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In Chapter Twenty-Nine, Crowley describes making love to Laylah in the night in as a metaphor for the annihilation of the rest of the universe aside from the two lovers. This metaphor is further reinforced when Crowley refers to making love in the Night of Pan, which represents the destruction of all things at the end of time.

Source(s)

The Book of Lies, Which Is Also Falsely Called Breaks: The Wanderings of Falsifications of the One Thought of Frat