Table Of ContentThe	Tree	of	Life.	(Source:	Crowley:	Magick	Without	Tears,	777	Revised,	and
The	Book	of	Thoth;	reproduced	by	Hymenaeus	Beta,	copyright	©	1993	O.T.O.)
The	Magick	of
Aleister	Crowley
A	Handbook	of	the	Rituals	of	Thelema
Lon	Milo	DuQuette
This	edition	first	published	in	2003	by
Red	Wheel/Weiser,	LLC
With	offices	at:
665	Third	Street,	Suite	400
San	Francisco,	CA	94107
www.redwheelweiser.com
Copyright	©	1993,	2003	Lon	Milo	DuQuette
All	rights	reserved.	No	part	of	this	publication	may	be	reproduced	or	transmitted	in	any	form	or	by	any
means,	electronic	or	mechanical,	including	photocopying,	recording,	or	by	any	information	storage	and
retrieval	system,	without	permission	in	writing	from	Red	Wheel/Weiser.	Reviewers	may	quote	brief
passages.	Originally	published	in	1993	as	The	Magick	of	Thelema:	A	Handbook	of	the	Rituals	of	Aleister
Crowley	by	Red	Wheel/Weiser,	LLC.
Library	of	Congress	Cataloging-in-Publication	Data
DuQuette,	Lon	Milo.
[Magick	of	Thelema]
The	magick	of	Aleister	Crowley	:	a	handbook	of	the	rituals	of	Thelema
/	Lon	Milo	Duquette.
p.	cm.
Includes	bibliographical	references	and	index.
ISBN	1-57863-299-4
1.	Magic.	2.	Occultism.	3.	Crowley,	Aleister,	1875–1947.	I.	Title.
BF1611.D87	2003
133.4'3—dc22
2003015150
ISBN:	978-1-57863-299-2
Photographs	on	pages	59,	60,	61,	and	62	copyright	©	1993	Paul	Maska.
Cover	and	book	design	by	Sky-Peck	Design
Typeset	in	Adobe	Garamond
Printed	in	the	United	States	of	America
10	9	8	7	6	5
The	paper	used	in	this	publication	meets	the	minimum	requirements	of	the	American	National	Standard	for
Information	Sciences—Permanence	of	Paper	for	Printed	Library	Materials	Z39.48-1992	(R1997).
	
To	my	wife	of	thirty-five	years,
Saint	Constance	of	the	Well,
Our	Lady	of	Perpetual	Motion,
this	work	is	lovingly	dedicated.
“There	is	no	bond	that	can	unite	the	divided	but	love.”
—LIBER	AL	VEL	LEGIS,	I.	41.
CONTENTS
Foreword	by	Hymenaeus	Beta
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter	Zero:	Frequently	Asked	Questions	about	Aleister	Crowley
Chapter	One:	The	Magick	of	Will
Chapter	Two:	The	Evolution	of	Magical	Formulae
Chapter	Three:	The	Book	of	the	Law
Chapter	Four:	The	Pentagram	Rituals
Chapter	Five:	The	Thelemic	Rituals	of	the	Pentagram
The	Star	Ruby	&	Liber	V	vel	Reguli
Chapter	Six:	The	Hexagram	Rituals
Chapter	Seven:	The	Thelemic	Ritual	of	the	Hexagram
The	Star	Sapphire
Chapter	Eight:	Knowledge	and	Conversation
of	the	Holy	Guardian	Angel
Liber	Samekh
Chapter	Nine:	The	Solar	Rites
Liber	Resh	&	The	Mass	of	the	Phoenix
Chapter	Ten:	Thelemic	Mysticism
Liber	NV	&	Liber	HAD
Chapter	Eleven:	The	Rites	of	Eleusis
Chapter	Twelve:	Thelemic	Orders
Chapter	Thirteen:	The	Religion	of	Thelema
The	Mass	of	Ecclesia	Gnostica	Catholica
Notes
Bibliography
FOREWORD
Do	what	thou	wilt	shall	be	the	whole	of	the	Law.
							A
	leister	Crowley	possessed	far	too	much	technical	knowledge	of
magick	to	readily	understand	the	problems	of	ordinary	students.	He	frequently
asked	his	younger	colleagues	to	help	make	his	teachings	more	accessible,	and
once	explained	that	“it's	the	sort	of	thing	I	can't	do	myself,	not	knowing	the
scope	of	the	mind	of	the	‘gentle	reader.’”
Like	other	“gentle	readers”	who	have	delved	into	Crowley's	system	on	their
own,	Brother	DuQuette	found	many	of	the	gaps	and	pitfalls	in	the	system	by	the
time-honored	method	of	falling	into	them,	scrambling	out,	and	trying	again	until
he	 crossed	 them.	 The	 present	 work	 incorporates	 many	 of	 the	 results	 of	 his
personal	work.
What	is	true	of	science	holds	true	for	scientific	illuminism.	DuQuette	is	the
first	 to	 allow	 that	 while	 some	 of	 his	 findings	 may	 be	 replicated	 by	 future
experimenters,	others	are	subjective	personal	interpretation.	But	even	the	latter
are	invaluable	as	suggesting	other	lines	of	investigation,	and	as	examples	of	the
kind	of	personalization	of	the	system	that	enables	the	magician	to	make	it	his	or
her	own.
DuQuette	also	drew	on	recent	research	by	other	students	that	will	be	formally
published	 in	 the	 forthcoming	 one-volume	 edition	 of	 Crowley's	 Book	 Four.
Speaking	of	Lon	Milo	DuQuette's	mythical	eponym,	Crowley	wrote	in	Part	II	of
his	Book	Four	that	“Milo	began	by	carrying	a	newborn	calf;	and	day	by	day	as	it
grew	 into	 a	 bull,	 his	 strength	 was	 found	 sufficient.”	 It	 is	 not	 stretching	 the
metaphor	too	far	to	suggest	that	the	present	work	will	be	useful	to	many	students
as	an	introductory	guide	to	those	portions	of	Crowley's	magnum	opus	dealing
with	ceremonial	magick.
Occultism	frequently	gives	ample	grounds	for	criticism	to	its	detractors	by
making	insupportable	claims	for	vaguely	defined	powers,	the	whole	compassed
by	nonsensical	theory.	As	Israel	Regardie	did	before	him,	DuQuette	avoids	this
by	writing	from	his	own	experience,	with	a	healthy	leavening	of	common	sense
and	a	refreshing	sense	of	humor.
Love	is	the	law,	love	under	will.
—Hymenaeus	Beta
Frater	Superior,	O.T.O.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
							I
	wish	first	to	thank	Hymenaeus	Beta,	Frater	Superior	of	Ordo	Templi
Orientis,	for	allowing	me	access	to	the	Order's	archival	material	and	for	his
fraternal	encouragement,	counsel,	and	criticism.
My	thanks	also	go	to	Soror	Meral,	of	the	College	of	Thelema,	Christopher	S.
Hyatt,	of	the	Israel	Regardie	Foundation,	James	Wasserman,	Clive	Harper,	Frater
E.	A.	O.	A.,	Rick	Potter,	Latin	scholar,	David	Coe,	D.G.,	Bill	Heidrick;	and	to
Paul	J.	Maska	for	his	excellent	photographs,	and	Ed	Sentowski	for	his	makeup
artistry.
It	gives	me	profound	pleasure	to	thank	the	dedicated	and	talented	Thelemic
ritualists	of	Heru-ra-ha	Lodge	O.T.O.,	and	93	Lodge	O.T.O.,	with	whom	I	have
labored,	and	from	whom	I	have	learned	for	more	than	fifteen	years;	especially
LeRoy	 Lauer,	 Doug	 James,	 Karen	 James,	 Steve	 Abbott,	 Judy	 Abbott,	 Jim
Kababick,	David	P.	Wilson,	and	Constance	DuQuette.
Lastly,	“…unto	them	from	whose	eyes	the	veil	of	life	hath	fallen…,”	Grady	L.
McMurtry	(Caliph	Hymenaeus	Alpha	X°),	Francis	I.	Regardie,	Gerald	Yorke,
and	the	“prophet	of	the	lovely	Star,”	Aleister	Crowley,	I	offer	my	perpetual
thanks.
The	quoted	material	at	the	beginning	of	each	chapter	is	from	the	works	of
Aleister	Crowley.	In	case	you	would	like	to	explore	these	passages	further,	the
following	reference	list	will	be	of	interest.
Chapter	Zero:	The	Poet,	from	The	Stone	of	the	Philosophers,	Konx	Om	Pax,
Originally	published	in	1907	in	a	limited	edition	of	500	copies.	First	facsimile
edition,	with	introduction	published	in	1990	by	The	Teitan	Press,	Inc.	Chicago,
IL.	©	1990	Martin	P.	Starr.	p.	108.
Chapter	One:	Magick	in	Theory	and	Practice	(New	York:	Magickal	Childe,
1990),	p.	xii.	This	work	was	originally	published	in	Paris	by	Lecram	Press	in
1929.
Chapter	Two:	“The	Pentagram.”	From	Thumbs	Up!	Five	Poems	by	Aleister
Crowley,	p.	2.	This	book	was	privately	printed	by	the	O.T.O.	in	1942	“for	free
distribution	among	the	soldiers	and	workers	of	the	Forces	of	Freedom.”
Chapter	Three:	This	quote	is	from	The	Class	A	Comment	of	The	Book	of	the
Law	(reprinted	in	its	entirety	in	this	work).