1.20 Tannhäuser, a Story of All Time, by Aleister Crowley, 1902, showing Crowley’s signature © NMI
Gray may have been interested in his philosophy but not in relation to his ideas regarding men and women. In his poem The Star and the Garter, of which Gray also owned a copy,59 Crowley satirised a number of their friends and clearly defined his opinion of the role of man and woman. ‘Sometime later I added an appendix of a very obscure kind. The people of our circle, from Kathleen Bruce (since Lady Scott and Mrs Hilton Young) to Sybil Muggins and Hener Skene (later accompanist to Isadora Duncan) are satirised. Their names are introduced by means of puns or allusions and every line is loaded with cryptic criticism. Gerald (Kelly) and I, as educated men, were frightfully fed up with the presumption and poses of the average ass – male or female – of the quarter’.60 He continued; ‘Another affectation of the woman art students was to claim to be treated exactly as if they were men in every respect. Gerald, always eager to oblige, addressed one of his models as old fellow, to her great satisfaction. Then he excused himself for a momentary absence in the terms which he would have to use for another man. On his return, the lady had recovered her “sex and character,” and had bolted. Women can only mix with men on equal terms when she adopts his morality lock, stock, and barrel, and ceases to set an extravagant artificial value on her animal function. The most high principled woman (alleged) insists on the supreme value of an asset which is notoriously of no value whatever in itself. The Star and the Garter deals frankly with this problem’.61
A surprise turn of events occurred in late summer 1903 when Crowley eloped with Rose Kelly (1874-1932), sister of Gerald Kelly. Kelly was furious. Despite describing this as the happiest day of his life in letters to Auguste Rodin, Crowley gave little consideration to his wife’s feelings in his autobiography when describing his brief engagement nine months earlier to an unnamed Englishwoman in January of 1903.62 Referring to the unnamed fiancée in his autobiography, Crowley informs us that, ‘This lady claims the notice principally as the model for several of my poems’. He informs the reader that ‘this Englishwoman was “the Star” in The Star and the Garter which I wrote at this time’. He claims that this woman served as the model for several poems, notably in the publication Rosa Mundi and other Love Songs, written under the pseudonym of H.D. Carr, in 1905. Of the list of poems which he dedicates to this secret fiancée, one was titled The Kiss and the other Eileen. This poem was dedicated to Eileen Gray. Whether Gray was Crowley’s secret fiancée is speculative, however she returned the gift of the brooch, not wanting to cause embarrassment to Rose, Crowley’s wife.
Prior to his arrival in Paris, Crowley was in India and on 20 and 21 March in 1902 where he composed Berashith An Essay in Ontology and Ceremonial Magic. It is Hebrew, meaning ‘in the Beginning; the first word of Genesis’. The book reflects Crowley’s interest in nineteenth-century philosophy and in Buddhism. His ideas again had an influence on Gray as the book discusses the theory of the universe according to Crowley. Included is a discussion of ceremonial magic where magic is viewed as a preparatory training for yoga. His theory explores the divergences between the great forms of religion – Buddhism, Hinduism and Christianity – adapting them to ontological science through mathematics. Crowley finishes the publication with ‘Om Mani Padme Hum’ the six sounds of the sacred Buddhist prayer meaning ‘Hail the Jewel in the Lotus’ – this being the title of one of Gray’s lacquer screens, exhibited in 1913. The book was eventually published privately in Paris in 1903.63 In the Paris edition the author is given as ‘Abhavanda’. This was Crowley’s chosen Hindu name during his yogic tutelage under Allan Bennett (1872-1923). By December 1903 Gray and Crowley were amicable to the point that Crowley once again sent her a copy of his book, writing his pseudonym ‘Abhavanda to Eileen Gray 9 December’. Crowley’s ideas on yoga also influenced Gray later, as she developed her theories on meditation which culminated in the Meditation Grove project, in 1941, where she designed a meditation garden on a hypothetical site outside St.Tropez. Gray purchased other publications on the subject, but starting with Crowley such publications form a part of Gray’s philosophical thinking in relation to her more socially motivated projects.
Many of the group to which Kelly and Gray belonged frequented both the Café de Versailles and an upper room at the Chat Blanc. Included were Wyndham Lewis; William Somerset Maugham (1874-1965) whom Gray also met; one of Kelly’s best friends,64 Clive Bell (1881-1964) who stated that Kelly was his close friend during the summer of 1904; Enoch Arnold Bennett (1867-1931) whom Kelly had met through Schwob; Aleister Crowley, and Stephen Haweis (1878-1969), a friend of both Gray’s, Kelly’s and Crowley’s. Gray states that sometimes she was brought along to these soirées.65 The Chat Blanc in the rue d’Odessa was also popular with a circle of Anglo-American painters, sculptors, illustrators, writers and their female friends. Between 1904 and 1906 regulars at the restaurant included novelists Bennett, Maugham, Bell and Crowley. Among the many artists were the Americans Thomas Alexander Harrison (1853-1930), Penrhyn Stanlaws (1877-1957), Robert Root (1864-1937), Paul Bartlett (1865-1925), Canadian James Morrice (1865-1924), Welshman Gabriel Thompson (1861-1935), Englishmen George Barne (1887-1972) and Joseph Milner Kite (1864-1946). The Irish artist Roderic O’Conor (1860-1940) also visited the Chat Blanc. Gray’s attendance at the Chat Blanc is only indicated in her biography and in Maugham’s book The Magician, 1908. Maugham’s main protagonist in the novel is Oliver Haddo, who was Crowley, and he describes a young lady, Margaret Dauncey, who had come to Paris from London to study art. Dauncey’s character dined frequently at the ‘Chien Noir’ – Maugham’s fictionalised name for the Chat Blanc.66 The similarities with Gray in this novel are purely coincidental.67 It is possible that the character of Margaret is an amalgam of Gray and Gerald Kelly’s sister Rose.
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