Sir Edward Kelly

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    Sir Edward Kelly

    (1555-1595 e.v.)

    by T. ApiryonCopyright 1995 Ordo Templi Orientis. All rights reserved.

    Irish alchemist and magician. Kelly is best known for his travels with John Dee and work his

    work for Dee as a "skryer" or visionary medium; but he was also a noted alchemist on his ownright, publishing three alchemical works: The Stone of the Philosophers, The Humid Way,and

    The Theatre of Terrestrial Astronomy.

    Kelly's personality is somewhat of a mystery. He was born Edward Talbot in Worcester and

    attended Oxford for a few years, but did not obtain a degree. He seems to have practiced as a

    notary for a number of years in London or Lancaster. In Wales he appears to have chanced upon,

    under rather mysterious circumstances, the sole copy of The Book of Saint Dunstan, analchemical treatise which explains how to formulate the Red and White Powders for the

    Transmutation of Metals, along with two ivory caskets containing samples of these powders. He

    is alleged to have used these powders to make gifts of gold for his friends; and to impress JohnDee.

    There is a poorly substantiated tradition that he wore his characteristic black skull cap to disguisethe fact that his ears had been cut off for forgery. Most non-magician historians view him as a

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    charlatan who took advantage of Dee's credulity, leading him along with puzzling clues to arcane

    knowledge. And yet, Dee seems to have driven Kelly to the brink of insanity, forcing him to

    perform long skrying sessions on a nearly daily basis. Kelly expressed his fear and mistrust of

    the spirits on a number of occasions. In addition, the materials received in the workings was inan Angelic language, with its own unique grammar and syntax, some of it being remarkably

    consistent and betraying substantial knowledge and intelligence. It is written in a strange yetmagnificent sort of prophetic poetry which possesses remarkable power and dark beauty.

    In Chapter 187 ofLiber Aleph,Crowley says that "an Angel did declare unto Kelly the veryAxiomata of our Law of Thelema, in Good Measure, and plainly; but Dee, afflicted by the Fixity

    of his Tenets that were of the Slave-Gods, was wroth, and by his Authority prevailed upon the

    other, who was indeed not wholly perfected as an Instrument, or the World ready for that

    Sowing."

    The particular transmission to which Crowley probably refers is recorded in Dee's diary for June

    8, 1584. Dee states that the Spirits attempted to persuade Kelly:

    "- That Jesus was not God.

    - That no prayer ought to be made to Jesus.- That there is no sin.

    - That mans soul doth go from one body to another childes quickening or animation.

    - That as many men and women as are now, have always been (...)- That the generation of mankind from Adam and Eve, is not an History, but a writing which has

    another sense.

    - No Holy Ghost they acknowledged.- They would not suffer him to pray to Jesus Christ; but would rebuke him, saying, that he

    robbed God of his honour, etc."

    The cosmological system received by Dee and Kelly bears numerous resemblances to olderGnostic systems. Two late Gnostic works, the "Books of Ieou," were attributed to the authorship

    of Enoch. The system of 30 Aethyrs developed by Dee and Kelly could easily be classified as a

    Gnostic aeonology. There are numerous other examples, one of the most striking is the followingpassage, obtained by Dee and Kelly on May 23, 1587:

    "I am the daughter of Fortitude, and ravished every hour, from my youth. For behold, I amUnderstanding, and Science dwelleth in me; and the heavens oppress me. They covet and desire

    me with infinite appetite; few or none that are earthly have embraced me, for I am shadowed

    with the Circle of the Stone, and covered with the morning Clouds. My feet are swifter than the

    winds, and my hands are sweeter than the morning dew. My garments are from the beginning,and my dwelling place is in my self. The Lion knoweth not where I walk, neither do the beasts of

    the field understand me. I am deflowered, and yet a virgin; I sanctify, and am not sanctified.

    Happy is he that embraceth me: for in the night season I am sweet, and in the day full ofpleasure. My company is a harmony of many Cymbals, and my lips sweeter than health itself. I

    am a harlot for such as ravish me, and a virgin with such as know me not: For Lo, I am loved of

    many, and I am a lover to many; and as many as come unto me as they should do, haveentertainment. Purge your streets, O ye sons of men, and wash your houses clean; make

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    yourselves holy, and put on righteousness. Cast out your old strumpets, and burn their clothes;

    abstain from the company of other women that are defiled, that are sluttish, and not so handsome

    and beautiful as I, and then will I come and dwell amongst you: and behold, I will bring forth

    children unto you, and they shall be the sons of Comfort. I will open my garments, and standnaked before you, that your love may be more enflamed toward me. As yet, I walk in the clouds;

    as yet, I am carried with the winds, and cannot descend unto you for the multitude of yourabominations, and the filthy loathsomeness of your dwelling places."

    Whatever else he was, Kelly was, in one sense or another, inspired.

    Kelly received knighthood at the hand of the Bohemian Emperor Rudolph II as a reward for his

    alchemical works (possibly as a result of the small quantities of the Red and White Tinctureswhich he possessed), but Rudolph later imprisoned him when he failed to deliver the quantities

    of alchemical gold he had promised. Kelly died while attempting to escape from prison.

    Crowley considered Kelly to be one of his previous incarnations. See Chapters 73 and 187 of

    Liber Alephand Part III of The Heart of the Master.

    References:

    Barrett, Francis; The Magus, or Celestial Intelligencer[1801], Citadel, Secaucus, NJ 1967Casaubon, Meric;A True and Faithful Relation of What Passed for many Years Between Dr.

    John Dee and Some Spirits[London 1659], reprinted by Magical Childe Publishing Inc., New

    York 1992Crowley, Aleister; The Equinox,Vol. I, London, 1910-1913 e.v.

    Crowley, Aleister; The Heart of the Master[Ordo Templi Orientis, 1938], New Falcon

    Publications, Scottsdale, Arizona 1992

    Crowley, Aleister;Liber Aleph vel CXI, The Book of Wisdom or Folly[Thelema Publishing,1962], Samuel Weiser, York Beach, Maine 1991

    Head, Thomas; "The Enochian System" in The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic, ed. by

    Israel Regardie, Falcon Press, Phoenix, Arizona 1984James, Geoffrey; The Enochian Evocation of Dr. John Dee,Heptangle Books, Gillette, New

    Jersey 1984

    Laycock, Donald C.; The Complete Enochian Dictionary,Askin Publishers, London, 1978

    Rohmer, Sax; The Romance of Sorcery,Causeway Books, NY 1973Turner, Robert;Elizabethan Magic,Element, Longmead 1989

    Yates, Frances; The Rosicrucian Enlightenment,ARK, London 1972/1986

    5/24/95

    Originally published inRed Flame No. 2 -- Mystery of Mystery: A Primer of ThelemicEcclesiastical Gnosticismby Tau Apiryon and Helena; Berkeley, CA 1995 e.v.