| 
				Comments 
				by 
				
				Aleister 
				 
				Crowley: | 
				     I was 
				nearly down and out, when I got an introduction to the editor of
				Vanity Fair, a perfectly charming man, who reminded me 
				not a little of Austin Harrison. He was, however, extremely 
				intelligent and understood his business thoroughly. In a couple 
				of years he had pulled the paper up from nothing to one quarter 
				of a million. He treated me, through some inexplicable 
				misunderstanding, as a human being and asked me to write for 
				him. 
				     I 
				began with an account of a baseball game as seen by a professor 
				from the University of Peking. This was followed up by a series 
				of Hokku. This is a Japanese verse form. It contains three lines 
				totalling seventeen syllables. I modified this by introducing 
				regular meter, the first line dactyl-spondee, the second line 
				spondee-dactyl-spondee, and the third dactyl-spondee. A Hokku 
				must contain a very definite finely chiselled idea or rather, 
				chain of ideas. Such is the strict rule, but one is allowed a 
				certain degree of latitude. 
				     — The Confessions of Aleister Crowley.  
				New York, NY.  Hill and Wang, 1969.  Page 766. |  |