, date unknown. 
                ______________________________ 
                  
				    
                
                
                Expensively printed lunacy, astrology, etc., in 
                oriental-occidental jargon. 
				
                —The Literary Guide, date unknown. 
                ______________________________ 
                  
				    
                
                It easily 
                takes rank as the most vigorous swearer and blasphemous in 
                respectable modern literature.  Moreover its swearing and 
                blasphemy are splendidly done, with immense style and glorious 
                colouring.  Its contributors certainly know how to write, though 
                occasionally they remind one of certain efforts that have 
                emanated from lunatic asylums where gorgeousness of imagination 
                and riotous language are by no means unknown.  But underneath 
                all, there is a huge wealth of knowledge, a few indications of 
                serious feeling, and a big flow of occult thought.  Yet with all 
                its “illuminism” it is so much of a mocker that we have before 
                us the figure of a Mephistopheles. . . . The Equinox is put 
                forth with a certain pomp, its writers are by no means 
                negligible in competence.  All we can say is that they remind us 
                of Diakkas and Jingles, and occasionally of Colney Hatch. . . . 
                The reference to black mass and the chaotic mixture may possibly 
                help to explain the rumours of devil worship which were 
                persistent not long ago.  Perhaps we have here the key to that 
                dark door. . . . 
				—The Light, date unknown. 
				______________________________ 
				  
				    
                
                A 
                mysterious publication called “The Equinox,” the official organ 
                of the A\ 
                A\ 
                has just been released upon a long-suffering world. . . . It is 
                a sort of thing no fellow can understand.  One gathers vaguely 
                out of the confusion that it deals with such things as Magic, 
                wizardry, mysticism, and so on; but what the special line is, 
                remains a baffling mystery. . . . From frequent references to 
                some people called The Brothers of the A\ 
                A\ 
                one gathers that they have a lot to do with this weird venture; 
                but a grim perusal of an article purporting to explain the Order 
                . . . leaves one without any real clue as to their identity.  
                True, the Chief of the Brothers is definitely names, his name 
                being “V.V.V.V.V.” but five V’s, do not strike one as a name 
                likely to be well known at any local post office. . . . One gets 
                all kinds of entertainments in “The Equinox” . . . Poetry gets a 
                strong show, but it is uncomfortable reading. . . . 
				 
                —The Morning Leader, date unknown. 
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
				  
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