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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Secret Societies And Subversive Movements, by
+Nesta H. Webster
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Secret Societies And Subversive Movements
+
+Author: Nesta H. Webster
+
+Release Date: August 23, 2006 [EBook #19104]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SECRET SOCIETIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dave Maddock, Curtis A. Weyant and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+SECRET SOCIETIES and SUBVERSIVE MOVEMENTS
+
+by
+
+NESTA H. WEBSTER
+
+
+CHRISTIAN BOOK CLUB OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+_The Chevalier de Boufflers_
+_The French Revolution_
+_World Revolution_
+_The Socialist Network_
+_The Surrender of an Empire_
+_Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette: Before the Revolution_
+_Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette: During the Revolution_
+_Spacious Days_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"There is in Italy a power which we seldom mention in this House ... I
+mean the secret societies.... It is useless to deny, because it is
+impossible to conceal, that a great part of Europe--the whole of Italy
+and France and a great portion of Germany, to say nothing of other
+countries--is covered with a network of these secret societies, just as
+the superficies of the earth is now being covered with railroads. And
+what are their objects? They do not attempt to conceal them. They do not
+want constitutional government; they do not want ameliorated
+institutions ... they want to change the tenure of land, to drive out
+the present owners of the soil and to put an end to ecclesiastical
+establishments. Some of them may go further...." (DISRAELI in the House
+of Commons, July 14, 1856.)
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+It is a matter of some regret to me that I have been so far unable to
+continue the series of studies on the French Revolution of which _The
+Chevalier de Boufflers_ and _The French Revolution, a Study in
+Democracy_ formed the first two volumes. But the state of the world at
+the end of the Great War seemed to demand an enquiry into the present
+phase of the revolutionary movement, hence my attempt to follow its
+course up to modern times in _World Revolution_. And now before
+returning to that first cataclysm I have felt impelled to devote one
+more book to the Revolution as a whole by going this time further back
+into the past and attempting to trace its origins from the first century
+of the Christian era. For it is only by taking a general survey of the
+movement that it is possible to understand the causes of any particular
+phase of its existence. The French Revolution did not arise merely out
+of conditions or ideas peculiar to the eighteenth century, nor the
+Bolshevist Revolution out of political and social conditions in Russia
+or the teaching of Karl Marx. Both these explosions were produced by
+forces which, making use of popular suffering and discontent, had long
+been gathering strength for an onslaught not only on Christianity, but
+on all social and moral order.
+
+It is of immense significance to notice with what resentment this point
+of view is met in certain quarters. When I first began to write on
+revolution a well-known London publisher said to me, "Remember that if
+you take an anti-revolutionary line you will have the whole literary
+world against you." This appeared to me extraordinary. Why should the
+literary world sympathize with a movement which from the French
+Revolution onwards has always been directed against literature, art, and
+science, and has openly proclaimed its aim to exalt the manual workers
+over the intelligentsia? "Writers must be proscribed as the most
+dangerous enemies of the people," said Robespierre; his colleague Dumas
+said all clever men should be guillotined. "The system of persecution
+against men of talents was organized.... They cried out in the sections
+of Paris, 'Beware of that man for he has written a book!'"[1] Precisely
+the same policy has been followed in Russia. Under Moderate Socialism in
+Germany the professors, not the "people," are starving in garrets. Yet
+the whole press of our country is permeated with subversive influences.
+Not merely in partisan works, but in manuals of history or literature
+for use in Schools, Burke is reproached for warning us against the
+French Revolution and Carlyle's panegyric is applauded. And whilst every
+slip on the part of an anti-revolutionary writer is seized on by the
+critics and held up as an example of the whole, the most glaring errors
+not only of conclusions but of facts pass unchallenged if they happen to
+be committed by a partisan of the movement. The principle laid down by
+Collot d'Herbois still holds good: "Tout est permis pour quiconque agit
+dans le sens de la revolution."
+
+All this was unknown to me when I first embarked on my work. I knew that
+French writers of the past had distorted facts to suit their own
+political views, that a conspiracy of history is still directed by
+certain influences in the masonic lodges and the Sorbonne; I did not
+know that this conspiracy was being carried on in this country.
+Therefore the publisher's warning did not daunt me. If I was wrong
+either in my conclusions or facts I was prepared to be challenged.
+Should not years of laborious historical research meet either with
+recognition or with reasoned and scholarly refutation? But although my
+book received a great many generous and appreciative reviews in the
+press, criticisms which were hostile took a form which I had never
+anticipated. Not a single honest attempt was made to refute either my
+_French Revolution_ or _World Revolution_ by the usual methods of
+controversy; statements founded on documentary evidence were met with
+flat contradiction unsupported by a shred of counter evidence. In
+general the plan adopted was not to disprove, but to discredit by means
+of flagrant misquotations, by attributing to me views I had never
+expressed, or even by means of offensive personalities. It will surely
+be admitted that this method of attack is unparalleled in any other
+sphere of literary controversy.
+
+It is interesting to notice that precisely the same line was adopted a
+hundred years ago with regard to Professor Robison and the Abbe Barruel,
+whose works on the secret causes of the French Revolution created an
+immense sensation in their day. The legitimate criticisms that might
+have been made on their work find no place in the diatribes levelled
+against them; their enemies content themselves merely with calumnies and
+abuse. A contemporary American writer, Seth Payson, thus describes the
+methods employed to discredit them:
+
+ The testimony of Professor Robison and Abbe Barruel would doubtless
+ have been considered as ample in any case which did not interest
+ the prejudices and passions of men against them. The scurrility and
+ odium with which they have been loaded is perfectly natural, and
+ what the nature of their testimony would have led one to expect.
+ Men will endeavour to invalidate that evidence which tends to
+ unveil their dark designs: and it cannot be expected that those who
+ believe that "the end sanctifies the means" will be very scrupulous
+ as to their measures. Certainly he was not who invented the
+ following character and arbitrarily applied it to Dr. Robison,
+ which might have been applied with as much propriety to any other
+ person in Europe or America. The character here referred to, is
+ taken from the American _Mercury_, printed at Hartford, September
+ 26, 1799, by E. Babcock. In this paper, on the pretended authority
+ of Professor Ebeling, we are told "that Robison had lived too fast
+ for his income, and to supply deficiencies had undertaken to alter
+ a bank bill, that he was detected and fled to France; that having
+ been expelled the Lodge in Edinburgh, he applied in France for the
+ second grade, but was refused; that he made the same attempt in
+ Germany and afterwards in Russia, but never succeeded; and from
+ this entertained the bitterest hatred to masonry; and after
+ wandering about Europe for two years, by writing to Secretary
+ Dundas, and presenting a copy of his book, which, it was judged,
+ would answer certain purposes of the ministry, the prosecution
+ against him was stopped, the Professor returned in triumph to his
+ country, and now lives upon a handsome pension, instead of
+ suffering the fate of his predecessor Dodd."[2]
+
+Payson goes on to quote a writer in _The National Intelligencer_ of
+January 1801, who styles himself a "friend to truth" and speaks of
+Professor Robison as "a man distinguished by abject dependence on a
+party, by the base crimes of forgery and adultery, and by frequent
+paroxysms of insanity." Mounier goes further still, and in his pamphlet
+_De l'influence attribuee aux Philosophes, ... Francs-macons et ...
+Illumines_, etc., inspired by the Illuminatus Bode, quotes a story that
+Robison suffered from a form of insanity which consisted in his
+believing that the posterior portion of his body was made of glass![3]
+
+In support of all this farrago of nonsense there is of course no
+foundation of truth; Robison was a well-known savant who lived sane and
+respected to the end of his days. On his death Watt wrote of him: "He
+was a man of the clearest head and the most science of anybody I have
+ever known."[4] John Playfair, in a paper read before the Royal Society
+of Edinburgh in 1815, whilst criticizing his _Proofs of a
+Conspiracy_--though at the same time admitting he had himself never had
+access to the documents Robison had consulted!--paid the following
+tribute to his character and erudition:
+
+ His range in science was most extensive; he was familiar with the
+ whole circle of the accurate sciences.... Nothing can add to the
+ esteem which they [i.e. "those who were personally acquainted with
+ him"] felt for his talents and worth or to the respect in which
+ they now hold his memory.[5]
+
+Nevertheless, the lies circulated against both Robison and Barruel were
+not without effect. Thirteen years later we find another American, this
+time a Freemason, confessing "with shame and grief and indignation" that
+he had been carried away by "the flood of vituperation poured upon
+Barruel and Robison during the past thirty years," that the title pages
+of their works "were fearful to him," and that although "wishing calmly
+and candidly to investigate the character of Freemasonry he refused for
+months to open their books." Yet when in 1827 he read them for the first
+time he was astonished to find that they showed "a manifest tendency
+towards Freemasonry." Both Barruel and Robison, he now realized, were
+"learned men, candid men, lovers of their country, who had a reverence
+for truth and religion. They give the reasons for their opinions, they
+quote their authorities, naming the author and page, like honest people;
+they both had a wish to rescue British Masonry from the condemnation and
+fellowship of continental Masonry and appear to be sincerely actuated by
+the desire of doing good by giving their labours to the public."[6]
+
+That the author was right here in his description of Barruel's attitude
+to Freemasonry is shown by Barruel's own words on the subject:
+
+ England above all is full of those upright men, excellent citizens,
+ men of every kind and in every condition of life, who count it an
+ honour to be masons, and who are distinguished from other men only
+ by ties which seem to strengthen those of benevolence and fraternal
+ charity. It is not the fear of offending a nation amongst which I
+ have found a refuge which prompts me to make this exception.
+ Gratitude would prevail with me over all such terrors and I should
+ say in the midst of London: "England is lost, she will not escape
+ the French Revolution if the masonic lodges resemble those I have
+ to unveil. I would even say more: government and all Christianity
+ would long ago have been lost in England if one could suppose its
+ Freemasons to be initiated into the last mysteries of the sect."[7]
+
+In another passage Barruel observes that Masonry in England is "a
+society composed of good citizens in general whose chief object is to
+help each other by principles of equality which for them is nothing else
+but universal fraternity."[8] And again: "Let us admire it [the wisdom
+of England] for having known how to make a real source of benefit to the
+State out of those same mysteries which elsewhere conceal a profound
+conspiracy against the State and religion."[9]
+
+The only criticism British Freemasons may make on this verdict is that
+Barruel regards Masonry as a system which originally contained an
+element of danger that has been eliminated in England whilst they regard
+it as a system originally innocuous into which a dangerous element was
+inserted on the Continent. Thus according to the former conception
+Freemasonry might be compared to one of the brass shell-cases brought
+back from the battle-fields of France and converted into a flower-pot
+holder, whilst according to the latter it resembles an innocent brass
+flower-pot holder which has been used as a receptacle for explosives. The
+fact is that, as I shall endeavour to show in the course of this book,
+Freemasonry being a composite system there is some justification for
+both these theories. In either case it will be seen that Continental
+Masonry alone stands condemned.
+
+The plan of representing Robison and Barruel as the enemies of British
+Masonry can therefore only be regarded as a method for discrediting them
+in the eyes of British Freemasons, and consequently for bringing the
+latter over to the side of their antagonists. Exactly the same method of
+attack has been directed against those of us who during the last few
+years have attempted to warn the world of the secret forces working to
+destroy civilization; in my own case even the plan of accusing me of
+having attacked British Masonry has been adopted without the shadow of a
+foundation. From the beginning I have always differentiated between
+British and Grand Orient Masonry, and have numbered high British Masons
+amongst my friends.
+
+But what is the main charge brought against us? Like Robison and
+Barruel, we are accused of raising a false alarm, of creating a bogey,
+or of being the victims of an obsession. Up to a point this is
+comprehensible. Whilst on the Continent the importance of secret
+societies is taken as a matter of course and the libraries of foreign
+capitals teem with books on the question, people in this country really
+imagine that secret societies are things of the past--articles to this
+effect appeared quite recently in two leading London newspapers--whilst
+practically nothing of any value has been written about them in our
+language during the last hundred years. Hence ideas that are
+commonplaces on the Continent here appear sensational and extravagant.
+The mind of the Englishman does not readily accept anything he cannot
+see or even sometimes anything he can see which is unprecedented in his
+experience, so that like the West American farmer, confronted for the
+first time by the sight of a giraffe, his impulse is to cry out angrily:
+"I don't believe it!"
+
+But whilst making all allowance for honest ignorance and incredulity, it
+is impossible not to recognize a certain method in the manner in which
+the cry of "obsession" or "bogey" is raised. For it will be noticed that
+people who specialize on other subjects are not described as "obsessed."
+We did not hear, for example, that the late Professor Einstein had
+Relativity "on the brain" because he wrote and lectured exclusively on
+this question, nor do we hear it suggested that Mr. Howard Carter is
+obsessed with the idea of Tutankhamen and that it would be well if he
+were to set out for the South Pole by way of a change. Again, all those
+who warn the world concerning eventualities they conceive to be a danger
+are not accused of creating bogeys. Thus although Lord Roberts was
+denounced as a scaremonger for urging the country to prepare for
+defence against a design openly avowed by Germany both in speech and
+print, and in 1921 the Duke of Northumberland was declared the victim of
+a delusion for believing in the existence of a plot against the British
+Empire which had been proclaimed in a thousand revolutionary harangues
+and pamphlets. People who, without bothering to produce a shred of
+documentary evidence, had sounded the alarm on the menace of "French
+Imperialism" and asserted that our former Allies were engaged in
+building a vast fleet of aeroplanes in order to attack our coasts. They
+were not held to be either scaremongers or insane. On the contrary,
+although some of these same people were proved by events to have been
+completely wrong in their prognostications at the beginning of the Great
+War, they are still regarded as oracles and sometimes even described as
+"thinking for half Europe."
+
+Another instance of this kind may be cited in the case of Mr. John
+Spargo, author of a small book entitled _The Jew and American Ideals_.
+On page 37 of this work Mr. Spargo in refuting the accusations brought
+against the Jews observes:
+
+ Belief in widespread conspiracies directed against individuals or
+ the state is probably the commonest form assumed by the human mind
+ when it loses its balance and its sense of proportion.
+
+Yet on page 6 Mr. Spargo declares that when visiting this country in
+September and October 1920:
+
+ I found in England great nation-wide organizations, obviously well
+ financed, devoted to the sinister purpose of creating anti-Jewish
+ feeling and sentiment. I found special articles in influential
+ newspapers devoted to the same evil purpose. I found at at least
+ one journal, obviously well financed again, exclusively devoted to
+ the fostering of suspicion, fear, and hatred against the Jew ...
+ and in the bookstores I discovered a whole library of books devoted
+ to the same end.
+
+It will be seen then that a belief in widespread conspiracies is not
+always to be regarded as a sign of loss of mental balance, even when
+these conspiracies remain completely invisible to the general public.
+For those of us who were in London during the period of Mr. Spargo's
+visit saw nothing of the things he here describes. Where, we ask, were
+these "great nation-wide organizations" striving to create anti-Jewish
+sentiments? What were their names? By whom were they led? It is true,
+however, that there were nation-wide organizations in existence here at
+this date instituted for the purpose of combating Bolshevism. Is
+anti-Bolshevism then synonymous with "anti-Semitism"?[10] This is the
+conclusion to which one is inevitably led. For it will be noticed that
+anyone who attempts to expose the secret forces behind the revolutionary
+movement, whether he mentions Jews in this connexion or even if he goes
+out of his way to exonerate them, will incur the hostility of the Jews
+and their friends and will still be described as "anti-Semite." The
+realization of this fact has led me particularly to include the Jews in
+the study of secret societies.
+
+The object of the present book is therefore to carry further the enquiry
+I began in _World Revolution_, by tracing the course of revolutionary
+ideas through secret societies from the earliest times, indicating the
+role of the Jews only where it is to be clearly detected, but not
+seeking to implicate them where good evidence is not forthcoming. For
+this reason I shall not base assertions on merely "anti-Semite" works,
+but principally on the writings of the Jews themselves. In the same way
+with regard to secret societies I shall rely as far as possible on the
+documents and admissions of their members, on which point I have been
+able to collect a great deal of fresh data entirely corroborating my
+former thesis. It should be understood that I do not propose to give a
+complete history of secret societies, but only of secret societies in
+their relation to the revolutionary movement. I shall therefore not
+attempt to describe the theories of occultism nor to enquire into the
+secrets of Freemasonry, but simply to relate the history of these
+systems in order to show the manner in which they have been utilized for
+a subversive purpose. If I then fail to convince the incredulous that
+secret forces of revolution exist, it will not be for want of evidence.
+
+Nesta H. Webster.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+PART I _THE PAST_
+
+ I. THE ANCIENT SECRET TRADITION
+ II. THE REVOLT AGAINST ISLAM
+ III. THE TEMPLARS
+ IV. THREE CENTURIES OF OCCULTISM
+ V. THE ORIGINS OF FREEMASONRY
+ VI. THE GRAND LODGE ERA
+ VII. GERMAN TEMPLARISM AND FRENCH ILLUMINISM
+VIII. THE JEWISH CABALISTS
+ IX. THE BAVARIAN ILLUMINATI
+ X. THE CLIMAX
+
+PART II _THE PRESENT_
+
+ XI. MODERN FREEMASONRY
+ XII. SECRET SOCIETIES IN ENGLAND
+XIII. OPEN SUBVERSIVE MOVEMENTS
+ XIV. PAN-GERMANISM
+ XV. THE REAL JEWISH PERIL
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+APPENDIX:
+ I. JEWISH EVIDENCE ON THE TALMUD
+ II. THE "PROTOCOLS" OF THE ELDERS OF ZION
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+_THE PAST_
+
+
+
+
+1
+
+THE ANCIENT SECRET TRADITION
+
+
+
+The East is the cradle of secret societies. For whatever end they may
+have been employed, the inspiration and methods of most of those
+mysterious associations which have played so important a part behind the
+scenes of the world's history will be found to have emanated from the
+lands where the first recorded acts of the great human drama were played
+out--Egypt, Babylon, Syria, and Persia. On the one hand Eastern
+mysticism, on the other Oriental love of intrigue, framed the systems
+later on to be transported to the West with results so tremendous and
+far-reaching.
+
+In the study of secret societies we have then a double line to
+follow--the course of associations enveloping themselves in secrecy for
+the pursuit of esoteric knowledge, and those using mystery and secrecy
+for an ulterior and, usually, a political purpose.
+
+But esotericism again presents a dual aspect. Here, as in every phase of
+earthly life, there is the _revers de la medaille_--white and black,
+light and darkness, the Heaven and Hell of the human mind. The quest for
+hidden knowledge may end with initiation into divine truths or into dark
+and abominable cults. Who knows with what forces he may be brought in
+contact beyond the veil? Initiation which leads to making use of
+spiritual forces, whether good or evil, is therefore capable of raising
+man to greater heights or of degrading him to lower depths than he could
+ever have reached by remaining on the purely physical plane. And when
+men thus unite themselves in associations, a collective force is
+generated which may exercise immense influence over the world around.
+Hence the importance of secret societies.
+
+Let it be said once and for all, secret societies have not always been
+formed for evil purposes. On the contrary, many have arisen from the
+highest aspirations of the human mind--the desire for a knowledge of
+eternal verities. The evil arising from such systems has usually
+consisted in the perversion of principles that once were pure and holy.
+If I do not insist further on this point, it is because a vast
+literature has already been devoted to the subject, so that it need only
+be touched on briefly here.
+
+Now, from the earliest times groups of Initiates or "Wise Men" have
+existed, claiming to be in possession of esoteric doctrines known as the
+"Mysteries," incapable of apprehension by the vulgar, and relating to
+the origin and end of man, the life of the soul after death, and the
+nature of God or the gods. It is this exclusive attitude which
+constitutes the essential difference between the Initiates of the
+ancient world and the great Teachers of religion with whom modern
+occultists seek to confound them. For whilst religious leaders such as
+Buddha and Mohammed sought for divine knowledge in order that they might
+impart it to the world, the Initiates believed that sacred mysteries
+should not be revealed to the profane but should remain exclusively in
+their own keeping, although the desire for initiation might spring from
+the highest aspiration, the gratification, whether real or imaginary, of
+this desire often led to spiritual arrogance and abominable tyranny,
+resulting in the fearful trials, the tortures physical and mental,
+ending even at times in death, to which the neophyte was subjected by
+his superiors.
+
+
+
+The Mysteries
+
+
+According to a theory current in occult and masonic circles, certain
+ideas were common to all the more important "Mysteries," thus forming a
+continuous tradition handed down through succeeding groups of Initiates
+of different ages and countries. Amongst these ideas is said to have
+been the conception of the unity of God. Whilst to the multitude it was
+deemed advisable to preach polytheism, since only in this manner could
+the plural aspects of the Divine be apprehended by the multitude, the
+Initiates themselves believed in the existence of one Supreme Being, the
+Creator of the Universe, pervading and governing all things, Le
+Plongeon, whose object is to show an affinity between the sacred
+Mysteries of the Mayas and of the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and Greeks,
+asserts that "The idea of a sole and omnipotent Deity, who created all
+things, seems to have been the universal belief in early ages, amongst
+all the nations that had reached a high degree of civilization. This was
+the doctrine of the Egyptian priests."[11] The same writer goes on to
+say that the "doctrine of a Supreme Deity composed of three parts
+distinct from each other, yet forming one, was universally prevalent
+among the civilized nations of America, Asia, and the Egyptians," and
+that the priests and learned men of Egypt, Chaldea, India, or China
+"...kept it a profound secret and imparted it only to a few select among
+those initiated in the sacred mysteries."[12] This view has been
+expressed by many other writers, yet lacks historical proof.
+
+That monotheism existed in Egypt before the days of Moses is, however,
+certain. Adolf Erman asserts that "even in early times the educated
+class" believed all the deities of the Egyptian religion to be identical
+and that "the priests did not shut their eyes to this doctrine, but
+strove to grasp the idea of the one God, divided into different persons
+by poesy and myth.... The priesthood, however, had not the courage to
+take the final step, to do away with those distinctions which they
+declared to be immaterial, and to adore the one God under the one
+name."[13] It was left to Amenhotep IV, later known as Ikhnaton, to
+proclaim this doctrine openly to the people. Professor Breasted has
+described the hymns of praise to the Sun God which Ikhnaton himself
+wrote on the walls of the Amarna tomb-chapels:
+
+ They show us the simplicity and beauty of the young king's faith in
+ the sole God. He had gained the belief that one God created not
+ only all the lower creatures but also all races of men, both
+ Egyptians and foreigners. Moreover, the king saw in his God a
+ kindly Father, who maintained all his creatures by his goodness....
+ In all the progress of men which we have followed through thousands
+ of years, no one had ever before caught such a vision of the great
+ Father of all.[14]
+
+May not the reason why Ikhnaton was later described as a "heretic" be
+that he violated the code of the priestly hierarchy by revealing this
+secret doctrine to the profane? Hence, too, perhaps the necessity in
+which the King found himself of suppressing the priesthood, which by
+persisting in its exclusive attitude kept what he perceived to be the
+truth from the minds of the people.
+
+The earliest European centre of the Mysteries appears to have been
+Greece, where the Eleusinian Mysteries existed at a very early date.
+Pythagoras, who was born in Samos about 582 B.C., spent some years in
+Egypt, where he was initiated into the Mysteries of Isis. After his
+return to Greece, Pythagoras is said to have been initiated into the
+Eleusinian Mysteries and attempted to found a secret society in Samos;
+but this proving unsuccessful, he journeyed on to Crotona in Italy,
+where he collected around him a great number of disciples and finally
+established his sect. This was divided into two classes of
+Initiates--the first admitted only into the exoteric doctrines of the
+master, with whom they were not allowed to speak until after a period of
+five years' probation; the second consisting of the real Initiates, to
+whom all the mysteries of the esoteric doctrines of Pythagoras were
+unfolded. This course of instruction, given, after the manner of the
+Egyptians, by means of images and symbols, began with geometrical
+science, in which Pythagoras during his stay in Egypt had become an
+adept, and led up finally to abstruse speculations concerning the
+transmigration of the soul and the nature of God, who was represented
+under the conception of a Universal Mind diffused through all things. It
+is, however, as the precursor of secret societies formed later in the
+West of Europe that the sect of Pythagoras enters into the scope of this
+book. Early masonic tradition traces Freemasonry partly to Pythagoras,
+who is said to have travelled in England, and there is certainly some
+reason to believe that his geometrical ideas entered into the system of
+the operative guilds of masons.
+
+
+
+The Jewish Cabala[15]
+
+
+According to Fabre d'Olivet, Moses, who "was learned in all the wisdom
+of the Egyptians," drew from the Egyptian Mysteries a part of the oral
+tradition which was handed down through the leaders of the
+Israelites.[16] That such an oral tradition, distinct from the written
+word embodied in the Pentateuch, did descend from Moses and that it was
+later committed to writing in the Talmud and the Cabala is the opinion
+of many Jewish writers.[17]
+
+The first form of the Talmud, called the Mischna, appeared in about the
+second or third century A.D.; a little later a commentary was added
+under the name of the Gemara. These two works compose the Jerusalem
+Talmud, which was revised in the third to the fifth centry[A]. This
+later edition was named the Babylonian Talmud and is the one now in use.
+
+The Talmud relates mainly to the affairs of everyday life--the laws of
+buying and selling, of making contracts--also to external religious
+observances, on all of which the most meticulous details are given. As a
+Jewish writer has expressed it:
+
+ ... the oddest rabbinical conceits are elaborated through many
+ volumes with the finest dialectic, and the most absurd questions
+ are discussed with the highest efforts of intellectual power; for
+ example, how many white hairs may a red cow have, and yet remain a
+ _red_ cow; what sort of scabs require this or that purification;
+ whether a louse or a flea may be killed on the Sabbath--the first
+ being allowed, while the second is a deadly sin; whether the
+ slaughter of an animal ought to be executed at the neck or the
+ tail; whether the high priest put on his shirt or his hose first;
+ whether the _Jabam_, that is, the brother of a man who died
+ childless, being required by law to marry the widow, is relieved
+ from his obligation if he falls off a roof and sticks in the
+ mire.[18]
+
+But it is in the Cabala, a Hebrew word signifying "reception," that is
+to say "a doctrine orally received," that the speculative and
+philosophical or rather the theosophical doctrines of Israel are to be
+found. These are contained in two books, the _Sepher Yetzirah_ and the
+_Zohar_.
+
+The _Sepher Yetzirah_, or Book of the Creation, is described by
+Edersheim as "a monologue on the part of Abraham, in which, by the
+contemplation of all that is around him, he ultimately arrives at the
+conclusion of the unity of God"[19]; but since this process is
+accomplished by an arrangement of the Divine Emanations under the name
+of the Ten Sephiroths, and in the permutation of numerals and of the
+letters of the Hebrew alphabet, it would certainly convey no such
+idea--nor probably indeed any idea at all--to the mind uninitiated into
+Cabalistic systems. The Sepher Yetzirah is in fact admittedly a work of
+extraordinary obscurity[20] and almost certainly of extreme antiquity.
+Monsieur Paul Vulliaud, in his exhaustive work on the Cabala recently
+published,[21] says that its date has been placed as early as the sixth
+century before Christ and as late as the tenth century A.D., but that it
+is at any rate older than the Talmud is shown by the fact that in the
+Talmud the Rabbis are described as studying it for magical purposes.[22]
+The Sepher Yetzirah is also said to be the work referred to in the Koran
+under the name of the "Book of Abraham."[23]
+
+The immense compilation known as the _Sepher-Ha-Zohar_, or Book of
+Light, is, however, of greater importance to the study of Cabalistic
+philosophy. According to the Zohar itself, the "Mysteries of Wisdom"
+were imparted to Adam by God whilst he was still in the Garden of Eden,
+in the form of a book delivered by the angel Razael. From Adam the book
+passed on to Seth, then to Enoch, to Noah, to Abraham, and later to
+Moses, one of its principal exponents.[24] Other Jewish writers declare,
+however, that Moses received it for the first time on Mount Sinai and
+communicated it to the Seventy Elders, by whom it was handed down to
+David and Solomon, then to Ezra and Nehemiah, and finally to the Rabbis
+of the early Christian era.[25]
+
+Until this date the Zohar had remained a purely oral tradition, but now
+for the first time it is said to have been written down by the disciples
+of Simon ben Jochai. The Talmud relates that for twelve years the Rabbi
+Simon and his son Eliezer concealed themselves in a cavern, where,
+sitting in the sand up to their necks, they meditated on the sacred law
+and were frequently visited by the prophet Elias.[26] In this way,
+Jewish legend adds, the great book of the Zohar was composed and
+committed to writing by the Rabbi's son Eliezer and his secretary the
+Rabbi Abba.[27]
+
+The first date at which the Zohar is definitely known to have appeared
+is the end of the thirteenth century, when it was committed to writing
+by a Spanish Jew, Moses de Leon, who, according to Dr. Ginsburg, said he
+had discovered and reproduced the original document of Simon ben Jochai;
+his wife and daughter, however, declared that he had composed it all
+himself.[28] Which is the truth? Jewish opinion is strongly divided on
+this question, one body maintaining that the Zohar is the comparatively
+modern work of Moses de Leon, the other declaring it to be of extreme
+antiquity. M. Vulliaud, who has collated all these views in the course
+of some fifty pages, shows that although the name Zohar might have
+originated with Moses de Leon, the ideas it embodied were far older than
+the thirteenth century. How, he asks pertinently, would it have been
+possible for the Rabbis of the Middle Ages to have been deceived into
+accepting as an ancient document a work that was of completely modern
+origin?[29] Obviously the Zohar was not the composition of Moses de
+Leon, but a compilation made by him from various documents dating from
+very early times. Moreover, as M. Vulliaud goes on to explain, those who
+deny its antiquity are the anti-Cabalists, headed by Graetz, whose
+object is to prove the Cabala to be at variance with orthodox Judaism.
+Theodore Reinach goes so far as to declare the Cabala to be "a subtle
+poison which enters into the veins of Judaism and wholly infests it";
+Salomon Reinach calls it "one of the worst aberrations of the human
+mind."[30] This view, many a student of the Cabala will hardly dispute,
+but to say that it is foreign to Judaism is another matter. The fact is
+that the main ideas of the Zohar find confirmation in the Talmud. As the
+_Jewish Encyclopaedia_ observes, "the Cabala is not really in opposition
+to the Talmud," and "many Talmudic Jews have supported and contributed
+to it."[31] Adolphe Franck does not hesitate to describe it as "the
+heart and life of Judaism."[32] "The greater number of the most eminent
+Rabbis of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries believed firmly in
+the sacredness of the Zohar and the infallibility of its teaching."[33]
+
+The question of the antiquity of the Cabala is therefore in reality
+largely a matter of names. That a mystical tradition existed amongst the
+Jews from remote antiquity will hardly be denied by anyone[34]; it is
+therefore, as M. Vulliaud observes, "only a matter of knowing at what
+moment Jewish mysticism took the name of Cabala."[35] Edersheim asserts
+that--
+
+ It is undeniable that, already at the time of Jesus Christ, there
+ existed an assemblage of doctrines and speculations that were
+ carefully concealed from the multitude. They were not even revealed
+ to ordinary scholars, for fear of leading them towards heretical
+ ideas. This kind bore the name of Kabbalah, and as the term (of
+ Kabbalah, to receive, transmit) indicates, it represented the
+ spiritual traditions transmitted from the earliest ages, although
+ mingled in the course of time with impure or foreign elements.[36]
+
+Is the Cabala, then, as Gougenot des Mousseaux asserts, older than the
+Jewish race, a legacy handed down from the first patriarchs of the
+world?[37] We must admit this hypothesis to be incapable of proof, yet
+it is one that has found so much favour with students of occult
+traditions that it cannot be ignored. The Jewish Cabala itself supports
+it by tracing its descent from the patriarchs--Adam, Noah, Enoch, and
+Abraham--who lived before the Jews as a separate race came into
+existence. Eliphas Levi accepts this genealogy, and relates that "the
+Holy Cabala" was the tradition of the children of Seth carried out of
+Chaldea by Abraham, who was "the inheritor of the secrets of Enoch and
+the father of initiation in Israel."[38]
+
+According to this theory, which we find again propounded by the American
+Freemason, Dr. Mackey,[39] there was, besides the divine Cabala of the
+children of Seth, the magical Cabala of the children of Cain, which
+descended to the Sabeists, or star-worshippers, of Chaldea, adepts in
+astrology and necromancy. Sorcery, as we know, had been practised by the
+Canaanites before the occupation of Palestine by the Israelites; Egypt
+India, and Greece also had their soothsayers and diviners. In spite of
+the imprecations against sorcery contained in the law of Moses, the
+Jews, disregarding these warnings, caught the contagion and mingled the
+sacred tradition they had inherited with magical ideas partly borrowed
+from other races and partly of their own devising. At the same time the
+speculative side of the Jewish Cabala borrowed from the philosophy of
+the Persian Magi, of the Neo-Platonists,[40] and of the
+Neo-Pythagoreans. There is, then, some justification for the
+anti-Cabalists' contention that what we know to-day as the Cabala is not
+of purely Jewish origin.
+
+Gougenot des Mousseaux, who had made a profound study of occultism,
+asserts that there were therefore two Cabalas: the ancient sacred
+tradition handed down from the first patriarchs of the human race; and
+the evil Cabala, wherein this sacred tradition was mingled by the Rabbis
+with barbaric superstitions, combined with their own imaginings and
+henceforth marked with their seal.[41] This view also finds expression
+in the remarkable work of the converted Jew Drach, who refers to--
+
+ The ancient and true Cabala, which ... we distinguish from the
+ modern Cabala, false, condemnable, and condemned by the Holy See,
+ the work of the Rabbis, who have also falsified and perverted the
+ Talmudic tradition. The doctors of the Synagogue trace it back to
+ Moses, whilst at the same time admitting that the principal truths
+ it contains were those known by revelation to the first patriarchs
+ of the world.[42]
+
+Further on Drach quotes the statement of Sixtus of Sienna, another
+converted Jew and a Dominican, protected by Pius V:
+
+ Since by the decree of the Holy Roman Inquisition all books
+ appertaining to the Cabala have lately been condemned, one must
+ know that the Cabala is double; that one is true, the other false.
+ The true and pious one is that which ... elucidates the secret
+ mysteries of the holy law according to the principle of anagogy
+ (i.e. figurative interpretation). This Cabala therefore the Church
+ has never condemned. The false and impious Cabala is a certain
+ mendacious kind of Jewish tradition, full of innumerable vanities
+ and falsehoods, differing but little from necromancy. This kind of
+ superstition, therefore, improperly called Cabala, the Church
+ within the last few years has deservedly condemned.[43]
+
+The modern Jewish Cabala presents a dual aspect--theoretical and
+practical; the former concerned with theosophical speculations, the
+latter with magical practices. It would be impossible here to give an
+idea of Cabalistic theosophy with its extraordinary imaginings on the
+Sephiroths, the attributes and functions of good and bad angels,
+dissertations on the nature of demons, and minute details on the
+appearance of God under the name of the Ancient of Ancients, from whose
+head 400,000 worlds receive the light. "The length of this face from the
+top of the head is three hundred and seventy times ten thousand worlds.
+It is called the 'Long Face,' for such is the name of the Ancient of
+Ancients."[44] The description of the hair and beard alone belonging to
+this gigantic countenance occupies a large place in the Zoharic
+treatise, Idra Raba.[45]
+
+According to the Cabala, every letter in the Scriptures contains a
+mystery only to be solved by the initiated.[46] By means of this system
+of interpretation passages of the Old Testament are shown to bear
+meanings totally unapparent to the ordinary reader. Thus the Zohar
+explains that Noah was lamed for life by the bite of a lion whilst he
+was in the ark,[47] the adventures of Jonah inside the whale are related
+with an extraordinary wealth of imagination,[48] whilst the beautiful
+story of Elisha and the Shunnamite woman is travestied in the most
+grotesque manner.[49]
+
+In the practical Cabala this method of "decoding" is reduced to a
+theurgic or magical system in which the healing of diseases plays an
+important part and is effected by means of the mystical arrangement of
+numbers and letters, by the pronunciation of the Ineffable Name, by the
+use of amulets and talismans, or by compounds supposed to contain
+certain occult properties.
+
+All these ideas derived from very ancient cults; even the art of working
+miracles by the use of the Divine Name, which after the appropriation of
+the Cabala by the Jews became the particular practice of Jewish
+miracle-workers, appears to have originated in Chaldea.[50] Nor can the
+insistence on the Chosen People theory, which forms the basis of all
+Talmudic and Cabalistic writings, be regarded as of purely Jewish
+origin; the ancient Egyptians likewise believed themselves to be "the
+peculiar people specially loved by the gods."[51] But in the hands of
+the Jews this belief became a pretension to the exclusive enjoyment of
+divine favour. According to the Zohar, "all Israelites will have a part
+in the future world,"[52] and on arrival there will not be handed over
+like the _goyim_ (or non-Jewish races) to the hands of the angel Douma
+and sent down to Hell.[53] Indeed the _goyim_ are even denied human
+attributes. Thus the Zohar again explains that the words of the
+Scripture "Jehovah Elohim made man" mean that He made Israel.[54] The
+seventeenth-century Rabbinical treatise Emek ha Melek observes: "Our
+Rabbis of blessed memory have said: 'Ye Jews are men because of the soul
+ye have from the Supreme Man (i.e. God). But the nations of the world
+are not styled men because they have not, from the Holy and Supreme Man,
+the Neschama (or glorious soul), but they have the Nephesch (soul) from
+Adam Belial, that is the malicious and unnecessary man, called Sammael,
+the Supreme Devil.'"[55]
+
+In conformity with this exclusive attitude towards the rest of the human
+race, the Messianic idea which forms the dominating theme of the Cabala
+is made to serve purely Jewish interests. Yet in its origins this idea
+was possibly not Jewish. It is said by believers in an ancient secret
+tradition common to other races besides the Jews, that a part of this
+tradition related to a past Golden Age when man was free from care and
+evil non-existent, to the subsequent fall of Man and the loss of this
+primitive felicity, and finally to a revelation received from Heaven
+foretelling the reparation of this loss and the coming of a Redeemer who
+should save the world and restore the Golden Age. According to Drach:
+
+ The tradition of a Man-God who should present Himself as the
+ teacher and liberator of the fallen human race was constantly
+ taught amongst all the enlightened nations of the globe. _Vetus et
+ constans opinio_, as Suetonius says. It is of all times and of all
+ places.[56]
+
+And Drach goes on to quote the evidence of Volney, who had travelled in
+the East and declared that--
+
+ The sacred and mythological traditions of earlier times had spread
+ throughout all Asia the belief in a great Mediator who was to come,
+ of a future Saviour, King, God, Conqueror, and Legislator who would
+ bring back the Golden Age to earth and deliver men from the empire
+ of evil.[57]
+
+All that can be said with any degree of certainty with regard to this
+belief is that it did exist amongst the Zoroastrians of Persia as well
+as amongst the Jews. D'Herbelot, quoting Abulfaraj, shows that five
+hundred years before Christ, Zerdascht, the leader of the Zoroastrians,
+predicted the coming of the Messiah, at whose birth a star would appear.
+He also told his disciples that the Messiah would be born of a virgin,
+that they would be the first to hear of Him, and that they should bring
+Him gifts.[58]
+
+Drach believes that this tradition was taught in the ancient
+synagogue,[59] thus explaining the words of St. Paul that unto the Jews
+"were committed the oracles of God"[60]:
+
+ This oral doctrine, which is the Cabala, had for its object the
+ most sublime truths of the Faith which it brought back incessantly
+ to the promised Redeemer, the foundation of the whole system of the
+ ancient tradition.[61]
+
+Drach further asserts that the doctrine of the Trinity formed a part of
+this tradition:
+
+ Whoever has familiarized himself with that which was taught by the
+ ancient doctors of the Synagogue, particularly those who lived
+ before the coming of the Saviour, knows that the Trinity in one God
+ was a truth admitted amongst them from the earliest times.[62]
+
+M. Vulliaud points out that Graetz admits the existence of this idea in
+the Zohar: "It even taught certain doctrines which appeared favourable
+to the Christian dogma of the Trinity!" And again: "It is incontestable
+that the Zohar makes allusions to the beliefs in the Trinity and the
+Incarnation."[63] M. Vulliaud adds: "The idea of the Trinity must
+therefore play an important part in the Cabala, since it has been
+possible to affirm that 'the characteristic of the Zohar and its
+particular conception is its attachment to the principle of the
+Trinity,'"[64] and further quotes Edersheim as saying that "a great
+part of the explanation given in the writings of the Cabalists resembles
+in a surprising manner the highest truths of Christianity."[65] It
+would appear, then, that certain remnants of the ancient secret
+tradition lingered on in the Cabala. The _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, perhaps
+unintentionally, endorses this opinion, since in deriding the
+sixteenth-century Christian Cabalists for asserting that the Cabala
+contained traces of Christianity, it goes on to say that what appears to
+be Christian in the Cabala is only ancient esoteric doctrine.[66] Here,
+then, we have it on the authority of modern Jewish scholars that the
+ancient secret tradition was in harmony with Christian teaching. But in
+the teaching of the later synagogue the philosophy of the earlier sages
+was narrowed down to suit the exclusive system of the Jewish hierarchy,
+and the ancient hope of a Redeemer who should restore Man to the state
+of felicity he had lost at the Fall was transformed into the idea of
+salvation for the Jews alone[67] under the aegis of a triumphant and even
+an avenging Messiah.[68] It is this Messianic dream perpetuated in the
+modern Cabala which nineteen hundred years ago the advent of Christ on
+earth came to disturb.
+
+
+
+The Coming of the Redeemer
+
+
+The fact that many Christian doctrines, such as the conception of a
+Trinity, the miraculous birth and murder of a Deity, had found a place
+in earlier religions has frequently been used as an argument to show
+that the story of Christ was merely a new version of various ancient
+legends, those of Attis, Adonis, or of Osiris, and that consequently the
+Christian religion is founded on a myth. The answer to this is that the
+existence of Christ on earth is an historic fact which no serious
+authority has ever denied. The attempts of such writers as Drews and
+J.M. Robertson to establish the theory of the "Christ-Myth," which find
+an echo in the utterances of Socialist orators,[69] have been met with
+so much able criticism as to need no further refutation. Sir James
+Frazer, who will certainly not be accused of bigoted orthodoxy, observes
+in this connexion:
+
+ The doubts which have been cast on the historical reality of Jesus
+ are, in my judgement, unworthy of serious attention.... To dissolve
+ the founder of Christianity into a myth, as some would do, is
+ hardly less absurd than it would be to do the same for Mohammed,
+ Luther, and Calvin.[70]
+
+May not the fact that certain circumstances in the life of Christ were
+foreshadowed by earlier religions indicate, as Eliphas Levi observes,
+that the ancients had an intuition of Christian mysteries?[71]
+
+To those therefore who had adhered to the ancient tradition, Christ
+appeared as the fulfilment of a prophecy as old as the world. Thus the
+wise men came from afar to worship the Babe of Bethlehem, and when they
+saw His star in the East they rejoiced with exceeding great joy. In
+Christ they hailed not only Him who was born King of the Jews, but the
+Saviour of the whole human race.[72]
+
+In the light of this great hope, that wondrous night in Bethlehem is
+seen in all its sublimity. Throughout the ages the seers had looked for
+the coming of the Redeemer, and lo! He was here; but it was not to the
+mighty in Israel, to the High Priests and the Scribes, that His birth
+was announced, but to humble shepherds watching their flocks by night.
+And these men of simple faith, hearing from the angels "the good tidings
+of great joy" that a Saviour, "Christ the Lord" was born, went with
+haste to see the babe lying in the manger, and returned "glorifying and
+praising God." So also to the devout in Israel, to Simeon and to Anna
+the prophetess, the great event appeared in its universal significance,
+and Simeon, departing in peace, knew that his eyes had seen the
+salvation that was to be "a light to lighten the Gentiles" as well as
+the glory of the people of Israel.
+
+But to the Jews, in whose hands the ancient tradition had been turned to
+the exclusive advantage of the Jewish race, to the Rabbis, who had,
+moreover, constituted themselves the sole guardians within this nation
+of the said tradition, the manner of its fulfilment was necessarily
+abhorrent. Instead of a resplendent Messiah who should be presented by
+them to the people, a Saviour was born amongst the people themselves and
+brought to Jerusalem to be presented to the Lord; a Saviour moreover
+who, as time went on, imparted His divine message to the poor and humble
+and declared that His Kingdom was not of this world. This was clearly
+what Mary meant when she said that God had "scattered the proud in the
+imagination of their hearts," that He had "put down the mighty from
+their seats, and exalted them of low degree." Christ was therefore
+doubly hateful to the Jewish hierarchy in that He attacked the
+privilege of the race to which they belonged by throwing open the door
+to all mankind, and the privilege of the caste to which they belonged by
+revealing sacred doctrines to the profane and destroying their claim to
+exclusive knowledge.
+
+Unless viewed from this aspect, neither the antagonism displayed by the
+Scribes and Pharisees towards our Lord nor the denunciations He uttered
+against them can be properly understood. "Woe unto you, Lawyers! for ye
+have taken away the key of knowledge: ye entered not in yourselves, and
+them that were entering in ye hindered.... Woe unto you, Scribes and
+Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men:
+tor ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are
+entering to go in." What did Christ mean by the key of knowledge?
+Clearly the sacred tradition which, as Drach explains, foreshadowed the
+doctrines of Christianity.[73] It was the Rabbis who perverted that
+tradition, and thus "the guilt of these perfidious Doctors consisted in
+their concealing from the people the traditional explanation of the
+sacred books by means of which they would have been able to recognize
+the Messiah in the person of Jesus Christ."[74] Many of the people,
+however, did recognize Him; indeed, the multitude acclaimed Him,
+spreading their garments before Him and crying, "Hosanna to the Son of
+David! Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord!" Writers who
+have cited the choice of Barabbas in the place of Christ as an instance
+of misguided popular judgement, overlook the fact that this choice was
+not spontaneous; it was the Chief Priests who delivered Christ "from
+envy" and who "moved the people that Pilate should rather release unto
+them Barabbas." _Then_ the people obediently cried out, "Crucify Him!"
+
+So also it was the Rabbis who, after hiding from the people the meaning
+of the sacred tradition at the moment of its fulfilment, afterwards
+poisoned that same stream for future generations. Abominable calumnies
+on Christ and Christianity occur not only in the Cabala but in the
+earlier editions of the Talmud. In these, says Barclay--
+
+ Our Lord and Saviour is "that one," "such a one," "a fool," "the
+ leper," "the deceiver of Israel," etc. Efforts are made to prove
+ that He is the son of Joseph Pandira before his marriage with Mary.
+ His miracles are attributed to sorcery, the secret of which He
+ brought in a slit in His flesh out of Egypt. He is said to have
+ been first stoned and then hanged on the eve of the Passover. His
+ disciples are called heretics and opprobrious names. They are
+ accused of immoral practices, and the New Testament is called a
+ sinful book. The references to these subjects manifest the most
+ bitter aversion and hatred.[75]
+
+One might look in vain for passages such as these in English or French
+translations of the Talmud, for the reason that no complete translation
+exists in these languages. This fact is of great significance. Whilst
+the sacred books of every other important religion have been rendered
+into our own tongue and are open to everyone to study, the book that
+forms the foundation of modern Judaism is closed to the general public.
+We can read English translations of the Koran, of the Dhammapada, of the
+Sutta Nipata, of the Zend Avesta, of the Shu King, of the Laws of Manu,
+of the Bhagavadgita, but we cannot read the Talmud. In the long series
+of Sacred Books of the East the Talmud finds no place. All that is
+accessible to the ordinary reader consists, on one hand, in expurgated
+versions or judicious selections by Jewish and pro-Jewish compilers,
+and, on the other hand, in "anti-Semitic" publications on which it would
+be dangerous to place reliance. The principal English translation by
+Rodkinson is very incomplete, and the folios are nowhere indicated, so
+that it is impossible to look up a passage.[76] The French translation
+by Jean de Pauly[B] professes to present the entire text of the Venetian
+Talmud of 1520, but it does nothing of the kind.[77] The translator, in
+the Preface, in fact admits that he has left out "sterile discussions"
+and has throughout attempted to tone down "the brutality of certain
+expressions which offend our ears." This of course affords him infinite
+latitude, so that all passages likely to prove displeasing to the
+"Hebraisants," to whom his work is particularly dedicated, are
+discreetly expunged. Jean de Pauly's translation of the Cabala appears,
+however, to be complete.[78] But a fair and honest rendering of the
+whole Talmud into English or French still remains to be made.
+
+Moreover, even the Hebrew scholar is obliged to exercise some
+discrimination if he desires to consult the Talmud in its original
+form. For by the sixteenth century, when the study of Hebrew became
+general amongst Christians, the antisocial and anti-Christian tendencies
+of the Talmud attracted the attention of the Censor, and in the Bale
+Talmud of 1581 the most obnoxious passages and the entire treatise
+Abodah Zara were suppressed.[79]
+
+In the Cracow edition of 1604 that followed, these passages were
+restored by the Jews, a proceeding which aroused so much indignation
+amongst Christian students of Hebrew that the Jews became alarmed.
+Accordingly a Jewish synod, assembled in Poland in 1631, ordered the
+offending passages to be expunged again, but--according to Drach--to be
+replaced by circles which the Rabbis were to fill in orally when giving
+instruction to young Jews.[80] After that date the Talmud was for a time
+carefully bowdlerized, so that in order to discover its original form it
+is advisable to go back to the Venetian Talmud of 1520 before any
+omissions were made, or to consult a modern edition. For now that the
+Jews no longer fear the Christians, these passages are all said to have
+been replaced and no attempt is made, as in the Middle Ages, to prove
+that they do not refer to the Founder of Christianity.[81]
+
+Thus the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_ admits that Jewish legends concerning
+Jesus are found in the Talmud and Midrash and in "the life of Jesus
+(Toledot Yeshu) that originated in the Middle Ages. It is the tendency
+of all these sources to belittle the person of Jesus by ascribing to Him
+illegitimate birth, magic, and a shameful death."[82]
+
+The last work mentioned, the _Toledot Yeshu_, or the _Sepher Toldos
+Jeschu_, described here as originating in the Middle Ages, probably
+belongs in reality to a much earlier period. Eliphas Levi asserts that
+"the Sepher Toldos, to which the Jews attribute a great antiquity and
+which they hid from the Christians with such precautions that this book
+was for a long while unfindable, is quoted for the first time by
+Raymond Martin of the Order of the Preaching Brothers towards the end
+of the thirteenth century.... This book was evidently written by a Rabbi
+initiated into the mysteries of the Cabala."[83] Whether then the
+Toledot Yeshu had existed for many centuries before it was first brought
+to light or whether it was a collection of Jewish traditions woven into
+a coherent narrative by a thirteenth-century Rabbi, the ideas it
+contains can be traced back at least as far as the second century of the
+Christian era. Origen, who in the middle of the third century wrote his
+reply to the attack of Celsus on Christianity, refers to a scandalous
+story closely resembling the Toledot Yeshu, which Celsus, who lived
+towards the end of the second century, had quoted on the authority of a
+Jew.[84] It is evident, therefore, that the legend it contains had long
+been current in Jewish circles, but the book itself did not come into
+the hands of Christians until it was translated into Latin by Raymond
+Martin. Later on Luther summarized it in German under the name of _Schem
+Hamphorasch_; Wagenseil in 1681 and Huldrich in 1705 published Latin
+translations.[85] It is also to be found in French in Gustave Brunei's
+_Evangiles Apocryphes_.
+
+However repugnant it is to transcribe any portion of this blasphemous
+work, its main outline must be given here in order to trace the
+subsequent course of the anti-Christian secret tradition in which, as we
+shall see, it has been perpetuated up to our own day. Briefly, then, the
+Toledot Yeshu relates with the most indecent details that Miriam, a
+hairdresser of Bethlehem,[86] affianced to a young man named Jochanan,
+was seduced by a libertine, Joseph Panther or Pandira, and gave birth to
+a son whom she named Johosuah or Jeschu. According to the Talmudic
+authors of the Sota and the Sanhedrim, Jeschu was taken during his
+boyhood to Egypt, where he was initiated into the secret doctrines of
+the priests, and on his return to Palestine gave himself up to the
+practice of magic.[87] The Toledot Yeshu, however, goes on to say that
+on reaching manhood Jeschu learnt the secret of his illegitimacy, on
+account of which he was driven out of the Synagogue and took refuge for
+a time in Galilee. Now, there was in the Temple a stone on which was
+engraved the Tetragrammaton or Schem Hamphorasch, that is to say, the
+Ineffable Name of God; this stone had been found by King David when the
+foundations of the Temple were being prepared and was deposited by him
+in the Holy of Holies. Jeschu, knowing this, came from Galilee and,
+penetrating into the Holy of Holies, read the Ineffable Name, which he
+transcribed on to a piece of parchment and concealed in an incision
+under his skin. By this means he was able to work miracles and to
+persuade the people that he was the son of God foretold by Isaiah. With
+the aid of Judas, the Sages of the Synagogue succeeded in capturing
+Jeschu, who was then led before the Great and Little Sanhedrim, by whom
+he was condemned to be stoned to death and finally hanged.
+
+Such is the story of Christ according to the Jewish Cabalists, which
+should be compared not only with the Christian tradition but with that
+of the Moslems. It is perhaps not sufficiently known that the Koran,
+whilst denying the divinity of Christ and also the fact of His
+crucifixion,[88] nevertheless indignantly denounces the infamous legends
+concerning Him perpetuated by the Jews, and confirms in beautiful
+language the story of the Annunciation and the doctrine of the
+Miraculous Conception.[89] "Remember when the angels said, 'O Mary!
+verily hath God chosen thee and purified thee, and chosen thee above the
+women of the worlds.' ... Remember when the angels said, 'O Mary! verily
+God announceth to thee the Word from Him: His name shall be Messiah,
+Jesus the son of Mary, illustrious in this world, and in the next, and
+one of those who have near access to God.'"
+
+The Mother of Jesus is shown to have been pure and to have "kept her
+maidenhood"[90]; it was the Jews who spoke against Mary "a grievous
+calumny."[91] Jesus Himself is described as "strengthened with the Holy
+Spirit," and the Jews are reproached for rejecting "the Apostle of
+God,"[92] to whom was given "the Evangel with its guidance and light
+confirmatory of the preceding Law."[93]
+
+Thus during the centuries that saw the birth of Christianity, although
+other non-Christian forces arrayed themselves against the new faith, it
+was left to the Jews to inaugurate a campaign of vilification against
+the person of its Founder, whom Moslems to this day revere as one of the
+great teachers of the world.[94]
+
+
+
+The Essenes
+
+
+A subtler device for discrediting Christianity and undermining belief in
+the divine character of our Lord has been adopted by modern writers,
+principally Jewish, who set out to prove that He belonged to the sect of
+the Essenes, a community of ascetics holding all goods in common, which
+had existed in Palestine before the birth of Christ. Thus the Jewish
+historian Graetz declares that Jesus simply appropriated to himself the
+essential features of Essenism, and that primitive Christianity was
+"nothing but an offshoot of Essenism."[95] The Christian Jew Dr.
+Ginsburg partially endorses this view in a small pamphlet[96] containing
+most of the evidence that has been brought forward on the subject, and
+himself expresses the opinion that "it will hardly be doubted that our
+Saviour Himself belonged to this holy brotherhood."[97] So after
+representing Christ as a magician in the Toledot Yeshu and the Talmud,
+Jewish tradition seeks to explain His miraculous works as those of a
+mere healer--an idea that we shall find descending right through the
+secret societies to this day. Of course if this were true, if the
+miracles of Christ were simply due to a knowledge of natural laws and
+His doctrines were the outcome of a sect, the whole theory of His divine
+power and mission falls to the ground. This is why it is essential to
+expose the fallacies and even the bad faith on which the attempt to
+identify Him with the Essenes is based.
+
+Now, we have only to study the Gospels carefully in order to realize
+that the teachings of Christ were totally different from those peculiar
+to the Essenes.[98] Christ did not live in a fraternity, but, as Dr.
+Ginsburg himself points out, associated with publicans and sinners. The
+Essenes did not frequent the Temple and Christ was there frequently. The
+Essenes disapproved of wine and marriage, whilst Christ sanctioned
+marriage by His presence at the wedding of Cana in Galilee and there
+turned water into wine. A further point, the most conclusive of all, Dr.
+Ginsburg ignores, namely, that one of the principal traits of the
+Essenes which distinguished them from the other Jewish sects of their
+day was their disapproval of ointment, which they regarded as defiling,
+whilst Christ not only commended the woman who brought the precious jar
+of ointment, but reproached Simon for the omission: "My head with oil
+thou didst not anoint: but this woman hath anointed My feet with
+ointment." It is obvious that if Christ had been an Essene but had
+departed from His usual custom on this occasion out of deference to the
+woman's feelings, he would have understood why Simon had not offered Him
+the same attention, and at any rate Simon would have excused himself on
+these grounds. Further, if His disciples had been Essenes, would they
+not have protested against this violation of their principles, instead
+of merely objecting that the ointment was of too costly a kind?
+
+But it is in attributing to Christ the Communistic doctrines of the
+Essenes that Dr. Ginsburg's conclusions are the most misleading--a point
+of particular importance in view of the fact that it is on this false
+hypothesis that so-called "Christian Socialism" has been built up. "The
+Essenes," he writes, "had all things in common, and appointed one of the
+brethren as steward to manage the common bag; so the primitive
+Christians (Acts ii. 44, 45, iv. 32-4; John xii. 6, xiii. 29)." It is
+perfectly true that, as the first reference to the Acts testifies, some
+of the primitive Christians after the death of Christ formed themselves
+into a body having all things in common, but there is not the slightest
+evidence that Christ and His disciples followed this principle. The
+solitary passages in the Gospel of St. John, which are all that Dr.
+Ginsburg can quote in support of this contention, may have referred to
+an alms-bag or a fund for certain expenses, not to a common pool of all
+monetary wealth. Still less is there any evidence that Christ advocated
+Communism to the world in general. When the young man having great
+possessions asked what he should do to inherit eternal life, Christ told
+him to follow the commandments, but on the young man asking what more he
+could do, answered: "If thou wilt be perfect go and sell that thou hast
+and give to the poor." Renunciation--but not the pooling--of all wealth
+was thus a counsel of perfection for the few who desired to devote their
+lives to God, as monks and nuns have always done, and bore no relation
+to the Communistic system of the Essenes.
+
+Dr. Ginsburg goes on to say: "Essenism put all its members on the same
+level, forbidding the exercise of authority of one over the other and
+enjoining mutual service; so Christ (Matt. xx. 25-8; Mark ix. 35-7, x.
+42-5). Essenism commanded its disciples to call no man master upon the
+earth; so Christ (Matt. xxiii. 8-10)." As a matter of fact, Christ
+strongly upheld the exercise of authority, not only in the oft-quoted
+passage, "Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's," but in His
+approval of the Centurion's speech: "I am a man under authority, having
+soldiers under me: and I say to this man, Go, and he goeth; and to
+another, Come, and he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth
+it." Everywhere Christ commends the faithful servant and enjoins
+obedience to masters. If we look up the reference to the Gospel of St.
+Matthew where Dr. Ginsburg says that Christ commanded His disciples to
+call no man master on earth, we shall find that he has not only
+perverted the sense of the passage but reversed the order of the words,
+which, following on a denunciation of the Jewish Rabbis, runs thus: "But
+be not ye called Rabbi: for one is your master, even Christ, and all ye
+are brethren.... Neither be ye called masters: for one is your master,
+even Christ. But he that is greatest among you shall be your servant."
+The apostles were therefore, never ordered to call no man master, but
+not to be called master themselves. Moreover, if we refer to the Greek
+text, we shall see that this was meant in a spiritual and not a social
+sense. The word for "master" here given is in the first verse [Greek:
+didaskalos], i.e. teacher, in the second, [Greek: kathegetes] literally
+guide, and the word is servant is [Greek: diakonos]. When masters and
+servants in the social sense are referred to in the Gospels, the word
+employed for master is [Greek: kurios] and for servant [Greek: doulos].
+Dr. Ginsburg should have been aware of this distinction and that the
+passage in question had therefore no bearing on his argument. As a
+matter of fact it would appear that some of the apostles kept servants,
+since Christ commends them for exacting strict attention to duty:
+
+ Which of you, having a servant ploughing or feeding cattle, will
+ say unto him by and by, when he is come from the field, Go and sit
+ down to meat? And will not rather say unto him, Make ready
+ wherewith I may sup, and gird thyself, and serve me, till I have
+ eaten and drunken; and afterwards thou shalt eat and drink? Doth he
+ thank that servant because he did the things that were commanded to
+ him? I trow not.[99]
+
+This passage would alone suffice to show that Christ and His apostles
+did not inhabit communities where all were equal, but followed the usual
+practices of the social system under which they lived, though adopting
+certain rules, such as taking only one garment and carrying no money
+when they went on journeys. Those resemblances between the teaching of
+the Essenes and the Sermon on the Mount which Dr. Ginsburg indicates
+refer not to the customs of a sect, but to general precepts for human
+conduct--humility, meekness, charity, and so forth.
+
+At the same time it is clear that if the Essenes in general conformed to
+some of the principles laid down by Christ, certain of their doctrines
+were completely at variance with those of Christ and of primitive
+Christians, in particular their custom of praying to the rising sun and
+their disbelief in the resurrection of the body.[100] St. Paul denounces
+asceticism, the cardinal doctrine of the Essenes, in unmeasured terms,
+warning the brethren that "in the latter times some shall depart from
+the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils, ...
+forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God
+hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and
+know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be
+refused, if it be received with thanksgiving ... If thou put the
+brethren in remembrance of these things, thou shalt be a good minister
+of Jesus Christ."
+
+This would suggest that certain Essenean ideas had crept into Christian
+communities and were regarded by those who remembered Christ's true
+teaching as a dangerous perversion.
+
+The Essenes were therefore not Christians, but a secret society,
+practising four degrees of initiation, and bound by terrible oaths not
+to divulge the sacred mysteries confided to them. And what were those
+mysteries but those of the Jewish secret tradition which we now know as
+the Cabala? Dr. Ginsburg throws an important light on Essenism when, in
+one passage alone, he refers to the obligation of the Essenes "not to
+divulge the secret doctrines to anyone, ... carefully to preserve the
+books belonging to their sect and the names of the angels or the
+mysteries connected with the Tetragrammaton and the other names of God
+and the angels, comprised in the theosophy as well as with the cosmogony
+which also played so important a part among the Jewish mystics and the
+Kabbalists."[101] The truth is clearly that the Essenes were Cabalists,
+though doubtless Cabalists of a superior kind. The Cabal they possessed
+very possibly descended from pre-Christian times and had remained
+uncontaminated by the anti-Christian strain introduced into it by the
+Rabbis after the death of Christ.[102]
+
+The Essenes are of importance to the subject of this book as the first
+of the secret societies from which a direct line of tradition can be
+traced up to the present day. But if in this peaceful community no
+actually anti-Christian influence is to be discerned, the same cannot be
+said of the succeeding pseudo-Christian sects which, whilst professing
+Christianity, mingled with Christian doctrines the poison of the
+perverted Cabala, main source of the errors which henceforth rent the
+Christian Church in twain.
+
+
+
+The Gnostics
+
+
+The first school of thought to create a schism in Christianity was the
+collection of sects known under the generic name of Gnosticism. In its
+purer forms Gnosticism aimed at supplementing faith by knowledge of
+eternal verities and at giving a wider meaning to Christianity by
+linking it up with earlier faiths. "The belief that the divinity had
+been manifested in the religious institutions of all nations"[103] thus
+led to the conception of a sort of universal religion containing the
+divine elements of all.
+
+Gnosticism, however, as the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_ points out, "was
+Jewish in character long before it became Christian."[104] M. Matter
+indicates Syria and Palestine as its cradle and Alexandria as the centre
+by which it was influenced at the time of its alliance with
+Christianity. This influence again was predominantly Jewish. Philo and
+Aristobulus, the leading Jewish philosophers of Alexandria, "wholly
+attached to the ancient religion of their fathers, both resolved to
+adorn it with the spoils of other systems and to open to Judaism the way
+to immense conquests."[105] This method of borrowing from other races
+and religions those ideas useful for their purpose has always been the
+custom of the Jews. The Cabala, as we have seen, was made up of these
+heterogeneous elements. And it is here we find the principal progenitor
+of Gnosticism. The Freemason Ragon gives the clue in the words: "The
+Cabala is the key of the occult sciences. The Gnostics were born of the
+Cabalists."[106]
+
+For the Cabala was much older than the Gnostics. Modern historians who
+date it merely from the publication of the Zohar by Moses de Leon in the
+thirteenth century or from the school of Luria in the sixteenth century
+obscure this most important fact which Jewish savants have always
+clearly, recognized.[107] The _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, whilst denying the
+certainty of connexion between Gnosticism and the Cabala, nevertheless
+admits that the investigations of the anti-Cabalist Graetz "must be
+resumed on a new basis," and it goes on to show that "it was Alexandria
+of the first century, or earlier, with her strange commingling of
+Egyptian, Chaldean, Judean, and Greek culture which furnished soil and
+seeds for that mystic philosophy."[108] But since Alexandria was at the
+same period the home of Gnosticism, which was formed from the same
+elements enumerated here, the connexion between the two systems is
+clearly evident. M. Matter is therefore right in saying that Gnosticism
+was not a defection from Christianity, but a combination of systems into
+which a few Christian elements were introduced. The result of Gnosticism
+was thus not to christianize the Cabala, but to cabalize Christianity by
+mingling its pure and simple teaching with theosophy and even magic. The
+_Jewish Encyclopaedia_ quotes the opinion that "the central doctrine of
+Gnosticism--a movement closely connected with Jewish mysticism--was
+nothing else than the attempt to liberate the soul and unite it with
+God"; but as this was apparently to be effected "through the employment
+of mysteries, incantations, names of angels," etc., it will be seen how
+widely even this phase of Gnosticism differs from Christianity and
+identifies itself with the magical Cabala of the Jews.
+
+Indeed, the man generally recognized as the founder of Gnosticism, a Jew
+commonly known as Simon Magus, was not only a Cabalist mystic but
+avowedly a magician, who with a band of Jews, including his master
+Dositheus and his disciples Menander and Cerinthus, instituted a
+priesthood of the Mysteries and practised occult arts and
+exorcisms.[109] It was this Simon of whom we read in the Acts of the
+Apostles that he "bewitched the people of Samaria, giving out that
+himself was some great one: to whom they all gave heed from the least to
+the greatest, saying, This man is the great power of God," and who
+sought to purchase the power of the laying on of hands with money.
+Simon, indeed, crazed by his incantations and ecstasies, developed
+megalomania in an acute form, arrogating to himself divine honours and
+aspiring to the adoration of the whole world. According to a
+contemporary legend, he eventually became sorcerer to Nero and ended his
+life in Rome.[110]
+
+The prevalence of sorcery amongst the Jews during the first century of
+the Christian era is shown by other passages in the Acts of the
+Apostles; in Paphos the "false prophet," a Jew, whose surname was
+Bar-Jesus, otherwise known as "Elymas the sorcerer," opposed the
+teaching of St. Paul and brought on himself the imprecation: "O full of
+all subtlety and all mischief, thou child of the devil, thou enemy of
+all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the
+Lord?"
+
+Perversion is the keynote of all the debased forms of Gnosticism.
+According to Eliphas Levi, certain of the Gnostics introduced into their
+rites that profanation of Christian mysteries which was to form the
+basis of black magic in the Middle Ages.[111] The glorification of evil,
+which plays so important a part in the modern revolutionary movement,
+constituted the creed of the Ophites, who worshipped the Serpent
+([Greek: ophis]) because he had revolted against Jehovah, to whom they
+referred under the Cabalistic term of the "demiurgus,"[112] and still
+more of the Cainites, so-called from their cult of Cain, whom, with
+Dathan and Abiram, the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah, and finally
+Judas Iscariot, they regarded as noble victims of the demiurgus.[113]
+Animated by hatred of all social and moral order, the Cainites "called
+upon all men to destroy the works of God and to commit every kind of
+infamy."[114]
+
+These men were therefore not only the enemies of Christianity but of
+orthodox Judaism, since it was against the Jehovah of the Jews that
+their hatred was particularly directed. Another Gnostic sect, the
+Carpocratians, followers of Carpocrates of Alexandria and his son
+Epiphanus--who died from his debaucheries and was venerated as a
+god[115]--likewise regarded all written laws, Christian or Mosaic, with
+contempt and recognized only the [Greek: gnosis] or knowledge given to
+the great men of every nation--Plato and Pythagoras, Moses and
+Christ--which "frees one from all that the vulgar call religion" and
+"makes man equal to God."[116]
+
+So in the Carpocratians of the second century we find already the
+tendency towards that _deification of humanity_ which forms the supreme
+doctrine of the secret societies and of the visionary Socialists of our
+day. The war now begins between the two contending principles: the
+Christian conception of man reaching up to God and the secret society
+conception of man as God, needing no revelation from on high and no
+guidance but the law of his own nature. And since that nature is in
+itself divine, all that springs from it is praiseworthy, and those acts
+usually regarded as sins are not to be condemned. By this line of
+reasoning the Carpocratians arrived at much the same conclusions as
+modern Communists with regard to the ideal social system. Thus
+Epiphanus held that since Nature herself reveals the principle of the
+community and the unity of all things, human laws which are contrary to
+this law of Nature are so many culpable infractions of the legitimate
+order of things. Before these laws were imposed on humanity everything
+was in common--land, goods, and women. According to certain
+contemporaries, the Carpocratians returned to this primitive system by
+instituting the community of women and indulging in every kind of
+licence.
+
+The further Gnostic sect of Antitacts, following this same cult of human
+nature, taught revolt against all positive religion and laws and the
+necessity for gratifying the flesh; the Adamites of North Africa, going
+a step further in the return to Nature, cast off all clothing at their
+religious services so as to represent the primitive innocence of the
+garden of Eden--a precedent followed by the Adamites of Germany in the
+fifteenth century.[117]
+
+These Gnostics, says Eliphas Levi, under the pretext of "spiritualizing
+matter, materialized the spirit in the most revolting ways.... Rebels to
+the hierarchic order, ... they wished to substitute the mystical licence
+of sensual passions to wise Christian sobriety and obedience to laws....
+Enemies of the family, they wished to produce sterility by increasing
+debauchery."[118]
+
+By way of systematically perverting the doctrines of the Christian faith
+the Gnostics claimed to possess the true versions of the Gospels, and
+professed belief in these to the exclusion of all the others.[119] Thus
+the Ebionites had their own corrupted version of the Gospel of St.
+Matthew founded on the "Gospel of the Hebrews," known earlier to the
+Jewish Christians; the Marcosians had their version of St. Luke, the
+Cainites their own "Gospel of Judas," and the Valentinians their "Gospel
+of St. John." As we shall see later, the Gospel of St. John is the one
+that throughout the war on Christianity has been specially chosen for
+the purpose of perversion.
+
+Of course this spirit of perversion was nothing new; many centuries
+earlier the prophet Isaiah had denounced it in the words: "Woe unto them
+that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and
+light for darkness!" But the role of the Gnostics was to reduce
+perversion to a system by binding men together into sects working under
+the guise of enlightenment in order to obscure all recognized ideas of
+morality and religion. It is this which constitutes their importance in
+the history of secret societies.
+
+Whether the Gnostics themselves can be described as a secret society, or
+rather as a ramification of secret societies, is open to question. M.
+Matter, quoting a number of third-century writers, shows the possibility
+that they had mysteries and initiations; the Church Fathers definitely
+asserted this to be the case.[120] According to Tertullian, the
+Valentinians continued, or rather perverted, the mysteries of Eleusis,
+out of which they made a "sanctuary of prostitution."[121]
+
+The Valentinians are known to have divided their members into three
+classes--the Pneumatics, the Psychics, and the Hylics (i.e.
+materialists); the Basilideans are also said to have possessed secret
+doctrines known to hardly one in a thousand of the sect. From all this
+M. Matter concludes that:
+
+ 1. The Gnostics professed to hold by means of tradition a secret
+ doctrine superior to that contained in the public writings of the
+ apostles.
+
+ 2. That they did not communicate this doctrine to everyone....
+
+ 3. That they communicated it by means of emblems and symbols, as
+ the Diagram of the Ophites proves.
+
+ 4. That in these communications they imitated the rites and trials
+ of the mysteries of Eleusis.[122]
+
+This claim to the possession of a secret oral tradition, whether known
+under the name of [Greek: gnosis] or of Cabala, confirms the conception
+of the Gnostics as Cabalists and shows how far they had departed from
+Christian teaching. For if only in this idea of "one doctrine for the
+ignorant and another for the initiated," the Gnostics had restored the
+very system which Christianity had come to destroy.[123]
+
+
+
+Manicheism
+
+
+Whilst we have seen the Gnostic sects working for more or less
+subversive purposes under the guise of esoteric doctrines, we find in
+the Manicheans of Persia, who followed a century later, a sect
+embodying the same tendencies and approaching still nearer to secret
+society organization.
+
+Cubricus or Corbicius, the founder of Manicheism, was born in Babylonia
+about the year A.D. 216. Whilst still a child he is said to have been
+bought as a slave by a rich widow of Ctesiphon, who liberated him and on
+her death left him great wealth. According to another story--for the
+whole history of Manes rests on legends--he inherited from a rich old
+woman the books of a Saracen named Scythianus on the wisdom of the
+Egyptians. Combining the doctrines these books contained with ideas
+borrowed from Zoroastrianism, Gnosticism, and Christianity, and also
+with certain additions of his own, he elaborated a philosophic system
+which he proceeded to teach. Cubricus then changed his name to Mani or
+Manes and proclaimed himself the Paraclete promised by Jesus Christ. His
+followers were divided into two classes--the outer circle of hearers or
+combatants, and the inner circle of teachers or ascetics described as
+the Elect. As evidence of their resemblance with Freemasons, it has been
+said that the Manicheans made use of secret signs, grips, and passwords,
+that owing to the circumstances of their master's adoption they called
+Manes "the son of the widow" and themselves "the children of the widow,"
+but this is not clearly proved. One of their customs is, however,
+interesting in this connexion. According to legend, Manes undertook to
+cure the son of the King of Persia who had fallen ill, but the prince
+died, whereupon Manes was flayed alive by order of the king and his
+corpse hanged up at the city gate. Every year after this, on Good
+Friday, the Manicheans carried out a mourning ceremony known as the Bema
+around the catafalque of Manes, whose real sufferings they were wont to
+contrast with the unreal sufferings of Christ.
+
+The fundamental doctrine of Manicheism is Dualism--that is to say, the
+existence of two opposing principles in the world, light and darkness,
+good and evil--founded, however, not on the Christian conception of this
+idea, but on the Zoroastrian conception of Ormuzd and Ahriman, and so
+perverted and mingled with Cabalistic superstitions that it met with as
+vehement denunciation by Persian priests as by Christian Fathers. Thus,
+according to the doctrine of Manes, all matter is absolute evil, the
+principle of evil is eternal, humanity itself is of Satanic origin, and
+the first human beings, Adam and Eve, are represented as the offspring
+of devils.[124] Much the same idea may be found in the Jewish Cabala,
+where it is said that Adam, after other abominable practices, cohabited
+with female devils whilst Eve consoled herself with male devils, so that
+whole races of demons were born into the world. Eve is also accused of
+cohabiting with the Serpent.[125] In the Yalkut Shimoni it is also
+related that during the 130 years that Adam lived apart from Eve, "he
+begat a generation of devils, spirits, and hobgoblins."[126] Manichean
+demonology thus paved the way for the placation of the powers of
+darkness practised by the Euchites at the end of the fourth century and
+later by the Paulicians, the Bogomils, and the Luciferians.
+
+So it is in Gnosticism and Manicheism that we find evidence of the first
+attempts to pervert Christianity. The very fact that all such have been
+condemned by the Church as "heresies" has tended to enlist sympathy in
+their favour, yet even Eliphas Levi recognizes that here the action of
+the Church was right, for the "monstrous gnosis of Manes" was a
+desecration not only of Christian doctrines but of pre-Christian sacred
+traditions.
+
+
+
+
+2
+
+THE REVOLT AGAINST ISLAM[127]
+
+
+
+We have followed the efforts of subversive sects hitherto directed
+against Christianity and orthodox Judaism; we shall now see this
+attempt, reduced by gradual stages to a working system of extraordinary
+efficiency, organized for the purpose of undermining all moral and
+religious beliefs in the minds of Moslems. In the middle of the seventh
+century an immense schism was created in Islam by the rival advocates of
+successors to the Prophet, the orthodox Islamites known by the name of
+Sunnis adhering to the elected Khalifas Abu Bakr, Omar, and Othman,
+whilst the party of revolt, known as the Shiahs, claimed the Khalifate
+for the descendants of Mohammed through Ali, son of Abu-Talib and
+husband of Fatima, the Prophet's daughter. This division ended in open
+warfare; Ali was finally assassinated, his elder son Hason was poisoned
+in Medina, his younger son Husain fell at the battle of Kerbela fighting
+against the supporters of Othman. The deaths of Hasan and Husain are
+still mourned yearly by the Shiahs at the Moharram.
+
+
+
+The Ismailis
+
+
+The Shiahs themselves split again over the question of Ali's successors
+into four factions, the fourth of which divided again into two further
+sects. Both of these retained their allegiance to the descendants of Ali
+as far as Jafar-as-Sadik, but whilst one party, known as the Imamias or
+Isna-Asharias (i.e. the Twelvers), supported the succession through his
+younger son Musa to the twelfth Iman Mohammed, son of Askeri, the
+Ismailis (or Seveners) adhered to Ismail, the elder son of
+Jafar-as-Sadik.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Choice of SUNNIS
+ Abu Bakr (1st Khalifa) 632
+ Omar 634
+ Othman 644
+ Ali
+
+
+ Choice of SHIAHS
+
+ Abd-ul-Muttalib
+ Abdullah
+ MOHAMMED A.D. 570-632
+ Fatima married Ali
+ Abu Talib
+ ALI (4th Sunni and 1st Shiah Khalifa murdered in Kufa)
+ (2) Hasan poisoned A.D. 680
+ (3) Husain killed at battle of Kerbela A.D. 680
+ (4) Ali II
+ (5) Mohammed
+ (6) Jafar-as-Sadik
+ Choice of ISMAILIS
+ (7) Ismail
+ Mohammed disappeared circ. 770
+ Choice of IMAMIAS or ISNA-ASHARIAS
+ (7) Abu'I Hasan Musa
+ (8) Ali III
+ (9) Abu Jafar Mohammed
+ (10) Ali
+ (11) Abu Mohammed al Askari
+ (12) Mohammed al Mahdi
+
+ SHIAHS
+ ISMAILIS circ. A.D. 770
+ BATINIS (founded by Abdullah ibn Maymun) circ. A.D. 872
+ FATIMITES (under Ubeidallah 1st Fatimite Khalifa) A.D. 909
+ Fatimite Khalifas of Egypt A.D. 977
+ HAKIM 6th Fatimite Khalifa A.D. 996
+ Founds Dar-ul-Hikmat A.D. 1004
+ ASSASSINS (under Hasan Saba) A.D. 1090
+ DRUSES (under Hazza) circ. A.D. 1021
+ KARMATHITES (under Hamdan Karmath) A.D. 896
+
+ THE SUCCESSORS OF THE PROPHET
+
+ The above table shows the rival lines of Khalifas--on the left the
+ elected successors, choice of the Sunnis; on the right the lineal
+ descendants, choice of the Shiahs. The figure at the side of each
+ name indicates the number in succession of the Khalifa mentioned.
+ The table inset shows the sects to which the disputes over the
+ succession gave birth.
+
+]
+
+So far, however, in spite of divisions, no body of Shiahs had ever
+deviated from the fundamental doctrines of Islamism, but merely claimed
+that these had been handed down through a different line from that
+recognized by the Sunnis. The earliest Ismailis, who formed themselves
+into a party at about the time of the death of Mohammed, son of Ismail
+(i.e. circ. A.D. 770), still remained believers, declaring only that the
+true teaching of the Prophet had descended to Mohammed, who was not dead
+but would return in the fullness of time and that he was the Mahdi whom
+Moslems must await. But in about A.D. 873 an intriguer of extraordinary
+subtlety succeeded in capturing the movement, which, hitherto merely
+schismatic, now became definitely subversive, not only of Islamism, but
+of all religious belief.
+
+This man, Abdullah ibn Maymun, the son of a learned and free-thinking
+doctor in Southern Persia, brought up in the doctrines of Gnostic
+Dualism and profoundly versed in all religions, was in reality, like his
+father, a pure materialist. By professing adherence to the creed of
+orthodox Shi-ism, and proclaiming a knowledge of the mystic doctrines
+which the Ismailis believed to have descended through Ismail to his son
+Mohammed, Abdullah succeeded in placing himself at the head of the
+Ismailis.
+
+His advocacy of Ismail was thus merely a mask, his real aim being
+materialism, which he now proceeded to make into a system by founding a
+sect known as the Batinis with seven degrees of initiation. Dozy has
+given the following description of this amazing project:
+
+ To link together into one body the vanquished and the conquerors;
+ to unite in the form of a vast secret society with many degrees of
+ initiation free-thinkers--who regarded religion only as a curb for
+ the people--and bigots of all sects; to make tools of believers in
+ order to give power to sceptics; to induce conquerors to overturn
+ the empires they had founded; to build up a party, numerous,
+ compact, and disciplined, which in due time would give the throne,
+ if not to himself, at least to his descendants, such was Abdullah
+ ibn Maymun's general aim--an extraordinary conception which he
+ worked out with marvellous tact, incomparable skill, and a profound
+ knowledge of the human heart. The means which he adopted were
+ devised with diabolical cunning....
+
+ It was ... not among the Shi-ites that he sought his true
+ supporters, but among the Ghebers, the Manicheans, the pagans of
+ Harran, and the students of Greek philosophy; on the last alone
+ could he rely, to them alone could he gradually unfold the final
+ mystery, and reveal that Imams, religions, and morality were
+ nothing but an imposture and an absurdity. The rest of mankind--the
+ "asses," as Abdullah called them--were incapable of understanding
+ such doctrines. But to gain his end he by no means disdained their
+ aid; on the contrary, he solicited it, but he took care to initiate
+ devout and lowly souls only in the first grades of the sect. His
+ missionaries, who were inculcated with the idea that their first
+ duty was to conceal their true sentiments and adapt themselves to
+ the views of their auditors, appeared in many guises, and spoke, as
+ it were, in a different language to each class. They won over the
+ ignorant vulgar by feats of legerdemain which passed for miracles,
+ or excited their curiosity by enigmatical discourse. In the
+ presence of the devout they assumed the mask of virtue and piety.
+ With mystics they were mystical, and unfolded the inner meanings of
+ phenomena, or explained allegories and the figurative sense of the
+ allegories themselves....
+
+ By means such as these the extraordinary result was brought about
+ that a multitude of men of diverse beliefs were all working
+ together for an object known only to a few of them....[128]
+
+I quote this passage at length because it is of immense importance in
+throwing a light on the organization of modern secret societies. It does
+not matter what the end may be, whether political, social, or religious,
+the system remains the same--the setting in motion of a vast number of
+people and making them work in a cause unknown to them. That this was
+the method adopted by Weishaupt in organizing the Illuminati and that it
+came to him from the East will be shown later on. We shall now see how
+the system of the philosopher Abdullah paved the way for bloodshed by
+the most terrible sect the world had ever seen.
+
+
+
+The Karmathites
+
+
+The first open acts of violence resulting from the doctrines of Abdullah
+were carried out by the Karmathites, a new development of the Ismailis.
+Amongst the many Dais sent out by the leader--which included his son
+Ahmed and Ahmed's son--was the Dai Hosein Ahwazi, Abdullah's envoy to
+Irak in Persia, who initiated a certain Hamdan surnamed Karmath into the
+secrets of the sect. Karmath, who was a born intriguer and believed in
+nothing, became the leader of the Karmathites in Arabia, where a number
+of Arabs were soon enlisted in the society. With extraordinary skill he
+succeeded in persuading these dupes to make over all their money to him,
+first by means of small contributions, later by larger sums, until at
+last he convinced them of the advantages of abolishing all private
+property and establishing the system of the community of goods and
+wives. This principle was enforced by the passage of the Koran:
+"Remember the grace of God in that whilst you were enemies, He has
+united your hearts, so that by His grace you have become brothers...."
+De Sacy thus trans-scribes the methods employed as given by the
+historian Nowairi:
+
+ When Karmath had succeeded in establishing all this, and everyone
+ had agreed to conform to it, he ordered the Dais to assemble all
+ the women on a certain night so that they should mingle
+ promiscuously with all the men. This, he said, was perfection and
+ the last degree of friendship and fraternal union. Often a husband
+ led his wife and presented her himself to one of his brothers when
+ that gave him pleasure. When he (Karmath) saw that he had become
+ absolute master of their minds, had assured himself of their
+ obedience, and found out the degree of their intelligence and
+ discernment, he began to lead them quite astray. He put before them
+ arguments borrowed from the doctrines of the Dualists. They fell in
+ easily with all that he proposed, and then he took away from them
+ all religion and released them from all those duties of piety,
+ devotion, and the fear of God that he prescribed for them in the
+ beginning. He permitted them pillage, and every sort of immoral
+ licence, and taught them to throw off the yoke of prayer, fasting,
+ and other precepts. He taught them that they were held by no
+ obligations, and that they could pillage the goods and shed the
+ blood of their adversaries with impunity, that the knowledge of the
+ master of truth to whom he had called them took the place of
+ everything else, and that with this knowledge they need no longer
+ fear sin or punishment.
+
+As the result of these teachings the Karmathites rapidly became a band
+of brigands, pillaging and massacring all those who opposed them and
+spreading terror throughout all the surrounding districts.
+
+Peaceful fraternity was thus turned into a wild lust for conquest; the
+Karmathites succeeded in dominating a great part of Arabia and the mouth
+of the Euphrates, and in A.D. 920 extended their ravages westwards. They
+took possession of the holy city of Mecca, in the defence of which
+30,000 Moslems fell. "For a whole century," says von Hammer, "the
+pernicious doctrines of Karmath raged with fire and sword in the very
+bosom of Islamism, until the widespread conflagration was extinguished
+in blood."
+
+But in proclaiming themselves revolutionaries the Karmathites had
+departed from the plan laid down by the originator of their creed,
+Abdullah ibn Maymun, which had consisted not in acts of open violence
+but in a secret doctrine which should lead to the gradual undermining of
+all religious faith and a condition of mental anarchy rather than of
+material chaos. For violence, as always, had produced counter-violence,
+and it was thus that while the Karmathites were rushing to their own
+destruction through a series of bloody conflicts, another branch of the
+Ismailis were quietly reorganizing their forces more in conformity with
+the original method of their founder. These were the Fatimites,
+so-called from their professed belief that the doctrine of the Prophet
+had descended from Ali, husband of Fatima, Mohammed's daughter. Whilst
+less extreme than the Karmathites, or than their predecessor Abdullah
+ibn Maymun, the Fatimites, according to the historian Makrizi,
+adopted the method of instilling doubts into the minds of believers and
+aimed at the substitution of a natural for a revealed religion. Indeed,
+after the establishment of their power in Egypt, it is difficult to
+distinguish any appreciable degree of difference in the character of
+their teaching from the anarchic code of Abdullah and his more violent
+exponent Karmath.
+
+
+
+The Fatimites
+
+
+The founder of the Fatimite dynasty of the Khalifas was one Ubeidallah,
+known as the Mahdi, accused of Jewish ancestry by his adversaries the
+Abbasides, who declared--apparently without truth--that he was the son
+or grandson of Ahmed, son of Adbullah ibn Maymun, by a Jewess. Under
+the fourth Fatimite Khalifa Egypt fell into the power of the dynasty,
+and, before long, bi-weekly assemblages of both men and women known as
+"societies of wisdom" were instituted in Cairo. In 1004 these acquired a
+greater importance by the establishment of the Dar ul Hikmat, or the
+House of Knowledge, by the sixth Khalifa Hakim, who was raised to a
+deity after his death and is worshipped to this day by the Druses. Under
+the direction of the Dar ul Hikmat or Grand Lodge of Cairo, the
+Fatimites continued the plan of Abdullah ibn Maymun's secret society
+with the addition of two more degrees, making nine in all. Their method
+of enlisting proselytes and system of initiation--which, as Claudio
+Jannet points out, "are absolutely those which Weishaupt, the founder of
+the _Illuminati_, prescribed to the 'Insinuating Brothers'"[129]--were
+transcribed by the fourteenth-century historian Nowairi in a description
+that may be briefly summarized thus[130]:
+
+The proselytes were broadly divided into two classes, the learned and
+the ignorant. The Dai was to agree with the former, applauding his
+wisdom, and to impress the latter with his own knowledge by asking him
+perplexing questions on the Koran. Thus in initiating him into the first
+degree the Dai assumed an air of profundity and explained that religious
+doctrines were too abstruse for the ordinary mind, but must be
+interpreted by men who, like the Dais, had a special knowledge of this
+science. The initiate was bound to absolute secrecy concerning the
+truths to be revealed to him and obliged to pay in advance for these
+revelations. In order to pique his curiosity, the Dai would suddenly
+stop short in the middle of a discourse, and should the novice finally
+decline to pay the required sum, he was left in a state of bewilderment
+which inspired him with the desire to know more.
+
+In the second degree the initiate was persuaded that all his former
+teachers were wrong and that he must place his confidence solely in
+those Imams endowed with authority from God; in the third he learnt that
+these Imams were those of the Ismailis, seven in number ending with
+Mohammed, son of Ismail, in contradistinction to the twelve Imams of the
+Imamias who supported the claims of Ismail's brother Musa; in the fourth
+he was told that the prophets preceding the Imams descending from Ali
+were also seven in number--namely Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, the
+first Mohammed, and finally Mohammed son of Ismail.
+
+So far, then, nothing was said to the initiate in contradiction to the
+broad tenets of orthodox Islamism. But with the fifth degree the process
+of undermining his religion began, he was now told to reject tradition
+and to disregard the precepts of Mohammed; in the sixth he was taught
+that all religious observances--prayer, fasting, etc.--were only
+emblematic, that in fact all these things were devices to keep the
+common herd of men in subordination; in the seventh the doctrines of
+Dualism, of a greater and a lesser deity, were introduced and the unity
+of God--fundamental doctrine of Islamism--was destroyed; in the eighth a
+great vagueness was expressed on the attributes of the first and
+greatest of these deities, and it was pointed out that real prophets
+were those who concerned themselves with practical matters--political
+institutions and good forms of government; finally, in the ninth, the
+adept was shown that all religious teaching was allegorical and that
+religious precepts need only be observed in so far as it is necessary to
+maintain order, but the man who understands the truth may disregard all
+such doctrines. Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and the other prophets were
+therefore only teachers who had profited by the lessons of philosophy.
+All belief in revealed religion was thus destroyed. It will be seen then
+that in the last degrees the whole teaching of the first five was
+reversed and therefore shown to be a fraud. Fraud in fact constituted
+the system of the society; in the instructions to the Dais every
+artifice is described for enlisting proselytes by misrepresentation:
+Jews were to be won by speaking ill of Christians, Christians by
+speaking ill of Jews and Moslems alike, Sunnis by referring with respect
+to the orthodox Khalifas Abu Bakr and Omar and criticizing Ali and his
+descendants. Above all, care was to be taken not to put before
+proselytes doctrines that might revolt them, but to make them advance
+step by step. By these means they would be ready to obey any commands.
+As the instructions express it:
+
+ If you were to give the order to whoever it might be to take from
+ him all that he holds most precious, above all his money, he would
+ oppose none of your orders, and if death surprised him he would
+ leave you all that he possesses in his will and make you his heir.
+ He will think that in the whole world he cannot find a man more
+ worthy than you.
+
+Such was the great secret society which was to form the model for the
+Illuminati of the eighteenth century, to whom the summary of von Hammer
+might with equal truth apply:
+
+ To believe nothing and to dare all was, in two words, the sum of
+ this system, which annihilated every principle of religion and
+ morality, and had no other object than to execute ambitious designs
+ with suitable ministers, who, daring all and knowing nothing, since
+ they consider everything a cheat and nothing forbidden, are the
+ best tools of an infernal policy. A system which, with no other aim
+ than the gratification of an insatiable lust for domination,
+ instead of seeking the highest of human objects, precipitates
+ itself into the abyss, and mangling itself, is buried amidst the
+ ruins of thrones and altars, the wreck of national happiness, and
+ the universal execration of mankind.[131]
+
+
+
+The Druses
+
+
+The terrible Grand Lodge of Cairo before long became the centre of a new
+and extraordinary cult. Hakim sixth Fatimite Khalifa and founder of the
+Dar ul Hikmat--a monster of tyranny and crime whose reign can only be
+compared to that of Caligula or Nero--was now raised to the place of a
+divinity by one Ismail Darazi, a Turk who in 1016 announced in a mosque
+in Cairo that the Khalifa should be made an object of worship. Hakim,
+who "believed that divine reason was incarnate in him," four years later
+proclaimed himself a deity, and the cult was finally established by one
+of his viziers, the Persian mystic Hamza ibn Ali. Hakim's cruelties,
+however, had so outraged the people of Egypt that a year later he was
+murdered by a band of malcontents, led, it is said, by his sister, who
+afterwards concealed his body--a circumstance which gave his followers
+the opportunity to declare that the divinity had merely vanished in
+order to test the faith of believers, but would reappear in time and
+punish apostates. This belief became the doctrine of the Druses of
+Lebanon, whom Darazi had won over to the worship of Hakim.
+
+It is unnecessary to enter into the details of this strange religion,
+which still persists to-day in the range of Lebanon; suffice it to say
+that, although the outcome of the Ismailis, the Druses do not appear to
+have embraced the materialism of Abdullah ibn Maymun, but to have
+grafted on a primitive form of Nature-worship and of Sabeism the avowed
+belief of the Ismailis in the dynasty of Ali and his successors, and
+beyond this an abstruse, esoteric creed concerning the nature of the
+Supreme Deity. God they declare to be "Universal Reason," who manifests
+Himself by a series of "avatars." Hakim was the last of the divine
+embodiments, and "when evil and misery have increased to the predestined
+height he will again appear, to conquer the world and to make his
+religion supreme."
+
+It is, however, as a secret society that the Druses enter into the scope
+of this book, for their organization presents several analogies with
+that which we now know as "masonic." Instead of the nine degrees
+instituted by the Lodge of Cairo, the Druses are divided into only
+three--Profanes, Aspirants, and Wise--to whom their doctrines are
+gradually unfolded under seal of the strictest secrecy, to ensure which
+signs and passwords are employed after the manner of Freemasonry. A
+certain degree of duplicity appears to enter into their scheme, much
+resembling that enjoined to the Ismaili Dais when enlisting proselytes
+belonging to other religions: thus in talking to Mohammedans, the Druses
+profess to be followers of the Prophet; with Christians, they pretend to
+hold the doctrines of Christianity, an attitude they defend on the score
+that it is unlawful to reveal the secret dogmas of their creed to a
+"Black," or unbeliever.
+
+The Druses are in the habit of holding meetings where, as in the Dar ul
+Hikmat, both men and women assemble and religious and political
+questions are discussed; the uninitiated, however, are allowed to
+exercise no influence on decisions, which are reached by the inner
+circle, to which only the "Wise" are admitted. The resemblance between
+this organization and that of Grand Orient Freemasonry is clearly
+apparent. The Druses also have modes of recognition which are common to
+Freemasonry, and M. Achille Laurent has observed: "The formula or
+catechism of the Druses resembles that of the Freemasons; one can learn
+it only from the _Akals_ (or Akels = Intelligent, a small group of
+higher initiates), who only reveal its mysteries after having subjected
+one to tests and made one take terrible oaths."
+
+I shall refer again later in this book to the affinity between the
+Druses and Freemasons of the Grand Orient.
+
+
+
+The Assassins
+
+
+It will be seen that the Druses, distinguishing themselves from other
+Ismaili sects by their worship of Hakim, yet retaining genuine religious
+beliefs, had not carried on the atheistical tradition of Abdullah ibn
+Maymun and of the Grand Lodge of Cairo. But this tradition was to
+find in 1090 an exponent in the Persian Hasan Saba, a native of
+Khorasan, the son of Ali, a strict Shiah, who, finding himself suspected
+of heretical ideas, ended by declaring himself a Sunni. Hasan, brought
+up in this atmosphere of duplicity, was therefore well fitted to play
+the Machiavellian role of an Ismaili Dai.
+
+Von Hammer regards Hasan as a mighty genius, one of a splendid triad,
+of which the two others were his schoolfellows the poet Omar Khayyam and
+Nizam ul Mulk, Grand Vizier under the Seljuk Sultan, Malik Shah. Hasan,
+having through the protection of Nizam ul Mulk secured titles and
+revenues and finally risen to office at the Court of the Sultan,
+attempted to supplant his benefactor and eventually retired in disgrace,
+vowing vengeance against the Sultan and vizier. At this juncture he
+encountered several Ismailis, one of whom, a Dai named Mumin, finally
+converted him to the principles of his sect, and Hasan, declaring
+himself now to be a convinced adherent of the Fatimite Khalifas, journed
+to Cairo, where he was received with honour by the Dar ul Hikmat and
+also by the Khalifa Mustansir, to whom he became counsellor. But his
+intrigues once more involving him in disgrace, he fled to Aleppo and
+laid the foundations of his new sect. After enlisting proselytes in
+Bagdad, Ispahan, Khusistan, and Damaghan, he succeeded in obtaining by
+strategy the fortress of Alamut in Persia on the Caspian Sea, where he
+completed the plans for his great secret society which was to become for
+ever infamous under the name of the Hashishiyin, or _Assassins_.
+
+Under the pretence of belief in the doctrines of Islam and also of
+adherence to the Ismaili line of succession from the Prophet, Hasan Saba
+now set out to pave his way to power, and in order to achieve this end
+adopted the same method as Abdullah ibn Maymun. But the terrible
+efficiency of Hasan's society consisted in the fact that a system of
+physical force was now organized in a manner undreamt of by his
+predecessor. As von Hammer has observed in an admirable passage:
+
+ Opinions are powerless, so long as they only confuse the brain,
+ without arming the hand. Scepticism and free-thinking, as long as
+ they occupied only the minds of the indolent and philosophical,
+ have caused the ruin of no throne, for which purpose religious and
+ political fanaticism are the strongest levers in the hands of
+ nations. It is nothing to the ambitious man what people believe,
+ but it is everything to know how he may turn them for the execution
+ of his projects.[132]
+
+Thus, as in the case of the French Revolution, "whose first movers," von
+Hammer also observes, "were the tools or leaders of secret societies,"
+it was not mere theory but the method of enlisting numerous dupes and
+placing weapons in their hands that brought about the "Terror" of the
+Assassins six centuries before that of their spiritual descendants, the
+Jacobins of 1793.
+
+Taking as his groundwork the organization of the Grand Lodge of Cairo,
+Hasan reduced the nine degrees to their original number of seven, but
+these now received a definite nomenclature, and included not only real
+initiates but active agents.
+
+Descending downwards, the degrees of the Assassins were thus as follows:
+first, the Grand Master, known as the Shaikh-al-Jabal or "Old Man of the
+Mountain"--owing to the fact that the Order always possessed itself of
+castles in mountainous regions; second, the Dail Kebir or Grand Priors;
+third, the fully initiated Dais, religious nuncios and political
+emissaries; fourth, the Rafiqs or associates, in training for the higher
+degrees; fifth, the Fadais or "devoted," who undertook to deliver the
+secret blow on which their superiors had decided; sixth, the Lasiqus, or
+law brothers; and lastly the "common people," who were to be simply
+blind instruments. If the equivalents to the words "Dai," "Rafiqs," and
+"Fadais" given by von Hammer and Dr. Bussell as "Master Masons," "Fellow
+Crafts," and "Entered Apprentices" are accepted, an interesting analogy
+with the degrees of Freemasonry is provided.
+
+Designs against religion were, of course, not admitted by the Order;
+"strict uniformity to Islam was demanded from all the lower rank of
+uninitiated, but the _adept_ was taught to see through the deception of
+'faith and works.' He believed in nothing and recognized that all acts
+or means were indifferent and the (secular) end alone to be
+considered."[133]
+
+Thus the final object was domination by a few men consumed with the lust
+of power "under the cloak of religion and piety," and the method by
+which this was to be established was the wholesale assassination of
+those who opposed them.
+
+In order to stimulate the energy of the Fadais, who were required to
+carry out these crimes, the superiors of the Order had recourse to an
+ingenious system of delusion. Throughout the territory occupied by the
+Assassins were exquisite gardens with fruit trees, bowers of roses, and
+sparkling streams. Here were arranged luxurious resting-places with
+Persian carpets and soft divans, around which hovered black-eyed
+"houris" bearing wine in gold and silver drinking-vessels, whilst soft
+music mingled with the murmuring water and the song of birds. The young
+man whom the Assassins desired to train for a career of crime was
+introduced to the Grand Master of the Order and intoxicated with
+haschisch--hence the name "Hashishiyin" applied to the sect, from
+which the word assassin is derived. Under the brief spell of
+unconsciousness induced by this seductive drug the prospective Fadai was
+then carried into the garden, where on awaking he believed himself to be
+in Paradise. After enjoying all its delights he was given a fresh dose
+of the opiate, and, once more unconscious, was transported back to the
+presence of the Grand Master, who assured him that he had never left his
+side but had merely experienced a foretaste of the Paradise that awaited
+him if he obeyed the orders of his chiefs. The neophyte, thus spurred on
+by the belief that he was carrying out the commands of the Prophet, who
+would reward him with eternal bliss, eagerly entered into the schemes
+laid down for him and devoted his life to murder. Thus by the lure of
+Paradise the Assassins enlisted instruments for their criminal work and
+established a system of organized murder on a basis of religious
+fervour. "'Nothing is true and all is allowed' was the ground of their
+secret doctrine, which, however, being imparted but to few and concealed
+under the veil of the most austere religionism and piety, restrained the
+mind under the yoke of blind obedience."[134] To the outside world all
+this remained a profound mystery; fidelity to Islam was proclaimed as
+the fundamental doctrine of the sect, and when the envoy of Sultan Sajar
+was sent to collect information on the religious beliefs of the Order he
+was met with the assurance: "We believe in the unity of God, and
+consider that only as true wisdom which accords with His word and the
+commands of the prophet."
+
+Von Hammer, answering the possible contention that, as in the case of
+the Templars and the Bavarian Illuminati, these methods of deception
+might be declared a calumny on the Order, points out that in the case of
+the Assassins no possible doubt existed, for their secret doctrines were
+eventually revealed by the leaders themselves, first by Hasan II, the
+third successor of Hasan Saba, and later by Jalal-ud-din Hasan, who
+publicly anathematized the founders of the sect and ordered the burning
+of the books that contained their designs against religion--a proceeding
+which, however, appears to have been a strategical manoeuvre for
+restoring confidence in the Order and enabling him to continue the work
+of subversion and crime. A veritable Reign of Terror was thus
+established throughout the East; the Rafiqs and Fadais "spread
+themselves in troops over the whole of Asia and darkened the face of the
+earth"; and "in the annals of the Assassins is found the chronological
+enumeration of celebrated men of all nations who have fallen the victims
+of the Ismailis, to the joy of their murderers and the sorrow of the
+world."[135]
+
+Inevitably this long and systematic indulgence in blood-lust recoiled on
+the heads of the leaders, and the Assassins, like the Terrorists of
+France, ended by turning on each other. The Old Man of the Mountain
+himself was murdered by his brother-in-law and his son Mohammed;
+Mohammed, in his turn, whilst "aiming at the life of his son
+Jalal-ud-din, was anticipated by him with poison, which murder was again
+avenged by poison," so that from "Hasan the Illuminator" down to the
+last of his line the Grand Masters fell by the hands of their
+next-of-kin, and "poison and the dagger prepared the grave which the
+Order had opened for so many."[136] Finally in 1250 the conquering
+hordes of the Mongol Mangu Khan swept away the dynasty of the Assassins.
+
+But, although as reigning powers the Assassins and Fatimites ceased to
+exist, the sects from which they derived have continued up to the
+present day; still every year at the celebration of the Moharram the
+Shiahs beat their breasts and besprinkle themselves with blood, calling
+aloud on the martyred heroes Hasan and Husain; the Druses of the Lebanon
+still await the return of Hakim, and in that inscrutable East, the
+cradle of all the mysteries, the profoundest European adept of secret
+society intrigue may find himself outdistanced by pastmasters in the art
+in which he believed himself proficient.
+
+The sect of Hasan Saba was the supreme model on which all systems of
+organized murder working through fanaticism, such as the Carbonari and
+the Irish Republican Brotherhood, were based, and the signs, the
+symbols, the initiations, of the Grand Lodge of Cairo formed the
+groundwork for the great secret societies of Europe.
+
+How came this system to be transported to the West? By what channel did
+the ideas of these succeeding Eastern sects penetrate to the Christian
+world? In order to answer this question we must turn to the history of
+the Crusades.
+
+
+
+
+3
+
+THE TEMPLERS
+
+
+
+In the year 1118--nineteen years after the first crusade had ended with
+the defeat of the Moslems, the capture of Antioch and Jerusalem, and the
+instalment of Godefroi de Bouillon as king of the latter city--a band of
+nine French _gentilshommes_, led by Hugues de Payens and Godefroi de
+Saint-Omer, formed themselves into an Order for the protection of
+pilgrims to the Holy Sepulchre. Baldwin II, who at this moment succeeded
+to the throne of Jerusalem, presented them with a house near the site of
+the Temple of Solomon--hence the name of Knights Templar under which
+they were to become famous. In 1128 the Order was sanctioned by the
+Council of Troyes and by the Pope, and a rule was drawn up by St.
+Bernard under which the Knights Templar were bound by the vows of
+poverty, chastity, and obedience.
+
+But although the Templars distinguished themselves by many deeds of
+valour, the regulation that they were to live solely on alms led to
+donations so enormous that, abandoning their vow of poverty, they spread
+themselves over Europe, and by the end of the twelfth century had become
+a rich and powerful body. The motto that the Order had inscribed upon
+its banner, "_Non nobis, Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam_," was
+likewise forgotten, for, their faith waxing cold, they gave themselves
+up to pride and ostentation. Thus, as an eighteenth-century masonic
+writer has expressed it:
+
+ The war, which for the greater number of warriors of good faith
+ proved the source of weariness, of losses and misfortunes, became
+ for them (the Templars) only the opportunity for booty and
+ aggrandizement, and if they distinguished themselves by a few
+ brilliant actions, their motive soon ceased to be a matter of doubt
+ when they were seen to enrich themselves even with the spoils of
+ the confederates, to increase their credit by the extent of the new
+ possessions they had acquired, to carry arrogance to the point of
+ rivalling crowned princes in pomp and grandeur, to refuse their aid
+ against the enemies of the faith, as the history of Saladin
+ testifies, and finally to ally themselves with that horrible and
+ sanguinary prince named the Old Man of the Mountain, Prince of the
+ Assassins.[137]
+
+The truth of the last accusation is, however, open to question. For a
+time, at any rate, the Templars had been at war with the Assassins. When
+in 1152 the Assassins murdered Raymond, Comte de Tripoli, the Templars
+entered their territory and forced them to sign a treaty by which they
+were to pay a yearly tribute of 12,000 gold pieces in expiation of the
+crime. Some years later the Old Man of the Mountain sent an ambassador
+to Amaury, King of Jerusalem, to tell him privately that if the Templars
+would forgo the payment of this tribute he and his followers would
+embrace the Christian faith. Amaury accepted, offering at the same time
+to compensate the Templars, but some of the Knights assassinated the
+ambassador before he could return to his master. When asked for
+reparations the Grand Master threw the blame on an evil one-eyed Knight
+named Gautier de Maisnil.[138]
+
+It is evident, therefore, that the relations between the Templars and
+the Assassins were at first far from amicable; nevertheless, it appears
+probable that later on an understanding was brought about between them.
+Both on this charge and on that of treachery towards the Christian
+armies, Dr. Bussell's impartial view of the question may be quoted:
+
+ When in 1149 the Emperor Conrad III failed before Damascus, the
+ Templars were believed to have a secret understanding with the
+ garrison of that city; ... in 1154 they were said to have sold, for
+ 60,000 gold pieces, a prince of Egypt who had wished to become a
+ Christian; he was taken home to suffer certain death at the hands
+ of his fanatical family. In 1166 Amaury, King of Jerusalem, hanged
+ twelve members of the Order for betraying a fortress to Nureddin.
+
+And Dr. Bussell goes on to say that it cannot be disputed that they had
+"long and important dealings" with the Assassins "and were therefore
+suspected (not unfairly) of imbibing their precepts and following their
+principles."[139]
+
+By the end of the thirteenth century the Templars had become suspect,
+not only in the eyes of the clergy, but of the general public. "Amongst
+the common people," one of their latest apologists admits, "vague
+rumours circulated. They talked of the covetousness and want of scruple
+of the Knights, of their passion for aggrandizement and their rapacity.
+Their haughty insolence was proverbial. Drinking habits were attributed
+to them; the saying was already in use 'to drink like a Templar.' The
+old German word _Tempelhaus_ indicated a house of ill-fame."[140]
+
+The same rumours had reached Clement V even before his accession to the
+papal throne in 1305,[141] and in this same year he summoned the Grand
+Master of the Order, Jacques du Molay, to return to France from the
+island of Cyprus, where he was assembling fresh forces to avenge the
+recent reverses of the Christian armies.
+
+Du Molay arrived in France with sixty other Knights Templar and 150,000
+gold florins, as well as a large quantity of silver that the Order had
+amassed in the East.[142]
+
+The Pope now set himself to make enquiries concerning the charges of
+"unspeakable apostasy against God, detestable idolatry, execrable vice,
+and many heresies" that had been "secretly intimated" to him. But, to
+quote his own words:
+
+ Because it did not seem likely nor credible that men of such
+ religion who were believed often to shed their blood and frequently
+ expose their persons to the peril of death for Christ's name, and
+ who showed such great and many signs of devotion both in divine
+ offices as well as in fasts, as in other devotional observances,
+ should be so forgetful of their salvation as to do these things, we
+ were unwilling ... to give ear to this kind of insinuation ...
+ (_hujusmodi insinuacioni ac delacioni ipsorum ... aurem noluimus
+ inclinare_).[143]
+
+The King of France, Philippe le Bel, who had hitherto been the friend of
+the Templars, now became alarmed and urged the Pope to take action
+against them; but before the Pope was able to find out more about the
+matter, the King took the law into his own hands and had all the
+Templars in France arrested on October 13, 1307. The following charges
+were then brought against them by the Inquisitor for France before whom
+they were examined:
+
+ 1. The ceremony of initiation into their Order was accompanied by
+ insults to the Cross, the denial of Christ, and gross obscenities.
+
+ 2. The adoration of an idol which was said to be the image of the
+ true God.
+
+ 3. The omission of the words of consecration at Mass.
+
+ 4. The right that the lay chiefs arrogated to themselves of giving
+ absolution.
+
+ 5. The authorization of unnatural vice.
+
+To all these infamies a great number of the Knights, including Jacques
+du Molay, confessed in almost precisely the same terms; at their
+admission into the Order, they said, they had been shown the cross on
+which was the figure of Christ, and had been asked whether they believed
+in Him; when they answered yes, they were told in some cases that this
+was wrong (_dixit sibi quod male credebat_),[144] because He was not
+God, He was a false prophet (_quia falsus propheta erat, nec erat
+Deus_).[145] Some added that they were then shown an idol or a bearded
+head which they were told to worship[146]; one added that this was of
+such "a terrible aspect that it seemed to him to be the face of some
+devil, called in French _un maufe_, and that whenever he saw it he was
+so overcome with fear that he could hardly look at it without fear and
+trembling."[147] All who confessed declared that they had been ordered
+to spit on the crucifix, and very many that they had received the
+injunction to commit obscenities and to practise unnatural vice. Some
+said that on their refusal to carry out these orders they had been
+threatened with imprisonment, even perpetual imprisonment; a few said
+they had actually been incarcerated[148]; one declared that he had been
+terrorized, seized by the throat, and threatened with death.[149]
+
+Since, however, a number of these confessions were made under torture,
+it is more important to consider the evidence provided by the trial of
+the Knights at the hands of the Pope, where this method was not
+employed.
+
+Now, at the time the Templars were arrested, Clement V., deeply
+resenting the King's interference with an Order which existed entirely
+under papal jurisdiction, wrote in the strongest terms of remonstrance
+to Philippe le Bel urging their release, and even after their trial,
+neither the confessions of the Knights nor the angry expostulations of
+the King could persuade him to believe in their guilt.[150] But as the
+scandal concerning the Templars was increasing, he consented to receive
+in private audience "a certain Knight of the Order, of great nobility
+and held by the said Order in no slight esteem," who testified to the
+abominations that took place on the reception of the Brethren, the
+spitting on the cross, and other things which were not lawful nor,
+humanly speaking, decent.[151]
+
+The Pope then decided to hold an examination of seventy-two French
+Knights at Poictiers in order to discover whether the confessions made
+by them before the Inquisitor at Paris could be substantiated, and at
+this examination, conducted without torture or pressure of any kind in
+the presence of the Pope himself, the witnesses declared on oath that
+they would tell "the full and pure truth." They then made confessions
+which were committed to writing in their presence, and these being
+afterwards read aloud to them, they expressly and willingly approved
+them (_perseverantes in illis eas expresse et sponte, prout recitate
+fuerunt approbarunt_).[152]
+
+Besides this, an examination of the Grand Master, Jacques du Molay, and
+the Preceptors of the Order was held in the presence of "three Cardinals
+and four public notaries and many other good men." These witnesses, says
+the official report, "having sworn with their hands on the Gospel of
+God" (_ad sancta dei evangelia ab iis corporaliter tacta_) that--
+
+ they would on all the aforesaid things speak the pure and full
+ truth, they, separately, freely, and spontaneously, without any
+ coercion and fear, deposed and confessed among other things, the
+ denial of Christ and spitting upon the cross when they were
+ received into the Order of the Temple. And some of them (deposed
+ and confessed) that under the same form, namely, with denial of
+ Christ and spitting on the cross, they had received many Brothers
+ into the Order. Some of them too confessed certain other horrible
+ and disgusting things on which we are silent.... Besides this, they
+ said and confessed that those things which are contained in the
+ confessions and depositions of heretical depravity which they made
+ lately before the Inquisitor (of Paris) were true.
+
+Their confessions, being again committed to writing, were approved by
+the witnesses, who then with bended knees and many tears asked for and
+obtained absolution.[153]
+
+The Pope, however, still refused to take action against the whole Order
+merely because the Master and Brethren around him had "gravely sinned,"
+and it was decided to hold a papal commission in Paris. The first
+sitting took place in November 1309, when the Grand Master and 231
+Knights were summoned before the pontifical commissioners. "This
+enquiry," says Michelet, "was conducted slowly, with much consideration
+and gentleness (_avec beaucoup de menagement et de douceur_) by high
+ecclesiastical dignitaries, an archbishop, several bishops, etc."[154]
+But although a number of the Knights, including the Grand Master, now
+retracted their admissions, some damning confessions were again
+forthcoming.
+
+It is impossible within the scope of this book to follow the many trials
+of the Templars that took place in different countries--in Italy, at
+Ravenna, Pisa, Bologna, and Florence, where torture was not employed and
+blasphemies were admitted,[155] or in Germany, where torture was
+employed but no confessions were made and a verdict was given in favour
+of the Order. A few details concerning the trial in England may,
+however, be of interest.
+
+It has generally been held that torture was not applied in England owing
+to the humanity of Edward II, who at first absolutely refused to listen
+to any accusations against the Order.[156] On December 10, 1307, he had
+written to the Pope in these terms:
+
+ And because the said Master or Brethren constant in the purity of
+ the Catholic faith have been frequently commended by us, and by all
+ our kingdom, both in their life and morals, we are unable to
+ believe in suspicious stories of this kind until we know with
+ greater certainty about these things.
+
+ We, therefore, pity from our souls the suffering and losses of the
+ Sd. Master and brethren, which they suffer in consequence of such
+ infamy, and we supplicate most affectionately your Sanctity if it
+ please you, that considering with favour suited to the good
+ character of the Master and brethren, you may deem fit to meet with
+ more indulgence the detractions, calumnies and charges by certain
+ envious and evil disposed persons, who endeavour to turn their good
+ deeds into works of perverseness opposed to divine teaching; until
+ the said charges attributed to them shall have been brought legally
+ before you or your representatives here and more fully proved.[157]
+
+Edward II also wrote in the same terms to the Kings of Portugal,
+Castile, Aragon, and Sicily. But two years later, after Clement V had
+himself heard the confessions of the Order, and a Papal Bull had been
+issued declaring that "the unspeakable wickednesses and abominable
+crimes of notorious heresy" had now "come to the knowledge of almost
+everyone," Edward II was persuaded to arrest the Templars and order
+their examination. According to Mr. Castle, whose interesting treatise
+we quote here, the King would not allow torture to be employed, with the
+result that the Knights denied all charges; but later, it is said, he
+allowed himself to be overpersuaded, and "torture appears to have been
+applied on one or two occasions,"[158] with the result that three
+Knights confessed to all and were given absolution.[159] At Southwark,
+however, "a considerable number of brethren" admitted that "they had
+been strongly accused of the crimes of negation and spitting, they did
+not say they were guilty but that they could not purge themselves ...
+and therefore they abjured these and all other heresies."[160] Evidence
+was also given against the Order by outside witnesses, and the same
+stories of intimidation at the ceremony of reception were told.[161] At
+any rate, the result of the investigation was not altogether
+satisfactory, and the Templars were finally suppressed in England as
+elsewhere by the Council of Vienne in 1312.
+
+In France more rigorous measures were adopted and fifty-four Knights who
+had retracted their confessions were burnt at the stake as "relapsed
+heretics" on May 12, 1310. Four years later, on March 14, 1314, the
+Grand Master, Jacques du Molay, suffered the same fate.
+
+Now, however much we must execrate the barbarity of this sentence--as
+also the cruelties that had preceded it--- this is no reason why we
+should admit the claim of the Order to noble martyrdom put forward by
+the historians who have espoused their cause. The character of the
+Templars is not rehabilitated by condemning the conduct of the King and
+Pope. Yet this is the line of argument usually adopted by the defenders
+of the Order. Thus the two main contentions on which they base their
+defence are, firstly, that the confessions of the Knights were made
+under torture, therefore they must be regarded as null and void; and,
+secondly, that the whole affair was a plot concerted between the King
+and Pope in order to obtain possession of the Templars' riches. Let us
+examine these contentions in turn.
+
+In the first place, as we have seen, all confessions were not made under
+torture. No one, as far as I am aware, disputes Michelet's assertion
+that the enquiry before the Papal Commission in Paris, at which a number
+of Knights adhered to the statements they had made to the Pope, was
+conducted without pressure of any kind. But further, the fact that
+confessions are made under torture does not necessarily invalidate them
+as evidence. Guy Fawkes also confessed under torture, yet it is never
+suggested that the whole story of the Gunpowder Plot was a myth.
+Torture, however much we may condemn it, has frequently proved the only
+method for overcoming the intimidation exercised over the mind of a
+conspirator; a man bound by the terrible obligations of a confederacy
+and fearing the vengeance of his fellow-conspirators will not readily
+yield to persuasion, but only to force. If, then, some of the Templars
+were terrorized by torture, or even by the fear of torture, it must not
+be forgotten that terrorism was exercised by both sides. Few will deny
+that the Knights were bound by oaths of secrecy, so that on one hand
+they were threatened with the vengeance of the Order if they betrayed
+its secrets, and on the other faced with torture if they refused to
+confess. Thus they found themselves between the devil and the deep sea.
+It was therefore not a case of a mild and unoffending Order meeting
+with brutal treatment at the hands of authority, but of the victims of a
+terrible autocracy being delivered into the hands of another autocracy.
+
+Moreover, do the confessions of the Knights appear to be the outcome of
+pure imagination such as men under the influence of torture might
+devise? It is certainly difficult to believe that the accounts of the
+ceremony of initiation given in detail by men in different countries,
+all closely resembling each other, yet related in different phraseology,
+could be pure inventions. Had the victims been driven to invent they
+would surely have contradicted each other, have cried out in their agony
+that all kinds of wild and fantastic rites had taken place in order to
+satisfy the demands of their interlocutors. But no, each appears to be
+describing the same ceremony more or less completely, with
+characteristic touches that indicate the personality of the speaker, and
+in the main all the stories tally.
+
+The further contention that the case against the Templars was
+manufactured by the King and Pope with a view to obtaining their wealth
+is entirely disproved by facts. The latest French historian of mediaeval
+France, whilst expressing disbelief in the guilt of the Templars,
+characterizes this counter-accusation as "puerile." "Philippe le Bel,"
+writes M. Funck-Brentano, "has never been understood; from the beginning
+people have not been just to him. This young prince was one of the
+greatest kings and the noblest characters that have appeared in
+history."[162]
+
+Without carrying appreciation so far, one must nevertheless accord to M.
+Funck-Brentano's statement of facts the attention it merits. Philippe
+has been blamed for debasing the coin of the realm; in reality he merely
+ordered it to be mixed with alloy as a necessary measure after the war
+with England,[163] precisely as own coinage was debased in consequence
+of the recent war. This was done quite openly and the coinage was
+restored at the earliest opportunity. Intensely national, his policy of
+attacking the Lombards, exiling the Jews, and suppressing the Templars,
+however regrettable the methods by which it was carried out, resulted in
+immense benefits to France; M. Funck-Brentano has graphically described
+the prosperity of the whole country during the early fourteenth
+century--the increase of population, flourishing agriculture and
+industry. "In Provence and Languedoc one meets swineherds who have
+vineyards; simple cowherds who have town houses."[164]
+
+The attitude of Philippe le Bel towards the Templars must be viewed in
+this light--ruthless suppression of any body of people who interfered
+with the prosperity of France. His action was not that of arbitrary
+authority; he "proceeded," says M. Funck-Brentano, "by means of an
+appeal to the people. In his name Nogaret (the Chancellor) spoke to the
+Parisians in the garden of the Palace (October 13, 1307). Popular
+assemblies were convoked all over France";[165] "the Parliament of
+Tours, with hardly a dissentient vote, declared the Templars worthy of
+death. The University of Paris gave the weight of their judgement as to
+the fullness and authenticity of the confessions."[166] Even assuming
+that these bodies were actuated by the same servility as that which has
+been attributed to the Pope, how are we to explain the fact that the
+trial of the Order aroused no opposition among the far from docile
+people of Paris? If the Templars had indeed, as they professed, been
+leading noble and upright lives, devoting themselves to the care of the
+poor, one might surely expect their arrest to be followed by popular
+risings. But there appears to have been no sign of this.
+
+As to the Pope, we have already seen that from the outset he had shown
+himself extremely reluctant to condemn the Order, and no satisfactory
+explanation is given of his change of attitude except that he wished to
+please the King. As far as his own interests were concerned, it is
+obvious that he could have nothing to gain by publishing to the world a
+scandal that must inevitably bring opprobrium on the Church. His
+lamentations to this effect in the famous Bull[167] clearly show that he
+recognized this danger and therefore desired at all costs to clear the
+accused Knights, if evidence could be obtained in their favour. It was
+only when the Templars made damning admissions in his presence that he
+was obliged to abandon their defence.[168] Yet we are told that he did
+this out of base compliance with the wishes of Philippe le Bel.
+
+Philippe le Bell is thus represented as the arch-villain of the whole
+piece, through seven long years hounding down a blameless Order--from
+whom up to the very moment of their arrest he had repeatedly received
+loans of money--solely with the object of appropriating their wealth.
+Yet after all we find that the property of the Templars was not
+appropriated by the King, but was given by him to the Knights of St.
+John of Jerusalem!
+
+ What was the fate of the Templars' goods? Philippe le Bel decided
+ that they should be handed over to the Hospitallers. Clement V
+ states that the Orders given by the King on this subject were
+ executed. Even the domain of the Temple in Paris ... up to the eve
+ of the Revolution was the property of the Knights of St. John of
+ Jerusalem. The royal treasury kept for itself certain sums for the
+ costs of the trial. These had been immense.[169]
+
+These facts in no way daunt the antagonists of Philippe, who we are now
+assured--again without any proof whatever--was overruled by the Pope in
+this matter. But setting all morality aside, as a mere question of
+policy, is it likely that the King would have deprived himself of his
+most valuable financial supporters and gone to the immense trouble of
+bringing them to trial without first assuring himself that he would
+benefit by the affair? Would he, in other words, have killed the goose
+that laid the golden eggs without any guarantee that the body of the
+goose would remain in his possession? Again, if, as we are told, the
+Pope suppressed the Order so as to please the King, why should he have
+thwarted him over the whole purpose the King had in view? Might we not
+expect indignant remonstrances from Philippe at thus being baulked of
+the booty he had toiled so long to gain? But, on the contrary, we find
+him completely in agreement with the Pope on this subject. In November
+1309 Clement V distinctly stated that "Philippe the Illustrious, King of
+France," to whom the facts concerning the Templars had been told, was
+"not prompted by avarice since he desired to keep or appropriate for
+himself no part of the property of the Templars, but liberally and
+devotedly left them to us and the Church to be administered," etc.[170]
+
+Thus the whole theory concerning the object for which the Templars were
+suppressed falls to the ground--a theory which on examination is seen to
+be built up entirely on the plan of imputing motives without any
+justification in facts. The King acted from cupidity, the Pope from
+servility, and the Templars confessed from fear of torture--on these
+pure hypotheses defenders of the Order base their arguments.
+
+The truth is, far more probably, that if the King had any additional
+reason for suppressing the Templars it was not envy of their wealth but
+fear of the immense power their wealth conferred; the Order dared even
+to defy the King and to refuse to pay taxes. The Temple in fact
+constituted an _imperium in imperio_ that threatened not only the royal
+authority but the whole social system.[171] An important light is thrown
+on the situation by M. Funck-Brentano in this passage:
+
+ As the Templars had houses in all countries, they practised the
+ financial operations of the international banks of our times; they
+ were acquainted with letters of change, orders payable at sight,
+ they instituted dividends and annuities on deposited capital,
+ advanced funds, lent on credit, controlled private accounts,
+ undertook to raise taxes for the lay and ecclesiastical
+ seigneurs.[172]
+
+Through their proficiency in these matters--acquired very possibly from
+the Jews of Alexandria whom they must have met in the East--the Templars
+had become the "international financiers" and "international
+capitalists" of their day; had they not been suppressed, all the evils
+now denounced by Socialists as peculiar to the system they describe as
+"Capitalism"--trusts, monopolies, and "corners"--would in all
+probability have been inaugurated during the course of the fourteenth
+century in a far worse form than at the present day, since no
+legislation existed to protect the community at large. The feudal
+system, as Marx and Engels perceived, was the principal obstacle to
+exploitation by a financial autocracy.[173]
+
+Moreover, it is by no means improbable that this order of things would
+have been brought about by the violent overthrow of the French
+monarchy--indeed, of all monarchies; the Templars, "those terrible
+conspirators," says Eliphas Levi, "threatened the whole world with an
+immense revolution."[174]
+
+Here perhaps we may find the reason why this band of dissolute and
+rapacious nobles has enlisted the passionate sympathy of democratic
+writers. For it will be noticed that these same writers who attribute
+the King's condemnation of the Order to envy of their wealth never apply
+this argument to the demagogues of the eighteenth century and suggest
+that their accusations against the nobles of France were inspired by
+cupidity, nor would they ever admit that any such motive may enter into
+the diatribes against private owners of wealth to-day. The Templars thus
+remain the only body of capitalists, with the exception of the Jews, to
+be not only pardoned for their riches but exalted as noble victims of
+prejudice and envy. Is it merely because the Templars were the enemies
+of monarchy? Or is it that the world revolution, whilst attacking
+private owners of property, has never been opposed to International
+Finance, particularly when combined with anti-Christian tendencies?
+
+It is the continued defence of the Templars which, to the present
+writer, appears the most convincing evidence against them. For even if
+one believes them innocent of the crimes laid to their charge, how is it
+possible to admire them in their later stages? The fact that cannot be
+denied is that they were false to their obligations; that they took the
+vow of poverty and then grew not only rich but arrogant; that they took
+the vow of chastity and became notoriously immoral.[175] Are all these
+things then condoned because the Templars formed a link in the chain of
+world revolution?
+
+At this distance of time the guilt or innocence of the Templars will
+probably never be conclusively established either way; on the mass of
+conflicting evidence bequeathed to us by history no one can pronounce a
+final judgement.
+
+Without attempting to digmatize on the question, I would suggest that
+the real truth may be that the Knights were both innocent and guilty,
+that is to say, that a certain number were initiated into the secret
+doctrine of the Order whilst the majority remained throughout in
+ignorance. Thus according to the evidence of Stephen de Stapelbrugge, an
+English Knight, "there were two modes of reception, one lawful and good
+and the other contrary to the Faith."[176] This would account for the
+fact that some of the accused declined to confess even under the
+greatest pressure. These may really have known nothing of the real
+doctrines of the Order, which were confided orally only to those whom
+the superiors regarded as unlikely to be revolted by them. Such have
+always been the methods of secret societies, from the Ismailis onward.
+
+This theory of a double doctrine is put forward by Loiseleur, who
+observes:
+
+ If we consult the statutes of the Order of the Temple as they have
+ come down to us, we shall certainly discover there is nothing that
+ justifies the strange and abominable practices revealed at the
+ Inquiry. But ... besides the public rule, had not the Order another
+ one, whether traditional or written, authorizing or even
+ prescribing these practices--a secret rule, revealed only to the
+ initiates?[177]
+
+Eliphas Levi also exonerates the majority of the Templars from
+complicity in either anti-monarchical or anti-religious designs:
+
+ These tendencies were enveloped in profound mystery and the Order
+ made an outward profession of the most perfect orthodoxy. The
+ Chiefs alone knew whither they were going; the rest followed
+ unsuspectingly.[178]
+
+What, then, was the Templar heresy? On this point we find a variety of
+opinions. According to Wilcke, Ranke, and Weber it was "the unitarian
+deism of Islam"[179]; Lecouteulx de Canteleu thinks, however, it was
+derived from heretical Islamic sources, and relates that whilst in
+Palestine, one of the Knights, Guillaume de Montbard, was initiated by
+the Old Man of the Mountain in a cave of Mount Lebanon.[180] That a
+certain resemblance existed between the Templars and the Assassins has
+been indicated by von Hammer,[181] and further emphasized by the
+Freemason Clavel:
+
+ Oriental historians show us, at different periods, the Order of the
+ Templars maintaining intimate relations with that of the Assassins,
+ and they insist on the affinity that existed between the two
+ associations. They remark that they had adopted the same colours,
+ white and red; that they had the same organization, the same
+ hierarchy of degrees, those of fedavi, refik, and dai in one
+ corresponding to those of novice, professed, and knight in the
+ other; that both conspired for the ruin of the religions they
+ professed in public, and that finally both possessed numerous
+ castles, the former in Asia, the latter in Europe.[182]
+
+But in spite of these outward resemblances it does not appear from the
+confessions of the Knights that the secret doctrine of the Templars was
+that of the Assassins or of any Ismaili sect by which, in accordance
+with orthodox Islamism, Jesus was openly held up as a prophet, although,
+secretly, indifference to all religion was inculcated. The Templars, as
+far as can be discovered, were anti-Christian deists; Loiseleur
+considers that their ideas were derived from Gnostic or Manichean
+dualists--Cathari, Paulicians, or more particularly Bogomils, of which a
+brief account must be given here.
+
+The _Paulicians_, who flourished about the seventh century A.D., bore a
+resemblance to the Cainites and Ophites in their detestation of the
+Demiurgus and in the corruption of their morals. Later, in the ninth
+century, the _Bogomils_, whose name signifies in Slavonic "friends of
+God" and who had migrated from Northern Syria and Mesopotamia to the
+Balkan Peninsula, particularly Thrace, appeared as a further development
+of Manichean dualism. Their doctrine may be summarized thus:
+
+God, the Supreme Father, has two sons, the elder Satanael, the younger
+Jesus. To Satanael, who sat on the right hand of God, belonged the right
+of governing the celestial world, but, filled with pride, he rebelled
+against his Father and fell from Heaven. Then, aided by the companions
+of his fall, he created the visible world, image of the celestial,
+having like the other its sun, moon, and stars, and last he created man
+and the serpent which became his minister. Later Christ came to earth in
+order to show men the way to Heaven, but His death was ineffectual, for
+even by descending into Hell He could not wrest the power from Satanael,
+i.e. Satan.
+
+This belief in the impotence of Christ and the necessity therefore for
+placating Satan, not only "the Prince of this world," but its creator,
+led to the further doctrine that Satan, being all-powerful, should be
+adored. Nicetas Choniates, a Byzantine historian of the twelfth century,
+described the followers of this cult as "Satanists," because
+"considering Satan powerful they worshipped him lest he might do them
+harm"; subsequently they were known as Luciferians, their doctrine (as
+stated by Neuss and Vitoduranus) being that Lucifer was unjustly driven
+out of Heaven, that one day he will ascend there again and be restored
+to his former glory and power in the celestial world.
+
+The Bogomils and Luciferians were thus closely akin, but whilst the
+former divided their worship between God and His two sons, the latter
+worshipped Lucifer only, regarding the material world as his work and
+holding that by indulging the flesh they were propitiating their
+Demon-Creator. It was said that a black cat, the symbol of Satan,
+figured in their ceremonies as an object of worship, also that at their
+horrible nocturnal orgies sacrifices of children were made and their
+blood used for making the Eucharistic bread of the sect.[183]
+
+ Thus the Templars recognize at the same time a good god,
+ incommunicable to man and consequently without symbolic
+ representation, and a bad god, to whom they give the features of an
+ idol of fearful aspect.[184]
+
+Their most fervent worship was addressed to this god of evil, who alone
+could enrich them. "They said with the Luciferians: 'The elder son of
+God, Satanael or Lucifer alone has a right to the homage of mortals;
+Jesus his younger brother does not deserve this honour.'"[185]
+
+Although we shall not find these ideas so clearly defined in the
+confessions of the Knights, some colour is lent to this theory by those
+who related that the reason given to them for not believing in Christ
+was "that He was nothing, He was a false prophet and of no value, and
+that they should believe in the Higher God of Heaven who could save
+them."[186] According to Loiseleur, the idol they were taught to
+worship, the bearded head known to history as Baphomet, represented "the
+inferior god, organizer and dominator of the material world, author of
+good and evil here below, him by whom evil was introduced into
+creation."[187]
+
+The etymology of the word Baphomet is difficult to discover; Raynouard
+says it originated with two witnesses heard at Carcassonne who spoke of
+"Figura Baflometi," and suggests that it was a corruption of "Mohammed,"
+whom the Inquisitors wished to make the Knights confess they were taught
+to adore.[188] But this surmise with regard to the intentions of the
+Inquisitors seems highly improbable, since they must have been well
+aware that, as Wilcke points out, the Moslems forbid all idols.[189] For
+this reason Wilcke concludes that the Mohammedanism of the Templars was
+combined with Cabalism and that their idol was in reality the
+_macroprosopos_, or head of the Ancient of Ancients, represented as an
+old man with a long beard, or sometimes as three heads in one, which has
+already been referred to under the name of the Long Face in the first
+chapter of this book--a theory which would agree with Eliphas Levi's
+assertion that the Templars were "initiated into the mysterious
+doctrines of the Cabala."[190] But Levi goes on to define this teaching
+under the name of Johannism. It is here that we reach a further theory
+with regard to the secret doctrine of the Templars--- the most important
+of all, since it emanates from masonic and neo-Templar sources thus
+effectually disposing of the contention that the charge brought against
+the Order of apostasy from the Catholic faith is solely the invention of
+Catholic writers.
+
+In 1842 the Freemason Ragon related that the Templars learnt from the
+"initiates of the East" a certain Judaic doctrine which was attributed
+to St. John the Apostle; therefore "they renounced the religion of St.
+Peter" and became Johannites.[191] Eliphas Levi expresses the same
+opinion.
+
+Now, these statements are apparently founded on a legend which was first
+published early in the nineteenth century, when an association calling
+itself the _Ordre du Temple_ and claiming direct descent from the
+original Templar Order published two works, the _Manuel des Chevaliers
+de l'Ordre du Temple_ in 1811, and the _Levitikon_ in 1831, together
+with a version of the Gospel of St. John differing from the Vulgate.
+These books, which appear to have been printed only for private
+circulation amongst the members and are now extremely rare, relate that
+the Order of the Temple had never ceased to exist since the days of
+Jacques du Molay, who appointed Jacques de Larmenie his successor in
+office, and from that time onwards a line of Grand Masters had succeeded
+each other without a break up to the end of the eighteenth century, when
+it ceased for a brief period but was reinstituted under a new Grand
+Master, Fabre Palaprat, in 1804. Besides publishing the list of all
+Grand Masters, known as the "Charter of Larmenius," said to have been
+preserved in the secret archives of the Temple, these works also
+reproduce another document drawn from the same repository describing the
+origins of the Order. This manuscript, written in Greek on parchment,
+dated 1154, purports to be partly taken from a fifth-century MS. and
+relates that Hugues de Payens, first Grand Master of the Templars, was
+initiated in 1118--that is to say, in the year the Order was
+founded--into the religious doctrine of "the Primitive Christian Church"
+by its Sovereign Pontiff and Patriarch, Theoclet, sixtieth in direct
+succession from St. John the Apostle. The history of the Primitive
+Church is then given as follows:
+
+ Moses was initiated in Egypt. Profoundly versed in the physical,
+ theological, and metaphysical mysteries of the priests, he knew how
+ to profit by these so as to surmount the power of the Mages and
+ deliver his companions. Aaron, his brother, and the chiefs of the
+ Hebrews became the depositaries of his doctrine....
+
+ The Son of God afterwards appeared on the scene of the world.... He
+ was brought up at the school of Alexandria.... Imbued with a spirit
+ wholly divine, endowed with the most astounding qualities
+ (_dispositions_), he was able to reach all the degrees of Egyptian
+ initiation. On his return to Jerusalem, he presented himself before
+ the chiefs of the Synagogue.... Jesus Christ, directing the fruit
+ of his lofty meditations towards universal civilization and the
+ happiness of the world, rent the veil which concealed the truth
+ from the peoples. He preached the love of God, the love of one's
+ neighbour, and equality before the common Father of all men....
+
+ Jesus conferred evangelical initiation on his apostles and
+ disciples. He transmitted his spirit to them, divided them into
+ several orders after the practice of John, the beloved disciple,
+ the apostle of fraternal love, whom he had instituted Sovereign
+ Pontiff and Patriarch....
+
+Here we have the whole Cabalistic legend of a secret doctrine descending
+from Moses, of Christ as an Egyptian initiate and founder of a secret
+order--a theory, of course, absolutely destructive of belief in His
+divinity. The legend of the _Ordre du Temple_ goes on to say:
+
+ Up to about the year 1118 (i.e. the year the Order of the Temple
+ was founded) the mysteries and the hierarchic Order of the
+ initiation of Egypt, transmitted to the Jews by Moses, then to the
+ Christians by J.C., were religiously preserved by the successors of
+ St. John the Apostle. These mysteries and initiations, regenerated
+ by the evangelical initiation (or baptism), were a sacred trust
+ which the simplicity of the primitive and unchanging morality of
+ the _Brothers of the East_ had preserved from all adulteration....
+
+ The Christians, persecuted by the infidels, appreciating the
+ courage and piety of these brave crusaders, who, with the sword in
+ one hand and the cross in the other, flew to the defence of the
+ holy places, and, above all, doing striking justice to the virtues
+ and the ardent charity of Hugues de Payens, held it their duty to
+ confide to hands so pure the treasures of knowledge acquired
+ throughout so many centuries, sanctified by the cross, the dogma
+ and the morality of the Man-God. Hugues was invested with the
+ Apostolic Patriarchal power and placed in the legitimate order of
+ the successors of St. John the apostle or the evangelist.
+
+ Such is the origin of the foundation of the Order of the Temple and
+ of the fusion in this Order of the different kinds of initiation of
+ the Christians of the East designated under the title of Primitive
+ Christians or Johannites.
+
+It will be seen at once that all this story is subtly subversive of true
+Christianity, and that the appellation of Christians applied to the
+Johannites is an imposture. Indeed Fabre Palaprat, Grand Master of the
+_Ordre du Temple_ in 1804, who in his book on the Templars repeats the
+story contained in the _Levitikon and the Manuel des Chevaliers du
+Temple_, whilst making the same profession of "primitive Christian"
+doctrines descending from St. John through Theoclet and Hugues de Payens
+to the Order over which he presides, goes on to say that the secret
+doctrine of the Templars "was essentially contrary to the canons of the
+Church of Rome and that it is principally to this fact that one must
+attribute the persecution of which history has preserved the memory."[192]
+The belief of the Primitive Christians, and consequently that the
+Templars, with regard to the miracles of Christ is that He "did or may
+have done extraordinary or miraculous things," and that since "God can
+do things incomprehensible to human intelligence," the Primitive Church
+venerates "all the acts of Christ as they are described in the Gospel,
+whether it considers them as acts of human science or whether as acts of
+divine power."[193] Belief in the divinity of Christ is thus left an
+open question, and the same attitude is maintained towards the
+Resurrection, of which the story is omitted in the Gospel of St. John
+possessed by the Order. Fabre Palaprat further admits that the gravest
+accusations brought against the Templars were founded on facts which he
+attempts to explain away in the following manner:
+
+ The Templars having in 1307 carefully abstracted all the
+ manuscripts composing the secret archives of the Order from the
+ search made by authority, and these authentic manuscripts having
+ been preciously preserved since that period, we have to-day the
+ certainty that the Knights endured a great number of religious and
+ moral trials before reaching the different degrees of initiation:
+ thus, for example, the recipient might receive the injunction under
+ pain of death to trample on the crucifix or to worship an idol, but
+ if he yielded to the terror which they sought to inspire in him he
+ was declared unworthy of being admitted to the higher grades of the
+ Order. One can imagine in this way how beings, too feeble or too
+ immoral to endure the trials of initiation, may have accused the
+ Templars of giving themselves up to infamous practices and of
+ having superstitious beliefs.
+
+It is certainly not surprising that an Order which gave such injunctions
+as these, for whatever purpose, should have become the object of
+suspicion.
+
+Eliphas Levi, who, like Ragon, accepts the statements of the _Ordre du
+Temple_ concerning the "Johannite" origin of the Templars' secret
+doctrine, is, however, not deceived by these professions of
+Christianity, and boldly asserts that the Sovereign Pontiff Theoclet
+initiated Hugues de Payens "into the mysteries and hopes of his
+pretended Church, he lured him by the ideas of sacerdotal sovereignty
+and supreme royalty, he indicated him finally as his successor. So the
+Order of the Knights of the Temple was stained from its origin with
+schism and conspiracy against Kings."[194] Further, Levi relates that
+the real story told to initiates concerning Christ was no other than the
+infamous _Toledot Yeshu_ described in the first chapter of this book,
+and which the Johannites dared to attribute to St. John.[195] This would
+accord with the confession of the Catalonian Knight Templar, Galcerandus
+de Teus, who stated that the form of absolution in the Order was: "I
+pray God that He may pardon your sins as He pardoned St. Mary Magdalene
+and the thief on the cross"; but the witness went on to explain:
+
+ By the thief of which the head of the Chapter speaks, is meant,
+ according to our statutes, that Jesus or Christ who was crucified
+ by the Jews because he was not God, and yet he said he was God and
+ the King of the Jews, which was an outrage to the true God who is
+ in Heaven. When Jesus, a few moments before his death, had his side
+ pierced by the lance of Longinus, he repented of having called
+ himself God and King of the Jews and he asked pardon of the true
+ God; then the true God pardoned him. It is thus that we apply to
+ the crucified Christ these words: "as God pardoned the thief on the
+ cross."[196]
+
+Raynouard, who quotes this deposition, stigmatizes it as "singular and
+extravagant"; M. Matter agrees that it is doubtless extravagant, but
+that "it merits attention. There was a whole system there, which was not
+the invention of Galcerant."[197] Eliphas Levi provides the clue to that
+system and to the reason why Christ was described as a thief, by
+indicating the Cabalistic legend wherein He was described as having
+_stolen_ the sacred Name from the Holy of Holies. Elsewhere he explains
+that the Johannites "made themselves out to be the only people initiated
+into the true mysteries of the religion of the Saviour. They professed
+to know the real history of Jesus Christ, and by adopting part of Jewish
+traditions and the stories of the Talmud, they made out that the facts
+related in the Gospels"--that is to say, the Gospels accepted by the
+orthodox Church--"were only allegories of which St. John gives the
+key."[198]
+
+But it is time to pass from legend to facts. For the whole story of the
+initiation of the Templars by the "Johannites" rests principally on the
+documents produced by the Ordre du Temple in 1811. According to the
+Abbes Gregoire and Munter the authenticity and antiquity of these
+documents are beyond dispute. Gregoire, referring to the parchment
+manuscript of the _Levitikon_ and Gospel of St. John, says that
+"Hellenists versed in paleography believe this manuscript to be of the
+thirteenth century, others declare it to be earlier and to go back to
+the eleventh century."[199] Matter, on the other hand, quoting Munter's
+opinion that the manuscripts in the archives of the modern Templars date
+from the thirteenth century, observes that this is all a tissue of
+errors and that the critics, including the learned Professor Thilo of
+Halle, have recognized that the manuscript in question, far from
+belonging to the thirteenth century, dates from the beginning of the
+eighteenth. From the arrangement of the chapters of the Gospel, M.
+Matter arrives at the conclusion that it was intended to accompany the
+ceremonies of some masonic or secret society.[200] We shall return to
+this possibility in a later chapter.
+
+The antiquity of the manuscript containing the history of the Templars
+thus remains an open question on which no one can pronounce an opinion
+without having seen the original. In order, then, to judge of the
+probability of the story that this manuscript contained it is necessary
+to consult the facts of history and to discover what proof can be found
+that any such sect as the Johannites existed at the time of the Crusades
+or earlier. Certainly none is known to have been called by this name or
+by one resembling it before 1622, when some Portuguese monks reported
+the existence of a sect whom they described as "Christians of St. John"
+inhabiting the banks of the Euphrates. The appellation appears, however,
+to have been wrongly applied by the monks, for the sectarians in
+question, variously known as the Mandaeans, Mandaites, Sabians,
+Nazoreans, etc., called themselves Mandai Iyahi, that is to say, the
+disciples, or rather the wise men, of John, the word _mandai_ being
+derived from the Chaldean word _manda_, corresponding to the Greek word
+[Greek: gnosis] or wisdom.[201] The multiplicity of names given to the
+Mandaeans arises apparently from the fact that in their dealings with
+other communities they took the name of Sabians, whilst they called the
+wise and learned amongst themselves Nazoreans.[202] The sect formerly
+inhabited the banks of the Jordan, but was driven out by the Moslems,
+who forced them to retire to Mesopotamia and Babylonia, where they
+particularly affected the neighbourhood of rivers in order to be able to
+carry out their peculiar baptismal rites.[203]
+
+There can be no doubt that the doctrines of the Mandaeans do resemble the
+description of the Johannite heresy as given by Eliphas Levi, though not
+by the _Ordre du Temple_, in that the Mandaeans professed to be the
+disciples of St. John--the Baptist, however, not the Apostle--but were
+at the same time the enemies of Jesus Christ. According to the Mandaeans'
+_Book of John_ (Sidra d'Yahya), Yahya, that is to say, St. John,
+baptized myriads of men during forty years in the Jordan. By a
+mistake--or in response to a written mandate from heaven saying,
+"Yahya, baptize the liar in the Jordan"--he baptized the false prophet
+Yishu Meshiha (the Messiah Jesus), son of the devil Ruha Kadishta.[204]
+The same idea is found in another book of the sect, called the "Book of
+Adam," which represents Jesus as the perverter of St. John's doctrine
+and the disseminator of iniquity and perfidy throughout the world.[205]
+The resemblance between all this and the legends of the Talmud, the
+Cabala, and the Toledot Yeshu is at once apparent; moreover, the
+Mandaeans claim for the "Book of Adam" the same origin as the Jews
+claimed for the Cabala, namely, that it was delivered to Adam by God
+through the hands of the angel Razael.[206] This book, known to scholars
+as the _Codex Nasaraeus_, is described by Munter as "a sort of mosaic
+without order, without method, where one finds mentioned Noah, Abraham,
+Moses, Solomon, the Temple of Jerusalem, St. John the Baptist, Jesus
+Christ, the Christians, and Mohammed." M. Matter, whilst denying any
+proof of the Templar succession from the Mandaeans, nevertheless gives
+good reason for believing that the sect itself existed from the first
+centuries of the Christian era and that its books dated from the eighth
+century[207]; further that these Mandaeans or Nazoreans--not to be
+confounded with the pre-Christian Nazarites or Christian Nazarenes--were
+Jews who revered St. John the Baptist as the prophet of ancient Mosaism,
+but regarded Jesus Christ as a false Messiah sent by the powers of
+darkness.[208] Modern Jewish opinion confirms this affirmation of Judaic
+inspiration and agrees with Matter in describing the Mandaeans as
+Gnostics: "Their sacred books are in an Aramaic dialect, which has close
+affinities with that of the Talmud of Babylon." The Jewish influence is
+distinctly visible in the Mandaean religion. "It is essentially of the
+type of ancient Gnosticism, traces of which are found in the Talmud, the
+Midrash, and in a modified form the later Cabala."[209]
+
+It may then be regarded as certain that a sect existed long before the
+time of the Crusades corresponding to the description of the Johannites
+given by Eliphas Levi in that it was Cabalistic, anti-Christian, yet
+professedly founded on the doctrines of one of the St. Johns. Whether it
+was by this sect that the Templars were indoctrinated must remain an
+open question. M. Matter objects that the evidence lacking to such a
+conclusion lies in the fact that the Templars expressed no particular
+reverence for St. John; but Loiseleur asserts that the Templars did
+prefer the Gospel of St. John to that of the other evangelists, and that
+modern masonic lodges claiming descent from the Templars possess a
+special version of this Gospel said to have been copied from the
+original on Mount Athos.[210] It is also said that "Baphomets" were
+preserved in the masonic lodges of Hungary, where a debased form of
+Masonry, known as Johannite Masonry, survives to this day. If the
+Templar heresy was that of the Johannites, the head in question might
+possibly represent that of John the Baptist, which would accord with the
+theory that the word Baphomet was derived from Greek words signifying
+baptism of wisdom. This would, moreover, not be incompatible with
+Loiseleur's theory of an affinity between the Templars and the Bogomils,
+for the Bogomils also possessed their own version of the Gospel of St.
+John, which they placed on the heads of their neophytes during the
+ceremony of initiation,[211] giving as the reason for the 'I peculiar
+veneration they professed for its author that they regarded St. John as
+the servant of the Jewish God Satanael.[212] Eliphas Levi even goes so
+far as to accuse the Templars of following the occult practices of the
+Luciferians, who carried the doctrines of the Bogomils to the point of
+paying homage to the powers of darkness:
+
+ Let us declare for the edification of the vulgar ... and for the
+ greater glory of the Church which has persecuted the Templars,
+ burned the magicians and excommunicated the Free-Masons, etc., let
+ us say boldly and loudly, that all the initiates of the occult
+ sciences ... have adored, do and will always adore that which is
+ signified by this frightful symbol [the Sabbatic goat].[213] Yes,
+ in our profound conviction, the Grand Masters of the Order of the
+ Templars adored Baphomet and caused him to be adored by their
+ initiates.[214]
+
+It will be seen, then, that the accusation of heresy brought against the
+Templars does not emanate solely from the Catholic Church, but also from
+the secret societies. Even our Freemasons, who, for reasons I shall show
+later, have generally defended the Order, are now willing to admit that
+there was a very real case against them. Thus Dr. Ranking, who has
+devoted many years of study to the question, has arrived at the
+conclusion that Johannism is the real clue to the Templar heresy. In a
+very interesting paper published in the masonic journal _Ars Quatuor
+Coronatorum_, he observes that "the record of the Templars in Palestine
+is one long tale of intrigue and treachery on the part of the Order,"
+and finally:
+
+ That from the very commencement of Christianity there has been
+ transmitted through the centuries a body of doctrine incompatible
+ with Christianity in the various official Churches....
+
+ That the bodies teaching these doctrines professed to do so on the
+ authority of St. John, to whom, as they claimed, the true secrets
+ had been committed by the Founder of Christianity.
+
+ That during the Middle Ages the main support of the Gnostic bodies
+ and the main repository of this knowledge was the Society of the
+ Templars.[215]
+
+What is the explanation of this choice of St. John for the propagation
+of anti-Christian doctrines which we shall find continuing up to the
+present day? What else than the method of perversion which in its
+extreme form becomes Satanism, and consists in always selecting the most
+sacred things for the purpose of desecration? Precisely then because the
+Gospel of St. John is the one of all the four which most insists on the
+divinity of Christ, the occult anti-Christian sects have habitually made
+it the basis of their rites.
+
+
+
+
+4
+
+THREE CENTURIES OF OCCULTISM
+
+
+
+It has been shown in the foregoing chapters that from very early times
+occult sects had existed for two purposes--esoteric and political.
+Whilst the Manicheans, the early Ismailis, the Bogomils, and the
+Luciferians had concerned themselves mainly with religious or esoteric
+doctrines, the later Ismailis, the Fatimites, the Karmathites, and
+Templars had combined secrecy and occult rites with the political aim of
+domination. We shall find this double tradition running through all the
+secret society movement up to the present day.
+
+The Dualist doctrines attributed to the Templars were not, however,
+confined to this Order in Europe, but had been, as we have seen, those
+professed by the Bogomils and also by the Cathari, who spread westwards
+from Bulgaria and Bosnia to France. It was owing to their sojourn in
+Bulgaria that the Cathari gained the popular nickname of "Bulgars" or
+"Bourgres," signifying those addicted to unnatural vice. One section of
+the Cathari in the South of France became known after 1180 as the
+Albigenses, thus called from the town of Albi, although their
+headquarters were really in Toulouse. Christians only in name, they
+adhered in secret to the Gnostic and Manichean doctrines of the earlier
+Cathari, which they would appear to have combined with Johannism, since,
+like this Eastern sect, they claimed to possess their own Gospel of St.
+John.[216]
+
+Although not strictly a secret society, the Albigenses were divided
+after the secret society system into initiates and semi-initiates. The
+former, few in number, known as the _Perfecti_, led in appearance an
+austere life, refraining from meat and professing abhorrence of oaths
+or of lying. The mystery in which they enveloped themselves won for them
+the adoring reverence of the _Credentes_, who formed the great majority
+of the sect and gave themselves up to every vice, to usury, brigandage,
+and perjury, and whilst describing marriage as prostitution, condoning
+incest and all forms of licence.[217] The _Credentes_, who were probably
+not fully initiated into the Dualist doctrines of their superiors,
+looked to them for salvation through the laying-on of hands according to
+the system of the Manicheans.
+
+It was amongst the nobles of Languedoc that the Albigenses found their
+principal support. This "Judaea of France," as it has been called, was
+peopled by a medley of mixed races, Iberian, Gallic, Roman, and
+Semitic.[218] The nobles, very different from the "ignorant and pious
+chivalry of the North," had lost all respect for their traditions.
+"There were few who in going back did not encounter some Saracen or
+Jewish grandmother in their genealogy."[219] Moreover, many had brought
+back to Europe the laxity of morals they had contracted during the
+Crusades. The Comte de Comminges practised polygamy, and, according to
+ecclesiastical chronicles, Raymond VI, Comte de Toulouse, one of the
+most ardent of the Albigense _Credentes_, had his harem.[220] The
+Albigensian movement has been falsely represented as a protest merely
+against the tyranny of the Church of Rome; in reality it was a rising
+against the fundamental doctrines of Christianity--more than this,
+against all principles of religion and morality. For whilst some of the
+sect openly declared that the Jewish law was preferable to that of the
+Christians,[221] to others the God of the Old Testament was as abhorrent
+as the "false Christ" who suffered at Golgotha; the old hatred of the
+Gnostics and Manicheans for the demiurgus lived again in these rebels
+against the social order. Forerunners of the seventeenth-century
+Libertines and eighteenth-century Illuminati, the Albigense nobles,
+under the pretext of fighting the priesthood, strove to throw off all
+the restraints the Church imposed.
+
+Inevitably the disorders that took place throughout the South of France
+led to reprisals, and the Albigenses were suppressed with all the
+cruelty of the age--a fact which has afforded historians the opportunity
+to exalt them as noble martyrs, victims of ecclesiastical despotism. But
+again, as in the case of the Templars, the fact that they were
+persecuted does not prove them innocent of the crimes laid to their
+charge.
+
+
+
+Satanism
+
+
+At the beginning of the fourteenth century another development of
+Dualism, far more horrible than the Manichean heresy of the Albigenses,
+began to make itself felt. This was the cult of Satanism, or black
+magic. The subject is one that must be approached with extreme caution,
+owing to the fact that on one hand much that has been written about it
+is the result of mediaeval superstition, which sees in every departure
+from the Roman Catholic Faith the direct intervention of the Evil One,
+whilst on the other hand the conspiracy of history, which denies _in
+toto_ the existence of the Occult Power, discredits all revelations on
+this question, from whatever source they emanate, as the outcome of
+hysterical imagination.[222] This is rendered all the easier since the
+subject by its amazing extravagance lends itself to ridicule.
+
+It is, however, idle to deny that the cult of evil has always existed;
+the invocation of the powers of darkness was practised in the earliest
+days of the human race and, after the Christian era, found its
+expression, as we have seen, in the Cainites, the Euchites, and the
+Luciferians. These are not surmises, but actual facts of history.
+Towards the end of the twelfth century Luciferianism spread eastwards
+through Styria, the Tyrol, and Bohemia, even as far as Brandenburg; by
+the beginning of the thirteenth century it had invaded western Germany,
+and in the fourteenth century reached its zenith in that country, as
+also in Italy and France. The cult had now reached a further stage in
+its development, and it was not the mere propitiation of Satanael as the
+prince of this world practised by the Luciferians, but actual
+Satanism--the love of evil for the sake of evil--which formed the
+doctrine of the sect known in Italy as _la vecchia religione_ or the
+"old religion." Sorcery was adopted as a profession, and witches, not,
+as is popularly supposed, sporadic growths, were trained in schools of
+magic to practise their art. These facts should be remembered when the
+Church is blamed for the violence it displayed against witchcraft--it
+was not individuals, but a system which it set out to destroy.
+
+The essence of Satanism is desecration. In the ceremonies for infernal
+evocation described by Eliphas Levi we read: "It is requisite to profane
+the ceremonies of the religion one belongs to and to trample its holiest
+symbols under foot."[223] This practice found a climax in desecrating
+the Holy Sacrament. The consecrated wafer was given as food to mice,
+toads, and pigs, or denied in unspeakable ways. A revolting description
+of the Black Mass may be found in Huysmans's book _La-bas_. It is
+unnecessary to transcribe the loathsome details here. Suffice it, then,
+to show that this cult had a very real existence, and if any further
+doubt remains on the matter, the life of Gilles de Rais supplies
+documentary evidence of the visible results of black magic in the Middle
+Ages.
+
+Gilles de Rais was born at Machecoul in Brittany about the year 1404.
+The first period of his life was glorious; the companion and guide of
+Jeanne d'Arc, he became Marechal of France and distinguished himself by
+many deeds of valour. But after dissipating his immense fortune, largely
+on Church ceremonies carried out with the wildest extravagance, he was
+led to study alchemy, partly by curiosity and partly as a means for
+restoring his shattered fortunes. Hearing that Germany and Italy were
+the countries where alchemy flourished, he enlisted Italians in his
+service and was gradually drawn into the further region of magic.
+According to Huysmans, Gilles de Rais had remained until this moment a
+Christian mystic under the influence of Jeanne d'Arc, but after her
+death--possibly in despair--he offered himself to the powers of
+darkness. Evokers of Satan now flocked to him from every side, amongst
+them Prelati, an Italian, by no means the old and wrinkled sorcerer of
+tradition, but a young and attractive man of charming manners. For it
+was from Italy that came the most skilful adepts in the art of alchemy,
+astrology, magic, and infernal evocation, who spread themselves over
+Europe, particularly France. Under the influence of these initiators
+Gilles de Rais signed a letter to the devil in a meadow near Machecoul
+asking him for "knowledge, power, and riches," and offering in exchange
+anything that might be asked of him with the exception of his life or
+his soul. But in spite of this appeal and of a pact signed with the
+blood of the writer, no Satanic apparitions were forthcoming.
+
+It was then that, becoming still more desperate, Gilles de Rais had
+recourse to the abominations for which his name has remained
+infamous--still more frightful invocations, loathsome debaucheries,
+perverted vice in every form, Sadic cruelties, horrible sacrifices, and,
+finally, holocausts of little boys and girls collected by his agents in
+the surrounding country and put to death with the most inhuman tortures.
+During the years 1432-40 literally hundreds of children disappeared.
+Many of the names of the unhappy little victims were preserved in the
+records of the period. Gilles de Rais met with a well-deserved end: in
+1440 he was hanged and burnt. So far he does not appear to have found a
+panegyrist to place him in the ranks of noble martyrs.
+
+It will, of course, be urged that the crimes here described were those
+of a criminal lunatic and not to be attributed to any occult cause; the
+answer to this is that Gilles was not an isolated unit, but one of a
+group of occultists who cannot all have been mad. Moreover, it was only
+after his invocation of the Evil One that he developed these monstrous
+proclivities. So also his eighteenth-century replica, the Marquis de
+Sade, combined with his abominations an impassioned hatred of the
+Christian religion.
+
+What is the explanation of this craze for magic in Western Europe?
+Deschamps points to the Cabala, "that science of demoniacal arts, of
+which the Jews were the initiators," and undoubtedly in any
+comprehensive review of the question the influence of the Jewish
+Cabalists cannot be ignored. In Spain, Portugal, Provence, and Italy the
+Jews by the fifteenth century had become a power; as early as 1450 they
+had penetrated into the intellectual circles of Florence, and it was
+also in Italy that, a century later, the modern Cabalistic school was
+inaugurated by Isaac Luria (1533-72), whose doctrines were organized
+into a practical system by the Hasidim of Eastern Europe for the writing
+of amulets, the conjuration of devils, mystical jugglery with numbers
+and letters, etc.[224] Italy in the fifteenth century was thus a centre
+from which Cabalistic influences radiated, and it may be that the
+Italians who indoctrinated Gilles de Rais had drawn their inspiration
+from this source. Indeed Eliphas Levi, who certainly cannot be accused
+of "Anti-Semitism," declares that "the Jews, the most faithful trustees
+of the secret of the Cabala, were almost always the reat masters of
+magic in the Middle Ages,"[225] and suggests that Gilles de Rais took
+his monstrous recipes for using the blood of murdered children "from
+some of those old Hebrew _grimoires_ (books on magic), which, if they
+had been known, would have sufficed to hold up the Jews to the
+execration of the whole earth."[226] Voltaire, in his _Henriade_,
+likewise attributes the magical blood-rites practised in the sixteenth
+century to Jewish inspiration:
+
+ Dans l'ombre de la nuit, sous une voute obscure,
+ Le silence conduit leui assemblee impure.
+ A la pale lueur d'un magique flambeau
+ S'eleve un vil autel dresse sur un tombeau.
+ C'est la que des deux rois on placa les images,
+ Objets de leur terreur, objets de leurs outrages.
+ Leurs sacrileges mains out mele sur l'autel
+ A des noms infernaux le nom de l'Eternel.
+ Sur ces murs tenebreux des lances sont rangees,
+ Dans des vases de sang leurs pointes sont plongees;
+ Appareil menacant de leur mystere affreux.
+ Le pretre de ce temple est un de ces Hebreux
+ Qui, proscrits sur la terre et citoyens du monde,
+ Portent de mers en mers leur misere profonde,
+ Et, d'un antique ramas de superstitions,
+ Out rempli des longtemps toutes les nations, etc.
+
+Voltaire adds in a footnote: "It was ordinarily Jews that were made use
+of for magical operations. This ancient superstition comes from the
+secrets of the Cabala, of which the Jews called themselves the sole
+depositaries. Catherine de Medicis, the Marechal d'Ancre, and many
+others employed Jews for these spells."
+
+This charge of black magic recurs all through the history of Europe from
+the earliest times. The Jews are accused of poisoning wells, of
+practising ritual murder, of using stolen church property for purposes
+of desecration, etc. No doubt there enters into all this a great amount
+of exaggeration, inspired by popular prejudice and mediaeval
+superstition. Yet, whilst condeming the persecution to which the Jews
+were subjected on this account, it must be admitted that they laid
+themselves open to suspicion by their real addiction to magical arts. If
+ignorant superstition is found on the side of the persecutors, still
+more amazing superstition is found on the side of the persecuted.
+Demonology in Europe was in fact essentially a Jewish science, for
+although a belief in evil spirits existed from the earliest times and
+has always continued to exist amongst primitive races, and also amongst
+the ignorant classes in civilized countries, it was mainly through the
+Jews that these dark superstitions were imported to the West, where they
+persisted not merely amongst the lower strata of the Jewish population,
+but formed an essential part of Jewish tradition. Thus the Talmud says:
+
+ If the eye could perceive the demons that people the universe,
+ existence would be impossible. The demons are more numerous than we
+ are: they surround us on all sides like trenches dug round
+ vineyards. Every one of us has a thousand on his left hand and ten
+ thousand on his right. The discomfort endured by those who attend
+ rabbinical conferences ... comes from the demons mingling with men
+ in these circumstances. Besides, the fatigue one feels in one's
+ knees in walking comes from the demons that one knocks up against
+ at every step. If the clothing of the Rabbis wears out so quickly,
+ it is again because the demons rub up against them. Whoever wants
+ to convince himself of their presence has only to surround his bed
+ with sifted cinders and the next morning he will see the imprints
+ of cocks' feet.[227]
+
+The same treatise goes on to give directions for seeing demons by
+burning portions of a black cat and placing the ashes in one's eye:
+"then at once one perceives the demons." The Talmud also explains that
+devils particularly inhabit the waterspouts on houses and are fond of
+drinking out of water-jugs, therefore it is advisable to pour a little
+water out of a jug before drinking, so as to get rid of the unclean
+part.[228]
+
+These ideas received a fresh impetus from the publication of the Zohar,
+which, a Jewish writer tells us, "from the fourteenth century held
+almost unbroken sway over the minds of the majority of the Jews. In it
+the Talmudic legends concerning the existence and activity of the
+_shedhim_ (demons) are repeated and amplified, and a hierarchy of demons
+was established corresponding to the heavenly hierarchy.... Manasseh
+[ben Israel]'s _Nishmat Hayim_ is full of information concerning belief
+in demons.... Even the scholarly and learned Rabbis of the seventeenth
+century clung to the belief."[229]
+
+Here, then, it is not a case of ignorant peasants evolving fantastic
+visions from their own scared imaginations, but of the Rabbis, the
+acknowledged leaders of a race claiming civilized traditions and a high
+order of intelligence, deliberately inculcating in their disciples the
+perpetual fear of demoniacal influences. How much of this fear
+communicated itself to the Gentile population? It is at any rate a
+curious coincidence to notice the resemblances between so-called popular
+superstitions and the writings of the Rabbis. For example, the vile
+confessions made both by Scotch and French peasant women accused of
+witchcraft concerning the nocturnal visits paid them by male devils[230]
+find an exact counterpart in passages of the Cabala, where it is said
+that "the demons are both male and female, and they also endeavour to
+consort with human beings--a conception from which arises the belief in
+_incubi_ and _succubae_."[231] Thus, on Jewish authority, we learn the
+Judaic origin of this strange delusion.
+
+It is clearly to the same source that we may trace the magical formulae
+for the healing of diseases current at the same period. From the
+earliest times the Jews had specialized in medicine, and many royal
+personages insisted on employing Jewish doctors,[232] some of whom may
+have acquired medical knowledge of a high order. The Jewish writer
+Margoliouth dwells on this fact with some complacency, and goes on to
+contrast the scientific methods of the Hebrew doctors with the
+quackeries of the monks:
+
+ In spite of the reports circulated by the monks, that the Jews were
+ sorcerers (in consequence of their superior medical skill),
+ Christian patients would frequent the houses of the Jewish
+ physicians in preference to the monasteries, where cures were
+ pretended to have been effected by some extraordinary relics, such
+ as the nails of St. Augustine, the extremity of St. Peter's second
+ toe, ... etc. It need hardly be added that the cures effected by
+ the Jewish physicians were more numerous than those by the monkish
+ impostors.[233]
+
+Yet in reality the grotesque remedies which Margoliouth attributes to
+Christian superstition appear to have been partly derived from Jewish
+sources. The author of a further article on Magic in Hastings'
+_Encyclopaedia_ goes on to say that the magical formulae handed down in
+Latin in ancient medical writings and used by the monks were mainly of
+Eastern origin, derived from Babylonish, Egyptian, and Jewish magic. The
+monks therefore "played merely an intermediate role."[234] Indeed, if
+we turn to the Talmud we shall find cures recommended no less absurd
+than those which Margoliouth derides. For example:
+
+ The eggs of a grasshopper as a remedy for toothache, the tooth of a
+ fox as a remedy for sleep, viz. the tooth of a live fox to prevent
+ sleep and of a dead one to cause sleep, the nail from the gallows
+ where a man was hanged, as a remedy for swelling.[235]
+
+A strongly "pro-Semite" writer quotes a number of Jewish medical
+writings of the eighteenth century, republished as late as the end of
+the nineteenth, which show the persistence of these magical formulae
+amongst the Jews. Most of these are too loathsome to transcribe; but
+some of the more innocuous are as follows: "For epilepsy kill a cock and
+let it putrefy." "In order to protect yourself from all evils, gird
+yourself with the rope with which a criminal has been hung." Blood of
+different kinds also plays an important part: "Fox's blood and wolf's
+blood are good for stone in the bladder, ram's blood for colic, weasel
+blood for scrofula," etc.--these to be externally applied.[236]
+
+But to return to Satanism. Whoever were the secret inspirers of magical
+and diabolical practices during the fourteenth to the eighteenth
+centuries, the evidence of the existence of Satanism during this long
+period is overwhelming and rests on the actual facts of history. Details
+quite as extravagant and revolting as those contained in the works of
+Eliphas Levi[237] or in Huysmans's _La-bas_ are given in documentary
+form by Margaret Alice Murray in her singularly passionless work
+relating principally to the witches of Scotland.[238]
+
+The cult of evil is a reality--by whatever means we may seek to explain
+it. Eliphas Levi, whilst denying the existence of Satan "as a superior
+personality and power," admits this fundamental truth: "Evil exists; it
+is impossible to doubt it. We can do good or evil. There are beings who
+knowingly and voluntarily do evil."[239] There are also beings who love
+evil. Levi has admirably described the spirit that animates such beings
+in his definition of black magic:
+
+ Black magic is really but a combination of sacrileges and murders
+ graduated with a view to the permanent perversion of the human will
+ and the realization in a living man of the monstrous phantom of the
+ fiend. It is, therefore, properly speaking, the religion of the
+ devil, the worship of darkness, the hatred of goodness exaggerated
+ to the point of paroxysm; it is the incarnation of death and the
+ permanent creation of hell.[240]
+
+The Middle Ages, which depicted the devil fleeing from holy water, were
+not perhaps quite so benighted as our superior modern culture has led us
+to suppose. For that "hatred of goodness exaggerated to the point of
+paroxysm," that impulse to desecrate and defile which forms the basis of
+black magic and has manifested itself in successive phases of the
+world-revolution, springs from fear. So by their very hatred the powers
+of darkness proclaim the existence of the powers of light and their own
+impotence. In the cry of the demoniac: "What have we to do with Thee,
+Jesus of Nazareth? art Thou come to destroy us? I know Thee who Thou
+art, the Holy One of God," do we not hear the unwilling tribute of the
+vanquished to the victor in the mighty conflict between good; and evil?
+
+
+
+The Rosicrucians
+
+
+In dealing with the question of Magic it is necessary to realize that
+although to the world in general the word is synonymous with necromancy,
+it does not bear this significance in the language of occultism,
+particularly the occultism of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
+Magic at this date was a term employed to cover many branches of
+investigation which Robert Fludd, the English Rosicrucian, classified
+under various headings, of which the first three are as follows: (1)
+"_Natural Magic_, ... that most occult and secret department of physics
+by which the mystical properties of natural substances are extracted";
+(2) _Mathematical Magic_, which enables adepts in the art to "construct
+marvellous machines by means of their geometrical knowledge "; whilst
+(3) _Venefic Magic_ "is familiar with potions, philtres, and with
+various preparations of poisons."[241]
+
+It is obvious that all these have now passed into the realms of science
+and are no longer regarded as magical arts; but the further categories
+enumerated by Fludd and comprised under the general heading of
+_Necromantic Magic_ retain the popular sense of the term. These are
+described as (i) _Goetic_, which consists in "diabolical commerce with
+unclean spirits, in rites of criminal curiosity, in illicit songs and
+invocations, and in the evocation of the souls of the dead"; (2)
+_Maleficent_, which is the adjuration of the devils by the virtue of
+Divine Names; and (3) _Theurgic_, purporting "to be governed by good
+angels and the Divine Will, but its wonders are most frequently
+performed by evil spirits, who assume the names of God and of the
+angels." (4) "The last species of magic is the _Thaumaturgic_, begetting
+illusory phenomena; by this art the Magi produced their phantoms and
+other marvels." To this list might be added _Celestial Magic_, or
+knowledge dealing with the influence of the heavenly bodies, on which
+astrology is based.
+
+The forms of magic dealt with in the preceding part of this chapter
+belong therefore to the second half of these categories, that is to say,
+to Necromantic Magic. But at the same period another movement was
+gradually taking shape which concerned itself with the first category
+enumerated above, that is to say, the secret properties of natural
+substances.
+
+A man whose methods appear to have approached to the modern conception
+of scientific research was Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim,
+commonly known as Paracelsus, the son of a German doctor, born about
+1493, who during his travels in the East is said to have acquired a
+knowledge of some secret doctrine which he afterwards elaborated into a
+system for the healing of diseases. Although his ideas were thus
+doubtless drawn from some of the same sources as those from which the
+Jewish Cabala descended, Paracelsus does not appear to have been a
+Cabalist, but a scientist of no mean order, and, as an isolated thinker,
+apparently connected with no secret association, does not enter further
+into the scope of this work.
+
+Paracelsus must therefore not be identified with the school of so-called
+"Christian Cabalists," who, from Raymond Lulli, the "doctor illuminatus"
+of the thirteenth century, onward, drew their inspiration from the
+Cabala of the Jews. This is not to say that the influence under which
+they fell was wholly pernicious, for, just as certain Jews appear to
+have acquired some real medical skill, so also they appear to have
+possessed some real knowledge of natural science, inherited perhaps from
+the ancient traditions of the East or derived from the writings of
+Hippocrates, Galen, and other of the great Greek physicians and as yet
+unknown to Europe. Thus Eliphas Levi relates that the Rabbi Jechiel, a
+Cabalistic Jew protected by St. Louis, possessed the secret of
+ever-burning lamps,[242] claimed later by the Rosicrucians, which
+suggests the possibility that some kind of luminous gas or electric
+light may have been known to the Jews. In alchemy they were the
+acknowledged leaders; the most noted alchemist of the fourteenth
+century, Nicholas Flamel, discovered the secret of the art from the book
+of "Abraham the Jew, Prince, Priest, Levite, Astrologer, and
+Philosopher," and this actual book is said to have passed later into the
+possession of Cardinal Richelieu.[243]
+
+It was likewise from a Florentine Jew, Alemanus or Datylus, that Pico
+della Mirandola, the fifteenth-century mystic, received instructions in
+the Cabala[244] and imagined that he had discovered in it the doctrines
+of Christianity. This delighted Pope Sixtus IV, who thereupon ordered
+Cabalistic writings to be translated into Latin for the use of divinity
+students. At the same time the Cabala was introduced into Germany by
+Reuchlin, who had learnt Hebrew from the Rabbi Jacob b. Jechiel Loans,
+court physician to Frederick III, and in 1494 published a Cabalistic
+treatise _De Verbo Mirifico_, showing that all wisdom and true
+philosophy are derived from the Hebrews. Considerable alarm appears,
+however, to have been created by the spread of Rabbinical literature,
+and in 1509 a Jew converted to Christianity, named Pfefferkorn,
+persuaded the Emperor Maximilian I to burn all Jewish books except the
+Old Testament. Reuchlin, consulted on this matter, advised only the
+destruction of the Toledot Yeshu and of the Sepher Nizzachon by the
+Rabbi Lipmann, because these works "were full of blasphemies against
+Christ and against the Christian religion," but urged the preservation
+of the rest. In this defence of Jewish literature he was supported by
+the Duke of Bavaria, who appointed him professor at Ingoldstadt, but was
+strongly condemned by the Dominicans of Cologne. In reply to their
+attacks Reuchlin launched his defence _De Arte Cabalistica_, glorifying
+the Cabala, of which the "central doctrine for him was the Messianology
+around which all its other doctrines grouped themselves."[245] His
+whole philosophical system, as he himself admitted, was in fact entirely
+Cabalistic, and his views were shared by his contemporary Cornelius
+Agrippa of Nettesheim. As a result of these teachings a craze for
+Cabalism spread amongst Christian prelates, statesmen, and warriors, and
+a number of Christian thinkers took up the doctrines of the Cabala and
+"essayed to work them over in their own way." Athanasius Kircher and
+Knorr, Baron von Rosenroth, author of the _Kabbala Denudata_, in the
+course of the seventeenth century "endeavoured to spread the Cabala
+among the Christians by translating Cabalistic works which they regarded
+as most ancient wisdom." "Most of them," the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_ goes
+on to observe derisively, "held the absurd idea that the Cabala
+contained proofs of the truth of Christianity.... Much that appears
+Christian [in the Cabala] is, in fact, nothing but the logical
+development of certain ancient esoteric doctrines."[246]
+
+The Rosicrucians appear to have been the outcome both of this Cabalistic
+movement and of the teachings of Paracelsus. The earliest intimation of
+their existence was given in a series of pamphlets which appeared at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century. The first of these, entitled the
+_Fama Fraternitatis; or a Discovery of the Fraternity of the most
+Laudable Order of the Rosy Cross_, was published at Cassel in 1614 and
+the _Confessio Fraternitatis_ early in the following year. These contain
+what may be described as the "Grand Legend" of Rosicrucianism, which has
+been repeated with slight variations up to the present day. Briefly,
+this story is as follows[247]:
+
+"The most godly and highly-illuminated Father, our brother C.R.," that
+is to say, Christian Rosenkreutz, "a German, the chief and original of
+our Fraternity," was born in 1378, and some sixteen years later
+travelled to the East with a Brother P.A.L., who had determined to go to
+the Holy Land. On reaching Cyprus, Brother P.A.L. died and "so never
+came to Jerusalem." Brother C.R., however, having become acquainted with
+certain Wise Men of "Damasco in Arabia," and beheld what great wonders
+they wrought, went on alone to Damasco. Here the Wise Men received him,
+and he then set himself to study Physick and Mathematics and to
+translate the Book M into Latin. After three years he went to Egypt,
+whence he journeyed on to Fez, where "he did get acquaintance with those
+who are called the Elementary inhabitants, who revealed to him many of
+their secrets.... Of those of Fez he often did confess that their Magia
+was not altogether pure and also that their Cabala was defiled with
+their religion, but notwithstanding he knew how to make good use of the
+same." After two years Brother C.R. departed the city Fez and sailed
+away with many costly things into Spain, where he conferred with the
+learned men and being "ready bountifully to impart all his arts and
+secrets" showed them amongst other things how "there might be a society
+in Europe which might have gold, silver, and precious stones sufficient
+for them to bestow on kings for their necessary uses and lawful
+purposes...."
+
+Christian Rosenkreutz then returned to Germany, where "there is nowadays
+no want of learned men, Magicians, Cabalists, Physicians, and
+Philosophers." Here he "builded himself a fitting and neat habitation in
+which he ruminated his voyage and philosophy and reduced them together
+in a true memorial." At the end of five years' meditation there "came
+again into his mind the wished-for Reformation: accordingly he chose
+some few adjoyned with him," the Brethren G.V., I.A., and I.O.--the
+last of whom "was very expert and well learned in Cabala as his book H
+witnesseth"--to form a circle of initiates. "After this manner began
+the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross." Five other Brethren were afterwards
+added, all Germans except I.A., and these eight constituted his new
+building called Sancti Spiritus. The following agreement was then drawn
+up:
+
+ First, that none of them should profess any other thing than to
+ cure the sick, and that gratis.
+
+ Second, none of the posterity should be constrained to wear one
+ certain kind of habit, but therein to follow the custom of the
+ country.
+
+ Third, that every year, upon the day C., they should meet together
+ at the house Sancti Spiritus, or write the cause of his absence.
+
+ Fourth, every Brother should look about for a worthy person who,
+ after his decease, might succeed him.
+
+ Fifth, the word C.R. should be their seal, mark, and character.
+
+ Sixth, the Fraternity should remain secret one hundred years.
+
+Finally Brother C.R. died, but where and when, or in what country he was
+buried, remained a secret. The date, however, is generally given as
+1484. In 1604 the Brethren who then constituted the inner circle of the
+Order discovered a door on which was written in large letters
+
+ Post 120 Annos Patebo.
+
+On opening the door a vault was disclosed to view, where beneath a brass
+tablet the body of Christian Rosenkreutz was found, "whole and
+unconsumed," with all his "ornaments and attires," and holding in his
+hand the parchment "I" which "next unto the Bible is our greatest
+treasure," whilst beside him lay a number of books, amongst others the
+_Vocabulario_ of Paracelsus, who, however, the _Fama_ observes, earlier
+"was none of our Fraternity."[248]
+
+The Brethren now knew that after a time there would be "a general
+reformation both of divine and human things." While declaring their
+belief in the Christian faith, the _Fama_ goes on to explain that:
+
+ Our Philosophy is not a new invention, but as Adam after his fall
+ hath received it and as Moses and Solomon used it, ... wherein
+ Plato, Aristotle, Pythagoras, and others did hit the mark and
+ wherein Enoch, Abraham, Moses, Solomon, did excel, but especially
+ wherewith that wonderful Book the Bible agreeth.
+
+It will be seen that, according to this Manifesto, Rosicrucianism was a
+combination of the ancient secret tradition handed down from the
+patriarchs through the philosophers of Greece and of the first Cabala of
+the Jews.
+
+The "Grand Legend" of Rosicrucianism rests, however, on no historical
+evidence; there is, in fact, not the least reason to suppose that any
+such person as Christian Rosenkreutz ever existed. The Illuminatus von
+Knigge in the eighteenth century asserted that:
+
+ It is now recognized amongst enlightened men that no real
+ Rosicrucians have existed, but that the whole of what is contained
+ in the _Fama_ and the _Universal Reformation of the World_ [another
+ Rosicrucian pamphlet which appeared in the same year] was only a
+ subtle allegory of Valentine Andrea, of which afterwards partly
+ deceivers (such as the Jesuits) and partly visionaries made use in
+ order to realize this dream.[249]
+
+What, then, was the origin of the name Rose-Cross? According to one
+Rosicrucian tradition, the word "Rose" does not derive from the flower
+depicted on the Rosicrucian cross, but from the Latin word _ros_,
+signifying "dew," which was supposed to be the most powerful solvent of
+gold, whilst _crux_, the cross, was the chemical hieroglyphic for
+"light."[250] It is said that the Rosicrucians interpreted the initials
+on the cross INRI by the sentence "Igne Nitrum Roris Invenitur."[251]
+Supposing this derivation to be correct, it would be interesting to know
+whether any connexion could be traced between the first appearance of
+the word Rosie Cross in the _Fama Fraternitatis_ at the date of 1614 and
+the cabalistic treatise of the celebrated Rabbi of Prague, Shabbethai
+Sheftel Horowitz, entitled _Shefa Tal_, that is to say, "The Effusion of
+Dew," which appeared in 1612.[252] Although this book has often been
+reprinted, no copy is to be found in the British Museum, so I am unable
+to pursue this line of enquiry further. A simpler explanation may be
+that the Rosy Cross derived from the Red Cross of the Templars.
+Mirabeau, who as a Freemason and an Illuminatus was in a position to
+discover many facts about the secret societies of Germany during his
+stay in the country, definitely asserts that "the Rose Croix Masons of
+the seventeenth century were only the ancient Order of the Templars
+secretly perpetuated."[253]
+
+Lecouteulx de Canteleu is more explicit:
+
+ In France the Knights (Templar) who left the Order, henceforth
+ hidden, and so to speak unknown, formed the Order of the Flaming
+ Star and of the Rose-Croix, which in the fifteenth century spread
+ itself in Bohemia and Silesia. Every Grand officer of these Orders
+ had all his life to wear the Red Cross and to repeat every day the
+ prayer of St. Bernard.[254]
+
+Eckert states that the ritual, symbols, and names of the Rose-Croix were
+borrowed from the Templars, and that the Order was divided into seven
+degrees, according to the seven days of creation, at the same time
+signifying that their "principal aim was that of the mysterious, the
+investigation of Being and of the forces of nature."[255]
+
+The Rosicrucian Kenneth Mackenzie, in his _Masonic Cyclopaedia_, appears
+to suggest the same possibility of Templar origin. Under the heading of
+Rosicrucians he refers enigmatically to an invisible fraternity that has
+existed from very ancient times, as early as the days of the Crusades,
+"bound by solemn obligations of impenetrable secrecy," and joining
+together in work for humanity and to "glorify the good." At various
+periods of history this body has emerged into a sort of temporary light;
+but its true name has never transpired and is only known to the
+innermost adepts and rulers of the society. "The Rosicrucians of the
+sixteenth century finally disappeared and re-entered this invisible
+fraternity "--from which they had presumably emerged. Whether any such
+body really existed or whether the above account is simply an attempt at
+mystification devised to excite curiosity, the incredulous may question.
+The writer here observes that it would be indiscreet to say more, but
+elsewhere he throws out a hint that may have some bearing on the matter,
+for in his article on the Templars he says that after the suppression of
+the Order it was revived in a more secret form and subsists to the
+present day. This would exactly accord with Mirabeau's statement that
+the Rosicrucians were only the Order of the Templars secretly
+perpetuated. Moreover, as we shall see later, according to a legend
+preserved by the Royal Order of Scotland, the degree of the Rosy Cross
+had been instituted by that Order in conjunction with the Templars in
+1314, and it would certainly be a remarkable coincidence that a man
+bearing the name of Rosenkreutz should happen to have inaugurated a
+society, founded, like the Templars, on Eastern secret doctrines during
+the course of the same century, without any connexion existing between
+the two.
+
+I would suggest, then, that Christian Rosenkreutz was a purely mythical
+personage, and that the whole legend concerning his travels was invented
+to disguise the real sources whence the Rosicrucians derived their
+system, which would appear to have been a compound of ancient esoteric
+doctrines, of Arabian and Syrian magic, and of Jewish Cabalism, partly
+inherited from the Templars but reinforced by direct contact with
+Cabalistic Jews in Germany. The Rose-Croix, says Mirabeau, "were a
+mystical, Cabalistic, theological, and magical sect," and Rosicrucianism
+thus became in the seventeenth century the generic title by which
+everything of the nature of Cabalism, Theosophy, Alchemy, Astrology, and
+Mysticism was designated. For this reason it has been said that they
+cannot be regarded as the descendants of the Templars. Mr. Waite, in
+referring to "the alleged connexion between the Templars and the
+Brethren of the Rosy Cross," observes:
+
+ The Templars were not alchemists, they had no scientific
+ pretensions, and their secret, so far as it can be ascertained, was
+ a religious secret of an anti-Christian kind. The Rosicrucians, on
+ the other hand, were pre-eminently a learned society and they were
+ also a Christian sect.[256]
+
+The fact that the Templars do not appear to have practised alchemy is
+beside the point; it is not pretended that the Rosicrucians followed the
+Templars in every particular, but that they were the inheritors of a
+secret tradition passed on to them by the earlier Order. Moreover, that
+they were a learned society, or even a society at all, is not at all
+certain, for they would appear to have possessed no organization like
+the Templars or the Freemasons, but to have consisted rather of isolated
+occultists bound together by some tie of secret knowledge concerning
+natural phenomena. This secrecy was no doubt necessary at a period when
+scientific research was liable to be regarded as sorcery, but whether
+the Rosicrucians really accomplished anything is extremely doubtful.
+They are said to have been alchemists; but did they ever succeed in
+transmuting metals? They are described as learned, yet do the pamphlets
+emanating from the Fraternity betray any proof of superior knowledge?
+"The Chymical Marriage of Christian Rosenkreutz," which appeared in
+1616, certainly appears to be the purest nonsense--magical imaginings of
+the most puerile kind; and Mr. Waite himself observes that the
+publication of the _Fama_ and the _Confessio Fraternitalis_ will not add
+new lustre to the Rosicrucian reputations:
+
+ We are accustomed to regard the adepts of the Rosy Cross as beings
+ of sublime elevation and preternatural physical powers, masters of
+ Nature, monarchs of the intellectual world.... But here in their
+ own acknowledged manifestos they avow themselves a mere
+ theosophical offshoot of the Lutheran heresy, acknowledging the
+ spiritual supremacy of a temporal prince, and calling the Pope
+ anti-Christ.... We find them intemperate in their language, rabid
+ in their religious prejudices, and instead of towering giant-like
+ above the intellectual average of their age, we see them buffeted
+ by the same passions and identified with all opinions of the men by
+ whom they were environed. The voice which addresses us behind the
+ mystical mask of the Rose-Croix does not come from an intellectual
+ throne....
+
+So much for the Rosicrucians as a "learned society."
+
+What, then, of their claim to be a Christian body? The Rosicrucian
+student of the Cabala, Julius Sperber, in his _Echo of the Divinely
+Illuminated Fraternity of the Admirable Order of the R.C._ (1615), has
+indicated the place assigned to Christ by the Rosicrucians. In De
+Quincey's words:
+
+ Having maintained the probability of the Rosicrucian pretensions
+ on the ground that such _magnalia Dei_ had from the creation
+ downwards been confided to the keeping of a few
+ individuals--agreeably to which he affirms that Adam was the first
+ Rosicrucian of the Old Testament and Simeon the last--he goes on to
+ ask whether the Gospel put an end to the secret tradition? By no
+ means, he answers: Christ established a new "college of magic"
+ among His disciples, and the greater mysteries were revealed to St.
+ John and St. Paul.
+
+John Yarker, quoting this passage, adds: "This, Brother Findel points
+out, was a claim of the Carpocratian Gnostics"; it was also, as we have
+seen, a part of the Johannite tradition which is said to have been
+imparted to the Templars. We shall find the same idea of Christ as an
+"initiate" running all through the secret societies up to the present
+day.
+
+These doctrines not unnaturally brought on the Rosicrucians the
+suspicion of being an anti-Christian body. The writer of a contemporary
+pamphlet published in 1624, declares that "this fraternity is a
+stratagem of the Jews and Cabalistic Hebrews, in whose philosophy, says
+Pic de la Mirandole, all things are ... as if hidden in the majesty of
+truth or as ... in very sacred Mysteries."[257]
+
+Another work, _Examination of the Unknown and Novel Cabala of the
+Brethren of the Rose-Cross_, agrees with the assertion that the chief of
+this "execrable college is Satan, that its first rule is denial of God,
+blasphemy against the most simple and undivided Trinity, trampling on
+the mysteries of the redemption, spitting in the face of the mother of
+God and of all the saints." The sect is further accused of compacts with
+the devil, sacrifices of children, of cherishing toads, making poisonous
+powders, dancing with fiends, etc.
+
+Now, although all this would appear to be quite incompatible with the
+character of the Rosicrucians as far as it is known, we have already
+seen that the practices here described were by no means imaginary; in
+this same seventeenth century, when the fame of the Rosicrucians was
+first noised abroad, black magic was still, as in the days of Gilles de
+Rais, a horrible reality, not only in France but in England, Scotland,
+and Germany, where sorcerers of both sexes were continually put to
+death.[258] However much we may deplore the methods employed against
+these people or question the supernatural origin of their cult, it would
+be idle to deny that the cult itself existed.
+
+Moreover, towards the end of the century it assumed in France a very
+tangible form in the series of mysterious dramas known as the "Affaire
+des Poisons," of which the first act took place in 1666, when the
+celebrated Marquise de Brinvilliers embarked on her amazing career of
+crime in collaboration with her lover Sainte-Croix. This extraordinary
+woman, who for ten years made a hobby of trying the effects of various
+slow poisons on her nearest relations, thereby causing the death of her
+father and brothers, might appear to have been merely an isolated
+criminal of the abnormal type but for the sequel to her exploits in the
+epidemic of poisoning which followed and during twenty years kept Paris
+in a state of terror. The investigations of the police finally led to
+the discovery of a whole band of magicians and alchemists--"a vast
+ramification of malefactors covering all France"--who specialized in
+the art of poisoning without fear of detection.
+
+Concerning all these sorcerers, alchemists, compounders of magical
+powders and philtres, frightful rumours circulated, "pacts with the
+devil were talked of, sacrifices of new-born babies, incantations,
+sacrilegious Masses and other practices as disquieting as they were
+lugubrious."[259] Even the King's mistress, Madame de Montespan, is
+said to have had recourse to black Masses in order to retain the royal
+favour through the agency of the celebrated sorceress La Voisin, with
+whom she was later implicated in an accusation of having attempted the
+life of the King.
+
+All the extraordinary details of these events have recently been
+described in the book of Madame Latour, where the intimate connexion
+between the poisoners and the magicians is shown. In the opinion of
+contemporaries, these were not isolated individuals:
+
+ "Their methods were too certain, their execution of crime too
+ skilful and too easy for them not to have belonged, either directly
+ or indirectly, to a whole organization of criminals who prepared
+ the way, and studied the method of giving to crime the appearance
+ of illness, of forming, in a word, a school."[260]
+
+The author of the work here quoted draws an interesting parallel between
+this organization and the modern traffic in cocaine, and goes on to
+describe the three degrees into which it was divided: firstly, the
+Heads, cultivated and intelligent men, who understood chemistry,
+physics, and nearly all useful sciences, "invisible counsellors but
+supreme, without whom the sorcerers and diviners would have been
+powerless"; secondly, the visible magicians employing mysterious
+processes, complicated rites and terrifying ceremonies; and thirdly, the
+crowd of nobles and plebeians who flocked to the doors of the sorcerers
+and filled their pockets in return for magic potions, philtres, and, in
+certain cases, insidious poisons. Thus La Voisin must be placed in the
+second category; "in spite of her luxury, her profits, and her fame,"
+she "is only a subaltern agent in this vast organization of criminals.
+She depends entirely for her great enterprises on the intellectual
+chiefs of the corporation...."[261]
+
+Who were these intellectual chiefs? The man who first initiated Madame
+de Brinvilliers' lover Sainte-Croix into the art of poisoning was an
+Italian named Exili or Eggidi; but the real initiate from whom Eggidi
+and another Italian poisoner had learnt their secrets is said to have
+been Glaser, variously described as a German or a Swiss chemist, who
+followed the principles of Paracelsus and occupied the post of physician
+to the King and the Duc d'Orleans.[262] This man, about whose history
+little is known, might thus have been a kind of Rosicrucian. For since,
+as has been said, the intellectual chiefs from whom the poisoners
+derived their inspiration were men versed in chemistry, in science, in
+physics, and the treatment of diseases, and since, further, they
+included alchemists and people professing to be in possession of the
+Philosopher's Stone, their resemblance with the Rosicrucians is at once
+apparent. Indeed, in turning back to the branches of magic enumerated by
+the Rosicrucian Robert Fludd, we find not only Natural Magic, "that most
+occult and secret department of physics by which the mystical properties
+of natural substances are extracted," but also Venefic Magic, which "is
+familiar with potions, philtres, and with various preparations of
+poisons."
+
+The art of poisoning was therefore known to the Rosicrucians, and,
+although there is no reason to suppose it was ever practised by the
+heads of the Fraternity, it is possible that the inspirers of the
+poisoners may have been perverted Rosicrucians, that is to say, students
+of those portions of the Cabala relating to magic both of the
+necromantic and venefic varieties, who turned the scientific knowledge
+which the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross used for healing to a precisely
+opposite and deadly purpose. This would explain the fact that
+contemporaries like the author of the _Examination of the Unknown and
+Novel Cabala of the Brethren of the Rose-Cross_ should identify these
+brethren with the magicians and believe them to be guilty of practices
+deriving from the same source as Rosicrucian knowledge--the Cabala of
+the Jews. Their modern admirers would, of course, declare that they were
+the poles asunder, the difference being between white and black magic.
+Huysmans, however, scoffs at this distinction and says the use of the
+term "white magic" was a ruse of the Rose-Croix.
+
+But of the real doctrines of the Rosicrucians no one can speak with
+certainty. The whole story of the Fraternity is wrapped in mystery.
+Mystery was avowedly the essence of their system; their identity, their
+aims, their doctrines, are said to have been kept a profound secret from
+the world. Indeed it is said that no real Rosicrucian ever allowed
+himself to be known as such. As a result of this systematic method of
+concealment, sceptics on the one hand have declared the Rosicrucians to
+have been charlatans and impostors or have denied their very existence,
+whilst on the other hand romancers have exalted them as depositaries of
+supernatural wisdom. The question is further obscured by the fact that
+most accounts of the Fraternity--as, for example, those of Eliphas Levi,
+Hargrave Jennings, Kenneth Mackenzie, Mr. A.E. Waite, Dr. Wynn Westcott,
+and Mr. Cadbury Jones--are the work of men claiming or believing
+themselves to be initiated into Rosicrucianism or other occult systems
+of a kindred nature and as such in possession of peculiar and exclusive
+knowledge. This pretension may at once be dismissed as an absurdity;
+nothing is easier than for anyone to make a compound out of Jewish
+Cabalism and Eastern theosophy and to label it Rosicrucianism, but no
+proof whatever exists of any affiliation between the self-styled
+Rosicrucians of to-day and the seventeenth-century "Brothers of the Rosy
+Cross."[263]
+
+In spite of Mr. Wake's claim, "The Real History of the Rosicrucians"
+still remains to be written, at any rate in the English language. The
+book he has published under this name is merely a superficial study of
+the question largely composed of reprints of Rosicrucian pamphlets
+accessible to any student. Mr. Wigston and Mrs. Pott merely echo Mr.
+Waite. Thus everything that has been published hitherto consists in the
+repetition of Rosicrucian legends or in unsubstantiated theorizings on
+their doctrines. What we need are facts. We want to know who were the
+early Rosicrucians, when the Fraternity originated, and what were its
+real aims. These researches must be made, not by an occultist weaving
+his own theories into the subject, but by a historian free from any
+prejudices for or against the Order, capable of weighing evidence and
+bringing a judicial mind to bear on the material to be found in the
+libraries of the Continent--notably the Bibliotheque de l'Arsenal in
+Paris. Such a work would be a valuable contribution to the history of
+secret societies in our country.
+
+But if the Continental Brethren of the Rose-Croix form but a shadowy
+group of "Invisibles" whose identity yet remains a mystery, the English
+adepts of the Order stand forth in the light of day as, philosophers
+well known to their age and country. That Francis Bacon was initiated
+into Rosicrucianism is now recognized by Freemasons, but a more definite
+link with the Rosicrucians of the Continent was Robert Fludd, who after
+travelling for six years in France, Germany, Italy, and Spain--where he
+formed connexions with Jewish Cabalists[264]--was visited by the German
+Jew Rosicrucian Michel Maier--doctor to the Emperor Rudolf--by whom he
+appears to have been initiated into further mysteries.
+
+In 1616 Fludd published his _Tractatus Apologeticus_, defending the
+Rosicrucians against the charges of "detestable magic and diabolical
+superstition" brought against them by Libavius. Twelve years later Fludd
+was attacked by Father Mersenne, to whom a reply was made "by Fludd or a
+friend of Fludd's" containing a further defence of the Order. "The
+Book," says Mr. Waite, "treats of the noble art of magic, the foundation
+and nature of the Cabala, the essence of veritable alchemy, and of the
+Causa Fratrum Rosae Crucis. It identifies the palace or home of the
+Rosicrucians with the Scriptural House of Wisdom."
+
+In further works by English writers the Eastern origin of the Fraternity
+is insisted on. Thus Thomas Vaughan, known as Eugenius Philalethes,
+writing in praise of the Rosicrucians in 1652, says that "their
+knowledge at first was not purchased by their own disquisitions, for
+they received it from the Arabians, amongst whom it remained as the
+monument and legacy of the Children of the East. Nor is this at all
+improbable, for the Eastern countries have been always famous for
+magical and secret societies."
+
+Another apologist of the Rosicrucians, John Heydon, who travelled in
+Egypt, Persia, and Arabia, is described by a contemporary as having been
+in "many strange places among the Rosie Crucians and at their castles,
+holy houses, temples, sepulchres, sacrifices." Heydon himself, whilst
+declaring that he is not a Rosicrucian, says that he knows members of
+the Fraternity and its secrets, that they are sons of Moses, and that
+"this Rosie Crucian Physick or Medicine, I happily and unexpectedly
+alight upon in Arabia." These references to castles, temples,
+sacrifices, encountered in Egypt, Persia, and Arabia inevitably recall
+memories of both Templars and Ismailis. Is there no connexion between
+"the Invisible Mountains of the Brethren" referred to elsewhere by
+Heydon and the Mountains of the Assassins and the Freemasons? between
+the Scriptural "House of Wisdom" and the Dar-ul-Hikmat or Grand Lodge of
+Cairo, the model for Western masonic lodges?
+
+It is as the precursors of the crisis which arose in 1717 that the
+English Rosicrucians of the seventeenth century are of supreme
+importance. No longer need we concern ourselves with shadowy Brethren
+laying dubious claim to supernatural wisdom, but with a concrete
+association of professed Initiates proclaiming their existence to the
+world under the name of Freemasonry.
+
+
+
+
+5
+
+ORIGINS OF FREEMASONRY
+
+
+
+"The origin of Freemasonry," says a masonic writer of the eighteenth
+century, "is known to Freemasons alone."[265] If this was once the
+case, it is so no longer, for, although the question would certainly
+appear to be one on which the initiated should be most qualified to
+speak, the fact is that no official theory on the origin of Freemasonry
+exists; the great mass of the Freemasons do _not_ know or care to know
+anything about the history of their Order, whilst Masonic authorities
+are entirely disagreed on the matter. Dr. Mackey admits that "the origin
+and source whence first sprang the institution of Freemasonry has given
+rise to more difference of opinion and discussion among masonic scholars
+than any other topic in the literature of the institution."[266] Nor is
+this ignorance maintained merely in books for the general public, since
+in those specially addressed to the Craft and at discussions in lodges
+the same diversity of opinion prevails, and no decisive conclusions
+appear to be reached. Thus Mr. Albert Churchward, a Freemason of the
+thirtieth degree, who deplores the small amount of interest taken in
+this matter by Masons in general, observes:
+
+Hitherto there have been so many contradictory opinions and theories in
+the attempt to supply the origin and the reason whence, where, and why
+the Brotherhood of Freemasonry came into existence, and all the
+"different parts" and various rituals of the "different degrees." All
+that has been written on this has hitherto been _theories_, without any
+facts for their fundation.[267]
+
+In the absence, therefore, of any origin universally recognized by the
+Craft, it is surely open to the lay mind to speculate on the matter and
+to draw conclusions from history as to which of the many explanations
+put forward seems to supply the key to the mystery.
+
+According to the _Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia_, no less than twelve
+theories have been advanced as to the origins of the Order, namely, that
+Masonry derived:
+
+"(1) From the patriarchs. (2) From the mysteries of the pagans. (3) From
+the construction of Solomon's Temple, (4) From the Crusades. (5) From
+the Knights Templar. (6) From the Roman Collegia of Artificers. (7) From
+the operative masons of the Middle Ages. (8) From the Rosicrucians of
+the sixteenth century. (9) From Oliver Cromwell. (10) From Prince
+Charles Stuart for political purposes. (11) From Sir Christopher Wren,
+at the building of St. Paul's. (12) From Dr. Desaguliers and his friends
+in 1717."
+
+This enumeration is, however, misleading, for it implies that in _one_
+of these various theories the true origin of Freemasonry may be found.
+In reality modern Freemasonry is a dual system, a blend of two distinct
+traditions--of operative masonry, that is to say the actual art of
+building, and of speculative theory on the great truths of life and
+death. As a well-known Freemason, the Count Goblet d'Alviella, has
+expressed it: "Speculative Masonry" (that is to say, the dual system we
+now know as Freemasonry) "is the legitimate offspring of a fruitful
+union between the professional guild of mediaeval Masons and of a secret
+group of philosophical Adepts, the first having furnished the form and
+the second the spirit."[268] In studying the origins of the present
+system we have therefore (1) to examine separately the history of each
+of these two traditions, and (2) to discover their point of junction.
+
+
+
+Operative Masonry
+
+
+Beginning with the first of these two traditions, we find that guilds of
+working masons existed in very ancient times. Without going back as far
+as ancient Egypt or Greece, which would be beyond the scope of the
+present work, the course of these associations may be traced throughout
+the history of Western Europe from the beginning of the Christian era.
+According to certain masonic writers, the Druids originally came from
+Egypt and brought with them traditions relating to the art of building.
+The _Culdees_, who later on established schools and colleges in this
+country for the teaching of arts, sciences, and handicrafts, are said
+to have derived from the Druids.
+
+But a more probable source of inspiration in the art of building are the
+Romans, who established the famous collegia of architects referred to in
+the list of alternative theories given in the _Masonic Cyclopaedia_.
+Advocates of the Roman Collegia origin of Freemasonry might be right as
+far as operative masonry is concerned, for it is to the period following
+on the Roman occupation of Britain that our masonic guilds can with the
+greatest degree of certainty be traced. Owing to the importance the art
+of building now acquired it is said that many distinguished men, such as
+St. Alban, King Alfred, King Edwin, and King Athelstan, were numbered
+amongst its patrons,[269] so that in time the guilds came to occupy the
+position of privileged bodies and were known as "free corporations";
+further that York was the first masonic centre in England, largely under
+the control of the Culdees, who at the same period exercised much
+influence over the Masonic Collegia in Scotland, at Kilwinning, Melrose,
+and Aberdeen.[270]
+
+But it must be remembered that all this is speculation. No documentary
+evidence has ever been produced to prove the existence of masonic guilds
+before the famous York charter of A.D. 936, and even the date of this
+document is doubtful. Only with the period of Gothic architecture do we
+reach firm ground. That guilds of working masons known in France as
+"Compagnonnages" and in Germany as "Steinmetzen" did then form close
+corporations and possibly possess secrets connected with their
+profession is more than probable. That, in consequence of their skill in
+building the magnificent cathedrals of this period, they now came to
+occupy a privileged position seems fairly certain.
+
+The Abbe Grandidier, writing from Strasbourg in 1778, traces the whole
+system of Freemasonry from these German guilds: "This much-vaunted
+Society of Freemasons is nothing but a servile imitation of an ancient
+and useful _confrerie_ of real masons whose headquarters was formerly at
+Strasbourg and of which the constitution was confirmed by the Emperor
+Maximilian in 1498."[271]
+
+As far as it is possible to discover from the scanty documentary
+evidence the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries provide,
+the same privileges appear to have been accorded to the guilds of
+working masons in England and Scotland, which, although presided over by
+powerful nobles and apparently on occasion admitting members from
+outside the Craft, remained essentially operative bodies. Nevertheless
+we find the assemblies of Masons suppressed by Act of Parliament in the
+beginning of the reign of Henry VI, and later on an armed force sent by
+Queen Elizabeth to break up the Annual Grand Lodge at York. It is
+possible that the fraternity merely by the secrecy with which it was
+surrounded excited the suspicions of authority, for nothing could be
+more law-abiding than its published statutes. Masons were to be "true
+men to God and the Holy Church," also to the masters that they served.
+They were to be honest in their manner of life and "to do no villainy
+whereby the Craft or the Science may be slandered."[272]
+
+Yet the seventeenth-century writer Plot, in his _Natural History of
+Staffordshire_, expresses some suspicion with regard to the secrets of
+Freemasonry. That these could not be merely trade secrets relating to
+the art of building, but that already some speculative element had been
+introduced to the lodges, seems the more probable from the fact that by
+the middle of the seventeenth century not only noble patrons headed the
+Craft, but ordinary gentlemen entirely unconnected with building were
+received into the fraternity. The well-known entry in the diary of Elias
+Ashmole under the date of October 16, 1646, clearly proves this fact: "I
+was made a Freemason at Warrington in Lancashire with Col. Henry
+Mainwaring of Karticham [?] in Cheshire. The names of those that were
+then of the Lodge, Mr. Rich. Penket, Warden, Mr. James Collier, Mr.
+Rich. Sankey, Henry Littler, John Ellam, Rich. Ellam and Hugh Brewer."[273]
+"It is now ascertained," says Yarker, "that the majority of the
+members present were not operative masons."[274]
+
+Again, in 1682 Ashmole relates that he attended a meeting held at Mason
+Hall in London, where with a number of other gentlemen he was admitted
+into "the Fellowship of the Freemasons," that is to say, into the second
+degree. We have then clear proof that already in the seventeenth century
+Freemasonry had ceased to be an association composed exclusively of men
+concerned with building, although eminent architects ranked high in the
+Order; Inigo Jones is said to have been Grand Master under James I, and
+Sir Christopher Wren to have occupied the same position from about 1685
+to 1702. But it was not until 1703 that the Lodge of St. Paul in London
+officially announced "that the privileges of Masonry should no longer be
+restricted to operative Masons, but extended to men of various
+professions, provided they were regularly approved and initiated into
+the Order."[275]
+
+This was followed in 1717 by the great _coup d'etat_ when Grand Lodge
+was founded, and Speculative Masonry, which we now know as Freemasonry,
+was established on a settled basis with a ritual, rules, and
+constitution drawn up in due form. It is at this important date that the
+official history of Freemasonry begins.
+
+But before pursuing the course of the Order through what is known as the
+"Grand Lodge Era," it is necessary to go back and enquire into the
+origins of the philosophy that was now combined with the system of
+operative masonry. This is the point on which opinions are divided and
+to which the various theories summarized in the _Masonic Cyclopcaedia_
+relate. Let us examine each of these in turn.
+
+
+
+Speculative Masonry
+
+
+According to certain sceptics concerning the mysteries of Freemasonry,
+the system inaugurated in 1717 had no existence before that date, but
+"was devised, promulgated, and palmed upon the world by Dr. Desaguliers,
+Dr. Anderson, and others, who then founded the Grand Lodge of England."
+Mr. Paton, in an admirable little pamphlet,[276] has shown the futility
+of this contention and also the injustice of representing the founders
+of Grand Lodge as perpetrating so gross a deception.
+
+ This 1717 theory ascribes to men of the highest character the
+ invention of a system of mere imposture.... It was brought forward
+ with pretensions which its framers knew to be false pretensions of
+ high antiquity; whereas ... it had newly been invented in their
+ studies. Is this likely? Or is it reasonable to ascribe such
+ conduct to honourable men, without even assigning a probable motive
+ for it?
+
+We have indeed only to study masonic ritual--which is open to everyone
+to read--in order to arrive at the same conclusion, that there could be
+no motive for this imposture, and further that these two clergymen
+cannot be supposed to have evolved the whole thing out of their heads.
+Obviously some movement of a kindred nature must have led up to this
+crisis. And since Elias Ashmole's diary clearly proves that a ceremony
+of masonic initiation had existed in the preceding century, it is surely
+only reasonable to conclude that Drs. Anderson and Desaguliers revised
+but did not originate the ritual and constitutions drawn up by them.
+
+Now, although the ritual of Freemasonry is couched in modern and by no
+means classical English, the ideas running through it certainly bear
+traces of extreme antiquity. The central idea of Freemasonry concerning
+a loss which has befallen man and the hope of its ultimate recovery is
+in fact no other than the ancient secret tradition described in the
+first chapter of this book. Certain masonic writers indeed ascribe to
+Freemasonry precisely the same genealogy as that of the early Cabala,
+declaring that it descended from Adam and the first patriarchs of the
+human race, and thence through groups of Wise Men amongst the Egyptians,
+Chaldeans, Persians, and Greeks.[277] Mr. Albert Churchward insists
+particularly on the Egyptian origin of the speculative element in
+Freemasonry: "Brother Gould and other Freemasons will never understand
+the meaning and origin of our sacred tenets till they have studied and
+unlocked the mysteries of the past." This study will then reveal the
+fact that "the Druids, the Gymnosophists of India, the Magi of Persia,
+and the Chaldeans of Assyria had all the same religious rites and
+ceremonies as practised by their priests who were initiated to their
+Order, and that these were solemnly sworn to keep the doctrines a
+profound secret from the rest of mankind. All these flowed from one
+source--Egypt."[278]
+
+Mr. Churchward further quotes the speech of the Rev. Dr. William Dodd at
+the opening of a masonic temple in 1794, who traced Freemasonry from
+"the first astronomers on the plains of Chaldea, the wise and mystic
+kings and priests of Egypt, the sages of Greece and philosophers of
+Rome," etc.[279]
+
+But how did these traditions descend to the masons of the West?
+According to a large body of masonic opinion in this country which
+recognizes only a single source of inspiration to the system we now know
+as Freemasonry, the speculative as well as the operative traditions of
+the Order descended from the building guilds and were imported to
+England by means of the Roman Collegia. Mr. Churchward, however,
+strongly dissents from this view:
+
+ In the new and revised edition of the Perfect Ceremonies, according
+ to our E. working, a theory is given that Freemasonry originated
+ from certain guilds of workmen which are well known in history as
+ the "Roman College of Artificers." There is no foundation of fact
+ for such a theory. Freemasonry is now, and always was, an
+ Eschatology, as may be proved by the whole of our signs, symbols,
+ and words, and our rituals.[280]
+
+But what Mr. Churchward fails to explain is how this eschatology reached
+the working masons; moreover why, if as he asserts, it derived from
+Egypt, Assyria, India, and Persia, Freemasonry no longer bears the stamp
+of these countries. For although vestiges of Sabeism may be found in the
+decoration of the lodges, and brief references to the mysteries of Egypt
+and Phoenicia, to the secret teaching of Pythagoras, to Euclid, and to
+Plato in the Ritual and instructions of the Craft degrees--nevertheless
+the form in which the ancient tradition is clothed, the phraseology and
+pass-words employed, are neither Egyptian, Chaldean, Greek, nor Persian,
+but Judaic. Thus although some portion of the ancient secret tradition
+may have penetrated to Great Britain through the Druids or the
+Romans--versed in the lore of Greece and Egypt--another channel for its
+introduction was clearly the Cabala of the Jews. Certain masonic writers
+recognize this double tradition, the one descending from Egypt, Chaldea,
+and Greece, the other from the Israelites, and assert that it is from
+the latter source their system is derived.[281] For after tracing its
+origin from Adam, Noah, Enoch, and Abraham, they proceed to show its
+line of descent through Moses, David, and Solomon[282]--descent from
+Solomon is in fact officially recognized by the Craft and forms a part
+of the instructions to candidates for initiation into the first degree.
+But, as we have already seen, this is the precise genealogy attributed
+to the Cabala by the Jews. Moreover, modern Freemasonry is entirely
+built up on the Solomonic, or rather the Hiramic legend. For the sake of
+readers unfamiliar with the ritual of Freemasonry a brief _resume_ of
+this "Grand Legend" must be given here.
+
+Solomon, when building the Temple, employed the services of a certain
+artificer in brass, named Hiram, the son of a widow of the tribe of
+Naphthali, who was sent to him by Hiram, King of Tyre. So much we know
+from the Book of Kings, but the masonic legend goes on to relate that
+Hiram, the widow's son, referred to as Hiram Abiff, and described as the
+master-builder, met with an untimely end. For the purpose of preserving
+order the masons working on the Temple were divided into three classes,
+Entered Apprentices, Fellow Crafts, and Master Masons, the first two
+distinguished by different pass-words and grips and paid at different
+rates of wages, the last consisting only of three persons--Solomon
+himself, Hiram King of Tyre, who had provided him with wood and precious
+stones and Hiram Abiff. Now, before the completion of the Temple fifteen
+of the Fellow Crafts conspired together to find out the secrets of the
+Master Masons and resolved to waylay Hiram Abiff at the door of the
+Temple.
+
+At the last moment twelve of the fifteen drew back, but the remaining
+three carried out the fell design, and after threatening Hiram in vain
+in order to obtain the secrets, killed him with three blows on the head,
+delivered by each in turn. They then conveyed the body away and buried
+it on Mount Moriah in Jerusalem. Solomon, informed of the disappearance
+of the master-builder, sent out fifteen Fellow Crafts to seek for him;
+five of these, having arrived at the mountain, noticed a place where the
+earth had been disturbed and there discovered the body of Hiram. Leaving
+a branch of acacia to mark the spot, they returned with their story to
+Solomon, who ordered them to go and exhume the body--an order that was
+immediately carried out.
+
+The murder and exhumation, or "raising," of Hiram, accompanied by
+extraordinary lamentations, form the climax of Craft Masonry; and when
+it is remembered that in all probability no such, tragedy ever took
+place, that possibly no one known as Hiram Abiff ever existed,[283] the
+whole story can only be regarded as the survival of some ancient cult
+relating not to an actual event, but to an esoteric doctrine. A legend
+and a ceremony of this kind is indeed to be found in many earlier
+mythologies; the story of the murder of Hiram had been foreshadowed by
+the Egyptian legend of the murder of Osiris and the quest for his body
+by Isis, whilst the lamentations around the tomb of Hiram had a
+counterpart in the mourning ceremonies for Osiris and Adonis--both, like
+Hiram, subsequently "raised"--and later on in that which took place
+around the catafalque of Manes, who, like Hiram, was barbarously put to
+death and is said to have been known to the Manicheans as "the son of
+the widow." But in the form given to it by Freemasonry the legend is
+purely Judaic, and would therefore appear to have derived from the
+Judaic version of the ancient tradition. The pillars of the Temple,
+Jachin and Boaz, which play so important a part in Craft Masonry, are
+symbols which occur in the Jewish Cabala, where they are described as
+two of the ten Sephiroths.[284] A writer of the eighteenth century,
+referring to "fyve curiosities" he has discovered in Scotland, describes
+one as--
+
+ The Mason word, which tho' some make a Misterie of it, I will not
+ conceal a little of what I know. It is lyke a Rabbinical Tradition
+ in way of Comment on Jachin and Boaz, the Two Pillars erected in
+ Solomon's Temple with ane Addition delyvered from Hand to Hand, by
+ which they know and become familiar one with another.[285]
+
+This is precisely the system by which the Cabala was handed down amongst
+the Jews. The _Jewish Encyclopaedia_ lends colour to the theory of
+Cabalistic transmission by suggesting that the story of Hiram "may
+possibly trace back to the Rabbinic legend concerning the Temple of
+Solomon," that "while all the workmen were killed so that they should
+not build another temple devoted to idolatry, Hiram himself was raised
+to Heaven like Enoch."[286]
+
+How did this Rabbinic legend find its way into Freemasonry? Advocates of
+the Roman Collegia theory explain it in the following manner.
+
+After the building of the Temple of Solomon the masons who had been
+engaged in the work were dispersed and a number made their way to
+Europe, some to Marseilles, some perhaps to Rome, where they may have
+introduced Judaic legends to the Collegia, which then passed on to the
+Comacini Masters of the seventh century and from these to the mediaeval
+working guilds of England, France, and Germany. It is said that during
+the Middle Ages a story concerning the Temple of Solomon was current
+amongst the _compagnonnages_ of France. In one of these groups, known as
+"the children of Solomon," the legend of Hiram appears to have existed
+much in its present form; according to another group the victim of the
+murder was not Hiram Abiff, but one of his companions named Maitre
+Jacques, who, whilst engaged with Hiram on the construction of the
+Temple, met his death at the hands of five wicked Fellow Crafts,
+instigated by a sixth, the Pere Soubise.[287]
+
+But the date at which this legend originated is unknown. Clavel thinks
+that the "Hebraic mysteries" existed as early as the Roman Collegia,
+which he describes as largely Judaized[288]; Yarker expresses precisely
+the opposite view: "It is not so difficult to connect Freemasonry with
+the Collegia; the difficulty lies in attributing Jewish traditions to
+the Collegia, and we say on the evidence of the oldest charges that such
+traditions had no existence in Saxon times."[289] Again: "So far as
+this country is concerned, we know nothing from documents of a Masonry
+dating from Solomon's Temple until after the Crusades, when the
+constitution believed to have been sanctioned by King Athelstan
+gradually underwent a change."[290] In a discussion which took place
+recently at the Quatuor Coronati Lodge the Hiramic legend could only be
+traced back--and then without absolute certainty--to the fourteenth
+century, which would coincide with the date indicated by Yarker.[291]
+
+Up to this period the lore of the masonic guilds appears to have
+contained only the exoteric doctrines of Egypt and Greece--which may
+have reached them through the Roman Collegia, whilst the traditions of
+Masonry are traced from Adam, Jabal, Tubal Cain, from Nimrod and the
+Tower of Babel, with Hermes and Pythagoras as their more immediate
+progenitors.[292] These doctrines were evidently in the main geometrical
+or technical, and in no sense Cabalistic. There is therefore some
+justification for Eckert's statement that "the Judeo-Christian mysteries
+were not yet introduced into the masonic corporations; nowhere can we
+find the least trace of them. Nowhere do we find any classification, not
+even that of masters, fellow-crafts, and apprentices. We observe no
+symbol of the Temple of Solomon; all their symbolism relates to masonic
+labours and to a few philosophical maxims of morality."[293] The date
+at which Eckert, like Yarker, places the introduction of these Judaic
+elements is the time of the Crusades.
+
+But whilst recognizing that modern Craft Masonry is largely founded on
+the Cabala, it is necessary to distinguish between the different
+Cabalas. For by this date no less than three Cabalas appear to have
+existed: firstly, the ancient secret tradition of the patriarchs handed
+down from the Egyptians through the Greeks and Romans, and possibly
+through the Roman Collegia to the Craft Masons of Britain; secondly, the
+Jewish version of this tradition, the first Cabala of the Jews, in no
+way incompatible with Christianity, descending from Moses, David and
+Solomon to the Essenes and the more enlightened Jews; and thirdly, the
+perverted Cabala, mingled by the Rabbis with magic, barbaric
+superstitions, and--after the death of Christ--with anti-Christian
+legends.
+
+Whatever Cabalistic elements were introduced into Craft Masonry at the
+time of the Crusades appear to have belonged to the second of these
+traditions, the unperverted Cabala of the Jews, known to the Essenes.
+There are, in fact, striking resemblances betwen Freemasonry and
+Essenism--degrees of initiation, oaths of secrecy, the wearing of the
+apron, and a certain masonic sign; whilst to the Sabeist traditions of
+the Essenes may perhaps be traced the solar and stellar symbolism of the
+lodges.[294] The Hiramic legend may have belonged to the same tradition.
+
+
+
+The Templar Tradition
+
+
+If then no documentary evidence can be brought forward to show that
+either the Solomonic legend or any traces of Judaic symbolism and
+traditions existed either in the monuments of the period or in the
+ritual of the masons before the fourteenth century, it is surely
+reasonable to recognize the plausibility of the contention put forward
+by a great number of masonic writers--particularly on the
+Continent--that the Judaic elements penetrated into Masonry by means of
+the Templars.[295] The Templars, as we have already seen, had taken
+their name from the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem. What then more
+likely than that during the time they had lived there they had learnt
+the Rabbinical legends connected with the Temple? According to George
+Sand, who was deeply versed in the history of secret societies, the
+Hiramic legend was adopted by the Templars as symbolic of the
+destruction of their Order. "They wept over their impotence in the
+person of Hiram. The word lost and recovered is their empire...."[296]
+The Freemason Ragon likewise declares that the catastrophe they lamented
+was the catastrophe that destroyed their Order.[297] Further, the Grand
+Master whose fate they deplored was Jacques du Molay. Here then we have
+two bodies in France at the same period, the Templars and the
+_compagnonnages_, both possessing a legend concerning the Temple of
+Solomon and both mourning a Maitre Jacques who had been barbarously put
+to death. If we accept the possibility that the Hiramic legend existed
+amongst the masons before the Crusades, how are we to explain this
+extraordinary coincidence? It is certainly easier to believe that the
+Judaic traditions were introduced to the masons by the Templars and
+grafted on to the ancient lore that the masonic guilds had inherited
+from the Roman Collegia.
+
+That some connexion existed between the Templars and the working masons
+is indicated by the new influence that entered into building at this
+period. A modern Freemason comparing "the beautifully designed and
+deep-cut marks of the true Gothic period, say circa 1150-1350," with
+"the careless and roughly executed marks, many of them mere scratches,
+of later periods," points out that "the Knights Templars rose and fell
+with that wonderful development of architecture." The same writer goes
+on to show that some of the most important masonic symbols, the
+equilateral triangle and the Mason's square surmounting two pillars,
+came through from Gothic times.[298] Yarker asserts that the level, the
+flaming star, and the Tau cross which have since passed into the
+symbolism of Freemasonry may be traced to the Knights Templar, as also
+the five-pointed star in Salisbury Cathedral, the double triangle in
+Westminster Abbey, Jachin and Boaz, the circle and the pentagon in the
+masonry of the fourteenth century. Yarker cites later, in 1556, the eye
+and crescent moon, the three stars and the ladder of five steps, as
+further evidences of Templar influence.[299] "The Templars were large
+builders, and Jacques du Molay alleged the zeal of his Order in
+decorating churches in the process against him in 1310; hence the
+alleged connexion of Templary and Freemasonry is bound to have a
+substratum of truth."[300]
+
+Moreover, according to a masonic tradition, an alliance definitely took
+place between the Templars and the masonic guilds at this period. During
+the proceedings taken against the Order of the Temple in France it is
+said that Pierre d'Aumont and seven other Knights escaped to Scotland in
+the guise of working masons and landed in the Island of Mull. On St.
+John's Day, 1307, they held their first chapter. Robert Bruce then took
+them under his protection, and seven years later they fought under his
+standard at Bannockburn against Edward II, who had suppressed their
+Order in England. After this battle, which took place on St. John the
+Baptist's Day in summer (June 24), Robert Bruce is said to have
+instituted the Royal Order of H.R.M. (Heredom) and Knights of the
+R.S.Y.C.S. (Rosy Cross).[301] These two degrees now constitute the Royal
+Order of Scotland, and it seems not improbable that in reality they were
+brought to Scotland by the Templars. Thus, according to one of the early
+writers on Freemasonry, the degree of the Rose-Croix originated with the
+Templars in Palestine as early as 1188[302]; whilst the Eastern origin
+of the word Heredom, supposed to derive from a mythical mountain on an
+island south of the Hebrides[303] where the Culdees practised their
+rites, is indicated by another eighteenth-century writer, who traces it
+to a Jewish source.[304] In this same year of 1314 Robert Bruce is said
+to have united the Templars and the Royal Order of H.R.M. with the
+guilds of working masons, who had also fought in his army, at the famous
+Lodge of Kilwinning, founded in 1286,[305] which now added to its name
+that of Heredom and became the chief seat of the Order.[306] Scotland
+was essentially a home of operative masonry, and, in view of the
+Templar's prowess in the art of building, what more natural than that
+the two bodies should enter into an alliance? Already in England the
+Temple is said between 1155 and 1199 to have administered the
+Craft.[307] It is thus at Heredom of Kilwinning, "the Holy House of
+Masonry"--"Mother Kilwinning," as it is still known to Freemasons--that
+a speculative element of a fresh kind may have found its way into the
+lodges. Is it not here, then, that we may see that "fruitful union
+between the professional guild of mediaeval masons and a secret group of
+philosophical Adepts" alluded to by Count Goblet d'Aviella and described
+by Mr. Waite in the following words:
+
+ The mystery of the building guilds--whatever it may be held to have
+ been--was that of a simple, unpolished, pious, and utilitarian
+ device; and this daughter of Nature, in the absence of all
+ intention on her own part, underwent, or was coerced into one of
+ the strangest marriages which has been celebrated in occult
+ history. It so happened that her particular form and figure lent
+ itself to such a union, etc.[308]?
+
+Mr. Waite with his usual vagueness does not explain when and where this
+marriage took place, but the account would certainly apply to the
+alliance between the Templars and Scottish guilds of working masons,
+which, as we have seen, is admitted by masonic authorities, and presents
+exactly the conditions described, the Templars being peculiarly fitted
+by their initiation into the legend concerning the building of the
+Temple of Solomon to co-operate with the masons, and the masons being
+prepared by their partial initiation into ancient mysteries to receive
+the fresh influx of Eastern tradition from the Templars.
+
+A further indication of the Templar influence in Craft Masonry is the
+system of degrees and initiations. The names of Entered Apprentice,
+Fellow Craft, and Master Mason are said to have derived from
+Scotland,[309] and the analogy between these and the degrees of the
+Assassins has already been shown. Indeed, the resemblance between the
+outer organization of Freemasonry and the system of the Ismailis is
+shown by many writers. Thus Dr. Bussell observes: "No doubt together
+with some knowledge of geometry regarded as an esoteric trade secret,
+many symbols to-day current did pass down from very primitive times. But
+a more certain model was the Grand Lodge of the Ismailis in Cairo"--that
+is to say the Dar-ul-Hikmat.[310] Syed Ameer Ali also expresses the
+opinion that "Makrisi's account of the different degrees of initiation
+adopted in this lodge forms an invaluable record of Freemasonry. In
+fact, the lodge at Cairo became the model of all the Lodges created
+afterwards in Christendom."[311] Mr. Bernard Springett, a Freemason,
+quoting this passage, adds: "In this last assertion I am myself greatly
+in agreement."[312]
+
+It is surely therefore legitimate to surmise that this system penetrated
+to Craft Masonry through the Templars, whose connexion with the
+Assassins--offshoot of the Dar-ul-Hikmat--was a matter of common
+knowledge.
+
+The question of the Templar succession in Freemasonry forms perhaps the
+most controversial point in the whole history of the Roman Collegia
+theory, Continental Masons more generally accepting it, and even
+glorying in it.[313] Mackey, in his _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, thus sums
+up the matter:
+
+ The connexion between the Knights Templar and the Freemasons has
+ been repeatedly asserted by the enemies of both institutions, and
+ has often been admitted by their friends. Lawrie, on this subject,
+ holds the following language: "We know that the Knights Templar not
+ only possessed the mysteries but performed the ceremonies and
+ inculcated the duties of Freemasons," and he attributes the
+ dissolution of the Order to the discovery of their being Freemasons
+ and their assembling in secret to practise the rites of the
+ Order.[314]
+
+This explains why Freemasons have always shown indulgence to the
+Templars.
+
+ It was above all Freemasonry [says Findel], which--because it
+ falsely held itself to be a daughter of Templarism--took the
+ greatest pains to represent the Order of the Templars as innocent
+ and therefore free from all mystery. For this purpose not only
+ legends and unhistorical facts were brought forward, but
+ manoeuvres were also resorted to in order to suppress the truth.
+ The masonic reverers of the Temple Order bought up the whole
+ edition of the _Actes du Proces_ of Moldenhawer, because this
+ showed the guilt of the Order; only a few copies reached the
+ booksellers.... Already several decades before ... the Freemasons
+ in their unhistorical efforts had been guilty of real forgery.
+ Dupuy had published his _History of the Trial of the Templars_ as
+ early as 1654 in Paris, for which he had made use of the original
+ of the _Actes du Proces_, according to which the guilt of the Order
+ leaves no room for doubt.... But when in the middle of the
+ eighteenth century several branches of Freemasonry wished to recall
+ the Templar Order into being, the work of Dupuy was naturally very
+ displeasing. It had already been current amongst the public for a
+ hundred years, so it could no longer be bought; therefore they
+ falsified it.[315]
+
+Accordingly in 1751 a reprint of Dupuy's work appeared with the addition
+of a number of notes and remarks and mutilated in such a way as to prove
+not the guilt but the innocence of the Templars.
+
+Now, although British Masonry has played no part in these intrigues, the
+question of the Templar succession has been very inadequately dealt with
+by the masonic writers of our country. As a rule they have adopted one
+of two courses--either they have persistently denied connexion with the
+Templars or they have represented them as a blameless and cruelly
+maligned Order. But in reality neither of these expedients is necessary
+to save the honour of British Masonry, for not even the bitterest enemy
+of Masonry has ever suggested that British masons have adopted any
+portion of the Templar heresy. The Knights who fled to Scotland may have
+been perfectly innocent of the charges brought against their Order;
+indeed, there is good reason to believe this was the case. Thus the
+_Manuel des Chevaliers de l'Ordre du Temple_ relates the incident in the
+following manner:
+
+ After the death of Jacques du Molay, some Scottish Templars having
+ become apostates, at the instigation of Robert Bruce ranged
+ themselves under the banners of a new Order[316] instituted by this
+ prince and in which the receptions were based on those of the Order
+ of the Temple. It is there that we must seek the origin of Scottish
+ Masonry and even that of the other masonic rites. The Scottish
+ Templars were excommunicated in 1324 by Larmenius, who declared
+ them to be _Templi desertores_ and the Knights of St. John of
+ Jerusalem, _Dominiorum Militiae spoliatores_, placed for ever
+ outside the pale of the Temple: _Extra girum Templi, nunc et in
+ futurum, volo, dico et jubeo._ A similar anathema has since been
+ launched by several Grand Masters against Templars who were
+ rebellious to legitimate authority. From the schism that was
+ introduced into Scotland a number of sects took birth.[317]
+
+This account forms a complete exoneration of the Scottish Templars; as
+apostates from the bogus Christian Church and the doctrines of Johannism
+they showed themselves loyal to the true Church and to the Christian
+faith as formulated in the published statutes of their Order. What they
+appear, then, to have introduced to Masonry was their manner of
+reception, that is to say their outer forms and organization, and
+possibly certain Eastern esoteric doctrines and Judaic legends
+concerning the building of the Temple of Solomon in no way incompatible
+with the teaching of Christianity.
+
+It will be noticed, moreover, that in the ban passed by the _Ordre du
+Temple_ on the Scottish Templars the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem
+are also included. This is a further tribute to the orthodoxy of the
+Scottish Knights. For to the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem--to whom
+the Templar property was given--no suspicion of heresy had ever
+attached. After the suppression of the Order of the Temple in 1312 a
+number of the Knights joined themselves to the Knights of St. John of
+Jerusalem, by whom the Templar system appears to have been purged of its
+heretical elements. As we shall see later, the same process is said to
+have been carried out by the Royal Order of Scotland, All this suggests
+that the Templars had imported a secret doctrine from the East which was
+capable either of a Christian or an anti-Christian interpretation, that
+through their connexion with the Royal Order of Scotland and the Knights
+of St. John of Jerusalem this Christian interpretation was preserved,
+and finally that it was this pure doctrine which passed into
+Freemasonry. According to early masonic authorities, the adoption of the
+two St. Johns as the patron saints of Masonry arose, not from Johannism,
+but from the alliance between the Templars and the Knights of St. John
+of Jerusalem.[318]
+
+It is important to remember that the theory of the Templar connexion
+with Freemasonry was held by the Continental Freemasons of the
+eighteenth century, who, living at the time the Order was reconstituted
+on its present basis, were clearly in a better position to know its
+origins than we who are separated from that date by a distance of two
+hundred years. But since their testimony first comes to light at the
+period of the upper degrees, in which the Templar influence is more
+clearly visible than in Craft Masonry, it must be reserved for a later
+chapter. Before passing on to this further stage in the history of the
+Craft, it is necessary to consider one more link in the chain of the
+masonic tradition--the "Holy Vehm."
+
+
+
+The Vehmgerichts[319]
+
+
+These dread tribunals, said to have been established by Charlemagne in
+772[320] in Westphalia, had for their avowed object the establishment of
+law and order amidst the unsettled and even anarchic conditions that
+then reigned in Germany. But by degrees the power arrogated to itself by
+the "Holy Vehm" became so formidable that succeeding emperors were
+unable to control its workings and found themselves forced to become
+initiates from motives of self-protection. During the twelfth century
+the Vehmgerichts, by their continual executions, had created a veritable
+"Red Terror," so that the East of Germany was known as the Red Land. In
+1371, says Lecouteulx de Canteleu, a fresh impetus was given to the
+"Holy Vehm" by a number of the Knights Templar who, on the dissolution
+of their Order, had found their way to Germany and now sought admission
+to the Secret Tribunals.[321] How much of Templar lore passed into the
+hand of the Vehmgerichts it is impossible to know, but there is
+certainly a resemblance between the methods of initiation and
+intimidation employed by the Vehms and those described by certain of the
+Templars, still more between the ceremony of the Vehms and the ritual of
+Freemasonry.
+
+Thus the members of the Vehms, known as the _Wissende_ (or Enlightened),
+were divided into three degrees of initiation: the Free Judges, the
+veritable Free Judges, and the Holy Judges of the Secret Tribunal. The
+candidate for initiation was led blindfold before the dread Tribunal,
+presided over by a _Stuhlherr_ (or master of the chair) or his
+substitute, a _Freigraf_, with a sword and branch of willow at his side.
+The initiate was then bound by a terrible oath not to reveal the secrets
+of the "Holy Vehm," to warn no one of danger threatening them by its
+decrees, to denounce anyone, whether father, mother, brother, sister,
+friend, or relation, if such a one had been condemned by the Tribunal.
+After this he was given the password and grip by which the confederates
+recognized each other. In the event of his turning traitor or revealing
+the secrets confided to him his eyes were bandaged, his hands tied
+behind his back, and his tongue was torn out through the back of his
+neck, after which he was hanged by the feet till he was dead, with the
+solemn imprecation that his body should be given as a prey to the birds
+of the air.
+
+It is difficult to believe that the points of resemblance with modern
+masonic ritual[322] which may here be discerned can be a mere matter of
+coincidence, yet it would be equally unreasonable to trace the origins
+of Freemasonry to the Vehmgerichts. Clearly both derived from a common
+source, either the old pagan traditions on which the early Vehms were
+founded or the system of the Templars. The latter seems the more
+probable for two reasons: firstly, on account of the resemblance between
+the methods of the Vehmgerichts and the Assassins, which would be
+explained if the Templars formed the connecting link; and secondly, the
+fact that in contemporary documents the members of the Secret Tribunals
+were frequently referred to under the name of Rose-Croix.[323] Now,
+since, as we have seen, the degree of the Rosy Cross is said to have
+been brought to Europe by the Templars, this would account for the
+persistence of the name in the Vehmgerichts as well as in the
+Rosicrucians of the seventeenth century, who are said to have continued
+the Templar tradition. Thus Templarism and Rosicrucianism appear to have
+been always closely connected, a fact which is not surprising since both
+derive from a common source--the traditions of the near East.
+
+This brings us to an alternative theory concerning the channel through
+which Eastern doctrines, and particularly Cabalism, found their way into
+Freemasonry. For it must be admitted that one obstacle to the complete
+acceptance of the theory of the Templar succession exists, namely, that
+although the Judaic element cannot be traced further back than the
+Crusades, neither can it with certainty be pronounced to have come into
+existence during the three centuries that followed after. Indeed, before
+the publication of Anderson's "Constitutions" in 1723 there is no
+definite evidence that the Solomonic legend had been incorporated into
+the ritual of British Masonry. So although the possession of the legend
+by the _compagnonnages_ of the Middle Ages would tend to prove its
+antiquity, there is always the possibility that it was introduced by
+some later body of adepts than the Templars. According to the partisans
+of a further theory, these adepts were the Rosicrucians.
+
+
+
+Rosicrucian Origin
+
+
+One of the earliest and most eminent precursors of Freemasonry is said
+to have been Francis Bacon. As we have already seen, Bacon is recognized
+to have been a Rosicrucian, and that the secret philosophical doctrine
+he professed was closely akin to Freemasonry is clearly apparent in his
+_New Atlantis_. The reference to the "Wise Men of the Society of
+Solomon's House" cannot be a mere coincidence. The choice of
+Atlantis--the legendary island supposed to have been submerged by the
+Atlantic Ocean in the remote past--would suggest that Bacon had some
+knowledge of a secret tradition descending from the earliest patriarchs
+of the human race, whom, like the modern writer Le Plongeon, he imagined
+to have inhabited the Western hemisphere and to have been the
+predecessors of the Egyptian initiates. Le Plongeon, however, places
+this early seat of the mysteries still further West than the Atlantic
+Ocean, in the region of Mayax and Yucatan.[324]
+
+Bacon further relates that this tradition was preserved in its pure form
+by certain of the Jews, who, whilst accepting the Cabala, rejected its
+anti-Christian tendencies. Thus in this island of Bensalem there are
+Jews "of a far differing disposition from the Jews in other parts. For
+whereas they hate the name of Christ, and have a secret inbred rancour
+against the people amongst whom they live; these contrariwise give unto
+our Saviour many high attributes," but at the same time they believe
+"that Moses by a secret Cabala ordained the laws of Bensalem which they
+now use, and that when the Messiah should come and sit on His throne at
+Jerusalem, the King of Bensalem should sit at His feet, whereas other
+kings should keep at a great distance." This passage is of particular
+interest as showing that Bacon recognized the divergence between the
+ancient secret tradition descending from Moses and the perverted Jewish
+Cabala of the Rabbis, and that he was perfectly aware of the tendency
+even among the best of Jews to turn the former to the advantage of the
+Messianic dreams.
+
+Mrs. Pott, who in her _Francis Bacon and his Secret Society_ sets out to
+prove that Bacon was the founder of Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry,
+ignores all the previous history of the secret tradition. Bacon was not
+the originator but the inheritor of the ideas on which both these
+societies were founded. And the further contention that Bacon was at the
+same time the author of the greatest dramas in the English language and
+of _The Chymical Marriage of Christian Rosengreutz_ is manifestly
+absurd. Nevertheless, Bacon's influence amongst the Rosicrucians is
+apparent; Heydon's _Voyage to the Land of the Rosicrucians_ is in fact a
+mere plagiarism of Bacon's _New Atlantis_.
+
+Mrs. Pott seems to imagine that by proclaiming Bacon to have been the
+founder or even a member of the Order of Freemasonry she is revealing a
+great masonic secret which Freemasons have conspired to keep dark. But
+why should the Craft desire to disown so illustrious a progenitor or
+seek to conceal his connexion with the Order if any such existed?
+Findel, indeed, frankly admits that the _New Atlantis_ contained
+unmistakable allusions to Freemasonry and that Bacon contributed to its
+final transformation.[325] This was doubtless brought about largely by
+the English Rosicrucians who followed after. To suggest then that
+Freemasonry originated with the Rosicrucians is to ignore the previous
+history of the secret tradition. Rosicrucianism was not the beginning
+but a link in the long chain connecting Freemasonry with far earlier
+secret associations. The resemblance between the two Orders admits of no
+denial. Thus Yarker writes: "The symbolic tracing of the Rosicrucians
+was a Square Temple approached by seven steps ... here also we find the
+two pillars of Hermes, the five-pointed star, sun and moon, compasses,
+square and triangle." Yarker further observes that "even Wren was more
+or less a student of Hermeticism, and if we had a full list of
+Freemasons and Rosicrucians we should probably be surprised at the
+numbers who belonged to both systems."[326]
+
+Professor Buhle emphatically states that "Freemasonry is neither more
+nor less than Rosicrucianism as modified by those who transplanted it
+into England." Chambers, who published his famous _Cyclopaedia_ in 1728,
+observes: "Some who are no friends to Freemasonry, make the present
+flourishing society of Freemasons a branch of _Rosicrucians_, or rather
+the Rosicrucians themselves under a new name or relation, viz. as
+retainers to building. And it is certain there are some Freemasons who
+have all the characters of Rosicrucians."
+
+The connexion between Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism is, however, a
+question hardly less controversial than that of the connexion between
+Freemasonry and Templarism.
+
+Dr. Mackey violently disputes the theory. "The Rosicrucians," he writes,
+"as this brief history indicates, had no connexion whatever with the
+masonic fraternity. Notwithstanding this fact, Barruel, the most
+malignant of our revilers, with a characteristic spirit of
+misrepresentation, attempted to identify the two institutions."[327]
+But the aforesaid "brief history" indicates nothing of the kind, and the
+reference to Barruel as a malignant reviler for suggesting a connexion,
+which, as we have seen, many Freemasons admit, shows on which side this
+"spirit of misrepresentation" exists. It is interesting, however, to
+note that in the eyes of certain masonic writers connexion with the
+Rosicrucians is regarded as highly discreditable; the fraternity would
+thus appear to have been less blameless than we have been taught to
+believe. Mr. Waite is equally concerned with proving that there "is no
+traceable connexion between Masonry and Rosicrucianism," and he goes on
+to explain that Freemasonry was never a learned society, that it never
+laid claim to "any transcendental secrets of alchemy and magic, or to
+any skill in medicine," etc.[328]
+
+The truth may lie between the opposing contentions of Prof. Buhle and
+his two masonic antagonists. The Freemasons were clearly, for the
+reasons given by Mr. Waite, not a mere continuation of the Rosicrucians,
+but more likely borrowed from the Rosicrucians a part of their system
+and symbols which they adapted to their own purpose. Moreover, the
+incontrovertible fact is that in the list of English Freemasons and
+Rosicrucians we find men who belonged to both Orders and amongst these
+two who contributed largely to the constitutions of English Freemasonry.
+
+The first of these is Robert Fludd, whom Mr. Waite describes as "the
+central figure of Rosicrucian literature, ... an intellectual giant, ...
+a man of immense erudition, of exalted mind, and, to judge by his
+writings, of extreme personal sanctity. Ennemoser describes him as one
+of the most distinguished disciples of Paracelsus...."[329] Yarker adds
+this clue: "In 1630 we find Fludd, the chief of the Rosicrucians, using
+architectural language, and there is proof that his Society was divided
+into degrees, and from the fact that the Masons' Company of London had
+a copy of the Masonic Charges 'presented by Mr. fflood' we may suppose
+that he was a Freemason before 1620."[330]
+
+A still more important link is Elias Ashmole, the antiquary, astrologer,
+and alchemist, founder of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, who was born
+in 1617. An avowed Rosicrucian, and as we have seen, also a Freemason,
+Ashmole displayed great energy in reconstituting the Craft; he is said
+to have perfected its organization, to have added to it further mystic
+symbols, and according to Ragon, it was he who drew up the ritual of the
+existing three Craft degrees--Entered Apprentice, Fellow-Craft, and
+Master Mason--which was adopted by Grand Lodge in 1717. Whence did these
+fresh inspirations come but from the Rosicrucians? For, as Ragon also
+informs us, in the year that Ashmole was received into Freemasonry the
+Rosicrucians held their meeting in the same room at Mason Hall![331]
+
+How, then, can it be said that there was "no traceable connexion between
+Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism?" and why should it be the part of a
+"malignant reviler" to connect them? It is not suggested that
+Rosicrucians, such as Fludd or Ashmole, imported any magical elements
+into Freemasonry, but simply the system and symbols of the Rose-Croix
+with a certain degree of esoteric learning. That Rosicrucianism forms an
+important link in the chain of the secret tradition is therefore
+undeniable.
+
+
+
+The Seventeenth-Century Rabbis
+
+
+There is, however, a third channel through which the Judaic legends of
+Freemasonry may have penetrated to the Craft, namely, the Rabbis of the
+seventeenth century. The Jewish writer Bernard Lazare has declared that
+"there were Jews around the cradle of Freemasonry,"[332] and if this
+statement is applied to the period preceding the institution of Grand
+Lodge in 1717 it certainly finds confirmation in fact. Thus it is said
+that in the preceding century the coat-of-arms now used by Grand Lodge
+had been designed by an Amsterdam Jew, Jacob Jehuda Leon Templo,
+colleague of Cromwell's friend the Cabalist, Manasseh ben Israel.[333]
+To quote Jewish authority on this question, Mr. Lucien Wolf writes that
+Templo "had a monomania for ... everything relating to the Temple of
+Solomon and the Tabernacle of the Wilderness. He constructed gigantic
+models of both these edifices."[334] These he exhibited in London,
+which he visited in 1675 and earlier, and it seems not unreasonable to
+conclude that this may have provided a fresh source of inspiration to
+the Freemasons who framed the masonic ritual some forty years later. At
+any rate, the masonic coat-of-arms still used by Grand Lodge of England
+is undoubtedly of Jewish design.
+
+"This coat," says Mr. Lucien Wolf, "is entirely composed of Jewish
+symbols," and is "an attempt to display heraldically the various forms
+of the Cherubim pictured to us in the second vision of Ezekiel--an Ox, a
+Man, a Lion, and an Eagle--and thus belongs to the highest and most
+mystical domain of Hebrew symbolism."[335]
+
+In other words, this vision, known to the Jews as the "Mercaba,"[336]
+belongs to the Cabala, where a particular interpretation is placed on
+each figure so as to provide an esoteric meaning not perceptible to the
+uninitiated.[337] The masonic coat-of-arms is thus entirely Cabalistic;
+as is also the seal on the diplomas of Craft Masonry, where another
+Cabalistic figure, that of a man and woman combined, is reproduced.[338]
+
+Of the Jewish influence in Masonry after 1717 I shall speak later.
+
+To sum up, then, the origins of the system we now know as Freemasonry
+are not to be found in one source alone. The twelve alternative sources
+enumerated in the _Masonic Cyclopaedia_ and quoted at the beginning of
+this chapter may all have contributed to its formation. Thus Operative
+Masonry may have descended from the Roman Collegia and through the
+operative masons of the Middle Ages, whilst Speculative Masonry may have
+derived from the patriarchs and the mysteries of the pagans. But the
+source of inspiration which admits of no denial is the Jewish Cabala.
+Whether this penetrated to our country through the Roman Collegia, the
+_compagnonnages_, the Templars, the Rosicrucians, or through the Jews of
+the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, whose activities behind the
+scenes of Freemasonry we shall see later, is a matter of speculation.
+The fact remains that when the ritual and constitutions of Masonry were
+drawn up in 1717, although certain fragments of the ancient Egyptian and
+Pythagorean doctrines were retained, the Judaic version of the secret
+tradition was the one selected by the founders of Grand Lodge on which
+to build up their system.
+
+
+
+
+6
+
+THE GRAND LODGE ERA
+
+
+
+Whatever were the origins of the Order we now know as Freemasonry, it is
+clear that during the century preceding its reorganization under Grand
+Lodge of London the secret system of binding men together for a common
+purpose, based on Eastern esoteric doctrines, had been anticipated by
+the Rosicrucians. Was this secret system employed, however by any other
+body of men? It is certainly easy to imagine how in this momentous
+seventeenth century, when men of all opinions were coalescing against
+opposing forces--Lutherans combining against the Papacy, Catholics
+rallying their forces against invading Protestantism, Republicans
+plotting in favour of Cromwell, Royalists in their turn plotting to
+restore the Stuarts, finally Royalists plotting against each other on
+behalf of rival dynasties--an organization of this kind, enabling one to
+work secretly for a cause and to set invisibly vast numbers of human
+beings in motion, might prove invaluable to any party.
+
+Thus, according to certain masonic writers on the Continent, the system
+used by the Rosicrucians in their fight against "Popery" was also
+employed by the Jesuits for a directly opposite purpose. In the
+manuscripts of the Prince of Hesse published by Lecouteulx de Canteleu
+it is declared that in 1714 the Jesuits used the mysteries of the
+Rose-Croix. Mirabeau also relates that "the Jesuits profited by the
+internal troubles of the reign of Charles I to possess themselves of the
+symbols, the allegories, and the carpets (tapis) of the Rose-Croix
+masons, who were only the ancient order of the Templars secretly
+perpetuated. It may be seen by means of what imperceptible innovations
+they succeeded in substituting their catechism to the instruction of the
+Templars."[339]
+
+Other Continental writers again assert that Cromwell, the arch-opponent
+of the Catholic Church, was "a higher initiate of masonic mysteries,"
+and used the system for his own elevation to power[340]; further, that
+he found himself outdistanced by the Levellers; that this sect, whose
+name certainly suggests masonic inspiration, adopted for its symbols the
+square and compass,[341] and in its claim of real equality threatened
+the supremacy of the usurper. Finally, Elias Ashmole, the Rosicrucian
+Royalist, is said to have turned the masonic system against Cromwell, so
+that towards the end of the seventeenth century the Order rallied to the
+Stuart cause.[342]
+
+But all this is pure speculation resting on no basis of known facts. The
+accusation that the Jesuits used the system of the Rose-Croix as a cover
+to political intrigues is referred to by the Rosicrucian Eliphas Levi as
+the outcome of ignorance, which "refutes itself." It is significant to
+notice that it emanates mainly from Germany and from the Illuminati; the
+Prince of Hesse was a member of the _Stricte Observance_ and Mirabeau an
+Illuminatus at the time he wrote the passage quoted above. That in the
+seventeenth century certain Jesuits played the part of political
+intriguers I suppose their warmest friends will hardly deny, but that
+they employed any secret or masonic system seems to me perfectly
+incapable of proof. I shall return to this point later, however, in
+connexion with the Illuminati.
+
+As to Cromwell, the only circumstance that lends any colour to the
+possibility of his connexion with Freemasonry is his known friendship
+for Manasseh ben Israel, the colleague of the Rabbi Templo who designed
+the coat-of-arms later adopted by Grand Lodge. If, therefore, the Jews
+of Amsterdam were a source of inspiration to the Freemasons of the
+seventeenth century, it is not impossible that Cromwell may have been
+the channel through which this influence first penetrated.
+
+In the matter of the Stuarts we are, however, on firm ground with regard
+to Freemasonry. That the lodges at the end of the seventeenth century
+were Royalist is certain, and there seems good reason to believe that,
+when the revolution of 1688 divided the Royalist cause, the Jacobites
+who fled to France with James II took Freemasonry with them.[343] With
+the help of the French they established lodges in which, it is said,
+masonic rites and symbols were used to promote the cause of the Stuarts.
+Thus the land of promise signified Great Britain, Jerusalem stood for
+London, and the murder of Hiram represented the execution of Charles
+I.[344]
+
+Meanwhile Freemasonry in England did not continue to adhere to the
+Stuart cause as it had done under the aegis of Elias Ashmole, and by 1717
+is said to have become Hanoverian.
+
+From this important date the official history of the present system may
+be said to begin; hitherto everything rests on stray documents, of which
+the authenticity is frequently doubtful, and which provide no continuous
+history of the Order. In 1717 for the first time Freemasonry was
+established on a settled basis and in the process underwent a
+fundamental change. So far it would seem to have retained an operative
+element, but in the transformation that now took place this was entirely
+eliminated, and the whole Order was transformed into a middle-and
+upper-class speculative body. This _coup d'etat_, already suggested in
+1703, took place in 1716, when four London lodges of Freemasons met
+together at the Apple Tree Tavern in Charles Street, Covent Garden, "and
+having put into the chair the oldest Master Mason (now the Master of a
+lodge), they constituted themselves a Grand Lodge, _pro tempore_, in due
+form." On St. John the Baptist's Day, June 24 of the next year, the
+annual assembly and banquet were held at the Goose and Gridiron in St.
+Paul's Churchyard, when Mr. Antony Sayer was elected Grand Master and
+invested with all the badges of office.[345]
+
+It is evident from the above account that already in 1717 the
+speculative elements must have predominated in the lodges, otherwise we
+might expect to find the operative masons taking some part in these
+proceedings and expressing their opinion as to whether their association
+should pass under the control of men entirely unconnected with the
+Craft. But no, the leaders of the new movement all appear to have
+belonged to the middle class, nor from this moment do either masons or
+architects seem to have played any prominent part in Freemasonry.
+
+But the point that official history does not attempt to elucidate is
+the reason for this decision. Why should the Freemasons of
+London--whether they were at this date a speculative or only a
+semi-speculative association--have suddenly recognized the necessity of
+establishing a Grand Lodge and drawing up a ritual and "Constitution"?
+It is evident, then, that some circumstances must have arisen which led
+them to take this important step. I would suggest that the following may
+be the solution to the problem.
+
+Freemasonry, as we have seen, was a system that could be employed in any
+cause and had now come to be used by intriguers of every kind--and not
+only by intriguers, but by merely convivial bodies, "jolly Brotherhoods
+of the Bottle," who modelled themselves on masonic associations.[346]
+But the honest citizens of London who met and feasted at the Goose and
+Gridiron were clearly not intriguers, they were neither Royalist nor
+Republican plotters, neither Catholic nor Lutheran fanatics, neither
+alchemists nor magicians, nor can it be supposed that they were simply
+revellers. If they were political, they were certainly not supporters of
+the Stuarts; on the contrary, they were generally reported to have been
+Hanoverian in their sympathies, indeed Dr. Bussell goes so far as to say
+that Grand Lodge was instituted to support the Hanoverian dynasty.[347]
+It would be perhaps nearer the truth to conclude that if they were
+Hanoverian it was because they were constitutional, and the Hanoverian
+dynasty having now been established they wished to avoid further
+changes. In a word, then, they were simply men of peace, anxious to put
+an end to dissensions, who, seeing the system of Masonry utilized for
+the purpose of promoting discord, determined to wrest it from the hands
+of political intriguers and restore it to its original character of
+brotherhood, though not of brotherhood between working masons only, but
+between men drawn from all classes and professions. By founding a Grand
+Lodge in London and drawing up a ritual and "Constitutions," they hoped
+to prevent the perversion of their signs and symbols and to establish
+the Order on a settled basis.
+
+According to Nicolai this pacific purpose had already animated English
+Freemasons under the Grand Mastership of Sir Christopher Wren: "Its
+principal object from this period was to moderate the religious hatreds
+so terrible in England during the reign of James II and to try and
+establish some kind of concord or fraternity, by weakening as far as
+possible the antagonisms arising from the differences of religions,
+ranks, and interests." An eighteenth-century manuscript of the Prince of
+Hesse quoted by Lecouteulx de Canteleu expresses the view that in 1717
+"_the mysteries of Freemasonry were reformed and purified in England of
+all political tendencies_."
+
+In the matter of religion, Craft Masonry adopted an equally
+non-sectarian attitude. The first "Constitutions" of the Order, drawn up
+by Dr. Anderson in 1723, contain the following paragraph:
+
+ Concerning God and Religion
+
+ A Mason is obliged, by his tenure, to obey the moral Law; and if he
+ rightly understands the Art, he will never be a stupid Atheist, nor
+ an irreligious Libertine. But though in ancient Times Masons were
+ charged in every Country to be of the Religion of that Country or
+ Nation, whatever it was, yet, 'tis now thought more expedient only
+ to oblige them to that Religion in which all men agree, leaving
+ their particular Opinions to themselves; that is to be good Men and
+ true, or Men of Honour and Honesty, by whatever Denominations or
+ Persuasions they may be distinguish'd; whereby Masonry becomes the
+ Centre of Union and the Means of Conciliating true Friendship among
+ Persons that must have remained at a perpetual Distance.
+
+The phrase "that Religion in which all men agree" has been censured by
+Catholic writers as advocating a universal religion in the place of
+Christianity. But this by no means follows. The idea is surely that
+Masons should be men adhering to that law of right and wrong common to
+all religious faiths. Craft Masonry may thus be described as Deist in
+character, but not in the accepted sense of the word which implies the
+rejection of Christian doctrines. If Freemasonry had been Deist in this
+sense might we not expect to find some connexion between the founders of
+Grand Lodge and the school of Deists--Toland, Bolingbroke, Woolston,
+Hume, and others--which flourished precisely at this period? Might not
+some analogy be detected between the organization of the Order and the
+Sodalities described in Toland's _Pantheisticon_, published in 1720? But
+of this I can find no trace whatever. The principal founders of Grand
+Lodge were, as we have seen, clergymen, both engaged in preaching
+Christian doctrines at their respective churches.[348] It is surely
+therefore reasonable to conclude that Freemasonry at the time of its
+reorganization in 1717 was Deistic only in so far that it invited men to
+meet together on the common ground of a belief in God. Moreover, some of
+the early English rituals contain distinctly Christian elements. Thus
+both in _Jachin and Boaz_ (1762) and _Hiram or the Grand Master Key to
+the Door of both Antient and Modern Freemasonry by a Member of the Royal
+Arch_ (1766) we find prayers in the lodges concluding with the name of
+Christ. These passages were replaced much later by purely Deistic
+formulas under the Grand Mastership of the free-thinking Duke of Sussex
+in 1813.
+
+But in spite of its innocuous character, Freemasonry, merely by reason
+of its secrecy, soon began to excite alarm in the public mind. As early
+as 1724 a work entitled _The Grand Mystery of the Freemasons Discovered_
+had provoked an angry remonstrance from the Craft[349]; and when the
+French edict against the Order was passed, a letter signed "Jachin"
+appeared in _The Gentleman's Magazine_ declaring the "Freemasons who
+have lately been suppressed not only in France but in Holland" to be "a
+dangerous Race of Men":
+
+ No Government ought to suffer such clandestine Assemblies where
+ Plots against the State may be carried on, under the Pretence of
+ Brotherly Love and good Fellowship.
+
+The writer, evidently unaware of possible Templar traditions, goes on to
+observe that the sentinel placed at the door of the lodge with a drawn
+sword in his hand "is not the only mark of their being a military
+Order"; and suggests that the title of Grand Master is taken in
+imitation of the Knights of Malta. "Jachin," moreover, scents a Popish
+plot:
+
+ They not only admit Turks, Jews, Infidels, but even Jacobites,
+ non-jurors and Papists themselves ... how can we be sure that
+ those Persons who are known to be well affected, are let into all
+ their Mysteries? They make no scruple to acknowledge that there is
+ a Distinction between Prentices and Master Masons and who knows
+ whether they may not have an higher Order of Cabalists, who keep
+ the Grand Secret of all entirely to themselves?[350]
+
+Later on in France, the Abbe Perau published his satires on Freemasonry,
+_Le Secret des Francs-Macons_ (1742), _L'Ordre des Francs-Macons trahi
+et le Secret des Mopses revele_, (1745), and _Les Francs-Macons ecrases_
+(1746)[351] and in about 1761 another English writer said to be a Mason
+brought down a torrent of invective on his head by the publication of
+the ritual of the Craft Degrees under the name of _Jachin and
+Boaz_.[352]
+
+It must be admitted that from all this controversy no party emerges in a
+very charitable light, Catholics and Protestants alike indulging in
+sarcasms and reckless accusations against Freemasonry, the Freemasons
+retorting with far from brotherly forbearance.[353] But, again, one must
+remember that all these men were of their age--an age which seen through
+the eyes of Hogarth would certainly not appear to have been
+distinguished for delicacy. It should be noted, however, when one reads
+in masonic works of the "persecutions" to which Freemasonry has been
+subjected, that aggression was not confined only to the one side in the
+conflict; moreover, that the Freemasons at this period were divided
+amongst themselves and expressed with regard to opposing groups much the
+same suspicions that non-Masons expressed with regard to the Order as a
+whole. For the years following after the suppression of Masonry in
+France were marked by the most important development in the history of
+the modern Order--the inauguration of the Additional Degrees.
+
+
+
+The Additional Degrees
+
+
+The origin and inspiration of the additional degrees has provoked hardly
+less controversy in masonic circles than the origin of Masonry itself.
+It should be explained that Craft Masonry, or Blue Masonry--that is to
+say, the first three degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and
+Master Mason of which I have attempted to trace the history--were the
+only degrees recognized by Grand Lodge at the time of its foundation in
+1717 and still form the basis of all forms of modern Masonry. On this
+foundation were erected, somewhere between 1740 and 1743, the degree of
+the Royal Arch and the first of the series of upper degrees now known as
+the Scottish Rite or as the Ancient and Accepted Rite. The acceptance or
+rejection of this superstructure has always formed a subject of violent
+controversy between Masons, one body affirming that Craft Masonry is the
+only true and genuine Masonry, the other declaring that the real object
+of Masonry is only to be found in the higher degrees. It was this
+controversy, centring round the Royal Arch degree, that about the middle
+of the eighteenth century split Masonry into opposing camps of Ancients
+and Moderns, the Ancients declaring that the R.A. was "the Root, Heart,
+and Marrow of Freemasonry,"[354] the Moderns rejecting it. Although
+worked by the Ancients from 1756 onwards, this degree was definitely
+repudiated by Grand Lodge in 1792,[355] and only in 1813 was officially
+received into English Freemasonry.
+
+The R.A. degree, which is said nevertheless to be contained in embryo in
+the 1723 Book of Constitutions,[356] is purely Judaic--a glorification
+of Israel and commemorating the building of the second Temple. That it
+was derived from the Jewish Cabala seems probable, and Yarker,
+commenting on the phrase in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ quoted
+above--"Who knows whether they (the Freemasons) have not a higher order
+of Cabalists, who keep the Grand Secret of all entirely to
+themselves"--observes: "It looks very like an intimation of the Royal
+Arch degree,"[357] and elsewhere he states that "the Royal Arch degree,
+when it had the Three Veils, must have been the work, even if by
+instruction, of a Cabalistic Jew about 1740, and from this time we may
+expect to find a secret tradition grafted upon Anderson's system."[358]
+
+Precisely in this same year of 1740 Mr. Waite says that "an itinerant
+pedlar of the Royal Arch degree is said to have propagated it in
+Ireland, claiming that it was practised at York and London,"[359] and
+in 1744 a certain Dr. Dassigny wrote that the minds of the Dublin
+brethren had been lately disturbed about Royal Arch Masonry owing to the
+activities in Dublin of "a number of traders or hucksters in pretended
+Masonry," whom the writer connects with "Italians" or the "Italic
+Order."
+
+A Freemason quoting this passage in a recent discussion on the upper
+degrees expresses the opinion that these hucksters were "Jacobite
+emissaries disguised under the form of a pretended Masonry," and that
+"by Italians and Italian Order he intends a reference to the Court of
+King James III, i.e. the Old Pretender at Rome, and to the Ecossais
+(Italic) Order of Masonry."[360] It is much more likely that he had
+referred to another source of masonic instruction in Italy which I shall
+indicate in a later chapter.
+
+But precisely at the moment when it is suggested that the Jacobites were
+intriguing to introduce the Royal Arch degree into Masonry they are also
+said to have been engaged in elaborating the "Scottish Rite." Let us
+examine this contention.
+
+
+
+Freemasonry in France
+
+
+The foundation of Grand Lodge in London had been followed by the
+inauguration of Masonic Lodges on the Continent--in 1721 at Mons, in
+1725 in Paris, in 1728 at Madrid, in 1731 at The Hague, in 1733 at
+Hamburg, etc. Several of these received their warrant from the Grand
+Lodge of England. But this was not the case with the Grand Lodge of
+Paris, which did not receive a warrant till 1743.
+
+The men who founded this lodge, far from being non-political, were
+Jacobite leaders engaged in active schemes for the restoration of the
+Stuart dynasty. The leader of the group, Charles Radcliffe, had been
+imprisoned with his brother, the ill-fated Lord Derwentwater who was
+executed on Tower Hill in 1716. Charles had succeeded in escaping from
+Newgate and made his way to France, where he assumed the title of Lord
+Derwentwater, although the Earldom had ceased to exist under the
+bill of attainder against his brother.[361] It was this Lord
+Derwentwater--afterwards executed for taking part in the 1745
+rebellion--who with several other Jacobites is said to have founded the
+Grand Lodge of Paris in 1725, and himself to have become Grand Master.
+
+The Jacobite character of the Paris lodge is not a matter of dispute.
+Mr. Gould relates that "the colleagues of Lord Derwentwater are stated
+to have been a Chevalier Maskeline, a Squire Heguerty, and others, all
+partisans of the Stuarts."[362] But he goes on to contest the theory
+that they used Freemasonry in the Stuart cause, which he regards as
+amounting to a charge of bad faith. This is surely unreasonable. The
+founders of Grand Lodge in Paris did not derive from Grand Lodge in
+London, from which they held no warrant,[363] but, as we have seen, took
+their Freemasonry with them to France before Grand Lodge of London was
+instituted; they were therefore in no way bound by its regulations. And
+until the Constitutions of Anderson were published in 1723 no rule had
+been laid down that the Lodges should be non-political. In the old days
+Freemasonry had always been Royalist, as we see from the ancient charges
+that members should be "true liegemen of the King"; and if the adherents
+of James Edward saw in him their rightful sovereign, they may have
+conceived that they were using Freemasonry for a lawful purpose in
+adapting it to his cause. So although we may applaud the decision of the
+London Freemasons to purge Freemasonry of political tendencies and
+transform it into a harmonious system of brotherhood, we cannot accuse
+the Jacobites in France of bad faith in not conforming to a decision in
+which they had taken no part and in establishing lodges on their own
+lines.
+
+Unfortunately, however, as too frequently happens when men form secret
+confederacies for a wholly honourable purpose, their ranks were
+penetrated by confederates of another kind. It has been said in an
+earlier chapter that, according to the documents produced by the _Ordre
+du Temple_ in the early part of the nineteenth century, the Templars had
+never ceased to exist in spite of their official suppression in 1312,
+and that a line of Grand Masters had succeeded each other in unbroken
+succession from Jacques du Molay to the Duc de Cosse-Brissac, who was
+killed in 1792. The Grand Master appointed in 1705 is stated to have
+been Philippe, Duc d'Orleans, later the Regent. Mr. Waite has expressed
+the opinion that all this was an invention of the late eighteenth
+century, and that the Charter of Larmenius was fabricated at this date
+though not published until 1811 by the revived _Ordre du Temple_ under
+the Grand Master, Fabre Palaprat. But evidence points to a contrary
+conclusion. M. Matter, who, as we have seen, disbelieves the story of
+the _Ordre du Temple_ and the authenticity of the Charter of Larmenius
+in so far as it professes to be a genuine fourteenth-century document,
+nevertheless asserts that the _savants_ who have examined it declare it
+to date from the early part of the eighteenth century, at which period
+Matter believes the Gospel of St. John used by the Order to have been
+arranged so as "to accompany the ceremonies of some masonic or secret
+society." Now, it was about 1740 that a revival of Templarism took place
+in France and Germany; we cannot therefore doubt that if Matter is right
+in this hypothesis, the secret society in question was that of the
+Templars, whether they existed as lineal descendants of the
+twelfth-century Order or merely as a revival of that Order. The
+existence of the German Templars at this date under the name of the
+_Stricte Observance_ (which we shall deal with in a further chapter) is
+indeed a fact disputed by no one; but that there was also an _Ordre du
+Temple_ in France at the very beginning of the eighteenth century must
+be regarded as highly probable. Dr. Mackey, John Yarker, and Lecouteulx
+de Canteleu (who, owing to his possession of Templar documents, had
+exclusive sources of information) all declare this to have been the case
+and accept the Charter of Larmenius as authentic. "It is quite certain,"
+says Yarker, "that there was at this period in France an _Ordre du
+Temple_, with a charter from John Mark Larmenius, who claimed
+appointment from Jacques du Molay. Philippe of Orleans accepted the
+Grand Mastership in 1705 and signed the Statutes."[364]
+
+Without, however, necessarily accepting the Charter of Larmenius as
+authentic let us examine the probability of this assertion with regard
+to the Duc d'Orleans.
+
+Amongst the Jacobites supporting Lord Derwentwater at the Grand Lodge of
+Paris was a certain Andrew Michael Ramsay, known as Chevalier Ramsay,
+who was born at Ayr near the famous Lodge of Kilwinning, where the
+Templars are said to have formed their alliance with the masons in 1314.
+In 1710 Ramsay was converted to the Roman Catholic faith by Fenelon and
+in 1724 became tutor to the sons of the Pretender at Rome. Mr. Gould has
+related that during his stay in France, Ramsay had formed a friendship
+with the Regent, Philippe, Duc d'Orleans, who was Grand Master of the
+_Ordre de Saint-Lazare_, instituted during the Crusades as a body of
+Hospitallers devoting themselves to the care of the lepers and which in
+1608 had been joined to the _Ordre du Mont-Carmel_. It seems probable
+from all accounts that Ramsay was a Chevalier of this Order, but he
+cannot have been admitted into it by the Duc d'Orleans, for the Grand
+Master of the Ordre de Saint-Lazare was not the Duc d'Orleans but the
+Marquis de Dangeau, who, on his death in 1720, was succeeded by the son
+of the Regent, the Duc de Chartres.[365] If, then, Ramsay was admitted
+to any Order by the Regent, it was surely the _Ordre du Temple_, of
+which the Regent is said to have been the Grand Master at this date.
+
+Now, the infamous character of the Duc d'Orleans is a matter of common
+knowledge; moreover, during the Regency--that period of impiety and
+moral dissolution hitherto unparalleled in the history of France--the
+chief of council was the Duc de Bourbon, who later placed his mistress
+the Marquise de Prie and the financier Paris Duverney at the head of
+affairs, thus creating a scandal of such magnitude that he was exiled
+in 1726 through the influence of Cardinal Fleury. This Duc de Bourbon in
+1737 is said to have become Grand Master of the Temple. "It was thus,"
+observes de Canteleu, "that these two Grand Masters of the Temple
+degraded the royal authority and ceaselessly increased hatred against
+the government."
+
+It would therefore seem strange that a man so upright as Ramsay appears
+to have been, who had moreover but recently been converted to the
+Catholic Church, should have formed a friendship with the dissolute
+Regent of France, unless there had been some bond between them. But here
+we have a possible explanation--Templarism. Doubtless during Ramsay's
+youth at Kilwinning many Templar traditions had come to his knowledge,
+and if in France he found himself befriended by the Grand Master
+himself, what wonder that he should have entered into an alliance which
+resulted in his admission to an Order he had been accustomed to revere
+and which, moreover, was represented to him as the _fons et origo_ of
+the masonic brotherhood to which he also belonged? It is thus that we
+find Ramsay in the very year that the Duc de Bourbon is said to have
+been made Grand Master of the Temple artlessly writing to Cardinal
+Fleury asking him to extend his protection to the society of Freemasons
+in Paris and enclosing a copy of the speech which he was to deliver on
+the following day, March 21, 1737. It is in this famous oration that for
+the first time we find Freemasonry traced to the Crusades:
+
+ At the time of the Crusades in Palestine many princes, lords, and
+ citizens associated themselves, and vowed to restore the Temple of
+ the Christians in the Holy Land, and to employ themselves in
+ bringing back their architecture to its first institution. They
+ agreed upon several ancient signs and symbolic words drawn from the
+ well of religion in order to recognize themselves amongst the
+ heathens and Saracens. These signs and words were only communicated
+ to those who promised solemnly, and even sometimes at the foot of
+ the altar, never to reveal them. This sacred promise was therefore
+ not an execrable oath, as it has been called, but a respectable
+ bond to unite Christians of all nationalities into one
+ confraternity. Some time afterwards our Order formed an intimate
+ union with the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem. From that time our
+ Lodges took the name of Lodges of St. John.[366]
+
+This speech of Ramsay's has raised a storm of controversy amongst
+Freemasons because it contains a very decided hint of a connexion
+between Templarism and Freemasonry. Mr. Tuckett, in the paper referred
+to above, points out that only the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem are
+here mentioned,[367] but Ramsay distinctly speaks of "our Order" forming
+a union with the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, and we know that the
+Templars did eventually form such a union. The fact that Ramsay does not
+mention the Templars by name admits of a very plausible explanation. It
+must be remembered that, as Mr. Gould has shown, a copy of the oration
+was enclosed by Ramsay in his letter to Cardinal Fleury appealing for
+royal protection to be extended to Freemasonry; it is therefore hardly
+likely that he would have proclaimed a connexion between the Order he
+was anxious to present in the most favourable light and one which had
+formerly been suppressed by King and Pope. Moreover, if the Charter of
+Larmenius is to be believed, the newly elected Grand Master of the
+Temple was the Duc de Bourbon, who had already incurred the Cardinal's
+displeasure. Obviously, therefore, Templar influence was kept in the
+background. This is not to imply bad faith on the part of Ramsay, who
+doubtless held the Order of Templars to be wholly praiseworthy; but he
+could not expect the King or Cardinal to share his view, and therefore
+held it more prudent to refer to the progenitors of Freemasonry under
+the vague description of a crusading body. Ramsay's well-meant effort
+met, however, with no success. Whether on account of this unlucky
+reference by which the Cardinal may have detected Templar influence or
+for some other reason, the appeal for royal protection was not only
+refused, but the new Order, which hitherto Catholics had been allowed to
+enter, was now prohibited by Royal edict. In the following year, 1738,
+the Pope, Clement XII, issued a bull, _In Eminenti_, banning
+Freemasonry and excommunicating Catholics who took part in it.
+
+But this prohibition appears to have been without effect, for
+Freemasonry not only prospered but soon began to manufacture new
+degrees. And in the masonic literature of the following thirty years the
+Templar tradition becomes still more clearly apparent. Thus the
+Chevalier de Berage in a well-known pamphlet, of which the first edition
+is said to have appeared in 1747,[368] gives the following account of
+the origins of Freemasonry:
+
+ This Order was instituted by Godefroi de Bouillon in Palestine in
+ 1330,[369] after the decadence of the Christian armies, and was
+ only communicated to the French Masons some time after and to a
+ very small number, as a reward for the obliging services they
+ rendered to several of our English and Scottish Knights, from whom
+ true Masonry is taken. Their Metropolitan Lodge is situated on the
+ Mountain of Heredom where the first Lodge was held in Europe and
+ which exists in all its splendour. The General Council is still
+ held there and it is the seal of the Sovereign Grand Master in
+ office. This mountain is situated between the West and North of
+ Scotland at sixty miles from Edinburgh.
+
+Apart from the historical confusion of the first sentence, this passage
+is of interest as evidence that the theory of a connexion between
+certain crusading Knights and the Lodge of Heredom of Kilwinning was
+current as early as 1747. The Baron Tschoudy in his _Etoile
+Flamboyante_, which appeared in 1766, says that the crusading origin of
+Freemasonry is the one officially taught in the lodges, where candidates
+for initiation are told that several Knights who had set forth to rescue
+the holy places of Palestine from the Saracens "formed an association
+under the name of Free Masons, thus indicating that their principal
+desire was the reconstruction of the Temple of Solomon," that, further,
+they adopted certain signs, grips, and passwords as a defence against
+the Saracens, and finally that "our Society ... fraternized on the
+footing of an Order with the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, from
+which it is apparent that the Freemasons borrowed the custom of
+regarding St. John as the patron of the whole Order in general."[370]
+After the crusades "the Masons kept their rites and methods and in this
+way perpetuated the royal art by establishing lodges, first in England,
+then in Scotland," etc.[371]
+
+In this account, therefore, Freemasonry is represented as having been
+instituted for the defence of Christian doctrines. De Berage expresses
+the same view and explains that the object of these Crusaders in thus
+binding themselves together was to protect their lives against the
+Saracens by enveloping their sacred doctrines in a veil of mystery. For
+this purpose they made use of Jewish symbolism, which they invested with
+a Christian meaning. Thus the Temple of Solomon was used to denote the
+Church of Christ, the bough of acacia signified the Cross, the square
+and the compass the union between the Old and New Testaments, etc. So
+"the mysteries of Masonry were in their principle, and are still,
+nothing else than those of the Christian religion."[372]
+
+Baron Tschoudy, however, declares that all this stops short of the
+truth, that Freemasonry originated long before the Crusades in
+Palestine, and that the real "ancestors, fathers, authors of the Masons,
+those illustrious men of whom I will not say the date nor betray the
+secret," were a "disciplined body" whom Tschoudy describes by the name
+of "the Knights of the Aurora and Palestine." After "the almost total
+destruction of the Jewish people" these "Knights" had always hoped to
+regain possession of the domains of their fathers and to rebuild the
+Temple, and they carefully preserved their "regulations and particular
+liturgy," together with a "sublime treatise" which was the object of
+their continual study and of their philosophical speculations. Tschoudy
+further relates that they were students of the "occult sciences," of
+which alchemy formed a part, and that they had "abjured the principles
+of the Jewish religion in order to follow the lights of the Christian
+faith." At the time of the Crusades the Knights of Palestine came out
+from the desert of the Thebaid, where they had remained hidden, and
+joined to themselves some of the crusaders who had remained in
+Jerusalem. Declaring that they were the descendants of the masons who
+had worked on the Temple of Solomon, they professed to concern
+themselves with "speculative architecure," which served to disguise a
+more glorious point of view. From this time they took the name of Free
+Masons, presented themselves under this title to the crusading armies
+and assembled under their banners.[373]
+
+It would of course be absurd to regard any of the foregoing accounts as
+historical facts; the important point is that they tend to prove the
+fallacy of supposing that the Johannite-Templar theory originated with
+the revived _Ordre du Temple_, since one corresponding to it so closely
+was current in the middle of the preceding century. It is true that in
+these earlier accounts the actual words "Johannite" and "Templar" do not
+occur, but the resemblance between the sect of Jews professing the
+Christian faith but possessing a "particular liturgy" and a "sublime
+treatise"--apparently some early form of the Cabala--dealing with occult
+science, and the Mandaeans or Johannites with their Cabalistic "Book of
+Adam," their Book of John, and their ritual, is at once apparent.
+Further, the allusions to the connexion between the Knights who had been
+indoctrinated in the Holy Land and the Scottish lodges coincides exactly
+with the Templar tradition, published not only by the _Ordre du Temple_
+but handed down in the Royal Order of Scotland.
+
+From all this the following facts stand out: (1) that whilst British
+Craft Masonry traced its origin to the operative guilds of masons, the
+Freemasons of France from 1737 onwards placed the origin of the Order in
+crusading chivalry; (2) that it was amongst these Freemasons that the
+upper degrees known as the Scottish Rite arose; and (3) that, as we
+shall now see, these degrees clearly suggest Templar inspiration.
+
+The earliest form of the upper degrees appears to have been the one
+given by de Berage, as follows:
+
+ 1. Parfait Macon Elu.
+ 2. Elu de Perignan.
+ 3. Elu des Quinze.
+ 4. Petit Architecte.
+ 5. Grand Architecte.
+ 6. Chevalier de l'Epee et de Rose-Croix.
+ 7. Noachite ou Chevalier Prussien.
+
+The first of these to make its appearance is believed to have been the
+one here assigned to the sixth place. This degree known in modern
+Masonry as "Prince of the Rose-Croix of Heredom or Knight of the Pelican
+and Eagle" became the eighteenth and the most important degree in what
+was later called the Scottish Rite, or at the present time in England
+the Ancient and Accepted Rite.
+
+Why was this Rite called Scottish? "It cannot be too strongly insisted
+on," says Mr. Gould, "that all Scottish Masonry has nothing whatever to
+do with the Grand Lodge of Scotland, nor, with one possible
+exception--that of the Royal Order of Scotland--did it ever originate in
+that country."[374] But in the case of the Rose-Croix degree there is
+surely some justification for the term in legend, if not in proven fact,
+for, as we have already seen, according to the tradition of the Royal
+Order of Scotland this degree had been contained in it since the
+fourteenth century, when the degrees of H.R.M. (Heredom) and R.S.Y.C.S.
+(Rosy Cross) are said to have been instituted by Robert Bruce in
+collaboration with the Templars after the battle of Bannockburn. Dr.
+Mackey is one of the few Masons who admit this probable affiliation, and
+in referring to the tradition of the Royal Order of Scotland observes:
+"From that Order it seems to us by no means improbable that the present
+degree of Rose-Croix de Heredom may have taken its origin."[375]
+
+But the Rose-Croix degree, like the Templar tradition from which it
+appears to have descended, is capable of a dual interpretation, or
+rather of a multiple interpretation, for no degree in Masonry has been
+subject to so many variations. That on the Continent it had descended
+through the Rosicrucians in an alchemical form seems more than probable.
+It would certainly be difficult to believe that a degree of R.S.Y.C.S.
+was imported from the East and incorporated in the Royal Order of
+Scotland in 1314; that by a mere coincidence a man named Christian
+Rosenkreutz was--according to the Rosicrucian legend--born in the same
+century and transmitted a secret doctrine he had discovered in the East
+to the seventeenth-century Brethren of the Rosy Cross; and finally,
+that a degree of the Rose-Croix was founded in circ. 1741 without any
+connexion existing between these succeeding movements. Even if we deny
+direct affiliation, we must surely admit a common source of inspiration
+producing, if not a continuation, at any rate a periodic revival of the
+same ideas. Dr. Oliver indeed admits affiliation between the
+seventeenth-century fraternity and the eighteenth-century degree, and
+after pointing out that the first indication of the Rose-Croix degree
+appears in the _Fama Fraternitatis_ in 1613, goes on to say:
+
+ It was known much sooner, although not probably as a degree in
+ Masonry, for it existed as a cabalistic science from the earliest
+ times in Egypt, Greece, and Rome, as well as amongst the Jews and
+ Moors in times more recent, and in our own country the names of
+ Roger Bacon, Fludd, Ashmole, and many others are found in its list
+ of adepts.[376]
+
+Dr. Mackey, quoting this passage, observes that "Oliver confounds the
+masonic Rose-Croix with the alchemical Rosicrucians," and proceeds to
+give an account of the Rose-Croix degree as worked in England and
+America, which he truly describes as "in the strictest sense a Christian
+degree."[377] But the point Dr. Mackey overlooks is that this is only
+one version of the degree, which, as we shall see later, has been and
+still is worked in a very different manner on the Continent.
+
+It is, however, certain that the version of the Rose-Croix degree first
+adopted by the Freemasons of France in about 1741 was not only so
+Christian but so Catholic in character as to have given rise to the
+belief that it was devised by the Jesuits in order to counteract the
+attacks of which Catholicism was the object.[378] In a paper on the
+Additional Degrees Mr. J.S. Tuckett writes:
+
+ There is undeniable evidence that in their _earliest forms_ the
+ Ecossais or Scots Degrees were Roman Catholic; I have a MS. Ritual
+ in French of what I believe to be the _original_ Chev. de l'Aigle
+ or S.'.P.'.D.'.R.'.C.'. (Souverain Prince de Rose-Croix) and in it the
+ New Law is declared to be "la foy Catholique," and the Baron Tschoudy
+ in his _L'Etoile Flamboyante_ of 1766 describes the same Degree as
+ "le Catholicisme mis en grade" (Vol. I. p. 114). I suggest that
+ Ecossais or Scots Masonry was intended to be a Roman Catholic as
+ well as a Stuart form of Freemasonry, in which none but those
+ devoted to both Restorations were to be admitted.[379]
+
+But is it necessary to read this political intention into the degree? If
+the tradition of the Royal Order of Scotland is to be believed, the idea
+of the Rose-Croix degree was far older than the Stuart cause, and dated
+back to Bannockburn, when the degree of Heredom with which it was
+coupled was instituted in order "to correct the errors and reform the
+abuses which had crept in among the three degrees of St. John's
+Masonry," and to provide a "Christianized form of the Third Degree,"
+"purified of the dross of paganism and even of Judaism."[380] Whether
+the antiquity attributed to these degrees can be proved or not, it
+certainly appears probable that the legend of the Royal Order of
+Scotland had some foundation in fact, and therefore that the ideas
+embodied in the eighteenth-century Rose-Croix degree may have been drawn
+from the store of that Order and brought by the Jacobites to France. At
+the same time there is no evidence in support of the statement made by
+certain Continental writers that Ramsay actually instituted this or any
+of the upper degrees. On the contrary, in his Oration he expressly
+states that Freemasonry is composed of the Craft degrees only:
+
+ We have amongst us three kinds of brothers: Novices or Apprentices,
+ Fellows or Professed Brothers, Masters or Perfected Brethren. To
+ the first are explained the moral virtues; to the second the heroic
+ virtues; to the last the Christian virtues....
+
+It might be said then that the Rose-Croix degree was here foreshadowed
+in the Masters' degree, in that the latter definitely inculcated
+Christianity. This would be perfectly in accord with Ramsay's point of
+view as set forth in his account of his conversion by Fenelon. When he
+first met the Archbishop of Cambrai in 1710, Ramsay relates that he had
+lost faith in all Christian sects and had resolved to "take refuge in a
+wise Deism limited to respect for the Divinity and for the immutable
+ideas of pure virtue," but that his conversation with Fenelon led him to
+accept the Catholic faith. And he goes on to show that "Monsieur de
+Cambrai turned Atheists into Deists, Deists into Christians, and
+Christians into Catholics by a sequence of ideas full of enlightenment
+and feeling."[381]
+
+Might not this be the process which Ramsay aimed at introducing into
+Freemasonry--the process which in fact does form part of the masonic
+system in England to-day, where the Atheist must become, at least by
+profession, a Deist before he can be admitted to the Craft Degrees,
+whilst the Rose-Croix degree is reserved solely for those who profess
+the Christian faith? Such was undoubtedly the idea of the men who
+introduced the Rose-Croix degree into France; and Ragon, who gives an
+account of this "Ancien Rose-Croix Francais"--which is almost identical
+with the degree now worked in England, but long since abandoned in
+France--objects to it on the very score of its Christian character.[382]
+
+In this respect the Rose-Croix amongst all the upper degrees introduced
+to France in the middle of the eighteenth century stands alone, and it
+alone can with any probability be attributed to Scottish Jacobite
+inspiration. It was not, in fact, until three or four years after Lord
+Derwentwater or his mysterious successor Lord Harnouester[383] had
+resigned the Grand Mastership in favour of the Duc d'Antin in 1738 that
+the additional degrees were first heard of, and it was not until eight
+years after the Stuart cause had received its death-blow at Culloden,
+that is to say, in 1754, that the Rite of Perfection in which the
+so-called Scots Degrees were incorporated was drawn up in the following
+form:
+
+ Rite of Perfection
+
+ 1. Entered Apprentice.
+ 2. Fellow Craft.
+ 3. Master Mason.
+ 4. Secret Master.
+ 5. Perfect Master.
+ 6. Intimate Secretary.
+ 7. Intendant of the Buildings.
+ 8. Provost and Judge.
+ 9. Elect of Nine.
+ 10. Elect of Fifteen.
+ 11. Chief of the Twelve Tribes.
+ 12. Grand Master Architect.
+ 13. Knight of the Ninth Arch.
+ 14. Ancient Grand Elect.
+ 15. Knight of the Sword.
+ 16. Prince of Jerusalem.
+ 17. Knight of the East and West.
+ 18. Rose-Croix Knight.
+ 19. Grand Pontiff.
+ 20. Grand Patriarch.
+ 21. Grand Master of the Key of Masonry.
+ 22. Prince of Libanus or Knight of the Royal Axe.
+ 23. Sovereign Prince Adept.
+ 24. Commander of the Black and White Eagle.
+ 25. Commander of the Royal Secret.[384]
+
+We have only to glance at the nomenclature of the last twenty-two of
+these degrees to see that on the basis of mere operative Masonry there
+has been built up a system composed of two elements: crusading chivalry
+and Judaic tradition. What else is this but Templarism? Even Mr. Gould,
+usually so reticent on Templar influence, admits it at this period:
+
+ In France ... some of the Scots lodges would appear to have very
+ early manufactured new degrees, connecting these very distinguished
+ Scots Masons with the Knights Templar, and thus given rise to the
+ subsequent flood of Templarism. The earliest of all are supposed to
+ have been the Masons of Lyons who invented the Kadosch degree,
+ representing the vengeance of the Templars, in 1741. From that time
+ new rites multiplied in France and Germany, but all those of French
+ origin contain Knightly, and almost all, Templar grades. In every
+ case the connecting link was composed of one or more Scots
+ degrees.[385]
+
+The name Kadosch here mentioned is a Hebrew word signifying "holy" or
+"consecrated," which in the Cabala is found in conjunction with the
+Tetragrammaton.[386] The degree is said to have developed from that of
+Grand Elect,[387] one of the three "degrees of vengeance" celebrating
+with sanguinary realism the avenging of the murder of Hiram. But in its
+final form of Knight Kadosch--later to become the thirtieth degree of
+the "Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite"--the Hiramic legend was changed
+into the history of the Templars with Jacques du Molay as the
+victim.[388] So the reprobation of attack on authority personified by
+the master-builder becomes approbation of attack on authority in the
+person of the King of France.
+
+The introduction of the upper degrees with their political and, later
+on, anti-Christian tendencies thus marked a complete departure from the
+fundamental principle of Freemasonry that "nothing concerning the
+religion or government shall ever be spoken of in the lodge." For this
+reason they have been assailed not only by anti-masonic writers but by
+Freemasons themselves.[389] To represent Barruel and Robison as the
+enemies of Freemasonry is therefore absolutely false; neither of these
+men denounced Craft Masonry as practised in England, but only the
+superstructure erected on the Continent. Barruel indeed incurs the
+reproaches of Mounier for his championship of English Freemasons:
+
+He vaunts their respect for religious opinion and for authority. When he
+speaks of Freemasons in general they are impious, rebellious successors
+of the Templars and Albigenses, but _all those of England are innocent_.
+More than this, all the Entered Apprentices, Fellow Crafts, and Master
+Masons in all parts of the world are innocent; there are only guilty
+ones in the higher degrees, which are not essential to the institution
+and are sought by a small number of people.[390]
+
+In this opinion of Barruel's a great number of Masonic writers
+concur--Clavel, Ragon, Rebold, Thory, Findel, and others too numerous to
+mention; all indicate Craft Masonry as the only true kind and the upper
+degrees as constituting a danger to the Order. Rebold, who gives a list
+of these writers, quotes a masonic publication, authorized by the Grand
+Orient and the Supreme Council of France, in which it is said that "from
+all these rites there result the most foolish conceptions, ... the most
+absurd legends, ... the most extravagant systems, the most immoral
+principles, and those the most dangerous for the peace and preservation
+of States," and that therefore except the first three degrees of
+Masonry, which are really ancient and universal, everything is "chimera,
+extravagance, futility, and lies."[391] Did Barruel and Robison ever
+use stronger language than this?
+
+To attribute the perversion of Masonry to Jacobite influence would be
+absurd. How could it be supposed that either Ramsay or Lord Derwentwater
+(who died as a devout Catholic on the scaffold in 1746) could have been
+concerned in an attempt to undermine the Catholic faith or the monarchy
+of France? I would suggest, then, that the term "Scots Masonry" became
+simply a veil for Templarism--Templarism, moreover, of a very different
+kind to that from which the original degree of the Rose-Croix was
+derived. It was this so-called Scots Masonry that, after the resignation
+of Lord Derwentwater, "boldly came forward and claimed to be not merely
+a part of Masonry but the real Masonry, possessed of superior knowledge
+and entitled to greater privileges and the right to rule over the
+ordinary, i.e. Craft Masonry."[392] The Grand Lodge of France seems,
+however, to have realized the danger of submitting to the domination of
+the Templar element, and on the death of the Duc d'Antin and his
+replacement by the Comte de Clermont in 1743, signified its adherence to
+English Craft Masonry by proclaiming itself Grande Loge _Anglaise_ de
+France and reissued the "Constitutions" of Anderson, first published in
+1723, with the injunction that the Scots Masters should be placed on the
+same level as the simple Apprentices and Fellow Crafts and allowed to
+wear no badges of distinction.[393]
+
+Grand Lodge of England appears to have been reassured by this
+proclamation as to the character of French Freemasonry, for now, in
+1743, it at last delivered a warrant to Grand Lodge of France. Yet in
+reality it was from this moment that French Freemasonry degenerated the
+most rapidly. The Order was soon invaded by intriguers. This was
+rendered all the easier by the apathy of the Comte de Clermont,
+appointed Grand Master in 1743, who seems to have taken little interest
+in the Order and employed a substitute in the person of a dancing master
+named Lacorne, a man of low character through whose influence the lodges
+fell into a state of anarchy. Freemasonry was thus divided into warring
+factions: Lacorne and the crowd of low-class supporters who had followed
+him into the lodges founded a Grand Lodge of their own (Grande Loge
+Lacorne), and in 1756 the original Freemasons again attempted to make
+Craft Masonry the national Masonry of France by deleting the word
+"Anglaise" from the appellation of Grand Lodge, and renaming it "Grand
+Loge Nationale de France." But many lodges still continue to work the
+additional degrees.
+
+The rivalry between the two groups became so violent that in 1767 the
+government intervened and closed down Grand Lodge.
+
+The Templar group had, however, formed two separate associations, the
+"Knights of the East" (1756) and the "Council of the Emperors of the
+East and West" (1758). In 1761 a Jew named Stephen Morin was sent to
+America by the "Emperors" armed with a warrant from the Duc de Clermont
+and Grand Lodge of Paris and bearing the sonorous title of "Grand Elect
+Perfect and Sublime Master," with orders to establish a Lodge in that
+country. In 1766 he was accused in Grand Lodge of "propagating strange
+and monstrous doctrines" and his patent of Grand Inspector was
+withdrawn.[394] Morin, however, had succeeded in establishing the Rite
+of Perfection. Sixteen Inspectors, nearly all Jews, were now appointed.
+These included Isaac Iong, Isaac de Costa, Moses Hayes, B. Spitser,
+Moses Cohen, Abraham Jacobs, and Hyman Long.
+
+Meanwhile in France the closing of Grand Lodge had not prevented
+meetings of Lacorne's group, which, on the death of the Duc de Clermont
+in 1772, instituted the "Grand Orient" with the Duc de Chartres--the
+future "Philippe Egalite"--as Grand Master. The Grand Orient then
+invited the Grande Loge to revoke the decree of expulsion and unite with
+it, and this offer being accepted, the revolutionary party inevitably
+carried all before it, and the Duc de Chartres was declared Grand Master
+of all the councils, chapters, and Scotch lodges of France.[395] In 1782
+the "Council of Emperors" and the "Knights of the East" combined to form
+the "Grand Chapitre General de France," which in 1786 joined up with the
+Grand Orient. The victory of the revolutionary party was then complete.
+
+It is necessary to enter into all these tedious details in order to
+understand the nature of the factions grouped together under the banner
+of Masonry at this period. The Martinist Papus attributes the
+revolutionary influences that now prevailed in the lodges to their
+invasion by the Templars, and goes on to explain that this was owing to
+a change that had taken place in the _Ordre du Temple_. Under the Grand
+Mastership of the Regent and his successor the Duc de Bourbon, the
+revolutionary elements amongst the Templars had had full play, but from
+1741 onwards the Grand Masters of the Order were supporters of the
+monarchy. When the Revolution came, the Duc de Cosse-Brissac, who had
+been Grand Master since 1776, perished amongst the defenders of the
+throne. It was thus that by the middle of the century the Order of the
+Temple ceased to be a revolutionary force, and the discontented elements
+it had contained, no longer able to find in it a refuge, threw
+themselves into Freemasonry, and entering the higher degrees turned them
+to their subversive purpose. According to Papus, Lacorne was a member of
+the Templar group, and the dissensions that took place were principally
+a fight between the ex-Templars and the genuine Freemasons which ended
+in the triumph of the former:
+
+ Victorious rebels thus founded the Grand Orient of France. So a
+ contemporary Mason is able to write: "It is not excessive to say
+ that the masonic revolution of 1773 was the prelude and the
+ precursor of the Revolution of 1789." What must be well observed is
+ the secret action of the Brothers of the Templar Rite. It is they
+ who are the real fomentors of revolution, the others are only
+ docile agents.[396]
+
+But all this attributes the baneful influence of Templarism to the
+French Templars alone, and the existence of such a body rests on no
+absolutely certain evidence. What is certain and admits of no denial on
+the part of any historian, is the inauguration of a Templar Order in
+Germany at the very moment when the so-called Scottish degrees were
+introduced into French Masonry. We shall now return to 1738 and follow
+events that were taking place at this important moment beyond the
+Rhine.
+
+
+
+
+7
+
+GERMAN TEMPLARISM AND FRENCH ILLUMINISM
+
+
+
+The year after Ramsay's oration--that is to say in 1738--Frederick,
+Crown Prince of Prussia, the future Frederick the Great, who for two
+years had been carrying on a correspondence with Voltaire, suddenly
+evinced a curiosity to know the secrets of Freemasonry which he had
+hitherto derided as "Kinderspiel," and accordingly went through a hasty
+initiation during the night of August 14-15, whilst passing through
+Brunswick.[397]
+
+The ceremony took place not at a masonic lodge, but at a hotel, in the
+presence of a deputation summoned by the Graf von Lippe-Buckeburg from
+Grand Lodge of Hamburg for the occasion. It is evident that something of
+an unusual kind must have occurred to necessitate these speedy and
+makeshift arrangements. Carlyle, in his account of the episode,
+endeavours to pass it off as a "very trifling circumstance"--a reason
+the more for regarding it as of the highest importance since we know now
+from facts that have recently come to light how carefully Carlyle was
+spoon-fed by Potsdam whilst writing his book on Frederick the
+Great.[398]
+
+But let us follow Frederick's masonic career. In June 1740, after his
+accession to the throne, his interest in Masonry had clearly not waned,
+for we find him presiding over a lodge at Charlottenburg, where he
+received into the Order two of his brothers, his brother-in-law, and
+Duke Frederick William of Holstein-Beck. At his desire the Baron de
+Bielfeld and his privy councillor Jordan founded a lodge at Berlin, the
+"Three Globes," which by 1746 had no less than fourteen lodges under its
+jurisdiction.
+
+In this same year of 1740 Voltaire, in response to urgent invitations,
+paid his first visit to Frederick the Great in Germany. Voltaire is
+usually said not to have yet become a Mason, and the date of his
+initiation is supposed to have been 1778, when he was received into the
+_Loge des Neuf Soeurs_ in Paris. But this by no means precludes the
+possibility that he had belonged to another masonic Order at an earlier
+date. At any rate, Voltaire's visit to Germany was followed by two
+remarkable events in the masonic world of France. The first of these was
+the institution of the additional degrees; the second--perhaps not
+wholly unconnected with the first--was the arrival in Paris of a masonic
+delegate from Germany named von Marschall, who brought with him
+instructions for a new or rather a revived Order of Templarism, in which
+he attempted to interest Prince Charles Edward and his followers.
+
+Von Marschall was followed about two years later by Baron von Hunt, who
+had been initiated in 1741 into the three degrees of Craft Masonry in
+Germany and now came to consecrate a lodge in Paris. According to von
+Hundt's own account, he was then received into the Order of the Temple
+by an unknown Knight of the Red Plume, in the presence of Lord
+Kilmarnock,[399] and was presented as a distinguished Brother to Prince
+Charles Edward, whom he imagined to be Grand Master of the Order.[400]
+But all this was afterwards shown to be a pure frabrication, for Prince
+Charles Edward dened all knowledge of the affair, and von Hundt himself
+admitted later that he did not know the name of the lodge or chapter in
+which he was received, but that he was directed from "a hidden centre"
+and by Unknown Superiors, whose identity he was bound not to
+reveal.[401] In reality it appears that von Hundt's account was exactly
+the opposite of the truth,[402] and that it was von Hundt who, seconding
+von Marschall's effort, tried to enrol Prince Charles Edward in the new
+German Order by assuring him that he could raise powerful support for
+the Stuart cause under the cover of reorganizing the Templar Order, of
+which he claimed to possess the true secrets handed down from the
+Knights of the fourteenth century. By way of further rehabilitating the
+Order, von Hundt declared that all the accusations brought against it
+by Philippe le Bel and the Pope were based on false charges manufactured
+by two recreant Knights named Noffodei and Florian as a revenge for
+having been deprived of their commands by the Order in consequence of
+certain crimes they had committed.[403] According to Lecouteulx de
+Canteleu, von Hundt eventually succeeded--after the defeat of
+Culloden--in persuading Prince Charles Edward to enter his Order. But
+this is extremely doubtful. At any rate, when in 1751 von Hundt
+officially founded his new Templar Order under the name of the _Stricte
+Observance_, the unfortunate Charles Edward played no part at all in the
+scheme. As Mr. Gould has truly observed, "no trace of Jacobite intrigues
+ever blended with the teaching of the _Stricte Observance_."[404]
+
+The _Order of the Stricte Observance_ was in reality a purely German
+association composed of men drawn entirely from the intellectual and
+aristocratic classes, and, in imitation of the chivalric Orders of the
+past, known to each other under knightly titles. Thus Prince Charles of
+Hesse became Eques a Leone Resurgente, Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick Eques
+a Victoria, the Prussian minister von Bischoffswerder Eques a Grypho,
+Baron de Wachter Eques a Ceraso, Christian Bode (Councillor of Legation
+in Saxe-Gotha) Eques a Lilio Convallium, von Haugwitz (Cabinet Minister
+of Frederick the Great) Eques a Monte Sancto, etc.
+
+But according to the declarations of the Order the official leaders,
+Knights of the Moon, the Star, the Golden Sun, or of the Sacred
+Mountain, were simply figure-heads; the real leaders, known as the
+"Unknown Superiors," remained in the background, unadorned by titles of
+chivalry but exercising supreme jurisdiction over the Order. The system
+had been foreshadowed by the "Invisibles" of seventeenth-century
+Rosicrucianism; but now, instead of an intangible group whose very
+existence was only known vaguely to the world, there appeared in the
+light of day a powerful organization led apparently by men of influence
+and position yet secretly directed by hidden chiefs.[405] Mirabeau has
+described the advent of these mysterious directors in the following
+passage:
+
+ In about 1756 there appeared, as if they had come out of the
+ ground, men sent, they said, by unknown superiors, and armed with
+ powers to reform the order [of Freemasonry] and re-establish it in
+ its ancient purity. One of these missionaries, named Johnston, came
+ to Weimar and Jena, where he established himself. He was received
+ in the best way in the world by the brothers [Freemasons], who were
+ lured by the hope of great secrets, of important discoveries which
+ were never made known to them.[406]
+
+Now, in the manuscripts of the Prince of Hesse published by Lecouteulx
+de Canteleu it is said that this man Johnston, or rather Johnson, who
+proclaimed himself to be "Grand Prior of the Order," was a Jew named
+Leicht or Leucht.[407] Gould says that his real name was either Leucht
+or Becker, but that he professed to be an Englishman, although unable to
+speak the English language, hence his assumption of the name
+Johnson.[408] Mr. Gould has described Johnson as a "consummate rogue and
+an unmitigated vagabond ... of almost repulsive demeanour and of no
+education, but gifted with boundless impudence and low cunning." Indeed,
+von Hundt himself, after enlisting Johnson's services, found him too
+dangerous and declared him to be an adventurer. Johnson was thereupon
+arrested by von Hundt's friend the councillor von Pritsch, and thrown
+into the castle of Wartburg, where sudden death ended his career.
+
+It is, however, improbable that Mirabeau could be right in indicating
+Johnson as one of the "Unknown Superiors," who were doubtless men of
+vaster conceptions than this adventurer appears to have been. Moreover,
+the manner of his end clearly proves that he occupied a subordinate
+position in the _Stricte Observance_.
+
+Here, then, we have a very curious sequence of events which it may be
+well to recapitulate briefly in order to appreciate their full
+significance:
+
+ 1737. Oration of Chevalier Ramsay indicating Templar origin of
+ Freemasonry, but making no mention of upper degrees.
+
+ 1738. Duc d'Antin becomes Grand Master of French Freemasonry in the
+ place of Lord "Harnouester."
+
+ 1738. Frederick, Crown Prince of Prussia, initiated into Masonry at
+ Brunswick.
+
+ 1740. Voltaire pays his first visit to Frederick, now King.
+
+ 1741. Baron von Marschall arrives in Paris with a plan for reviving
+ the Templar Order.
+
+ Templar degrees first heard of in France under name of "Scots
+ Masonry."
+
+ 1743. Arrival in France of Baron von Hundt with fresh plans for
+ reviving the Templar Order.
+
+ Degree of Knight Kadosch celebrating vengeance of Templars said
+ to have been instituted at Lyons.
+
+ 1750. Voltaire goes to spend three years with Frederick.
+
+ 1751. Templar Order of the Stricte Observance founded by von Hundt.
+
+ 1754. Rite of Perfection (early form of Scottish Rite) founded in
+ France.
+
+ 1761. Frederick acknowledged head of Scottish Rite.
+
+ " Morin sent to found Rite of Perfection in America.
+
+ 1762. Grand Masonic Constitutions ratified in Berlin.[409]
+
+It will be seen then that what Mr. Gould describes as "the flood of
+Templarism," which both he and Mr. Tuckett attribute to the so-called
+Scots Masons,[410] corresponds precisely with the decline of Jacobite
+and the rise of German influence. Would it not therefore appear probable
+that, except in the case of the Rose-Croix degree, the authors of the
+upper degrees were not Scotsmen nor Jacobites, that Scots Masonry was a
+term used to cover not merely Templarism but more especially German
+Templarism, and that the real author and inspirer of the movement was
+Frederick the Great? No, it is significant to find that in the history
+of the _Ordre du Temple_, published at the beginning of the nineteenth
+century, Frederick the Great is cited as one of the most distinguished
+members of this Order in the past,[411] and the Abbe Gregoire adds that
+he was "consecrated" at Remersberg (Rheinsberg?) in 1738, that is to say
+in the same year that he was initiated into Masonry at Brunswick.[412]
+There is therefore a definite reason for connecting Frederick with
+Templarism at this date.
+
+I would suggest, then, that the truth about the Templar succession may
+be found in one of the two following theories:
+
+1. That the documents produced by the _Ordre du Temple_ in the
+nineteenth century, including the Charter of Larmenius, were genuine;
+that the Order had never ceased to exist since the days of the Crusades;
+that the Templar heresy was Johannism, but that this was not held by the
+Templars who escaped to Scotland; that the Rose-Croix degree in its
+purely Christian form was introduced by the Scottish Templars to
+Scotland and four hundred years later brought by Ramsay to France; that
+the Master of the Temple at this date was the Regent, Philippe Duc
+d'Orleans, as stated in the Charter of Larmenius. Finally, that after
+this, fresh Templar degrees were introduced from Germany by von Hundt,
+acting on behalf of Frederick the Great.
+
+2. That the documents produced by the _Ordre du Temple_ in the
+nineteenth century were, as M. Matter declares, early eighteenth-century
+fabrications; that although, in view of the tradition preserved in the
+Royal Order of Scotland, there appears to be good reason to believe the
+story of the Scottish Templars and the origin of the Rose-Croix degree,
+the rest of the history of the Templars, including the Charter of
+Larmenius, was an invention of the "Concealed Superiors" of the _Stricte
+Observance_ in Germany, and that the most important of these "Concealed
+Superiors" were Frederick the Great and Voltaire.
+
+I shall not attempt to decide which of these two theories is correct;
+all that I do maintain is that in either case the preponderating role in
+Templarism at this crisis was played by Frederick the Great, probably
+with the co-operation of Voltaire, who in his _Essai sur les Maeurs_
+championed the cause of the Templars. Let us follow the reasons for
+arriving at this conclusion.
+
+Ramsay's oration in 1737 connecting Freemasonry with the Templars may
+well have come to the ears of Frederick and suggested to him the idea of
+using Masonry as a cover for his intrigues--hence his hasty initiation
+at Brunswick. But in order to acquire influence in a secret society it
+is always necessary to establish a claim to superior knowledge, and
+Templarism seemed to provide a fruitful source of inspiration. For this
+purpose new light must be thrown on the Order. Now, there was probably
+no one better qualified than Voltaire, with his knowledge of the ancient
+and medieval world and hatred of the Catholic Church, to undertake the
+construction of a historical romance subversive of the Catholic
+faith--hence the urgent summons to the philosopher to visit Frederick.
+We can imagine Voltaire delving amongst the records of the past in order
+to reconstruct the Templar heresy. This was clearly Gnostic, and the
+Mandaeans or Christians of St. John may well have appeared to present the
+required characteristics. If it could be shown that here in Johannism
+true "primitive Christianity" was to be found, what a blow for the
+"infame"! A skilful forger could easily be found to fabricate the
+documents said to have been preserved in the secret archives of the
+Order. Further we find von Marschall arriving in the following year in
+France to reorganize the Templars, and von Hundt later claiming to be in
+possession of the true secrets of the Order handed down from the
+fourteenth century. That some documents bearing on this question were
+either discovered or fabricated under the direction of Frederick the
+Great seems the more probable from the existence of a masonic tradition
+to this effect. Thus Dr. Oliver quotes a Report of the Grand
+Inspectors-General in the nineteenth century stating that:
+
+ During the Crusades, at which 27,000 Masons were present, some
+ masonic MSS. of great importance were discovered among the
+ descendants of the ancient Jews, and that other valuable documents
+ were found at different periods down to the year of Light 5557
+ (i.e. 1553), at which time a record came to light in Syrian
+ characters, relating to the most remote antiquity, and from which
+ it would appear that the world is many thousand years older than
+ given by the Mosaic account. Few of these characters were
+ translated till the reign of our illustrious and most enlightened
+ Brother Frederick II, King of Prussia, whose well-known zeal for
+ the Craft was the cause of so much improvement in the Society over
+ which he condescended to preside.[413]
+
+I suggest, then, that the documents here referred to and containing the
+secrets claimed by von Hundt may have been the ones afterwards published
+by the _Ordre du Temple_ in the nineteenth century, and that if
+unauthentic they were the work of Voltaire, aided probably by a Jew
+capable of forging Syriac manuscripts. That Johnson was the Jew in
+question seems probable, since Findel definitely asserts that the
+history of the continuation of the Order of Knights Templar was his
+work.[414] Frederick, as we know, was in the habit of employing Jews to
+carry out shady transactions, and he may well have used Johnson to forge
+documents as he used Ephraim to coin false money for him. It would be
+further quite in keeping with his policy to get rid of the man as soon
+as he had served his purpose, lest he should betray his secrets.
+
+At any rate, whatever were the methods employed by Frederick the Great
+for obtaining control over Masonry, the fruitful results of that "very
+trifling circumstance," his initiation at Brunswick, become more and
+more apparent as the century advances. Thus when in 1786 the Rite of
+Perfection was reorganized and rechristened the "Ancient and Accepted
+Scottish Rite"--always the same Scottish cover for Prussianism!--it is
+said to have been Frederick who conducted operations, drew up the new
+Constitutions of the Order, and rearranged the degrees so as to bring
+the total number up to thirty-three[415], as follows:
+
+ 26. Prince of Mercy.
+ 27. Sovereign Commander of the Temple.
+ 28. Knight of the Sun.
+ 29. Grand Scotch Knight of St. Andrew.
+ 30. Grand Elect Knight of Kadosch.
+ 31. Grand Inspector Inquisitor Commander.
+ 32. Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret.
+ 33. Sovereign Grand Inspector-General.
+
+In the last four degrees Frederick the Great and Prussia play an
+important part; in the thirtieth degree of Knight Kadosch, largely
+modelled on the Vehmgerichts, the Knights wear Teutonic crosses, the
+throne is surmounted by the double-headed eagle of Prussia, and the
+President, who is called Thrice Puissant Grand Master, represents
+Frederick himself; in the thirty-second degree of Sublime Prince of the
+Royal Secret, Frederick is described as the head of Continental
+Freemasonry; in the thirty-third degree of Sovereign Grand
+Inspector-General the jewel is again the double-headed eagle, and the
+Sovereign Grand Commander is Frederick, who at the time this degree was
+instituted figured with Philippe, Duc d'Orleans, Grand Master of the
+Grand Orient, as his lieutenant. The most important of these innovations
+was the thirty-second degree, which was in reality a system rather than
+a degree for bringing together the Masons of all countries under one
+head--hence the immense power acquired by Frederick. By 1786 French
+Masonry was thus entirely Prussianized and Frederick had indeed become
+the idol of Masonry everywhere. Yet probably no one ever despised
+Freemasonry more profoundly. As the American Mason Albert Pike shrewdly
+observed:
+
+ There is no doubt that Frederick came to the conclusion that the
+ great pretensions of Masonry in the blue degrees were merely
+ imaginary and deceptive. He ridiculed the Order, and thought its
+ ceremonies mere child's play; and some of his sayings to that
+ effect have been preserved. It does not at all follow that he might
+ not at a later day have found it politic to put himself at the head
+ of an Order that had become a power....[416]
+
+It is not without significance to find that in the year following the
+official foundation of the _Stricte Observance_, that is to say in 1752,
+Lord Holdernesse, in a letter to the British Ambassador in Paris, Lord
+Albemarle, headed "Very secret," speaks of "the influence which the King
+of Prussia has of late obtained over all the French Councils"; and a few
+weeks later Lord Albemarle refers to "the great influence of the
+Prussian Court over the French Councils by which they are so blinded as
+not to be able to judge for themselves."[417]
+
+But it is time to turn to another sphere of activity which Masonry
+opened out to the ambitions of Frederick.
+
+The making of the _Encyclopedie_, which even those writers the most
+sceptical with regard to secret influences behind the revolutionary
+movement admit to have contributed towards the final cataclysm, is a
+question on which official history has thrown but little light.
+According to the authorized version of the story--as related, for
+example, in Lord Morley's work on the Encyclopaedists--the plan of
+translating Ephraim Chambers's _Cyclopaedia_, which had appeared in 1728,
+was suggested to Diderot "some fifteen years later" by a French
+bookseller named Le Breton. Diderot's "fertile and energetic
+intelligence transformed the scheme.... It was resolved to make
+Chambers's work a mere starting-point for a new enterprise of far wider
+scope." We then go on to read of the financial difficulties that now
+beset the publisher, of the embarrassment of Diderot, who "felt himself
+unequal to the task of arranging and supervising every department of a
+new book that was to include the whole circle of the sciences," of the
+fortunate enlisting of d'Alembert as a collaborator, and later of men
+belonging to all kinds of professions, "all united in a work that was as
+useful as it was laborious, without any view of interest ... without any
+common understanding and agreement," further, of the cruel persecutions
+encountered at the hands of the Jesuits, "who had expected at least to
+have control of the articles on theology," and finally of the tyrannical
+suppression of the great work on account of the anti-Christian
+tendencies these same articles displayed.[418]
+
+Now for a further light on the matter.
+
+In the famous speech of the Chevalier Ramsay already quoted, which was
+delivered at Grand Lodge of Paris in 1737, the following passage occurs:
+
+ The fourth quality required in our Order is the taste for useful
+ sciences and the liberal arts. Thus, the Order exacts of each of
+ you to contribute, by his protection, liberality, or labour, to a
+ vast work for which no academy can suffice, because all these
+ societies being composed of a very small number of men, their work
+ cannot embrace an object so extended. All the Grand Masters in
+ Germany, England, Italy, and elsewhere exhort all the learned men
+ and all the artisans of the Fraternity to unite to furnish the
+ materials for a Universal Dictionary of all the liberal arts and
+ useful sciences; excepting only theology and politics. The work has
+ already been commenced in London, and by means of the unions of our
+ brothers it may be carried to a conclusion in a few years.[419]
+
+So after all it was no enterprising bookseller, no brilliantly inspired
+philosopher, who conceived the idea of the _Encyclopedie_, but a
+powerful international organization able to employ the services of more
+men than all the academies could supply, which devised the scheme at
+least six years before the date at which it is said to have occurred to
+Diderot. Thus the whole story as usually told to us would appear to be a
+complete fabrication--struggling publishers, toiling _litterateurs_
+carrying out their superhuman task as "independent men of letters"
+without the patronage of the great--which Lord Morley points out as "one
+of the most important facts in the history of the Encyclopaedia"--writers
+of all kinds bound together by no "common understanding or agreement,"
+are all seen in reality to have been closely associated as "artisans of
+the Fraternity" carrying out the orders of their superiors.
+
+The _Encyclopedie_ was therefore essentially a Masonic publication, and
+Papus, whilst erroneously attributing the famous oration and
+consequently the plan of the _Encyclopedie_ to the inspiration of the
+Duc d'Antin, emphasizes the importance of this fact. Thus, he writes:
+
+ The Revolution manifests itself by two stages:
+
+ 1st. _Intellectual revolution_, by the publication of the
+ _Encyclopedie_, due to French Freemasonry under the high
+ inspiration of the Duc d'Antin.
+
+ 2nd. _Occult revolution_ in the Lodges, due in great part to the
+ members of the Templar Rite and executed by a group of expelled
+ Freemasons afterwards amnestied.[420]
+
+The masonic authorship of the _Encyclopedie_ and the consequent
+dissemination of revolutionary doctrines has remained no matter of doubt
+to the Freemasons of France; on the contrary, they glory in the fact. At
+the congress of the Grand Orient in 1904 the Freemason Bonnet declared:
+
+ In the eighteenth century the glorious line of Encyclopaedists
+ formed in our temples a fervent audience which was then alone in
+ invoking the radiant device as yet unknown to the crowd: "Liberty,
+ Equality, Fraternity." The revolutionary seed quickly germinated
+ amidst this _elite_. Our illustrious Freemasons d'Alembert,
+ Diderot, Helvetius, d'Holbach, Voltaire, Condorcet, completed the
+ evolution of minds and prepared the new era. And, when the Bastille
+ fell, Freemasonry had the supreme honour of giving to humanity the
+ charter (i.e. the Declaration of the Rights of Man) which it had
+ elaborated with devotion. (_Applause_.)
+
+This charter, the orator went on to say, was the work of the Freemason
+Lafayette, and was adopted by the Constituent Assembly, of which more
+than 300 members were Freemasons.
+
+But in using the lodges to sow the seeds of revolution, the
+Encyclopaedists betrayed not only the cause of monarchy but of Masonry as
+well. It will be noticed that, in conformity with true masonic
+principles, Ramsay in his oration expressly stated that the encyclopaedia
+was to concern itself with the liberal arts and sciences[421] and that
+theology and politics were to be excluded from the contemplated scheme.
+How, then, did it come to pass that these were eventually the two
+subjects to which the Encyclopaedists devoted the greatest attention, so
+that their work became principally an attack on Church and monarchy? If
+Papus was right in attributing this revolutionary tendency to the
+_Encyclopedie_ from the time of the famous oration, then Ramsay could
+only be set down as the profoundest hypocrite or as the mouthpiece of
+hypocrites professing intentions the very reverse of their real designs.
+A far more probable explanation seems to be that during the interval
+between Ramsay's speech and the date when the _Encyclopedie_ was begun
+in earnest, the scheme underwent a change. It will be noticed that the
+year of 1746, when Diderot and d'Alembert are said to have embarked on
+their task, coincided with the decadence of French Freemasonry under the
+Comte de Clermont and the invasion of the lodges by the subversive
+elements; thus the project propounded with the best intentions by the
+Freemasons of 1737 was filched by their revolutionary successors and
+turned to a diametrically opposite purpose.
+
+But it is not to the dancing-master Lacorne and his middle-class
+following that we can attribute the efficiency with which not only the
+_Encyclopedie_ but a host of minor revolutionary publications were
+circulated all over France. Frederick the Great had seen his
+opportunity. If I am right in my surmise that Ramsay's speech had
+reached the ears of Frederick, the prospect of the _Encyclopedie_
+contained therein may well have appeared to him a magnificent method for
+obtaining a footing in the intellectual circles of France; hence then,
+doubtless, an additional reason for his hasty initiation into Masonry,
+his summons to Voltaire, and his subsequent overtures to Diderot and
+d'Alembert, who, by the time the first volume of the _Encyclopedie_
+appeared in 1751, had both been made members of the Royal Academy of
+Prussia. In the following year Frederick offered d'Alembert the
+presidency of the Academy in place of Maupertuis, an offer which was
+refused; but in 1755 and again in 1763 d'Alembert visited Frederick in
+Germany and received his pension regularly from Berlin. It is therefore
+not surprising that when the _Encyclopedie_ had reached the letter P, it
+included, in an unsigned article on Prussia, a panegyric on the virtues
+and the talents of the illustrious monarch who presided over the
+destinies of that favoured country.
+
+The art of Frederick the Great, as of his successors on the throne of
+the Hohenzollerns, was to make use of every movement that could further
+the design of Prussian supremacy. He used the Freemasons as he used the
+philosophers and as he used the Jews, to carry out his great scheme--the
+destruction of the French monarchy and of the alliance between France
+and Austria. Whilst through his representatives at the Court of France
+he was able to create discord between Versailles and Vienna and bring
+discredit on Marie Antoinette, through his allies in the masonic lodges
+and in the secret societies he was able to reach the people of France.
+The gold and the printing presses of Frederick the Great were added to
+those of the Orleanistes for the circulation of seditious literature
+throughout the provinces.[422]
+
+So as the century advanced the association founded by Royalists and
+Catholics was turned into an engine of destruction by revolutionary
+intriguers; the rites and symbols were gradually perverted to an end
+directly opposed to that for which they had been instituted, and the two
+degrees of Rose-Croix and Knight Kadosch came to symbolize respectively
+war on religion and war on the monarchy of France.
+
+It is no orthodox Catholic but an occultist and Rosicrucian who thus
+describes the role of Masonry in the Revolution:
+
+ Masonry has not only been profaned but it has been served as a
+ cover and pretext for the plots of anarchy, by the occult influence
+ of the avengers of Jacques du Molay and the continuers of the
+ schismatic work of the Temple. Instead of avenging the death of
+ Hiram, they have avenged his assassins. The anarchists have taken
+ the plumb-line, the square, and the mallet and have written on them
+ liberty, equality, fraternity. That is to say, liberty for
+ envyings, equality in degradation, fraternity for destruction.
+ Those are the men whom the Church has justly condemned and that she
+ will always condemn.[423]
+
+But it is time to turn to another masonic power which meanwhile had
+entered the lists, the Martinistes or French Illumines.
+
+
+
+French Illuminism
+
+
+Whilst Frederick the Great, the Freemasons, the Encyclopaedists, and the
+Orleanistes were working on the material plane to undermine the Church
+and monarchy in France, another cult had arisen which by the middle of
+the century succeeded in insinuating itself into the lodges. This was a
+recrudescence of the old craze for occultism, which now spread like
+wildfire all over Europe from Bordeaux to St. Petersburg. During the
+reign of Anna of Courland (1730-40) the Russian Court was permeated with
+superstition, and professional magicians and charlatans of every kind
+were encouraged. The upper classes of Germany in the eighteenth century
+proved equally susceptible to the attractions of the supernatural, and
+princes desirous of long life or greater power eagerly pursued the quest
+of the Philosopher's Stone, the "Elixir of Life," and evoked spirits
+under the direction of occultists in their service.
+
+In France occultism, reduced to a system, adopted the outer forms of
+Masonry as a cover to the propagation of its doctrines. It was in 1754
+that Martines de Pasqually (or Paschalis), a Rose-Croix Mason,[424]
+founded his Order of Elus Cohens (Elected Priests), known later as the
+_Martinistes_ or the French _Illumines_. Although brought up in the
+Christian faith, Pasqually has been frequently described as a Jew. The
+Baron de Gleichen, himself a Martiniste and a member of the Amis
+Reunis,[425] throws an interesting light on the matter in this passage:
+"Pasqualis was originally Spanish, perhaps of the Jewish race, since
+his disciples inherited from him a large number of Jewish
+manuscripts."[426]
+
+It was "this Cabalistic sect,"[427] the Martinistes, which now became
+the third great masonic power in France.
+
+The rite of the Martinistes was broadly divided into two classes, in the
+first of which was represented the fall of man and in the second his
+final restoration--a further variation on the masonic theme of a loss
+and a recovery. After the first three Craft degrees came the Cohen
+degrees of the same--Apprentice Cohen, Fellow Craft Cohen, and Master
+Cohen--then those of Grand Architect, Grand Elect of Zerubbabel or
+Knight of the East: but above these were concealed degrees leading up to
+the Rose-Croix, which formed the capstone of the edifice.[428] Pasqually
+first established his rite at Marseilles, Toulouse, and Bordeaux, then
+in Paris, and before long Martiniste lodges spread all over France with
+the centre at Lyons under the direction of Willermoz, a prosperous
+merchant living there. From this moment other occult Orders sprang up in
+all directions. In 1760 Dom Pernetti founded his sect of "Illumines
+d'Avignon" in that city, declaring himself a high initiate of
+Freemasonry and teaching the doctrines of Swedenborg. Later a certain
+Chastanier founded the "Illumines Theosophes," a modified version of
+Pernetti's rite; and in 1783 the Marquis de Thome started a purified
+variety of Swedenborgianism under the name of "Rite of Swedenborg."
+
+Beneath all these occult sects one common source of inspiration is to be
+found--the perverted and magical Cabala of the Jews, that conglomeration
+of wild theosophical imaginings and barbaric superstitions founded on
+ancient pagan cults and added to throughout seventeen centuries by
+succeeding generations of Jewish occultists.[429] This influence is
+particularly to be detected in the various forms of the Rose-Croix
+degree, which in nearly all these associations forms the highest and
+most secret degree. The ritual of "the eminent Order of the Knights of
+the Black Eagle or Sovereigns of the Rose-Croix," a secret and
+unpublished document of the eighteenth century, which differs entirely
+from the published rituals, explains that no one can attain to knowledge
+of the higher sciences without the "Clavicules de Salomon," of which
+the real secrets were never committed to print and which is said to
+contain the whole of Cabalistic science.[430] The catechism of this same
+degree deals mainly with the transmutation of metals, the Philosopher's
+Stone, etc.
+
+In the Rite of Perfection as worked in France and America this
+Cabalistic influence is shown in those degrees known under the name of
+the "Ineffable Degrees," derived from the Jewish belief in the mystery
+that surrounds the Ineflable Name of God. According to the custom of the
+Jews, the sacred name Jehovah or Jah-ve, composed of the four letters
+yod, he, vau, he, which formed the Tetragrammaton, was never to be
+pronounced by the profane, who were obliged to substitute for it the
+word "Adonai." The Tetragrammaton might only be uttered once a year on
+the Day of Atonement by the High Priest in the Holy of Holies amid the
+sound of trumpets and cymbals, which prevented the people from hearing
+it. It is said that in consequence of the people thus refraining from
+its utterance, the true pronunciation of the name was at last lost. The
+Jews further believed that the Tetragrammaton was possessed of unbounded
+powers. "He who pronounces it shakes heaven and earth and inspires the
+very angels with astonishment and terror."[431] The Ineffable Name thus
+conferred miraculous gifts; it was engraved on the rod of Moses and
+enabled him to perform wonders, just as, according to the Toledot Yeshu,
+it conferred the same powers on Christ.
+
+This superstition was clearly a part of Rosicrucian tradition, for the
+symbol of the Tetragrammaton within a triangle, adopted by the masonic
+lodges, figures in Fludd's Cabalistic system.[432] In the "Ineffable
+degrees" it was invested with all the mystic awe by which it is
+surrounded in Jewish theology, and, according to early American working:
+"Brothers and Companions of these degrees received the name of God as it
+was revealed to Enoch and were sworn to pronounce it but once in their
+lives."
+
+In the alchemical version of the Rose-Croix degree referred to above the
+Ineffable Name is actually invested with magical powers as in the
+Jewish Cabala. Ragon, after describing the Jewish ceremony when the word
+Jehovah was pronounced by the High Priest in the Holy of Holies, goes on
+to say that "Schem-hamm-phorasch," another term for the Tetragrammaton,
+forms the sacred word of a Scotch degree, and that this belief in its
+mystic properties "will be found at the head of the instructions for the
+third degree of the Knight of the Black Eagle, called Rose-Croix," thus:
+
+
+ Q. What is the most powerful name of God on the pentaculum?
+ A. Adonai.
+ Q. What is its power?
+ A. To move the Universe.
+
+ That one of the Knights who had the good fortune to pronounce it
+ cabalistically would have at his disposal the powers that inhabit
+ the four elements and the celestial spirits, and would possess all
+ the virtues possible to man.[433]
+
+That this form of the Rose-Croix was of purely Jewish origin is thus
+clearly evident. In the address to the candidate for initiation into the
+Rose-Croix degree at the Lodge of the "Contrat Social" it is stated:
+
+ This degree, which includes an Order of Perfect Masons, was brought
+ to light by Brother R., who took it from the Kabbalistic treasure
+ of the Doctor and Rabbi Neamuth, chief of the synagogue of Leyden
+ in Holland, who had preserved its precious secrets and its costume,
+ both of which we shall see in the same order in which he placed
+ them in his mysterious Talmud.[434]
+
+Now, we know that in the eighteenth century a society of Rosicrucian
+magicians had been instituted in Florence which was believed to date
+back to the fifteenth century and to have been partly, if not wholly
+composed of Orientals, as we shall see in the next chapter; but it seems
+probable that this sect, whilst secretly inspiring the Rose-Croix
+masons, was itself either nameless or concealed under a disguise. Thus
+in 1782 an English Freemason writes: "I have found some rather curious
+MSS. in Algiers in Hebrew relating to the society of the Rosicrucians,
+which exists at present under another name with the same forms. I hope,
+moreover to be admitted to their knowledge."[435]
+
+It has frequently been argued that Jews can have played no part in
+Freemasonry at this period since they themselves were not admitted to
+the lodges. But this is by no means certain; in the article from _The
+Gentleman's Magazine_ already quoted it is stated that Jews are
+admitted; de Luchet further quotes the instance of David Moses Hertz
+received in a London lodge in 1787; and the author of _Les Franc-Masons
+ecrases_, published in 1746, states that he has seen three Jews received
+into a lodge at Amsterdam. In the "Melchisedeck Lodges" of the Continent
+non-Christians were openly admitted, and here again the Rose-Croix
+degree occupies the most important place. The highest degrees of this
+rite were the Initiated Brothers of Asia, the Masters of the Wise, and
+the Royal Priests, otherwise known as the degree of Melchisedeck or the
+true Brothers of the Rose-Croix.
+
+This Order, usually described as the _Asiatic Brethren_, of which the
+centre was in Vienna and the leader a certain Baron von Eckhoffen, is
+said to have been a continuation of the "Brothers of the Golden and Rosy
+Cross," a revival of the seventeenth-century Rosicrucians organized in
+1710 by a Saxon priest, Samuel Richter, known as Sincerus Renatus. The
+real origins of the Asiatic Brethren are, however, obscure and little
+literature on the subject is to be found in this country.[436] Their
+further title of "the Knights and Brethren of St. John the Evangelist"
+suggests Johannite inspiration and was clearly an imposture, since they
+included Jews, Turks, Persians, and Armenians. De Luchet, who as a
+contemporary was in a position to acquire first-hand information, thus
+describes the organization of the Order, which, it will be seen, was
+entirely Judaic. "The superior direction is called the small and
+constant Sanhedrim of Europe. The names of those employed by which they
+conceal themselves from their inferiors are Hebrew. The signs of the
+third principal degree (i.e. the Rose-Croix) are Urim and Thummim....
+The Order has the true secrets and the explanations, moral and
+physical, of the hierogyphics of the very venerable Order of
+Freemasonry."[437] The initiate had to swear absolute submission and
+unswerving obedience to the laws of the Order and to follow its laws
+implicitly to the end of his life, without asking by whom they were
+given or whence they came.
+
+"Who," asks de Luchet, "gave to the Order these so-called secrets? That
+is the great and insidious question for the secret societies. But the
+Initiate who remains, and must remain eternally in the Order, never
+finds this out, he dare not even ask it, he must promise never to ask
+it. In this way those who participate in the secrets of the Order remain
+the Masters."
+
+Again, as in the _Stricte Observance_, the same system of "Concealed
+Superiors"--the same blind obedience to unknown directors!
+
+Under the guidance of these various sects of Illumines a wave of
+occultism swept over France, and lodges everywhere became centres of
+instruction on the Cabala, magic, divination, alchemy, and
+theosophy[438]; masonic rites degenerated into ceremonies for the
+evocation of spirits--women, who were now admitted to these assemblies,
+screamed, fainted, fell into convulsions, and lent themselves to
+experiments of the most horrible kind.[439]
+
+By means of these occult practices the _Illumines_ in time became the
+third great masonic power in France, and the rival Orders perceived the
+expediency of joining forces. Accordingly in 1771 an amalgamation of all
+the masonic groups was effected at the new lodge of the _Amis Reunis_.
+
+The founder of this lodge was Savalette de Langes, Keeper of the Royal
+Treasury, Grand Officer of the Grand Orient, and a high initiate of
+Masonry--"versed in all mysteries, in all the lodges, and in all the
+plots." In order to unite them he made his lodge a mixture of all
+sophistic, Martiniste, and masonic systems, "and as a bait to the
+aristocracy organized balls and concerts at which the adepts, male and
+female, danced and feasted, or sang of the beauties of their liberty
+and equality, little knowing that above them was a secret committee
+which was arranging to extend this equality beyond the lodge to rank and
+fortune, to castles and to cottages, to marquesses and bourgeois"
+alike.[440]
+
+A further development of the Amis Reunis was the Rite of the
+_Philalethes_, compounded by Savalette de Langes in 1773 out of
+Swedenborgian, Martiniste, and Rosicrucian mysteries, into which the
+higher initiates of the Amis Reunis--Court de Gebelin, the Prince de
+Hesse, Condorcet, the Vicomte de Tavannes, Willermoz, and others--were
+initiated. A modified form of this rite was instituted at Narbonne in
+1780 under the name of "Free and Accepted Masons du Rit Primitif," the
+English nomenclature being adopted (according to Clavel) in order to
+make it appear that the rite emanated from England. In reality its
+founder, the Marquis de Chefdebien d'Armisson, a member of the Grand
+Orient and of the Amis Reunis, drew his inspiration from certain German
+Freemasons with whom he maintained throughout close relations and who
+were presumably members of the Stricte Observance, since Chefdebien was
+a member of this Order, in which he bore the title of "Eques a Capite
+Galeato." The correspondence that passed between Chefdebien and
+Salvalette de Langes, recently discovered and published in France, is
+one of the most illuminating records of the masonic ramifications in
+existence before the Revolution ever brought to light.[441] To judge by
+the tone of these letters, the leaders of the Rit Primitif would appear
+to have been law-abiding and loyal gentlemen devoted to the Catholic
+religion, yet in their passion for new forms of Masonry and thirst for
+occult lore ready to associate themselves with every kind of adventurer
+and charlatan who might be able to initiate them into further mysteries.
+In the curious notes drawn up by Savalette for the guidance of the
+Marquis de Chefdebien we catch a glimpse of the power behind the
+philosophers of the _salons_ and the aristocratic adepts of the
+lodges--the professional magicians and men of mystery; and behind these
+again the concealed directors of the secret societies, the _real
+initiates_.
+
+
+
+The Magicians
+
+
+The part played by magicians during the period preceding the French
+Revolution is of course a matter of common knowledge and has never been
+disputed by official history. But like the schools of philosophers this
+sudden crop of magicians is always represented as a sporadic growth
+called into being by the idle and curious society of the day. The
+important point to realize is that just as the philosophers were all
+Freemasons, the principal magicians were not only Freemasons but members
+of occult secret societies. It is therefore not as isolated charlatans
+but as agents of some hidden power that we must regard the men whom we
+will now pass in a rapid survey.
+
+One of the first to appear in the field was Schroepfer, a coffee-house
+keeper of Leipzig, who declared that no one could be a true Freemason
+without practising magic. Accordingly he proclaimed himself the
+"reformer of Freemasonry," and set up a lodge in his own house with a
+rite based on the Rose-Croix degree for the purpose of evoking spirits.
+The meetings took place at dead of night, when by means of carefully
+arranged lights, magic mirrors, and possibly of electricity, Schroepfer
+contrived to produce apparitions which his disciples--under the
+influence of strong punch--took to be visitors from the other
+world.[442] In the end Schroepfer, driven crazy by his own incantations,
+blew out his brains in a garden near Leipzig.
+
+According to Lecouteulx de Canteleu, it was Schroepfer who indoctrinated
+the famous "Comte de Saint-Germain"--"The Master" of our modern
+co-masonic lodges. The identity of this mysterious personage has never
+been established[443]; by some contemporaries he was said to be a
+natural son of the King of Portugal, by others the son of a Jew and a
+Polish Princess. The Duc de Choiseul on being asked whether he knew the
+origin of Saint-Germain replied: "No doubt we know it, he is the son of
+a Portuguese Jew who exploits the credulity of the town and Court."[444]
+In 1780 a rumour went round that his father was a Jew of Bordeaux,
+but according to the _Souvenirs of the Marquise de Crequy_ the Baron de
+Breteuil discovered from the archives of his Ministry that the pretended
+Comte de Saint-Germain was the son of a Jewish doctor of Strasburg, that
+his real name was Daniel Wolf, and that he was born in 1704.[445] The
+general opinion thus appears to have been in favour of his Jewish
+ancestry.
+
+Saint-German seems first to have been heard of in Germany about 1740,
+where his marvellous powers attracted the attention of the Marechal de
+Belle-Isle, who, always the ready dupe of charlatans, brought him back
+with him to the Court of France, where he speedily gained the favour of
+Madame de Pompadour. The Marquise before long presented him to the King,
+who granted him an apartment at Chambord and, enchanted by his brilliant
+wit, frequently spent long evenings in conversation with him in the
+rooms of Madame de Pompadour. Meanwhile his invention of flat-bottomed
+boats for the invasion of England raised him still higher in the
+estimation of the Marechal de Belle-Isle. In 1761 we hear of him as
+living in great splendour in Holland and giving out that he had reached
+the age of seventy-four, though appearing to be only fifty; if this were
+so, he must have been ninety-seven at the time of his death in 1784 at
+Schleswig. But this feat of longevity is far from satisfying his modern
+admirers, who declare that Saint-Germain did not die in 1784, but is
+still alive to-day in some corner of Eastern Europe. This is in
+accordance with the theory, said to have been circulated by
+Saint-Germain himself, that by the eighteenth century he had passed
+through several incarnations and that the last one had continued for
+1,500 years. Barruel, however, explains that Saint-Germain in thus
+referring to his age spoke in masonic language, in which a man who has
+taken the first degree is said to be three years old, after the second
+five, or the third seven, so that by means of the huge increase the
+higher degrees conferred it might be quite possible for an exalted adept
+to attain the age of 1,500.
+
+Saint-Germain has been represented by modern writers--not only those who
+compose his following--as a person of extraordinary attainments, a sort
+of super-man towering over the minor magicians of his day.
+Contemporaries, however, take him less seriously and represent him
+rather as an expert charlatan whom the wits of the _salons_ made the
+butt of pleasantries. His principal importance to the subject of this
+book consists, however, in his influence on the secret societies.
+According to the _Memoires authentiques pour servir a l'histoire du
+Comte de Cagliostro_, Saint-Germain was the "Grand Master of
+Freemasonry,"[446] and it was he who initiated Cagliostro into the
+mysteries of Egyptian masonry.
+
+Joseph Balsamo, born in 1743, who assumed the name of Comte de
+Cagliostro, as a magician far eclipsed his master. Like Saint-Germain,
+he was generally reputed to be a Jew--the son of Pietro Balsamo, a
+Sicilian tradesman of Jewish origin[447]--and he made no secret of his
+arden admiration for the Jewish race. After the death of his parents he
+escaped from the monastery in which he had been placed at Palermo and
+joined himself to a man known as Altotas, said to have been an Armenian,
+with whom he travelled to Greece and Egypt[448]. Cagliostro's travels
+later took him to Poland and Germany, where he was initiated into
+Freemasonry[449], and finally to France; but it was in England that he
+himself declared that he elaborated his famous "Egyptian Rite," which he
+founded officially in 1782. According to his own account, this rite was
+derived from a manuscript by a certain George Cofton--whose identity has
+never been discovered--which he bought by chance in London[450]. Yarker,
+however, expresses the opinion that "the rite of Cagliostro was clearly
+that of Pasqually," and that if he acquired it from a manuscript in
+London it would indicate that Pasquilly had disciples in that city. A
+far more probable explanation is that Cagliostro derived his Egyptian
+masonry from the same source as that on which Pasqually had drawn for
+his Order of Martinistes, namely the Cabala, and that it was not from a
+single manuscript but from an eminent Jewish Cabalist in London that he
+took his instructions. Who this may have been we shall soon see. At any
+rate, in a contemporary account of Cagliostro we find him described as
+"a doctor initiated into Cabalistic art" and a Rose-Croix; but after
+founding his own rite he acquired the name of Grand Copht, that is to
+say, Supreme Head of Egyptian Masonry, a new branch that he wished to
+graft on to old European Freemasonry.[451] We shall return to his
+further masonic adventures later.
+
+In a superior category to Saint-German and Cagliostro was the famous
+Swabian doctor Mesmer, who has given his name to an important branch of
+natural science. In about 1780 Mesmer announced his great discovery of
+"animal magnetism, the principle of life in all organized beings, the
+soul of all that breathes." But if to-day Mesmerism has come to be
+regarded as almost synonymous with hypnotism and in no way a branch of
+occultism, Mesmer himself--stirring the fluid in his magic bucket,
+around which his disciples wept, slept, fell into trances or
+convulsions, raved or prophesied[452]--earned not unnaturally the
+reputation of a charlatan. The Freemasons, eager to discover the secret
+of the magic bucket, hastened to enrol him in their Order, and Mesmer
+was received into the Primitive Rite of Free and Accepted Masons in
+1785.[453]
+
+Space forbids a description of the minor magicians who flourished at
+this period--of _Schroeder_, founder in 1776 of a chapter of "True and
+Ancient Rose-Croix Masons," practising certain magical, theosophical,
+and alchemical degrees; of _Gassner_, worker of miracles in the
+neighbourhood of Ratisbonne; of "the Jew Leon," one of a band of
+charlatans who made large sums of money with magic mirrors in which the
+imaginative were able to see their absent friends, and who was finally
+banished from France by the police,--all these and many others exploited
+the credulity and curiosity of the upper classes both in France and
+Germany between the years of 1740 and 1790. De Luchet, writing before
+the French Revolution, describes the part played in their mysteries by
+the soul of a Cabalistic Jew named Gablidone who had lived before
+Christ, and who predicted that "in the year 1800 there will be, on our
+globe, a very remarkable revolution, and there will be no other religion
+but that of the patriarchs."[454]
+
+How are we to account for this extraordinary wave of Cabalism in Western
+Europe? By whom was it inspired? If, as Jewish writers assure us,
+neither Marlines Pasqually, Saint-Germain, Cagliostro, nor any of the
+visible occultists or magicians were Jews, the problem only becomes the
+more insoluble. We cannot believe that Sanhedrims, Hebrew hieroglyphics,
+the contemplation of the Tetragrammaton, and other Cabalistic rites
+originated in the brains of French and German aristocrats, philosophers,
+and Freemasons. Let us turn, then, to events taking place at this moment
+in the world of Jewry and see whether these may provide some clue.
+
+
+
+
+8
+
+THE JEWISH CABALISTS
+
+
+
+It has been shown in the preceding chapters that the Jewish Cabala
+played an important part in the occult and anti-Christian sects from the
+very beginning of the Christian era. The time has now come to enquire
+what part Jewish influence played meanwhile in revolutions. Merely to
+ask the question is to bring on oneself the accusation of
+"anti-Semitism," yet the Jewish writer Bernard Lazare has shown the
+falseness of this charge:
+
+ This [he writes] is what must separate the impartial historian from
+ anti-Semitism. The anti-Semite says: "The Jew is the preparer, the
+ machinator, the chief engineer of revolutions"; the impartial
+ historian confines himself to studying the part which the Jew,
+ considering his spirit, his character, the nature of his
+ philosophy, and his religion, may have taken in revolutionary
+ processes and movements.[455]
+
+Lazare himself expresses the opinion, however, that--
+
+ The complaint of the anti-Semites seems to be founded: the Jew has
+ the revolutionary spirit; consciously or not he is an agent of
+ revolution. Yet the complaint complicates itself, for anti-Semitism
+ accuses the Jews of being the cause of revolutions. Let us examine
+ what this accusation is worth....[456]
+
+In the light of our present knowledge it would certainly be absurd to
+ascribe to the Jews the authorship of the conspiracy of Catiline or of
+the Gracchi, the rising of Jack Straw and Wat Tyler, Jack Cade's
+rebellion, the _jacqueries_ of France, or the Peasants' Wars in Germany,
+although historical research may lead in time to the discovery of
+certain occult influences--not necessarily Jewish--behind the European
+insurrections here referred to. Moreover, apart from grievances or
+other causes of rebellion, the revolutionary spirit has always existed
+independently of the Jews. In all times and in all countries there have
+been men born to make trouble as the sparks fly upward.
+
+Nevertheless, in modern revolutions the part played by the Jews cannot
+be ignored, and the influence they have exercised will be seen on
+examination to have been twofold--financial and occult. Throughout the
+Middle Ages it is as sorcerers and usurers that they incur the
+reproaches of the Christian world, and it is still in the same role,
+under the more modern terms of magicians and loan-mongers, that we
+detect their presence behind the scenes of revolution from the
+seventeenth century onward. Wherever money was to be made out of social
+or political upheavals, wealthy Jews have been found to back the winning
+side; and wherever the Christian races have turned against their own
+institutions, Jewish Rabbis, philosophers, professors, and occultists
+have lent them their support. It was not then necessarily that Jews
+created these movements, but they knew how to make use of them for their
+own ends.
+
+It is thus that in the Great Rebellion we find them not amongst the
+Ironsides of Cromwell or the members of his State Council, but
+furnishing money and information to the insurgents, acting as army
+contractors, loan-mongers, and super-spies--or to use the more
+euphonious term of Mr. Lucien Wolf, as "political intelligencers" of
+extraordinary efficiency. Thus Mr. Lucien Wolf, in referring to
+Carvajal, "the great Jew of the Commonwealth," explains that "the wide
+ramifications of his commercial transactions and his relations with
+other Crypto-Jews all over the world placed him in an unrivalled
+position to obtain news of the enemies of the Commonwealth."[457]
+
+It is obvious that a "secret service" of this kind rendered the Jews a
+formidable hidden power, the more so since their very existence was
+frequently unknown to the rest of the population around them. This
+precaution was necessary because Jews were not supposed to exist at that
+date in England. In 1290 Edward I had expelled them all, and for three
+and a half centuries they had remained in exile; the Crypto-Jews or
+Marranos who had come over from Spain contrived, however, to remain in
+the country by skilfully taking the colour of their surroundings. Mr.
+Wolf goes on to observe that Jewish services were regularly held in the
+secret Synagogue, but "in public Carvajal and his friends followed the
+practice of the secret Jews in Spain and Portugal, passing as Roman
+Catholics and regularly attending mass in the Spanish Ambassador's
+chapel."[458] But when war between England and Spain rendered this
+expedient inadvisable, the Marranos threw off the disguise of
+Christianity and proclaimed themselves followers of the Jewish faith.
+
+Now, just at this period the Messianic era was generally believed by the
+Jews to be approaching, and it appears to have occurred to them that
+Cromwell might be fitted to the part. Consequently emissaries were
+despatched to search the archives of Cambridge in order to discover
+whether the Protector could possibly be of Jewish descent.[459] This
+quest proving fruitless, the Cabalist Rabbi of Amsterdam, Manasseh ben
+Israel,[460] addressed a petition to Cromwell for the readmission of the
+Jews to England, in which he adroitly insisted on the retribution that
+overtakes those who afflict the people of Israel and the rewards that
+await those who "cherish" them. These arguments were not without effect
+on Cromwell, who entertained the same superstition, and although he is
+said to have declined the Jews' offer to buy St. Paul's Cathedral and
+the Bodleian Library because he considered the L500,000 they offered
+inadequate,[461] he exerted every effort to obtain their readmission to
+the country. In this he encountered violent opposition, and it seems
+that Jews were not permitted to return in large numbers, or at any rate
+to enjoy full rights and privileges, until after the accession of
+Charles II, who in his turn had enlisted their financial aid.[462]
+Later, in 1688, the Jews of Amsterdam helped with their credit the
+expedition of William of Orange against James II; the former in return
+brought many Jews with him to England. So a Jewish writer is able to
+boast that "a Monarch reigned who was indebted to Hebrew gold for his
+royal diadem."[463]
+
+In all this it is impossible to follow any consecutive political plan;
+the role of the Jews seems to have been to support no cause consistently
+but to obtain a footing in every camp, to back any venture that offered
+a chance of profit. Yet mingled with these material designs were still
+their ancient Messianic dreams. It is curious to note that the same
+Messianic idea pervaded the Levellers, the rebels of the Commonwealth;
+such phrases as "Let Israel go free," "Israel's restoration is now
+beginning," recur frequently in the literature of the sect. Gerard
+Winstanley, one of the two principal leaders, addressed an epistle to
+"the Twelve Tribes of Israel that are circumcised in heart and scattered
+through all the Nations of the Earth," and promised them "David their
+King that they have been waiting for." The other leader of the movement,
+by name Everard, in fact declared, when summoned before the Lord Fairfax
+at Whitehall, that "he was of the race of the Jews."[464] It is true
+that the Levellers were by profession Christian, but after the manner of
+the Bavarian Illuminati and of the Christian Socialists two centuries
+later, claiming Christ as the author of their Communistic and
+equalitarian doctrines: "For Jesus Christ, the Saviour of all Men, is
+the greatest, first, and truest Leveller that ever was spoken of in the
+world." The Levellers are said to have derived originally from the
+German Anabaptists; but Claudio Jannet, quoting German authorities,
+shows that there were Jews amongst the Anabaptists. "They were carried
+away by their hatred of the name of Christian and imagined that their
+dreams of the restoration of the kingdom of Israel would be realized
+amidst the conflagration."[465] Whether this was so or not, it is clear
+that by the middle of the seventeenth century the mystical ideas of
+Judaism had penetrated into all parts of Europe. Was there then some
+Cabalistic centre from which they radiated? Let us turn our eyes
+eastward and we shall see.
+
+Since the sixteenth century the great mass of Jewry had settled in
+Poland, and a succession of miracle-workers known by the name of
+Zaddikim or Ba'al Shems had arisen. The latter word, which signifies
+"Master of the Name," originated with the German Polish Jews and was
+derived from the Cabalistic belief in the miraculous use of the sacred
+name of Jehovah, known as the Tetragrammaton.
+
+According to Cabalistic traditions, certain Jews of peculiar sanctity or
+knowledge were able with impunity to make use of the Divine Name. A
+Ba'al Shem was therefore one who had acquired this power and employed it
+in writing amulets, invoking spirits, and prescribing cures for various
+diseases. Poland and particularly Podolia--which had not yet been ceded
+to Russia--became thus a centre of Cabalism where a series of
+extraordinary movements of a mystical kind followed each other. In 1666,
+when the Messianic era was still believed to be approaching, the whole
+Jewish world was convulsed by the sudden appearance of Shabbethai Zebi,
+the son of a poulterer in Smyrna named Mordecai, who proclaimed himself
+the promised Messiah and rallied to his support a huge following not
+only amongst the Jews of Palestine, Egypt, and Eastern Europe, but even
+the hard-headed Jews of the Continental bourses.[466] Samuel Pepys in
+his Diary refers to the bets made amongst the Jews in London on the
+chances of "a certain person now in Smyrna" being acclaimed King of the
+World and the true Messiah.[467]
+
+Shabbethai, who was an expert Cabalist and had the temerity to utter the
+Ineffable Name Jehovah, was said to be possessed of marvellous powers,
+his skin exuded exquisite perfume, he indulged perpetually in
+sea-bathing and lived in a state of chronic ecstasy. The pretensions of
+Shabbethai, who took the title of "King of the Kings of the Earth,"
+split Jewry in two; many Rabbis launched imprecations against him, and
+those who had believed in him were bitterly disillusioned when,
+challenged by the Sultan to prove his claim to be the Messiah by
+allowing poisoned arrows to be shot at him, he suddenly renounced the
+Jewish faith and proclaimed himself a Mohammedan. His conversion,
+however, appeared to be only partial, for "at times he would assume the
+role of a pious Mohammedan and revile Judaism; at others he would enter
+into relations with Jews as one of their own faith."[468] By this means
+he retained the allegiance both of Moslems and of Jews. But the Rabbis,
+alarmed for the cause of Judaism, succeeded in obtaining his
+incarceration by the Sultan in a castle near Belgrade, where he died of
+colic in 1676.[469]
+
+This prosaic ending to the career of the Messiah did not, however,
+altogether extinguish the enthusiasm of his followers, and the
+Shabbethan movement continued into the next century. In Poland Cabalism
+broke out with renewed energy; fresh Zaddikim and Ba'al Shems arose, the
+most noted of these being Israel of Podolia, known as Ba'al Shem Tob, or
+by the initial letters of this name, Besht, who founded his sect of
+Hasidim in 1740.
+
+Besht, whilst opposing bigoted Rabbinism and claiming the Zohar as his
+inspiration, did not, however, adhere strictly to the doctrine of the
+Cabala that the universe was an emanation of God, but evolved a form of
+Pantheism, declaring that the whole universe was God, that even evil
+exists in God since evil is not bad in itself but only in its relation
+to Man; sin therefore has no positive existence.[470] As a result the
+followers of Besht, calling themselves the "New Saints," and at his
+death numbering no less than 40,000, threw aside not only the precepts
+of the Talmud, but all the restraints of morality and even decency.[471]
+
+Another Ba'al Shem of the same period was Heilprin, alias Joel Ben Uri
+of Satanov, who, like Israel of Podolia, professed to perform miracles
+by the use of the Divine Name and collected around him many pupils, who,
+on the death of their master, "formed a band of charlatans and
+shamelessly exploited the credulity of their contemporaries."[472]
+
+But the most important of these Cabalistic groups was that of the
+Frankists, who were sometimes known as the Zoharists or the
+Illuminated,[473] from their adherence to the Zohar or book of Light, or
+in their birthplace Podolia as the Shabbethan Zebists, from their
+allegiance to the false Messiah of the preceding century--a heresy that
+had been "kept alive in secret circles which had something akin to a
+masonic organization."[474] The founder of this sect was Jacob Frank, a
+brandy distiller profoundly versed in the doctrines of the Cabala, who
+in 1755 collected around him a large following in Podolia and lived in a
+style of oriental magnificence, maintained by vast wealth of which no
+one ever discovered the source. The persecution to which he was
+subjected by the Rabbis led the Catholic clergy to champion his cause,
+whereupon Frank threw himself on the mercy of the Bishop of Kaminick,
+and publicly burnt the Talmud, declaring that he recognized only the
+Zohar, which, he alleged, admitted the doctrine of the Trinity. Thus the
+Zoharists "claimed that they regarded the Messiah-Deliverer as one of
+the three divinities, but failed to state that by the Messiah they meant
+Shabbethai Zebi."[475] The Bishop was apparently deceived by this
+manoeuvre, and in 1759 the Zoharites declared themselves converted to
+Christianity, and were baptized, including Frank himself, who took the
+name of Joseph. "The insincerity of the Frankists soon became apparent,
+however, for they continued to inter-marry only among themselves and
+held Frank in reverence, calling him 'The Holy Master.'"[476] It soon
+became evident that, whilst openly embracing the Catholic faith, they
+had in reality retained their secret Judaism.[477] Moreover, it was
+discovered that Frank endeavoured to pass as a Mohammedan in Turkey; "he
+was therefore arrested in Warsaw and delivered to the Church tribunal on
+the charge of feigned conversion to Christianity and the spreading of a
+pernicious heresy."[478] Unlike his predecessor in apostasy, Shabbethai
+Zebi, Frank, however, came to no untimely end, but after his release
+from prison continued to prey on the credulity of Christians and
+frequently travelled to Vienna with his daughter, Eve, who succeeded in
+duping the pious Maria Theresa. But here also "the sectarian plans of
+Frank were found out,"[479] and he was obliged to leave Austria.
+Finally he settled at Offenbach and supported by liberal subsidies from
+the other Jews, he resumed his former splendour[480]
+
+ with a retinue of several hundred beautiful Jewish youth of both
+ sexes; carts containing treasure were reported to be perpetually
+ brought in to him, chiefly from Poland--he went out daily in great
+ state to perform his devotions in the open field--he rode in a
+ chariot drawn by noble horses; ten or twelve Hulans in red or green
+ uniform, glittering with gold, by his side, with pikes in their
+ hands and crests on their caps, eagles, or stags, or the sun and
+ moon.... His followers believed him immortal, but in 1791 he died;
+ his burial was as splendid as his mode of living--800 persons
+ followed him to the grave.[481]
+
+Now, it is impossible to study the careers of these magicians in Poland
+and Germany without being reminded of their counterparts in France. The
+family likeness between the "Baron von Offenbach," the "Comte de
+Saint-Germain" and the "Comte de Cagliostro" is at once apparent. All
+claimed to perform miracles, all lived with extraordinary magnificence
+on wealth derived from an unknown source, one was certainly a Jew, the
+other two were believed to be Jews, and all were known to be Cabalists.
+Moreover, all three spent many years in Germany, and it was whilst Frank
+was living as Baron von Offenbach close to Frankfurt that Cagliostro was
+received into the Order of the Stricte Observance in a subterranean
+chamber a few miles from that city. Earlier in his career he was known
+to have visited Poland, whence Frank derived. Are we to believe that all
+these men, so strangely alike in their careers, living at the same time
+and in the same places, were totally unconnected? It is a mere
+coincidence that this group of Jewish Cabalist miracle-workers should
+have existed in Germany and Poland at the precise moment that the
+Cabalist magicians sprang up in France? Is it again a coincidence that
+Martines Pasqually founded his "Kabbalistic sect" of Illumines in 1754
+and Jacob Frank his sect of Zoharites (or Illuminated) in 1755?
+
+Moreover, when we know from purely Jewish sources that the Ba'al Shem
+Heilprin had many pupils "who formed a band of charlatans who
+shamelessly exploited the credulity of their contemporaries," that the
+Ba'al Shem Tob and Jacob Frank both had large followings, it is surely
+here that we may find the origin of those mysterious magicians who
+spread themselves over Europe at this date.
+
+It will at once be asked: "But what proof is there that any one of these
+Ba'al Shems or Cabalists was connected with masonic or secret
+societies?" The answer is that the most important Ba'al Shem of the day,
+known as "the Chief of all the Jews," is shown by documentary evidence
+to have been an initiate of Freemasonry and in direct contact with the
+leaders of the secret societies. If then it is agreed that neither
+Saint-Germain nor Cagliostro can be proved to have been Jews, here we
+have a man concerned in the movement, more important than either, whose
+nationality admits of no doubt whatever.
+
+This extraordinary personage, known as the "Ba'al Shem of London," was a
+Cabalistic Jew named Hayyim Samuel Jacob Falk, also called Dr. Falk,
+Falc, de Falk, or Falkon, born in 1708, probably in Podolia. The further
+fact that he was regarded by his fellow-Jews as an adherent of the
+Messiah Shabbethai Zebi clearly shows his connexion with the Podolian
+Zoharites. Falk was thus not an isolated phenomenon, but a member of one
+of the groups described in the foregoing pages. The following is a
+summary of the account given of the Ba'al Shem of London in the _Jewish
+Encyclopedia_:
+
+ Falk claimed to possess thaumaturgic powers and to be able to
+ discover hidden treasure. Archenholz (_England und Italien_, I.
+ 249) recounts certain marvels which he had seen performed by Falk
+ in Brunswick and which he attributes to a special knowledge of
+ chemistry. In Westphalia at one time Falk was sentenced to be
+ burned as a sorcerer, but escaped to England. Here he was received
+ with hospitality and rapidly gained fame as a Cabalist and worker
+ of miracles. Many stories of his powers were current. He would
+ cause a small taper to remain alight for weeks; an incantation
+ would fill his cellar with coal; plate left with a pawnbroker would
+ glide back into his house. When a fire threatened to destroy the
+ Great Synagogue, he averted the disaster by writing four Hebrew
+ letters on the pillars of the door.[482] [Obviously the
+ Tetragrammaton.]
+
+On his arrival in London in 1742 Falk appeared to be without means, but
+soon after he was seen to be in possession of considerable wealth,
+living in a comfortable house in Wellclose Square, where he had his
+private synagogue, whilst gold and silver plate adorned his table. His
+Journal, still preserved in the library of the United Synagogue,
+contains references to "mysterious journeyings" to and from Epping
+Forest, to meetings, a meeting-chamber in the forest, and chests of gold
+there buried. It was said that on one occasion when he was driving
+thither along Whitechapel Road, a back wheel of his carriage came off,
+which alarmed the coachman, but Falk ordered him to drive on and the
+wheel followed the carriage all the way to the forest.
+
+The stories of Falk's miraculous powers are too numerous to relate here,
+but a letter written by an enthusiastic Jewish admirer, Sussman
+Shesnowzi, to his son in Poland will serve to show the reputation he
+enjoyed:
+
+ Hear, my beloved son, of the marvellous gifts entrusted to a son of
+ man, who verily is not a man, a light of the captivity ... a holy
+ light, a saintly man ... who dwells at present in the great city of
+ London. Albeit I could not fully understand him on account of his
+ volubility and his speaking as an inhabitant of Jerusalem.... His
+ chamber is lighted by silver candlesticks on the walls, with a
+ central eight-branched lamp made of pure silver of beaten work. And
+ albeit it contained oil to burn a day and a night it remained
+ enkindled for three weeks. On one occasion he abode in seclusion in
+ his house for six weeks without meat and drink. When at the
+ conclusion of this period ten persons were summoned to enter, they
+ found him seated on a sort of throne, his head covered with a
+ golden turban, a golden chain round his neck with a pendant silver
+ star on which sacred names were inscribed. Verily this man stands
+ alone in his generation by reason of his knowledge of holy
+ mysteries. I cannot recount to you all the wonders he accomplishes.
+ I am grateful, in that I am found worthy to be received among those
+ who dwell within the shadow of his wisdom.... I know that many will
+ believe my words, but others, who do not occupy themselves with
+ mysteries, will laugh thereat. Therefore, my son, be very
+ circumspect, and show this only to wise and discreet men. For here
+ in London this master has not been disclosed to anyone who does not
+ belong to our Brotherhood.
+
+The esteem in which Falk was held by the Jewish community, including the
+Chief Rabbi and the Rabbi of the new Synagogue, appears to have roused
+the resentment of his co-religionist Emden, who denounced him as a
+follower of the false Messiah and an exploiter of Christian credulity.
+
+ Falk [he wrote in a letter to Poland] had made his position by his
+ pretence to be an adept in practical Cabala, by which means he
+ professed to be able to discover hidden treasures; by his
+ pretensions he had entrapped a wealthy captain whose fortune he had
+ cheated him out of, so that he was reduced to depending on the
+ Rabbi's charity, and yet, despite this, wealthy Christians spend
+ their money on him, whilst Falk spends his bounty on the men of his
+ Brotherhood so that they may spread his fame.
+
+In general Falk appears to have displayed extreme caution in his
+relations with Christian seekers after occult knowledge, for the _Jewish
+Encyclopaedia_ goes on to say: "Archenholz mentions a royal prince who
+applied to Falk in his quest for the philosopher's stone, but was denied
+admittance." Nevertheless Hayyum Azulai mentions (Ma'gal Tob, p. 13_b_):
+
+ That when in Paris in 1778 he was told by the Marchesa de Crona
+ that the Ba'al Shem of London had taught her the Cabala. Falk seems
+ also to have been on intimate terms with that strange adventurer
+ Baron Theodor de Neuhoff.... Falk's principal friends were the
+ London bankers Aaron Goldsmid and his son.[483] Pawnbroking and
+ successful speculation enabled him to acquire a considerable
+ fortune. He left large sums of money to charity, and the overseers
+ of the United Synagogue in London still distribute annually certain
+ payments left by him for the poor.
+
+Nothing of all this would lead one to suppose that Falk could be
+regarded in the light of a black magician; it is therefore surprising to
+find Dr. Adler observing that a horrible account of a Jewish Cabalist in
+_The Gentleman's Magazine_ for September 1762 "obviously refers to Dr.
+Falk, though his name is not mentioned."[484] This man is described as
+"a christened Jew and the biggest rogue and villain in all the world,"
+who "had been imprisoned everywhere and banished out of all countries in
+Germany, and also sometimes publicly whipped, so that his back lost all
+the old skin, and became new again, and yet left never off from his
+villainies, but grew always worse." The writer goes on to relate that
+the Cabalist offered to teach him certain mysteries, but explained that
+before entering on any "experiments of the said godly mysteries, we
+must first avoid all churches and places of worshipping as unclean"; he
+then bound his initiate by a very strong oath and proceeded to tell him
+that he must steal a Hebrew Bible from a Protestant and also procure
+"one pound of blood out of the veins of an honest Protestant." The
+initiate thereupon robbed a Protestant of all his effects, but had
+himself bled of about three-quarters of a pound of blood, which he gave
+to the magician. He thus describes the ceremony that took place:
+
+ Then the next night about 11 o'clock, we both went into the garden
+ of my own, and the cabalist put a cross, tainted with my blood, in
+ each corner of the garden, and in the middle of the garden a
+ threefold circle ... in the first circle were written all the names
+ of God in Hebrew; in the second all the names of the angels; and in
+ the third the first chapter of the holy Gospel of St. John, and it
+ was all written with my blood.
+
+The cruelties then performed by the Cabalist on a he-goat are too
+loathsome to transcribe. The whole story, indeed, appears a farrago of
+nonsense and would not be worth quoting but for the fact that it appears
+to be taken seriously by Dr. Adler as a description of the great Ba'al
+Shem.
+
+The death of Falk took place on April 17, 1782, and the epitaph on his
+grave in the cemetery at Globe Road, Mile End, "bears witness to his
+excellencies and orthodoxy": "Here is interred ... the aged and
+honourable man, a great personage who came from the East, an
+accomplished sage, an adept in Cabbalah.... His name was known to the
+ends of the earth and distant isles," etc.
+
+This then is surely the portrait of a most remarkable personage, a man
+known for his powers in England, France, and Germany, visited by a royal
+prince in search of the philosopher's stone, and acclaimed by one of his
+own race as standing alone in his generation by reason of his knowledge,
+yet whilst Saint-Germain and Cagliostro figure in every account of
+eighteenth-century magicians, it is only in exclusively Judaic or
+masonic works, not intended for the general public, that we shall find
+any reference to Falk. Have we not here striking evidence of the truth
+of M. Andre Baron's dictum: "Remember that the constant rule of the
+secret societies is that the real authors never show themselves"?
+
+It will now be asked: what proof is there that Falk is connected with
+any masonic or secret societies? True, in the accounts given by the
+_Jewish Encyclopaedia_, the word Freemasonry is not once mentioned. But
+in the curious portrait of the great Ba'al Shem appended, we see him
+holding in his hand the pair of compasses, and before him, on the table
+at which he is seated, the double triangle or Seal of Solomon known
+amongst Jews as "the Shield of David," which forms an important emblem
+in Masonry.
+
+Moreover, it is significant to find in the _Royal Masonic Encyclopaedia_
+by the Rosicrucian Kenneth Mackenzie that a long and detailed article is
+devoted to Falk, though again without any reference to his connexion
+with Freemasonry. May we not conclude that in certain inner masonic
+circles the importance of Falk is recognized but must not be revealed to
+the uninitiated? Mr. Gordon Hills, in the above-quoted paper contributed
+to the _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, indulges in some innocent speculation
+as to the part Falk may have played in the masonic movement. "If," he
+observes, "Jewish Brethren did introduce Cabalistical learning into the
+so-called High Degrees, here we have one, who, if a Mason, would have
+been eminently qualified to do so."
+
+Falk inded was far more than a Mason, he was a high initiate--the
+supreme oracle to which the secret societies applied for guidance. All
+this was disclosed a few years ago in the correspondence between
+Savalette de Langes and the Marquis de Chefdebien referred to in the
+previous chapter. Thus in the _dossiers_ of the leading occultists
+supplied by Savalette we find the following note on the Ba'al Shem of
+London:
+
+ This Doctor Falk is known to many Germans. He is a very
+ extraordinary man from every point of view. Some people believe him
+ to be the Chief of all the Jews and attribute to purely political
+ schemes all that is marvellous and singular in his life and
+ conduct. He is referred to in a very curious manner, and as a
+ Rose-Croix in the _Memoirs of the Chevalier de Rampsow_ (i.e.
+ Rentzov). He has had adventures with the Marechal de Richelieu,
+ great seeker of the Philosophers' Stone. He had a strange history
+ with the Prince de Rohan Guemenee and the Chevalier de Luxembourg
+ relating to Louis XV, whose death he foretold. He is almost
+ inaccessible. In all the sects of savants in secret sciences he
+ passes as a superior man. He is at present in England. The Baron de
+ Gleichen can give good information about him. Try to get more at
+ Frankfurt.[485]
+
+Again, in notes on other personages the name of Falk recurs with the
+same insistence on his importance as a high initiate:
+
+ Leman, pupil of Falk....
+
+ The Baron de Gleichen ... intimately connected with Wecter
+ [Waechter] and Wakenfeldt.... He knows Falk....
+
+ The Baron de Waldenfels ... is, according to what I know from the
+ Baron de Gleichen, the princes of Daimstadt, ... and others, the
+ most interesting man for you and me to know. If we made his
+ acquaintance, he could give us the best information on all the most
+ interesting objects of instiuction. He knows Falk and Wecter.
+
+Prince Louis d'Haimstadt ... is also a member of the Amis Reunis, 12 deg.
+and in charge of the Directories. He worked in his youth with a Jew whom
+he believes to be taught by Falk....[486]
+
+Here, then, behind the organization of the Stricte Observance, of the
+Amis Reunis, and the Philalethes, we catch a glimpse at last of one of
+those _real initiates_ whose identity has been so carefully kept dark.
+For Falk, as we see in these notes, was not an isolated sage; he had
+pupils, and to be one of these was to be admitted to the inner
+mysteries. Was Cagliostro one of these adepts? Is it here we may seek
+the explanation of the "Egyptian Rite" devised by him in London, and of
+his chance discovery on a bookstall in that city of a Cabalistic
+document by the mysterious "George Cofton," whose identity has never
+been revealed? I would suggest that the whole story of the bookstall was
+a fable and that it was not from any manuscript, but from Falk, that
+Cagliostro received his directions. Thus Cagliostro's rite was in
+reality concealed Cabalism.
+
+That Falk was only one of several Concealed Superiors is further
+suggested by the intriguing correspondence of Savalette de Langes.
+"Schroeder," we read, "had for his master an old man of Suabia," by whom
+the Baron de Waechter was also said to have been instructed in Masonry,
+and to have become one of the most important initiates of Germany.
+Accordingly de Waechter was despatched by his Order to Florence in order
+to make enquiries on further secrets and on certain famous treasures
+about which Schroepfer, the Baron de Hundt, and others, had heard that
+Aprosi, the secretary of the Pretender, could give them information.
+Waechter, however, wrote to say that all they had been told on the
+latter point was fabulous, but that he had met in Florence certain
+"Brothers of the Holy Land," who had initiated him into marvellous
+secrets; one in particular who is described as "a man who is not a
+European" had "perfectly instructed him." Moreover, de Waechter, who had
+set forth poor, returned loaded with riches attributed by his
+fellow-masons to the "Asiatic Brethren" he had frequented in Florence
+who possessed the art of making gold.[487] I would suggest then that
+these were the members of the "Italian Order" referred to by Mr.
+Tuckett, which, like Schroepfer and de Hundt, he imagined to have been
+connected with the Jacobites.
+
+But all these secret sources of instruction are wrapped in mystery.
+Whilst Saint-Germain and Cagliostro--who is referred to in this
+correspondence in terms of light derision--emerge into the limelight,
+the real initiates remain concealed in the background. Falk "is almost
+inaccessible!" Yet one more almost forgotten document of the period may
+throw some light on the important part he played behind the scenes in
+Masonry.
+
+It may be remembered that Archenholz had spoken of certain marvels he
+had seen performed by Falk in Brunswick. Now, in 1770 the German poet
+Gotthold Ephraim Lessing was made librarian to the Duke of Brunswick in
+that city. The fame of Falk may then have reached his ears. At any rate
+in 1771 Lessing, after having mocked at Freemasonry, was initiated in a
+masonic lodge at Hamburg, and in 1778 he published not only his famous
+masonic drama _Nathan der Weise_, in which the Jew of Jerusalem is shown
+in admirable contrast to the Christians and Mohammedans, but he also
+wrote five dialogues on Freemasonry which he dedicated to the Duke of
+Brunswick, Grand Master of all the German Lodges, and which he entitled
+"_Ernst und Falk: Gesprache fur Freimaurer_."[488]
+
+Lessing's friendship with Moses Mendelssohn has led to the popular
+theory, unsupported however by any real evidence, that the Jewish
+philosopher of Berlin provided the inspiration for the character of
+Nathan, but might it not equally have been provided by the
+miracle-worker of Brunswick? However, in the case of the dialogues less
+room is left for doubt. Falk is mentioned by name and represented as
+initiated into the highest mysteries of Freemasonry. This is of course
+not explained by Lessing's commentators, who give no clue to his
+identity.[489] It is evident that Lessing committed an enormous blunder
+in thus letting so important a cat out of the bag, for after the
+publication of the first three dialogues and whilst the last two were
+circulating privately in manuscript amongst the Freemasons, an order
+from the Duke of Brunswick forbade their publication as dangerous. In
+spite of this prohibition, the rest of the series was printed, however
+without Lessing's permission, in 1870 with a preface by an unknown
+person describing himself as a non-mason.
+
+The dialogues between Ernst and Falk throw a curious light on the
+influences at work behind Freemasonry at this period and gain immensely
+in interest when the identity of the two men in question is understood.
+Thus Ernst, by whom Lessing evidently represents himself, is at the
+beginning not a Freemason, and, whilst sitting with Falk in a wood,
+questions the high initiate on the aims of the Order. Falk explains that
+Freemasonry has always existed, but not under this name. Its real
+purpose has never been revealed. On the surface it appears to be a
+purely philanthropic association, but in reality philanthropy forms no
+part of its scheme, its object being to bring about a state of things
+which will render philanthropy unnecessary. (_Was man gemeinlich gute
+Thaten zu nennen pflegt entbehrlich zu machen_.) As an illustration Falk
+points to an ant-heap at the foot of the tree beneath which the two men
+are seated. "Why," he asks, "should not human beings exist without
+government like the ants or bees?" Falk then goes on to describe his
+idea of a Universal State, or rather a federation of States, in which
+men will no longer be divided by national, social, or religious
+prejudices, and where greater equality will exist.
+
+At the end of the third dialogue an interval occurs during which Ernst
+goes away and becomes a Freemason, but on his return expresses his
+disappointment to Falk at finding many Freemasons engaged in such
+futilities as alchemy or the evocation of spirits. Others again seek to
+revive the * * *. Falk replies that although the great secrets of
+Freemasonry cannot be revealed by any man even if he wished it, one
+thing, however, has been kept dark which should now be made public, and
+this is the relationship between the Freemasons and the * * *. "The
+* * * were in fact the Freemasons of their time." It seems probable from
+the context and from Falk's references to Sir Christopher Wren as the
+founder of the modern Order, that the asterisks denote the Rosicrucians.
+
+The most interesting point of these dialogues is, however, the hint
+continually thrown out by Falk that there is something behind
+Freemasonry, something far older and far wider in its aims than the
+Order now known by this name--the modern Freemasons are for the most
+part only "playing at it." Thus, when Ernst complains that true
+equality has not been attained in the lodges since Jews are not
+admitted, Falk observes that he himself does not attend them, that true
+Freemasonry does not exist in outward forms--"A lodge bears the same
+relation to Freemasonry as a church to belief." In other words, the real
+initiates do not appear upon the scene. Here then we see the role of the
+"Concealed Superiors." What wonder that Lessing's dialogues were
+considered too dangerous for publication!
+
+Moreover, in Falk's conception of the ideal social order and his
+indictment of what he calls "bourgeois society" we find the clue to
+movements of immense importance. Has not the system of the ant-heap or
+the beehive proved, as I have pointed out elsewhere, the model on which
+modern Anarchists, from Proudhon onwards, have formed their schemes for
+the reorganization of human life? Has not the idea of the "World
+State," "The Universal Republic" become the war-cry of the
+Internationalist Socialists, the Grand Orient Masons, the Theosophists,
+and the world-revolutionaries of our own day?
+
+Was Falk, then, a revolutionary? This again will be disputed. Falk may
+have been a Cabalist, a Freemason, a high initiate, but what proof is
+there that he had any connexion with the leaders of the French
+Revolution? Let us turn again to the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_:
+
+ Falk ... is ... believed to have given the Duc d'Orleans, to ensure
+ his succession to the throne, a talisman consisting of a ring,
+ which Philippe Egalite before mounting the scaffold is said to have
+ sent to a Jewess, Juliet Goudchaux, who passed it on to his son,
+ subsequently Louis Philippe.
+
+The Baron de Gleichen, who "knew Falc," refers to a talisman of
+lapis-lazuli which the Due d'Orleans had received in England from "the
+celebrated Falk Scheck, first Rabbi of the Jews," and says that a
+certain occultist, Madame de la Croix, imagined she had destroyed it by
+"the power of prayer." But the theory of its survival is further
+confirmed by the information supplied from Jewish sources to Mr. Gordon
+Hills, who states that Falk was "in touch with the French Court in the
+person of 'Prince Emanuel,'[490] whom he describes as a servant of the
+King of France," and adds that the talismanic ring which he gave to the
+Due d'Orleans "is still in the possession of the family, having passed
+to King Louis Philippe and thence to the Comte de Paris."[491]
+
+One fact, then, looms out of the darkness that envelops the secret power
+behind the Orleanist conspiracy, one fact of supreme importance, and
+based moreover on purely Jewish evidence: the Duke was in touch with
+Falk when in London and Falk supported his scheme of usurpation. Thus
+behind the arch-conspirator of the revolution stood "the Chief of all
+the Jews." Is it here perhaps, in Falk's "chests of gold," that we might
+find the source of some of those loans raised in London by the Due
+d'Orleans to finance the riots of the Revolution, so absurdly described
+as "l'or de Pitt"?
+
+The direct connexion between the attack on the French monarchy and
+Jewish circles in London is further shown by the curious sequel to the
+Gordon Riots. In 1780 the half-witted Lord George Gordon (as a Jewish
+writer describes him), the head of the so-called "Protestant" mob,
+marched on the House of Commons to protest against the bill for the
+relief of Roman Catholic disabilities and then proceeded to carry out
+his plan of burning down London. During the five days' rioting that
+ensued, property to the amount of L180,000 was destroyed. After this
+"the scion of the ducal house of Gordon proved the durability of his
+love for Protestantism by professing the Hebrew faith," and was received
+with the highest honours into the Synagogue. The same Jewish writer, who
+has described him earlier as half-witted, quotes this panegyric on his
+orthodoxy: "He was very regular in his Jewish observances; every morning
+he was seen with the philacteries between his eyes, and opposite his
+heart.... His Saturday's bread was baked according to the manner of the
+Jews, his wine was Jewish, his meat was Jewish, and he was the best Jew
+in the congregation of Israel." And it was immediately after his
+conversion to Judaism that he published in _The Public Advertiser_ the
+libel against Marie Antoinette which brought about his imprisonment in
+Newgate.[492]
+
+Now we know that Lord George Gordon met Cagliostro in London in
+1786.[493] Is it not probable that the author of the scurrilous pamphlet
+and the magician concerned in the attack on the Queen's honour through
+the Affair of the Necklace--one a--Jew by profession, the other said to
+be a Jew by race--may have had some connexion with Philippe Egalite's
+Jewish supporter, the miracle worker of Wellclose Square?
+
+But already a vaster genius than Falk or Cagliostro, than Pasqually or
+Savalette de Langes, had arisen, who, gathering into his hands the
+threads of all the conspiracies, was able to weave them together into a
+gigantic scheme for the destruction of France and of the world.
+
+
+
+
+9
+
+The Bavarian Illuminati
+
+
+
+The question of the system to which I shall henceforth refer simply as
+Illuminism is of such immense importance to an understanding of the
+modern revolutionary movement that, although I have already described it
+in detail in _World Revolution_, it is necessary to devote a further
+chapter to it here in order to answer the objections made against my
+former account of the Order and also to show its connexion with earlier
+secret societies.
+
+Now, the main contentions of those writers who, either consciously or
+unconsciously, attempt to mislead the public on the true nature and real
+existence of Illuminism are:
+
+Firstly, that the case against Illuminism rests solely on the works of
+Robison, and of Barruel and later Catholic authorities.
+
+Secondly, that all these writers misinterpreted or misquoted the
+Illuminati, who should be judged only by their own works.
+
+Thirdly, that in reality the Illuminati were perfectly innocuous and
+even praiseworthy.
+
+Fourthly, that they are of no importance, since they ceased to exist in
+1786.
+
+In the present chapter I propose therefore to answer all these
+contentions in turn and at the same time to make further examination
+into the origins of the Order.
+
+
+
+Origins of the Illuminati
+
+
+That Weishaupt was not the originator of the system he named Illuminism
+will be already apparent to every reader of the present work; it has
+needed, in fact, all the foregoing chapters to trace the source of
+Weishaupt's doctrines throughout the history of the world. From these it
+will be evident that men aiming at the overthrow of the existing social
+order and of all accepted religion had existed from the earliest times,
+and that in the Cainites, the Carpocratians, the Manichaens, the
+Batinis, the Fatimites, and the Karmathites many of Weishaupt's ideas
+had already been foreshadowed. To the Manichaeans, in fact, the word
+"Illuminati" may be traced--"gloriantur Manichaei se de caelo
+illuminatos."[494]
+
+It is in the sect of Abdullah ibn Maymun that we must seek the model
+for Weishaupt's system of organization. Thus de Sacy has described in
+the following words the manner of enlisting proselytes by the Ismailis:
+
+ They proceeded to the admission and initiation of new proselytes
+ only by degrees and with great reserve; for, as the sect had at the
+ same time a political object and ambitions, its interest was above
+ all to have a great number of partisans in all places and in all
+ classes of society. It was necessary therefore to suit themselves
+ to the character, the temperament, and the prejudices of the
+ greater number; what one revealed to some would have revolted
+ others and alienated for ever spirits less bold and consciences
+ more easily alarmed.[495]
+
+This passage exactly describes the methods laid down by Weishaupt for
+his "Insinuating Brothers"--the necessity of proceeding with caution in
+the enlisting of adepts, of not revealing to the novice doctrines that
+might be likely to revolt him, of "speaking sometimes in one way,
+sometimes in another, so that one's real purpose should remain
+impenetrable" to members of the inferior grades.
+
+How did these Oriental methods penetrate to the Bavarian professor?
+According to certain writers, through the Jesuits. The fact that
+Weishaupt had been brought up by this Order has provided the enemies of
+the Jesuits with the argument that they were the secret inspirers of the
+Illuminati. Mr. Gould, indeed, has attributed most of the errors of the
+latter to this source; Weishaupt, he writes, incurred "the implacable
+enmity of the Jesuits, to whose intrigues he was incessantly exposed."[496]
+In reality precisely the opposite was the case, for, as we shall
+see, it was Weishaupt who perpetually intrigued against the Jesuits.
+That Weishaupt did, however, draw to a certain extent on Jesuit methods
+of training is recognized even by Barruel, himself a Jesuit, who,
+quoting Mirabeau, says that Weishaupt "admired above all those laws,
+that _regime_ of the Jesuits, which, under one head, made men dispersed
+over the universe tend towards the same goal; he felt that one could
+imitate their methods whilst holding views diametrically opposed."[497]
+And again, on the evidence of Mirabeau, de Luchet, and von Knigge,
+Barruel says elsewhere: "It is here that Weishaupt appears specially to
+have wished to assimilate the regime of the sect to that of the
+religious orders and, above all, that of the Jesuits, by the total
+abandonment of their own will and judgement which he demands of his
+adepts ..." But Barruel goes on to show "the enormous difference that is
+to be found between religious obedience and Illuminist obedience." In
+every religious order men know that the voice of their conscience and of
+their God is even more to be obeyed than that of their superiors.
+
+ There is not a single one who, in the event that his superiors
+ should order him to do things contrary to the duties of a Christian
+ or of a good man, would not see an exception to be made to the
+ obedience which he has sworn. This exception is often expressed and
+ always clearly announced in all religious institutions; it is above
+ all formal and positively repeated many times in that of the
+ Jesuits. They are ordered to obey their superiors, but it is in the
+ event that they see no sin in obeying, _ubi non cerneretur peccatum
+ (Constitution des Jesuites_, part 3, chapter I, parag. 2, vol. i.,
+ edition de Prague).[498]
+
+Indeed, implicit obedience and the total surrender of one's own will and
+judgement forms the foundation of all military discipline; "theirs not
+to reason why, theirs not to make reply" is everywhere recognized as the
+duty of soldiers. The Jesuits being in a sense a military Order,
+acknowledging a General at their head, are bound by the same obligation.
+Weishaupt's system was something totally different. For whilst all
+soldiers and all Jesuits, when obeying their superiors, are well aware
+of the goal towards which they are tending, Weishaupt's followers were
+enlisted by the most subtle methods of deception and led on towards a
+goal entirely unknown to them. It is this that, as we shall see later,
+constitutes the whole difference between honest and dishonest secret
+societies. The fact is that the accusation of Jesuit intrigue behind
+secret societies has emanated principally from the secret societies
+themselves and would appear to have been a device adopted by them to
+cover their own tracks. No good evidence has ever been brought forward
+in support of their contention. The Jesuits, unlike the Templars and
+the Illuminati, were simply suppressed in 1773 without the formality of
+a trial, and were therefore never given the opportunity to answer the
+charges brought against them, nor, as in the case of these other Orders,
+were their secret statutes--if any such existed--brought to light. The
+only document ever produced in proof of these accusations was the
+"Monita Secreta," long since shown to be a forgery. At any rate, the
+correspondence of the Illuminati provides their best exoneration. The
+Marquis de Luchet, who was no friend of the Jesuits, shows the absurdity
+of confounding their aims with those of either the Freemasons or the
+Illuminati, and describes all three as animated by wholly different
+purposes.[499]
+
+In all these questions it is necessary to seek a motive. I have no
+personal interest in defending the Jesuits, but I ask: what motive could
+the Jesuits have in forming or supporting a conspiracy directed against
+all thrones and altars? It has been answered me that the Jesuits at this
+period cared nothing for thrones and altars, but only for temporal
+power; yet--even accepting this unwarrantable hypothesis--how was this
+power to be exercised except through thrones and altars? Was it not
+through princes and the Church that the Jesuits had been able to bring
+their influence to bear on affairs of state? In an irreligious Republic,
+as events afterwards proved, the power of the whole clergy was bound to
+be destroyed. The truth is then, that, far from abetting the Illuminati,
+the Jesuits were their most formidable opponents, the only body of men
+sufficiently learned, astute, and well organized to outwit the schemes
+of Weishaupt. In suppressing the Jesuits it is possible that the Old
+Regime removed the only barrier capable of resisting the tide of
+revolution.
+
+Weishaupt indeed, as we know, detested the Jesuits,[500] and took from
+them only certain methods of discipline, of ensuring obedience or of
+acquiring influence over the minds of his disciples; his aims were
+entirely different.
+
+Where, then, did Weishaupt find his immediate inspiration? It is here
+that Barruel and Lecouteulx de Canteleu provide a clue not to be
+discovered in other sources. In 1771, they relate, a certain Jutland
+merchant named Kolmer, who had spent many years in Egypt, returned to
+Europe in search of converts to a secret doctrine founded on Manichaeism
+that he had learnt in the East. On his way to France he stopped at
+Malta, where he met Cagliostro and nearly brought about an insurrection
+amongst the people. Kolmer was therefore driven out of the island by the
+Knights of Malta and betook himself to Avignon and Lyons. Here he made a
+few disciples amongst the Illumines and in the same year went on to
+Germany, where he encountered Weishaupt and initiated him into all the
+mysteries of his secret doctrine. According to Barruel, Weishaupt then
+spent five years thinking out his system, which he founded under the
+name of Illuminati on May 1, 1776, and assumed the "illuminated" name of
+"Spartacus."
+
+Kolmer remains the most mysterious of all the mystery men of his day; at
+first sight one is inclined to wonder whether he may not have been
+another of the Cabalistic Jews acting as the secret inspirers of the
+magicians who appeared in the limelight. The name Kolmer might easily
+have been a corruption of the well-known Jewish name Calmer. Lecouteulx
+de Canteleu, however, suggests that Kolmer was identical with Altolas,
+described by Figuier as "this universal genius, almost divine, of whom
+Cagliostro has spoken to us with so much respect and admiration. This
+Altotas was not an imaginary personage. The Inquisition of Rome has
+collected many proofs of his existence without having been able to
+discover when it began or ended, for Altotas disappears, or rather
+vanishes like a meteor, which, according to the poetic fancy of
+romancers, would authorize us in declaring him immortal."[501] It is
+curious to notice that modern occultists, whilst attributing so much
+importance to Saint-Germain and the legend of his immortality, make no
+mention of Altotas, who appears to have been a great deal more
+remarkable. But, again, we must remember: "It is the unvarying rule of
+secret societies that the real authors never show themselves." If, then,
+Kolmer was the same person as Altotas, he would appear not to have been
+a Jew or a Cabalist, but an initiate of some Near Eastern secret
+society--possibly an Ismaili. Lecouteulx de Canteleu describes Altotas
+as an Armenian, and says that his system was derived from those of
+Egypt, Syria, and Persia. This would accord with Barruel's statement
+that Kolmer came from Egypt, and that his ideas were founded on
+Manichaeism.
+
+It would be necessary to set these statements aside as only the
+theories of Barruel or Lecouteulx, were it not that the writings of the
+Illuminati betray the influence of some sect akin to Manichaeism. Thus
+"Spartacus" writes to "Cato" that he is thinking of "warming up the old
+system of the Ghebers and Parsees,"[502] and it will be remembered that
+the Ghebers were one of the sects in which Dozy relates that Abdullah
+ibn Maymun found his true supporters. Later Weishaupt goes on to
+explain that--
+
+ The allegory in which the Mysteries and Higher Grades must be
+ clothed is Fire Worship and the whole philosophy of Zoroaster or of
+ the old Parsees who nowadays only remain in India; therefore in the
+ further degrees the Order is called "Fire Worship" (Feuer-dienst),
+ the "Fire Order," or the "Persian Order"--that is, something
+ magnificent beyond all expectation.[503]
+
+At the same time the Persian calendar was adopted by the
+Illuminati.[504]
+
+It is evident that this pretence of Zoroastrianism was as pure humbug as
+Weishaupt's later pretence of Christianity; of the true doctrines of
+Zoroaster he shows no conception--nor does he insist further on the
+point; but the above passage would certainly lend colour to the theory
+that his system was partly founded on Manichaeism, that is to say, on
+perverted Zoroastrianism, imparted to him by a man from the East, and
+that the methods of the Batinis and Fatimites may have been communicated
+to him through the same channel. Hence the extraordinary resemblance
+between his plan of organization and that of Abdullah ibn Maymun,
+which consisted in political intriguing rather than in esoteric
+speculation. Thus in Weishaupt's system the phraseology of Judaism, the
+Cabalistic legends of Freemasonry, the mystical imaginings of the
+Martinistes, play at first no part at all. For all forms of "theosophy,"
+occultism, spiritualism, and magic Weishaupt expresses nothing but
+contempt, and the Rose-Croix masons are bracketed with the Jesuits by
+the Illuminati as enemies it is necessary to outwit at every turn.[505]
+Consequently no degree of Rose-Croix finds a place in Weishaupt's
+system, as in all the other masonic orders of the day which drew their
+influence from Eastern or Cabalistic sources.
+
+It is true that "Mysteries" play a great part in the phraseology of the
+Order--"Greater and Lesser Mysteries," borrowed from ancient
+Egypt--whilst the higher initiates are decorated with such titles as
+"Epopte" and "Hierophant," taken from the Eleusinian Mysteries. Yet
+Weishaupt's own theories appear to bear no relation whatever to these
+ancient cults. On the contrary, the more we penetrate into his system,
+the more apparent it becomes that all the formulas he employs which
+derive from any religious source--whether Persian, Egyptian, or
+Christian--merely serve to disguise a purely material purpose, a plan
+for destroying the existing order of society. Thus all that was really
+ancient in Illuminism was the destructive spirit that animated it and
+also the method of organization it had imported from the East.
+Illuminism therefore marks an entirely new departure in the history of
+European secret societies. Weishaupt himself indicates this as one of
+the great secrets of the Order. "Above all," he writes to "Cato" (alias
+Zwack), "guard the origin and the novelty of (*) in the most careful
+way."[506] "The greatest mystery," he says again, "must be that the
+thing is new; the fewer who know this the better.... Not one of the
+Eichstadters knows this but would live or die for it that the thing is
+as old as Methuselah."[507]
+
+This pretence of having discovered some fund of ancient wisdom is the
+invariable ruse of secret society adepts; the one thing never admitted
+is the identity of the individuals from whom one is receiving direction.
+Weishaupt himself declares that he has got it all out of books by means
+of arduous and unremitting labour. "What it costs me to read, study,
+think, write, cross out, and re-write!" he complains to Marius and
+Cato.[508] Thus, according to Weishaupt the whole system is the work of
+his own unaided genius, and the supreme direction remains in his hands
+alone. Again and again he insists on this point in his correspondence.
+
+If this were indeed the case, Weishaupt--in view of the efficiency
+achieved by the Order--must have been a genius of the first water, and
+it is difficult to understand why so remarkable a man should not have
+distinguished himself on other lines, but have remained almost unknown
+to posterity. It would therefore appear possible that Weishaupt,
+although undoubtedly a man of immense organizing capacity and endowed
+with extraofdinary subtlety, was not in reality the sole author of
+Illuminism, but one of a group, which, recognizing his talents and the
+value of his untiring activity, placed the direction in his hands. Let
+us examine this hypothesis in the light of a document which was unknown
+to me when I wrote my former account of the Illuminati.
+
+Barruel has pointed out that the great error of Robison was to describe
+Illuminism as arising out of Freemasonry, since Weishaupt did not become
+a Freemason until after he had founded his Order. It is true that
+Weishaupt was not officially received into Freemasonry until 1777, when
+he was initiated into the first degree at the Lodge "Theodore de Bon
+Conseil," at Munich. From this time we find him continually occupied in
+trying to discover more about the secrets of Freemasonry, whilst himself
+claiming superior knowledge.
+
+But at the same time it is by no means certain that an inner circle of
+the Lodge Theodore may not have been first in the field and Weishaupt
+all the while an unconscious agent. A very curious light is thrown on
+this question by the _Memoires_ of Mirabeau.
+
+Now, in _The French Revolution_ and again in _World Revolution_ I quoted
+the generally received opinion that Mirabeau, who was already a
+Freemason, was received into the Order of the Illuminati during his
+visit to Berlin in 1786. To this Mr. Waite replied: "All that is said
+about Mirabeau, his visit to Berlin, and his plot to 'illuminize' French
+Freemasonry, may be disposed of in one sentence: there is no evidence to
+show that Mirabeau ever became a Mason. The province of Barruel was to
+colour everything...."[509] Mr. Waite's statement may also be disposed
+of in one sentence: it is a pure invention. The province of Mr. Waite is
+to deny everything inconvenient to him. The evidence that Mirabeau was a
+Freemason does not rest on Barruel alone. M. Barthou, in his Life of
+Mirabeau, refers to it as a matter of common knowledge, and relates that
+a paper was found at Mirabeau's house describing a new Order to be
+grafted on Freemasonry. This document will be found in its entirety in
+the _Memoires_ of Mirabeau, where it is stated that:
+
+ Mirabeau had early entered an association of Freemasonry. This
+ affiliation had accredited him to a Dutch lodge, and it seems that,
+ either spontaneously or in response to a request, he thought of
+ proposing an organization of which we possess the plan, written not
+ by his hand.... but by the hand of a copyist whom Mirabeau had
+ attached to himself.... This work appears to have been that of
+ Mirabeau; all his opinions, his principles, and his style will be
+ found here.[510]
+
+The same work goes on to print the document in full, which is headed:
+"Memoir concerning an intimate association to be established in the
+Order of Freemasonry so as to bring it back to its true principles and
+to make it really tend to the good of humanity, drawn up by the F.
+Mi----, at present named Arcesilas, in 1776."
+
+As this Memoir is too long to reproduce in full here, M. Barthou's
+_resume_ will serve to give an idea of its contents[511]:
+
+ He [Mirabeau] was a Freemason from his youth. There was found
+ amongst his papers, written by the hand of a copyist, an
+ international organization of Freemasonry, which no doubt he
+ dictated in Amsterdam. This project contains on the solidarity of
+ men, on the benefits of instruction, and on the "correction of the
+ system of governments and of legislations" views very superior to
+ those of "The Essay on Despotism" (1772). The mind of Mirabeau had
+ ripened. The duties he traces out for the "brothers of the higher
+ grade" constitute even a whole plan of reforms which resemble very
+ much in certain parts the work accomplished later by the
+ Constituent [Assembly]: suppression of servitudes on the land and
+ the rights of main morte, abolition of the corvees, of working
+ guilds and of maitrises [freedom of companies], of customs and
+ excise duties, the diminution of taxation, liberty of religious
+ opinions and of the press, the disappearance of special
+ jurisdiction. In order to organize, to develop and arrive at his
+ end, Mirabeau invokes the example of the Jesuits: "We have quite
+ contrary views," he says, "that of enlightening men, of making them
+ free and happy, but we must and we can do this by the same means,
+ and who should prevent us doing for good what the Jesuits have done
+ for evil?"[512]
+
+Now in this Memoir Mirabeau makes no mention of Weishaupt, but in his
+_Histoire de la Monarchic Prussienne_ he gives a eulogistic account of
+the Bavarian Illuminati, referring to Weishaupt by name, and showing the
+Order to have arisen out of Freemasonry. It will be seen that this
+account corresponds point by point with the Memoir he had himself made
+out in 1776, that is to say, in the very year that Illuminism was
+founded:
+
+ The Lodge Theodore de Bon Conseil at Munich, where there were a few
+ men with brains and hearts, was tired of being tossed about by the
+ vain promises and quarrels of Masonry. The heads resolved to graft
+ on to their branch another secret association to which they gave
+ the name of the Order of the Illumines. They modelled it on the
+ Society of Jesus, whilst proposing to themselves views
+ diametrically opposed.
+
+Mirabeau then goes on to say that the great object of the Order was the
+amelioration of the present system of government and legislation, that
+one of its fundamental rules was to admit "no prince whatever his
+virtues,"[513] that it proposed to abolish--
+
+ The slavery of the peasants, the servitude of men to the soil, the
+ rights of main morte and all the customs and privileges which abase
+ humanity, the corvees under the condition of an equitable
+ equivalent, all the corporations, all the maitrises, all the
+ burdens imposed on industry and commerce by customs, excise duties,
+ and taxes ... to procure a universal toleration for all religious
+ opinions ... to take away all the arms of superstition, to favour
+ the liberty of the press, etc.[514]
+
+From all this we see then that Mirabeau did not become an Illuminatus in
+1786 as I had supposed before this document was known to me, but had
+been in the Order from the beginning apparently as one of its founders,
+first under the "Illuminated" name of Arcesilas and later under that of
+Leonidas. The Memoir found at his house was thus no other than the
+programme of the Illuminati evolved by him in collaboration with an
+inner ring of Freemasons belonging to the Lodge Theodore. The
+correspondence of the Illuminati in fact contains several references to
+an inner ring under the name of "the secret chapter of the Lodge of St.
+Theodore," which, after his initiation into Masonry, Weishaupt indicates
+the necessity of bringing entirely under the control of Illuminism. It
+is probable that Weishaupt was in touch with this secret chapter before
+his formal admission to the lodge.
+
+Whether, then, the ideas of Illuminism arose in this secret, chapter of
+the Lodge Theodore independently of Weishaupt, or whether they were
+imparted by Weishaupt to the Lodge Theodore after the directions had
+been given him by Kolmer, it is impossible to know; but in either case
+there would be some justification for Robison's assertion that
+Illuminism arose out of Freemasonry, or rather that it took birth
+amongst a group of Freemasons whose aims were not those of the Order in
+general.
+
+What were these aims? A plan of social and political "reform" which, as
+M. Barthou points out, much resembled the work accomplished later by the
+Constituent Assembly in France. This admission is of great importance;
+in other words, the programme carried out by the Constituent Assembly in
+1789 had been largely formulated in a lodge of German Freemasons who
+formed the nucleus of the Illuminati, in 1776. And yet we are told that
+Illuminism had no influence on the French Revolution!
+
+It will be objected that the reforms here indicated were wholly
+admirable. True, the abolition of the _corvee_, of _main morte_, and of
+servitudes were measures that met with the approval of all right-minded
+men, including the King of France himself. But what of the abolition of
+the "working guilds" and "all the corporations," that is to say, the
+"trade unions" of the period, which was carried out by the infamous Loi
+Chapelier in 1791, a decree that is now generally recognized as one of
+the strangest anomalies of the Revolution? Again, to whose interest was
+it to do away with the customs and excise duties of France? To establish
+the absolute and unfettered liberty of the press and religious opinions?
+The benefits these measures might be expected to confer on the French
+people were certainly problematical, but there could be no doubt of
+their utility to men who, like Frederick the Great, wished to ruin
+France and to break the Franco-Austrian alliance by the unrestricted
+circulation of libels against Marie Antoinette, who, like Mirabeau,
+hoped to bring about a revolution, or who, like Voltaire, wished to
+remove all obstacles to the spread of an anti-Christian propaganda.
+
+It is therefore by no means impossible that Weishaupt was at first the
+agent of more experienced conspirators, whose purely political aims were
+disguised under a plan of social reform, and who saw in the Bavarian
+professor a clever organizer to be employed in carrying out their
+designs.
+
+Whether this was so or not, the fact remains that from the time
+Weishaupt assumed control of the Order the plan of "social reform"
+described by Mirabeau vanishes entirely, for not a word do we find in
+the writings of the Illuminati about any pretended scheme for
+ameliorating the lot of the people, and Illuminism becomes simply a
+scheme of anarchic philosophy. The French historian Henri Martin has
+thus admirably summed up the system elaborated by "Spartacus":
+
+ Weishaupt had made into an absolute theory the misanthropic gibes
+ _[boutades]_ of Rousseau at the invention of property and society,
+ and without taking into account the statement so distinctly
+ formulated by Rousseau on the impossibility of suppressing property
+ and society once they had been established, he proposed as the end
+ of Illuminism the abolition of property, social authority, of
+ nationality, and the return of the human race to the happy state in
+ which it formed only a single family without artificial needs,
+ without useless sciences, every father being priest and magistrate.
+ Priest of we know not what religion, for in spite of their frequent
+ invocations of the God of Nature, many indications lead us to
+ conclude that Weishaupt had, like Diderot and d'Holbach, no other
+ God than Nature herself. From his doctrine would naturally follow
+ the German ultra-Hegelianism and the system of anarchy recently
+ developed in France, of which the physiognomy suggests a foreign
+ origin.[515]
+
+This summary of the aims of the Illuminati, which absolutely
+corroborates the view of Barruel and Robison, is confirmed in detail by
+the Socialist Freethinker of the nineteenth century Louis Blanc, who in
+his remarkable chapter on the "Revolutionnaires Mystiques" refers to
+Weishaupt as "One of the profoundest conspirators who have ever
+existed."[516] George Sand also, Socialist and _intime_ of the
+Freemasons, wrote of "the European conspiracy of Illuminism" and the
+immense influence exercised by the secret societies of "mystic Germany."
+To say, then, that Barruel and Robison were alone in proclaiming the
+danger of Illuminism is simply a deliberate perversion of the truth, and
+it is difficult to understand why English Freemasons should have allowed
+themselves to be misled on this question.
+
+Thus the _Masonic Cyclopaedia_ observes that the Illuminati "were, as a
+rule, men of the strictest morality and humanity, and the ideas they
+sought to instil were those which have found universal acceptance in our
+own times." Preston, in his _Illustrations of Masonry_, also does his
+best to gloss over the faults of the Order, and even "the historian of
+Freemasonry" devotes to its founder this astounding apology. After
+describing Weishaupt as the victim of Jesuit intrigue, Mr. Gould goes on
+to say:
+
+ He conceived the idea of combating his foes with their own
+ weapons, and forming a society of young men, enthusiastic in the
+ cause of humanity, who should gradually be trained to work as one
+ man to one end--the destruction of evil and the enhancement of good
+ in this world. Unfortunately he had unconsciously imbibed that most
+ pernicious doctrine that the end justifies the means, and his whole
+ plan reveals the effects of his youthful teaching.... The man
+ himself was without guile, ignorant of men, knowing them only by
+ books, a learned professor, an enthusiast who took a wrong course
+ in all innocence, and the faults of his head have been heavily
+ visited upon his memory in spite of the rare qualities of his
+ heart.[517]
+
+One can only conclude that these extraordinary exonerations of an Order
+bitterly hostile to the true aims of Masonry proceed from ignorance of
+the real nature of Illuminism. In order to judge of this it is only
+necessary to consult the writings of the Illuminati themselves, which
+are contained in the following works:
+
+1. _Einige Originalschriften des Illuminatenordens_ (Munich, 1787).
+
+2. _Nachtrag von weitern Originalschriften, etc._ (Munich, 1787).
+
+3. _Die neuesten Arbeiten des Spartacus und Philo in dem
+Illuminaten-Orden_ (Munich, 1794).
+
+All these consist in the correspondence and papers of the Order which
+were seized by the Bavarian Government at the houses of two of the
+members, Zwack and Bassus, and published by order of the Elector. The
+authenticity of these documents has never been denied even by the
+Illuminati themselves; Weishaupt, in his published defence, endeavoured
+only to explain away the most incriminating passages. The publishers,
+moreover, were careful to state at the beginning of the first volume:
+"Those who might have any doubts on the authenticity of this collection
+may present themselves at the Secret Archives here, where, on request,
+the original documents will be laid before them." This precaution
+rendered all dispute impossible.
+
+Setting Barruel and Robison entirely aside, we shall now see from the
+evidence of their own writings, how far the Illuminati can be regarded
+as a praiseworthy and cruelly maligned Order. Let us begin with their
+attitude towards Freemasonry.
+
+
+
+Illuminism and Freemasonry
+
+
+From the moment of Weishaupt's admission into Freemasonry his whole
+conduct was a violation of the Masonic code. Instead of proceeding after
+the recognized manner by successive stages of initiation, he set himself
+to find out further secrets by underhand methods and then to turn them
+to the advantage of his own system. Thus about a year after his
+initiation he writes to Cato (alias Zwack): "I have succeeded in
+obtaining a profound glimpse into the secret of the Freemasons. I know
+their whole aim and shall impart it all at the right time in one of the
+higher degrees."[518]
+
+Cato is then deputed to make further discoveries through an Italian
+Freemason, the Abbe Marotti, which he records triumphantly in his diary:
+
+ Interview with the Abbe Marotti on the question of Masonry, when he
+ explained to me the whole secret, which is founded on old religion
+ and Church history, and imparted to me all the higher degrees up to
+ the Scottish. Informed Spartacus of this.[519]
+
+Spartacus, however, unimpressed by this communication, replied drily:
+
+ Whether you know the aim of Masonry I doubt. I have myself included
+ an insight into this structure in my plan, but reserved it for
+ later degrees.[520]
+
+Weishaupt then decides that all illuminated "Areopagites" shall take the
+first three degrees of Freemasonry[521]; but further:
+
+ That we shall have a masonic lodge of our own. That we shall regard
+ this as our nursery garden. That to some of these Masons we shall
+ not at once reveal that we have something more than the Masons
+ have. That at every opportunity we shall cover ourselves with this
+ [Masonry].... All those who are not suited to the work shall remain
+ in the masonic Lodge and advance in that without knowing anything
+ of the further system.[522]
+
+We shall find this plan of an inner secret circle concealed within
+Freemasonry persisting up to our own day.
+
+Weishaupt, however, admits himself puzzled with regard to the past of
+Masonry, and urges "Porcius" to find out more on this question from the
+Abbe Marotti:
+
+ See whether through him you can discover the real history, origin,
+ and the first founders of Masonry, for on this alone I am still
+ undecided.[523]
+
+But it is in "Philo," the Baron von Knigge, a Freemason and member of
+the Stride Observance, in which he was known as the Eques a Cygno, that
+Weishaupt finds his most efficient investigator. Thus "Philo" writes to
+"Spartacus":
+
+ I have now found in Cassel the best man, on whom I cannot
+ congratulate ourselves enough: he is Mauvillon, Grand Master of one
+ of the Royal York Lodges. So with him we have the whole lodge in
+ our hands. He has also got from there all their miserable degrees
+ [_Er hat auch von dort aus alle ihre elenden Grade_].[524]
+
+No wonder that Weishaupt thereupon exclaims joyfully: "Philo does more
+than we all expected, and he is the man who alone will carry it all
+through."[525] Weishaupt then occupies himself in trying to get a
+"Constitution" from London, evidently without success, and also in
+wresting the Lodge Theodore in Munich from the control of Berlin in
+order to substitute his own domination, so that "the whole secret
+chapter will be subjected to our (*), leave everything to it, and await
+further degrees from it alone."[526]
+
+In all this Weishaupt shows himself not only an intriguer but a
+charlatan, inventing mysteries and degrees to impose on the credulity of
+his followers. "The mysteries, or so-called secret truths, are the
+finest of all," he writes to "Philipo Strozzi," "and give me much
+trouble."[527] So whilst heartily despising Freemasonry, theosophy,
+Rosicrucianism, and mysticism of every kind, his association with Philo
+leads him to perceive the utility of all these as a bait, and he allows
+Philo to draw up plans for a degree of Scottish Knight. But the result
+is pitiable, Philo's composition, a "semi-theosophical discourse and
+explanation of hieroglyphics" is characterized by Weishaupt as gibberish
+(_kauderwelsche_).[528]
+
+ Philo [he says again] is full of such follies, which betray his
+ small mind.... On the Illuminatus Major follows the miserable
+ degree of Scottish Knight entirely of his composition, and on the
+ degree of Priest an equally miserable degree of Regent, ... but I
+ have already composed four more degrees compared to the worst of
+ which the Priest's degree will be child's play, but I shall tell no
+ one about it till I see how the thing goes....[529]
+
+The perfidy of the Illuminati with regard to the Freemasons is therefore
+apparent. Even Mounier, who set out to refute Barruel on the strength of
+the information supplied to him by the Illuminatus Bode, admits their
+duplicity in this respect.
+
+ Weishaupt [says Mounier] made the acquaintance of a Hanoverian, the
+ Baron von Knigge, a famous intriguer, long practised in the
+ charlatanism of lodges of Freemasons. On his advice new degrees
+ were added to the old ones, and it was resolved to profit by
+ Freemasonry whilst profoundly despising it. They decided that the
+ degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft, Master Mason, and
+ Scotch Knight should be added to those of the Illuminati, and that
+ they would boast of possessing exclusively the real secrets of the
+ Freemasons and affirm that Illuminism was the real primitive
+ Freemasonry.
+
+"The papers of the Order seized in Bavaria and published," Mounier says
+again, show that "the Illuminati employed the forms of Freemasonry, but
+that they considered it in itself, apart from their own degrees, as a
+puerile absurdity and that they detested the Rose-Croix." Mounier, as a
+good disciple of Bode, takes much the same view and pities the _naivete_
+of the Freemasons, who, "like so many children, spend a great part of
+the time in their lodges playing at chapel."
+
+Why in the face of all this should any British Masons take up the
+cudgels for the Illuminati and vilify Robison and Barruel for exposing
+them? The American Mackey, as a consistent Freemason, shows scant
+sympathy for this traitor in the masonic camp. "Weishaupt," he writes,
+"was a radical in politics and an infidel in religion, and he organized
+this association, not more for the purpose of aggrandizing himself, than
+of overturning Christianity and the institutions of society." And in a
+footnote he adds that Robison's _Proofs of a Conspiracy_ "contain a very
+excellent exposition of the nature of this pseudo-masonic
+institution."[530]
+
+The truth is that Weishaupt was one of the greatest enemies of British
+Freemasonry who ever lived, and genuine Freemasons will do themselves no
+good by defending him or his abominable system.
+
+Let us now see how far, apart from their role in Masonry, the Illuminati
+can be regarded as noble idealists striving for the welfare of the human
+race.
+
+
+
+Idealism of the Illuminati
+
+
+The line of defence adopted by the apologists of the Illuminati is
+always to quote the admirable principles professed by the Order, the
+"beautiful ideas" that run through their writings, and to show what
+excellent people were to be found amongst them.
+
+Of course on their face value the Illuminati appear wholly admirable, of
+course there is nothing easier than to find innumerable passages in
+their writings breathing a spirit of the loftiest aspiration, and of
+course many excellent men figured amongst the patrons of the Order. All
+this is the mere stock-in-trade of the secret society leader as of the
+fraudulent company promoter, to whom the first essentials are a glowing
+prospectus and a long list of highly respectable patrons who know
+nothing whatever about the inner workings of the concern. These methods,
+pursued as early as the ninth century by Abdullah ibn Maymun, enter
+largely into the policy of Frederick the Great, Voltaire, and his
+"brothers" in philosophy--or in Freemasonry.
+
+The resemblances between Weishaupt's correspondence and that of Voltaire
+and of Frederick the Great are certainly very striking. All at moments
+profess respect for Christianity whilst working to destroy it. Thus just
+as Voltaire in one letter to d'Alembert expresses his horror at the
+publication of an anti-Christian pamphlet, _Le Testament de Jean
+Meslier,[531]_ and in another urges him to have it circulated in
+thousands all over France,[532] so Weishaupt is careful in general to
+exhibit the face of a benign philosopher and even of a Christian
+evangelist; it is only at moments that he drops the mask and reveals the
+grinning satyr behind it.
+
+Accordingly in the published statutes of the Illuminati no hint of
+subversive intentions will be found; indeed the "Obligation" expressly
+states that "nothing against the State, religion, or morals is
+undertaken."
+
+Yet what is Weishaupt's real political theory? No other than that of
+modern Anarchy, that man should govern himself and rulers should be
+gradually done away with. But he is careful to deprecate all ideas of
+violent revolution--the process is to be accomplished by the most
+peaceful methods. Let us see how gently he leads up to the final
+conclusion:
+
+ The first stage in the life of the whole human race is savagery,
+ rough nature, in which the family is the only society, and hunger
+ and thirst are easily satisfied, ... in which man enjoys the two
+ most excellent goods, Equality and Liberty, to their fullest
+ extent.... In these circumstances ... health was his usual
+ condition.... Happy men, who were not yet enough enlightened to
+ lose their peace of mind and to be conscious of the unhappy
+ mainsprings and causes of our misery, love of power ... envy ...
+ illnesses and all the results of imagination.
+
+The manner in which man fell from this primitive state of felicity is
+then described:
+
+ As families increased, means of subsistence began to lack, the
+ nomadic life ceased, property was instituted, men established
+ themselves firmly, and through agriculture families drew near each
+ other, thereby language developed and through living together men
+ began to measure themselves against each other, etc.... But here
+ was the cause of the downfall of freedom; equality vanished. Man
+ felt new unknown needs....[533]
+
+Thus men became dependent like minors under the guardianship of kings;
+the human must attain its majority and become self-governing:
+
+ Why should it be impossible that the human race should attain to
+ its highest perfection, the capacity to guide itself? Why should
+ anyone be eternally led who understands how to lead himself?[534]
+
+Further, men must learn not only to be independent of kings but of each
+other:
+
+ Who has need of another depends on him and has resigned his rights.
+ So to need little is the first step to freedom; therefore savages
+ and the most highly enlightened are perhaps the only free men. The
+ art of more and more limiting one's needs is at the same time the
+ art of attaining freedom....[535]
+
+Weishaupt then goes on to show how the further evil of Patriotism arose:
+
+ With the origin of nations and peoples the world ceased to be a
+ great family, a single kingdom: the great tie of nature was
+ torn.... Nationalism took the place of human love.... Now it became
+ a virtue to magnify one's fatherland at the expense of whoever was
+ not enclosed within its limits, now as a means to this narrow end
+ it was allowed to despise and outwit foreigners or indeed even to
+ insult them. This virtue was called Patriotism....[536]
+
+And so by narrowing down affection to one's fellow-citizens, the members
+of one's family, and even to oneself:
+
+ There arose out of Patriotism, Localism, the family spirit, and
+ finally Egoism.... Diminish Patriotism, then men will learn to know
+ each other again as such, their dependence on each other will be
+ lost, the bond of union will widen out....[537]
+
+It will be seen that the whole of Weishaupt's theory was in reality a
+new rendering of the ancient secret tradition relating to the fall of
+man and the loss of his primitive felicity; but whilst the ancient
+religions taught the hope of a Redeemer who should restore man to his
+former state, Weishaupt looks to man alone for his restoration. "Men,"
+he observes, "no longer loved men but only such and such men. The word
+was quite lost...."[538] Thus in Weishaupt's masonic system the "lost
+word" is "Man," and its recovery is interpreted by the idea that Man
+should find himself again. Further on Weishaupt goes on to show how "the
+redemption of the human race is to be brought about".
+
+ These means are secret schools of wisdom, these were from all time
+ the archives of Nature and of human rights, through them will Man
+ be saved from his Fall, princes and nations will disappear without
+ violence from the earth, the human race will become one family and
+ the world the abode of reasonable men. Morality alone will bring
+ about this change imperceptibly. Every father of a family will be,
+ as formerly Abraham and the patriarchs, the priest and unfettered
+ lord of his family, and Reason will be the only code of Man. This
+ is one of our greatest secrets....[539]
+
+But whilst completely eliminating any idea of divine power outside Man
+and framing his system on purely political lines, Weishaupt is careful
+not to shock the susceptibilities of his followers by any open
+repudiation of Christian doctrines; on the contrary, he invokes Christ
+at every turn and sometimes even in language so apparently earnest and
+even beautiful that one is almost tempted to believe in his sincerity.
+Thus he writes:
+
+ This our great and unforgettable Master, Jesus of Nazareth,
+ appeared at a time in the world when it was sunk in depravity....
+ The first followers of His teaching are not wise men but simple,
+ chosen from the lowest class of the people, so as to show that His
+ teaching should be possible and comprehensible to all classes and
+ conditions of men.... He carries out this teaching by means of the
+ most blameless life in conformity with it, and seals and confirms
+ this with His blood and death. These laws which He shows as the way
+ to salvation are only two: love of God and love of one's neighbour;
+ more He asks of no one.[540]
+
+So far no Lutheran pastor could have expressed himself better. But one
+must study Weishaupt's writings as a whole to apprehend the true measure
+of his belief in Christ's teaching.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, as we have already seen, his first idea was to make Fire Worship
+the religion of Illuminism; the profession of Christianity therefore
+appears to have been an after-thought. Evidently Weishaupt discovered,
+as others have done, that Christianity lends itself more readily to
+subversive ideas than any other religion. And in the passages which
+follow we find him adopting the old ruse of representing Christ as a
+Communist and as a secret-society adept. Thus he goes on to explain that
+"if Jesus preaches contempt of riches, He wishes to teach us the
+reasonable use of them and prepare for the community of goods introduced
+by Him,"[541] and in which, Weishaupt adds later, He lived with His
+disciples.[542] But this secret doctrine is only to be apprehended by
+initiates:
+
+ No one ... has so cleverly concealed the high meaning of His
+ teaching, and no one finally has so surely and easily directed men
+ on to the path of freedom as our great master Jesus of Nazareth.
+ This secret meaning and natural consequence of His teaching He hid
+ completely, for Jesus had a secret doctrine, as we see in more than
+ one place of the Scriptures.[543]
+
+Weishaupt thus contrives to give a purely political interpretation to
+Christ's teaching:
+
+ The secret preserved through the Disciplinam Arcani, and the aim
+ appearing through all His words and deeds, is to give back to men
+ their original liberty and equality.... Now one can understand how
+ far Jesus was the Redeemer and Saviour of the world.[544]
+
+The mission of Christ was therefore by means of Reason to make men
+capable of freedom[545]: "When at last reason becomes the religion of
+man, so will the problem be solved."[546]
+
+Weishaupt goes on to show that Freemasonry can be interpreted in the
+same manner. The secret doctrine concealed in the teaching of Christ was
+handed down by initiates who "hid themselves and their doctrine under
+the cover of Freemasonry,"[547] and in a long explanation of Masonic
+hieroglyphics he indicates the analogies between the Hiramic legend and
+the story of Christ. "I say then Hiram is Christ," and after giving one
+of his reasons for this assertion, adds: "Here then is much ground
+gained, although I myself cannot help laughing at this explanation
+[_obwohl ich selbst uber diese Explication im Grund lachen muss_]."[548]
+Weishaupt then proceeds to give further interpretations of his own
+devising to the masonic ritual, including an imaginary translation of
+certain words supposed to be derived from Hebrew, and ends up by saying:
+"One will be able to show several more resemblances between Hiram and
+the life and death of Christ, or drag them in by the hair."[549] So much
+for Weishaupt's respect for the Grand Legend of Freemasonry!
+
+In this manner Weishaupt demonstrates that "Freemasonry is hidden
+Christianity, at least my explanations of the hieroglyphics fit this
+perfectly; and in the way in which I explain Christianity no one need be
+ashamed to be a Christian, for I leave the name and substitute for it
+Reason."[550]
+
+But this is of course only the secret of what Weishaupt calls "real
+Freemasonry"[551] in contradistinction to the official kind, which he
+regards as totally unenlightened: "Had not the noble and elect remained
+in the background ... new depravity would have broken out in the human
+race, and through Regents, Priests, and Freemasons Reason would have
+been banished from the earth."[552]
+
+In Weishaupt's masonic system, therefore, the designs of the Order with
+regard to religion are not confided to the mere Freemasons, but only to
+the Illuminati. Under the heading of "Higher Mysteries" Weishaupt
+writes:
+
+ The man who is good for nothing better remains a Scottish Knight.
+ If he is, however, a particularly industrious co-ordinator
+ [_Sammler_], observer, worker, he becomes a Priest.... If there are
+ amongst these [Priests] high speculative intellects, they become
+ Magi. These collect and put in order the higher philosophical
+ system and work at the People's Religion, which the Order will
+ next give to the world. Should these high geniuses also be fit to
+ rule the world, they become Regents. This is the last degree.[553]
+
+Philo (the Baron von Knigge) also throws an interesting light on the
+religious designs of the Illuminati. In a letter to Cato he explains the
+necessity of devising a system that will satisfy fanatics and
+freethinkers alike: "So as to work on both these classes of men and
+unite them, we must find an explanation to the Christian religion ...
+make this the secret of Freemasonry and turn it to our purpose."[554]
+Philo continues:
+
+ We say then: Jesus wished to introduce no new religion, but only to
+ restore natural religion and reason to their old rights. Thereby he
+ wished to unite men in a great universal association, and through
+ the spread of a wiser morality, enlightenment, and the combating of
+ all prejudices to make them capable of governing themselves; so the
+ secret meaning of his teaching was to lead men without revolution
+ to universal liberty and equality. There are many passages in the
+ Bible which can be made use of and explained, and so all
+ quarrelling between the sects ceases if one can find a reasonable
+ meaning in the teaching of Jesus--be it true or not. As, however,
+ this simple religion was afterwards distorted, so were these
+ teachings imparted to us through Disciplinam Arcani and finally
+ through Freemasonry, and all masonic hieroglyphics can be explained
+ with this object. Spartacus has collected very good data for this
+ and I have myself added to them, ... and so I have got both degrees
+ ready....
+
+ Now therefore that people see that we are the only real and true
+ Christians, we can say a word more against priests and princes, but
+ I have so managed that after previous tests I can receive pontiffs
+ and kings in this degree. In the higher Mysteries we must then
+ (_a_) disclose the pious fraud and (_b_) reveal from all writings
+ the origin of all religious lies and their connexion....[555]
+
+So admirably did this ruse succeed that we find Spartacus writing
+triumphantly:
+
+ You cannot imagine what consideration and sensation our Priest's
+ degree is arousing. The most wonderful thing is that great
+ Protestant and reformed theologians who belong to (*) [Illuminism]
+ still believe that the religious teaching imparted in it contains
+ the true and genuine spirit of the Christian religion. Oh! men, of
+ what cannot you be persuaded? I never thought that I should become
+ the founder of a new religion.[556]
+
+It is on the "illuminized" clergy and professors that Weishaupt counts
+principally for the work of the Order.
+
+ Through the influence of the Brothers [he writes], the Jesuits have
+ been removed from all professorships, and the University of
+ Ingoldstadt has been quite cleansed of them....[557]
+
+Thus the way is cleared for Weishaupt's adepts.
+
+The Institute of Cadets also comes under the control of the Order:
+
+ All the professors are members of the Illuminati, ... so will all
+ the pupils become disciples of Illuminism.[558]
+
+Further:
+
+ We have provided our clerical members with good benefices,
+ parishes, posts at Court.
+
+ Through our influence Arminius and Cortez have been made professors
+ at Ephesus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The German schools are quite under [the influence of] (*) and now
+ only members have charge of them.
+
+ The charitable association is also directed by (*).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Soon we shall draw over to us the whole Bartholomew Institute for
+ young clergymen; the preparations have already been made and the
+ prospects are very good, by this means we shall be able to provide
+ the whole of Bavaria with proper priests.[559]
+
+But religion and Freemasonry are not the only means by which Illuminism
+can be spread.
+
+ We must consider [says Weishaupt], how we can begin to work under
+ another form. If only the aim is achieved, it does not matter under
+ what cover it takes place, and a cover is always necessary. For in
+ concealment lies a great part of our strength. For this reason we
+ must always cover ourselves with the name of another society. The
+ lodges that are under Freemasonry are in the meantime the most
+ suitable cloak for our high purpose, because the world is already
+ accustomed to expect nothing great from them which merits
+ attention.... As in the spiritual Orders of the Roman Church,
+ religion was, alas! only a pretence, so must our Order also in a
+ nobler way try to conceal itself behind a learned society or
+ something of the kind.... A society concealed in this manner cannot
+ be worked against. In case of a prosecution or of treason the
+ superiors cannot be discovered.... We shall be shrouded in
+ impenetrable darkness from spies and emissaries of other
+ societies.[560]
+
+In order to give a good appearance to the Order, Weishaupt particularly
+indicates the necessity for enlisting esteemed and "respectable"
+persons,[561] but above all young men whom he regards as the most likely
+subjects. "I cannot use men as they are," he observes, "but I must first
+form them."[562] Youth naturally lends itself best to this process.
+"Seek the society of young people," Weishaupt writes to Ajax, "watch
+them, and if one of them pleases you, lay your hand on him."[563] "Seek
+out young and already skilful people.... Our people must be engaging,
+enterprising, intriguing, and adroit. Above all the first."[564]
+
+If possible they should also be good-looking--"beautiful people,
+_caeteris paribus_...."
+
+ Such people have generally gentle manners, a tender heart, and are,
+ when well practised in other things, of the greatest use in
+ undertakings, for their first glance attracts; but their spirit
+ _n'a pas la profondeur des physiognomies sombres_. They are,
+ however, also less disposed to riots and disturbances than the
+ darker physiognomies. That is why one must know how to use one's
+ people. Above all, the high, soulful eye pleases me and the free,
+ open brow.[565]
+
+With these novices the adept of Illuminism is to proceed slowly, talking
+backwards and forwards:
+
+ One must speak, first in one way, then in another, so as not to
+ commit oneself and to make one's real way of thinking impenetrable
+ to one's inferiors.[566]
+
+Weishaupt also insists on the importance of exciting the candidate's
+curiosity and then drawing back again, after the manner of the Fatimite
+_dais_:
+
+ I have no fault to find with your [methods of] reception
+ ["Spartacus" writes to "Cato"], except that they are too quick....
+ You should proceed gradually in a roundabout way by means of
+ suspense and expectations, so as first to arouse indefinite, vague
+ curiosity, and then when the candidate declares himself, present
+ the object, which he will then seize with both hands.[567]
+
+By this means his vanity will also be flattered, because one will arouse
+the pleasure of "knowing something which everyone does not know, and
+about which the greater part of the world is groping in darkness."[568]
+
+For the same reason the candidate must be impressed with the importance
+of secret societies and the part they have played in the destinies of
+the world:
+
+ One illustrates this by the Order of the Jesuits, of the
+ Freemasons, by the secret associations of the ancients, one asserts
+ that all events in the world occur from a hundred secret springs
+ and causes, to which secret associations above all belong; one
+ arouses the pleasure of quiet, hidden power and of insight into
+ hidden secrets.[569]
+
+At this point one is to begin to "show glimpses and to let fall here and
+there remarks that may be interpreted in two ways," so as to bring the
+candidate to the point of saying: "If I had the chance to enter such an
+association, I would go into it at once." "These discourses," says
+Weishaupt, "are to be often repeated."[570]
+
+In the discourse of reception to the "Illuminatus Dirigens," the appeal
+to love of power plays the most important part:
+
+ Do you realize sufficiently what it means to rule--to rule in a
+ secret Society? Not only over the lesser or more important of the
+ populace, but over the best men, over men of all ranks, nations,
+ and religions, to rule without external force, to unite them
+ indissolubly, to breathe one spirit and soul into them, men
+ distributed over all parts of the world?...[571]
+
+ And finally, do you know what secret societies are? what a place
+ they occupy in the great kingdom of the world's events? Do you
+ really think they are unimportant, transitory appearances?[572]
+ etc.
+
+But the admission of political aims is reserved only for the higher
+grades of the Order. "With the beginner," says Weishaupt, "we must be
+careful about books on religion and the State. I have reserved these in
+my plan for the higher degrees."[573] Accordingly the discourse to the
+"Minerval" is expressly designed to put him off the track. Thus the
+initiator is to say to him:
+
+ After two years' reflection, experience, intercourse, reading of
+ the graduated writings and information, you will necessarily have
+ formed the idea that the final aim of our Society is nothing less
+ than to win power and riches, to undermine secular or religious
+ government, and to obtain the mastery of the world, and so on. If
+ you have represented our Society to yourself from this point of
+ view or have entered it in this expectation, you have mightily
+ deceived yourself....[574]
+
+The initiator, without informing the Minerval of the real aim of the
+Society, then goes on to say that he is now free to leave it if he
+wishes. By this means the leaders were able to eliminate ambitious
+people who might become their rivals to power and to form their ranks
+out of men who would submit to be led blindly onward by unseen
+directors. "My circumstances necessitate," Spartacus writes to Cato,
+"that I should remain hidden from most of the members as long as I live.
+I am obliged to do everything through five or six persons."[575] So
+carefully was this secret guarded that until the papers of the
+Illuminati were seized in 1786 no one outside this inner circle knew
+that Weishaupt was the head of the Order. Yet if we are to believe his
+own assertions, he had been throughout in supreme control. Again and
+again he impresses on his _intimes_ the necessity for unity of command
+in the Order: "One must show how easy it would be for one clever head to
+direct hundreds and thousands of men,"[576] and he illustrates this
+system by the table reproduced on the next page, to which he appends the
+following explanation:
+
+ I have two immediately below me into whom I breathe my whole
+ spirit, and each of these two has again two others, and so on. In
+ this way I can set a thousand men in motion and on fire in the
+ simplest manner, and in this way one must impart orders and operate
+ on politics.[577]
+
+Thus, as in the case of Abdullah ibn Maymun's society, "the
+extraordinary result was brought about that a multitude of men of divers
+beliefs were all working together for an object known only to a few of
+them."
+
+Enough has now been quoted from the correspondence of the Illuminati to
+show their aims and methods according to their own admissions. We shall
+now see how far their apologists are justified in describing them as
+"men of the strictest morality and humanity."[578] Doubtless there were
+many excellent people in the outer ranks of the Order, but this is not
+the contention of Mr. Gould, who expressly states that "all the
+prominent members of this association were estimable men both in public
+and in private life." These further extracts from their correspondence
+may be left to speak for themselves.
+
+
+
+Character of the Illuminati
+
+
+In June 1782 Weishaupt writes to "Cato" as follows:
+
+ Oh, in politics and morality you are far behind, my gentlemen.
+ Judge further if such a man as Marcus Aurelius[579] finds out how
+ wretched it [Illuminism] appears in Athens [Munich]; what a
+ collection of immoral men, of whoremongers, liars, debtors,
+ boasters, and vain fools they have amongst them. If he saw all
+ that, what do you suppose the man would think? Would he not be
+ ashamed to find himself in such an association, in which the
+ leaders arouse the greatest expectations and carry out the best
+ plan in such a miserable manner? And all this out of caprice,
+ expediency, etc. Judge whether I am not right.[580]
+
+ [Illustration: Diagram of Weishapt's System. From _Nachtrag von
+ weitern Originalschriften der Illuminatensekte_, p. 32. Munchen,
+ 1787.]
+
+ From Thebes [Freysing] I hear fatal news; they have received into
+ the lodge the scandal of the whole town, the dissolute debtor
+ Propertius, who is trumpeted abroad by the whole "personnel" of
+ Athens [Munich], Thebes and Erzerum [Eichstadt]; D. also appears
+ to be a bad man. Socrates who would be a capital man [_ein Capital
+ Mann_] is continually drunk, Augustus in the worst repute, and
+ Alcibiades sits the whole day with the innkeeper's wife sighing and
+ pining: Tiberius tried in Corinth to rape the sister of Democedes
+ and the husband came in. In Heaven's name, what are these for
+ Areopagites! We upper ones, write, read and work ourselves to
+ death, offer to (*) our health, fame and fortune, whilst these
+ gentlemen indulge their weaknesses, go a whoring, cause scandals
+ and yet are Areopagites and want to know about everything.[581]
+
+ Concerning Arminius there are great complaints.... He is an
+ unbearable, obstinate, arrogant, vain fool![582]
+
+ Let Celsus, Marius, Scipio, and Ajax do what they will ... no one
+ does us so much harm as Celsus, no one is less to be reasoned with
+ than Celsus, and perhaps few could have been so much use to us as
+ Celsus.... Marius is obstinate and can see no great plan, Scipio is
+ negligent, and of Ajax I will not speak at all.... Confucius is
+ worth very little: he is too inquisitive and a terrible chatterer
+ [_ein grausamer Schwatzer_].[583]
+
+ Agrippa must be quite struck off our list, for the rumour goes
+ round ... that he has stolen a gold and silver watch together with
+ a ring from our best fellow-worker Sulla.[584]
+
+It will doubtless be suggested at this point that all these letters
+merely portray the lofty idealist sorrowing over the frailties of his
+erring disciples, but let us hear what Weishaupt has to say about
+himself. In a letter to Marius (Hertel) he writes:
+
+ And now in the strictest confidence, a matter near my heart, which
+ robs me of all rest, makes me incapable of anything and drives me
+ to despair. I stand in danger of losing my honour and my reputation
+ which gave me so much power over our people. Think, my
+ sister-in-law is expecting a child.[585] I have for this purpose
+ sent to Euriphon in Athens to solicit the marriage licence and
+ Promotorial from Rome, you see how much depends on this and that no
+ time must be lost; every minute is precious. But if the
+ dispensation does not arrive, what shall I do? How shall I make
+ amends to the person since I alone am to blame? We have already
+ tried several ways to get rid of the child; she herself was
+ resolved for anything. But Euriphon is too timid and yet I see no
+ other expedient, if I could ensure the silence of Celsus he could
+ help me and indeed he already promised me this three years
+ ago....[586] If you can help me out of this dilemma, you will give
+ me back life, honour, peace and power to work.... I do not know
+ what devil led me astray, I who always in these circumstances took
+ extreme precautions.[587]
+
+A little later Weishaupt writes again:
+
+ All fatalities happen to me at the same time. Now there is my
+ mother dead! Corpse, wedding, christening all in a short time, one
+ on the top of the other. What a wonderful mix-up
+ [_mischmasch_]![588]
+
+So much for what Mr. Gould calls the "rare qualities" of Weishaupt's
+heart. Let us now listen to the testimony of Weishaupt's principal
+coadjutor, Philo (the Baron von Knigge), to whom the "historian of
+Freemasonry" refers as "a lovable enthusiast." In all subversive
+associations, whether open or secret, directed by men who aim at power,
+a moment is certain to arrive when the ambitions of the leaders come
+into conflict. This is the history of every revolutionary organization
+during the last 150 years. It was when the inevitable climax had been
+reached between Weishaupt and Knigge that "Philo" wrote to "the most
+loving Cato" in the following terms:
+
+ It is not Mahomed and A. who are so much to blame for my break with
+ Spartacus, as the Jesuitical conduct of this man which has so often
+ turned us against each other in order to rule despotically over
+ men, who, if they have not perhaps such a rich imagination as
+ himself, also do not possess so much cuteness and cunning,
+ etc.[589]
+
+In a further letter Philo goes on to enumerate the services he has
+rendered to Weishaupt in the past:
+
+ At the bidding of Spartacus I have written against ex-Jesuits and
+ Rosicrucians, persecuted people who never did me any harm, thrown
+ the _Stricte Observance_ into confusion, drawn the best amongst
+ them to us, told them of the worthiness of (*), of its power, its
+ age, the excellence of its Chiefs, the blamelessness of its higher
+ leaders, the importance of its knowledge, and given great ideas of
+ the uprightness of its views; those amongst us who are now working
+ so actively for us but cling much to religiousness [_sehr an
+ Religiositat kleben_] and who feared our intention was to spread
+ Deism, I have sought to persuade that the higher Superiors had
+ nothing less than this intention. Gradually, however, I shall work
+ it as I please [_nach und nach wirke ich dock was ich will_]. If I
+ now were to ... give a hint to the Jesuits and Rosicrucians as to
+ who is persecuting them ... if I were to make known (to a few
+ people) the Jesuitical character of the man who leads perhaps all
+ of us by the nose, uses us for his ambitious schemes, sacrifices us
+ as often as his obstinacy requires, [if I were to make known to
+ them] what they have to fear from such a man, from such a machine
+ behind which perhaps Jesuits may be concealed or might conceal
+ themselves; if I were to assure those who seek for secrets that
+ they have nothing to expect; if I were to confide to those who hold
+ religion dear, the principles of the General; ... if I were to draw
+ the attention of the lodges to an association behind which the
+ Illuminati are concealed; if I were again to associate myself with
+ princes and Freemasons ... but I shrink from the thought, vengeance
+ will not carry me so far....[590]
+
+We have now seen enough of the aims and methods of the Illuminati and
+the true characters of their leaders from their own admissions. To make
+the case complete it would be necessary also to give a resume of the
+confessions made by the ex-Illuminati, the four professors Cosandey,
+Grunberger, Utzschneider, and Renner, as also of the further published
+works of the Illuminati--but space and time forbid. What is needed is a
+complete book on the subject, consisting of translations of the most
+important passages in all the contemporary German publications.
+
+From the extracts given above, can it, however, be seriously contended
+that Barruel or Robison exaggerated the guilt of the Order? Do my
+literal translations differ materially in sense from the translations
+and occasional paraphrases given by the much-abused couple?
+
+Even those contemporaries, Mounier and the member of the Illuminati[591]
+who set out to refute Barruel and Lombard de Langres, merely provide
+further confirmation of their views. Thus Mounier is obliged to confess
+that the real design of Illuminism was "to undermine all civil order,"[592]
+and "Ancien Illumine" asserts in language no less forcible than
+Barruel's own that Weishaupt "made a code of Machiavellism," that his
+method was "a profound perversity, flattering everything that was base
+and rancorous in human nature in order to arrive at his ends," that he
+was not inspired by "a wise spirit of reform" but by a "fanatical enmity
+inimical to all authority on earth." The only essential points on which
+the opposing parties differ is that whilst Mounier and "Ancien Illumine"
+deny the influence of the Illuminati on the French Revolution and
+maintain that they ceased to exist in 1786, Barruel and Lombard de
+Langres present them as the inspirers of the Jacobins and declare them
+to be still active after the Revolution had ended. That on this point,
+at any rate, the latter were right, we shall see in a further chapter.
+
+The great question that presents itself after studying the writings of
+the Illuminati is: what was the motive power behind the Order? If we
+admit the possibility that Frederick the Great and the Stricte
+Observance, working through an inner circle of Freemasons at the Lodge
+St. Theodore, may have provided the first impetus and that Kolmer
+initiated Weishaupt into Oriental methods of organization, the source of
+inspiration from which Weishaupt subsequently drew his anarchic
+philosophy still remains obscure. It has frequently been suggested that
+his real inspirers were Jews, and the Jewish writer Bernard Lazare
+definitely states that "there were Jews, Cabalistic Jews, around
+Weishaupt."[593] A writer in _La Vieille France_ went so far as to
+designate these Jews as Moses Mendelssohn, Wessely, and the bankers
+Itzig, Friedlander, and Meyer. But no documentary evidence has ever been
+produced in support of these statements. It is therefore necessary to
+examine them in the light of probability.
+
+Now, as I have already shown, the theosophical ideas of the Cabala play
+no part in the system of Illuminism; the only trace of Cabalism to be
+found amongst the papers of the Order is a list of recipes for procuring
+abortion, for making aphrodisiacs, Aqua Toffana, pestilential vapours,
+etc., headed "Cabala Major."[594] It is possible, then, that the
+Illuminati may have learnt something of "venefic magic" and the use of
+certain natural substances from Jewish Cabalists; at the same time Jews
+appear to have been only in rare cases admitted to the Order. Everything
+indeed tends to prove that Weishaupt and his first coadjutors, Zwack and
+Massenhausen, were pure Germans. Nevertheless there is between the
+ideas of Weishaupt and of Lessing's "Falk" a distinct resemblance; both
+in the writings of the Illuminati and in Lessing's _Dialogues_ we find
+the same vein of irony with regard to Freemasonry, the same design that
+it should be replaced by a more effectual system,[595]the same
+denunciations of the existing social order and of bourgeois society, the
+same theory that "men should be self-governing," the same plan of
+obliterating all distinctions between nations, even the same simile of
+the bee-hive as applied to human life[596] which, as I have shown
+elsewhere, was later on adopted by the anarchist Proudhon. It may,
+however, legitimately be urged that these ideas were those of the inner
+masonic circle to which both Lessing and Weishaupt belonged, and that,
+though placed in the mouth of Falk, they were in no sense Judaic.
+
+But Lessing was also the friend and admirer of Moses Mendelssohn, who
+has been suggested as one of Weishaupt's inspirers. Now, at first sight
+nothing seems more improbable than that an orthodox Jew such as
+Mendelssohn should have accorded any sympathy to the anarchic scheme of
+Weishaupt. Nevertheless, certain of Weishaupt's doctrines are not
+incompatible with the principles of orthodox Judaism. Thus, for example,
+Weishaupt's theory--so strangely at variance with his denunciations of
+the family system--that as a result of Illuminism "the head of every
+family will be what Abraham was, the patriarch, the priest, and the
+unfettered lord of his family, and Reason will be the only code of
+Man,"[597] is essentially a Jewish conception.
+
+It will be objected that the patriarchal system as conceived by orthodox
+Jews could by no means include the religion of Reason as advocated by
+Weishaupt. It must not, however, be forgotten that to the Jewish mind
+the human race presents a dual aspect, being divided into two distinct
+categories--the privileged race to whom the promises of God were made,
+and the great mass of humanity which remains outside the pale. Whilst
+strict adherence to the commands of the Talmud and the laws of Moses is
+expected of the former, the most indefinite of religious creeds suffices
+for the nations excluded from the privileges that Jewish birth confers.
+It was thus that Moses Mendelssohn wrote to the pastor Lavater, who had
+sought to win him over to Christianity:
+
+ Pursuant to the principles of my religion, I am not to seek to
+ convert anyone who is not born according to our laws. This
+ proneness to conversion, the origin of which some would fain tack
+ on to the Jewish religion, is, nevertheless, diametrically opposed
+ to it. Our rabbis unanimously teach that the written and oral laws
+ which form conjointly our revealed religion are obligatory on our
+ nation only. "Moses commanded us a law, even the inheritance of the
+ congregation of Jacob." We believe that all other nations of the
+ earth have been directed by God to adhere to the laws of nature,
+ and to the religion of the patriarchs. Those who regulate their
+ lives according to the precepts of this _religion of nature and of
+ reason_[598] are called virtuous men of other nations and are the
+ children of eternal salvation.[599] Our rabbis are so remote from
+ Proselytomania, that they enjoin us to dissuade, by forcible
+ remonstrances, everyone who comes forward to be converted. (The
+ Talmud says ... "proselytes are annoying to Israel like a
+ scab.")[600]
+
+But was not this "religion of nature and of reason" the precise
+conception of Weishaupt?
+
+Whether, then, Weishaupt was directly inspired by Mendelssohn or any
+other Jew must remain for the present an open question. But the Jewish
+connexions of certain other Illuminati cannot be disputed. The most
+important of these was Mirabeau, who arrived in Berlin just after the
+death of Mendelssohn and was welcomed by his disciples in the Jewish
+salon of Henrietta Herz. It was these Jews, "ardent supporters of the
+French Revolution"[601] at its outset, who prevailed on Mirabeau to
+write his great apology for their race under the form of a panegyric of
+Mendelssohn.
+
+To sum up, I do not so far see in Illuminism a Jewish conspiracy to
+destroy Christianity, but rather a movement finding its principal
+dynamic force in the ancient spirit of revolt against the existing
+social and moral order, aided and abetted perhaps by Jews who saw in it
+a system that might be turned to their own advantage. Meanwhile,
+Illuminism made use of every other movement that could serve its
+purpose. As the contemporary de Luchet has expressed it:
+
+ The system of the Illumines is not to embrace the dogmas of a sect,
+ but to turn all errors to its advantage, to concentrate in itself
+ everything that men have invented in the way of duplicity and
+ imposture.
+
+More than this, Illuminism was not only the assemblage of all errors, of
+all ruses, of all subtleties of a theoretic kind, it was also an
+assemblage of all practical methods for rousing men to action. For in
+the words of von Hammer on the Assassins, that cannot be too often
+repeated:
+
+ Opinions are powerless so long as they only confuse the brain
+ without arming the hand. Scepticism and free-thinking as long as
+ they occupied only the minds of the indolent and philosophical have
+ caused the ruin of no throne.... It is nothing to the ambitious man
+ what people believe, but it is everything to know how he may turn
+ them for the execution of his projects.
+
+This was what Weishaupt so admirably understood; he knew how to take
+from every association, past and present, the portions he required and
+to weld them all into a working system of terrible efficiency--the
+disintegrating doctrines of the Gnostics and Manicheans, of the modern
+philosophers and Encyclopaedists, the methods of the Ismailis and the
+Assassins, the discipline of the Jesuits and Templars, the organization
+and secrecy of the Freemasons, the philosophy of Machiavelli, the
+mystery of the Rosicrucians--he knew moreover, how to enlist the right
+elements in all existing associations as well as isolated individuals
+and turn them to his purpose. So in the army of the Illuminati we find
+men of every shade of thought, from the poet Goethe[602] to the meanest
+intriguer--lofty idealists, social reformers, visionaries, and at the
+same time the ambitious, the rancorous, and the disgruntled, men swayed
+by lust or embittered by grievances, all these differing in their aims
+yet by Weishaupt's admirable system of watertight compartments precluded
+from a knowledge of these differences and all marching, unconsciously or
+not, towards the same goal.
+
+Although this was not the invention of Weishaupt but had been
+foreshadowed many centuries earlier in the East, it was Weishaupt, so
+far as we know, who reduced it to a working system for the West--a
+system which has been adhered to by succeeding groups of
+world-revolutionaries up to the present day. It is for this reason that
+I have quoted at length the writings of the Illuminati--all the ruses,
+all the hypocrisy, all the subtle methods of camouflage which
+characterized the Order will be found again in the insidious propaganda
+both of the modern secret societies and the open revolutionary
+organizations whose object is to subvert all order, all morality, and
+all religion.
+
+I maintain, therefore, with greater conviction than ever the importance
+of Illuminism in the history of world-revolution. But for this
+co-ordination of methods the philosophers and Encyclopaedists might have
+gone on for ever inveighing against thrones and altars, the Martinistes
+evoking spirits, the magicians weaving spells, the Freemasons declaiming
+on universal brotherhood--none of these would have "armed the hand" and
+driven the infuriated mobs into the streets of Paris; it was not until
+the emissaries of Weishaupt formed an alliance with the Orleaniste
+leaders that vague subversive theory became active revolution.
+
+
+
+
+10
+
+THE CLIMAX
+
+
+
+The first Masonic body with which the Illuminati formed an alliance was
+the Stricte Observance, to which the Illuminati Knigge and Bode both
+belonged. Cagliostro had also been initiated into the Stricte Observance
+near Frankfurt and was now employed as agent of the combined order.
+According to his own confession his mission "was to work so as to turn
+Freemasonry in the direction of Weishaupt's projects"; and the funds he
+drew upon were those of the Illuminati.[603] Cagliostro also formed a
+link with the Martinistes, whose doctrines, though derided by Weishaupt,
+were useful to his plan in attracting by their mystical character those
+who would have been repelled by the cynicism of the Illuminati.
+According to Barruel, it was the Martinistes who--following in the
+footsteps of the Rosicrucians--had suggested to Weishaupt the device of
+presenting Christ as an "Illuminatus" which had led to such triumphant
+results amongst the Protestant clergy.
+
+But if Weishaupt made use of the various masonic associations, they on
+their account found in him a valuable ally. The fact is that by this
+time both French and German Freemasons were very much at sea with regard
+to the whole subject of Masonry and needed someone to give a point to
+their deliberations. Thus at the Congress of Wilhelmsbad convened on
+July 16, 1782, and attended by representatives of masonic bodies from
+all over the world, the first question propounded by the Grand Master of
+the Templars (i.e. the Stricte Observance) was: "_What is the real
+object of the Order and its true origin_?" So, says Mirabeau in relating
+this incident, "this same Grand Master and all his assistants had worked
+for more than twenty years with incredible ardour at a thing of which
+they knew neither the real object nor the origin."[604]
+
+Two years later the Freemasons of France do not appear to have been any
+less in the dark on this matter, for we find them writing to General
+Rainsford, one of the English Masons who had been present at the
+Congress of Wilhelmsbad, as follows:
+
+ Since you say that Masonry has never experienced any variation in
+ its aim, do you then know with certainty what this unique object
+ is? Is it useful for the happiness of mankind?... Tell us if it is
+ of an historical, political, hermetical, or scientific nature?...
+ Moral, social, or religious?... Are the traditions oral or
+ written?[605]
+
+But Weishaupt had a very definite object in view, which was to gain
+control of all Freemasonry, and though he himself was not present at the
+Congress, his coadjutor Knigge, who had been travelling about Germany
+proclaiming himself the reformer of Freemasonry, presented himself at
+Wilhelmsbad, armed with full authority from Weishaupt, and succeeded in
+enrolling a number of magistrates, savants, ecclesiastics, and ministers
+of state as Illuminati and in allying himself with the deputies of
+Saint-Martin and Willermoz. Vanquished by this powerful rival, the
+Stricte Observance ceased temporarily to exist and Illuminism was left
+in possession of the field.
+
+On February 15, 1785, a further congress took place in Paris, convened
+this time by the Philalethes, at which the Illuminati Bode (alias
+Amelius) and the Baron de Busche (alias Bayard) were present, also--it
+has been stated--the "magician" Cagliostro, the magnetiser Mesmer, the
+Cabalist Duchanteau, and of course the leaders of the Philalethes,
+Savalette de Langes, who was elected President, the Marquis de
+Chefdebien, and a number of German members of the same Order. This
+congress led to no very practical results, and a further and more secret
+one was convened in the following year at Frankfurt, where a Grand Lodge
+had been established in 1783. It was here that the deaths of Louis XVI
+and Gustavus III of Sweden are said to have been decreed.
+
+But already in this same year of 1785 the first act of the revolutionary
+drama had been played out. The famous "Affair of the Necklace" can never
+be understood in the pages of official history; only an examination of
+the mechanism provided by the secret societies can explain that
+extraordinary episode, which, in the opinion of Napoleon, contributed
+more than any other cause to the explosion of 1789. In its double attack
+on Church and Monarchy the Affair of the Necklace fulfilled the purpose
+of both Frederick the Great and of the Illuminati. Cagliostro, we know,
+received both money and instructions from the Order for carrying out the
+plot, and after it had ended in his own and the Cardinal de Rohan's
+exoneration and exile, we find him embarking on fresh secret-society
+work in London, where he arrived in November of the same year.
+Announcing himself as the Count Sutkowski, member of a society at
+Avignon, he "visited the Swedenborgians at their Theosophical Society
+meeting in rooms in the Middle Temple and displayed minute acquaintance
+with their doctrines, whilst claiming a superior knowledge."[606]
+According to a generally received opinion, Cagliostro was the author of
+a mysterious proclamation which appeared at this moment in the _Morning
+Herald_ in the cypher of the Rose-Croix.[607]
+
+But in the year before these events an extraordinary thing had happened.
+An evangelist preacher and Illuminatus named Lanze had been sent in July
+1785 as an emissary of the Illuminati to Silesia, but on his journey he
+was struck down by lightning. The instructions of the Order were found
+on him, and as a result its intrigues were conclusively revealed to the
+Government of Bavaria.[608] A searching enquiry followed, the houses of
+Zwack and Bassus were raided, and it was then that the documents and
+other incriminating evidence referred to in the preceding chapter of
+this book were seized and made public under the name of _The Original
+Writings of the Order of the Illuminati_ (1787). But before this the
+evidence of four ex-Illuminati, professors of Munich, was published in
+two separate volumes.[609]
+
+The diabolical nature of Illuminism now remained no longer a matter of
+doubt, and the Order was officially suppressed. The opponents of Barruel
+and Robison therefore declare that Illuminism came finally to an end. We
+shall see later by documentary evidence that it never ceased to exist,
+and that twenty-five years later not only the Illuminati but Weishaupt
+himself were still as active as ever behind the scenes in Freemasonry.
+
+But for the present we must follow its course from the moment of its
+apparent extinction in 1786. This course can be traced not only through
+the "German Union," which is believed to have been a reorganization of
+the original Illuminati, but through the secret societies of France.
+Illuminism in reality is less an Order than a principle, and a principle
+which can work better under cover of something else. Weishaupt himself
+had laid down the precept that the work of Illuminism could best be
+conducted "under other names and other occupations," and henceforth we
+shall always find it carried on by this skilful system of camouflage.
+
+The first cover adopted was the lodge of the "Amis Reunis" in Paris,
+with which, as we have already seen, the Illuminati had established
+relations. But now in 1787 a definite alliance was effected by the
+aforementioned Illuminati, Bode and Busche, who in response to an
+invitation from the secret committee of the lodge arrived in Paris in
+February of this year. Here they found the old Illuminatus Mirabeau--who
+with Talleyrand had been largely instrumental in summoning these German
+Brothers--and, according to Gustave Bord,[610] two important members
+of the Stricte Observance, the Marquis de Chefdebien d'Armisson
+(_Eques a Capite Galeato_) and an Austrian, the Comte Leopold de
+Kollowrath-Krakowski (_Eques ab Aquila Fulgente_) who also belonged to
+Weishaupt's Order of Illuminati in which he bore the pseudonym of
+Numenius.
+
+It is important here to recognize the peculiar part played by the Lodge
+of the _Amis Reunis_. Whilst the _Loge des Neuf Soeurs_ was largely
+composed of middle-class revolutionaries such as Brissot, Danton,
+Camille Desmoulins, and Champfort, and the _Loge de la Candeur_ of
+aristocratic revolutionaries--Lafayette as well as the Orleanistes, the
+Marquis de Sillery, the Duc d'Aiguillon, the Marquis de Custine, and the
+Lameths--_the Loge du Contrat Social_ was mainly composed of honest
+visionaries who entertained no revolutionary projects but, according to
+Barruel, were strongly Royalist. The role of the "Amis Reunis" was to
+collect together the subversives from all other lodges--Philalethes,
+Rose-Croix, members of the _Loge des Neuf Sours_ and of the _Loge de la
+Candeur_ and of the most secret committees of the Grand Orient, as well
+as deputies from the _Illumines_ in the provinces. Here, then, at the
+lodge in the Rue de la Sordiere, under the direction of Savalette de
+Langes, were to be found the disciples of Weishaupt, of Swedenborg, and
+of Saint-Martin, as well as the practical makers of revolution--the
+agitators and demagogues of 1789.
+
+The influence of German Illuminism on all these heterogeneous elements
+was enormous. From this moment, says a further Bavarian report of the
+matter, a complete change took place in the Order of the "Amis Reunis."
+Hitherto only vaguely subversive, the Chevaliers Bienfaisants became the
+Chevaliers Malfaisants, the Amis Reunis became the Ennemis Reunis. The
+arrival of the two Germans, Bode and Busche, gave the finishing touch to
+the conspiracy. "The avowed object of their journey was to obtain
+information about magnetism, which was just then making a great stir,"
+but in reality, "taken up with the gigantic plan of their Order," their
+real aim was to make proselytes. It will be seen that the following
+passage exactly confirms the account given by Barruel:
+
+ As the Lodge of the _Amis Reunis_ collected together everything
+ that could be found out from all other masonic systems in the
+ world, so the way was soon paved there for Illuminism. It was also
+ not long before this lodge together with all those that depended on
+ it was impregnated with Illuminism. The former system of all these
+ was as if wiped out, so that from this time onwards the framework
+ of the Philalethes quite disappeared and in the place of the former
+ Cabalistic-magical extravagance [_Schwarmerei_] came in the
+ philosophical-political.[611]
+
+It was therefore not Martinism, Cabalism, or Freemasonry that in
+themselves provided the real revolutionary force. Many non-illuminized
+Freemasons, as Barruel himself declares, remained loyal to the throne
+and altar, and as soon as the monarchy was seen to be in danger the
+Royalist Brothers of the _Contrat Social_ boldly summoned the lodges to
+coalesce in defence of King and Constitution; even some of the upper
+Masons, who in the degree of Knight Kadosch had sworn hatred to the Pope
+and Bourbon monarchy, rallied likewise to the royal cause. "The French
+spirit triumphed over the masonic spirit in the greater number of the
+Brothers. Opinions as well as hearts were still for the King." It
+needed the devastating doctrines of Weishaupt to undermine this spirit
+and to turn the "degrees of vengeance" from vain ceremonial into
+terrible fact.
+
+If, then, it is said that the Revolution was prepared in the lodges of
+Freemasons--and many French Masons have boasted of the fact--let it
+always be added that it was _Illuminized Freemasonry_ that made the
+Revolution, and that the Masons who acclaim it are illuminized Masons,
+inheritors of the same tradition introduced into the lodges of France in
+1787 by the disciples of Weishaupt, "patriarch of the Jacobins."
+
+Many of the Freemasons of France in 1787 were thus not conscious allies
+of the Illuminati. According to Cadet de Gassicourt, there were in all
+the lodges only twenty-seven real initiates; the rest were largely dupes
+who knew little or nothing of the source whence the fresh influence
+among them derived. The amazing feature of the whole situation is that
+the most enthusiastic supporters of the movement were men belonging to
+the upper classes and even to the royal families of Europe. A
+contemporary relates that no less than thirty princes--reigning and
+non-reigning--had taken under their protection a confederation from
+which they stood to lose everything and had become so imbued by its
+principles that they were inaccessible to reason.[612] Intoxicated by
+the flattery lavished on them by the priests of Illuminism, they adopted
+a religion of which they understood nothing. Weishaupt, of course, had
+taken care that none of these royal dupes should be initiated into the
+real aims of the Order, and at first adhered to the original plan of
+excluding them altogether; but the value of their co-operation soon
+became apparent and by a supreme irony it was with a Grand Duke that he
+himself took refuge.
+
+But if the great majority of princes and nobles were stricken with
+blindness at this crisis, a few far-seeing spirits recognized the danger
+and warned the world of the impending disaster. In 1787 Cardinal
+Caprara, Apostolic Nuncio at Vienna, addressed a confidential memoir to
+the Pope, in which he pointed out that the activities carried on in
+Germany by the different sects of Illumines, of Perfectibilists, of
+Freemasons, etc., were increasing.
+
+ The danger is approaching, for from all these senseless dreams of
+ Illuminism, of Swedenborgianism, or of Freemasonry a frightful
+ reality will emerge. Visionaries have their time; the revolution
+ they forebode will have its time also.[613]
+
+A more amazing prophecy, however, was the _Essai sur la Secte des
+Illumines_, by the Marquis de Luchet,[614] a Liberal noble who played
+some part in the revolutionary movement, yet who nevertheless realized
+the dangers of Illuminism. Thus, as early as 1789, before the Revolution
+had really developed, de Luchet uttered these words of warning:
+
+ Deluded people ... learn that there exists a conspiracy in favour
+ of despotism against liberty, of incapacity against talent, of vice
+ against virtue, of ignorance against enlightenment.... This society
+ aims at governing the world.... Its object is universal domination.
+ This plan may seem extraordinary, incredible--yes, but not
+ chimerical ... no such calamity has ever yet afflicted the world.
+
+De Luchet then goes on to foretell precisely the events that were to
+take place three and four years later; he describes the position of a
+king who has to recognize masters above himself and to authorize their
+"abominable regime," to become the plaything of an ambitious and
+fanatical horde which has taken possession of his will.
+
+ See him condemned to serve the passions of all that surround him
+ ... to raise degraded men to power, to prostitute his judgement by
+ choices that dishonour his prudence....
+
+All this was exactly fulfilled during the reign of the Girondin ministry
+of 1792. The campaign of destruction carried out in the summer of 1793
+is thus foretold:
+
+ We do not mean to say that the country where the Illumines reign
+ will cease to exist, but it will fall into such a degree of
+ humiliation that it will no longer count in politics, that the
+ population will diminish, that the inhabitants who resist the
+ inclination to pass into a foreign land will no longer enjoy the
+ happiness of consideration, nor the charms of society, nor the
+ gifts of commerce.
+
+And de Luchet ends with this despairing appeal to the powers of Europe:
+
+ Masters of the world, cast your eyes on a desolated multitude,
+ listen to their cries, their tears, their hopes. A mother asks you
+ to restore her son, a wife her husband, your cities for the fine
+ arts that have fled from them, the country for citizens, the fields
+ for cultivators, religion for forms of worship, and Nature for
+ beings of which she is worthy.
+
+Five years after these words were written the countryside of France was
+desolate, art and commerce were destroyed, and women following the
+tumbril that carried Fouquier-Tinville to the guillotine cried out:
+"Give me back my brother, my son, my husband!" So was this amazing
+prophecy fulfilled. Yet not one word has history to say on the subject!
+The warning of de Luchet has fallen on deaf ears amongst posterity as
+amongst the men of his own day.
+
+De Luchet himself recognizes the obstacle to his obtaining a hearing:
+there are too many "passions interested in supporting the system of the
+Illumines," too many deluded rulers imagining themselves enlightened
+ready to precipitate their people into the abyss, whilst "the heads of
+the Order will never relinquish the authority they have acquired nor the
+treasure at their disposal." In vain de Luchet appeals to the Freemasons
+to save their Order from the invading sect. "Would it not be possible,"
+he asks, "to direct the Freemasons themselves against the Illumines by
+showing them that whilst they are working to maintain harmony in
+society, those others are everywhere sowing seeds of discord" and
+preparing the ultimate destruction of their Order? So far it is not too
+late; if only men will believe in the danger it may be averted: "from
+the moment they are convinced, the necessary blow is dealt to the sect."
+Otherwise de Luchet prophesies "a series of calamities of which the end
+is lost in the darkness of time, ... a subterranean fire smouldering
+eternally and breaking forth periodically in violent and devastating
+explosions." What words could better describe the history of the last
+150 years?
+
+The _Essai sur la Sects des Illumines_ is one of the most extraordinary
+documents of history and at the same time one of the most mysterious.
+Why it should have been written by the Marquis de Luchet, who is said to
+have collaborated with Mirabeau in the _Galerie de Portraits_ published
+in the following year, why it should have been appended to Mirabeau's
+_Histoire Secrete de la Cour de Berlin_, and accordingly attributed to
+Mirabeau himself, why Barruel should have denounced it as dust thrown in
+the eyes of the public, although it entirely corroborated his own point
+of view, are questions to which I can find no reply. That is was written
+seriously and in all good faith it is impossible to doubt; whilst the
+fact that it appeared before, instead of after, the events described,
+renders it even more valuable evidence of the reality of the conspiracy
+than Barruel's own admirable work. What Barruel saw, de Luchet foresaw
+with equal clearness. As to the role of Mirabeau at this crisis, we can
+only hazard an explanation on the score of his habitual inconsistency.
+At one moment he was seeking interviews with the King's ministers in
+order to warn them of the coming danger, at the next he was
+energetically stirring up insurrection. It is therefore not impossible
+that he may have encouraged de Luchet's exposure of the conspiracy,
+although meanwhile he himself had entered into the scheme of
+destruction. Indeed, according to a pamphlet published in 1791 entitled
+_Mysteres de la Conspiration_,[615] the whole plan of revolution was
+found amongst his papers. The editor of this _brochure_ explains that
+the document here made public, called _Croquis ou Projet de Revolution
+de Monsieur de Mirabeau_, was seized at the house of Madame Lejai, the
+wife of Mirabeau's publisher, on October 6, 1789. Beginning with a
+diatribe against the French monarchy, the document goes on to say that
+"in order to triumph over this hydra-headed monster these are my ideas":
+
+ We must overthrow all order, suppress all laws, annul all power,
+ and leave the people in anarchy. The laws we establish will not
+ perhaps be in force at once, but at any rate, having given back the
+ power to the people, they will resist for the sake of their liberty
+ which they will believe they are preserving. We must caress their
+ vanity, flatter their hopes, promise them happiness after our work
+ has been in operation; we must elude their caprices and their
+ systems at will, for the people as legislators are very dangerous,
+ they only establish laws which coincide with their passions, their
+ want of knowledge would besides only give birth to abuses. But as
+ the people are a lever which legislators can move at their will, we
+ must necessarily use them as a support, and render hateful to them
+ everything we wish to destroy and sow illusions in their path; we
+ must also buy all the mercenary pens which propagate our methods
+ and which will instruct the people concerning their enemies whom we
+ attack. The clergy, being the most powerful through public opinion,
+ can only be destroyed by ridiculing religion, rendering its
+ ministers odious, and only representing them as hypocritical
+ monsters, for Mahomet in order to establish his religion first
+ defamed the paganism which the Arabs, the Sarmathes, and the
+ Scythians professed. Libels must at every moment show fresh traces
+ of hatred against the clergy. To exaggerate their riches, to make
+ the sins of an individual appear to be common to all, to attribute
+ to them all vices; calumny, murder, irreligion, sacrilege, all is
+ permitted in times of revolution.
+
+ We must degrade the _noblesse_ and attribute it to an odious
+ origin, establish a germ of equality which can never exist but
+ which will flatter the people; [we must] immolate the most
+ obstinate, burn and destroy their property in order to intimidate
+ the rest, so that if we cannot entirely destroy this prejudice we
+ can weaken it and the people will avenge their vanity and their
+ jealousy by all the excesses which will bring them to submission.
+
+After describing how the soldiers are to be seduced from their
+allegiance, and the magistrates represented to the people as despots,
+"since the people, brutal and ignorant, only see the evil and never the
+good of things," the writer explains they must be given only limited
+power in the municipalities.
+
+ Let us beware above all of giving them too much force; their
+ despotism is too dangerous, we must flatter the people by
+ gratuitous justice, promise them a great diminution in taxes and a
+ more equal division, more extension in fortunes, and less
+ humiliation. These phantasies [_vertiges_] will fanaticise the
+ people, who will flatten out all resistance. What matter the
+ victims and their numbers? spoliations, destructions, burnings, and
+ all the necessary effects of a revolution? nothing must be sacred
+ and we can say with Machiavelli: "What matter the means as long as
+ one arrives at the end?"
+
+Were all these the ideas of Mirabeau, or were they, like the other
+document of the Illuminati found amongst his papers, the programme of a
+conspiracy? I incline to the latter theory. The plan of campaign was, at
+any rate, the one followed out by the conspirators, as Chamfort, the
+friend and confidant of Mirabeau, admitted in his conversation with
+Marmontel:
+
+ The nation is a great herd that only thinks of browsing, and with
+ good sheepdogs the shepherds can lead it as they please.... Money
+ and the hope of plunder are all-powerful with the people....
+ Mirabeau cheerfully asserts that with 100 louis one can make quite
+ a good riot.[616]
+
+Another contemporary thus describes the methods of the leaders:
+
+ Mirabeau, in the exuberance of an orgy, cried one day: "That
+ _canaille_ well deserves to have us for legislators!" These
+ professions of faith, as we see, are not at all democratic; the
+ sect uses the populace as revolution fodder [_chair a revolution_],
+ as prime material for brigandage, after which it seizes the gold
+ and abandons generations to torture. It is veritably the code of
+ hell.[617]
+
+It is this "code of hell" set forth in the "Projet de Revolution" that
+we shall find repeated in succeeding documents throughout the last
+hundred years--in the correspondence of the "Alta Vendita," in the
+_Dialogues aux Enfers entre Machiavel et Montesquieu_ by Maurice Joly,
+in the Revolutionary Catechism of Bakunin, in the Protocols of the
+Elders of Zion, and in the writings of the Russian Bolsheviks to-day.
+
+Whatever doubts may be cast on the authenticity of any of these
+documents, the indisputable fact thus remains that as early as 1789 this
+Machiavellian plan of engineering revolution and using the people as a
+lever for raising a tyrannical minority to power, had been formulated;
+further, that the methods described in this earliest "Protocol" have
+been carried out according to plan from that day to this. And in every
+outbreak of the social revolution the authors of the movement have been
+known to be connected with secret societies.
+
+It was Adrien Duport, author of the "Great Fear" that spread over France
+on July 22, 1789, Duport, the inner initiate of the secret societies,
+"holding in his hands all the threads of the masonic conspiracy," who on
+May 21, 1790, set forth before the Committee of Propaganda the vast
+scheme of destruction.
+
+ M. de Mirabeau has well established the fact that the fortunate
+ revolution which has taken place in France must and will be for all
+ the peoples of Europe the awakening of liberty and for Kings the
+ sleep of death.
+
+But Duport goes on to explain that whilst Mirabeau thinks it advisable
+at present not to concern themselves with anything outside France, he
+himself believes that the triumph of the French Revolution must lead
+inevitably to "the ruin of all thrones ... Therefore we must hasten
+among our neighbours the same revolution that is going on in France."[618]
+
+
+The plan of illuminized Freemasonry was thus nothing less than
+world-revolution.
+
+It is necessary here to reply to a critic who suggested that in
+emphasizing the role of the secret societies in _World Revolution_ I had
+abandoned my former thesis of the Orleaniste conspiracy. I wish
+therefore to state that I do not retract one word I wrote in _The French
+Revolution_ on the Orleaniste conspiracy, I merely supply a further
+explanation of its efficiency by enlarging on the aid it received from
+the party I referred to as the Subversives--outcome of the masonic
+lodges. It was because the Orleanistes held the whole masonic
+organization at their disposal that they were able to carry out their
+plans with such extraordinary skill and thoroughness, and because they
+had at their back men bent solely on destruction that they could enlist
+a following which would not have rallied to a mere scheme of usurpation.
+Even Montjoie, who saw in the Revolution principally the work of the Duc
+d'Orleans, indicates in a very curious passage of a later work the
+existence of the still darker intrigue behind the conspiracy he had
+spent his energies in unveiling:
+
+ I will not examine whether this wicked prince, thinking he was
+ acting in his personal interests, was not moved by that invisible
+ hand which seems to have created all the events of our revolution
+ in order to lead us towards a goal that we do not see at present,
+ but which I think we shall see before long.[619]
+
+Unfortunately, after this mysterious utterance Montjoie never again
+returns to the subject.
+
+At the beginning of the Revolution, Orleanism and Freemasonry thus
+formed a united body. According to Lombard de Langres:
+
+ France in 1789 counted more than 2,000 lodges affiliated to the
+ Grand Orient; the number of adepts was more than 100,000. The first
+ events of 1789 were only Masonry in action. All the revolutionaries
+ of the Constituent Assembly were initiated into the third degree.
+ We place in this class the Duc d'Orleans, Valence, Syllery, Laclos,
+ Sieyes, Petion, Menou, Biron, Montesquieu, Fauchet, Condorcet,
+ Lafayette, Mirabeau, Garat, Rabaud, Dubois-Crance, Thiebaud,
+ Larochefoucauld, and others.[620]
+
+Amongst these others were not only the Brissotins, who formed the
+nucleus of the Girondin party, but the men of the Terror--Marat,
+Robespierre, Danton, and Desmoulins.
+
+It was these fiercer elements, true disciples of the Illuminati, who
+were to sweep away the visionary Masons dreaming of equality and
+brotherhood. Following the precedent set by Weishaupt, classical
+pseudonyms were adopted by these leaders of the Jacobins, thus Chaumette
+was known as Anaxagoras, Clootz as Anacharsis, Danton as Horace, Lacroix
+as Publicola, and Ronsin as Scaevola[621]; again, after the manner of
+the Illuminati, the names of towns were changed and a revolutionary
+calendar was adopted. The red cap and loose hair affected by the
+Jacobins appear also to have been foreshadowed in the lodges of the
+Illuminati.[622]
+
+Yet faithfully as the Terrorists carried out the plan of the Illuminati,
+it would seem that they themselves were not initiated into the innermost
+secrets of the conspiracy. Behind the Convention, behind the clubs,
+behind the Revolutionary Tribunal, there existed, says Lombard de
+Langres, that "most secret convention [_convention secretissime_] which
+directed everything after May 31, an occult and terrible power of which
+the other Convention became the slave and which was composed of the
+prime initiates of Illuminism. This power was above Robespierre and the
+committees of the government, ... it was this occult power which
+appropriated to itself the treasures of the nation and distributed them
+to the brothers and friends who had helped on the great work."[623]
+
+What was the aim of this occult power? Was it merely the plan of
+destruction that had originated in the brain of a Bavarian professor
+twenty years earlier, or was it something far older, a live and terrible
+force that had lain dormant through the centuries, that Weishaupt and
+his allies had not created but only loosed upon the world? The Reign of
+Terror, like the outbreak of Satanism in the Middle Ages, can be
+explained by no material causes--the orgy of hatred, lust, and cruelty
+directed not only against the rich but still more against the poor and
+defenceless, the destruction of science, art, and beauty, the
+desecration of the churches, the organized campaign against all that was
+noble, all that was sacred, all that humanity holds dear, what was this
+but Satanism?
+
+In desecrating the churches and stamping on the crucifixes the Jacobins
+had in fact followed the precise formula of black magic: "For the
+purpose of infernal evocation ... it is requisite ... to profane the
+ceremonies of the religion to which one belongs and to trample its
+holiest symbols under foot."[624] It was this that formed the prelude
+to the "Great Terror," when, to those who lived through it, it seemed
+that France lay under the sway of the powers of darkness.
+
+So in the "great shipwreck of civilization," as a contemporary has
+described it, the projects of the Cabalists, the Gnostics, and the
+secret societies which for nearly eighteen centuries had sapped the
+foundations of Christianity found their fulfilment. Do we not detect an
+echo of the Toledot Yeshu in the blasphemies of the Marquis de Sade
+concerning "the Jewish slave" and "the adulterous woman, the courtesan
+of Galilee?" And in the imprecations of Marat's worshippers, "Christ was
+a false prophet!" a repetition of the secret doctrine attributed to the
+Templars: "Jesus is not the true God; He is a false prophet; He was not
+crucified for the salvation of humanity, but for His own misdeeds"? Are
+these resemblances accidental, or are they the outcome of a continuous
+plot against the Christian faith?
+
+What, then, was the role of Jews in the Revolution? In this connexion it
+is necessary to understand the situation of the Jews in France at this
+period.
+
+After the decree of banishment issued by Charles VI in 1394, Jewry, as a
+body, had ceased to exist; but towards the end of the fifteenth century
+a certain number of Jews, driven out of Spain and Portugal, were allowed
+to settle in Bordeaux. These Spanish and Portuguese Jews, known as
+_Sephardim_, appeared to acquiesce in the Christian religion and were
+not officially regarded as Jews, but enjoyed considerable privileges
+conferred on them by Henri II. It was not until the beginning of the
+eighteenth century, during the Regency, that Jews began to reappear in
+Paris. Meanwhile, the annexation of Alsace at the end of the previous
+century had added to the population of France the German Jews of that
+province known as the _Ashkenazim_.
+
+It is important to distinguish between these two races of Jews in
+discussing the question of Jewish emancipation at the time of the
+Revolution. For whilst the Sephardim had shown themselves good citizens
+and were therefore subject to no persecutions, the Ashkenazim by their
+extortionate usury and oppressions had made themselves detested by the
+people, so that rigorous laws were enforced to restrain their rapacity.
+The discussions that raged in the National Assembly on the subject of
+the Jewish question related therefore mainly to the Jews of Alsace.
+Already, in 1784, the Jews of Bordeaux had been accorded further
+concessions by Louis XVI; in 1776 all Portuguese Jews had been given
+religious liberty and the permission to inhabit all parts of the
+kingdom. The decree of January 28, 1790, conferring on the Jews of
+Bordeaux the rights of French citizens, put the finishing touch to this
+scheme of liberation. But the proposal to extend this privilege to the
+Jews of Alsace evoked a storm of controversy in the Assembly and also
+violent insurrections amongst the Alsatian peasants. It was thus on
+behalf of the people that several deputies protested against the decree.
+"The Jews," said the Abbe Maury, "have traversed seventeen centuries
+without mingling with other nations. They have never done anything but
+trade with money, they have been the scourge of agricultural provinces,
+not one of them has known how to ennoble his hands by guiding the
+plough." And he went on to point out that the Jews "must not be
+persecuted, they must be protected as individuals and not as Frenchmen,
+since they cannot be citizens.... Whatever you do, they will always
+remain foreigners in our midst."
+
+Monseigneur de la Fare, Bishop of Nancy, adopted the same line of
+argument:
+
+ They must be accorded protection, safety, liberty; but should we
+ admit into the family a tribe that is foreign to it, that turns its
+ eyes unceasingly towards a common country, that aspires to abandon
+ the land that bears it?... My _cahier_ orders me to protest against
+ the motion that has been made to you. The interest of the Jews
+ themselves necessitates this protest. The people have a horror of
+ them; they are often in Alsace the victims of popular risings.[625]
+
+In all this, as will be seen, there is no question of persecution, but
+of precautions against a race that wilfully isolates itself from the
+rest of the community in order to pursue its own interests and
+advantages. The Jews of Bordeaux indeed recognized the odium that the
+German Jews were calculated to bring on the Jewish cause, and in an
+address to the Assembly on January 22, 1790, dissociated themselves from
+the aggressive claims of the Ashkenazim:
+
+ We dare to believe that our condition in France would not to-day be
+ open to discussion if certain demands of the Jews of Alsace,
+ Lorraine, and the Trois Eveches [i.e. Metz, Toul, and Verdun] had
+ not caused a confusion of ideas which appears to reflect on us. We
+ do not yet know exactly what these demands are, but to judge by the
+ public papers they appear to be rather extraordinary since these
+ Jews aspire to live in France under a special regime, to have laws
+ peculiar to themselves, and to constitute a class of citizens
+ separated from all the others.
+
+ As for us, our condition in France has long since been settled. We
+ have been naturalized French since 1550; we possess all kinds of
+ properties, and we enjoy the unlimited right to acquire estates. We
+ have neither laws, tribunals, nor officers of our own[626]
+
+In adopting this attitude the Sephardim created a precedent which, if it
+had been followed henceforth consistently by their co-religionists,
+might have gone far to allay prejudice against the Jewish race. It was
+the solidarity generally presented by the Jews towards the rest of the
+community which excited alarm in the minds of French citizens. Thirty
+years earlier the merchants of Paris, in a petition against the
+admission of the Jews to their corporations, indicated by an admirable
+simile the danger this solidarity offered to free commerce.
+
+ The French merchant carries on his commerce alone; each commercial
+ house is in a way isolated, whilst the Jews are particles of
+ quicksilver, which at the least slant run together into a
+ block.[627]
+
+But in spite of all protests, the decree emancipating the Jews of Alsace
+was passed in September 1791, and hymns of praise were sung in the
+synagogues.
+
+What part was actually played by the Jews in the tumults of the
+Revolution it is impossible to determine, for the reason that they are
+seldom designated as such in the writings of contemporaries. On this
+point Jewish writers appear to be better informed than the rest of the
+world, for Monsieur Leon Kahn in his panegyric on the part played by his
+co-religionists in the Revolution[628] finds Jews where even Drumont
+failed to detect them. Thus we read that it was a Jew, Rosenthal, who
+headed the legion known by his name, which was sent against La Vendee
+but took to flight,[629] and which was the subject of complaint when
+employed to guard the Royal Family at the Temple[630]; that amongst
+those who worked most energetically to deprive the clergy of their goods
+was a Jewish ex-old-clothes seller, Zalkind Hourwitz; that it was a Jew
+named Lang who murdered three out of the five Swiss guards at the foot
+of the staircase in the Tuileries on August 10[631]; that Jews were
+implicated in the theft of the crown jewels on September 16, 1792, and
+one named Lyre was executed in consequence; that it was Clootz and the
+Jew Pereyra, and not, as I had stated, Hebert, Chaumette, and Momoro,
+who went to the Archbishop Gobel in November 1793 and induced him by
+means of threats to abjure the Christian faith.[632]
+
+All these facts were unknown to me when I wrote my account of these
+events; it will be seen then that, far from exaggerating the role of the
+Jews in _The French Revolution_, I very much underrated it. Indeed the
+question of their complicity had not occurred to me at all when I wrote
+this book, and the only Jew to whom I referred was Ephraim--sent to
+France by the Illuminati Frederick William II and Bischoffswerder--whom
+M. Kahn indicates as playing an even more important part than I had
+assigned to him.
+
+But illuminating as these incidents may be, it is yet open to question
+whether they prove any concerted attempt on the part of the Jews to
+bring about the overthrow of the French monarchy and the Catholic
+religion. It is true, nevertheless, that they themselves boasted of
+their revolutionary ardour. In an address presenting their claims before
+the National Assembly in 1789, they declare:
+
+ Regenerators of the French Empire, you would not wish that we
+ should cease to be citizens, since for already six months we have
+ assiduously performed all duties as such, and the recompense for
+ the zeal we have shown in accelerating the revolution will not be
+ to condemn us to participate in none of its advantages now that it
+ has been consummated.... Nosseigneurs, we are all very good
+ citizens, and in this memorable revolution we dare to say that
+ there is not one of us who has not proved himself.[633]
+
+In all these activities, however, religious feeling appears to have
+played an entirely subordinate part; the Jews, as has been said, were
+free before the Revolution to carry on the rites of their faith. And
+when the great anti-religious campaign began, many of them entered
+whole-heartedly into the attack on all religious faiths, their own
+included. Thus on the 21st Brumaire, whilst the Feasts of Reason were
+taking place in the churches of Paris, we find "a deputation of
+Israelites" presenting themselves at the National Assembly and
+"depositing on the bosom of the Mountain the ornaments of which they had
+stripped a little temple they had in the Faubourg Saint-Germain." At the
+same moment--
+
+ A revolutionary committee of the Reunion brings to the general
+ council crosses, suns, chalices, copes, and quantities of other
+ ornaments of worship, and a member of this committee observes that
+ several of these effects belong to individuals of the Jewish race.
+ A minister of the religion of Moses, Abraham, and Jacob asks in the
+ name of his co-religionists that the said effects should not be
+ regarded as belonging to such and such a sect, ... this citizen is
+ named Benjamin Jacob.... Another member of the same committee pays
+ homage to the patriotic zeal of the citizens heretofore Jews, ...
+ almost all have forestalled the wish of the revolutionary committee
+ by themselves bringing their reliquaries and ornaments, amongst
+ others the famous cope said to have belonged to Moses.[634]
+
+On the 20th Frimaire at "the Temple of Liberty," formerly the church of
+the Benedictines, "the citizen Alexandre Lambert _fils_, a Jew brought
+up in the prejudices of the Jewish religion," uttered a violent harangue
+against all religions:
+
+ I will prove to you, citizens, that all forms of worship are
+ impostures equally degrading to man and to divinities; I will not
+ prove it by philosophy, I do not know it, but only by the light of
+ reason.
+
+After denouncing the iniquities of both the Catholic and Protestant
+faiths, Lambert demonstrates "the absurdities of the Jewish religion,
+of this domineering religion"; he thunders against Moses "governing a
+simple and agrarian people like all clever impostors," against "the
+servile respect of the Jews for their kings ... the ablutions of women,"
+etc. Finally he declares:
+
+ The bad faith, citizens, of which the Jewish nation is accused does
+ not come from themselves but from their priests. Their religion,
+ which would allow them only to lend to those of their nation at 5
+ per cent., tells them to take all they can from Catholics; it is
+ even hallowed as a custom in our morning prayers to solicit God's
+ help in catching out a Christian. There is more, citizens, and it
+ is the climax of abomination: if any mistake is made in commerce
+ between Jews, they are ordered to make reparation; but if on 100
+ louis a Christian should have paid 25 too much, one is not bound to
+ return them to him. What an abomination! What a horror! And where
+ does that all come from but from the Rabbis? Who have excited
+ proscriptions against us? Our priests! Ah, citizens, more than
+ anything in the world we must abjure a religion which, ... by
+ subjecting us to irksome and servile practices, makes it impossible
+ for us to be good citizens.[635]
+
+The encouragement accorded by the Jews to the French Revolution appears
+thus to have been prompted not by religious fanaticism but by a desire
+for national advantage. That they gained immensely by the overthrow of
+the Old Order is undeniable, for apart from the legislation passed on
+their behalf in the National Assembly, the disorder of the finances in
+1796 was such that, as M. Leon Kahn tells us, a contemporary journal
+enquired: "Has the Revolution then been only a financial scheme? a
+speculation of bankers?"[636] We know from Prudhomme to what race the
+financiers who principally profited by this disorder belonged.[637]
+
+But if the role of the Jews in the Revolution remains obscure there can
+be no doubt of the part played by the secret societies in the revolt
+against all religion, all moral laws, and social order, which had been
+reduced to a system in the councils of the Illuminati.
+
+It was this conspiracy that reasserted itself in the Babouviste rising
+of 1796 which was directly inspired by the secret societies. After the
+death of Babeuf, his friend and inspirer Buonarotti with the aid of
+Marat's brother founded a masonic lodge, the _Amis Sinceres_, which was
+affiliated to the _Philadelphes_, at Geneva, and as "Diacre Mobile" of
+the "Order of Sublime and Perfect Masons" created three new secret
+degrees, in which the device of the Rose-Croix I.N.R.I. was interpreted
+as signifying "Justum necare reges injustos."[638]
+
+The part to be assigned to each intrigue in preparing the world-movement
+of which the French Revolution was the first expression is a question on
+which no one can speak with certainty. But, as at the present moment,
+the composite nature of this movement must never be lost to sight.
+Largely perhaps the work of Frederick the Great, it is probable that but
+for the Orleanistes the plot against the French monarchy might have come
+to nought; whilst again, but for his position at the head of illuminized
+Freemasonry it is doubtful whether the Duc d'Orleans could have
+commanded the forces of revolution. Further, how far the movement,
+which, like the modern Bolshevist conspiracy, appears to have had
+unlimited funds at its disposal, was financed by the Jews yet remains to
+be discovered. Hitherto only the first steps have been taken towards
+elucidating the truth about the French Revolution.
+
+In the opinion of an early nineteenth-century writer the sect which
+engineered the French Revolution was absolutely international:
+
+ The authors of the Revolution are not more French than German,
+ Italian, English, etc. They form a particular nation which took
+ birth and has grown in the darkness, in the midst of all civilized
+ nations, with the object of subjecting them to its domination.[639]
+
+It is curious to find almost precisely the same idea expressed by the
+Duke of Brunswick, formerly the "Eques a Victoria" of the Stricte
+Observance, "Aaron" of the Illuminati, and Grand Master of German
+Freemasonry, who, whether because the Revolution had done its work in
+destroying the French monarchy and now threatened the security of
+Germany, or whether because he was genuinely disillusioned in the Orders
+to which he had belonged, issued a Manifesto to all the lodges in 1794,
+declaring that in view of the way in which Masonry had been penetrated
+by this great sect the whole Order must be temporarily suppressed. It is
+essential to quote a part of this important document verbatim:
+
+ Amidst the universal storm produced by the present revolutions in
+ the political and moral world, at this period of supreme
+ illumination and of profound blindness, it would be a crime against
+ truth and humanity to leave any longer shrouded in a veil things
+ that can provide the only key to past and future events, things
+ that should show to thousands of men whether the path they have
+ been made to follow is the path of folly or of wisdom. It has to do
+ with you, VV. FF. of all degrees and of all secret systems. The
+ curtain must at last be drawn aside, so that your blinded eyes may
+ see that light you have ever sought in vain, but of which you have
+ only caught a few deceptive rays....
+
+ We have raised our building under the wings of darkness; ... the
+ darkness is dispelled, and a light more terrifying than darkness
+ itself strikes suddenly on our sight. We see our edifice crumbling
+ and covering the ground with ruins; we see destruction that our
+ hands can no longer arrest. And that is why we send away the
+ builders from their workshops. With a last blow of the hammer we
+ overthrow the columns of salaries. We leave the temple deserted,
+ and we bequeath it as a great work to posterity which shall raise
+ it again on its ruins and bring it to completion.
+
+Brunswick then goes on to explain what has brought about the ruin of the
+Order, namely, the infiltration of Freemasonry by secret conspirators:
+
+ A great sect arose which, taking for its motto the good and the
+ happiness of man, worked in the darkness of the conspiracy to make
+ the happiness of humanity a prey for itself. This sect is known to
+ everyone: its brothers are known no less than its name. It is they
+ who have undermined the foundations of the Order to the point of
+ complete overthrow; it is by them that all humanity has been
+ poisoned and led astray for several generations. The ferment that
+ reigns amongst the peoples is their work. They founded the plans of
+ their insatiable ambition on the political pride of nations. Their
+ founders arranged to introduce this pride into the heads of the
+ peoples. They began by casting odium on religion.... They invented
+ the rights of man which it is impossible to discover even in the
+ book of Nature, and they urged the people to wrest from their
+ princes the recognition of these supposed rights. The plan they had
+ formed for breaking all social ties and of destroying all order was
+ revealed in all their speeches and acts. They deluged the world
+ with a multitude of publications; they recruited apprentices of
+ every rank and in every position; they deluded the most
+ perspicacious men by falsely alleging different intentions. They
+ sowed in the hearts of youth the seed of covetousness, and they
+ excited it with the bait of the most insatiable passions.
+ Indomitable pride, thirst of power, such were the only motives of
+ this sect: their masters had nothing less in view than the thrones
+ of the earth, and the government of the nations was to be directed
+ by their nocturnal clubs.
+
+ This is what has been done and is still being done. But we notice
+ that princes and people are unaware how and by what means this is
+ being accomplished. That is why we say to them in all frankness:
+ The misuse of our Order, the misunderstanding of our secret, has
+ produced all the political and moral troubles with which the world
+ is filled to-day. You who have been initiated, you must join
+ yourselves with us in raising your voices, so as to teach peoples
+ and princes that the sectarians, the apostates of our Order, have
+ alone been and will be the authors of present and future
+ revolutions. We must assure princes and peoples, on our honour and
+ our duty, that our association is in no way guilty of these evils.
+ But in order that our attestations should have force and merit
+ belief, we must make for princes and people a complete sacrifice;
+ so as to cut out to the roots the abuse and error, we must from
+ this moment dissolve the whole Order. This is why we destroy and
+ annihilate it completely for the time; we will preserve the
+ foundations for posterity, which will clear them when humanity, in
+ better times, can derive some benefit from our holy alliance.[640]
+
+Thus, in the opinion of the Grand Master of German Freemasonry, a secret
+sect working within Freemasonry had brought about the French Revolution
+and would be the cause of all future revolutions. We shall now pursue
+the course of this sect after the first upheaval had ended.
+
+Three years after the Duke of Brunswick issued his Manifesto to the
+lodges, the books of Barruel, Robison, and others appeared, laying bare
+the whole conspiracy. It has been said that all these books "fell
+flat."[641] This is directly contrary to the truth. Barruel's book went
+into no less than eight editions, and I have described elsewhere the
+alarm that his work and Robison's excited in America. In England they
+led to the very tangible result that a law was passed by the English
+Parliament in 1799 prohibiting all secret societies with the exception
+of Freemasonry.
+
+It is evident, then, that the British Government recognized the
+continued existence of these associations and the danger they presented
+to the world. This fact should be borne in mind when we are assured that
+Barruel and Robison had conjured up a bogey which met with no serious
+attention from responsible men. For the main purpose of Barruel's book
+is to show that not only had Illuminism and Grand Orient Masonry
+contributed largely to the French Revolution, but that three years after
+that first explosion they were still as active as ever. This is the
+great point which the champions of the "bogey" theory are most anxious
+to refute. "The Bavarian Order of the Illuminati," wrote Mr. Waite, "was
+founded by Adam Weishaupt in 1776, and it was suppressed by the Elector
+of Bavaria in 1789.... Those who say that 'it was continued in more
+secret forms' have never produced one item of real evidence."[642] Now,
+as we have seen, the Illuminati were not suppressed by the Elector of
+Bavaria in 1789, but in 1786--first error of Mr. Waite. But more
+extraordinary confusion of mind is displayed in his _Encyclopaedia of
+Freemasonry_, where, in a Masonic Chronology, he gives, this time under
+the date of 1784, "Suppression of the Illuminati," but under 1793:
+"J.J.C. Bode joined the Illuminati under Weishaupt." At a matter of
+fact, this was the year Bode died. These examples will serve to show the
+reliance that can be placed on Mr. Waite's statement concerning the
+Illuminati.
+
+We shall now see that not only the Illuminati but Weishaupt himself
+still continued to intrigue long after the French Revolution had ended.
+
+Directly the Reign of Terror was over, the masonic lodges, which during
+the Revolution had been replaced by the clubs, began to reopen, and by
+the beginning of the nineteenth century were in a more flourishing
+condition than ever before. "It was the most brilliant epoch of
+Masonry," wrote the Freemason Bazot in his History of Freemasonry.
+Nearly 1,200 lodges existed in France under the Empire; generals,
+magistrates, artists, savants, and notabilities in every line were
+initiated into the Order.[643] The most eminent of these was Prince
+Cambaceres, pro Grand Master of the Grand Orient.
+
+It is in the midst of this period that we find Weishaupt once more at
+work behind the scenes of Freemasonry. Thus in the remarkable masonic
+correspondence published by M. Benjamin Fabre in his _Eques a Capite
+Galeato_--of which, as has already been pointed out, the authenticity is
+admitted by eminent British Freemasons--a letter is reproduced from
+Pyron, representative in Paris of the Grand Orient of Italy, to the
+Marquis de Chefdebien, dated September 9, 1808, in which it is stated
+that "a member of the sect of Bav." has asked for information on a
+certain point of ritual.
+
+On December 29, 1808, Pyron writes again: "By the words 'sect of B....'
+I meant W...."; and on December 3, 1809, puts the matter quite plainly:
+"The other word remaining at the end of my pen refers enigmatically to
+Weis=pt."
+
+So, as M. Fabre points out:
+
+ There is no longer any doubt that it is a question here of
+ Weishaupt, and yet one observes that his name is not yet written in
+ all its letters. It must be admitted here that Pyron took great
+ precautions when it was a matter of Weishaupt! And one is led to
+ ask what could be the extraordinary importance of the role played
+ at this moment in the Freemasonry of the First Empire by this
+ Weishaupt, who was supposed to have been outside the masonic
+ movement since Illuminism was brought to trial in 1786![644]
+
+But the Marquis de Chefdebien entertained no illusions about Weishaupt,
+whose intrigues he had always opposed, and in a letter dated May 12,
+1806, to the Freemason Roettiers, who had referred to the danger of
+isolated masonic lodges, he asks:
+
+ In good faith, very reverend brother, is it in isolated lodges that
+ the atrocious conspiracy of Philippe [the Duc d'Orleans] and
+ Robespierre was formed? Is it from isolated lodges that those
+ prominent men came forth, who, assembled at the Hotel de Ville,
+ stirred up revolt, devastation, assassination? And is it not in the
+ lodges bound together, co-and sub-ordinated, that the monster
+ Weishaupt established his tests and had his horrible principles
+ prepared?[645]
+
+If, then, as M. Gustave Bord asserts, the Marquis de Chefdebien had
+himself belonged to the Illuminati before the Revolution, here is indeed
+Illuminist evidence in support of Barruel! Yet disillusioned as the
+"Eques a Capite Galeato" appears to have been with regard to Illuminism,
+he still retained his allegiance to Freemasonry. This would tend to
+prove that, however subversive the doctrines of the Grand Orient may
+have been--and indeed undoubtedly were--it was not Freemasonry itself
+but Illuminism which organized the movement of which the French
+Revolution was the first manifestation. As Monsignor Dillon has
+expressed it:
+
+ Had Weishaupt not lived, Masonry might have ceased to be a power
+ after the reaction consequent on the French Revolution. He gave it
+ a form and character which caused it to outlive that reaction, to
+ energize to the present day, and which will cause it to advance
+ until its final conflict with Christianity must determine whether
+ Christ or Satan shall reign on this earth to the end.[646]
+
+If to the word Masonry we add Grand Orient--that is to say, the Masonry
+not of Great Britain, but of the Continent--we shall be still nearer to
+the truth.
+
+In the early part of the nineteenth century Illuminism was thus as much
+alive as ever. Joseph de Maistre, writing at this period, constantly
+refers to the danger it presents to Europe. Is it not also to Illuminism
+that a mysterious passage in a recent work of M. Lenotre refers? In the
+course of conversation with the friends of the false Dauphin Hervagault.
+Monsignor de Savine is said to have "made allusions in prudent and
+almost terrified terms to some international sect ... a power superior
+to all others ... which has arms and eyes everywhere and which governs
+Europe to-day."[647]
+
+When in _World Revolution_ I asserted that during the period that
+Napoleon held the reins of power the devastating fire of Illuminism was
+temporarily extinguished, I wrote without knowledge of some important
+documents which prove that Illuminism continued without break from the
+date of its foundation all through the period of the Empire. So far,
+then, from overstating the case by saying that Illuminism did not cease
+in 1786, I understated it by suggesting that it ceased even for this
+brief interval. The documents in which this evidence is to be found are
+referred to by Lombard de Langres, who, writing in 1820, observes that
+the Jacobins were invisible from the 18th Brumaire until 1813, and goes
+on to say:
+
+ Here the sect disappears; we find to guide us during this period
+ only uncertain notions, scattered fragments; the plots of
+ Illuminism lie buried in the boxes of the Imperial police.
+
+But the contents of these boxes no longer lie buried; transported to the
+Archives Nationales, the documents in which the intrigues of Illuminism
+are laid bare have at last been given to the public. Here there can be
+no question of imaginative abbes, Scotch professors, or American divines
+conjuring up a bogey to alarm the world; these dry official reports
+prepared for the vigilant eye of the Emperor, never intended and never
+used for publication, relate calmly and dispassionately what the writers
+have themselves heard and observed concerning the danger that Illuminism
+presents to all forms of settled government.
+
+The author of the most detailed report[648] is one Francois Charles de
+Berckheim, special commissioner of police at Mayence towards the end of
+the Empire, who as a Freemason is naturally not disposed to prejudice
+against secret societies. In October 1810 he writes, however, that his
+attention has been drawn to the Illuminati by a pamphlet which has just
+fallen into his hands, namely the _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_,
+which, like many contemporaries, he attributes originally to Mirabeau.
+He then goes on to ask whether the sect still exists, and if so whether
+it is indeed "an association of frightful scoundrels who aim, as
+Mirabeau assures us, at the overthrow of all law and all morality, at
+replacing virtue by crime in every act of human life." Further, he asks
+whether both sects of _Illumines_ have now combined in one and what are
+their present projects. Conversations with other Freemasons further
+increase Berckheim's anxiety on the subject; one of the best informed
+observes to him: "I know a great deal, enough at any rate to be
+convinced that the _Illumines_ have vowed the overthrow of monarchic
+governments and of all authority on the same basis."
+
+Berckheim thereupon sets out to make enquiries, with the result that he
+is able to state that the _Illumines_ have initiates all over Europe,
+that they have spared no efforts to introduce their principles into the
+lodges, and "to spread a doctrine subversive of all settled government
+... under the pretext of the regeneration of social morality and the
+amelioration of the lot and condition of men by means of laws founded on
+principles and sentiments unknown hitherto and contained only in the
+heads of the leaders." "Illuminism," he declares, "is becoming a great
+and formidable power, and I fear, in my conscience, that kings and
+peoples will have much to suffer from it unless foresight and prudence
+break its frightful mechanism [_ses affreux restorts_]."
+
+Two years later, on January 16, 1813, Berckheim writes again to the
+Minister of Police:
+
+ Monseigneur, they write to me from Heidelberg ... that a great
+ number of initiates into the mysteries of Illuminism are to be
+ found there.
+
+ These gentlemen wear as a sign of recognition a gold ring on the
+ third finger of the left hand; on the back of this ring there is a
+ little rose, in the middle of this rose is an almost imperceptible
+ dint; by pressing this with the point of a pin one touches a
+ spring, by this means the two gold circles are detached. On the
+ inside of the first of these circles is the device: "Be German as
+ you ought to be"; on the inside of the second of these circles are
+ engraved the words "Pro Patria."
+
+Subversive as the ideas of the Illuminati might be, they were therefore
+not subversive of German patriotism. We shall find this apparent paradox
+running all through the Illuminist movement to the present day.
+
+In 1814 Berckheim drew up his great report on the secret societies of
+Germany, which is of so much importance in throwing a light on the
+workings of the modern revolutionary movement, that extracts must be
+given here at length.[649] His testimony gains greater weight from the
+vagueness he displays on the origins of Illuminism and the role it had
+played before the French Revolution; it is evident, therefore, that he
+had not taken his ideas from Robison or Barruel--to whom he never once
+refers--but from information gleaned on the spot in Germany. The opening
+paragraphs finally refute the fallacy concerning the extinction of the
+sect in 1786.
+
+ The oldest and most dangerous association is that which is
+ generally known under the denomination of the _Illumines_ and of
+ which the foundation goes back towards the middle of the last
+ century.
+
+ Bavaria was its cradle; it is said that it had for founders several
+ chiefs of the Order of the Jesuits; but this opinion, advanced
+ perhaps at random, is founded only on uncertain premises; in any
+ case, in a short time it made rapid progress, and the Bavarian
+ Government recognized the necessity of employing methods of
+ repression against it and even of driving away several of the
+ principal sectaries.
+
+ But it could not eradicate the germ of the evil. The _Illumines_
+ who remained in Bavaria, obliged to wrap themselves in darkness so
+ as to escape the eye of authority, became only the more formidable:
+ the rigorous measures of which they were the object, adorned by the
+ title of persecution, gained them new proselytes, whilst the
+ banished members went to carry the principles of the Association
+ into other States.
+
+ Thus in a few years Illuminism multiplied its hotbeds all through
+ the south of Germany, and as a consequence in Saxony, in Prussia,
+ in Sweden, and even in Russia.
+
+ The reveries of the Pietists have long been confounded with those
+ of the Illumines. This error may arise from the denomination of the
+ sect, which at first suggests the idea of a purely religious
+ fanaticism and of mystic forms which it was obliged to take at its
+ birth in order to conceal its principles and projects; but the
+ Association always had a political tendency. If it still retains
+ some mystic traits, it is in order to support itself at need by the
+ power of religious fanaticism, and we shall see in what follows how
+ well it knows to turn this to account.
+
+ The doctrine of Illuminism is subversive of every kind of monarchy;
+ unlimited liberty, absolute levelling down, such is the fundamental
+ dogma of the sect; to break the ties that bind the Sovereign to the
+ citizen of a state, that is the object of all its efforts.
+
+ No doubt some of the principal chiefs, amongst whom are numbered
+ men distinguished for their fortune, their birth, and the dignities
+ with which they are invested, are not the dupes of these demagogic
+ dreams: they hope to find in the popular emotions they stir up the
+ means of seizing the reigns of power, or at any rate of increasing
+ their wealth and their credit; but the crowd of adepts believe in
+ it religiously, and, in order to reach the goal shown to them, they
+ maintain incessantly a hostile attitude towards sovereigns.
+
+ Thus the _Illumines_ hailed with enthusiasm the ideas that
+ prevailed in France from 1789 to 1804. Perhaps they were not
+ foreign to the intrigues which prepared the explosions of 1789 and
+ the following years; but if they did not take an active part in
+ these manoeuvres, it is at least beyond doubt that they openly
+ applauded the systems which resulted from them; that the Republican
+ armies when they penetrated into Germany found in these sectarians
+ auxiliaries the more dangerous for the sovereigns of the invaded
+ states in that they inspired no distrust, and we can say with
+ assurance that more than one general of the Republic owed a part of
+ its success to his understanding with the _Illumines_.
+
+ It would be a mistake if one confounded Illuminism with
+ Freemasonry. These two associations, in spite of the points of
+ resemblance they may possess in the mystery with which they
+ surround themselves, in the tests that precede initiation, and in
+ other matters of form, are absolutely distinct and have no kind of
+ connexion with each other. The lodges of the Scottish Rite number,
+ it is true, a few _Illumines_ amongst the Masons of the higher
+ degrees, but these adepts are very careful not to be known as such
+ to their brothers in Masonry or to manifest ideas that would betray
+ their secret.
+
+Berckheim then goes on to describe the subtle methods by which the
+Illuminati now maintain their existence; learning wisdom from the events
+of 1786, their organization is carried on invisibly, so as to defy the
+eye of authority:
+
+ It was thought for a long while that the association had a Grand
+ Mastership, that is to say, a centre point from which radiated all
+ the impulsions given to this great body, and this primary motive
+ power was sought for successively in all the capitals of the North,
+ in Paris and even in Rome. This error gave birth to another opinion
+ no less fallacious: it was supposed that there existed in the
+ principal towns lodges where initiations were made and which
+ received directly the instructions emanating from the headquarters
+ of the Society.
+
+ If such had been the organization of Illuminism, it would not so
+ long have escaped the investigations of which it was the object:
+ these meetings, necessarily thronged and frequent, requiring
+ besides, like masonic lodges, appropriate premises, would have
+ aroused the attention of magistrates: it would not have been
+ difficult to introduce false brothers, who, directed and protected
+ by authority, would soon have penetrated the secrets of the sect.
+
+ This is what I have gathered most definitely on the Association of
+ the _Illumines_:
+
+ First I would point out that by the word hotbeds [foyers] I did not
+ mean to designate points of meeting for the adepts, places where
+ they hold assemblies, but only localities where the Association
+ counts a great number of partisans, who, whilst living isolated in
+ appearance, exchange ideas, have an understanding with each other,
+ and advance together towards the same goal.
+
+ The Association had, it is true, assemblies at its birth where
+ receptions [i.e. initiations] took place, but the dangers which
+ resulted from these made them feel the necessity of abandoning
+ them. It was settled that each initiated adept should have the
+ right without the help of anyone else to initiate all those who,
+ after the usual tests, seemed to him worthy.
+
+ The catechism of the sect is composed of a very small number of
+ articles which might even be reduced to this single principle:
+
+ "To arm the opinion of the peoples against sovereigns and to work
+ by every method for the fall of monarchic governments in order to
+ found in their place systems of absolute independence." Everything
+ that can tend towards this object is in the spirit of the
+ Association....
+
+ Initiations are not accompanied, as in Masonry, by phantasmagoric
+ trials, ... but they are preceded by long moral tests which
+ guarantee in the safest way the fidelity of the catechumen; oaths,
+ a mixture of all that is most sacred in religion, threats and
+ imprecations against traitors, nothing that can stagger the
+ imagination is spared; but the only engagement into which the
+ recipient enters is to propagate the principles with which he has
+ been imbued, to maintain inviolable secrecy on all that pertains to
+ the association, and to work with all his might to increase the
+ number of proselytes.
+
+ It will no doubt seem astonishing that there can be the least
+ accord in the association, and that men bound together by no
+ physical tie and who live at great distances from each other can
+ communicate their ideas to each other, make plans of conduct, and
+ give grounds of fear to Governments; but there exists an invisible
+ chain which binds together all the scattered members of the
+ association. Here are a few links:
+
+ All the adepts living in the same town usually know each other,
+ unless the population of the town or the number of the adepts is
+ too considerable. In this last case they are divided into several
+ groups, who are all in touch with each other by means of members of
+ the association whom personal relations bind to two or several
+ groups at a time.
+
+ These groups are again subdivided into so many private coteries
+ which the difference of rank, of fortune, of character, tastes,
+ etc., may necessitate: they are always small, sometimes composed of
+ five or six individuals, who meet frequently under various
+ pretexts, sometimes at the house of one member, sometimes at that
+ of another; literature, art, amusements of all kinds are the
+ apparent object of these meetings, and it is nevertheless in these
+ confabulations [_conciliabules_] that the adepts communicate their
+ private views to each other, agree on methods, receive the
+ directions that the intermediaries bring them, and communicate
+ their own ideas to these same intermediaries, who then go on to
+ propagate them in other coteries. It will be understood that there
+ may be uniformity in the march of all these separated groups, and
+ that one day may suffice to communicate the same impulse to all the
+ quarters of a large town....
+
+ These are the methods by which the _Illumines_, without any
+ apparent organization, without settled leaders, agree together from
+ the banks of the Rhine to those of the Neva, from the Baltic to the
+ Dardanelles, and advance continually towards the same goal, without
+ leaving any trace that might compromise the interests of the
+ association or even bring suspicion on any of its members; the most
+ active police would fail before such a combination....
+
+ As the principal force of the _Illumines_ lies in the power of
+ opinions, they have set themselves out from the beginning to make
+ proselytes amongst the men who through their profession exercise a
+ direct influence on minds, such as _litterateurs_, savants, and
+ above all professors. The latter in their chairs, the former in
+ their writings, propagate the principles of the sect by disguising
+ the poison that they circulate under a thousand different forms.
+ These germs, often imperceptible to the eyes of the vulgar, are
+ afterwards developed by the adepts of the Societies they frequent,
+ and the most obscure wording is thus brought to the understanding
+ of the least discerning. It is above all in the Universities that
+ Illuminism has always found and always will find numerous recruits.
+ Those professors who belong to the Association set out from the
+ first to study the character of their pupils. If a student gives
+ evidence of a vigorous mind, an ardent imagination, the sectaries
+ at once get hold of him, they sound in his ears the words
+ Despotism--Tyranny--Rights of the People, etc., etc. Before he can
+ even attach any meaning to these words, as he advances in age,
+ reading chosen for him, conversations skilfully arranged, develop
+ the germs deposited in his youthful brain; soon his imagination
+ ferments, history, traditions of fabulous times, all are made use
+ of to carry his exaltation to the highest point, and before even he
+ has been told of a secret Association, to contribute to the fall of
+ a sovereign appears to his eyes the noblest and most meritorious
+ act....
+
+ At last, when he has been completely captivated, when several years
+ of testing guarantee to the society inviolable secrecy and absolute
+ devotion, it is made known to him that millions of individuals
+ distributed in all the States of Europe share his sentiments and
+ his hopes, that a secret link binds firmly all the scattered
+ members of this immense family, and that the reforms he desires so
+ ardently must sooner or later come about.
+
+ This propaganda is rendered the easier by the existing associations
+ of students who meet together for the study of literature, for
+ fencing, gaming, or even mere debauchery. The Illumines insinuate
+ themselves into all these circles and turn them into hot-beds for
+ the propagation of their principles.
+
+ Such, then, is the Association's continual mode of progression from
+ its origins until the present moment; it is by conveying from
+ childhood the germ of poison into the highest classes of society,
+ in feeding the minds of students on ideas diametrically opposed to
+ that order of things under which they have to live, in breaking the
+ ties that bind them to sovereigns, that Illuminism has recruited
+ the largest number of adepts, called by the state to which they
+ were born to be the mainstays of the Throne and of a system which
+ would ensure them honours and privileges.
+
+ Amongst the proselytes of this last class there are some no doubt
+ whom political events, the favour of the prince or other
+ circumstances, detach from the Association; but the number of these
+ deserters is necessarily very limited: and even then they dare not
+ speak openly against their old associates, whether because they are
+ in dread of private vengeances or whether because, knowing the real
+ power of the sect, they want to keep paths of reconciliation open
+ to themselves; often indeed they are so fettered by the pledges
+ they have personally given that they find it necessary not only to
+ consider the interests of the sect, but to serve it indirectly,
+ although their new circumstances demand the contrary....
+
+Berckheim then proceeds to show that those writers on Illuminism were
+mistaken who declared that political assassinations were definitely
+commanded by the Order:
+
+ There is more than exaggeration in this accusation; those who put
+ it forward, more zealous in striking an effect than in seeking the
+ truth, may have concluded, not without probability, that men who
+ surrounded themselves with profound mystery, who propagated a
+ doctrine absolutely subversive of any kind of monarchy, dreamt only
+ of the assassination of sovereigns; but experience has shown (and
+ all the documents derived from the least suspect sources confirm
+ this) that the _Illumines_ count a great deal more on the power of
+ opinion than on assassination; the regicide committed on Gustavus
+ III is perhaps the only crime of this kind that Illuminism has
+ dared to attempt, if indeed it is really proved that this crime was
+ its work; moreover, if assassination had been, as it is said, the
+ fundamental point in its doctrine, might we not suppose that other
+ regicides would have been attempted in Germany during the course of
+ the French Revolution, especially when the Republican armies
+ occupied the country?
+
+ The sect would be much less formidable if this were its doctrine,
+ on the one hand because it would inspire in most of the _Illumines_
+ a feeling of horror which would triumph even over the fear of
+ vengeance, on the other hand because plots and conspiracies always
+ leave some traces which guide the authorities to the footsteps of
+ the prime instigators; and besides, it is the nature of things that
+ out of twenty plots directed against sovereigns, nineteen come to
+ light before they have reached the point of maturity necessary to
+ their execution.
+
+ The _Illumines'_ line of march is more prudent, more skilful, and
+ consequently more dangerous; instead of revolting the imagination
+ by ideas of regicide, they affect the most generous sentiments:
+ declamations on the unhappy state of the people, on the selfishness
+ of courtiers, on measures of administration, on all acts of
+ authority that may offer a pretext to declamations as a contrast to
+ the seductive pictures of the felicity that awaits the nations
+ under the systems they wish to establish, such is their manner of
+ procedure, particularly in private. More circumspect in their
+ writings, they usually disguise the poison they dare not proffer
+ openly under obscure metaphysics or more or less ingenious
+ allegories. Often indeed texts from Holy Writ serve as an envelope
+ and vehicle for these baneful insinuations....
+
+By this continuous and insidious form of propaganda the imagination of
+the adepts is so worked on that if a crisis arises, they are ready to,
+carry out the most daring projects.
+
+Another Association closely resembling the _Illumines_, Berckheim
+reports, is known as the _Idealists_, whose system is founded on the
+doctrine of perfectibility; these kindred sects "agree in seeing in the
+words of Holy Scripture the pledge of universal regeneration, of an
+absolute levelling down, and it is in this spirit that the sectarians
+interpret the sacred books."
+
+Berckheim further confirms the assertion I made in _World
+Revolution_--contested, as usual, by a reviewer without a shred of
+evidence to the contrary--that the Tugendbund derived from the
+Illuminati. "The League of Virtue," he writes, "was directed by the
+secondary chiefs of the _Illumines_.... In 1810 the Friends of Virtue
+were so identified with the _Illumines_ in the North of Germany that no
+line of demarcation was seen between them."
+
+But it is time to turn to the testimony of another witness on the
+activities of the secret societies which is likewise to be found at the
+Archives Nationales.[650] This consists of a document transmitted by the
+Court of Vienna to the Government of France after the Restoration, and
+contains the interrogatory of a certain Witt Doehring, a nephew of the
+Baron d'Eckstein, who, after taking part in secret society intrigues,
+was summoned before the judge Abel at Bayreuth in February, 1824.
+Amongst secret associations recently existing in Germany, the witness
+asserted, were the "Independents" and the "Absolutes"; the latter
+"adored in Robespierre their most perfect ideal, so that the crimes
+committed during the French Revolution by this monster and the
+Montagnards of the Convention were in their eyes, in accordance with
+their moral system, heroic actions ennobled and sanctified by their
+aim." The same document goes on to explain why so many combustible
+elements had failed to produce an explosion in Germany:
+
+ The thing that seemed the great obstacle to the plans of the
+ Independents ... was what they called the servile character and the
+ dog-like fidelity [_Hundestreue_] of the German people, that is to
+ say, that attachment--innate and firmly impressed on their minds
+ without even the aid of reason--which that excellent people
+ everywhere bears towards its princes.
+
+A traveller in Germany during the year 1795 admirably summed up the
+matter in these words:
+
+ The Germans are in this respect [of democracy] the most curious
+ people in the world ... the cold and sober temperament of the
+ Germans and their tranquil imagination enable them to combine the
+ most daring opinions with the most servile conduct. That will
+ explain to you ... why so much combustible material accumulating
+ for so many years beneath the political edifice of Germany has not
+ yet damaged it. Most of the princes, accustomed to see their men of
+ letters so constantly free in their writings and so constantly
+ slavish in their hearts, have not thought it necessary to use
+ severity against this sheeplike herd of modern Gracchi and
+ Brutuses. Some of them [the princes] have even without difficulty
+ adopted part of their opinions, and Illuminism having doubtless
+ been presented to them as perfection, the complement of philosophy,
+ they were easily persuaded to be initiated into it. But great care
+ was taken not to let them know more than the interests of the sect
+ demanded.[651]
+
+It was thus that Illuminism, unable to provoke a blaze in the home of
+its birth, spread, as before the French Revolution, to a more
+inflammable Latin race--this time the Italians. Six years after his
+interrogatory at Beyreuth, Witt Doehring published his book on the
+secret societies of France and Italy, in which he now realized he had
+played the part of dupe, and incidentally confirms the statement I have
+previously quoted, that the Alta Vendita was a further development of
+the Illuminati.
+
+This infamous association, with which I have dealt at length
+elsewhere,[652] constituted the Supreme Directory of the Carbonari and
+was led by a group of Italian noblemen, amongst whom a prince, "the
+profoundest of initiates, was charged as Inspector-General of the Order"
+to propagate its principles throughout the North of Europe. "He had
+received from the hands of Kingge [i.e. Knigge, the ally of Weishaupt?]
+the cahiers of the last three degrees." But these were of course unknown
+to the great majority of Carbonari, who entered the association in all
+good faith. Witt Doehring then shows how faithfully the system of
+Weishaupt was carried out by the Alta Vendita. In the three first
+degrees, he explains--
+
+ It is still a question of the morality of Christianity and even of
+ the Church, for which those who wish to be received must promise to
+ sacrifice themselves. The initiates imagine, according to this
+ formula, that the object of the association is something high and
+ noble, that it is the Order of those who desire a purer morality
+ and a stronger piety, the independence and the unity of their
+ country. One cannot therefore judge the Carbonari _en masse_; there
+ are excellent men amongst them.... But everything changes after one
+ has taken the three degrees. Already in the fourth, in that of the
+ _Apostoli_, one promises to overthrow all monarchies, and
+ especially the kings of the race of the Bourbons. But it is only in
+ the seventh and last degree, reached by few, that revelations go
+ further. At last the veil is torn completely for the Principi Summo
+ Patriarcho. Then one learns that the aim of the Carbonari is just
+ the same as that of the _Illumines_. This degree, in which a man is
+ at the same time prince and bishop, coincides with the Homo Rex of
+ the latter. The initiate vows the ruin of all religion and of all
+ positive government, whether despotic or democratic; murder,
+ poison, perjury, are all at their disposal. Who does not remember
+ that on the suppression of the _Illumines_ was found, amongst other
+ poisons, a _tinctura ad abortum faciendum_. The _summo maestro_
+ laughs at the zeal of the mass of Carbonari who have sacrificed
+ themselves for the liberty and independence of Italy, neither one
+ nor the other being for him a goal but a method.[653]
+
+Witt Doehring, who had himself reached the degree of P.S.P., thereupon
+declares that, having taken his vows under a misapprehension, he holds
+himself to be released from his obligations and conceives it his duty to
+warn society. "The fears that assail governments are only too well
+founded. The soil of Europe is volcanic."[654]
+
+It is unnecessary to go over the ground already traversed in _World
+Revolution_ by relating the history of the successive eruptions which
+proved the truth of Witt Doehring's warning. The point to emphasize
+again is that every one of these eruptions can be traced to the work of
+the secret societies, and that, as in the eighteenth century, most of
+the prominent revolutionaries were known to be connected with some
+secret association. According to the plan laid down by Weishaupt,
+Freemasonry was habitually adopted as a cover. Thus Louis _Amis de la
+Verite_, numbering Bazard and Buchez amongst Blanc, himself a Freemason,
+speaks of a lodge named the its founders, "in which the solemn
+puerilities of the Grand Orient only served to mask political action."[655]
+Bakunin, companion of the Freemason Proudhon,[656] "the father of
+Anarchy," makes use of precisely the same expression. Freemasonry, he
+explains, is not to be taken seriously, but "may serve as a mask" and
+"as a means of preparing something quite different."[657]
+
+I have quoted elsewhere the statement of the Socialist Malon that
+"Bakunin was a disciple of Weishaupt," and that of the Anarchist
+Kropotkine that between Bakunin's secret society--the _Alliance Sociale
+Democratique_--and the secret societies of 1795 there was a direct
+affiliation; I have quoted the assertion of Malon that "Communism was
+handed down in the dark through the secret societies" of the nineteenth
+century; I have quoted also the congratulations addressed by Lamartine
+and the Freemason Cremieux to the Freemasons of France in 1848 on their
+share in this revolution as in that of 1789; I have shown that the
+organization of this later outbreak by the secret societies is not a
+matter of surmise, but a fact admitted by all well-informed historians
+and by the members of the secret societies themselves.
+
+So, too, in the events of the Commune, and in the founding of the First
+Internationale, the role of Freemasonry and the secret societies is no
+less apparent. The Freemasons of France have indeed always boasted of
+their share in political and social upheavals. Thus in 1874, Malapert,
+orator of the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite,
+went so far as to say: "In the eighteenth century Freemasonry was so
+widespread throughout the world that one can say that since that epoch
+nothing has been done without its consent."
+
+The secret history of Europe during the last two hundred years yet
+remains to be written. Until viewed in the light of the _dessous des
+cartes_, many events that have taken place during this period must
+remain for ever incomprehensible.
+
+But it is time to leave the past and consider the secret forces at work
+in the world to-day.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+_THE PRESENT_
+
+
+
+
+11
+
+MODERN FREEMASONRY
+
+
+
+In the foregoing portion of this book we have followed the history of
+Freemasonry in the past and the various interpretations that have been
+placed on its rites and ceremonies. The question now arises: what is the
+role of Freemasonry to-day?
+
+The fundamental error of most writers on this question, whether Masonic
+or anti-Masonic, is to represent all Freemasons as holding a common
+belief and animated by a common purpose. Thus on one hand the panegyrics
+by Freemasons on their Order as a whole, and on the other hand the
+sweeping condemnations of the Order by the Catholic Church, are equally
+at fault.
+
+The truth is that Freemasonry in a generic sense is simply a system of
+binding men together for any given purpose, since it is obvious that
+allegories and symbols, like the _x_ and _y_ of algebra, can be
+interpreted in a hundred different manners. Two pillars may be said to
+represent strength and stability, or man and woman, or light and
+darkness, or any other two things we please. A triangle may signify the
+Trinity, or Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity, or any other triad. To
+say that any of these symbols have an absolute meaning is absurd.
+
+The allegories of Freemasonry are equally capable of various
+interpretations. The building of the Temple of Solomon may signify the
+progress of any undertaking and Hiram the victim of its opponents. So
+also with regard to the "secret tradition" of Freemasonry concerning "a
+loss which has befallen humanity"[658] and its ultimate recovery. Any
+body of people working for an object may be said to have experienced a
+loss and to aim at its recovery.
+
+In the same way the whole organization of Freemasonry, the plan of
+admitting candidates to successive degrees of initiation, of binding
+them to secrecy by fearful oaths, is one that can be employed for any
+purpose, social, political, philanthropic, or religious, for promoting
+that which is good or for disseminating that which is evil. It may be
+used to defend a throne or to overthrow it, to protect religion or to
+destroy it, to maintain law and order or to create anarchy.
+
+Now, there was, as we have seen, from the beginning, besides the written
+charges, an _oral tradition_ in Masonry, after the manner of the Cabala,
+on which the guidance of the society depended. The true character of any
+form of Freemasonry is thus not to be judged only by its printed ritual,
+but by the oral instruction of the initiates and the interpretations
+placed on the symbols and ritual. Naturally these interpretations vary
+in different countries and at different periods. Freemasonry is
+described in its Ritual as "a peculiar system of morality, veiled in
+allegory and illustrated by symbols." But what code of morality? In
+studying the history of the Order we shall find that the same code was
+by no means common to all masonic bodies, nor is it to-day. Some
+maintain a very high standard of morals; others appear to possess no
+standard at all. Mr. Waite observes that "the two doctrines of the unity
+of God and the immortality of the soul constitute 'the philosophy of
+Freemasonry.'"[659] But these doctrines are by no means essential to
+the existence of Freemasonry; the Grand Orient has renounced both, but
+it still ranks as Freemasonry.
+
+M. Paul Nourrisson is therefore perfectly right in saying: "There are as
+many Masonries as countries; there is no such thing as universal
+Masonry."[660] Broadly, however, modern Freemasonry may be divided into
+two kinds: the variety worked in the British Empire, in America,
+Holland, Sweden, Denmark, etc., and Grand Orient Masonry, which prevails
+in Catholic countries and of which the most important centre is the
+Grand Orient of Paris.
+
+
+
+Continental Masonry
+
+
+The fact that Masonry in Protestant countries is neither revolutionary
+nor anti-religious is frequently used by Catholic writers to show that
+Protestantism identifies itself with the aims of Masonry, and by
+Freemasons to prove that the tyranny of the Church of Rome has driven
+Masonry into an attitude hostile to Church and State. The point
+overlooked in both these contentions is the essential difference in the
+character of the two kinds of Masonry. If the Grand Orient had adhered
+to the fundamental principle of British Masonry not to concern itself
+with religion or politics, there is no reason why it should have come
+into conflict with the Church. But its duplicity on this point is
+apparent. Thus in one of its earlier manuals it declares, like British
+Masonry, that it "never interferes with questions of government or of
+civil and religious legislation, and that whilst making its members
+participate in the perfecting of all sciences, it positively excepts in
+the lodges two of the most beautiful, _politics_ and _theology_, because
+these two sciences divide men and nations which Masonry constantly tends
+to unite."[661] But on a further page of the same manual from which
+this quotation is taken we find it stated that Masonry is simply "the
+political application of Christianity."[662] Indeed, during the last
+fifty years the Grand Orient has thrown off the mask and openly declared
+itself to be political in its aims. In October 1887 the Venerable Bro.'.
+Blanc said in a discourse which was printed for the lodges:
+
+ You recognise with me, my brothers, the necessity for Freemasonry
+ to become a vast and powerful political and social society having a
+ decisive influence on the resolutions of the Republican
+ government.[663]
+
+And in 1890 the Freemason Fernand Maurice declared "that nothing should
+happen in France without the hidden action of Freemasonry," and "if the
+Masons choose to organize, in ten years' time no one in France will be
+able to move outside us (_personne ne bougera plus en France en dehors
+de nous_)."[664]
+
+This is the despotic power which the Grand Orient has established in
+opposition to both Church and Government.
+
+Moreover, Grand Orient masonry is not only political but subversive in
+its political aims. Instead of the peaceful trilogy of British masonry,
+"Brotherly love, relief, and truth," it has throughout adhered to the
+formula which originated in the Masonic lodges of France and became the
+war-cry of the Revolution: "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity." "It is the
+law of equality," says Ragon, "that has always endeared Masonry to the
+French," and "as long as equality really exists only in the lodges,
+Masonry will be preserved in France."[665] The aim of Grand Orient
+Masonry is thus to bring about universal equality as formulated by
+Robespierre and Babeuf. In the matter of liberty we read further that as
+men are all by nature free--the old fallacy of Rousseau and of the
+Declaration of the Rights of Man--therefore "no one is necessarily
+subjected to another nor has the right to rule him."[666] The
+revolutionary expresses the same idea in the phrase that "no man should
+have a master." Finally, by fraternity Grand Orient Masonry denotes the
+abolition of all national feeling.
+
+ It is to Masonry [Ragon says again] that we owe the affiliation of
+ all classes of society, it alone could bring about this fusion
+ which from its midst has passed into the life of the peoples. It
+ alone could promulgate that humanitarian law of which the rising
+ activity, tending to a great social uniformity, leads to the fusion
+ of races, of different classes, of morals, codes, customs,
+ languages, fashions, money, and measures. Its virtuous propaganda
+ will become the humanitarian law of all consciences.[667]
+
+The policy of the Grand Orient is thus avowedly International Socialism.
+Indeed in a further passage Ragon plainly indicates this fact:
+
+ Every generous reform, every social benefit derives from it, and if
+ these survive it is because Masonry lends them its support. This
+ phenomenon is due only to the power of its organization. The past
+ belongs to it and the future cannot escape from it. By its immense
+ lever of association it alone is able to realize by a productive
+ communion (_communion generatrice_) that great and beautiful social
+ unity conceived by Jaurez, Saint-Simon, Owen, Fourier. If Masons
+ wish it, the generous conceptions of these philanthropic thinkers
+ will cease to be vain Utopias.[668]
+
+Who are the philanthropic thinkers enumerated here but the men
+derisively described by Karl Marx as the "Utopian Socialists" of the
+nineteenth century? Utopian Socialism is thus simply the open and
+visible expression of Grand Orient Freemasonry. Moreover, these Utopian
+Socialists were almost without exception Freemasons or members of other
+secret societies.
+
+The Freemason Clavel confirms the foregoing account by Ragon. Thus, like
+Ragon, he quotes, the principle expressed in a ritual for the initiation
+of a Master Mason:
+
+ It is expressly forbidden to Masons to discuss amongst themselves,
+ either in the lodge or outside it, religious and political matters,
+ these discussions having usually the effect of creating discord
+ where formerly peace, union, and fraternity reigned. This masonic
+ law admits of no exceptions.[669]
+
+But Clavel also goes on to say:
+
+ To efface amongst men the distinctions of colour, rank, creed,
+ opinions, country; to annihilate fanaticism, and ... the scourge of
+ war; in a word, to make of the whole human race one and the same
+ family united by affection, by devotion, by work and knowledge:
+ that, my brother, is the great work which Freemasonry has
+ undertaken, etc.[670]
+
+Up to a point many a British Freemason reading these passages will
+declare himself completely in accord with the sentiments expressed.
+Humanitarianism, the obliteration of class distinctions, fraternization
+between men of all races, conditions, and religious creeds, enter of
+course largely into the spirit of British Masonry, but form simply the
+basis on which Masons meet together in the lodges and not a political
+system to be imposed on the world in general.
+
+British Masonry thus makes no attempt to interfere with the existing
+social system or form of Government; the essence of its teaching is that
+each member of the Fraternity should seek to reform himself and not
+society. In a word, individual regeneration takes the place of the
+social reorganization advocated by the Grand Orient under the influence
+of Illuminism. The formula of the "United States of Europe" and of the
+"Universal Republic" first proclaimed by the Illuminatus, Anacharsis
+Clootz,[671] has long been the slogan of the French lodges.[672]
+
+In the matter of religion, Grand Orient Masonry has entirely departed
+from the principle laid down by the British lodges. If the Catholic
+Church has shown itself hostile to Masonry, it must be remembered that
+in Catholic countries Masonry has shown itself militantly anti-Catholic.
+"Freemasonry," one of its modern orators declared, "is the anti-Church,
+the anti-Catholicism, the Church of Heresy (_la contre Eglise, le contre
+Catholicisme, l'Eglise de l'Heresie_)."[673] The _Bulletin_ of the
+Grand Orient in 1885 officially declared: "We Freemasons must pursue the
+definite demolition of Catholicism."
+
+But the Grand Orient goes further than this and attacks all forms of
+religion. Thus, as has been said, those "ancient landmarks" of British
+Masonry, belief in the Great Architect of the Universe and in the
+immortality of the soul, had never formed an integral part of its
+system, and it was only in 1849 that for the first time "it was
+distinctly formulated that the basis of Freemasonry is a belief in God
+and in the immortality of the soul, and the solidarity of Humanity." But
+in September 1877 the first part of this formula was deleted, all
+allusions to the Great Architect were omitted, and the statute now
+reads: "Its basis is absolute liberty of conscience and the solidarity
+of Humanity."[674] British Freemasonry, which does not admit liberty of
+conscience in the sense of Atheism, but demands that every Mason should
+profess belief in some form of religion and which insists that the
+Volume of the Sacred Law--in England the Bible, in Mohammedan countries
+the Koran, and so on--should be placed on the table in its lodges,
+thereupon broke off all relations with the Grand Orient. In March 1878
+the following resolution was passed unanimously:
+
+ That the Grand Lodge, whilst always anxious to receive in the most
+ fraternal spirit the Brethren of any foreign Grand Lodge whose
+ proceedings are conducted according to the Ancient Landmarks of the
+ Order, of which a belief in T.G.A.O.T.U. is the first and most
+ important, cannot recognize as "true and genuine" Brethren any who
+ have been initiated in lodges which either deny or ignore that
+ belief.[675]
+
+The Grand Orient, says M. Copin Albancelli, not content with renouncing
+the Great Architect whose glory it had celebrated on every possible
+occasion and whose praises had been incessantly sung in its lodges,
+demanded of its initiates that they should declare themselves to be
+absolutely convinced that the Great Architect was nothing but a
+myth.[676] More than this, violent anti-religious tirades have been
+permitted and even applauded in the lodges. Thus in 1902 the Freemason
+Delpech in his discourse at a masonic banquet uttered these words:
+
+ The triumph of the Galilean has lasted twenty centuries; he is
+ dying in his turn. The mysterious voice which once on the mountains
+ of Epirus announced the death of Pan, to-day announces the death of
+ the deceiver God who had promised an era of justice and peace to
+ those who should believe in him. The illusion has lasted very long;
+ the lying God in his turn disappears; he goes to rejoin in the dust
+ of ages the other divinities of India, Egypt, Greece, and Rome, who
+ saw so many deluded creatures throw themselves at the food of their
+ altars. Freemasons, we are pleased to state that we are not
+ unconcerned with this ruin of false prophets. The Roman Church,
+ founded on the Galilean myth, began to decline rapidly on the day
+ when the masonic association was constituted. From the political
+ point of view Freemasons have often varied. But in all times
+ Freemasonry has stood firm on this principle: war on all
+ superstitions, war on all fanaticism.[677]
+
+How is it possible to reconcile this attitude towards religion in
+general and Christianity in particular with the fact that the Grand
+Orient still works the Rose-Croix degree? This degree--which, as we have
+seen, was first devised (whether in Scotland or in France) to give a
+Christian meaning to Masonry--was only incorporated into British
+Freemasonry in 1846 and in our country has retained its original
+character. Its ritual, centring around a lost word, signifies that the
+Old Testament dispensation has come to an end with the Crucifixion, and
+is so strongly Christian that no Jew, Mohammedan, or other non-Christian
+can be admitted to it. Moreover, since this degree, known as the
+eighteenth degree, forms in reality the first degree of the Ancient and
+Accepted Rite, as worked in this country, non-Christians are excluded
+from the whole of this Rite and can only take the degrees of Royal Arch,
+Mark Mason, Royal Ark Mariner, and finally Royal Select and
+Super-Excellent Master. Consequently the thirty-three Masons of the
+thirty-third degree who compose the Supreme Council which directs the
+Ancient and Accepted Rite are necessarily professing Christians. Exactly
+the opposite is the case in France; the Rose-Croix, worked by professing
+atheists and Jews, can only be parody of Christian mysteries.
+
+Now, it is essential to realize that in France the anti-masonic camp is
+divided into two parties. Whilst the majority of Catholic writers regard
+Freemasonry itself as the source of all evil--"the Synagogue of
+Satan"--more impartial investigators have pronounced the opinion that it
+is not Freemasonry even of the Grand Orient variety but something
+concealed behind Freemasonry which constitutes the principal danger.
+This view is expressed by M. Copin Albancelli, whose book _Le Pouvoir
+occulte contre la France_ is of the utmost importance to an
+understanding of the masonic danger, for here there can be no question
+of Catholic prejudice or of imaginary accusations made by a stranger to
+Masonry. M. Copin Albancelli entered the Grand Orient as an agnostic and
+has never returned to the bosom of the Church; yet as a Frenchman, a
+patriot, and a believer in law, morality, and Christian ethics he found
+himself obliged, after six years' experience in the lodges and after
+attaining the degree of Rose-Croix, to leave Freemasonry and, further,
+to denounce it. From what he himself heard and observed M. Copin
+Albancelli declares the Grand Orient to be anti-patriotic, subversive of
+all morality and religious belief, and an immense danger to France.
+
+But further than this, M. Copin Albancelli declares the Grand Orient to
+be a system of deception by which members are enlisted in a cause
+unknown to themselves; even the initiates of the upper degrees are not
+all aware of the real aim of the Order or of the power behind it. M.
+Copin Albancelli thus arrives at the conclusion that there are three
+Freemasonries one above the other: (i) Blue Masonry (i.e. the three
+Craft Degrees), in which none of the real secrets are revealed to the
+members and which serves merely as a sorting-ground for selecting likely
+subjects; (2) the Upper Degrees, in which most of the members, whilst
+imagining themselves to have been initiated into the whole secret of the
+Order and "bursting with importance" over their imaginary role of
+leaders, are only admitted to a partial knowledge of the goal to which
+they are tending; and (3) the inner circle, "the true masters," those
+who conceal themselves behind high-grade Masonry. Admission to this
+inner circle may be, moreover, not a matter of degrees. "Whilst in the
+lower Masonries the adepts are obliged to pass through all the degrees
+of the established hierarchy, the upper and invisible Freemasonry is
+certainly recruited not only amongst the thirty-three degrees but in all
+the groups of upper-degree Masonry, and perhaps even in certain
+exceptional cases outside these."[678] This inner and invisible
+Freemasonry is to a large extent _international_.
+
+The most illuminating passage in the whole of M. Copin Albancelli's book
+is where he describes an experience that befell him after he had taken
+the degree of Rose-Croix. It was then that one of his superiors took him
+aside and addressed him in the following terms:
+
+ "You realize the power which Freemasonry has at its disposal. We
+ can say that we hold France. It is not because of our numbers,
+ since there are only 25,000 Freemasons in this country [this was in
+ 1889]. Nor is it because we are the brains, for you have been able
+ to judge of the intellectual mediocrity of the greater number of
+ these 25,000 Freemasons. We hold France because we are organized
+ and the only people who are organized. But above all, we hold
+ France because we have an aim, this aim is unknown; as it is
+ unknown, no obstacle can be put in its way; and finally, as no
+ obstacle is put up, the way is wide open before us. This is
+ logical, is it not?"
+
+ "Absolutely."
+
+ "Good. But what would you say of an association which instead of
+ consisting of 25,000 nonentities as in Freemasonry, were composed
+ of, say, only a thousand individuals, but a thousand individuals
+ recruited in the manner that I will tell you."
+
+And the Freemason went on to explain the way in which such individuals
+were selected, the months and years of observation, of supervision, to
+which they were subjected, so as to form a body of picked men inside
+Freemasonry capable of directing its operations.
+
+ "You can imagine the power at the command of such an association?"
+
+ "An association thus selected would do anything it chose. It could
+ possess the world if it pleased."
+
+Thereupon the higher adept, after asking for a further promise of
+secrecy, declared:
+
+ "Well, in exchange for this promise, Brother Copin, I am authorized
+ to let you know that this association exists and that, further, I
+ am authorized to introduce you into it."[679]
+
+It was then that Monsieur Copin Albancelli understood that the point to
+which the conversation was leading up was not, as he had at first
+supposed, an invitation to take the next step in Freemasonry--the
+thirtieth degree of Knight Kadosch--but to enter through a side-door
+into an association concealed within Freemasonry and for which the
+visible organization of the latter served merely as a cover. A very
+curious resemblance will here be noticed between the method of sounding
+M. Copin Albancelli and that of the Illuminatus Cato in the matter of
+Savioli, described in a passage already quoted:
+
+ Now that he is a Mason I have ... taken up the general plan of our
+ (*), and as this pleased him I said that such a thing really existed,
+ whereat he gave me his word that he would enter it.
+
+M. Copin Albancelli, however, did not give his word that he would enter
+it, but, on the contrary, checked further revelations by declaring that
+he would leave Freemasonry.
+
+This experience had afforded him a glimpse of "a world existing behind
+the masonic world, more secret than it, unsuspected by it as by the
+outside world."[680] Freemasonry, then, "can only be the half-lit
+antechamber of the real secret society. That is the truth."[681] "There
+exists then necessarily a permanent directing Power. We cannot see that
+Power, therefore it is occult."[682]
+
+For some time M. Copin Albancelli concluded this Power to be "the Jewish
+power," and elaborated the idea in a further work[683]; but the war has
+led him to develop his theories in yet another book, which will shortly
+appear.
+
+That the lodges of the Grand Orient are largely controlled by Jews is,
+however, certain, and that they are centres of political propaganda is
+equally undeniable. We have only to glance at the following
+extracts--some of which are reproduced on the opposite page--from the
+programme of debates in the _Bulletin_ of the Grand Orient for June 5,
+1922, to recognize that the ideas they propagate are simply those of
+International Socialism:
+
+ Loge "Union et France": Lecture du Rapport de notre T.'. C.'. F.'.
+ Chardard sur "L'Exploitation des richesses nationales au profit de
+ la collectivite."
+
+ Loge "Les Renovateurs": "Exploitation des Richesses nationales et
+ des grosses Entreprises an profit de la collectivite." Conference
+ de notre F.'. Goldschmidt, Orat.'. adjoint sur la meme question.
+
+[Illustration: News paper clippings]
+
+ Loge "Les Zeles Philanthropes": "La Transformation de la Societe
+ Actuelle s'impose-t-elle?" Conference par le T.'. C.'. F.'. Edmond
+ Cottin.
+
+ Loge "Paix-Travail-Solidarite": "Role de la Franc-Maconnerie dans
+ la politique actuelle" par le F.'. F.'.
+
+ Loge "Les Trinitaires": "Le Socialisme Francais" par le T.'. Ill. F.'.
+ Elie May.
+
+ Ten.'. Collective des L.'. "Emmanuel Arago" & "les Coeurs Unis
+ indivisibles": "Comment propager notre Ideal Maconnique dans le
+ Monde profane." Conference par le F.'. Jahia, de la R.'. L.'. Isis
+ Monthyon.
+
+ Loge "Isis Monthyon et Conscience et Volonte": "La Terreur et le
+ Peril Fasciste en Italie, le Fascisme et la F.'.-Mac.'. Italienne,"
+ impressions de notre F.'. Mazzini, de retour, apres un sejour
+ prolonge en Italie.
+
+It will be seen by the last of these extracts that Grand Orient Masonry
+is the enemy of Fascismo, which saved Italy in her hour of peril.
+Indeed, the Italian Masons passed a resolution which was directly
+opposed to Fascist views, especially with regard to the religious policy
+of Mussolini, who has restored the crucifix to the schools and religious
+teaching to the curriculum. The Fascist _Giornale di Roma_ declared that
+the principles announced by the Masons in this resolution were those
+which threatened to submerge the State and nation. Consequently
+Mussolini declared that Fascisti must either leave their lodges or leave
+Fascismo.[684]
+
+In Belgium Freemasonry has taken the same political and anti-religious
+course. In 1856 the directing committee of the Belgian Grand Orient
+declared: "Not only is it the right but the duty of the lodges to
+supervise the actions in public life of those amongst its members
+whom it has placed in political posts, the right to demand
+explanations...."[685] When in 1866 at a funeral ceremony in honour of
+the deceased King Leopold I the Grand Orient of Belgium displayed the
+maxim, "The soul which has emanated from God is immortal," the
+Freemasons of Louvain entered a violent protest on the ground that
+"Free-thinking had been admitted by the Belgian lodges in 1864 as its
+fundamental principle," and that the Grand Orient had therefore violated
+the convictions of its members.[686]
+
+In Spain and Portugal Freemasonry has played not merely a subversive
+but an actively revolutionary and sanguinary role. The anarchist Ferrer,
+intimately concerned with a plot to murder the King of Spain, was at the
+same moment entrusted with negotiations between the Grand Orient of
+France and the Grand Lodge of Catalonia.[687] These murderous schemes,
+frustrated in Spain, met, however, in Portugal with complete success.
+The Portuguese revolutions from 1910 to 1921 were organized under the
+direction of Freemasonry and the secret society of Carbonarios. The
+assassination of King Carlos and his elder son had been prepared by the
+same secret organizations. In 1908 a pamphlet modelled on the libels
+published against Marie Antoinette was directed against Queen Amelie and
+her husband. A month later the assassination took place. Amongst the
+leaders of the new Republic was Magalhaes Lima, Grand Master of the
+Grand Orient of Portugal.[688]
+
+The authorship of these disorders was, in fact, so clearly recognized
+that honest Freemasons forsook the lodges. An English Mason, unaware of
+the true character of Portuguese Freemasonry, when in Lisbon in August
+1919, made himself known to several moderate Portuguese Masons, who,
+while glad to welcome him as a brother, refused to take him to a lodge,
+declaring that they had severed all connection with Masonry since it had
+passed under the control of assassins. They also added that the
+assassination of Senor Paes, the President in December 1918, was the
+work of certain Portuguese lodges. A special meeting had previously been
+held in Paris in conjunction with the Grand Orient of France, at which
+it had been decided that Paes was to be removed. This decision reached,
+the earliest opportunity of putting it into force was sought--with fatal
+results. The assassin was imprisoned in the Penitentiary but liberated
+by the revolution of 1921, and no attempt has been made to recapture
+him. The murder of Dr. Antonio Granjo in October 1921 was traced to the
+same agency. In the pocket of the murdered man was found a document from
+the "Lodge of Liberty and Justice"(!) warning him of the decision taken
+against him for having ordered the police to protect the British tramway
+company.[689]
+
+The present Portuguese Government, indeed, makes no secret of its
+masonic character and prints the square and compass on its bank-notes.
+
+But whilst in Spain and Portugal Freemasonry manifested itself in
+Anarchist outrages, in the east of Europe the lodges, largely under the
+control of Jews, followed the line of Marxian Socialism. After the fall
+of the Bela Kun regime in Hungary a raid on the lodges brought to light
+documents clearly revealing the fact that the ideas of Socialism had
+been disseminated by the Freemasons. Thus in the minutes of meetings it
+was recorded that on November 16, 1906, Dr. Kallos had addressed the
+Gyor Lodge on Socialist ideals. "The ideal world which we call the
+masonic world," he declared, "will be also a Socialist world and the
+religion of Freemasonry is that of Socialism as well." Dr. Kallos then
+proceeded to acquaint the members with the theories of Marx and Engels,
+showing that no help was to be found in Utopias, as the interests of the
+proletarians were in absolute conflict with those of other classes, and
+these differences could only be settled by international class warfare.
+Nevertheless with that fear of the proletariat which has always
+characterized the democrats of revolutionary Freemasonry, Dr. Kallos
+declared later that "the social revolution must take place without
+bloodshed."[690] The Karolyi regime was the direct outcome of these
+illusions, and as in all revolutions paved the way for the more violent
+elements.
+
+Still further east in Europe the lodges, though revolutionary, instead
+of following the International Socialist line of Hungarian Freemasonry,
+exhibited a political and nationalist character. The Young Turk movement
+originated in the masonic lodges of Salonica under the direction of the
+Grand Orient of Italy, which later contributed to the success of
+Mustapha Kemal. Moreover, as we approach the Near East, cradle of the
+masonic system, we find the Semitic influence not only of the Jews but
+of other Semite races directing the lodges. In Turkey, in Egypt, in
+Syria now, as a thousand years ago, the same secret societies which
+inspired the Templars have never ceased to exist, and in this mingling
+of the East and West it is possible that the Grand Orient may draw
+reinforcement from those sources whence it drew its system and its name.
+
+Amongst the strange survivals of early Eastern sects are the Druses of
+Lebanon, who might indeed be described as the Freemasons of the East;
+their outer organization closely resembles that of the Craft Degrees in
+Western Masonry, yet such is their power of secrecy that few if any
+Europeans have ever succeeded in discovering the secret doctrines. That
+their tendency is largely political admits of little doubt; in fact men
+intimately acquainted with the Near East have declared that the
+influence they exercise over the politics of that region is as
+far-reaching as that of the Grand Orient over the affairs of Europe and
+that they form the breeding-ground of all political ideas and changes.
+Though small in numbers this mysterious society is composed of past
+masters in the game of intrigue, who, whilst playing apparently a minor
+part at political meetings, secret or otherwise, or even remaining
+completely silent, contrive to influence decisions with startling
+results.
+
+
+
+British Masonry
+
+
+We shall now consider the further ways in which British Masonry differs
+from the Grand Orient.
+
+In the first place, whilst working the same degrees, its rituals,
+formulas, and ceremonies, as also the interpretation it places on words
+and symbols, are different in many essential points.
+
+Secondly, British Masonry is essentially an honest institution. Whereas
+in the Grand Orient the initiate is led through a maze of ceremonies
+towards a goal unknown to him which he may discover too late to be other
+than he supposed, the British initiate, although admitted by gradual
+stages to the mysteries of the Craft, knows nevertheless from the
+beginning the general aim of the Order.
+
+Thirdly, British Masonry is primarily philanthropic and the sums it
+devotes to charitable purposes are immense. Since the war the three
+principal masonic charities have collected annually over L300,000.
+
+But the point to be emphasized here is that British Masonry is strictly
+non-political, not merely in theory but in practice, and that it
+enforces this principle on every occasion. Thus before the recent
+General Election, the Report of the Board of General Purposes, drawn up
+by Grand Lodge on December 5, 1923, recalled to the notice of the Craft
+that "'all subjects of a political nature are strictly excluded from
+discussion in masonic meetings,' this being in accordance with
+long-established masonic tradition ... it follows from this that Masonry
+must not be used for any personal or party purpose in connexion with an
+election." It further emphasized the distinct caution "that any attempt
+to bring the Craft into the electioneering arena would be treated as a
+serious masonic offence."
+
+At the same time a fresh injunction was made with regard to the Grand
+Orient of France:
+
+ As recognition was withdrawn from that body by the United Grand
+ Lodge of England in 1878, ... it is considered necessary to warn
+ all members of our lodges that they cannot visit any lodge under
+ the obedience of a jurisdiction unrecognized by the United Grand
+ Lodge of England; and further that under Rule 150 of the Book of
+ Constitutions, they cannot admit visitors therefrom.
+
+For the reasons given at the beginning of this section British Masonry
+stands rigidly aloof from all attempts to create an international system
+of Masonry. The idea was first suggested at the Masonic Congress of
+Paris in 1889, convened to celebrate the centenary of the first French
+Revolution, but led to nothing very definite until the Congress of
+Geneva in September 1902, at which the delegates of thirty-four lodges,
+Grand Lodges, Grand Orients, and Supreme Councils were present, and a
+proposal was unanimously adopted "tending towards the creation of an
+International Bureau for Masonic Affairs," to which twenty Powers,
+mostly Europeans, gave their adherence. Brother Desmons, of the Grand
+Orient of France, in an after-dinner speech declared it to have been
+always "the dream of his life" that "all democracies should meet and
+understand one another in such a way as one day to form the Universal
+Republic."[691]
+
+According to the official report of the proceedings, "the
+representatives of Belgium, Holland, France, Germany, England, Spain,
+Italy, and Switzerland greeted with much feeling the dawn of this new
+era." The same Report goes on to observe that--
+
+ It is altogether a mistake ... to believe that Freemasonry does not
+ attack the defects of such and such a State, and that consequently
+ it remains a stranger to party-strife and the tendencies of the
+ times.
+
+And again:
+
+ Freemasonry has imposed upon itself a task--a mission. It is a
+ question of nothing less than the rebuilding of society on an
+ entirely new basis, which shall be more in accordance with the
+ present conditions of the means of communication, of situation, and
+ production, as well as of a reform of right, of a complete renewal
+ of the principle of existence, especially of the principle of
+ community and of the relations of men among one another.
+
+The Report here quoted is, however, inaccurate in one important
+particular. No English delegates were present at the Geneva Congress or
+on any other occasion of the kind. There was a delegate from Adelaide
+who spoke a good deal, but the Chairman specifically mentioned England
+as taking no part in the movement. Later on, in a Report of the Board of
+General Purposes to Grand Lodge on March 2, 1921, a letter from Lord
+Ampthill, pro Grand Master, appears, declining an invitation from the
+Swiss Grand Lodge Alpina to British Freemasons to attend an
+International Masonic Congress in Geneva and quoting the following
+letter from the Grand Secretary as an earlier precedent for this
+refusal:
+
+ I am directed to state, in reply to the invitation to attend an
+ International Masonic Conference in Switzerland during the coming
+ autumn, that the United Grand Lodge of England will be unable to
+ send representatives on the occasion. It never participates in a
+ Masonic gathering in which are treated as an open question what it
+ has always held to be ancient and essential Landmarks of the Craft,
+ these being an express belief in the Great Architect of the
+ Universe, and an obligatory recognition of the Volume of the Sacred
+ Law. Its refusal to remain in fraternal association with such
+ Sovereign Jurisdictions as have repudiated or made light of these
+ Landmarks has long been upon record, and its resolve in this regard
+ remains unshaken.
+
+Lord Ampthill then went on to say:
+
+ A further consequence of certain happenings of the war is to make
+ more firm our resolve to keep, as far as in us lies, Freemasonry
+ strictly away from participation in politics, either national or
+ international. This attitude of aloofness from necessarily
+ controversial affairs of State, on which Brethren can legitimately
+ and most properly differ, has ever been maintained by our Grand
+ Lodge since it was first convened in 1717. Because of this, it held
+ aloof from such international conferences as were summoned during
+ the war; and never more than now has the necessity for the
+ maintenance of this attitude been felt by British Freemasons....
+ For these reasons, the invitation to participate in the proposed
+ International Conference of Freemasons at Geneva cannot be
+ accepted. Such an assembly might be termed informal, but inevitably
+ it would be regarded as opening a door to compromise on those
+ things which this Grand Lodge has always held to be essentials.
+ Such a compromise English Freemasonry will never contemplate. On
+ these essentials we take the firm stand we have always done; we
+ cannot detract from full recognition of the Great Architect of the
+ Universe, and we shall continue to forbid the introduction of
+ political discussion into our Lodges.
+
+British Masonry has thus taken a firm stand against the Grand Orient.
+But it is regrettable that views so admirably expressed should be
+confined to masonic correspondence and not made more apparent to the
+world in general. On the Continent, outside masonic circles, the
+difference between British Masonry and the Grand Orient variety is _not_
+sufficiently known, and the reticence of leading British Masons on this
+subject has not only played into the hands of the intractable
+anti-Masons, who declare all Masonry to be harmful, but has strengthened
+the position of the revolutionaries who use Masonry for a subversive
+purpose. Thus in the Portuguese revolution of 1920 the Masons of that
+country who were directing the movement sheltered themselves behind the
+good name of England. "How can you accuse the lodges of being murder
+clubs," they said to the people, "when Masonry is directed by England
+and had King Edward for its Grand Master?"
+
+However ludicrous all this may seem to the British public, yet for the
+honour of our country such accusations should not remain unrefuted. A
+witness of the disorders that took place in Portugal declared to the
+present writer that if only Grand Lodge of England would have published
+a notice in the Continental press disassociating itself from the Grand
+Orient in general and from Portuguese Freemasonry in particular, the
+power of the revolutionaries would have been immensely weakened and the
+anti-British and pro-German propaganda then circulating in the country
+defeated. But British Freemasonry preferred to maintain an attitude of
+aloofness, contenting itself with issuing periodical warnings against
+the Grand Orient privately to the lodges.
+
+This policy has done much to damage not only the good name of England
+but of British Masonry in the eyes of the outside world, and
+particularly in those of Roman Catholics, which is the more regrettable
+since Freemasonry and the Roman Catholic Church are the only two
+organized bodies in this country which really exercise discipline over
+their members and forbid them to belong to subversive secret societies;
+hence they provide the two strongest bulwarks against the occult forces
+of revolution. For this reason, as we shall see later, they are the two
+bodies which are the most feared by the recruiting agents of these
+societies.
+
+But in the case of Freemasonry the fact is unfortunately too little
+known to the world in general. As a singularly broad-minded Jesuit has
+recently expressed it:
+
+ The anti-clerical and revolutionary activities of Continental
+ Freemasonry did not begin when the Grand Orient finally abolished
+ God. During a century and more these evil forces had been at work.
+ Nevertheless English Masons only shrugged their shoulders and
+ looked another way, though the true character of foreign Masonry
+ was brought to their notice in such books as that of John Robison,
+ _Proofs of a Conspiracy against all the Religions and Governments
+ of Europe_....
+
+ No doubt [the same writer says again] there has been at times a
+ deplorable amount of exaggeration among Continental Catholics in
+ attributing all the moral and social evils of the world to the
+ insidious workings of Freemasonry.... But so long as English
+ Freemasons resolutely avert their gaze from the anti-religious and
+ anti-social activities of their Continental brethren there can be
+ no hope of any better understanding.[692]
+
+It is impossible to deny the truth of these strictures. As has already
+been pointed out in the course of this book, British Freemasons have
+frequently not only ignored Robison's warning but vilified him as the
+enemy of Masonry, although he never attacked their Order but only the
+perverted systems of the Continent; too often also they have exonerated
+the most dangerous secret societies, notably the Illuminati, because,
+apparently from a mistaken sense of loyalty, they conceive it their duty
+to defend any association of a masonic character. This is simply
+suicidal. British Masonry has no bitterer enemies than the secret
+societies working for subversion, which, from the Illuminati onwards,
+have always regarded honest Masonry with contempt and used its doctrines
+for an ulterior purpose.
+
+It is easy to see how these doctrines may be perverted to an end
+directly opposed to that which British Masons have in view. Thus, for
+example, the idea of the brotherhood of man in the sense of love for all
+humanity is the essence of Christianity--"Be kindly affectioned one to
+another with brotherly love; in honour preferring one another." In
+adopting "brotherly love" as a part of their sacred trilogy British
+Masons adopt an entirely Christian standpoint. But if by the brotherhood
+of man is meant that men of every race are equally related and that
+therefore one owes the same duty to foreigners as to one's
+fellow-countrymen it is obvious that all national feeling must vanish.
+The British Freemason does not, of course, interpret the theory in this
+manner; he cannot seriously regard himself as the brother of the Bambute
+pygmy or the Polynesian cannibal, thus he uses the term merely in a
+vague and theoretical sense.
+
+What indeed does the word "brother" literally mean? If we consult the
+dictionary we shall see it defined as "a male born of the same parents;
+anyone closely united with or resembling one another; associated in
+common interests, occupation," etc. It is therefore obviously absurd to
+say that men of such different races as those referred to are brothers;
+they are not born of the same kind of parents, they are not united in
+their aims, they do not remotely resemble one another, and they are not
+associated in common interests and occupations. Though these happen to
+be extreme cases, there are nevertheless essential differences between
+men of the same zone and climate. The Englishman and the Frenchman are
+not brothers because they do not see life from the same point of view,
+but that is no reason why they should not be close allies.
+
+The brotherhood of man, if taken literally, is therefore a misleading
+term, nor is such a relationship necessary to the peace of the world.
+Cain and Abel were not better friends, for being brothers. David and
+Jonathan, on the other hand, were not brothers but devoted friends. In
+striving after universal brotherhood in a literal sense, Freemasons are
+therefore pursuing a chimera.
+
+The most dangerous fallacy to which democracy, under the influence of
+Illuminized Freemasonry, has succumbed is that peace between nations can
+be brought about by means of Internationalism, that is to say, by the
+destruction of national feeling. Yet a man is not more likely to live at
+peace with his neighbours because he is devoid of natural affection; on
+the contrary, the good brother, the devoted father, is most likely to
+become the faithful friend. Permanent peace between nations will
+probably never be ensured, but the only basis on which such a situation
+can conceivably be established is the basis of sane Nationalism--an
+understanding between the patriotic and virile elements in every
+country which, because they value their own liberties and revere their
+own traditions, are able to respect those of other nations.
+Internationalism is an understanding between the decadent elements in
+each country--the conscientious objectors, the drawing-room Socialists,
+the visionaries--who shirk the realities of life and, as the Socialist
+Karl Kautsky in a description of Idealists has admirably expressed it,
+"see only differences of opinion and misapprehension where there are
+actually irreconcilable antagonisms." This is why at times of crisis
+Idealists are of all men the most dangerous and Pacifists the great
+promoters of wars. Understanding between nations is wholly desirable,
+but the destruction of the national spirit everywhere can only lead to
+the weakening of all countries where this process takes place and the
+triumph of the nations who refuse to accept the same principle.
+
+It will perhaps be answered that Freemasons do not believe in the
+doctrine of brotherhood between all men, but only between Masons of all
+races. But this may lead no less to national disintegration if it
+creates a nation within each nation, an international fraternity
+independent of the countries to which its members belong. The logical
+outcome of this may be that a man will refuse to fight for his country
+against his brother Masons--it is what has happened in France. The Grand
+Orient was before the recent war the great breeding-ground of
+anti-patriotism, where all schemes for national defence were
+discouraged. Before 1870 the same thing took place, and it was in the
+masonic lodges that Germany found her most valuable allies.
+
+In the same way the doctrine of the perfectibility of human nature lends
+itself to perversion. Nothing could be more desirable than that man
+should strive after perfection. Did not Christ enjoin His disciples: "Be
+ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in Heaven is
+perfect"? Man is therefore acting in accordance with Christian
+principles in seeking after divine perfection. But when he comes to
+believe that he has already attained it he makes of himself a god. "If I
+justify myself," said Job, "mine own mouth shall condemn me; if I say I
+am perfect, it shall also prove me perverse." And St. John: "If we say
+we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us." More
+than this, if we seek perfection in others we deceive ourselves equally
+and make gods of men. This is precisely the conclusion at which
+perverted Freemasonry and the forms of Socialism deriving from it
+arrive. Human nature, they say, is itself divine; what need then for
+other divinities? The Catholic Church is consequently quite right in
+declaring that the doctrine of the perfectibility of human nature leads
+to the deification of humanity in that it puts humanity in the place of
+God. The Grand Orient, which definitely accepts this doctrine, has
+therefore logically erased the name of the Great Architect of the
+Universe from its ritual and has become an association of Freethinkers
+and Atheists.
+
+Is it necessary to point out the folly as well as the crime of this
+delusion--the ludicrous inconsequence of men who divinize humanity yet
+revile what they call "society"? All the evils of the world, they
+declare, are not to be found in nature but in "man-made laws," in the
+institutions of "society." Yet what is society but the outcome of human
+wills, of human aspirations? Society may be, and no doubt is, in need of
+reformation, but are not its imperfections the creation of imperfect
+beings? It is true that to-day the world is in a state of chaos,
+industrial chaos, political chaos, social chaos, religious chaos.
+Everywhere men are losing faith in the causes they are supposed to
+represent; authority questions its own right to govern, democracy is
+rent with divisions, the ruling classes are abdicating in favour of
+unscrupulous demagogues, the ministers of religion barter their faith
+for popularity.
+
+And what has brought the world to this pass? Humanity! Humanity, that
+all-wise, all-virtuous abstraction that needs no light from Heaven.
+Humanity that was to take the place of God! If ever there was a moment
+in the history of the world when the futility of this pretension should
+be apparent it is the present moment. All the ills, all the confusion,
+what are they but the outcome of human error and of human passions? It
+is not Capitalism that has failed, nor yet Democracy, nor yet even
+Socialism as a principle, it is not monarchy that has broken down, nor
+Republicanism, nor again religion; _it is humanity that has broken
+down_. The ills of Capitalism arise from the egoism of individual
+capitalists; Socialism has failed because, as Robert Owen discovered,
+the idle, the quarrelsome, the selfish have prevented its success. If
+men were perfect, Socialism might succeed, but so might any other
+system. A perfect capitalist would love his employee as himself, just as
+a perfect Socialist would be willing to work for the common good. It is
+the imperfections of human nature that prevent, and will always prevent,
+any system from being perfect. There will never be a Millennium of man's
+making. Only the application of Christian principles to human conduct
+can bring about a better order of things.
+
+Grand Orient Masonry, in deifying human nature, thus not only builds
+upon the sand, but by its rejection of all religion takes away the sole
+hope of human progress. Meanwhile, by the support it lends to Socialism
+it encourages the class war instead of the brotherhood between men of
+all ranks and conditions which it professes to advocate. British
+Freemasonry, on the other hand, whilst not interpreting brotherhood in a
+political sense, nevertheless contributes to social peace. At the annual
+conference of the Labour Party in 1923 a proposal was made by the
+extreme section that "any person who is a Free mason should be excluded
+from any kind of office," it being suggested that "in cases where an
+understanding has been reached between Trade Union leaders and
+employers, thus preventing or limiting industrial trouble, the secret
+has been the bond of Freemasonry."[693] Whether this was the case or
+not, British Masonry, by taking its stand on patriotism and respect for
+religion, necessarily tends to unite men of all classes and therefore
+offers a formidable bulwark against the forces of revolution. Any
+attacks on British Masonry as at present constituted and directed are
+therefore absolutely opposed to the interests of the country. But at the
+same time it behoves Masons to beware of the insidious attempts that are
+being made by irregular secret societies to infiltrate the Craft and
+pervert its true principles. The present satisfactory condition of
+Freemasonry in England is owing not only to its established statutes,
+but to the character of the men who control it--men who are not, as in
+eighteenth-century France, mere figureheads, but the real directors of
+the Order. Should the control ever pass into the wrong hands and the
+agents of secret societies succeed in capturing a number of the lodges,
+this great stabilizing force might become a gigantic engine of
+destruction. How insidiously these efforts are being made we shall see
+in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+12
+
+SECRET SOCIETIES IN ENGLAND
+
+
+
+We have seen that from the Illuminati onwards subversive societies have
+always sought recruits amongst orthodox Freemasons. The reason for this
+is obvious: not only do the doctrines of Freemasonry lend themselves to
+perversion, but the training provided in the Lodges makes an admirable
+preparation for initiation into other secret systems. The man who has
+learnt to maintain silence even on what may appear to him as
+trivialities, who is willing to submit to mystification, to ask no
+questions, and to recognize the authority of superiors whom he is in no
+way legally obliged to obey, who has, moreover, become imbued with the
+_esprit de corps_ which binds him to his fellow-members in a common
+cause, is naturally a better subject for the secret society adept than
+the free lance who is liable to assert his independence at any moment.
+Perhaps the most important factor, however, is the nature of the masonic
+oaths. These terrible penalties, which many Freemasons themselves regret
+as a survival of barbarism and which have in fact been abolished in the
+higher degrees, have done much to create prejudice against Freemasonry,
+whilst at the same time they provide an additional incentive to outside
+intriguers. In the opinion of M. Copin Albancelli, the abolition of the
+oath would go far to prevent penetration of British Masonry by the
+secret societies.
+
+Now, by their obligations British Freemasons are forbidden to join these
+irregular societies, not only because their principles are in conflict
+with those of orthodox Masonry, but because in most cases they admit
+women. According to the ruling of Grand Lodge, "any member working under
+the English Jurisdiction ... violates his Obligation by being present at
+or assisting in assemblies professing to be Masonic which are attended
+by women." Warnings to this effect have been frequently given in the
+Lodges; on September 3, 1919, the Board of General Purposes issued the
+following report:
+
+ The Board's attention is being increasingly drawn to sedulous
+ endeavours which are being made by certain bodies unrecognized as
+ Masonic by the United Grand Lodge of England, to induce Freemasons
+ to join in their assemblies. As all such bodies which admit women
+ to membership are clandestine and irregular, it is necessary to
+ caution Brethren against being inadvertently led to violate their
+ Obligation by becoming members of them or attending their meetings.
+ Grand Lodge, nine years since, approved the action of the Board in
+ suspending from all Masonic rights and privileges two Brethren who
+ had contumaciously failed to explain the grave Masonic irregularity
+ to which attention is now again called; and it is earnestly hoped
+ that no occasion will arise for having again to institute
+ disciplinary proceedings of a like kind.
+
+The idea of women Masons is, of course, not a new one. As early as 1730
+lodges for women are said to have existed in France, and towards the end
+of the century several excellent women, such as the Duchesse de Bourbon
+and the Princesse de Lamballe, played a leading part in the Order. But
+this _Maconnerie d'Adoption_, as it was called, retained a purely
+convivial character; a sham ceremonial, with symbols, pass words, and a
+ritual, was devised as a consolation to the members for their exclusion
+from the real lodges. These mummeries were, as Ragon observes, "only the
+pretexts for assemblies; the real objects were the banquet and the ball,
+which were their inevitable accompaniments."[694]
+
+But this precedent, inaugurated as a society pastime and accompanied by
+all the frivolity of the age, paved the way for Weishaupt's two classes
+of women members, who, although never initiated into the secrets of the
+Order, were to act as useful tools "directed by men without knowing it."
+For this purpose they were to be divided into two classes, the
+"virtuous" to play the part of figureheads or decoys, and the
+"freer-hearted," who were to carry out the real designs of the Order.
+
+The same plan was adopted nearly a hundred years later by Weishaupt's
+disciple Bakunin, who, however, did admit women as actual initiates into
+his secret society, the Alliance Sociale Democratique, but, like
+Weishaupt, divided them into classes. The sixth category of people to be
+employed in the work of social revolution is thus described in his
+programme:
+
+ The sixth category is very important. They are the women, who must
+ be divided into three classes: the first, frivolous women, without
+ mind or heart, which we must use in the same manner as the third
+ and fourth categories of men [i.e. by "getting hold of their dirty
+ secrets and making them our slaves"]; the second, the ardent,
+ devoted and capable women, but who are not ours because they have
+ not reached a practical revolutionary understanding, without
+ phrase--we must make use of these like the men of the fifth
+ category [i.e. by "drawing them incessantly into practical and
+ perilous manifestations, which will result in making the majority
+ of them disappear while making some of them genuine
+ revolutionaries"]; finally, the women who are entirely with us,
+ that is to say completely initiated and having accepted our
+ programme in its entirety. We ought to consider them as the most
+ precious of our treasures, without whose help we can do
+ nothing.[695]
+
+The first and only woman to be admitted into real Masonry, if such a
+term can be applied to so heterogeneous a system, was Maria Deraismes,
+an ardent French Feminist celebrated for her political speeches and
+electioneering campaigns in the district of Pontoise and for twenty-five
+years the acknowledged leader of the anti-clerical and Feminist
+party.[696] In 1882 Maria Deraismes was initiated into Freemasonry by
+the members of the Lodge _Les Libres Penseurs_, deriving from the Grande
+Loge Symbolique Ecossaise and situated at Pecq in the Department of
+Seine-et-Oise. The proceeding being, however, entirely unconstitutional,
+Maria Deraismes's initiation was declared by the Grande Loge to be null
+and void and the Lodge _Les Libres Penseurs_ was disgraced.[697] But
+some years afterwards Dr. George Martin, an enthusiastic advocate of
+votes for women, collaborated with Maria Deraismes in founding the
+_Maconnerie Mixte_ at the first lodge of the Order named "Le Droit
+Humain." The _Supreme Conseil Universel Mixte_ was founded in 1899.
+
+The Maconnerie Mixte was political and in no way theosophical or occult,
+and its programme, like that of the Grand Orient, was Utopian Socialism,
+whilst by its insistence on the supremacy of reason it definitely
+proclaimed its antagonism to all revealed religion. Thus in the involved
+language of Dr. George Martin himself:
+
+ The Ordre Maconnique Mixte Internationale is the first mixed,
+ philosophic, progressive, and philanthropic Masonic Power to be
+ organized and constituted in the world, placed above all the
+ prooccupations of the philosophical or religious ideas which may be
+ professed by those who ask to become members.... The Order wishes
+ to interest itself principally in the vital interests of the human
+ being on earth; it wishes above all to study in its Temples the
+ means for realizing Peace between all nations and social Justice
+ which will enable all human beings to enjoy during their lives the
+ greatest possible sum of moral felicity and of material
+ well-being.... Claiming no divine revelation and loudly affirming
+ that it is only an emanation of human reason, this fraternal
+ institution is not dogmatic, it is rationalist.[698]
+
+Into this materialist and political club, erected under the guise of
+Freemasonry, entered Annie Besant with all the strange conglomeration of
+Eastern doctrines now known as Theosophy.
+
+
+
+Theosophy
+
+
+Before entering on this question it is necessary to make my own position
+clear. Although I should much prefer not to introduce a personal note
+into the discussion, I feel that nothing I say will carry any weight if
+it appears to be an expression of opinion by one who has never
+considered religious doctrines from anything but the orthodox Christian
+point of view. I should explain, then, that I have known Theosophists
+from my early youth, that I have travelled in India, Ceylon, Burma, and
+Japan and seen much to admire in the great religions of the East. I do
+not believe that God has revealed Himself to one portion of mankind
+alone and that during only the last 1,900 years of the world's history;
+I do not accept the doctrine that all the millions of human beings who
+have never heard of Christ are plunged in spiritual darkness; I believe
+that behind all religions founded on a law of righteousness there lies a
+divine and central truth, that Ikhnaton, Moses and Isaiah, Socrates and
+Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, Buddha, Zoroaster, and Mohammed were all
+teachers who interpreted to men the aspect of the divine as it had been
+vouchsafed to them and which in harmony with the supreme revelation
+given to man by Jesus Christ.
+
+This conception of an affinity between all great religious faiths was
+beautifully expressed by an old Mohammedan to a friend of the present
+writer with whom he stood watching a Hindu procession pass through an
+Indian village. In answer to the Englishman's enquiry, "What do you
+think of this?" the Mohammedan replied:
+
+ "Ah, sahib, we cannot tell. We know of three roads up the hill of
+ endeavour to the gates of Paradise--the way of Mousa [Moses], the
+ way of Issa [Jesus], and the way of Mahmoud, and there may be other
+ roads of which you and I know nothing. I was born in the way of
+ Mahmoud, and I believe it to be the best and the easiest to follow,
+ and you were born in the way of Issa. And of this I am very sure:
+ that if you will follow your guide on your road and I follow my
+ guide on my road, when we have climbed the hill of endeavour, we
+ shall salute one another again at the gates of Paradise."
+
+If, then, in the following pages I attempt to show the errors of
+Theosophy, it is not because I do not recognize that there is much that
+is good and beautiful in the ancient religions from which it professes
+to derive.
+
+But what is Theosophy? The word, as we have already seen, was used in
+the eighteenth century to denote the theory of the Martinists; it was
+known two centuries earlier when Haselmeyer in 1612 wrote of "the
+laudable Fraternity of the Theosophists of the Rosy Cross." According to
+Colonel Olcott, who with Madame Blavatsky founded the modern
+Theosophical Society in New York in 1875, the word was discovered by one
+of the members "in turning over the leaves of a Dictionary" and
+forthwith unanimously adopted.[699] Madame Blavatsky had arrived in
+America two years earlier, before which date she professed to have been
+initiated into certain esoteric doctrines in Thibet. Monsieur Guenon,
+who writes with inside knowledge of the movement, indicates, however,
+the existence of concealed superiors on the Continent of Europe by whom
+she was in reality directed.
+
+ What is very significant ... is that Madame Blavatsky in 1875 wrote
+ this: "I have been sent from Paris to America in order to verify
+ phenomena and their reality and to show the deception of the
+ Spiritualist theory." Sent by whom? Later she will say: by the
+ "Mahatmas"; but then there was no question of them, and besides it
+ was in Paris that she received her mission, and not in India or in
+ Thibet.[700]
+
+Elsewhere Monsieur Guenon observes that it is very doubtful whether
+Madame Blavatsky was ever in Thibet at all. These obvious attempts at
+concealment lead Monsieur Guenon therefore to the conclusion that in the
+background of Theosophy there existed a mysterious centre of direction,
+that Madame Blavatsky was simply "an instrument in the hands of
+individuals or occult groups sheltering behind her personality," and
+that "those who believe she invented everything, that she did everything
+by herself and on her own initiative, are as much mistaken as those who,
+on the contrary, believe her affirmations concerning her relations with
+the pretended Mahatmas."[701]
+
+There is some reason to believe that the people under whom Madame
+Blavatsky was working at this date in Paris were Serapis Bey and Tuiti
+Bey, who belonged to "the Egyptian Brothers." This might answer M.
+Guenon's question: "By whom was she sent to America?" But another
+passage from Madame Blavatsky's writings, on the person of Christ, that
+M. Guenon quotes later, indicates a further source of inspiration: "For
+me, Jesus Christ, that is to say the Man-God of the Christians, copy of
+the Avatars of all countries, of the Hindu Chrishna as of the Egyptian
+Horus, was never a _historical_ personage." Hence the story of His life
+was merely an allegory founded on the existence of "a personage named
+Jehoshua born at Lud." But elsewhere she asserted that Jesus may have
+lived during the Christian era or a century earlier "_as the Sepher
+Toldoth Jehoshua indicates_" (my italics). And Madame Blavatsky went on
+to say of the savants who deny the historical value of this legend, that
+they--
+
+ either lie or talk nonsense. _It is our Masters who affirm it_ [my
+ italics]. If the history of Jehoshua or Jesus Ben Pandera is false,
+ then the whole of the Talmud, the whole of the Jewish canon law, is
+ false. It was the disciple of Jehoshua Ben Parachia, the fifth
+ President of the Sanhedrim since Ezra, who re-wrote the Bible....
+ This story is much truer than that of the New Testament, of which
+ history does not say a word.[702]
+
+Who were the Masters whose authority Madame Blavatsky here invokes?
+Clearly not the Trans-Himalayan Brotherhood to whom she habitually
+refers by this term, and who can certainly not be suspected of affirming
+the authenticity of the Toldoth Yeshu. It is evident, then, that there
+were other "Masters" from whom Madame Blavatsky received this teaching,
+and that those other masters were Cabalists.
+
+The same Judaic influence appears more strongly in a book published by
+the Theosophical Society in 1903, where the Talmud and the Toledot Yeshu
+are quoted at great length and the Christians are derided for resenting
+the attacks on their faith contained in these books, whilst the Jews are
+represented as innocent, persecuted victims. One passage will suffice to
+give an idea of the author's point of view:
+
+ The Christ [said the mystics] was born "of a virgin"; the unwitting
+ believer in Jesus as _the_ historical Messiah in the exclusive
+ Jewish sense, and in his being _the_ Son of God, nay God Himself,
+ in course of time asserted that Mary was that virgin; whereupon
+ Rabbinical logic, which in this case was simple and common logic,
+ met this extravagance by the natural retort that, seeing that his
+ paternity was unacknowledged, Jesus was therefore illegitimate, a
+ bastard [_mamzer_].[703]
+
+It is obviously, then, less from Thibetan Mahatmas, Hindu Swamis, Sikh
+Gurus, or Egyptian Brothers than from Jewish Cabalists that these
+leaders of Theosophy have borrowed their ideas on Jesus Christ. As the
+Jewish writer Adolphe Franck has truly observed: "Des qu'il est question
+de theosophie, on est sur de voir apparaitre la Kabbale."[704] And he
+goes on to show the direct influence of Cabalism on the modern
+Theosophical Society.
+
+Mrs. Besant, without endorsing the worst blasphemies of the Toledot
+Yeshu, nevertheless reflected this and other Judaic traditions in her
+book _Esoteric Christianity_, where she related that Jesus was brought
+up amongst the Essenes, and that later He went to Egypt, where He became
+an initiate of the great esoteric lodge--that is to say, the Great White
+Lodge--from which all great religions derive. It will be seen that
+this is only a version of the old story of the Talmudists and
+Cabalists, perpetuated by the Gnostics, the Rosicrucians, and the
+nineteenth-century _Ordre du Temple_.[705] But according to one of Mrs.
+Besant's Theosophical antagonists, her doctrine "rests on a perpetual
+equivocation," and whilst allowing the English public to believe that
+when she spoke of the coming Christ she referred to the Christ of the
+Gospels, she stated to her intimates what Mr. Leadbeater taught in his
+book _The Inner Life_, namely, that the Christ of the Gospels never
+existed, but was an invention of the monks of the second century.[706]
+It should be understood, however, that in the language of the
+Theosophists, led by Mrs. Besant and Mr. Leadbeater, Jesus and "the
+Christ" are two separate and distinct individualities, and that when
+they now speak of "the Christ" they refer to someone living in a
+bungalow in the Himalayas with whom Mr. Leadbeater has interviews to
+arrange about his approaching advent.[707] Portraits of this person have
+been distributed amongst the members of "The Star in the East," an Order
+founded at Benares in 1911 by Mr. Leadbeater and J. Krishnamurti for the
+purpose of preparing the world for the coming of the Great Teacher.
+
+But it is time to return to the alliance between Theosophy and the
+Maconnerie Mixte. Whether Mrs. Besant, who had begun her career as a
+Freethinker, retained some lingering belief in her earlier creed at the
+time she entered into relations with the Order, or whether she saw in
+this materialistic society a valuable concrete organization for the
+dissemination of her new esoteric theories, it is impossible to know. At
+any rate, she rose rapidly through the succeeding degrees and became
+before long Vice President of the _Supreme Conseil_, which appointed her
+its national delegate to Great Britain. It was in this capacity that she
+founded the English branch of the Order under the name of Co-Masonry
+(that is, admitting both sexes) at the Lodge "Human Duty" in London,
+which was consecrated on September 26, 1902, and later founded another
+lodge at Adyar in India, named "The Rising Sun." The number of lodges on
+the Grand Roll of Co-Masonry, including those abroad, is now said to be
+no less than 442.
+
+Co-Masonry thus receives a two-fold direction, for whilst remaining in
+constant correspondence with the _Supreme Conseil Universel Mixte_,
+situated at 5 Rue Jules-Breton in Paris and presided over by the Grand
+Master Piron, with Madame Amelie Gedalje, thirty-third degree, as Grand
+Secretary-General, it receives further instructions from "the V.'. Ill.'.
+Bro.'. Annie Besant 33deg." at Adyar. In order not to shock the
+susceptibilities of English adepts who might be repelled by the
+rationalist tendencies of the Maconnerie Mixte, Mrs. Besant has,
+however, borrowed the formulas of British Masonry together with its
+custom of placing the V.S.L. on the table in the lodges. These
+conflicting doctrines are blended in an amusing manner on the
+certificates of the Order, where at the top we find the French motto and
+initials:
+
+ Liberte Egalite Fraternite
+ A.'. L.'. G.'. D.'. L'H.'.
+ (i.e. a la gloire de l'Humanite)
+
+and below, for the benefit of English members, the initials of the
+British masonic device, that does not of course appear on the diplomas
+of the French Order, which, like the Grand Orient, has rejected the
+Great Architect:
+
+ T.'. T.'. G.'. O.'. T.'. G.'. A.'. O.'. T.'. U.'.
+ (To the glory of the Great Architect of the Universe).
+
+Our Co-Masons therefore enjoy the advantage of being able to choose
+whether they shall render glory to God or to Humanity. That the two
+devices are somewhat incompatible does not appear to strike the English
+initiates, nor do they probably realize the imposture practised on them
+by the further wording of the certificate, which, after announcing in
+imposing capitals "To all Masons dispersed over both Hemispheres,
+Greeting," goes on to say "We therefore recommend him (_or_ her) as such
+to all Freemasons of the Globe, requesting them to recognize him (_or_
+her) in all the rights and privileges attached to this Degree, as we
+will do to all presenting themselves under similar circumstances."
+
+Now, any British Mason will see at a glance that all this is a false
+pretension. No order of Masonry can recommend its members for rights and
+privileges to "all the Freemasons of the world," for the simple reason
+that, as has been said, there is no such thing as "Universal Masonry,"
+so that even Grand Lodge of England--the most important Lodge in the
+world--could not, if it would, accord the right of entry for its members
+into Continental lodges. As an English Mason recently expressed it:
+
+ The impression among non-Masons generally appears to be that a
+ British or Irish member of the Craft is able to enter a masonic
+ lodge in any part of the world and take part in its deliberations
+ and proceedings. To this belief an unqualified denial may at once
+ be given. Nor may a member of a lodge under any Jurisdiction not
+ in communion with the Grand Lodges of the United Kingdom be
+ received as a visitor or as a Joining Member in any subsidiary
+ lodge of the Grand Lodges of England, Ireland, or Scotland.[708]
+
+But for Co-Masonry to make this claim is even more ridiculous, since at
+the time when the above quoted diploma was drawn up Co-Masonry and its
+parent, the Maconnerie Mixte, were not recognized by any other order of
+Masonry except the "Droit Humain," and it is not only unrecognized but
+utterly repudiated by Grand Lodge of England. The British Mason, in
+fact, does not recognize the Co-Mason as a Mason at all, and would
+violate his obligations by discussing masonic secrets with him or her,
+so that there is no manner in which the Co-Mason could be accorded
+masonic rights and privileges by British Masons. In order, further, to
+keep up the illusion in the minds of its members that they are genuine
+Masons, Co-Masonry, in its quarterly organ, _The Co-Mason_, is careful
+to include masonic news relating to British Masonry as if it formed one
+and the same order.
+
+With regard to the Grand Orient, an equally tortuous policy was pursued.
+As we have already seen, the Grande Loge disgraced the lodge that had
+admitted Maria Deraismes and did not officially recognize the Maconnerie
+Mixte. The ritual adopted by the latter Order was, however, not that of
+British Masonry, and in most Co-Masonic Lodges the ritual employed
+contains variations derived from the Grand Orient[709]; indeed the Grand
+Orient character of Co-Masonry has always been generally recognized in
+masonic circles. This being so, I pointed out in _World Revolution_ that
+Co-Masonry derives from the Grand Orient, but I received the following
+protest from a woman Co-Mason:
+
+ Are you aware that for twenty years the Grand Orient has refused to
+ recognize it [Co-Masonry] as a legitimate body, just as the English
+ Orthodox Masons do now? Also, we are distinctly told before joining
+ that we shall not be recognized by that body. Also, we have nothing
+ to do with Illuminati, or with Germany. As the Grand Orient have
+ eliminated the Deity, it is rather a dreadful thing to a Mason to
+ be connected in any way with that Order, and I cannot imagine a
+ worse thing could be said about us.
+
+This letter was dated March 6, 1922, and on the 19th of the preceding
+month of February an alliance between the Grand Orient and Co-Masonry
+had been finally celebrated at the Grand Temple of the Droit Humain in
+Paris! We find a report of this ceremony in the _Co-Mason_ for the
+following April. It is evident, therefore, that members who were likely
+to be repelled by the idea of connexion with the Grand Orient were
+assured that no such connexion existed. But when this covert _liaison_
+developed into official recognition--although this did not include the
+right of entry to the lodges of the Grand Orient for women members--the
+triumphant manner in which the great event was announced in the
+_Co-Mason_ suggests that the majority of members were likely to feel
+nothing but satisfaction at association with the Order that "had
+eliminated the Deity." It is true that a few members protested, and by
+this time Co-Masonry was too completely under the control of Mrs. Besant
+for any faction to question her dictates. Moreover, the opposition had
+been weakened by a schism which took place in the Order in 1908, when a
+number of members who objected to the introduction of Eastern occultism
+into Masonry and likewise disapproved of the Grand Orient, formed
+themselves into a separate body under Mrs. Halsey and Dr. Geikie Cobb,
+working only the Craft Degrees according to the Grand Lodge of England.
+
+It has been shown by this brief resume that Co-Masonry is a hybrid
+system deriving from two conflicting sources--the political and
+rationalist doctrines of the _Maconnerie Mixte_ and the Eastern
+occultism of Madame Blavatsky and Mrs. Besant.
+
+As a professing Buddhist, Madame Blavatsky consistently dissociated
+herself from any schemes of material welfare. Thus in the early
+Constitution of the Theosophical Society it is stated:
+
+ "The Society repudiates all interference on its behalf with the
+ Governmental relations of any nation or community, confining its
+ attention exclusively to the matters set forth in the present
+ document."[710]
+
+These matters relate to the study of Occult Sciences. Again Madame
+Blavatsky herself wrote in the _Theosophist_:
+
+ Unconcerned about politics: hostile to the insane dreams of
+ Socialism and Communism, which it abhors--as both are but disguised
+ conspiracies of brutal force and selfishness against honest
+ labour; the Society cares but little about the outward human
+ management of the material world. The whole of its aspirations are
+ directed towards the occult truths of the visible and invisible
+ worlds.[711]
+
+It will be seen that this declaration is diametrically opposed to that
+of the Maconnerie Mixte. Nevertheless, Madame Blavatsky so far departed
+from her purely occult programme after her arrival in India in 1879 as
+to reconstruct the society on the basis of "Universal Brotherhood." This
+idea was completely absent from her first scheme; "the Brotherhood plank
+in the Society's future platform," wrote her coadjutor Colonel Olcott,
+"was not thought of."[712] It was over this plank, however, that Mrs.
+Besant was able to walk to the Supreme Council of the Maconnerie Mixte,
+and adding Liberty and Equality to the principle of Fraternity to
+establish Co-Masonry on a definitely political basis as a preparation
+for the Socialist doctrines her teacher had "abhorred."
+
+In the matter of esoteric doctrines Mrs. Besant again departed from the
+path laid down by Madame Blavatsky, whose aim had been to rehabilitate
+Buddhism in India, representing the teachings of Gautama Buddha as an
+advance on Hinduism.[713] Mrs. Besant, however, came to regard the
+doctrines of the Brahmins as the purer faith. Yet it was neither
+Buddhism nor Hinduism in a pure form that she introduced to the
+Co-Masons of the West, but an occult system of her own devising, wherein
+Mahatmas, Swamis, and Gurus were incongruously mingled with the
+charlatans of eighteenth-century France. Thus in the Co-Masonic lodges
+we find "the King" inscribed over the Grand Master's chair in the East,
+in the North the empty chair of "the Master"--to which, until recently,
+all members were required to bow in passing--and over it a picture,
+veiled in some lodges, of the same mysterious personage. Should the
+neophyte enquire, "Who is the King?" he may be told that he is the King
+who is to come from India--whether he is identical with the young Hindu
+Krishnamurti adopted by Mrs. Besant in 1909 is not clear--whilst the
+question "Who is the Master?" will probably be met with the reply that
+he is "the Master of all true Freemasons throughout the world," which
+the enquirer takes to mean the head of the religion to which he happens
+to belong--Christ, Mohammed, or another. But in the third degree the
+astonishing information is confided with an appearance of great secrecy
+that he is no other than the famous Comte de Saint-Germain, who did not
+really die in 1784, but is still alive to-day in Hungary under the name
+of Ragocsky. In yet a higher degree, however, the initiate may be told
+that the Master is in reality Prince Eugene of Austria.
+
+It would be superfluous to describe in detail the wild nonsense that
+composes the creed of Co-Masonry, since a long series of articles was
+recently devoted to the subject in _The Patriot_ and can be consulted by
+anyone who desires information concerning its ceremonies and the
+personnel directing it.[714] Suffice it to say here that its course,
+like that of most secret societies, has been marked by violent
+dissensions amongst the members--the Blavatsky-ites passionately
+denouncing the Besantites and the Besantites proclaiming the divine
+infallibility of their leader--whilst at the same time scandals of a
+peculiarly unsavoury kind have been brought to light. This fact has
+indeed created a serious schism in the ranks of the Theosophists, which
+shows that a number of perfectly harmless people are to be found amongst
+them. Yet the peculiar recurrence of such scandals in the history of
+secret societies leads one inevitably to wonder how far these are to be
+regarded as merely deplorable accidents or as the results of
+secret-society methods and of occult teaching. That the men against whom
+charges of sexual perversion were brought were not isolated examples of
+these tendencies is shown by a curious admission on the part of one of
+Madame Blavatsky's "chelas," or disciples, who relates:
+
+ I was a pupil of H.P.B. before Mrs. Besant joined the T.S. and saw
+ her expel one of her most gifted and valued workers from the
+ Esoteric Section for offences against the occult and moral law,
+ similar to those with which Mr. Leadbeater's name has now been
+ associated for nearly twenty years. H.P.B. was always extremely
+ strict on this particular point, and _many_ [my itals.] would-be
+ aspirants for chelaship were refused on this one ground alone,
+ while others who had been accepted "on probation" failed almost
+ immediately afterwards.[715]
+
+It would appear, then, that these deplorable proclivities are peculiarly
+prevalent amongst aspirants to Theosophical knowledge.
+
+It is unnecessary to enlarge at length on Mrs. Besant's connexion with
+the seditious elements in this country and in India, since these have
+frequently been referred to in the press. It is true that the
+Theosophical Society, like the Grand Orient, disavows all political
+intentions and professes to work only for spiritual development, but the
+leaders appear to consider that a radical change must take place in the
+existing social system before true spiritual development can be
+attained. That this change would lie in the direction of Socialism is
+suggested by the fact that a group of leading Theosophists, including
+Mrs. Besant, were discovered in 1919 to be holding a large number of
+shares in the Victoria House Printing Company, which was financing the
+_Daily Herald_ at that date[716]; indeed, Mrs. Besant in her lectures on
+Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, at the Queen's Hall in October of the
+same year, clearly indicated Socialism as the system of the coming New
+Era.[717] Since then the "Action Lodge" has been founded with the object
+of carrying "Theosophical ideals and conceptions into all fields of
+human activity"[718]--from which the political field appears not to be
+excluded, since this lodge has been known to co-operate with the
+promoters of a political meeting on the Indian question.[719] It is
+interesting to notice that a leading member of the "Action Lodge," and
+also of the "Order of the Star in the East," was recently reported in
+the press to have been long connected with the Labour Party and to have
+notified her intention of standing for it in Parliament.
+
+This is, of course, not to say that all Theosophists are Socialists. The
+Theosophical Society of America, in an admirable series of articles[720]
+discussing the theory of world-revolution set forth in my books, pointed
+out that:
+
+ The pupils of the powers of evil work ... untiringly to thwart
+ every real advance of the human race, to pull down whatever
+ civilization painfully builds, that makes for light and true
+ development and spiritual growth.... It would not be difficult to
+ suggest reasons why these pupils and co-workers of the powers of
+ darkness choose the chief clauses of their creed: Internationalism,
+ Communism, the destruction of the higher class through the despotic
+ rule of the lowest class, the corruption of family life. The attack
+ on religion hardly needs comment.
+
+It will be seen, then, that Socialism and Internationalism are not an
+essential part of Theosophical teaching, and that the more enlightened
+Theosophists recognize the danger of these destructive doctrines. At a
+Special Convention in England on April 6 of this year, seven Lodges
+entered a protest against recent departures from the original policy of
+the Society. Amongst the resolutions put forward was one urging the
+President (Mrs. Besant) to establish a tribunal "to investigate matters
+affecting the good name of the Society, and the conduct of certain
+members"; this was lost by "an overwhelming majority." Another
+resolution regretted that "the Administration, the Magazine, and the
+influence of the Society have been used for controversial political ends
+and sectarian religious propaganda." Unhappily these resolutions were
+not met in the fraternal spirit that might be expected from a Society
+setting out to establish Universal Brotherhood and were stigmatized in a
+proposed amendment as "destructive motions ... at variance with the
+objects for which the Society stands." This clause in the amendment was
+lost by a small majority, but a very large majority supported the
+further clauses in which the Special Convention affirmed "its complete
+confidence in the administration of the Society and its beloved and
+revered President Dr. Annie Besant, the chosen leader of whom it is
+justly proud," and sent "its cordial greetings to Bishop Leadbeater,
+F.T.S.," thanking him "for his invaluable work and his unswerving
+devotion to the cause of Theosophy and the service of the Theosophical
+Society."
+
+There are, then, a certain number of Theosophists in this country who
+have the courage and public spirit to protest against the use of the
+Society for political ends and against infractions of the moral code
+which they believe certain members to have committed. But this party
+unfortunately constitutes only a small minority; the rest are prepared
+to render blind and unquestioning obedience to the dictates of Mrs.
+Besant and Mr. Leadbeater. In this respect the Theosophical Society
+follows the usual plan of secret societies. For although not nominally a
+secret society it is one in effect, being composed of outer and inner
+circles and absolutely controlled by supreme directors. The inner
+circle, known as the Esoteric Section, or rather the Eastern School of
+Theosophy--usually referred to as the E.S.--is in reality a secret
+society, consisting in its turn of three further circles, the innermost
+composed of the Mahatmas or Masters of the White Lodge, the second of
+the Accepted Pupils or Initiates, and the third of the Learners or
+ordinary members. The E.S. and Co-Masonry thus compose two secret
+societies within the open order controlled by people who are frequently
+members of both. Whether even these higher initiates are really in the
+secret is another question. Dr. Weller van Hook who is said to have been
+also a Rosicrucian and an important member of the Grand Orient once
+cryptically observed that "Theosophy is not the hierarchy," implying
+that it was only part of a world-organization, and darkly hinting that
+if it did not carry out the work allotted to it, the Rosicrucians would
+take control. That this is more than probable we shall see later.
+
+The outer ranks of the Theosophical Society seem to be largely composed
+of harmless enthusiasts who imagine that they are receiving genuine
+instruction in the religions and occult doctrines of the East. That the
+teaching of the E.S. would not be taken seriously by any real
+Orientalist and that they could learn far more by studying the works of
+recognized authorities on these subjects at a University or at the
+British Museum does not occur to them for a moment. Nor would this
+fulfil the purpose of the leaders. For the Theosophical Society is not a
+study group, but essentially a propagandist society which aims at
+substituting for the pure and simple teaching of Christianity the
+amazing compound of Eastern superstition, Cabalism, and
+eighteenth-century charlatanism which Mrs. Besant and her coadjutors
+have devised. Yet even were the doctrines of Mrs. Besant those of true
+Buddhism or of Brahmanism, to what extent are they likely to benefit
+Western civilization? Setting the question of Christianity aside,
+experience shows that the attempt to orientalize Occidentals may prove
+no less disastrous than the attempt to occidentalize Orientals, and that
+to transport Eastern mysticism to the West is to vulgarize it and to
+produce a debased form of occultism that frequently ends in moral
+deterioration or mental derangement.[721] I attribute the scandals that
+have taken place amongst Theosophists directly to this cause.
+
+But it is time to turn to another society in which this debased
+occultism plays a still more important part.
+
+
+
+Rosicrucianism
+
+
+At the present time, as in the eighteenth century, the term
+"Rosicrucianism" is used to cover a number of associations differing in
+their aims and doctrines.
+
+The first of these societies to be founded in England was the _Societas
+Rosicruciana in Anglia_, founded in 1867 by Robert Wentworth Little on
+instructions received from abroad. Only Master Masons are admitted--a
+procedure not condemned by Grand Lodge of England, which regards the
+S.R.I.A. as a perfectly innocuous body. Although neither polical nor
+anti-Christian, but, on the contrary, containing distinctly Christian
+elements and claiming to descend from Christian Rosenkreutz--a claim
+which must be dismissed as an absurdity--the S.R.I.A. is nevertheless
+largely Cabalistic,[722] dealing with the forces of Nature, alchemy,
+etc. If its progenitors are really to be traced further back than the
+Rosicrucians of the nineteenth century--Ragon, Eliphas Levi, and Kenneth
+Mackenzie--they must be sought amongst certain esoteric Masons in
+Hungary and also amongst the French Martinistes, whose rituals doubtless
+derived from a kindred source. It will be remembered that Marlines
+Pasqually bequeathed to his disciples a large number of Jewish
+manuscripts which were presumably preserved in the archives of the
+Martiniste Lodge at Lyons. The Order of Martinistes has never ceased to
+exist, and the President of the Supreme Conseil, Dr. Gerard Encausse,
+well known as "Papus," an avowed Cabalist, only died in 1916. To these
+archives another famous Cabalist, the renegade Abbe, Alphonse Louis
+Constant, who assumed the name of Eliphas Levi, may well have had
+access. It is said that one of Eliphas Levi's most distinguished
+disciples, the occultist Baron Spedalieri of Marseilles, was a member of
+the "Grand Lodge of Solitary Brethren of the Mountain," an "Illumined
+Brother of the Ancient Restored Order of Manicheans," a high member of
+the Grand Orient, and also a "High Illuminate of the Martinistes."
+Before his death in 1875 Eliphas Levi announced that in 1879 a new
+political and religious "universal Kingdom" would be established, and
+that it would be possessed by "him who would have the keys of the East."
+The manuscript containing this prophecy was passed on by Baron
+Spedalieri to Edward Maitland, who in his turn gave it to a leading
+member of S.R.I.A., by whom it was published in English.[723]
+
+But, as we have already seen, the principal centre of Cabalism was in
+Eastern Europe, whilst Germany was the principal home of Rosicrucianism,
+and it was from these directions that, a few years later, a new
+Rosicrucian Order in England derived its inspiration. It is curious to
+notice that the eighties of the last century were marked by a
+simultaneous recrudescence of secret societies and of Socialist
+organizations. In 1880 Leopold Engel reorganized Weishaupt's Order of
+Illuminati, which, according to M. Guenon, played thenceforth "an
+extremely suspect political role," and soon after this in 1884 it is
+said that a strange incident took place in London. The Rev. A.F.A.
+Woodford, a F.'. M.'., happened to be turning over the contents of a
+second-hand bookstall in Farringdon Street when he came upon some cypher
+MSS., attached to which was a letter in German saying that if the finder
+were to communicate with Sapiens Dominabatur Astris, c/o Fraulein Anna
+Sprengel, in Germany, he would receive further interesting information.
+
+This, at any rate, is the story told to initiates of the Order which
+came to be founded according to the instructions given in the cypher.
+But when we remember that precisely the same story was told by
+Cagliostro concerning his discovery of a MS. in London by the mysterious
+George Cofton on which he had founded his Egyptian rite, we begin to
+wonder whether the placing of a MS. in a spot where it is certain to be
+discovered by precisely the people qualified to decipher it forms one of
+the traditional methods of secret-society adepts for extending their
+sphere of influence without betraying their identity or revealing the
+centre of direction.
+
+In this case it certainly succeeded admirably, for by a fortunate
+coincidence the clergyman who found the cypher MSS. was acquainted with
+two prominent members of the S.I.R.A., Dr. Wynn Westcott and Dr.
+Woodman, to whom he took the documents, and by a further fortunate
+coincidence one of them happened to be the very person to whom Eliphas
+Levi's prophecy had been given; These two men who now assumed the
+pseudonyms of S.A. (Sapere Aude) and M.E.V. (Magnus est Veritas), were
+able partially to decipher the manuscript; S.A., with the assistance of
+a German, then wrote to S.D.A. c/o Fraulein Anna Sprengel, saying that
+he and a friend had finished the deciphering and that they desired
+further information. In reply they were told to elaborate the notes, and
+that if diligent they would be allowed to form an elementary branch of
+the Rosicrucian Order in England. Finally S.D.A. wrote to S.A.
+authorising him to sign her (or his?) name to any warrant or document
+necessary for the constitution of an Order, and promising later on
+further rituals and advanced teachings if the preliminary Order proved
+successful. S.A. and M.E.V. now called in the aid of a third member of
+the S.I.R.A., Macgregor Mathers, henceforth known as D.D.C.F. (Deo Duce
+Comite Ferro), who, having more time at his disposal, was able, by means
+of long and arduous labour, to elaborate the rituals in Masonic style.
+On March 8, 1888, a warrant was then drawn up according to the design
+given in the cypher MSS. and was signed by S.A. for S.D.A., by M.E.V.
+and D.D.C.F., all three having received the honorary grade of 7-4 from
+S.D.A. so as to enable them to act as Chief of the New Temple. It is
+interesting to note that whilst the instructions in the cypher MSS. were
+in English and German, the name now given to the new Order "The Golden
+Dawn," was accompanied by its equivalent in Hebrew "Chebreth Zerech aur
+Bokher" that is to say "The Companions of the Rising Light of the
+Morning." Amongst the instructions we find: "Avoid Roman Catholics but
+with pity"; also these directions concerning the Obligation:
+
+ The candidate asking for Light is taken to the Altar and forced to
+ take an Obligation to secrecy under penalty of expulsion and death
+ or palsy from hostile current of will.
+
+From the subsequent correspondence of the Order it is seen that this
+so-called "punitive current" was actually directed by the Chiefs against
+those who rebelled.
+
+Although the members of the Golden Dawn later became linked up with the
+"Esoteric Masons" in Germany, neither the organization nor the ritual of
+the Order are masonic, but rather Martiniste and Cabalistic. For amidst
+all the confused phraseology of the Order, the phrases and symbols
+borrowed from Egyptian, Greek, or Hindu mythology, one detects the real
+basis of the whole system--the Jewish Cabala, in which all the three
+Chiefs were, or became, experts. Mathers in fact translated the famous
+book of Abraham the Jew from French into English with explanatory notes,
+and Wynn Westcott translated the Sepher Yetzirah from Hebrew. Lectures
+were given to the society on such subjects as the Tarot Cards, Geomantic
+Talismans, and the Schemhamphorasch or Tetragrammaton.
+
+The Order was at first absolutely governed by the three Chiefs, but
+after a time--owing to the death of Woodman and the resignation of Wynn
+Westcott--Mathers became the Sole Chief and professed to have obtained
+further instructions from the Hidden Chiefs through his wife--a sister
+of Bergson--by means of clairvoyance and clairaudience. But the real
+directors of the Order were in Germany and known as the "Hidden and
+Secret Chiefs of the Third Order." A curious resemblance will here be
+noted with the "Concealed Superiors" by whom members of the _Stricte
+Observance_ in the eighteenth century declared themselves to be
+controlled.
+
+Who these men were at the time the Order was founded remains a mystery
+not only to the outside world but even to the English initiates
+themselves. The identity of Sapiens Dominabatur Astris appears never to
+have been established, nor was anything more heard about the still more
+mysterious Anna Sprengel until her death in an obscure German village
+was reported in 1893. Indeed, one of the most active members of the
+Order, Dr. Robert Felkin, M.D., known as F.R. (Finem Respice), later
+declared that, although he had visited five temples of the Order in
+Germany and Austria, he had been unable to get into touch with the
+Hidden Chiefs, or to discover how the original MSS. came into the hands
+of the clergyman who handed them to Wynn Westcott and Woodman. According
+to Felkin's statement, all that he had been able to find out was that
+the MSS. were the notes of ceremonies made by a man who had been
+initiated into a Lodge in Germany, and that the temple from which they
+originated was "a special temple" working on the Cabala tree like the
+English branch of the Order. Further, he was told that none of the "big
+Three" who founded the Golden Dawn in England were real Rosicrucians at
+all.
+
+The confusion of ideas which must inevitably result when, as in secret
+societies or revolutionary organizations, a number of people are being
+blindly led by hidden directors, naturally brought about dissensions
+amongst the members, who mutually accused each other of ignorance of the
+real aims of the Order. Thus the London Lodge ended by breaking with
+Mathers, who was in Paris, on account of his arrogance in claiming
+supreme power through the mystery of the Hidden Chiefs, and after two
+years of unsettled government, in 1902 elected three new chiefs--Dr.
+Felkin (F.R. = Finem Respice), Bullock, a solicitor (L.O. = Levavi
+Oculos) who resigned at the end of the year, and Brodie Innes (S.S.--Sub
+Spe). But although Mathers had been repudiated, his teachings were
+retained as emanating from the Hidden Chiefs.
+
+Two years earlier a dramatic incident had occurred. In a very sinister
+personage, Aleister Crowley, had been introduced into the Order on
+the recommendation of A. E. Waite (S.R. = Sacramentum Regis) the
+well-known mystical writer. A man of many aliases, Crowley followed the
+precedent of the "Comte de Saint-Germain," the "Comte de Cagliostro,"
+and the "Baron von Offenbach" by ennobling himself and masquerading
+under various titles in turn, such as "Count Svareff," "Lord Boleskine,"
+"Baron Rosenkreutz," but usually known in the Order as "P" for
+"Perdurabo."
+
+Crowley, who was a Cabalist, had written a book on Goetic Magic and soon
+after becoming a member of the "Golden Dawn" set to work with another
+"Frater" on magical experiments, including evocations, the consecration
+and use of talismans, divination, alchemy, etc. In 1900 Crowley had
+joined Mathers in Paris where the latter and his wife were living under
+the assumed names of the "Comte and Comtesse of Glenstrae" and engaged
+in reviving the mysteries of Isis at the Bodiniere Theatre. In this task
+they were joined by an extraordinary lady, the notorious Madame Horos
+(alias the Swami) who claimed to be the real and authentic Sapiens
+Dominabatur Astris. Crowley described her as "a very stout woman and
+very fair" and "a vampire of remarkable power;" Mathers declared her to
+be "probably the most powerful medium living," but later, in a letter to
+another member of the "Golden Dawn" observed: "I believe her and her
+accomplices to be emissaries of a very powerful _secret occult order_
+who have been trying for years to break up other Orders and especially
+my work." Incidentally this lady, who proved to be a false S.D.A., ended
+by starting an Order in collaboration with her husband, in which it was
+said that certain rituals of the Golden Dawn were adapted to an immoral
+purpose, with the result that the couple were brought to trial and
+finally condemned to penal servitude.
+
+Whether owing to this disturbing experience, or because, as Crowley
+declared, he had "imprudently attracted to himself forces of evil too
+great and terrible for him to withstand, presumably Abramelin demons,"
+Mathers' reason began to totter. This then was the situation at the time
+of his rupture with the Order, and the dramatic incident referred to was
+the sudden appearance of Crowley in London, who, whether acting as
+Mathers' envoy or on his own initiative, broke into the premises of the
+Order, with a black mask over his face, a plaid shawl thrown over his
+shoulders, an enormous gold (or gilt) cross on his breast, and a dagger
+at his side, for the purpose of taking over possession. This attempt was
+baffled with the prosaic aid of the police and Crowley was expelled from
+the Order. Eventually, however, he succeeded in obtaining possession of
+some of the rituals and other documents of the Golden Dawn, which he
+proceeded to publish in the organ of a new Order of his own. This
+magazine, containing a mixture of debased Cabalism and vulgar
+blasphemies, interspersed with panegyrics on haschish--for Crowley
+combined with sexual perversion an addiction to drugs--which might
+appear to express only the ravings of a maniac. But eccentricity has
+often provided the best cloak for dark designs, and the outbreak of war
+proved that there was a method in the madness of the man whom the
+authorities persisted in regarding merely as an irresponsible degenerate
+of a non-political kind. To quote the press report of his exploits after
+this date:
+
+ In November 1914 Crowley went to the United States, where he
+ entered into close relations with the pro-German propagandists. He
+ edited the New York _International_, a German propagandist paper
+ run by the notorious George Silvester Viereck, and published, among
+ other things, an obscene attack on the King and a glorification of
+ the Kaiser. Crowley ran occultism as a side-line, and seems to have
+ been known as the "Purple Priest." Later on he publicly destroyed
+ his British passport before the Statute of Liberty, declared in
+ favour of the Irish Republican cause, and made a theatrical
+ declaration of "war" on England.... During his stay in America
+ Crowley was associated with a body known as the "Secret
+ Revolutionary Committee" which was working for the establishment of
+ an Irish Republic. He is known also as the writer of a defeatest
+ manifesto circulated in France in 1915.
+
+But to return to the Golden Dawn. In 1903 a split occurred in the Order.
+A.E. Waite, an early member of it, seceded from it with a number of
+other members and carried off with him the name of "Golden Dawn," also
+the vault and other property of the Order. The original Order then took
+the name of "Stella Matutina," with Dr. Felkin as Chief.
+
+In the preceding year the members of the London Lodge had again believed
+that they were in touch with the _Hidden Third Order_ and revived their
+efforts to communicate with the Secret Chiefs in Germany. This state of
+uncertainty continued till about 1910, when Felkin and Meakin set forth
+for Germany, where they succeeded in meeting several members of the
+Third Order, who professed to be "true and genuine Rosicrucians" and to
+know of Anna Sprengel and the starting of the Order in England. They
+were not, it was believed, the Secret and Hidden Chiefs, but more
+probably Esoteric Masons of the Grand Orient. These Fratres, however,
+told them that in order to form a definite etheric link between
+themselves and the Order in Great Britain, it would be necessary for a
+British Frater to be under their instruction for a year. Accordingly
+Meakin remained in Germany for special training, so that he might act as
+the "etheric link" between the two countries. After a pilgrimage to the
+Near East, closely following the itinerary of Christian Rosenkreutz,
+Meakin returned to Germany, and it appears to have been now that he was
+able to get into touch with a certain high adept of occult science.
+
+This remarkable personage, Rudolf Steiner, had earlier belonged to the
+Theosophical Society, and it has been suggested that at some period he
+may have been connected with the revived Illuminati of Leopold Engel.
+There is certainly some reason to believe that at one point in his
+career he came into touch with men who were carrying on the teachings of
+Weishaupt, the chief of whom was the President of a group of Pan-German
+secret societies, and it seems not improbable that the mysterious
+S.D.A., under whose directions the Golden Dawn was founded, might be
+located in this circle.
+
+A few years before the war, Steiner, whilst still a Theosophist, started
+a society of his own, the Anthroposophical Society, a name borrowed from
+the work of the XVIIth century Rosicrucian, Thomas Vaughan,
+"Anthroposophica Magica." The ostensible leader of Rosicrucianism in
+Germany was Dr. Franz Hartmann, founder of the "Order of the Esoteric
+Rose Croix." Although in some way connected with Engel's Illuminati and
+more definitely with the Theosophical Society, Hartmann was believed to
+be a genuine Christian mystic. Steiner also made the same profession,
+and it seems probable that he formed one of the group of mysterious
+personages, including besides Grand Orient Masons, Baron von Knigge,
+great grandson of Weishaupt's coadjutor "Philo," who met together in
+secret conference at Ingoldstadt where the first Lodge of the Illuminati
+had been founded in 1776, and decided to revive Illuminism on Christian
+mystic lines used in a very elastic sense amongst occultists. At the
+same time Steiner introduces into his teaching a strong vein of
+Gnosticism, Luciferianism, Johannism, and Grand Orient Masonry, whilst
+reserving Rosicrucianism for his higher initiates. On this last point he
+is extremely reticent, preferring to call his teaching "occult science,"
+since he recognizes that "real Rosicrucians never proclaim themselves as
+such"; it is therefore only in the inner circle of his society, on which
+no information is given to the public and into which members are
+admitted by much the same forms of initiation as those used by the Grand
+Orient, that Rosicrucianism is mentioned. Some of Steiner's imitators in
+The Rosicrucian Fellowship at Oceanside, California, however, openly
+profess what they call Rosicrucianism and at the same time claim
+superior knowledge on the subject of Masonry. Thus in a book by the
+leader of this group we find it solemnly stated that according to Max
+Heindl, Eve cohabited with serpents in the garden of Eden, that Cain was
+the offspring of her union with "the Lucifer Spirit Samael," and that
+from this "divine progenitor" the most virile portion of the human race
+descended, the rest being merely the "progeny of human parents." Readers
+of the present work will recognize this as not the legend of Masonry but
+of the Jewish Cabala which has been already quoted in this context.[724]
+Whether this also forms part of Steiner's teaching it is impossible to
+say, since his real doctrines are known only to his inner circle; even
+some of his admirers amongst the Steiner Matutina, whilst consulting him
+as an oracle, are not admitted to the secrets of his grades of
+initiation and have been unable to succeed in obtaining from him a
+charter. Meanwhile they themselves do not disclose to the neophytes whom
+they seek to win over that they are members of any secret association.
+This is quite in accordance with the methods of Weishaupt's "Insinuating
+Brothers."
+
+The result of what Steiner calls "occult science" is thus described in a
+striking passage of one of his own works:
+
+"This is the change which the occult student observes coming over
+himself--that there is no longer a connection between a thought and a
+feeling or a feeling and a volition, except when he creates the
+connection himself. No impulse drives him from thought to action if he
+does not voluntarily harbour it. He can now stand completely without
+feeling before an object which, before his training, would have filled
+him with glowing love or violent hatred; he can likewise remain
+actionless before a thought which heretofore would have spurred him to
+action as if by itself," etc.
+
+I can imagine no clearer expose of the dangers of occultism than this.
+Weishaupt had said: "I cannot use men as I find them; I must form them."
+Dr. Steiner shows how this transformation can be accomplished. Under the
+influence of so-called occult training, which is in reality simply
+powerful suggestion, all a man's native impulses and inhibitive springs
+of action may be broken; the pupil of the occultist will no longer react
+to the conceptions of beauty or ugliness, of right or wrong, which,
+unknown to himself, formed the law of his being. Thus not only his
+conscious deeds but his sub-conscious processes pass under the control
+of another. If this is indeed the method employed by Dr. Steiner and his
+adepts there would certainly seem to be some justification for the
+verdict of M. Robert Kuentz that "Steiner has devised occult exercises
+which render the mind incapable (rendent l'esprit aneanti), that he
+attacks the individual by deranging his faculties (il detraque les
+facultes)."[725]
+
+What is the real motive power behind such societies as the Stella
+Matutina and again behind Steiner? This remains a mystery, not only to
+the outside world but to the "initiates" themselves. The quest of the
+Hidden Chiefs, undertaken by one intrepid pilgrim after another, seems
+to have ended only in further meetings with Steiner. Yet hope springs
+eternal in the breast of the aspirant after occult knowledge, and astral
+messages spurred the Fratres to further efforts. One of these contained
+the exhortation: "Go on with Steiner, which is not the ultimate end of
+search, and we will come into contact with many serious students who
+will lead us to the real master of the Order, who will be so
+overpoweringly impressive as to leave no room for doubt."
+
+A curious analogy with Co-Masonry will here be observed. For whilst the
+veiled picture of the Co-Masonic lodges is said to represent "the
+Master" in the person of Ragocsky or some other personage in Austria or
+Hungary, so it is likewise in Austria and Germany that the members of
+Stella Matutina seek their Hidden Chiefs and the "real Master" of their
+Order. Moreover, whilst the Co-Masons await the coming of the great
+"World Teacher," King, or Messiah in 1926, it is also in 1926 that the
+Stella Matutina expect Christian Rosenkreutz to appear again.[726] There
+are many other points of resemblance between the phraseology of the two
+Orders, as, for example, the idea of the "Astral Light," "the Great
+White Lodge," and also "the GREAT WORK" by which both Orders denote the
+supreme object of their aspirations--"the union of the East and the
+West." It is therefore impossible not to suspect that, although the
+members of Co-Masonry and of the Stella Matutina imagine their
+respective Orders to be entirely unconnected and indeed appear to be
+hardly aware of each other's existence, there may be nevertheless some
+point of junction in the background and even a common centre of
+direction.
+
+In this connexion it is interesting to notice the political tendencies
+of the societies in question. Although the outcome of the _Maconnerie
+Mixte_, and nominally under the jurisdiction of headquarters in Paris,
+Co-Masonry does not appear to be pro-French in its sympathies. On the
+contrary, the Co-masonic lodges in this country, as also the head lodge
+in the Rue Jules-Breton, seem to have adopted that form of universal
+brotherhood which principally redounds to the benefit of Germany.
+
+The Stella Matutina, whilst professing to be solely concerned in occult
+science and warning its members against Co-Masonry on account of the
+political tendencies of the latter, is nevertheless still more imbued
+with German influence, since, as we have seen, it has ever since it
+first came into existence been secretly under Germany direction. Indeed,
+during the war this influence became so apparent that certain patriotic
+members, who had entered the society in all good faith with the idea of
+studying occult science, raised an energetic protest and a schism took
+place. Thus, just as in the case of Co-Masonry, the more clear-sighted
+recognized the imprudence of placing themselves under foreign control.
+That this was no imaginary danger is shown by a correspondence which had
+taken place some years earlier and has recently been brought to light.
+It will be remembered that the great aim of Weishaupt and the Illuminati
+of the eighteenth century was to obtain control over all existing
+masonic and occult Orders, This also became the dream of Rudolf Steiner
+and his allies in other countries, whose plan was to form what they
+called an "International Bund." The idea of an International Bureau for
+Masonic Affairs had already, as we have seen, been started in
+Switzerland; this was the same idea applied to occult groups, so that
+all such societies as Rosicrucianism, Theosophy with its various
+ramifications of Co-Masonry, etc., Hermetic Orders, isolated occultists,
+and so on, were to be placed under German control. The audacity of the
+proposal seems to have been too much even for some of the most
+internationally minded members of the Stella Matutina, and in the
+discussion that took place it was pointed out that admirable as the
+scheme might be, there was nevertheless some British spirit amongst
+these Orders to be reckoned with. Even Mrs. Besant's followers, headed
+by the Co-Masons, described as a group which "attracts a large number of
+idle women who have leisure to take a little occultism with their
+afternoon tea," might be liable to ask, "Who are these Germans to
+interfere?" But the real obstacle to success was held to be British
+Freemasonry, to which a certain number of students of occult science,
+including all the members of the S.R.I.A., belonged. "English Masonry,"
+it was remarked, "boasts the Grand Lodge of 1717, the Mother Lodge of
+the World. They are a proud, jealous, autocratic body. Co-Masonry
+derives from the Grand Orient of France, an illegitimate body according
+to English ruling. No English Mason can work with Co-Masons.... If the
+English Grand Lodge hears of anything called 'Esoteric Masonry' derived
+from such sources, under chiefs once T.S. [Theosophical Society]
+members, under a head in Berlin, it will not enquire who Dr. Steiner is
+or what is the nature of his work, it will simply say, 'No English
+Masons of the Free and Accepted Masons may join any Society working
+pseudo-Masonic rites, i.e. no one of ordinary accepted Freemasonry can
+attend any meetings or attend any grades in this illegitimate body.'
+Finis!... If a lodge of the Continental Order is to be established in
+England, Dr. Steiner will be faced with the Masonic difficulty. This is
+really serious...."[727]
+
+Here then is one of the finest tributes ever paid to British Masonry,
+for it shows that as at present constituted and controlled it provides
+the most formidable barrier against the infiltration of this country by
+alien or subversive secret societies. Thus the Freemasons and the Roman
+Catholics are recognized as the principal obstacles to success. The
+Freemasons, however, would do well to realize the attempts that are made
+to break down this resistance by traitors in the Masonic camp, who,
+after violating their obligations by belonging to an irregular secret
+society, act as recruiting agents in the lodges. For the author of these
+remarks was a British Freemason who, in collusion with a foreign adept,
+proposed to penetrate Freemasonry by the process known in revolutionary
+language as "boring from within." To quote his own words, "_They must be
+got at from within, not from without_." This was to be accomplished in
+various ways--by adepts of the Continental Order getting themselves
+initiated into orthodox Masonry and then spreading their own doctrines
+in the lodges, or by enlisting recruits amongst orthodox Masons and
+using them as propagandists among their brother-Masons. It was also
+suggested that in order not to rouse suspicion it would be better to
+avoid the name "Esoteric Masonry," to adopt one of the rituals used in
+England, and to employ as "officers" a "mixed group" drawn from various
+secret societies. This plan has been carried out with considerable
+success, and at a recent conference held by a high Continental adept
+under the most distinguished patronage, it was interesting to notice the
+various secret societies represented by certain of the promoters, who of
+course to the general public appeared to be merely isolated individuals
+interested in philosophical speculation. But it is time to pass on to
+the question of yet another secret association, for amongst those
+present at the Conference referred to were members of the group Clarte.
+
+This society, of which the name as well as its avowed aims are
+singularly reminiscent of Illuminism, was first heard of in France and
+was led by men who carried on active anti-patriotic propaganda
+throughout the war. Amongst these was Henri Barbusse, author of _Le
+Feu_, a defeatest novel which was received with acclamations from
+"illuminated" reviewers in the press of this country. Yet although
+outwardly a French organization, the real inspiration and teaching of
+_Clarte_ is essentially German-Jewish and a great number of Jews are to
+be found amongst its members, particularly in Central Europe. At the
+inaugural meeting of the Austrian group it was stated that 80 per cent.
+of those present were of the Jewish race. The keynote of _Clarte_ is
+Internationalism--abolition of nationality, destruction of frontiers,
+and pacifism or rather the substitution of class warfare for war
+between nations. For this purpose it is willing to make use of all
+subversive doctrines, to whatever school of thought they may belong.
+Hence, although the creed of the leaders is professedly Socialism, they
+readily co-operate with Syndicalists, Anarchists, or revolutionaries of
+any brand, carrying on propaganda in Trade Unions and various workers'
+organizations; some are secretly in the ranks of the Communists. In fact
+members of _Charte_ have succeeded in penetrating into almost every
+subversive group, even as far afield as New Zealand, where the society
+has an agency in Wellington and disseminates the most violent
+revolutionary teaching and literature.
+
+But whilst thus making use of the "proletariat" to further its ends, the
+point of view of _Clarte_ is fundamentally undemocratic--for the real
+grievances of the workers it has no use at all. The plan of this
+group--who were recently described in the French press as "the finest
+specimens of cannibals smeared with humanitarianism (les plus beaux
+specimens de cannibales barbouilles d'humanitairerie)"--is to constitute
+a sort of International Hierarchy of Intellectual Socialists, whose
+influence is to make itself invisibly felt in literary, educational, and
+artistic circles all over the world. For the members of _Clarte_ are as
+careful as were the adepts of Weishaupt to preserve their incognito and
+not to be known as "Illuminati." Thus the public in our own country and
+elsewhere, reading the diatribes of certain well-known authors against
+the existing order of society, may vaguely wonder why men living amidst
+all the amenities of civilization should desire its destruction, but do
+not dream that all this is not the outcome of an individual brain but
+propaganda put out by a company which, having largely primed such
+writers with ideas, is able, owing to the high position of many of its
+leading members and its influence with the literary world, to ensure the
+success of any publication that will further its ends.
+
+The organization of _Clarte_ thus approximates more nearly, to the
+system of Weishaupt than that of the other societies described in this
+chapter. Although in the strictest sense a secret society, it is in no
+sense occult and therefore possesses no ritual of its own, but, like the
+earlier Illuminati, recognizes the utility of working through
+Freemasonry. _Clarte_, in fact, forms an adjunct of the Grand Orient and
+owns a lodge under its jurisdiction in Paris. It would be interesting,
+however, to know whether the idea of the alliance with the Grand Orient
+occurred as an afterthought to the _Clarte_ group or whether the
+original inspiration of _Clarte_ emanated from an inner circle of the
+Grand Orient. We shall return to the question of this inner circle in a
+later chapter.
+
+Such, then, are the principal secret societies at work in Great Britain,
+but amongst minor secret or semi-secret movements may be mentioned the
+strange sect the Faithists, said to have some affinity with the Druses,
+inhabiting a singularly unromantic London suburb, whose "Ancient
+Founder" is the author of a series of tracts urging man not to be misled
+by false Gods, but to worship "Jehovih the Creator only," and at the
+same time advocating nationalization as a cure for all social ills; or
+again The Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man at
+Fontainebleau, led by Gurdjieff and Uspenski which combines esoteric
+meditation with an extremely meagre diet and strenuous manual labour. It
+is interesting, by the way, to notice that the art of movement known as
+Eurhythmy--not to be confounded with the system of M. Dalcroze which is
+known in England only as Eurhythmics--forms an important part of the
+curriculum of the last society, as also of Herr Steiner's Order, of the
+Stella Matutina, and of the Russian Bolsheviks.[728]
+
+The one question that presents itself to the judicial mind after
+examining all these movements, is inevitably: Are they of any real
+importance? Can a few hundreds, or even thousands, of men and women,
+drawn largely by curiosity or want of occupation into societies of which
+the very names are hardly known to the general public, exercise any
+influence on the world at large? It would certainly be an error to
+overestimate the power that each of these societies individually can
+wield; to do so would be, in fact, to play into the hands of the
+leaders, whose plan, from Weishaupt onwards, has always been to
+represent themselves as directing the destinies of the universe. This
+claim to power is the bait laid for neophytes, who are made to believe
+that "the Order will one day rule the world." But, whilst recognizing
+the folly of this pretension, we should be mistaken in underrating their
+importance, for the reason that they provide evidence of a larger
+organization in the background. The Stella Matutina may be only an
+obscure Fraternity, even the Theosophical Society with all its
+ramifications[729] may not be of great importance in itself, but will
+anyone with a knowledge of European affairs seriously maintain that the
+Grand Orient is a small or unimportant organization? And have we not
+seen that investigations into the smaller secret societies frequently
+lead back to this greater masonic power? Secret societies are of
+importance, because they are, moreover, symptomatic, and also because,
+although the work actually carried out in their lodges or councils may
+be of a trivial character, they are able by the power of association and
+the collective force they generate to influence public opinion and to
+float ideas in the outside world which may have far-reaching
+consequences.
+
+At any rate, the fact that they exist finally disposes of the contention
+that secret societies of a subversive and even of an abominable kind are
+things of the past. These amazing cults, these strange perverted rites
+which we associate with the dark ages, are going on around us to-day.
+Illuminism, Cabalism, and even Satanism are still realities. In 1908
+Monsieur Copin Albancelli stated that circumstances had afforded him the
+proof that--
+
+ certain Masonic societies exist which are Satanic, not in the sense
+ that the devil comes to preside at their meetings, as that romancer
+ of a Leo Taxil pretended, but in that their initiates profess the
+ cult of Lucifer. They adore him as the true God, and they are
+ animated by an implacable hatred against the Christian God, whom
+ they declare to be an impostor. They have a formula which sums up
+ their state of mind; it is no longer: "To the glory of the Great
+ Architect of the Universe," as in the two lower Masonries; it is
+ G.'. E.'. A.'. A.'. L.'. H.'. H.'. H.'. A.'. D.'. M.'. M.'. M.'.,
+ which means "Gloire et Amour a Lucifer! Haine! haine! haine! an Dieu
+ maudit! maudit! maudit!" (Glory and Love for Lucifer! Hatred! hatred!
+ hatred! to God, accursed, accursed, accursed!)
+
+ It is professed in these societies that all that the Christian God
+ commands is disagreeable to Lucifer; that all that He forbids is,
+ on the contrary, agreeable to Lucifer; that in consequence one must
+ do all that the Christian God forbids and that one must shun like
+ fire all that He commands. I repeat that with regard to all that, I
+ have the proofs under my hand. I have read and studied hundreds of
+ documents relating to one of these societies, documents that I have
+ not permission to publish and which emanate from the members, men
+ and women, of the group in question.[730]
+
+I do not say that any society in England consciously practices this cult
+of Satan, but I too have seen dozens of documents relating to occult
+groups in this country which practise rites and evocations that lead to
+illness, moral perversion, mental derangement, and even in some cases to
+death. I have heard from the lips of initiates themselves accounts of
+the terrible experiences through which they have passed; some have even
+urged me to bring the matter before the attention of the authorities.
+But unfortunately no department exists for the investigation of
+subversive movements. Yet since all these movements are intimately
+connected with revolutionary agitation they are well worth the attention
+of Governments that desire to protect law, order, and public morality.
+The fact is that the very extravagance of their doctrines and practices
+seems to ensure their immunity. Nevertheless, whether the power at work
+behind them is of the kind we are accustomed to call "supernatural," or
+whether it is merely the outcome of the human mind, there can be no
+doubt of its potency for evil and of its very definite effects in the
+obliteration of all sense of truth and in sexual perversion.
+
+In the opinion of an initiate who belonged for years to the Stella
+Matutina, the dynamic force employed known as "Kundalini" is simply an
+electro-magnetic force, of which the sex-force is a part, on which the
+adepts know how to play, and "the unseen hand behind all the seeming
+Spiritism of these Orders is a system of very subtle and cunning
+hypnotism and suggestion." Further, the aim of this group like that of
+all subversive Esoteric Orders, is, by means of such processes as
+eurhythmics, meditations, symbols, ceremonies, and formulas, to awaken
+this force and produce false "Illumination" for the purpose of obtaining
+"Spiritual Seership," which is at most clairvoyance, clairaudience, etc.
+The ceremonies of the Order are hypnotic, and by suggestion create the
+necessary mental and astral atmosphere, hypnotize and prepare the
+members to be the willing tools in the hands of the controlling adepts.
+The same initiate has communicated to me the following conclusions
+concerning the group in question, with the permission to quote them
+verbatim:
+
+ I have been convinced that we, as an Order, have come under the
+ power of some very evil occult Order, profoundly versed in science
+ both occult and otherwise, though not infallible, their methods
+ being Black Magic, that is to say, electro-magnetic power,
+ hypnotism, and powerful suggestion.
+
+ We are convinced that the Order is being controlled by some SUN
+ Order after the nature of the Illuminati, if not by that Order
+ itself.
+
+ The reason why they (the leaders of all such Orders) insisted so
+ much upon the Church and Sacrament, especially before the
+ initiation, is, I think, for the same reason as the use of the
+ consecrated Host in Black Magic. The Christian consecration and the
+ use of the sacraments renders the building or person more powerful
+ as a material basis for black magic even as in white magic--"for
+ the Great Good or the Great Evil." When the initiation is
+ accomplished and the domination of the person complete, there is no
+ further need for Church or Sacrament.
+
+ We are told at the Initiation: "There is nothing incompatible with
+ your civil, moral, or religious duties in this obligation." We now
+ are convinced that this Order is contrary absolutely to our civil,
+ moral, and religious duties; which being so, our obligations are
+ null and void.
+
+ We are told that all that has taken place in Russia and elsewhere
+ is due to these International Occult Forces set in motion by
+ Subversive Esoteric Lodges. Yet it is known that we have several
+ branches of these same Esoteric Masonic Lodges carrying on their
+ deadly work in our midst. England, as well as Europe, seems to be
+ drifting along in a hypnotic sleep, and even our soundest
+ politicians seem paralysed and all that they attempt is turned to
+ foolishness. Is there no one in authority who understands these
+ things and realizes the danger both to the country and to
+ individuals from these forces working for disruption and world
+ revolution?
+
+How in the face of these declarations, coming from those inside the
+movement, can anyone maintain that Illuminism is dead and that secret
+societies present no danger to Christian civilization?
+
+
+
+
+13
+
+OPEN SUBVERSIVE MOVEMENTS
+
+
+
+Although the sceptical reader who has reached this stage of the present
+work will perhaps be willing to admit that some connexion may be traced
+between hidden forces and open subversive movements, the objection he
+will still raise against the general thesis here set forth will probably
+be expressed somewhat in the following manner:
+
+"It is quite possible that secret societies and other unseen agencies
+may have played a part in revolutions, but to attribute the continued
+revolt against the existing social order to these causes is absurd.
+Poverty, unemployment, inadequate housing, and above all the
+inequalities of human life are quite sufficient to produce a
+revolutionary spirit without the aid of secret instigators. Social
+revolution is simply a rising of the 'have-nots' against the 'haves,'
+and requires no further cause to explain it."
+
+Let it be at once admitted that the injustices here enumerated are real.
+The working classes throughout the nineteenth century had very genuine
+reasons for complaints. Wages were far too low, the rich sometimes
+showed themselves indifferent to the sufferings of the poor, employers
+of labour often made profits out of all proportion to the remuneration
+paid to the workers. Nor, in spite of the immense reforms introduced
+during the last hundred years, have all these grievances been redressed.
+The slums of our great cities still constitute a blot upon our
+civilization. Profiteering since the beginning of the war has been more
+flagrant than ever. "Rings" and combines provide fabulous wealth for
+individuals or groups at the expense of vast numbers of consumers. And
+in all classes of the community, just as before the French Revolution,
+people feast and dance whilst others live on the border-line of
+starvation.
+
+But let us see how far the Socialist movement can be regarded as the
+spontaneous revolt of the "people" against this condition of things.
+Dividing the people after the manner of Marx into the non-revolutionary
+and the "revolutionary proletariat," we shall find that the former
+category, by far the larger, combines with a strong respect for
+tradition a perfectly reasonable desire for social reform. Briefly it
+asks for adequate wages, decent housing, and a fair share of the good
+things of life. For State interference in the affairs of everyday life
+it feels nothing but abhorrence. The ideal of Communism as formulated by
+Lenin, wherein "the getting of food and clothing shall be no longer a
+private affair,"[731] would meet with stronger opposition from working
+men--and still more from working women, to whom "shopping" is as the
+breath of life--than from any other section of the population. Even such
+apparently benign Socialist schemes as "communal dining-rooms" or
+"communal kitchens" appeal less to the working-class mentality than to
+the upper-class mind that devises them.
+
+Turning to the "revolutionary proletariat," we shall find this
+individualistic instinct quite as strongly developed. It is not the
+Socialist idea of placing all wealth and property in the hands of the
+State, but the Anarchist plan of "expropriation," of plunder on a
+gigantic scale for the benefit of the revolutionary masses, which really
+appeals to the disgruntled portion of the proletariat. The Socialist
+intellectual may write of the beauties of nationalization, of the joy of
+working for the common good without hope of personal gain; the
+revolutinary working man sees nothing to attract him in all this.
+Question him on his ideas of social transformation, and he will
+generally express himself in favour of some method by which he will
+acquire something he has not got; he does not want to see the rich man's
+motor-car socialized by the State--he wants to drive about in it
+himself. The revolutionary working man is thus in reality not a
+Socialist but an Anarchist at heart. Nor in some cases is this
+unnatural. That the man who enjoys none of the good things of life
+should wish to snatch his share must at least appear comprehensible.
+What is not comprehensible is that he should wish to renounce all hope
+of ever possessing anything. Modern Socialist propagandists are very
+well aware of this attitude of the working classes towards their
+schemes, and therefore that as long as they explain the real programme
+they mean to put into operation, which is nothing but the workhouse
+system on a gigantic scale, they can meet with no success. As a
+life-long Socialist has frequently observed to me, "Socialism has never
+been a working-class movement; it was always we of the middle or upper
+classes who sought to instil the principles of Socialism into the minds
+of working men." Mr. Hyndman's candid confessions of the failures to
+enlist the sympathies even of slum-dwellers in his schemes of social
+regeneration bear out this testimony.
+
+Less honest Socialist orators as the result of long experience have
+therefore adopted the more effectual policy of appealing to the
+predatory instincts of the crowd. From Babeuf onwards, Socialism has
+only been able to make headway by borrowing the language of Anarchy in
+order to blast its way to power.
+
+Socialism is thus essentially a system of deception devised by
+middle-class theorists and in no sense a popular creed. Had the
+revolutionary movement of the past 150 years really proceeded from the
+people, it would inevitably have followed the line laid down by one of
+the two sections of the proletariat indicated above, that is to say, it
+would either have taken the form of a continuous and increasing
+agitation for social reforms which would have enlisted the sympathy of
+all right-thinking men and must therefore in the end have proved
+irresistible, or it would have followed the line of Anarchy, organizing
+brigandage on a larger and yet larger scale, until, all owners of wealth
+having been exterminated and their expropriators in their turn
+exterminated by their fellows, the world would have been reduced to a
+depopulated desert.
+
+But the world revolution has followed neither of these lines. Always the
+opponent of sane social reforms which Socialists deride as "melioration"
+or as futile attempts to shore up an obsolete system, it has
+consistently disassociated itself from such men as Lord Shaftesbury, who
+did more to better the conditions of the working classes than anyone who
+has ever lived. Anarchy, on the other hand, has been used by them merely
+as a means to an end; for genuine revolutionary sentiment they have no
+use at all. In Russia the Anarchists became the first objects of Soviet
+vengeance. The cynical attitude of Socialists towards the revolutionary
+proletariat was illustrated by Mr. Bernard Shaw, who in December 1919
+openly boasted that he had helped to organize the railway strike,[732]
+and two years later wrote about the miners' strike in the following
+terms:
+
+ A Socialist State would not tolerate such an attack on the
+ community as a strike for a moment. If a Trade Union attempted such
+ a thing, the old Capitalist law against Trade Unions as
+ conspiracies would be re-enacted within twenty-four hours and put
+ ruthlessly into execution. Such a monstrosity as the recent coal
+ strike, during which the coal-miners spent all their savings in
+ damaging their neighbours and wrecking the national industries,
+ would be impossible under Socialism. It was miserably defeated, as
+ it deserved to be.[733]
+
+Now, if this had been written by the Duke of Northumberland in the
+_National Review_ instead of by Mr. Bernard Shaw in the _Labour
+Monthly_, one can imagine the outcry there would have been in the
+Socialist press. But the leaders of what is called democracy may always
+use what language they please in speaking of the people. "Our peasants,"
+Maxim Gorky openly declared, "are brutal and debased, hardly human. I
+hate them."[734] It will be noticed that in descriptions of the French
+Revolution references to the savageries of the people are never resented
+by the Liberal or Socialist press; the persons of the leaders alone are
+sacred. It is clearly not the cause of democracy but of demagogy that
+these champions of "liberty" are out to defend.
+
+The world-revolution is therefore not a popular movement but a
+conspiracy to impose on the people a system directly opposed to their
+real demands and aspirations, a system which, moreover, has proved
+disastrous every time an attempt has been made to put it into practice.
+
+Russia has provided a further example of its futility. The fact that the
+more responsible leaders in this country do not advocate violence, does
+not affect the ultimate issue. Whilst Bolshevism sets out to destroy
+Capitalism at a blow, Socialism prefers a more gradual process. It is
+the difference between clubbing a man on the head and bleeding him to
+death--that is all.
+
+The fact is that all Socialism leads to Communism in the long run[735]
+and therefore to disaster. The Bolshevist regime brought ruin and misery
+to Russia not because of the brutality of its methods, but because it
+was founded on the gigantic economic fallacy that industry can be
+carried on without private enterprise and personal initiative. The same
+theory applied by constitutional methods would produce precisely the
+same results. If the Socialists are ever allowed to carry out their full
+programme, England may be reduced to the state of Russia without the
+shedding of a drop of blood.
+
+But how are we to explain the fact that in spite of the failure of
+Socialism in the past, in spite of the gigantic fiasco presented by
+Russia, in spite, moreover, of the declaration by the Bolsheviks
+themselves that Communism had failed and must be replaced by "a new
+economic policy," that is to say by a return to "Capitalism,"[736]
+there should still be a large and increasing body of people to proclaim
+the efficacy of Socialism as the remedy for all social ills? In any
+other field of human experiment, in medicine or mechanical invention,
+failure spells oblivion; the prophylactic that does not cure, the
+machine that cannot be made to work, is speedily relegated to the
+scrap-heap. What indeed should we say of the bacteriologist, who, after
+killing innumerable patients with a particular serum, were to advertise
+it as an unqualified success? Should we not brand such a man as an
+unscrupulous charlatan or at best as a dangerous visionary? If,
+moreover, we were to find that large bands of agents backed by unlimited
+funds, were engaged in pressing his remedy upon the public and carefully
+avoiding all reference to the fatalities it had caused, should we not
+further conclude that there was "something behind all this"--some
+powerful company "running" the concern with a view to advancing its own
+private interests?
+
+Why should not the same reasoning be applied to Socialism? For not only
+has Socialism never been known to succeed, but all its past failures are
+carefully kept dark by its exponents. Who, then, stands to gain by
+advocating it? And further, who provides the vast sums spent on
+propaganda? If in reality Socialism is a rising of the "have-nots"
+against the "haves," how is it that most of the money seems to be on
+the side of the "have-nots"? For whilst organizations working for law
+and order are hampered at every turn for funds, no financial
+considerations ever seem to interfere with the activities of the
+so-called "Labour movement." Socialism, in fact, appears to be a
+thoroughly "paying concern," into which a young man enters as he might
+go into the City, with the reasonable expectation of "doing well." It is
+only necessary to glance at the history of the past hundred years to
+realize that "agitation" has provided a pleasant and remunerative career
+for hundreds of middle-class authors, journalists, speakers, organizers,
+and dilettantes of all kinds who would otherwise have been condemned to
+pass their lives on office-stools or at schoolmasters' desks. And when
+we read the accounts of the delightful treats provided for these
+"devoted workers" in the cause of the proletariat as given in the
+records of the First Internationale or the pages of Mrs. Snowden, we
+begin to understand the attractions of Socialism as a profession.[737]
+
+But again I repeat: _Who provides the funds for this vast campaign_? Do
+they come out of the pockets of the workers or from some other
+mysterious reservoir of wealth? We shall return to this point in a later
+chapter.
+
+How is it possible at any rate to believe in the sincerity of the
+exponents of equality who themselves adopt a style of living so
+different from that of the proletariat whose cause they profess to
+represent? If the doctrinaires of Socialism formed a band of ascetics
+who had voluntarily renounced luxury and amusement in order to lead
+lives of poverty and self-sacrifice--as countless really devoted men and
+women _not_ calling themselves Socialists have done--we should still
+doubt the soundness of their economic theories as applied to society in
+general, but we should respect their disinterestedness. But with very
+few exceptions Socialist Intellectuals dine and sup, feast and amuse
+themselves with as few scruples of conscience as any unregenerate
+Tories.
+
+With people such as these it is obviously as futile to reason, as it
+would be to attempt to convince the agent of a quack medicine company
+that the nostrums he presses on the public will not effect a cure. He is
+very well aware of that already. Hence the efforts of well-meaning
+people to set forth in long, well-reasoned arguments the "fallacies of
+Socialism" produce little or no result. All these so-called "fallacies"
+have been exposed repeatedly by able writers and disproved by all
+experience, so that if based merely on ignorance or error they would
+long since have ceased to obtain credence. The truth is that they are
+not fallacies but lies, deliberately devised and circulated by men who
+do not believe in them for a moment and who can therefore only be
+described as unscrupulous charlatans exploiting the credulity of the
+public.
+
+But if this description may be legitimately applied to the brains behind
+Socialism and to certain of its leading doctrinaires, there are
+doubtless thousands of honest visionaries to be found in the movement. A
+system that professes to cure all the ills of life inevitably appeals to
+generous minds that feel but do not reason. In reality many of these
+people, did they but know it, are simply social reformers at heart and
+not Socialists at all, and their ignorance of what Socialism really
+means leads them to range themselves under the banner of a party that
+claims a monopoly of ideals. Others again, particularly amongst the
+young intelligentsia, take up Socialism in the same spirit as they would
+adopt a fashion in ties or waistcoats, for fear of being regarded as
+"reactionaries." That in reality, far from being "advanced," the
+profession of Socialism is as retrogressive as would be a return to the
+side-whiskers and plaid trousers of the last century, does not occur to
+them. The great triumph of Mussolini was to make the youth of Italy
+realize that to be a Communist was to be a "back number," and that
+progress consisted in marching forward to new ideas and aspirations. The
+young men of Cabet's settlement discovered this sixty years ago when
+they formed themselves into a band of "Progressives" in opposition to
+the old men who still clung to the obsolete doctrine of Communism.
+
+Socialism at the present moment is in reality less a creed than a cult,
+founded not on practical experience but on unreal theory. It is here we
+find a connexion with secret societies. M. Augustin Cochin in his
+brilliant essays on the French Revolution[738] has described that "World
+of the Clouds" of which the Grand Orient was the capital, peopled by the
+precursors of the French Revolution. "Whilst in the real world the
+criterion of all thought lies in putting it to the test," there in the
+World of the Clouds the criterion is opinion. "They are there to talk,
+not to do; all this intellectual agitation, this immense traffic in
+speeches, writings, correspondence, leads not to the slightest beginning
+of work, of real effort." We should be wrong to judge them harshly;
+their theories on the perfectibility of human nature, on the advantages
+of savagery, which appear to us "dangerous chimeras," were never
+intended to apply to real life, only to the World of the Clouds, where
+they present no danger but become, on the contrary, "the most fecund
+truths."
+
+The revolutionary explosion might well have finally shattered these
+illusions but for the Grand Orient. We have already seen the identity of
+theory between French Masonry and French Socialism in the nineteenth
+century. It was thus that, although in France one experiment after
+another demonstrated the unreality of Socialist Utopias, the lodges were
+always there to reconstruct the mirage and lead humanity on again across
+the burning desert sands towards the same phantom palm-trees and
+illusory pools of water.
+
+Whatever the manner in which these ideas penetrated to this
+country--whether through the Radicals of the last century, adorers of
+the Encyclopaedist Masons of France, or through the British disciples of
+German Social Democrats from the time of the First Internationale
+onwards--it is impossible to ignore the resemblance between the theories
+not only of French but of modern British Socialism and the doctrines of
+illuminized Freemasonry. Thus the idea running through Freemasonry of a
+Golden Age before the Fall, when man was free and happy, and which
+through the application of masonic principles is to return once more,
+finds an exact counterpart in the Socialist conception of a past halcyon
+era of Liberty and Equality, which is to return not merely in the form
+of a regenerated social order, but as a complete Millennium from which
+all the ills of human life have been eliminated. This idea has always
+haunted the imagination of Socialist writers from Rousseau to William
+Morris, and leads directly up to the further theory--the necessity for
+destroying civilization.
+
+I cannot find in Mr. Lothrop Stoddart's conception of the revolutionary
+movement as the revolt of the "Under Man" against civilization, the
+origin of this campaign. In reality the leaders of world-revolution have
+not been "Under Men," victims of oppression or of adverse fate, nor
+could they be ranged in this category on account of physical or mental
+inferiority. It is true that most revolutionary agitators have been in
+some way abnormal and that the revolutionary army has largely been
+recruited from the unfit, but the real inspirers of the movement have
+frequently been men in prosperous circumstances and of brilliant
+intellect who might have distinguished themselves on other lines had
+they not chosen to devote their talents to subversion. To call
+Weishaupt, for example, an "Under Man" would be absurd. But let us see
+what is the idea on which the plan of destroying civilization is
+ostensibly founded.
+
+It will be remembered that Rousseau like Weishaupt held that the Golden
+Age of felicity did not end in the garden of Eden, as is popularly
+supposed, but was prolonged into tribal and nomadic life. Up to this
+moment Communism was the happy disposition under which the human race
+existed and which vanished with the introduction of civilization.
+Civilization is therefore the _fons et origo mali_ and should be done
+away with. Let no one exclaim that this theory died out either with
+Rousseau or with Weishaupt; the idea that "civilization is all wrong"
+runs all through the writings and speeches of our Intellectual
+Socialists to-day. I have referred elsewhere to Mr. H.G. Wells's
+prediction that mankind will more and more revert to the nomadic life,
+and Mr. Snowden has recently referred in tones of evident nostalgia to
+that productive era when man "lived under a system of tribal
+Communism."[739] The children who attend the Socialist Schools are also
+taught in the "Red Catechism" the advantages of savagery, thus:
+
+Question. Do savages starve in the midst of plenty?
+
+Answer. No; when there is plenty of food they all rejoice, feast, and
+make merry.[740]
+
+That when there is not plenty of food they occasionally eat each other
+is not mentioned.
+
+Here, then, is the theory on which this yearning for a return to nature
+is based. For it is quite probable that if a Golden Age ever existed it
+was Communistic; it is also true that certain primitive tribes have
+found it possible to continue the same system, for the simple reason
+that when and where the earth was very thinly populated it brought
+forth, without the artificial aid of agriculture, more than enough to
+supply each man's needs. There was therefore no need for laws to protect
+property, since every man could help himself freely to all that he
+required. If at the present time a dozen people were shipwrecked on a
+fertile island some miles in area, the institution of property would be
+equally superfluous; if, however, several hundred were to share the same
+fate, it would at once become necessary to institute some system of
+cultivation which in its turn would necessitate either the institution
+of property, by which each man would depend on his own plot of land for
+his existence, or a communal system, by which all would be obliged to
+work for the common good and force applied to those who refused to do
+their allotted share.
+
+Peaceful Communism is thus simply a matter of population; the conditions
+under which men can sit in the sun and enjoy the fruits of the earth
+with little effort must be transformed with the multiplication of the
+human species into a system which recognizes private property, or a
+communal State which enforces compulsory labour by means of overseers
+with whips. It was perhaps an appreciation of this truth that impelled
+the practical exponents of Rousseau's doctrines, the Terrorists of 1793,
+to embark on their "plan of depopulation" by way of establishing
+Communism on a peaceful basis.
+
+But our Intellectual Socialists deny this necessity on the ground that
+under the benign regime of Socialism all men would be good and happy and
+would work joyfully for the welfare of the community. The fact that this
+has not proved the case even in voluntary Communist settlements does not
+daunt them, because, as has been said, their creed is founded not on
+practical experiment, but on theory, and it is here that we again find
+the inspiration of Grand Orient Freemasonry. The assumption that under
+an ideal social order all human failings would vanish derives directly
+from the two masonic doctrines which the Grand Orient, under the
+influence of Illuminism, has brought to a _reductio ad absurdum_--the
+perfectibility of human nature and universal brotherhood. The whole
+philosophy of Socialism is built upon these false premises.
+
+Indeed the actual phraseology of illuminized Freemasonry has now passed
+into the language of Socialism; thus the old formulae of "the United
+States of Europe" and "the Universal Republic" have been adopted not
+only by Mrs. Besant and her followers[741] as the last word in modern
+thought, but have also reappeared as a brilliant inspiration under the
+pen of Mr. H.G. Wells in the slightly varied form of the "World State."
+It would be amusing, for anyone who had the time, to discover how many
+of the ideas of our so-called advanced thinkers might be found almost
+verbatim in the writings of Weishaupt, the _Republique Universelle_ of
+Anacharsis Clootz, and in the speeches of Grand Orient orators during
+the last century.
+
+Moreover, the world-revolution is not only founded on the doctrines of
+illuminized Freemasonry, but has adopted the same method of
+organization. Thus, after the plan of the secret societies, from the
+Batinis onward, we shall find the forces of revolution divided into
+successive grades--the lowest consisting of the revolutionary
+proletariat, the _chair a revolution_ as Marx expressed it, knowing
+nothing of the theory of Socialism, still less of the real aims of the
+leaders; above this the semi-initiates, the doctrinaires of Socialism,
+comprising doubtless many sincere enthusiasts; but above these again
+further grades leading up to the real initiates, who alone know whither
+the whole movement is tending.
+
+For the final goal of world-revolution is not Socialism or even
+Communism, it is not a change in the existing economic system, it is not
+the destruction of civilization in a material sense; the revolution
+desired by the leaders is a moral and spiritual revolution, an anarchy
+of ideas by which all standards set up throughout nineteen centuries
+shall be reversed, all honoured traditions trampled under foot, and
+above all the Christian ideal finally obliterated.
+
+It is true that a certain section of the Socialist movement proclaims
+itself Christian. The Illuminati made the same profession, so have the
+modern Theosophists and Rosicrucians. But, as in the case of these
+secret societies, we should ask of so-called Christian Socialists: What
+do they means by Christ? What do they mean by Christianity? On
+examination it will be found that their Christ is a being of their own
+inventing, that their Christianity is a perversion of Christ's real
+teaching.
+
+The Christ of Socialism invoked in the interests of Pacifism as the
+opponent of force and in the interests of class warfare as a Socialist,
+a revolutionary, or even an "agitator," bears no resemblance to the real
+Christ. Christ was not a Pacifist when He told His disciples to arm
+themselves with swords, when He made a scourge of cords and drove the
+money-changers from the Temple. He did not tell men to forgive the
+enemies of their country or of their religion, but only their private
+enemies. Christ was not a Socialist when He declared that "a man's life
+consisteth not in the abundance of the things that he possesseth."
+Socialism teaches that a man must never rest content as long as another
+man possesses that which he has not. Christ did not believe in equality
+of payment when He told the parable of the ten talents and the
+unprofitable servant. Socialism would reduce all labour to the pace of
+the slowest. Above all, Christ was not a Socialist when He bade the
+young man who had great possessions sell all that he had and give it to
+the poor. _What School of Socialism has ever issued such a command?_ On
+the contrary, Socialists are enjoined by their leaders not to give their
+money away in charity lest they should help by this means to prolong the
+existence of the present social system. The truth is that, as I showed
+in connexion with the fallacy of representing Christ as an Essene, there
+is no evidence to show that He or His disciples practised even the
+purest form of Communism. Christ did not advocate any economic or
+political system; He preached a spirit which if applied to any system
+would lead to peace among men. It is true that He enjoined His disciples
+to despise riches and that He denounced many of the rich men with whom
+He came into contact, but it must not be forgotten that His immediate
+mission was to a race that had always glorified riches, that had
+worshipped the golden calf, and by which wealth was regarded as the
+natural reward of godliness.[742] Christ came to teach men not to look
+for present reward in the form of increased material welfare, but to do
+good out of love to God and one's neighbour.
+
+I do not doubt that in the past such men as Kingsley and J.F.D. Maurice
+sincerely imagined that they were following in the footsteps of the
+Master by describing themselves as Christian Socialists, but that the
+present leaders of Socialism in England are Christians at heart is
+impossible to believe in view of their attitude towards the campaign
+against Christianity in Russia. Never once have they or their allies,
+the Quakers, officially denounced the persecution not only of the
+priests but of all who profess the Christian faith in Russia.[743] Listen
+to this voice from the abyss of Russia:
+
+ We very much ask for prayer for the Church of Russia; it is passing
+ through great tribulation and it is a question whether spiritual or
+ earthly power will triumph. Many are being executed for not denying
+ God.... Those placed by God at the helm need all the prayer and
+ help of Christians all over the earth, because their fate is partly
+ theirs too, for it is a question of faith triumphing over atheism,
+ and it is a tug-of-war between those two principles.[744]
+
+And again:
+
+ I look upon the persecution of the Russian Church as an effort to
+ overthrow Christianity in general, for we are governed just now by
+ the power of darkness, and all that we consider sinful seems to get
+ the upper hand and to prosper.[744]
+
+Yet it is for this power that the Socialist Party of Great Britain have
+for years been demanding recognition. Even the appeals for help from
+their fellow-Socialists in Russia have left them cold. "We would
+suggest," ran one such appeal--
+
+ 1. That the British Labour Party issue an official protest against
+ the Soviet Government's inhuman treatment of its political
+ opponents in general and the political prisoners in particular.
+
+ 2. That meetings of protest should be organized in the industrial
+ towns of Great Britain.
+
+ 3. That the British Labour Party make an official representation to
+ the Soviet Government directly, urging the latter to put a stop to
+ the persecutions of the Socialists in Russia.[745]
+
+And it was of this regime that Mr. Lansbury wrote:
+
+ Whatever their faults, the Communist leaders of Russia have hitched
+ their wagon to a star--the star of love, brotherhood,
+ comradeship.[746]
+
+The callous indifference displayed by British Socialists, with the
+honourable exception of the Social Democratic Federation,[747] towards
+the crimes of the Bolsheviks offers indeed a painful contrast to the
+attitude of the other Socialists of Europe. At the conference of the
+Labour and Socialist International at Hamburg in May 1923, a resolution
+was passed condemning the persecution by the Soviet Government. When the
+resolution was put to the congress, 196 voted for, 2 against it, and 39,
+including the 30 British delegates, abstained.
+
+I ask, then: Why should the Socialists of Great Britain be
+differentiated from the Bolsheviks of Russia? In every question of
+importance they have always lent them their support. In the great war on
+Christianity they have acted as the advance guard by the institution of
+Socialist Sunday-schools, from which all religious teaching is excluded.
+Socialists are very anxious to disassociate these from the "Proletarian"
+Sunday-schools which teach atheism. But from ignoring the existence of
+God to denying it is but a step; moreover, it will be noticed that the
+Socialists have never issued any protests against the blasphemies of the
+Proletarian schools. The real attitude of the Socialist Party towards
+religion may perhaps be gauged by the notice, reproduced on page 341,
+which once appeared in its official organ the _Daily Herald_, of which
+Mr. Lansbury, widely advertised as a fervent Christian, was once editor
+and is now managing director.
+
+It was to the party controlling this organ that 700 clergymen of the
+Church of England and the Episcopal Church of Scotland saw fit to offer
+their congratulations by means of a memorial presented to Mr. Ramsay
+MacDonald in March 1923. Shall we yet see the scene of Brumaire 1793
+repeated and a procession of prelates presenting themselves at
+Westminster to lay down their rings and crosses and declare that
+"henceforth there shall be no other worship than that of liberty and
+holy equality"?
+
+Already the desecration of the churches has begun. The red flag was
+recently carried into the City Temple by a band of unemployed, although
+several of their number objected to its presence in the church. An
+attempt to sing "The Red Flag" was also suppressed by a section of the
+unemployed
+
+[Illustration:
+
+Books We All Pretend to have Read
+
+The Bible is a real book, although during the whole of the nineteenth
+century the Churches turned a blind eye to the fact that it was a free
+translation by Jacobean clergymen of a Greek text of doubtful
+authenticity and of multiple authorship. The Bible is as divinely
+inspired as Shakespeare, or Milton, or Anatole France. But it is not as
+"pure" as the texts of these authors, for it is:--
+
+ (1) A miscellaneous collection of folk and traditional history bound
+ to and described as the "Old Testament," and
+
+ (2) "The New Testament," a collection of Eastern theological
+ doctrines centralized in the figure of a great Syrian mystic
+ religious teacher, Jesus.
+
+Those who will go to the Bible with an unprejudiced mind will discover
+that it is one of the great books of the world, full of beauty, humour,
+and aspiration, and disfigured, as great books often are, by occasional
+brutalities and crudities.--_Daily Herald_, February 7. 1923.
+
+]
+
+themselves, who had apparently retained some sense ot decency.[748]
+
+Weishaupt's design of enlisting the clergy in the work of
+world-revolution has been carried out according to plan. Those Catholic
+priests in Ireland who inflamed popular passions acted as the tools of
+the International Atheist conspiracy and found at last the movement
+turning against themselves. The Protestant clergymen who profess
+"Christian Socialism" are playing the same part. Doubtless without
+knowing it, they act as the agents of the Continental Illuminati and
+pave the way, as did the emissaries of Weishaupt, for the open attack on
+all forms of religion. It is not a mere accident that the blasphemous
+masquerades of the French Revolution have recently been repeated in
+Russia. The horrible incidents described in the press[749] were simply
+the outward manifestation of a continuous conspiracy of which evidence
+was seen some years ago in Portugal under the influence of the
+Carbonarios, led by Alfonso Costa, whose utterances at times bore a
+striking resemblance to those of Anacharsis Clootz. The late Duchess of
+Bedford thus described the war on religion which inaugurated the new
+Republic:
+
+One of the most zealous enterprises of this great society [the
+Carbonarios] is, in their own words, to exterminate "the Christian myth"
+in the minds of the nation of Portugal. The little children in the
+schools have badges pinned into their clothes with the words "No God! No
+religion!" and a British tourist who made a journey throughout the
+country of Portugal met bands of innocent babes carrying banners, on
+which the inscription was "We have no need of God."[750]
+
+Is it only a coincidence that last year a Socialist and Communist
+meeting in Trafalgar Square displayed a red banner bearing the motto:
+"No King, no God, no Law"?[751]
+
+I repeat: It is not an economic revolution which forms the plan of the
+real directors of the movement, it is neither the "dictatorship of the
+proletariat" nor the reorganization of society by the Intelligentsia of
+"Labour"; it is the destruction of the Christian idea. Socialist orators
+may inveigh against corrupt aristocracy or "bloated Capitalists," but
+these are not in reality the people who will suffer most if the aim of
+the conspiracy is achieved. The world-revolution has always shown itself
+indulgent towards selfish and corrupt aristocrats, from the Marquis de
+Sade and the Duc d'Orleans onwards; it is the gentle, the upright, the
+benevolent, who have fallen victims to revolutionary fury.
+
+Socialism with its hatred of all superiority, of noble virtues--loyalty
+and patriotism--with its passion for dragging down instead of building
+up, serves the purpose of the deeper conspiracy. If the Christian
+Intelligentsia can be destroyed or won over and the nation deprived of
+all its natural leaders, the world-revolutionaries reckon that they will
+be able to mould the proletariat according to their desires. This being
+so, the thing we now call Bolshevism forms only one phase of the
+movement which is carried on by countless different methods, apparently
+disconnected but all tending towards the same end. We have only to look
+around us in the world to-day to see everywhere the same disintegrating
+power at work--in art, literature, the drama, the daily press--in every
+sphere that can influence the mind of the public. Just as in the French
+Revolution a play on the massacre of St. Bartholomew was staged in order
+to rouse the passions of the people against the monarchy, so our modern
+cinemas perpetually endeavour to stir up class hatred by scenes and
+phrases showing "the injustice of kings," "the sufferings of the
+people," the selfishness of "aristocrats," regardles of whether these
+enter into the theme of the narrative or not.[752] And in the realms of
+literature, not merely in works of fiction but in manuals for schools,
+in histories and books professing to be of serious educative value and
+receiving a skilfully organized boom throughout the press, everything is
+done to weaken patriotism, to shake belief in all existing institutions
+by the systematic perversion of both contemporary and historical facts,
+whilst novels and plays calculated to undermine all ideas of morality
+are pressed upon the public as works of genius which, in order to
+maintain a reputation for intellect, it is essential to admire. I do not
+believe that all this is accidental; I do not believe that the public
+asks for the anti-patriotic or demoralizing books and plays placed
+before it; on the contrary, it invariably responds to an appeal to
+patriotism and simple healthy emotions. The heart of the people is still
+sound, but ceaseless efforts are made to corrupt it.
+
+This conspiracy has long been apparent to Continental observers. Some
+years before the war, Monsieur de Lannoy, a member of an anti-masonic
+association in France, at a conference on "the influence of
+judaeo-masonic sects in the theatre, in literature, in the fashions,"
+showed how "orders of things which appear to have no connexion with
+each other are skilfully bound up together and directed by a single
+methodical movement towards a common end. This common end is the
+paganization of the universe, the destruction of all Christianity, the
+return to the loosest morals of antiquity."[753] Robison saw in the
+indecent dress of the period of the Directory the result of Weishaupt's
+teaching, and traces to the same cause the ceremony which took place in
+Notre Dame when a woman of loose morals was held up to the admiration of
+the public.[754] The same glorification of vice has found exponents
+amongst the modern Illuminati in this country. In _The Equinox--the
+Journal of Scientific Illuminism_, it is proposed that prostitutes
+should be placed on the same level as soldiers who have served their
+country and be honoured and pensioned by the State.[755] The community
+of women was not an idea that originated with the Russian Bolsheviks,
+but one that has run through all the revolutionary movements of the
+past.
+
+The attempt to pervert all conceptions of beauty in the sphere of art
+serves to pave the way for moral perversion. In the _New York Herald_
+two years ago there appeared a circular protesting against the so-called
+Modernistic cult in art as "world-wide Bolshevist propaganda." The
+circular went on to declare:
+
+This aims to overthrow and destroy all existing social systems,
+including that of the arts. This modernistic degenerate cult is simply
+the Bolshevist philosophy applied in art. The triumph of Bolshevism
+therefore means the destruction of the present aesthetic system, the
+transportation of all aesthetic values, and the deification of ugliness.
+
+The whole propaganda of the movement was said to be organized by "a
+coterie of European art-dealers"--elsewhere described as German--who had
+flooded the market with the works of artists who began as "a small group
+of neurotic egomaniacs in Paris styling themselves worshippers of Satan,
+the God of Ugliness." Some of these men were suffering from the "visual
+derangement" of the insane, whilst "many of the pictures exhibited
+another form of mania. The system of this is an incontrollable desire to
+mutilate the human body." Sadism, as we know, played a prominent part in
+both the French and Russian revolutions. The most important point in
+all this is not that degenerates should be found to perpetrate these
+abominations, but what the circular describes as the "Machiavellian
+campaign organized for the unloading of these works. Editions de luxe
+... were published and sold by the picture dealers; ...every crafty
+device known to the picture trade was resorted to in order to discredit
+and destroy the heretofore universally accepted standards of
+aesthetics."[756]
+
+This process of reversing all accepted standards may also be brought
+about by subtler methods. We have already seen that occult practices may
+lead to the obliteration of all sense of truth and of normal sexual
+instincts. Under the influence of so-called occult science, which is, in
+reality, simply powerful suggestion or self-hypnotism, all a man's
+natural impulses and inhibitive springs of action may be broken; he will
+no longer react to the conceptions of beauty or ugliness, or right or
+wrong, which, unknown to himself, formed the law of his being. Thus not
+only his conscious deeds but his subconscious mental processes may pass
+under the control of another, or become entirely deranged.
+
+Much the same consequences may result from the Freud system of
+Psycho-Analysis, which, particularly by its insistence on sex, tends to
+subordinate the will to impulses of a harmful kind. An eminent American
+neuro-psychiatrist of New York has expressed his opinion on this subject
+in the following words:
+
+The Freud theory is anti-Christian and subversive of organized society.
+Christianity teaches that the individual can resist temptation and
+Freudism teaches that the matter of yielding to or resisting temptation
+is one for which the individual is not wilfully responsible. Freudism
+makes of the individual a machine, absolutely controlled by subconscious
+reflexes.... It would of course be difficult to prove that
+psycho-analysis has been evolved as a destructive propaganda measure,
+but in one sense the point is immaterial. Whether conscious or
+unconscious, it makes for destructive effect.[757]
+
+In general, the art of the conspiracy is not so much to create movements
+as to capture existing movements, often innocuous and even admirable in
+themselves, and turn them to a subversive purpose. Thus birth control,
+which--if combined with the restriction of alien immigration and carried
+out under proper direction--would provide a solution to the frightful
+problem of over-population, can without these provisos become a source
+of national weakness and demoralization. It is easy to see how a
+limitation of the native population would serve the cause of England's
+enemies by reducing her fighting forces and by making room for
+undesirable aliens. That the birth-control campaign may also be used for
+evil purposes is suggested by the fact that it has not been confined to
+our own overcrowded island, but has been carried on in France, where
+under-population has long constituted a tragedy. In 1903 and 1904 the
+"Ligue de la Regeneration Humaine," founded by Monsieur Paul Robin, in
+its organ _L'Emancipateur_ issued not only instructions on "the means
+how to avoid large families," but also pamphlets on "free love and free
+maternity."[758] The campaign of race-suicide was thus combined with
+the undermining of morality; legal families were to be limited and
+illegal births encouraged. This was quite in accord with the doctrines
+of the Grand Orient, in whose Temples, Monsieur Copin Albancelli points
+out, the principle of "la libre maternite"--known in this country as
+"the right to motherhood"--was advocated.
+
+It is curious to notice that the apparently innocent invention of
+Esperanto receives support from the same quarter. This is not surprising
+since we know that the idea of a universal language has long haunted the
+minds of Freemasons. I have myself seen a document emanating from a body
+of French Masons stating that Esperanto is directly under the control of
+the three masonic powers of France--the Grand Orient, the Grande Loge
+Nationale, and the Droit Humain.
+
+That it is largely used for promoting Bolshevism has been frequently
+stated. In July 1922, M. Berard, Minister of Education, issued a
+circular "to the heads of all French Universities, academies, and
+colleges, calling on them not to help in any way in the teaching of
+Esperanto on the ground that Bolsheviks use it as one of their dangerous
+forms of propaganda."[759] A correspondent points out to me that
+another universal language, Ido, is used for propaganda by the
+Anarchists, and that several journals distributed by revolutionary
+societies, written in Ido, are "frankly and baldly Anarchical." The
+writer adds:
+
+Last week I received a copy of _Libereso_ (Liberty), monthly organ of
+the Anarchist Section of the "Emancipating Star"--"Cosmopolitan Union of
+Labour-class Idists." It commands carrying out Anarchistic principles
+to their extreme limits; commends "La Ruzo" (ruse); is sarcastic
+regarding Socialism and Democracy.... It contains an appeal for help (in
+money) for the Anarchists imprisoned in Russia ... written by Alexander
+Berkmann and signed by him with Emma Goldmann and A. Schapiro.
+
+Here, then, we have a revolutionary movement which is anti-Socialist and
+even anti-Bolshevist, which tends to prove the opinion I have already
+expressed, that Bolshevism is only one phase of the world-conspiracy.
+But if we explain this by the old antagonism between the opposing
+revolutionary camps of Anarchy and Socialism, how are we to account for
+the fact that the same destructive purpose animates people who are
+neither Anarchist nor Socialist, but can only be ranged in the category
+of extreme reaction? Of this phase of the movement Nietzsche provides
+the supreme example. In his imprecations against "the Crucified," the
+advocate of autocracy and militarism rivals the most infuriated of
+revolutionary Socialists. The whole spirit of perversion is contained in
+the description of Nietzsche by his friend Georges Brandes: "His
+thoughts stole inquisitively along forbidden paths: 'This thing passes
+for a value. Can we not turn it upside-down? This is regarded as good.
+Is it not rather evil?'" What is this but Satanism? The case of
+Nietzsche is not to be explained away by the fact that he died raving
+mad, since a number of apparently sane people still profess for him
+unbounded admiration, and whilst deriding Socialism and even attacking
+Bolshevism join in the war against Christian civilization. The
+conspiracy therefore exists apart from so-called democratic circles.
+
+Not long ago I picked up an Italian novel by an anti-Socialist
+containing precisely the same diatribes against "Christian-bourgeois
+society" that are to be found in Anarchist and Bolshevist literature.
+"The family," says the author, "is the kernel of contemporary society
+and its base. Whoever would really reform or subvert must begin by
+reforming and subverting the family.... The family ... is the principal
+path of all unhappiness, of all vice, of all hypocrisy, of all moral
+ugliness, ..." and he goes on to show that the two countries which have
+proved themselves the sanest and the strongest are Germany and America,
+because they have advanced by long strides towards free love.[760]
+
+The writer of these words may be of no importance, but they should be
+noted because they are symptomatic and help us to locate certain centres
+of infection.
+
+It is impossible to observe all these miscellaneous movements going on
+all around us without being struck by the similarity of aim between
+them; each seems to form part of a common plan, which, like the separate
+pieces of a jig-saw puzzle, convey no meaning, but when fitted together
+make up a perfectly clear design. That there is somewhere in the
+background a point of contact is suggested by the fact that we find
+members of the different groups playing a double and a treble role, the
+same name occurring in the list of patrons in a Birth Control paper and
+in a revolutionary secret society, amongst the exponents of
+Psycho-Analysis and the members of an Irish Republican Committee.
+
+With the open as with the secret forces the great method of warfare is
+the capture of public opinion. A hidden influence behind the press
+contributes powerfully to this end. Some of the subtlest disintegrating
+propaganda during the last seven years has emanated from the so-called
+"Capitalist press." The _Daily Herald_ is only the brass band of the
+Revolution. It is to the journals inspired and patronized by the
+Intelligentsia that we must turn to find the doctrines of Illuminism set
+forth with the most persuasive eloquence.[761]
+
+More than eighty years ago a Frenchman endowed with extraordinary
+prophetic instinct foretold not only the danger that would one day come
+from Russia, but that the press would facilitate the destruction of
+civilization:
+
+ When our cosmopolitan democracy, bearing its last fruits, shall
+ have made of war a thing odious to whole populations, when the
+ nations calling themselves the most civilized on earth shall have
+ finished enervating themselves in their political debaucheries, ...
+ the floodgates of the North will open on us once again, then we
+ shall undergo a last invasion not of ignorant barbarians but of
+ cunning and enlightened masters, more enlightened than ourselves,
+ for they will have learnt from our own excesses how we can and must
+ be governed.
+
+ It is not for nothing that Providence piles up so many inactive
+ forces in the East of Europe. One day the sleeping giant will arise
+ and force will put an end to the reign of words. In vain, then,
+ distracted equality will call the old aristocracy to the help of
+ liberty; the weapon grasped again too late and wielded by hands too
+ long inactive will have become powerless. Society will perish for
+ having trusted to words void of sense or contradictory; then the
+ deceitful echoes of public opinion, the newspapers, wishing at all
+ costs to keep their readers, will push [the world] to ruin if only
+ to have something to relate for a month longer. They will kill
+ society to live upon its corpse.[762]
+
+To-day the newspapers, no longer the echoes of public opinion but its
+supreme directors, throw open their columns to every form of
+disintegrating doctrine and close them to arguments that could
+effectually arrest the forces of destruction.
+
+What is the hidden influence behind the press, behind all the subversive
+movements going on around us? Are there several Powers at work? Or is
+there one Power, one invisible group directing all the rest--the circle
+of the _real Initiates_?
+
+
+
+
+14
+
+PAN-GERMANISM
+
+
+
+We have seen in the course of this book that the idea of a secret power
+working for world-revolution through both open movements and secret
+societies, is not a new one, but dates from the eighteenth century. In
+order to appreciate the continuity of this idea, let us recapitulate the
+testimonies of contemporaries, some of which have been already quoted in
+their context, but which when collected together and placed in
+chronological order make up a very remarkable chain of evidence.
+
+In 1789 the Marquis de Luchet warned France of the danger of the
+Illuminati, whose object was world-domination.[763] In consequence of
+this "gigantic project" de Luchet foresees "a series of calamities of
+which the end is lost in the darkness of time, like unto those
+subterranean fires of which the insatiable activity devours the bowels
+of the earth and which escape into the air by violent and devastating
+explosions."[764]
+
+In 1794 the Duke of Brunswick in his manifesto to the German lodges
+said:
+
+ A great sect arose, which, taking for its motto "the good and
+ happiness of man," worked in the darkness of the conspiracy to make
+ the happiness of humanity a prey for itself. This sect is known to
+ everyone: its brothers are known no less than its name.... The plan
+ they had formed for breaking all social ties and of destroying all
+ order was revealed in their speeches and acts.... Indomitable
+ pride, thirst of power, such were the only motives of this sect:
+ their masters had nothing less in view than the thrones of the
+ earth, and the government of the nations was to be directed by
+ their nocturnal clubs.[765]
+
+In 1797 Montjoie, writing of the Orleaniste conspiracy, to which in an
+earlier work he had attributed the whole organization of the French
+Revolution in its first stages, observed:
+
+ I will not examine whether this wicked prince, thinking he was
+ acting in his personal interests, was not moved by that _invisible
+ hand_[766] which seems to have created all the events of our
+ revolution in order to lead us towards a goal that we do not see at
+ present, but which I think we shall see before long.[767]
+
+In 1801 Monsignor de Savine "made allusions in prudent and almost
+terrified terms to some international sect ...a power superior to all
+others ...which has arms and eyes everywhere and which governs Europe
+to-day."[768]
+
+In 1817 the Chevalier de Malet declared that "the authors of the
+Revolution are not more French than German, Italian, English, etc. They
+form a particular nation which took birth and has increased in the dark
+amidst all civilized nations with the object of subjecting them all to
+its domination."[769]
+
+In 1835 the Carbonaro, Malegari, wrote to another member of the
+Carbonari:
+
+ We form an association of brothers in all points of the globe, we
+ have desires and interests in common, we aim at the emancipation of
+ humanity, we wish to break every kind of yoke, yet there is one
+ that is unseen, that can hardly be felt, yet that weighs on us.
+ Whence comes it? Where is it? No one knows, or at least no one
+ tells. The association is secret, even for us, the veterans of
+ secret societies.[770]
+
+In 1852 Disraeli wrote:
+
+ It was neither parliaments nor populations, nor the course of
+ nature, nor the course of events, that overthrew the throne of
+ Louis Philippe ...the throne was surprised by the Secret Societies,
+ ever prepared to ravage Europe.... Acting in unison with a great
+ popular movement they may destroy society, as they did at the end
+ of the last century.[771]
+
+In 1874 Pere Deschamps, after his exhaustive study of secret societies,
+thus propounded the question:
+
+ We have now to ask ourselves whether there is anything but an
+ identity of doctrines and personal communications between the
+ members of the different sects, whether there is really a unity of
+ direction which binds together all the secret societies, including
+ Free Masonry. Here we touch on the most mysterious point of the
+ action of secret societies, on that which these national Grand
+ Orients who declare themselves independent of each other and
+ sometimes even excommunicate each other conceal most carefully
+ beneath a veil.[772]
+
+Finally Deschamps is led to the conclusion that there is "a secret
+council which directs all masonic societies,"[773] that there are
+secret lairs where the chiefs of the sects agree together on their work
+of destruction.[774]
+
+It would be easy to multiply quotations of this kind taken from many
+different sources. Whether the men who expressed these opinions were, as
+we are frequently told, suffering from delusions or not, the fact
+remains that the idea of a hidden hand behind world-revolution has
+existed for at least 135 years. And when we compare these utterances
+with Monsieur Copin Albancelli's description of an inner circle secretly
+directing the activities of the Grand Orient, and with the conclusions
+reached by members of other secret societies, that such a circle exists
+behind all occult and masonic societies of a subversive kind, we are
+necessarily led to enquire: is there one circle or rather one Power
+behind both open and secret organizations working for the overthrow of
+the existing social order and Christian civilization? If so, what is
+this power?
+
+Now, to leave speculation for the moment and come to known facts,
+everyone who has seriously studied these matters is aware that there are
+at the present moment five principal organized movements at work in the
+world with which ordered government has to contend, that may be
+summarized as follows:
+
+ 1. Grand Orient Freemasonry.
+ 2. Theosophy with its innumerable ramifications.
+ 3. Nationalism of an aggressive kind, now represented by Pan-Germanism.
+ 4. International Finance.
+ 5. Social Revolution.
+
+It will be seen that, with the exception of the fourth, these movements
+are those of which I have endeavoured to trace the course throughout the
+earlier part of this book. It is a highly significant fact that it was
+only when I had reached this stage of my work I discovered there were
+independent investigators who had arrived at precisely the same
+conclusions as myself.
+
+The problem that now confronts us is therefore this: if there is indeed
+one power directing all subversive movements, is it one of the five
+movements here enumerated or is it yet another power more potent and
+more invisible? In order to discover this, it is necessary to consider
+whether these movements, although apparently divergent in their ultimate
+purpose, have nevertheless any ideas or any aims in common. One
+fundamental point of similarity will certainly be found between them.
+All desire to dominate the world and to direct it along lines and
+according to rules of their own devising; more than this, each desires
+to direct it solely for the benefit of one class of people--social,
+intellectual, or national as the case may be--to the entire exclusion of
+every human being outside that class. Thus in reality each aspires to
+the dictatorship of the world.
+
+Besides this, it will be noticed that not only these principal
+movements, but also the minor subversive movements described in the last
+chapter, have in the main (1) a pro-German tendency--none, at any rate,
+are pro-French nor do they encourage British patriotism, (2) all contain
+a Jewish element--none, at least, are "anti-Semite," and (3) all have a
+more or less decided antagonism to Christianity. If then, there is a
+single power behind them, is it the Pan-Germanic Power? Is it the Jewish
+Power? Or is it the Anti-Christian Power? Let us examine each of these
+possibilities in turn.
+
+Viewed under the aspect of exaggerated Nationalism, the spirit of
+Pan-Germanism is nothing new. The dream of world-domination has haunted
+the imagination of many races from the time of Alexander the Great to
+Napoleon I, but nowhere has the plan been carried out by the
+Machiavellian methods which have characterized Prussian foreign policy
+and diplomacy from the days of Frederick the Great onwards. It is not
+Prussian militarism that constitutes the crime of modern Germany.
+Militarism in the sense of courage, patriotism, discipline, and devotion
+to duty is a splendid thing. But the spirit of Pan-Germanism differs
+from the British conception of patriotism in that it overrides the
+rights of all other peoples and seeks to establish its domination over
+the whole world. Under German domination every German would be free and
+every other human being a slave. England, whilst seeking conquests, has,
+on the other hand, always allowed the inhabitants of conquered
+territories to develop along their own lines and has made use of
+legislation largely to protect them from each other. The preference of
+the native of India for an English judge to one of his own race is
+evidence of this fact. But it is further the abandonment of all
+principle, the acceptance of the doctrine that everything is
+allowable--lying, treachery, calumny, and bad faith--in order to achieve
+its end, that has placed Germany outside the comity of nations. Robison
+describes the system of the Illuminati as leading to the conclusion that
+"nothing would be scrupled at, if it could be made appear that the Order
+would derive advantage from it, because the great object of the Order
+was held as superior to every consideration."[775] Change the word
+Order to State, and one has the whole principle of modern German
+Imperialism.
+
+Now, it is interesting to notice that the founders of German Illuminism
+and of German Imperialism drew certain of their ideas from the same
+source. Both Weishaupt and Frederick the Great were earnest students of
+Machiavelli--and both out-did their master. This form of Machiavellism,
+carried to a point probably never dreamt of by the Italian philosopher,
+has run through the whole struggle of Prussia for supremacy and at the
+same time through each outbreak of world revolution in which Prussian
+influence has played a part. Thus the Ems telegram in 1870, the false
+report that tricked Russia into mobilization in 1914,[776] the violation
+of treaties and of all the laws of civilised warfare during the recent
+war, were the direct outcome of doctrines that may be found in embryo in
+_The Prince_. So also the most striking characteristic of the French
+Revolution under the inspiration of Weishaupt's emissaries and the
+agents of Prussia, and of the present revolutionary movement inaugurated
+by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, is not so much its violence as its
+Machiavellian cunning. The art popularly known to-day as
+_camouflage_--of dressing-up one design under the guise of something
+quite different, of making black appear white by glorifying the most
+ignoble actions, of making white appear black by holding up all
+honourable traditions to contempt and ridicule, in a word
+_perversion_--has been reduced to a system by the secret directors of
+world revolution. It is here that we can detect the non-proletarian
+character of the movement. The working-man of all countries is the least
+Machiavellian of beings; his weakness lies in the fact that he is too
+inarticulate, that he does not know how to put his case even when he has
+a good one, still less to make a bad one appear plausible. It was not
+until world revolution was taken over by the faction described by
+Bakunin as "the German-Jew Company" that it reassumed its Machiavellian
+character and gradually became the formidable organization it is to-day.
+
+A few extracts from _The Prince_ will show how closely both the
+Prussians and the Terrorists of France and Russia have followed
+Machiavelli's manual for despots:
+
+"He who usurps the government of any State is to execute and put in
+practice all the cruelties which he thinks material at once, that he may
+have no occasion to renew them often," etc.[777] (Vide the German
+principle of "frightfulness" to be exercised against the inhabitants of
+invaded territory and the plan of the French and Russian Terrorists in
+suppressing "counter-revolutionaries.")
+
+"It is of such importance to a prince to take upon him the nature and
+disposition of a beast; of all the whole flock he ought to imitate the
+lion and the fox."[778](Vide Frederick the Great and the demagogues of
+France and Russia.)
+
+"A prince ... who is wise and prudent, cannot or ought not to keep his
+parole, when the keeping of it is to his prejudice, and the causes for
+which he promised removed."[779] (Vide Germany's doctrine of the scrap
+of paper and the promises of the Bolshevist Trade Delegation in London
+to refrain from propaganda.)
+
+"Because the whole multitude which submits to your government is not
+capable of being armed, if you be beneficial and obliging to those you
+do arm, you may make the bolder with the rest, for the difference of
+your behaviour to the soldier binds him more firmly to your service,"
+etc.[780](Vide the insolent behaviour permitted to officers of the
+German Imperial Army and the feeding of the Red Army in Russia at the
+expense of the rest of the population.)
+
+"The prince ... is obliged ... at convenient times in the year to
+entertain the people by feastings and plays and spectacles of recreation
+... and give them some instance of his humanity and magnificence."[781]
+(Vide the important part played by "spectacles" in the French Revolution
+and by the theatre and opera in Soviet Russia. Always the same plan of
+"_panem ei circenses_!")
+
+Just after the fall of Napoleon I a French writer published a book
+describing the "methodic perversity" of the revolutionary leaders and
+the Revolution as the beginning of a Machiavellian regime.[782] How did
+this system come to be established in France unless under the guidance
+of Weishaupt's emissaries and the agents of Frederick the Great and of
+the Illuminatus Frederick William II?
+
+Germany was well able, however, to defend herself against the
+devastating doctrines of Illuminism. Always the home of secret
+societies, she became by the end of the nineteenth century the spiritual
+home of Socialism. Yet although this might appear to present a danger to
+German Imperialism, no country has remained so free as Germany from
+serious agitation. It has been well said that the Germans are
+theoretically more Socialistic than other nations, but they are far less
+revolutionary.
+
+The truth is that the rulers of Germany have always known that they
+could count not merely on the servility of the people but on their
+ardent national spirit. A strong vein of patriotism ran through all the
+secret societies even of the most subversive variety, and it was the
+German Student Orders, whence the Illuminati drew their disciples, that
+became also the recruiting-ground for the German Imperialist idea.
+Instead of combating subversive forces, German Imperialism adopted the
+far more skilful expedient of enlisting them in its service.
+
+It was thus that in Germany Freemasonry became a powerful aid to
+Prussian aggrandizement. From 1840 onwards the word of command to all
+the lodges went out from Berlin,[783] and in the revolution of 1848 the
+Freemasons of Germany showed themselves the most ardent supporters of
+German unity under the aegis of Prussia. Later, Bismarck with superb
+ingenuity enlisted not only Freemasons and members of secret societies
+but Socialists and democrats in the same cause. Lassalle and Marx
+contributed powerfully to the cause of pan-Germanism. Dammer, who
+succeeded Lassalle as head of the Socialist party, instructed his
+successor Fritsche that "in the meetings which took place in Saxony,
+whilst putting forward Socialist claims, they must not fail to demand
+the unity of Germany under the domination of Prussia. Fritsche was
+personally to render an account to Bismarck of the results obtained at
+these meetings."[784]
+
+Even as far afield as Italy, Bismarck succeeded in imposing the policy
+of German autocracy on men who were ostensibly marching in the vanguard
+of "liberty." "I believe in the unity of Germany," Mazzini wrote to
+Bismarck in 1867, "and I desire it as I desire that of my own country. I
+abhor the empire and supremacy that France arrogates to herself over
+Europe."[785]
+
+Before 1870 Freemasonry everywhere on the Continent helped the cause of
+Germany. "The Occult Power preached pacifism and humanitarianism in
+France by means of French Freemasonry whilst it preached patriotism in
+Germany by means of German Freemasonry."[786] So although throughout
+the nineteenth century the rulers of Germany permitted the dissemination
+of ideas antagonistic to religion, until by the dawn of the following
+century the very idea of God was rooted out of the minds of many German
+children, the Imperial Government was careful that nothing should be
+allowed to weaken patriotism. Indeed, the Pan-German obsession into
+which German patriotism became transformed under the influence of such
+men as Treitschke and Bernhardi was, no less than revolutionary
+Socialism, fortified by irreligion because founded on the law of force
+and the absence of all moral scruple. It is thus not "militarism" in the
+accepted sense that has rendered Germany a menace to the world, but the
+Machiavellian plan of using for export doctrines sternly repressed
+within her own borders.
+
+I shall not enlarge here on the crime of the German Imperial Staff in
+sending Lenin and his fellow Bolsheviks to Russia, because I have
+already dealt at length with this question in a controversy that
+appeared in the _Morning Post_ two years ago.[787] But whilst
+acknowledging the fair and courteous line of argument adopted by my
+German opponent, with which on certain points I found myself completely
+in agreement. I was obliged to recognize that the bar to any real
+understanding between us lay in the impossibility of persuading him to
+recognize the principle that all means are not justifiable in order to
+obtain one's ends. This is how he expresses himself on the subject:
+
+If Mrs. Webster ... reproaches Germany for having employed seditious
+propaganda in the countries of the Allies, it may simply be brought to
+mind that all is fair in love and war. In a war, in a fight concerning
+life and death, one does not look at the weapons which one takes, nor at
+the values which are destroyed by using the arms. The only adviser [sic]
+is, first of all, the success of the fight, the salvation of one's
+independence.[788]
+
+Until Germany abandons this Machiavellian doctrine it will be impossible
+to treat her as a civilized Power.
+
+But Herr Kerlen accuses England of pursuing the same Machiavellian
+policy of encouraging sedition abroad. Undoubtedly England did propagate
+Pacifism in Germany and other enemy countries and hoped to bring about a
+political revolution, that is to say, a rising of the German people
+against the rulers who had led them into war. (It should be remembered
+that all the friends of Germany in this country always declared that the
+German people did not want the war and were dragged into it unwillingly
+by the military caste.) But is there any evidence to show that England
+ever attempted to engineer a social revolution, to undermine morality
+and all belief in ordered government, in a word to promote Bolshevism in
+Germany or elsewhere? Herr Kerlen cites the sympathy accorded in this
+country to the Kerensky revolution. But England, largely through the
+influence of the Liberals, had always entertained an exaggerated idea of
+"Tzarist tyranny," and honestly sympathized with all efforts, however
+misguided, to "liberate" the Russian people. Further, throughout the war
+the Tzar and Tzarina had been ceaselessly represented as faithless to
+the Allies--a story that we now know to have been an infamous calumny
+circulated doubtless by enemy agents. This idea even obtained credence
+in Conservative circles, misled by false information on the situation in
+Russia. One must have lived through the spring of 1917 in London to
+realize how completely not only the public but the authorities were
+deluded. What else could be expected when the opinion of Socialists was
+accepted on the matter? I know from personal experience that two of the
+most important Government departments were completely mistaken even on
+the subject of Bolshevism, with the result that measures were not taken
+which might have checked its spread into this country.
+
+In a word, then, the essential difference between the attitude of
+Germany and England to Russia was that whilst England imagined that the
+Kerensky revolution would be for the good of Russia as well as for the
+advantage of the Allies, Germany deliberately introduced into Russia
+what she knew to be a poison.
+
+Always faithful to the maxim of _divide et impera_, Germany, after
+bringing Russia to ruin, has at last succeeded in causing dissensions
+between the Allies. This policy she pursued unremittingly throughout the
+war. Thus whilst on one hand she was assuring the French that "the
+English would fight to the last breath of the last Frenchman," General
+Ludendorff was instructing the Imperial Chancellor that: "We must again
+and again rub in the sentence in Kuhlmann's speech to the effect that
+the question of Alsace-Lorraine is the only one which stands in the way
+of peace. And we must lay special emphasis on the fact that the English
+people are shedding their blood for an Imperialistic war-aim."[789]
+
+So skilfully was this propaganda carried on after the war had ended that
+whilst English officers returning to England from the occupied areas
+were declaring that the friendliness of the Germans convinced them that
+Germany was really our friend and that we should have an "entente" with
+her rather than with France, French officers returning to France said
+that the Germans had assured them that they were their best friends,
+that England was the real enemy, and that it would be better to break
+the Entente and form an alliance with Germany. At the same time no less
+than three lines of propaganda concerning the causes of the war were
+going out from Germany, one laying all the blame on the English, one on
+the French, and one on the Jews, and pamphlets embodying these
+conflicting theories were despatched broadcast to likely subjects in the
+countries of the Allies.[790]
+
+The greatest triumph for Imperial Germany lay in her success in
+enlisting the very elements amongst the Allies which might most be
+expected to oppose her. Although there was no country in the world where
+monarchy was so adored, militarism so universally admired, where rank
+and birth played so important a part, and the working classes, though
+cared for, so rigidly kept in subjection, Germany from the time of
+Bismarck onwards has always been the "spiritual home" of British
+Socialists, democrats, and pacifists, just as in France she has always
+found her principal allies in the masonic lodges. And this although the
+German Socialists and Freemasons have never attempted to use their
+influence in favour of the masonic and Socialist ideal of universal
+brotherhood and world-peace, but, on the contrary, at every crisis have
+thrown in their lot with the military party. Thus before the
+Franco-Prussian War, whilst French Freemasons of the Loge Concordia and
+the Socialists of the First Internationale were urging their brothers to
+rely on German Socialism to avert a conflict, the Prussian lodges were
+shouting Hoch! to the national colours and chanting the praises of King
+William and "the Prussian sword," and the German Social Democrats were
+applauding the cause of German unity.[791]
+
+Exactly the same thing happened before the recent war, when Jaures
+assured his fellow-Socialists that at the first sign of conflict he had
+only to communicate with Berlin in order to enlist German Socialism in
+the interests of peace; yet on the declaration of war the German
+Socialists voted solidly for war credits, whilst the British Socialists
+opposed participation in the war and even in some instances expressed
+sympathy with Germany. And let it never be forgotten, it was not
+Socialist Germany but Imperial Germany that won the allegiance of our
+so-called democrats.
+
+In spite of this betrayal by the Socialists of Germany, in spite of the
+fact that they have contributed nothing to the cause of International
+Socialism or of world-peace, the British "Labour" Party never until its
+accession to office wavered in its policy of publicly advocating the
+cause of Germany. With the exception of the Social Democratic
+Federation, every Socialist body in this country has proclaimed
+pro-German sentiments, and _Justice_ alone, of all Socialist organs, has
+expressed its sympathy for the sufferings of France. In fact, any
+Socialist who dared to champion the cause of France immediately lost his
+influence and position in Socialist circles. As to the _Daily Herald_,
+had it been edited in Berlin it could not more faithfully have supported
+German interests. When Alsace Lorraine was restored to France, it
+published an article showing how deeply the inhabitants of this province
+resented being transferred from the German Empire to the French
+Republic[792]; when a general strike threatened this country, it seized
+the opportunity to come out with an appeal in enormous capitals to
+revise the Versailles Treaty; in the matter of reparations its efforts
+to let Germany off altogether have been, as it itself observed,
+"unceasing." "The plain fact is," it declared on December 17, 1921,
+"that these fantastic reparation demands cannot be met; and that every
+payment by which Germany attempts to meet them will only work further
+havoc to our own commerce and our own industry. We have urged that
+ceaselessly for three years. To-day even the Premier begins to see that
+we were right, that the interests of this country demand the scrapping
+of _the whole bad business of 'making Germany pay_.'"[793]
+
+Indeed, when the interests of Germany were concerned, this paper, which
+Lenin has described as "our own organ," but which might still more truly
+be claimed by Ludendorff and Stinnes, was quite ready to throw Socialism
+to the winds and plead the cause of capital. At the very moment that it
+was advocating the Labour policy of a capital levy on all fortunes
+exceeding L5,000 in this country, the _Daily Herald_ waxed almost
+tearful over the iniquity of France in attempting to touch the pockets
+of German multi-millionaires whose profits, it went on to explain
+elaborately, were not nearly as huge as might appear in view of the
+decline in the purchasing power of the mark. The decline in the
+purchasing power of the pound had, however, never been taken into
+account when assessing the profits of British employers of labour.[794]
+
+We have only to follow point by point the policy of the British Labour
+Party since the war to recognize that whilst the measures it advocated
+might be of doubtful benefit to the workers, there could be no doubt
+whatever of the benefit they would confer on Germany. With a million and
+a quarter unemployed and large numbers of the working classes unable to
+find homes, the professed representatives of Labour have persistently
+clamoured for the removal of restrictions on alien immigration and alien
+imports. So although through the Trade Unions the British worker was to
+be rigorously protected against competition from his fellow-Briton, no
+obstacles were to be placed in the way of competition by foreign, and
+frequently underpaid, labour. That this glaring betrayal of their
+interests should not have raised a storm of resentment amongst the
+working classes is surely evidence that the Marxian doctrine "the
+emancipation of the working classes must be brought about by the working
+classes themselves"[795] has so far led to no great results. Emerson
+truly observed: "So far as a man thinks, he is free." The working
+classes can never be free until they learn to think for themselves
+instead of allowing their thinking to be done for them by the
+middle-class exploiters of Labour.
+
+The hand of Germany behind Socialism must be apparent to all those who
+do not deliberately shut their eyes to the fact, and it is significant
+to notice that the nearer Socialism approaches to Bolshevism the more
+marked this influence becomes. Thus although certain Socialist groups,
+such as the Social Democratic Federation in England and the Socialist
+Party in France, have not become Germanized, the avowed Communists in
+all the Allied countries are strongly pro-German. This is the case even
+in France, where the Bolsheviks find fervent supporters in the group led
+by Marcel Cachin, Froissart, and Longuet, grandson of Karl Marx.
+
+The organization of the Bolshevist movement has indeed throughout owed a
+great deal of its efficiency to German co-operation, provided not only by
+the Socialist but by the Monarchist elements in Germany. It is necessary
+in this connexion to understand the dual character of the German
+Monarchist party since the ending of the war. The great majority of its
+adherents, animated by nothing more reprehensible than the spirit of
+militarism and an aggressive form of patriotism that clings to the old
+formula of _Deutschland uber alles_, are probably strangers to any
+intrigues, but behind this mass of honest Imperialists, and doubtless
+unknown to a great number, there lurk those sinister organizations the
+Pan-German secret societies.
+
+Many of these, as for example the _Ostmarkenverein_, ostensibly
+instituted for the defence of German interests on the Russian frontier,
+existed before the war; indeed, there is little doubt that they have
+continued without a break since the days of the Tugendbund and have
+always preserved their masonic and "illuminized" character. But since
+the beginning of the Great War, and still more since the Armistice,
+their numbers have increased until in 1921 they were estimated to run
+into three figures. Moreover, as in the time of Weishaupt, Bavaria is
+still a centre for secret-society intrigue, and it was here that
+Escherich founded the _Einwohnerwehr_ sometimes known as the _Orgesch_
+or Organization Escherich, with Munich as its headquarters. The Orgesch
+was followed by the formidable murder club known to all the world as the
+Organization C or "Consul," named after its founder, the famous Captain
+Ehrhardt, whose nickname was "_der Herr Consul_." During the year 1921
+no less than 400 political assassinations were reported in Germany and
+said to be the work of secret societies. Amongst the crimes attributed
+to the initiative of Organization C were the murders of Herr Erzberger
+and the attempt on the life of Herr Scheidemann. Eighty persons arrested
+for complicity in the murder of Herr Rathenau were also said to be
+members of the same society.[796]
+
+But as in the case of all secret societies, the visible leaders were not
+the real hierarchy; behind this active body there existed an inner
+circle organised on masonic lines, the Druidenorden, a name unknown to
+the public, and behind this again another and still more secret circle
+which appears to be nameless. It is these inner rings which, whilst
+remaining Monarchist in Germany, work for other ends abroad, and are
+connected with the world-revolutionary movement.
+
+This alliance between the two extremes of ardent Monarchism and
+revolutionary Socialism existed at the beginning of the war or even
+earlier, and, as is now well known, it was the Jewish Social Democrat,
+Israel Lazarewitch, alias Helphandt alias Parvus, who arranged with the
+German General Staff for the passage of Lenin from Switzerland to
+Russia, accompanied by Karl Radek, the Austrian Jew deserter, and a
+number of other Jews.
+
+Now, Switzerland has been for hundreds of years a centre of
+revolutionary and secret-society intrigue. As early as the sixteenth
+century the Pope, writing to the Kings of France and Spain, warned them
+that Geneva was "un foyer eternel de revolution," and Joseph de Maistre,
+quoting this letter in 1817, declared Geneva to be the metropolis of the
+revolutionaries, whose art of deception he describes as "the great
+European secret."[797] Elsewhere, a year earlier, he had referred to
+Illuminism as the root of all the evil at work. It is now known that at
+the moment de Maistre wrote these words an inner ring of
+revolutionaries, claiming direct descent from Weishaupt and even from an
+earlier sect existing at the end of the fifteenth century, profited by
+the fall of Napoleon I to reconstruct its organization and took up its
+headquarters in Switzerland with branch offices in London and Paris. The
+same secret ring of Illuminati is believed to have been intimately
+connected with the organization of the Bolshevist revolution, although
+none of the leading Bolsheviks are said to have been members of the
+innermost circle, which is understood to consist of men belonging to the
+highest intellectual and financial classes whose names remained
+absolutely unknown. Outside this absolutely secret ring there
+existed, however, a semi-secret circle of high initiates of subversive
+societies drawn from all over the world and belonging to various
+nationalities--German, Jewish, French, Russian, and even Japanese. This
+group, which might be described as the active ring of the inner circle,
+appears to have been in touch with, if not in control of, a committee
+which met in Switzerland to carry out the programme of the Third
+Internationale.
+
+It was thus in Switzerland that at the same time high initiates of
+Pan-German secret societies foregathered and that an active centre of
+pro-German, anti-Entente, and even Bolshevist propaganda was
+established. These Germans, although Monarchists themselves, co-operated
+with the secret revolutionary forces in stirring up trouble in the
+countries of the Allies. At the same time the conferences of the Second
+Internationale, attended by members of the British I.L.P. took place in
+Switzerland, and at one of these--the Berne Conference of 1919--the
+delegates were entertained by a mysterious "American" millionaire, John
+de Kay, living himself in great style, paying for press service at the
+rate of 2,000 francs a day, lavishing money on the conference, and at
+the same time subsidizing a Pacifist and Defeatest paper named _La
+Feuille_.
+
+It is impossible, then, to ignore the role of Germany in the present
+outbreak of world revolution. In the British White Paper on Bolshevism
+in Russia we find it stated by an Englishman who had been through the
+whole of the Revolution in that country that:
+
+ The Germans initiated disturbances in order to reduce Russia to
+ chaos. They printed masses of paper money to finance their schemes;
+ the notes, of which I possess specimens, can be easily recognized
+ by a special mark.[798]
+
+What has Germany to say to all this? Simply that the promotion of
+Bolshevism was a military "necessity" in order to bring about the
+downfall of her opponents, but that the propaganda utilized by her was
+in reality of Jewish origin, and that Jewry, not Germany, was the real
+author of world revolution.
+
+It is easy to see how such a theory can be made to serve the cause of
+Pan-Germanism. For if Germany can persuade us that the Jews alone were
+responsible for the war and were also the sole authors of Bolshevism, we
+shall naturally be led to the conclusion that Germany is, after all,
+innocent of the crimes attributed to her, and that our only safety lies
+in forgoing reparations, restoring her to her former power, and
+coalescing with her against a common enemy. We shall therefore do well
+to accept with extreme caution advice on the Jewish question emanating
+from German sources, and to test the sincerity of the spirit in which it
+is offered by considering the relations which have hitherto existed
+between the Germans and the Jews.
+
+Now, Germany has long been the home of modern "anti-Semitism." Although
+in every country and at every period, but more particularly in the East
+of Europe during the last century, the Jews have suffered from
+unpopularity, it was Germany that organized this aversion into a
+definite plan of campaign. If in Russia, Galicia, and Poland the Jews
+have met with sporadic violence at the hands of the peasants, in Germany
+they have been systematically held up by the authorities to hatred and
+contempt. Luther, Kant, Fichte, Schopenhauer, Treitschke, successively
+inveighed against the Jewish race. Jews were denied admission to masonic
+lodges and to the rank of officers in the army, whilst society excluded
+them up to the outbreak of war.
+
+Yet the extraordinary fact remains that of all nations the Germans have
+always been the favourites of the Jews. Throughout the whole movement
+for the unification of Germany under the aegis of Prussia, Jews played a
+leading part, and in the recent war Germany found in them some of her
+most valuable allies. As Maximilian Harden recently pointed out: "The
+services of the Jews to Germany during the war were enormous. The
+patriotism of the Jews was beyond reproach, in many cases even ludicrous
+and offensive in its intensity." And in spite of "anti-Semitism," Harden
+declares: "There is a strong affinity between the German and the Jew."[799]
+To the Ashkenazim Germany even more than Palestine has appeared
+the Land of Promise. Thus some years before the war Professor Ludwig
+Geiger, leader of the Liberal Jews of Berlin, denounced "Zionist
+sophisms" in the words: "The German Jew who has a voice in German
+literature must, as he has been accustomed to for the last century and a
+half, look upon Germany alone as his fatherland, upon the German
+language as his mother-tongue, and the future of that nation must remain
+the only one upon which he bases his hopes."[800]
+
+How are we to explain this unrequited devotion? Simply by the German
+policy of enlisting every dynamic force in her service. She has known
+how to use the Jews just as she has known how to use the Freemasons, the
+Illuminati, and the Socialists for the purpose of Pan-Germanism. From
+Frederick the Great, who employed the Jew Ephraim to coin false money,
+to William II, who kept in touch with Rathenau by means of a private
+telephone wire, the rulers of Germany have always allowed them to
+co-operate in their schemes of world-domination. As the allies of
+Bismarck, who used them freely to fill his war-chests, the Jews directed
+the power of the secret societies in the interests of Germany; in 1871
+the Jew Bloechreider acted as adviser to the new German Empire as to the
+best method of wresting indemnities from France. And Germany, whilst
+heaping insults on the Jews, nevertheless fulfils certain conditions
+essential to Jewish enterprise. Unlike England and France, she has never
+allowed herself to be seriously weakened by democratic ideas, and
+therefore to the Jews--as to British believers in autocracy--she
+represents the principle of stability.
+
+Moreover, Germany as the home of militarism offers a wide field for
+Jewish speculation. We have only to couple together an aphorism of
+Mirabeau's with one of Werner Sombart's to perceive the bond of union
+between the two races, thus: "War is the national industry of Prussia"
+and "Wars are the Jews' harvests." As long ago as 1793 Anacharsis
+Clootz, the apostle of universal brotherhood and defender of the Jewish
+race, declared that if Germany were to be prevented from going to war
+the Jews must be persuaded to withdraw their support from her military
+adventures:
+
+ War could not begin or last in Germany without the activity, the
+ intelligence, and the money of the Jews. Magazines and munitions of
+ all kinds are provided by Hebrew capitalists and all the subaltern
+ agents of military provisionment are of the same nation. We have
+ only to come to an understanding with our brothers, the Rabbis, to
+ produce astonishing, miraculous results.[801]
+
+Mr. Ford, the American motor-car manufacturer, appears to have arrived
+at much the same conclusion expressed in the words recently attributed
+to him: "We don't need the League of Nations to end war. Put under
+control the fifty most wealthy Jewish financiers, who produce wars for
+their own profit, and wars will cease."[802]
+
+On another occasion Mr. Ford is reported to have said that the Jews who
+voyaged with him in the Peace ship in 1915 "went out of their way to
+convince" him of "the direct relations between the International Jew and
+the war": they "went into details to tell me the means by which the Jews
+controlled the war--how they had the money, how they had cornered all
+the basic materials needed to fight the war," etc.[803]
+
+Without in any way absolving Germany from the crime of the war, it is
+necessary to take this secondary factor into consideration if peace
+between the nations is to be established. For as long as the lust of war
+lingers in the hearts of the Germans and the lust of gain at the price
+of human suffering lingers in the hearts of the Jews, both races will
+remain necessary to each other and the hideous nightmare of war will
+continue to brood over the world.
+
+There is then a great deal of truth in the Socialist phrase
+"Capitalists' Wars," although not in the sense they attribute to it. For
+it will be noticed that the Capitalists who are most instrumental in
+making wars are precisely those whom the Socialists are always careful
+to shield from blame. The following incident will illustrate this point.
+
+At a meeting of the Social Democratic Federation Mr. Adolphe Smith moved
+a resolution appealing to the organized workers of Great Britain--
+
+ Not to permit themselves in the supposed interests of their
+ fellow-workers in other countries, to be used by sinister financial
+ and militarist influences merely to weaken the Entente nations in
+ the present critical situation, and urging them to keep careful
+ watch against such manoeuvres on the part of pro-German
+ international financiers, who were able to exercise considerable
+ reactionary influence among the wealthy and official classes in
+ this country.[804]
+
+Mr. Hyndman added that "the most serious danger by which we were
+threatened was from the most powerful group of capitalists in Europe
+headed by Hugo Stinnes and backed by Hindenburg, Ludendorff, and the
+militarist party in Germany." This resolution was opposed by a member of
+the Parliamentary Labour Party and eventually withdrawn.
+
+The connexion between German Imperialism, International Finance,
+Illuminism, Bolshevism, and certain sections of British Socialism is
+thus apparent. Is Germany then the secret power behind the thing we call
+Bolshevism? Are Illuminism and Pan-Germanism one and the same thing? To
+this hypothesis two objections present themselves: firstly, that the
+spirit of Illuminism and Bolshevism existed, as we have seen in earlier
+chapters of this book, long before modern Germany came into existence;
+and secondly, that Germany herself is not entirely free from the
+contagion. For although the danger of Bolshevism in Germany has been
+doubtless greatly exaggerated in order to prevent the Allies from
+pressing their demands for disarmament and reparations, nevertheless
+Bolshevism under its illuminated name of Spartacism cannot be regarded
+as a movement entirely staged for the deception of Europe. Moreover,
+just as in the countries of the Allies it has shown itself, under the
+guise of Pacifism, savagely anti-national and pro-German, so in Germany,
+as also in Hungary, it turned Pacifism to the opposite purpose by
+professing sympathy at moments with the Allies.
+
+It is clear, then, that besides Pan-Germanism there is another power at
+work, a power far older, that seeks to destroy all national spirit, all
+ordered government in every country, Germany included. What is this
+power? A large body of opinion replies: the Jewish power.
+
+
+
+
+15
+
+THE REAL JEWISH PERIL
+
+
+
+In considering the immense problem of the Jewish Power, perhaps the most
+important problem with which the modern world is confronted, it is
+necessary to divest oneself of all prejudices and to enquire in a spirit
+of scientific detachment whether any definite proof exists that a
+concerted attempt is being made by Jewry to achieve world-domination and
+to obliterate the Christian faith.
+
+That such a purpose has existed amongst the Jews in the past has been
+shown throughout the earlier chapters of this book. The conception of
+the Jews as the Chosen People who must eventually rule the world forms
+indeed the basis of Rabbinical Judaism.
+
+It is customary in this country to say that we should respect the Jewish
+religion, and this would certainly be our duty were the Jewish religion
+founded, as is popularly supposed, solely on the Old Testament. For
+although we do not consider ourselves bound to observe the ritual of the
+Pentateuch, we find no fault with the Jews for carrying out what they
+conceive to be their religious duties. Moreover, although the Old
+Testament depicts the Jews as a favoured race--a conception which we
+believe to have been superseded by the Christian dispensation, whereby
+all men are declared equal in the sight of God--nevertheless it does
+contain a very lofty law of righteousness applicable to all mankind. It
+is because of their universality that the books of Job and Ecclesiastes,
+as also many passages in the Psalms, in Isaiah, and the minor prophets,
+have made an undying appeal to the human race. But the Jewish religion
+now takes its stand on the Talmud rather than on the Bible. "The modern
+Jew," one of its latest Jewish translators observes, "is the product of
+the Talmud."[805] The Talmud itself accords to the Bible only a
+secondary place. Thus the Talmudic treatise Soferim says: "The Bible is
+like water, the Mischna is like wine, and the Gemara is like spiced
+wine."
+
+Now, the Talmud is not a law of righteousness for all mankind, but a
+meticulous code applying to the Jew alone. No human being outside the
+Jewish race could possibly go to the Talmud for help or comfort. One
+might look through its pages in vain for any such splendid rule of life
+as that given by the prophet Micah: "He hath shewed thee, O man, what is
+good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to
+love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" In the Talmud, on the
+contrary, as Drach points out, "the precepts of justice, of equity, of
+charity towards one's neighbour, are not only not applicable with regard
+to the Christian, but constitute a crime in anyone who would act
+differently.... The Talmud expressly forbids one to save a non-Jew from
+death, ... to restore lost goods, etc., to him, to have pity on him."[806]
+
+
+How far the Talmud has contributed to the anti-social tendencies of
+modern Judaism is shown by the fact that the Karaites living in the
+south of Russia, the only body of Jews which takes its stand on the
+Bible, and not on the Talmud,--of which it only accepts such portions as
+are in accordance with Bible teaching--have always shown themselves good
+subjects of the Russian Empire, and have therefore enjoyed equal rights
+with the Russian people around them. Catherine the Great particularly
+favoured the Karaites.
+
+Thus even the Jews are not unanimous in supporting the Talmud; indeed,
+as we have already seen, many Jews have protested against it as a
+barrier between themselves and the rest of the human race.
+
+But it is in the Cabala, still more than in the Talmud, that the Judaic
+dream of world-domination recurs with the greatest persistence. The
+Zohar indeed refers to this as a _fait accompli_, explaining that "the
+Feast of Tabernacles is the period when Israel triumphs over the other
+people of the world; that is why during this feast we seize the Loulab
+[branches of trees tied together] and carry it as a trophy to show that
+we have conquered all the other peoples known as 'populace' and that we
+dominate them."[807] God is, however, asked to accord these other
+peoples a certain share of blessings, "so that occupied with this share
+they shall not participate nor mingle with the joy of Israel when he
+calls down blessings from on high." The situation may thus be compared
+with that of a king who, wishing to give a feast to his special friends,
+finds his house invaded by importunate governors demanding admittance.
+"What then does the king do? He orders the governors to be served with
+beef and vegetables, which are common food, and then sits down to table
+with his friends and has the most delicious dishes served."[808]
+
+But this is nothing to the feasting that is to take place when the
+Messianic era arrives. After the return of the Jews from all nations and
+parts of the world to Palestine, the Messiah, we are told in the Talmud,
+will entertain them at a gorgeous banquet, where they will be seated at
+golden tables and regaled with wine from Adam's wine-cellar. The first
+course is to consist of a roasted ox named Behemoth, so immense that
+every day it eats up the grass upon a thousand hills; the second of a
+monstrous fish Leviathan; the third of a female Leviathan boiled and
+pickled; the fourth of a gigantic roast fowl known as Barjuchne, of
+which the egg alone was so enormous that when it fell out of the nest it
+crushed three hundred tall cedars and the white overflowed threescore
+villages. This course is to be followed up by "the most splendid and
+pompous Dessert" that can be procured, including fruit from the Tree of
+Life and "the Pomegranates of Eden which are preserved for the Just."
+
+At the end of the banquet "God will entertain the company at a ball"; He
+Himself will sit in the midst of them, and everyone will point Him out
+with his finger, saying: "Behold, this is our God: we have waited for
+Him, we will be glad and rejoice in His salvation."[809]
+
+The eighteenth-century commentator, whose summary of these passages we
+quote, goes on to observe:
+
+ But let us see a little after what manner the Jews are to live in
+ their ancient Country under the Administration of the Messiah. In
+ the First Place, the strange Nations, which they shall suffer to
+ live, shall build them Houses and Cities, till them Ground, and
+ plant them Vineyards; and all this, without so much as looking for
+ any Reward of their Labour. These surviving Nations will likewise
+ voluntarily offer them all their Wealth and Furniture: And Princes
+ and Nobles shall attend them; and be ready at their Nod to pay them
+ all Manner of Obedience; while they themselves shall be surrounded
+ with Grandeur and Pleasure, appearing abroad in Apparel glittering
+ with Jewels like Priests of the Unction, consecrated to God....
+
+ In a word, the felicity of this Holy Nation, in the Times of the
+ Messiah, will be such, that the exalted Condition of it cannot
+ enter into the Conception of Man; much less can it be couched in
+ human Expression. This is what the Rabbis say of it. But the
+ intelligent reader will doubtless pronounce it the Paradise of
+ Fools.[810]
+
+It is interesting to notice that this conception of the manner in which
+the return to Palestine is to be carried out has descended to certain of
+the modern colonists. Sir George Adam Smith, after watching Zionism at
+work in 1918, wrote:
+
+ On visiting a recently established Jewish colony in the north-east
+ of the land, round which a high wall had been built by the
+ munificent patron, I found the colonists sitting in its shade
+ gambling away the morning, while groups of _fellahin_ at a poor
+ wage did the cultivation for them. I said that this was surely not
+ the intention of their patron in helping them to settle on land of
+ their own. A Jew replied to me in German: "Is it not written: The
+ sons of the alien shall be your ploughmen and vinedressers?" I know
+ that such delinquencies have become the exception in Jewish
+ colonization of Palestine, but they are symptomatic of dangers
+ which will have to be guarded against.[811]
+
+The fellahin may, however, consider themselves lucky to be allowed to
+live at all, for, according to several passages in the Cabala, all the
+_goyim_ are to be swept off the face of the earth when Israel comes into
+its own. Thus the Zohar relates that the Messiah will declare war on the
+whole world and all the kings of the world will end by declaring war on
+the Messiah. But "the Holy One, blessed be He, will display His force
+and exterminate them from the world."[812] Then:
+
+ Happy will be the lot of Israel, whom the Holy One, blessed be He,
+ has chosen from amongst the _goyim_ of whom the Scriptures say:
+ "Their work is but vanity, it is an illusion at which we must
+ laugh; they will all perish when God visits them in His wrath." At
+ the moment when the Holy One, blessed be He, will exterminate all
+ the _goyim_ of the world, Israel alone will subsist, even as it is
+ written: "The Lord alone will appear great on that day."[813]
+
+The hope of world-domination is therefore not an idea attributed to the
+Jews by "anti-Semites," but a very real and essential part of their
+traditions. What then of their attitude to Christianity in the past? We
+have already seen that hatred of the person and teaching of Christ did
+not end at Golgotha, but was kept alive by the Rabbis and perpetuated in
+the Talmud and the Toledot Yeshu. The Cabala also contains passages
+referring both to Christ and to Mohammed so unspeakably foul that it
+would be impossible to quote them here.
+
+But it will be urged: the Jews of Western Europe to-day know nothing of
+the Cabala. This may be so, yet imperceptibly the Cabala has moulded the
+mind of the Jew. As a modern Jewish writer has declared:
+
+ [Kabbalism] has contributed to the formation of modern Judaism,
+ for, without the influence of the Kabbala, Judaism to-day might
+ have been one-sided, lacking in warmth and imagination. Indeed, so
+ deeply has it penetrated into the body of the faith that many ideas
+ and prayers are now immovably rooted in the general body of
+ orthodox doctrine and practice. This element has not only become
+ incorporated, but it has fixed its hold on the affections of the
+ Jews and cannot be eradicated.[814]
+
+It is thus not in the law of Moses thundered from Sinai, not in the dry
+ritual of the Talmud, but in the stupendous imaginings of the Cabala,
+that the real dreams and aspirations of Jewry have been transmitted
+through the ages. Belief in the coming Messiah may burn low, but faith
+in the final triumph of Israel over the other nations of the world still
+glows in the hearts of a race nurtured on this hope from time
+immemorial. Even the free-thinking Jew must unconsciously react to the
+promptings of this vast and ancient ambition. As a modern French writer
+has expressed it:
+
+ Assuredly sectarian Freethinkers swarm, who flatter themselves on
+ having borrowed nothing from the synagogue and on hating equally
+ Jehovah and Jesus. But the modern Jewish world is itself also
+ detached from any supernatural belief, and the Messianic tradition,
+ of which it preserves the cult, reduces itself to considering the
+ Jewish race as the veritable Messiah[815].
+
+Some colour is lent to this statement by an article which recently
+appeared in the Jewish press, in which it is explained that, according
+to the teaching of the "Liberal Jewish Synagogue," the beautiful
+passages in the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah concerning "the Man of
+Sorrows acquainted with grief," usually supposed by Christians to relate
+to the promised Messiah, are interpreted to modern Jewish youth as
+relating to Israel and signifying that Israel's "sufferings were caused
+by the sins of other nations," who thus "escaped the suffering they
+deserved." Consequently "Israel has suffered for the sake of the whole
+world[816]." How this amazing pretension can be maintained in view of
+the perpetual denunciations of the Israelites throughout the whole of
+the Old Testament is difficult to imagine. On their entry into Canaan
+they were distinctly told by Moses that the Lord their God had not given
+them "this good land" on account of their righteousness or the
+uprightness of their hearts[817]; long afterwards Daniel declared that
+all Israel had transgressed the law of God[818]; Nehemiah showed that on
+account of their rebellion and disobedience they had been delivered into
+the hands of their enemies[819]. Isaiah spoke of the iniquities of Judah
+in burning words:
+
+ Ah sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of
+ evildoers, children that are corruptors!... Wash your, make you
+ clean; put away the evil of your doings from before Mine eyes;
+ cease to do evil; learn to do well, etc.[820]
+
+Thus even the Word of God itself is powerless to mitigate the immense
+megalomania of the Jewish race. It is doubtful indeed whether by the
+majority of Jews the Bible is now regarded as divinely inspired. "The
+ten commandments which _we_ gave to mankind[821]" is a phrase typical of
+the manner in which Israel now arrogates to itself the sole authorship
+of the Scriptures. The deification of humanity by the Freemasons of the
+Grand Orient finds its counterpart in the deification of Israel by the
+modern Jew.
+
+It is here that we must surely see the cause of much of the suffering
+the Jews have endured in the past. No one of course would justify the
+cruelty with which they have frequently been treated; nevertheless to
+maintain there was no provocation on the part of the Jews would be
+absurd. A race that has always considered itself entitled to occupy a
+privileged position amongst the nations of the world must inevitably
+meet with resentment, and in a primitive age or population resentment is
+apt to find a vent in violence shocking to the civilized mind. Moreover,
+to represent the Jews as a gentle long-suffering people, always the
+victims but never the perpetrators of violence, is absolutely contrary
+to historic fact. In the dark ages of the past the Jews showed
+themselves perfectly capable of cruelties not only towards other races
+but towards each other. One of the first pogroms recorded in the
+Christian era was carried out by the Jews themselves. The Jewish
+historian Josephus describes the reign of "lawlessness and barbarity"
+that was inaugurated about the middle of the first century A.D. by the
+band of assassins known as the Sicarii, who infested the country round
+Jerusalem and, by means of little daggers that they wore concealed
+beneath their garments, "slew men in the daytime and in the midst of the
+city, especially at the festivals when they mixed with the multitude."
+During one night raid on the small town of Engaddi they massacred more
+than seven hundred women and children.[822] And Josephus goes on to say:
+
+ Somehow, indeed, that was a time most fertile in all manner of
+ wicked practices among the Jews, insomuch that no kind of villainy
+ was then left undone; nor could anyone so much as devise any bad
+ thing that was new if he wished. So deeply were they all infected,
+ both privately and publicly, and vied with one another who should
+ run the greatest lengths in impiety towards God, and in unjust
+ actions towards their neighbours, men in power oppressing the
+ multitude, and the multitude earnestly endeavouring to destroy men
+ in power.[823]
+
+It is futile then to maintain as do the Jews and their friends--for the
+pro-Jew is frequently _plus royaliste que le roi_--that all the faults
+of the modern Jew are to be attributed to bitterness engendered by
+persecution. Judaism has always contained an element of cruelty[824]
+which finds expression in the Talmud. It is from the Talmud, not from
+the Mosaic law, that the inhuman methods of Jewish slaughtering are
+derived.[825] The Talmud likewise gives the most horrible directions for
+carrying out capital punishment, particularly with regard to women, by
+the methods of stoning, burning, choking, or slaying with the sword. The
+victim condemned to be burnt is to have a scarf wound round his neck,
+the two ends pulled tightly by the executioners whilst his mouth is
+forced open with pincers and a lighted string thrust into it "so that it
+flows down through his inwards and shrinks his entrails."[826]
+
+It will be said that all this belongs to the past. True, the practice
+here described may be considered obsolete, but the spirit of cruelty and
+intolerance that dictated it is still alive. One has only to study the
+modern Jewish press to realize the persecution to which Jews are
+subjected from members of their own race should they infringe one
+fraction of the Jewish code.
+
+If, then, "the modern Jew is the product of the Talmud," it is here that
+we must see the principal obstacle to Jewish progress. It is said that
+Isaac Disraeli, the father of Lord Beaconsfield, gave as his reason for
+withdrawing from the Synagogue that Rabbinical Judaism with its
+unyielding laws and fettering customs "cuts off the Jews from the great
+family of mankind."[827] Such a system is indeed absolutely
+incompatible not only with Christian teaching but with the secular ideas
+of Western civilization. The attitude it adopts towards women would be
+in itself sufficient to justify this assertion. The Jewish daily prayer,
+"Blessed be Thou, O Lord our God, King of the universe, that Thou has
+not made me a woman!"[828] is a ludicrous anachronism in the present
+age. According to the Talmud a service can take place in the Synagogue
+only if ten persons are present, which number ensures the presence of
+God in the assembly. Drach explains however that these persons must all
+be men. "If then there were nine men and a million women there could be
+no assembly, for the reason that women are nothing. But there arrives
+[on the scene] only one small boy of thirteen years and a day, at once
+there can be a holy assembly and, according to our Doctors, it is
+permitted to God to be present[829]."
+
+When therefore we say that we must respect the Jewish religion we
+cannot, if we know anything about it, mean that we respect that portion
+of it which is founded on the Rabbinical traditions of the Talmud and
+the Cabala, but only that ethical law set forth in the Old Testament, to
+which right-living Jews have faithfully adhered and which is largely in
+accord with Christian teaching.
+
+Let us not forget that Rabbinical Judaism is the declared and implacable
+enemy of Christianity. Hatred of Christianity and of the person of
+Christ is not a matter of remote history, nor can it be regarded as the
+result of persecution; it forms an integral part of Rabbinical tradition
+which originated before any persecution of the Jews by Christians had
+taken place, and has continued in our country long after all such
+persecution has ended.
+
+It is here that we cannot fail to detect the origin of much of that
+virulent anti-Christian teaching that is being disseminated in our midst
+to-day. This teaching will be observed to follow three lines, of which
+the course has been traced throughout this book. These consist in
+desecrating the Christian tradition by declaring that Christ was either
+(_a_) a myth, (_b_) a purely human teacher endowed with superior virtue
+and knowledge of natural laws, (_c_) a crazy fanatic[830] or a
+malefactor. The first two theories are, as we have seen, those held by
+secret societies; the last is essentially Jewish. It is true that there
+is now a movement amongst the more enlightened Jews to recognize Jesus
+as a great teacher; so far, unfortunately, this is met by bitter
+hostility from the rest, and in the current Jewish press contemptuous
+and even blasphemous references to Christ and the Christian faith
+frequently occur. The fact that here in England, for nearly three
+hundred years, the Jews have been allowed to dwell in peace and carry
+out their religious rites unmolested, that they have been admitted to
+society, to masonic lodges, and to all offices of State and have met
+with increasing tolerance and favour, has done nothing to moderate that
+hatred of Christianity inculcated throughout nineteen centuries of
+Rabbinical teaching. Thus, for example, under the heading of "What
+Christianity has Meant," we read in a modern Jewish periodical:
+
+ We are thinking of what Christianity as an institution has meant to
+ us Jews. The twenty centuries of its existence have been coeval
+ with the long-drawn tragedy of the Jew's dispersal among the
+ nations.... What kindliness and consideration we have received at
+ the hands of Christianity has for the most part been tendered with
+ the lure of the baptismal font. To the extent to which
+ Christianity's embodiment, the Church, has been puissant has the
+ Jewish tragedy deepened. Only when and where the Church has been
+ weak has life been tolerable for the Jew.... Hatred of the Jew,
+ anti-Jewish outbursts and anti-Semitic campaigns, are traceable to
+ nothing so surely as to antipathy to the Jew which has been inbred
+ by Christianity.... There is thus precious little about which the
+ Jew has for rejoicing and gladness in the institution of
+ Christianity, etc.[831]
+
+The most cursory study of history would reveal the falseness of this
+contention. Antipathy to the Jew began long before the Christian era; in
+Egypt, Persia, and Rome he became, whether just or not, the object of
+suspicion to rulers. The reason given by Pharaoh for oppressing the
+Israelites was that if they were allowed to grow too powerful they might
+join themselves to the enemy in time of war[832]; the Emperors of Rome
+regarded them as a turbulent element; Mohammed declared: "Their aim will
+be to abet disorder on the earth, but God loveth not the abettors of
+disorder."[833] Meanwhile, the antipathy shown by the "people" in every
+country was mainly based on economic grounds. It was not simply the
+possession of wealth--which according to the Socialist creed should
+justify any amount of hatred--but the manner in which it was acquired
+and the arrogance with which it was displayed that roused popular
+feeling against the Jews. An Arab Fakih, Abu Ishak of Elvira, thus
+warned his master of the growing power of the Jews in Spain in the
+middle of the eleventh century A.D.:
+
+ The Jews, contemptible outcasts, have become great lords, and their
+ pride and arrogance know no bounds.... Take not such men for thy
+ ministers, but abandon them to curses, for the whole earth crieth
+ out against them--ere long it will quake and we shall all perish.
+ Turn thine eyes to other lands and behold how the Jews are treated
+ as dogs, and kept apart....
+
+ I came to Granada, and there I beheld the Jews reigning. They had
+ parcelled out the provinces and the capital between them:
+ everywhere one of these accursed ruled. They collected the taxes,
+ they made good cheer, they were sumptuously clad, while your
+ garments, O Moslems, were old and worn-out. All the secrets of
+ state were known to them; yet is it folly to put trust in traitors!
+ While believers ate the bread of poverty, they dined delicately in
+ the palace.... How can we thrive if we live in the shade and the
+ Jews dazzle us with the glory of their pride?[834]
+
+In mediaeval France the chief cause for complaint against the Jews is
+that of not working with their hands but of enriching themselves by
+"excessive usury." In the fifteenth century the Strasbourg preacher
+Geyler asks: "Are the Jews above the Christians? Why will they not work
+with their hands?... practising usury is not working. It is exploiting
+others whilst remaining idle."[835] Such quotations as these might be
+multiplied _ad infinitum_.
+
+To attribute the persecution of the Jews to Christianity is therefore
+ludicrous. That in a less enlightened age the Church should have adopted
+rigorous measures--although no more rigorous than their own laws
+demanded--against those Jews who practised magic and witchcraft must
+appear deplorable to the modern mind, but so must many other phases of
+mediaeval life. Why then hark back perpetually to the past? If the Jews
+were persecuted in a less enlightened age, so were many other sections
+of the community. Catholics were persecuted, Protestants were
+persecuted, men were placed in the stocks for minor offences, scolding
+women were ducked in the village pond. But if all these cruelties of the
+dark ages are to be remembered and perpetuated on the plan of a tribal
+blood-feud, what peace can there be for the world? The disastrous
+results of this tendency were seen in the Irish Intellectuals, nourished
+from infancy on the story of Ireland's wrongs, who, instead of sanely
+facing present problems, unhinged their minds by brooding on historic
+grievances, thereby sealing their own doom and plunging their country
+into ruin. So, too, the enraged Feminists, harking back to injustices
+that had long ceased to exist, embittered their lives by proclaiming
+themselves the eternal enemies of Man. Emerson, the prophet of sanity,
+declared: "The only ballast I know is a respect to the present hour."
+It is for lack of this ballast that the Jews have become victims of a
+fanaticism in which Christians from a mistaken idea of kindness have
+frequently encouraged them. In reality nothing is more cruel than to
+encourage in the minds of a nervous race the idea of persecution; true
+kindness to the Jews would consist in urging them to throw off memories
+of past martyrdom and to enter healthfully into the enjoyment of their
+present blessings, which are the direct outcome of Christian
+civilization.
+
+Let us consider what Christianity has in reality done for the Jews. If
+so much is to be said about the persecutions they have endured, what of
+the extraordinary indulgence shown them as the result of Christian
+respect for the Bible? For hundreds of years Christian school children
+have been brought up on Old Testament history and Christian
+congregations have listened sympathetically to the story of Israel's
+sufferings and hopes of final restoration. All the support lent to
+Zionism arose from this tradition. Christianity, then, so reviled by the
+Jews, has been their greatest protection. If Christianity goes, the
+whole theory that the Jews were once the Chosen People goes with it as
+far as Gentiles are concerned, and the Jewish race, divested of its halo
+of divine favour, will have to be judged on its own merits.
+
+In our own country, the Chosen People theory has in fact been carried to
+the point of superstition--a superstition immensely advantageous to the
+Jews--which consists in interpreting the passage of Scripture containing
+the promise made to Abraham, "I will bless them that bless thee, and
+curse them that curseth thee," as meaning that favour shown to the
+Jews--who form merely a fraction of the seed of Abraham--brings with it
+peculiar blessings. In reality it would be easier to show by history
+that countries and rulers who have protected the Jews have frequently
+met with disaster. France banished the Jews in 1394 and again in 1615,
+and did not readmit them in large numbers till 1715-19, so that they
+were absent throughout the most glorious period in French history--the
+_Grand Siecle_ of Louis XIV--whilst their return coincided with the
+Regency, from which moment the monarchy of France may be said to have
+declined. England likewise banished the Jews in 1290, and it was during
+the three and a half centuries they remained in exile that she was known
+as "Merrie England." The fact that their return in force in 1664 was
+followed the next year by the Great Plague and the year after by the
+Great Fire of London would not appear to indicate that the Jews
+necessarily bring good fortune to the land that protects them. The truth
+is, of course, that kindness to any portion of the human race brings its
+own reward in the form of moral improvement in the individual or nation
+that performs it, but no more benefit attaches to philanthropy when
+exercised towards the Jew than towards the Chinaman.
+
+I would urge, then, that the Jewish problem should be approached neither
+in the spirit of superstitious pro-Semitism nor in the bitter spirit of
+"anti-Semitism," but with a sanity worthy of an enlightened age. To
+quote again the words of Bernard Lazare, let us enquire what part "the
+Jew, considering his spirit, his character, the nature of his philosophy
+and his religion," may now be taking "in revolutionary processes and
+movements." Is there, then, any evidence that there exists amongst Jewry
+to-day an organized conspiracy having for its objects world-domination
+and the destruction of Christianity such as the famous _Protocols of the
+Elders of Zion_ suggest?[836]
+
+The theory of a Jewish world-conspiracy does not, of course, rest on the
+evidence of Protocols. To judge by the paeans of joy that rang through
+the press after the publication of the _Times_ articles, one would
+imagine that with the so-called "refutation" of this one document the
+whole case against the Jews had collapsed and that the "anti-Semites"
+must be for ever silenced. But the arguments of the Jews and their
+friends go further than this; not only do they claim that there is no
+Jewish conspiracy, but no world-plot of any kind. This contention they
+had indeed maintained from the beginning, and Mr. Lucien Wolf, in his
+earliest "refutation" of the Protocols, derided the exponents of the
+secret-society danger as vehemently as he derided the perfidious author
+of the Jewish Peril. It will in fact always be noticed that references
+to the Illuminati meet with almost as much resentment from the Jewish
+press as allusions of a directly "anti-Semitic" character. Barruel, who
+refused to incriminate the Jews, and de Malet, who never referred to
+them at all, are denounced by Mr. Lucien Wolf no less as scaremongers
+than Gougenot des Mousseaux or Chabauty. To suggest that any Hidden Hand
+has ever been at work in the world is to raise immediately a storm of
+Jewish protest.
+
+Yet intelligent Jews must be well aware that, whether secret societies
+have contributed as much to past revolutions as these writers believed,
+their existence and their very real influence is not a matter of surmise
+but of historical fact. No one ever warned the British public more
+distinctly of the danger they presented or of the role the Jews were
+playing in them than Disraeli, whose famous words have been quoted so
+frequently in this connexion: "The world is governed by very different
+personages from what is imagined by those who are not behind the
+scenes." What is this but a clear recognition of the Hidden Hand? Why,
+then, is Disraeli not included with Barruel, Robison, de Malet, and Des
+Mousseaux in Mr. Wolf's list of scaremongers? Is it because Disraeli
+pointed the moral that, Jews being so dangerous, they should be
+employed?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If, then, leading Jews persist in villifying everyone who reiterates the
+warnings uttered by so eminent a member of their race, it is inevitable
+that they should come to be suspected of having some interest in
+suppressing further revelations.
+
+Setting all such evidence as the Protocols completely aside, let us
+examine the reasons for believing in the exisence of a Jewish
+world-conspiracy. Now, we know for certain that the five powers before
+referred to--Grand Orient Masonry, Theosophy, Pan-Germanism,
+International Finance, and Social Revolution--have a very real existence
+and exercise a very definite influence on the affairs of the world. Here
+we are not dealing with hypothesis but with facts based on documentary
+evidence. We know in each case the names of many of the leaders, their
+methods of organization, their centres of direction, and the aims they
+are pursuing. But with regard to the Jewish power we cannot proceed with
+the same certainty. We cannot cite the names of the leaders or the
+centres of direction, we cannot produce documentary evidence as to their
+methods of organization or their final aims. The very existence of such
+a power, in the sense of a united and organized body of Jews working for
+the destruction of Christianity and the existing social system, is still
+a matter of speculation and not of known fact. Investigations into the
+activities of such groups as the B'nai B'rith, Poale Zion, the Jewish
+Bund, and the Weltverband (or Jewish International Union of Socialists),
+might however throw much light on this question. The custom of printing
+their pidgin German, known as Yiddish, in Hebrew characters provides the
+Jews with a more or less secret code by means of which their ideas and
+aspirations are concealed from the great mass of the Gentiles.
+
+Whether then the Jewish power is unified or not, Jews are to be found
+co-operating with, if not directing, all the five powers of which the
+existence is known. Thus Jews have long played a leading part in Grand
+Orient Masonry[837] and predominate in the upper degrees. As we have
+already seen, Freemasonry is always said to be subversive in Roman
+Catholic countries. It will also be noticed that in countries where
+Freemasonry is subversive, Jews are usually less conspicuous in the
+revolutionary movement than in countries where Freemasonry is either
+non-existent or constitutional. Thus in France the masonic peril is much
+more generally recognized than the Jewish peril; in Italy the Freemasons
+have been banned by Mussolini, but the Jews are not regarded by him as a
+particular danger; in Portugal it was the Freemasons rather than the
+Jews who made the recent revolutions. In Hungary, however, the
+revolutionaries were principally both Jews and Freemasons. On the other
+hand, in England, Germany, and America, where Freemasonry is not
+subversive, the Jewish question is more apparent. All this would suggest
+that either Freemasonry is the cover under which the Jews, like the
+Illuminati, prefer to work, so that where the cover is not available
+they are obliged to come out more into the open, or that Grand Orient
+Masonry is the directing power which employs Jews as agents in those
+countries where it cannot work on its own account.
+
+The preponderance of Jews in the ranks of "Aurora" has already been
+indicated, as also the influence of the Jewish Cabala in the teaching of
+Theosophy and Rosicrucianism. But it is important that the latter point
+should be further emphasized in connexion with the craze for occultism
+that is spreading through society. Ragon has said: "The Cabala is the
+key of all occult sciences"; therefore in this field of experiment the
+Gentile must always be at a disadvantage with the Jew. Indeed Mr. Waite,
+who certainly cannot be suspected of "anti-Semitism," goes so far as to
+suggest that the gift of ceremonial magic was "the answer of Jewry to
+Christendom as a counter-blast" to "centuries of persecution."[838] It
+would be well if every Gentile who has been tempted to dabble in
+occultism were to realize this source of inspiration.
+
+The role of Jews in social revolution and particularly in Bolshevism
+hardly needs comment. Yet since the Jewish press has chosen to deny this
+last and very obvious fact and still persists in setting down to
+prejudice or "anti-Semitism" a mere statement of facts, it may be well
+to quote here a few official statements on the subject which admit of no
+denial.
+
+First of all, it must be remembered that the founder and patron saint of
+Bolshevism was the Jew Karl Marx, and that it was the Anarchist Bakunin,
+not the Duke of Northumberland, who described him and his following in
+the Internationale as "the German-Jew Company" and the "red
+bureaucracy." It was therefore not surprising that when the "red
+bureaucracy," avowedly founded on the doctrines of Marx, came to be set
+up in Russia, it should have been largely led by Jews. This is what the
+official British White Paper has to say on the matter:
+
+_Extract from Report from the Netherlands Minister at Petrograd on the
+6th of September_, 1918, _forwarded by Sir M. Findlay, at Christiania,
+to Mr. Balfour_:
+
+ I consider that the immediate suppression of Bolshevism is the
+ greatest issue now before the world, not even excluding the war
+ which is still raging, and unless, as above stated, Bolshevism is
+ nipped in the bud immediately, it is bound to spread in one form or
+ another over Europe and the whole world, as it is organized and
+ worked by Jews who have no nationality, and whose one object is to
+ destroy for their own ends the existing order of things.*[839]
+
+Mr. Alston to Lord Curzon, quoting statement from British Consul at
+Ekaterinburg, January 23, 1919:
+
+ The Bolsheviks can no longer be described as a political party
+ holding extreme communistic views. They form a relatively small
+ privileged class which is able to terrorize the rest of the
+ population because it has a monopoly both of arms and of food
+ supplies. This class consists chiefly of workmen and soldiers, and
+ includes a large non-Russian element, such as Letts and Esthonians
+ and Jews; the latter are specially numerous in higher posts.
+
+Lord Kilmarnock to Lord Curzon, quoting information given by Frenchman
+from Petrograd, February 3, 1919:
+
+ The Bolsheviks comprised chiefly Jews and Germans, who were
+ exceedingly active and enterprising. The Russians were largely
+ anti-Bolshevik, but were for the most part dreamers, incapable of
+ any sustained action, who now, more than ever before, were unable
+ to throw off the yoke of their oppressors.*[839]
+
+Mr. Alston to Lord Curzon, forwarding Report from Consul at Ekaterinburg
+of February 6, 1919:
+
+ From examination of several labourer and peasant witnesses, I have
+ evidence to the effect that very smallest percentage of this
+ district were pro-Bolshevik, majority of labourers sympathizing
+ with summoning of Constituent Assembly. Witnesses further stated
+ that Bolshevik leaders did not represent Russian working classes,
+ most of them being Jews.
+
+The Rev. B.S. Lombard to Lord Curzon, March 23, 1919:
+
+ I have been for ten years in Russia, and have been in Petrograd
+ through the whole of the revolution.... [I] had ample opportunity
+ of studying Bolshevik methods. It originated in German propaganda,
+ and was, and is being, carried out by international Jews. The
+ Germans initiated disturbances in order to reduce Russia to chaos.
+ They printed masses of paper money to finance their schemes, the
+ notes, of which I possess specimens, can be easily recognized by a
+ special mark.
+
+As one of the results, the writer adds:
+
+ All business became paralysed, shops were closed, Jews became
+ possessors of most of the business houses, and horrible scenes of
+ starvation became common in the country districts.
+
+In Hungary (where, as has been said, Socialism had been propagated by
+Jews in the masonic lodges[840]) the outbreak of Bolshevism was
+conducted under the auspices of the same race. To quote again an
+official document on this question, the Report on Revolutionary
+Activities issued by a Committee of the New York Legislature, headed by
+Senator Lusk[841]:
+
+ There was no organized opposition to Bela Kun. Like Lenin, he
+ surrounded himself with commissars, having absolute authority. Of
+ the thirty-two principal commissars, twenty-five were Jews, which
+ was about the same proportion as in Russia. The most prominent of
+ these formed a directorate of five: Bela Kun, Bela Varga, Joseph
+ Pogany, Sigmund Kunfi, and one other. Other leaders were Alpari
+ and Samuely, who had charge of the Red Terror, and carried out the
+ torturing and executing of the bourgeoisie, especially the groups
+ held as hostages, the so-called counter-revolutionists and
+ peasants.[842]
+
+The same Report publishes a list of seventy-six men prosecuted by the
+Committee on the charge of criminal anarchy in America at the beginning
+of 1920, of which the overwhelming majority are seen by their names to
+be Jewish.[843]
+
+These names speak for themselves and are published without comment on
+the obvious nationality of the majority of the persons concerned. So far
+indeed does the Lusk Committee appear to have been removed from
+"anti-Semitism," that nowhere in its vast Report, running to 2008 pages,
+is attention drawn to the preponderance of Jews concerned in the
+revolutionary movement, except in the one passage on Hungary quoted
+above. The Lusk Report must therefore be regarded as an absolutely
+impartial statement of facts.
+
+In view of these official data, how is it possible for the Jewish press
+to pretend that a connexion between Jews and Bolshevism is a malicious
+invention of the "anti-Semites"? That all Jews are not Bolsheviks and
+that all Bolsheviks are not Jews is of course obvious; but that Jews are
+playing a preponderating part in Bolshevism it is absurd to deny.
+
+An attempt has been made to show that Jews have suffered as much as the
+rest of the population in Russia under Bolshevism and that the Jewish
+religion has met with the same hostility as the Christian faith.
+Doubtless many Jews have suffered in Russia, since human violence, once
+allowed to go unchecked, is liable to express itself in various
+unexpected ways, and the resentment of the Russian "proletariat" towards
+the Jews was bound to break out under Lenin as under the Tzar. Again, a
+campaign against Christianity inevitably led in Russia, as in France, to
+a campaign against all forms of religion, and the Jewish Bolsheviks,
+being atheists themselves, were doubtless as ready as Lambert of the
+French Revolution to turn against the believers in the faith they had
+abandoned.
+
+Yet that the Jewish religion suffered to the same extent as
+Christianity, or that any organized campaign was conducted against it by
+the Government, is effectually disproved by the lamentations of
+professing Jews on the death of Lenin.[844] Indeed, as is generally
+recognized, the fall of the Soviet Government must mean the downfall of
+the Jews from the position of privilege they now occupy.
+
+That in our own country Jews are playing a part in the background of
+Bolshevism is again evident. The _Patriot_ recently published a series
+of articles giving inside information on the organization of the
+revolutionary movement in Great Britain, where it was stated the whole
+plot was directed by a group of twelve men. This group in turn was
+controlled by three of its members. These three men, as the key
+revealed, were all Jews, so also was "the fiend in human form whose
+psychological perversion produced this plot,"[845] and who was one of a
+group in America consisting of four Jews and a Jewess which controlled
+an outer revolutionary group of eighteen.[846] The Irish Republican
+Brotherhood also maintained close relations with a ring of revolutionary
+Jews in America. Incidentally, it is curious to notice that the language
+employed in some of the correspondence that has passed between members
+of an inner group bears a strong resemblance to that of Weishaupt and
+his fellow-Illuminati.
+
+Jewish influence in the less extreme forms of Socialism in this country
+is no less apparent. If the Labour Party is solidly pro-German, it is
+also solidly pro-Jewish. Whilst loudly proclaiming pacifism and pressing
+for the reduction of armaments, it has never uttered a word of protest
+against the employment of British troops to defend Jewish interests
+against the Arabs in Palestine. The blessed word Mesopotamia may be
+freely mentioned in connexion with the withdrawal of troops from
+military adventures, but never the word Palestine. Again, the free
+admission of aliens and particularly of Jews into this country has
+always been one of the principal planks in the Labour platform. Even the
+Jewish capitalist meets with indulgence at the hands of our Socialist
+Intellectuals, who whilst inveighing against British owners of property,
+never include Jewish millionaires in their diatribes.
+
+This may perhaps throw some light on the question frequently propounded:
+How can one believe that Jews advocate Socialism since they stand to
+lose everything by it? The fact remains that many Jews do advocate it.
+After the recent accession of the Labour Party to office the _Jewish
+World_ observed:
+
+ The result of the General Election in England is regarded as very
+ gratifying by the Hebrew and Yiddish press. The Hebrew journals in
+ Palestine, as well as the Hebrew and Yiddish organs in Europe and
+ America, express satisfaction at the return to Parliament of men
+ who have repeatedly assured the public of their intention to adhere
+ to the Balfour declaration.[847]
+
+A further reason is advanced by the _Jewish Courier_ for rejoicing at
+the downfall of the Conservative Government, namely, that "the election
+results have wiped out anti-Semitic remnants in England," for "the
+Conservative Government does include several members who are far from
+favourably disposed towards Jews."[848] The indulgence shown to the Jews
+and the honours piled on them by Conservative statesmen therefore
+availed nothing to the Conservative cause, and the welfare of the whole
+country was subordinated to the interests of the Jews alone.
+
+It is difficult at first to understand how the programme of the "Labour"
+Party, even when combined with ardent pro-Semitism, could however be in
+accord with the interests of the Jews, who have never displayed any
+hostility towards the Capitalist system which Socialism sets out to
+destroy. Indeed, we find the same Jewish paper which rejoiced at the
+advent of the present Government to office offering birthday
+congratulations to the richest Jew in this country, whose wealth, it
+goes on to observe with some complacency, "amounts to no less than
+L12,000,000 sterling, and is constantly increasing, apart from the
+interest that it brings, by the huge profits of the concerns in which he
+is interested."[849]
+
+It would seem, then, that in the eyes of Jewry all capitalists are not
+to be regarded as monsters who should be mercilessly expropriated.
+
+But in considering the war on Capitalism it is essential to bear
+in mind that capitalists are of two kinds: national industrial
+capitalists--largely Gentiles and usually men of brains and energy who
+have built up flourishing businesses--and international loan-mongering
+capitalists, principally, though not exclusively, Jews, who live by
+speculation. Whilst to the former, social unrest may prove fatal, to the
+latter any disturbances may provide opportunities for profit. As M.
+Georges Batault has well expressed it:
+
+ From the strictly financial point of view, the most disastrous
+ events of history, wars or revolutions, never represent
+ catastrophes; the manipulators of money and the wary business men
+ can make profit out of everything, provided they know beforehand
+ and are well-informed.... It is certain that the Jews dispersed
+ over all the surface of the earth ... are particularly favourably
+ situated in this respect.[850]
+
+It is significant to notice that the capitalists most attacked by the
+Socialists and Pacifists are not those who make profit out of wars and
+revolutions, but those who contribute to the prosperity of the country
+and provide work for millions of people. Here, then, the Jews and the
+Socialists seem to find a point of agreement. It is evident, at any
+rate, that many rich Jews consider that they have nothing to fear from
+the threatened Capital Levy and other features of expropriation. Are we
+not irresistibly reminded of the passage in the Protocols--where
+incidentally the Capital Levy is specifically mentioned--"Ours they will
+not touch, because the moment of attack will be known to us and we shall
+take measures to protect our own"?
+
+But let us consider further how the Socialist plan for "the
+nationalization of all the means of production, distribution, and
+exchange" might be reconciled even with the interests of Jewish
+Industrial Capitalists. The more we examine this magic formula which is
+to transform the world into a Paradise for the workers, the more we
+shall see that it approximates to the system of Super Capitalism, of
+which, as Werner Sombart has shown, the Jews were the principal
+inaugurators. Socialists are fond of explaining that "Capitalism" began
+with the introduction of steam; in reality, of course, Capitalism, in
+the sense of wealth accumulated in private hands, has always existed
+since the first savage made his store of winter food. What Socialists
+really mean by Capitalism is the modern system of Industrialism, which
+tends to concentrate all the means of production and distribution in the
+hands of individuals or groups, who, if they happen to be unscrupulous,
+are able by systematic sweating of the worker and bleeding of the
+consumer to conduct operations on so large a scale as to crush all
+competition by the home worker or the small tradesman.
+
+Obviously, however, with the growing demand of the workers for better
+conditions of life and the increasing support lent to them by
+enlightened public opinion this possibility cannot continue
+indefinitely, and unless a violent convulsion takes place the time will
+come when great industrial magnates will have to content themselves with
+moderate profits on their outlay. Thus although at first sight it might
+appear that the Super-Capitalist must desire to maintain the existing
+order of things, if he is far-seeing he must realize that profiteering
+under present conditions must soon cease.
+
+It is therefore conceivable that even the Jewish Industrial Capitalist
+may see in the nationalization of industry a preferable alternative to
+the limitation of profits under private enterprise. The same financial
+acumen and skill in management which has enabled him to control rings
+and trusts in the past would ensure him a place at the head of
+nationalized industries, which in effect would be nothing but gigantic
+trusts nominally under State control but really, like all State
+enterprises, in the hands of a few men. Under Socialism the position of
+these trusts would be rendered impregnable. For whilst under the present
+system any individual or group may set out to break a trust, no such
+competition would be possible in a State where private enterprise had
+been made illegal. The men in control of nationalized industries would
+therefore be able to exercise absolute authority both over the worker
+and the consumer. Further, if the worker can be persuaded to accept the
+ultimate scheme of Communism, which is compulsory labour in return for
+no monetary remuneration, but merely a daily ration of food and the
+other necessaries of life whenever State officials decide that he
+requires them, the directors of Labour, like the overseers in a slave
+plantation, will be able, as in Russia, to impose any conditions they
+please.
+
+The Jews may well hope to occupy these posts, not only because of their
+aptitude for organization on so large a scale, but because their
+international relations would facilitate the sale or barter of goods
+between countries. The cohesion which exists amongst them would speedily
+lead to the monopolization of all the higher posts by members of their
+race.
+
+It is idle to dismiss such a possibility as a chimera. This is what
+happened in Russia and is happening in Germany to-day. Here, then, we
+may find perhaps the inner meaning of a remark attributed to a
+prominent member of the Labour Party, that under Socialism a certain
+well-known Jewish capitalist might well be worth L10,000 a year. Lenin
+expressed much the same idea when he said that the Russian Soviet
+Republic might require a thousand first-class specialists "to direct the
+work of the people," and that "these greatest 'stars' must be paid
+25,000 roubles each," or even four times that sum, supposing it were
+necessary to employ foreign specialists for the purpose.[851]
+
+But the Jewish capitalists doubtless see further that in England, as in
+Russia, this condition of things would be merely a temporary phase, and
+that the institution of Socialism by dispossessing the present Gentile
+owners of wealth and property would pave the way for a Jewish and German
+plutocracy. In Russia wealth has not been altogether destroyed; it has
+simply changed hands, and a class of new rich has sprung up which meets
+with no hostility from the professed advocates of equality. Those Jews
+who see in the Christian Intelligentsia the main obstacle to their dream
+of world-power, therefore naturally find in the promoters of
+class-warfare their most valuable allies. For the Christian
+Intelligentsia is the sole bare to the enslavement of the proletariat;
+most of the movements to redress the wrongs of the workers, from Lord
+Shaftesbury's onwards, have arisen not amongst the workers themselves,
+but amongst the upper or middle classes[852]; once these were swept away
+an iron bureaucracy would have the workers at their mercy. I do not say
+this is the plan, but I do say that such a hypothesis provides a reason
+for the otherwise unaccountable indulgence displayed by Socialists
+everywhere towards wealthy Jews and at the same time for the huge funds
+the Socialists appear to have at their disposal.
+
+If big financiers are not at their back, I repeat: where does all the
+money come from? It seems unlikely that it can be derived from the
+British owners of wealth and property whom the Socialists are openly out
+to dispossess; the only body of financiers which can therefore be
+suspected of contributing towards this end is the body known as
+"International Finance," which is mainly, though not exclusively,
+Jewish.
+
+The influence of the Jews in all the five great powers at work in the
+world--Grand Orient Masonry, Theosophy, Pan-Germanism, International
+Finance, and Social Revolution--is not a matter of surmise but of fact.
+Let us now examine what part they are playing in the minor subversive
+movements enumerated in an earlier chapter.
+
+Freud, the inventor of the most dangerous form of Psycho-Analysis, is a
+Jew. In this connexion the eminent American neuro-psychiatrist before
+quoted writes:
+
+ Not only the Freud theory of psycho-analysis but a considerable
+ quantity of pseudo-scientific propaganda of that type has for years
+ been emanating from a group of German Jews who live and have their
+ headquarters in Vienna. From its inception, psycho-analysis has
+ been in Jewish hands. There are not half a dozen physicians in the
+ whole world, recognized as authorities in this field, whose names
+ are identified with this movement who are not Jews. This may have
+ been an accident, but nevertheless it is a fact.[853]
+
+I have already referred in an earlier chapter to the question of
+degenerate art defined in a circular to the _New York Herald_ as "the
+deification of ugliness."[854] The originators of this cult are here
+described as a group of Satan worshippers in Paris, and the dealers by
+whom the movement was propagated as "Germans," but we note amongst the
+lenders to the exhibition at which these "works of art" were displayed
+several Jewish names. Of one well-known Jewish artist a critic has
+written:
+
+ Were these works the product of a man who had imperfect control
+ over his material, who, in stumbling towards the light, dwelt
+ inevitably upon much darkness, who sought for beauty and found
+ ugliness, who looked for purity and found filth--even then one
+ might be silent and hope for better things to come. But here,
+ apparently, unless my whole reading is ludicrously wrong, he
+ delights in deformity and glories in degradation.... He brings to
+ the world of art a new gospel, a black gospel, a gospel in which
+ everything is to be inverted and distorted. Whatsoever things are
+ hideous, whatsoever things are of evil report, whatsoever things
+ are sordid: if there be any unhealthiness or any degradation: think
+ on these things.
+
+What better resume could be given of that tendency to perversion
+denounced by the prophet Isaiah in the words: "Woe unto them that call
+evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for
+darkness"? An organ of the Jewish press, with that sense of solidarity
+which always rallies Jews to the defence of their compatriots however
+culpable, immediately detects in the critic's expression of opinion the
+insidious work of "anti-Semitism." A more enlightened Jew, Mr. Frank L.
+Emanuel, however, having come to the support of the Gentile critic, the
+Jewish journal is obliged to admit the justice of his contention that
+"it is lamentable to think of the undue proportion of young Jews" who
+"have joined the Revolutionary or sham 'Modern Art' movement in this
+country."
+
+The same influence will be noticed in the cinema world, where, as has
+already been pointed out, history is systematically falsified in the
+interests of class hatred, and everything that can tend, whilst keeping
+within the present law, to undermine patriotism or morality is pressed
+upon the public. And the cinema trade is almost entirely in the hands of
+the Jews.
+
+In the drug traffic Jews are playing a prominent part both here and in
+America. An eminent New York doctor writes to me as follows:
+
+ Members of the Federal narcotic squad attached to the Treasury
+ Department and having the function of enforcing the provisions of
+ the Harrison Act have long been convinced that there is a direct
+ relationship between Radicalism and narcotism. From seven to ten
+ years ago this was thought to be a manifestation of pan-German
+ propaganda. Activity was and still is greater on the part of the
+ distributors and pedlars than is to be accounted for by the large
+ profits, according to their story. Curiously enough, the traffic
+ largely stopped for several weeks following the signing of the
+ Armistice.
+
+ In one instance, seven regularly licensed physicians of the "East
+ Side," all Jews, were arrested in succession during the summer of
+ 1920 for illegitimate use of narcotic prescriptions, and every
+ office raided had large quantities of Radical literature. Such
+ associations are not uncommon.
+
+ As to the distribution, a recent investigation by _Hearst's
+ Magazine_ definitely revealed the fact that the illegitimate
+ distributors were almost invariably of the Jewish race, and that
+ the pedlars were exclusively Jewish and Italian.
+
+Enough, then, has been said to show that, whether as agents or as
+principals, Jews are playing a part in all subversive movements. A
+Christian Jew, no renegade to his race but deeply concerned for their
+future development, said recently to the present writer: "The growing
+materialism amongst Jews has made them the most destructive force in the
+world. The only hope for them is to accept Christianity. At present
+they are the greatest danger that Christian civilization has to face."
+
+The recognition of all these facts does not of course imply the belief
+that all Jews are destructive. Undoubtedly there are good and loyal
+Jews--particularly in France, where the Sephardim predominate--who have
+absolutely identified themselves with the country of their adoption, and
+are sincerely opposed to Bolshevism. But these isolated individuals
+carry little weight compared to the massed forces of subversive Jewry.
+The same thing was observed in America, where a report privately
+communicated to the present writer in 1923 stated:
+
+ It appears not without significance that Radical literature is
+ never anti-Semitic, but, on the contrary, manifestoes issued by the
+ Executive Committee of the Communist Party are often emphatically
+ pro-Jewish. So far as I know, there is not one exclusively Jewish
+ organization in the United States which is openly and consistently
+ fighting Radicalism. Conservative Judaism loyal to the United
+ States and its institutions as conceived by its founders is
+ unorganized and inarticulate.
+
+When, therefore, the Jewish press protests at the injustice of
+associating Jews with Bolshevism it may be legitimately answered: What
+has Jewry done collectively to disassociate itself from Bolshevism?[855]
+What official protests has the Jewish press uttered against any
+subversive movement except when Jewish interests were threatened?[856]
+Has it not, on the contrary, denounced all patriotic efforts to oppose
+the forces of destruction whenever such efforts necessitated the
+exposure of the corrupt elements in Jewry?
+
+But these tactics have not been confined to the Jewish press alone. The
+general press of this country, over which the Jews exercise an
+increasing control, has followed the same policy. This process of
+penetration began long ago on the Continent. As early as 1846 an English
+missionary to the Jews in Berlin wrote:
+
+ Independently of the fifteen exclusively Jewish journals of
+ Germany, four of which have made their appearance since the
+ beginning of the present year, the daily political press of Europe
+ is very much under the dominion of the Jews; as literary
+ contributors, they influence almost every leading Continental
+ newspaper, and as controversy seems to be their native air, and
+ they bring into the field mental energies of no ordinary stamp,
+ they find no lack of employment, and if any literary opponent
+ ventures to endeavour to arrest the progress of Judaism to
+ political power, he finds himself held up to public notice, and
+ exposed to attack after attack in most of the leading journals of
+ Europe. Such ... was the lot of a Roman Catholic priest of Prague,
+ who lately wrote a pamphlet entitled _Guter Rath fur Zeit der
+ Noth_, directed against the advancing power of Judaism. And such is
+ my conviction of the extent of the participation the Jews take in
+ the everyday literature of Germany, that I never pass by a crowded
+ reading-room, but what I think I see standing behind the scenes a
+ Jew, causing new ideas to rise and stir, and develop themselves in
+ the unsuspecting mind of the Gentile.[857]
+
+Do we not see the same methods being pursued with still greater vigour
+to-day? It would not be an exaggeration to say that there is hardly a
+periodical in this country with the exception of _The Patriot_ that
+dares to speak out freely on questions in which the interests of Jews
+are involved.
+
+The fact is that the whole educational as well as the whole political
+and social world is permeated with Jewish influence. Every man in public
+life, every modern politician, to whatever party he belongs, seems to
+find it _de rigueur_ to have his confidential Jewish adviser at his
+elbow, just as in the Middle Ages a prince had his Jewish doctor always
+at hand to mix his potions and ensure him long life. This appears to be
+owing not only to the utility of the Jew in financing projects, but to
+the almost universal belief in the superior intelligence of the Jewish
+race which the Jew has succeeded in implanting in the Gentile mind.
+
+But the time has come to ask: Is the Jew really the super-man we have
+been taught to consider him? On examination we shall find that in the
+present as in the past his talents are displayed principally along two
+lines--financial and occult. Usurers in the Middle Ages, financiers
+to-day, the Jews have always excelled in the making and manipulating of
+wealth. And just as at the former period they were the great masters of
+magic, so at the present time they are the masters of the almost
+magical art of gaining control over the mind both of the individual and
+of the public.
+
+Yet in the realms of literature, philosophy, painting, sculpture,
+politics, and even science, Jews will be found frequently occupying the
+second or third ranks, and only very seldom the first. Heine may be
+cited as a poet of the first order, Spinoza as a philosopher, Disraeli
+as a statesman, but it would be difficult to prolong the list. On the
+stage and in music alone can the Jews be said to have proved absolutely
+the equals of their Gentile competitors. The fact is that the Jew is not
+usually a man of vast conceptions, nor is he endowed with great
+originality of mind; his skill consists rather in elaborating or in
+adapting other men's ideas and rendering them more effectual. Thus the
+most important inventions of modern times have not been made by Jews,
+but have been frequently improved by them. Neither James Watt,
+Stephenson, Marconi, Edison, Pasteur, nor Madame Curie were of the
+Jewish race, and the same might be said of nearly all the greatest men
+who have lived since the dawn of our civilization. Napoleon was not a
+Jew, nor was Shakespeare, nor Bacon, nor Sir Isaac Newton, nor Michael
+Angelo, nor Leonardo da Vinci, nor Galileo, nor Dante, nor Descartes,
+nor Moliere, nor Emerson, nor Abraham Lincoln, nor Goethe, nor Kant, nor
+even Machiavelli. Thrown on their own resources, what civilization were
+the Jews able to create? Whilst Egypt, Greece, and Rome have left
+immortal monuments, what monuments has Palestine bequeathed to the
+world?[858]
+
+The Jews, then, provide a high average of cleverness, but have they ever
+during the last two thousand years produced one mighty genius? Moreover,
+against this high average of intelligence must be set an equally high
+average of mental derangement. On this point we have the evidence of the
+_Jewish Encyclopaedia_:
+
+ The Jews are more subject to diseases of the nervous system than
+ the other races and peoples among which they dwell. Hysteria and
+ neurasthenia appear to be most frequent. Some physicians of large
+ experience among Jews have even gone so far as to state that most
+ of them are neurasthenic and hysterical. Tobler claims that all
+ the Jewish women in Palestine are hysterical; and Raymond says that
+ in Warsaw, Poland, hysteria is very frequently met with among both
+ Jewish men and Jewish women. The Jewish population of that city
+ alone is almost exclusively the inexhaustible source for the supply
+ of hysterical males for the clinics of the whole Continent
+ (_L'Etude des Maladies du Systeme Nerveux en Russie_). As regards
+ Austria and Germany, the same neurotic taint of the Jews has been
+ emphasized by Krafft, Ebbing, etc.... In New York it has been shown
+ by Collins that among 333 cases of neurasthenia which came under
+ his observation, more than 40 per cent, were of Jewish extraction,
+ etc.[859]
+
+The same American neuro-psychiatrist already quoted attributes the
+predominance of Jews in the revolutionary movement in America largely to
+this cause:
+
+ Anarchists have been developed largely from the criminal classes,
+ and a belief in anarchy, _per se_, is a psychopathic manifestation.
+ A student of anarchy, therefore, would not only be obliged to cover
+ the field of criminology, but its more significant and important
+ background, psycho-pathology. Some anarchists are actually insane,
+ while others show marked psychological deficiencies. Under our laws
+ as they are now framed, they cannot be restrained unless they
+ commit acts of violence.
+
+ As it is, our asylums are filled with this class, and that
+ introduces another phase of the matter. Our asylum insane are
+ largely recruited from the Jewish race, at least recruited in
+ tremendous disproportion to their number in the population. The
+ fact that the revolutionary movement is so largely made up of
+ Jewish elements furnishes an interesting confirmation of what I
+ have said.
+
+The _Jewish World_, recently commenting on the "generally admitted" fact
+that "the percentage of mental disorders among Jews is much greater than
+among non-Jews," asks: "Is the cause inherent, that is to say, is there
+a racial disposition towards degeneracy, or is it the result of the
+external conditions and causes?" The writer goes on to refer to an
+article in the _Zukunft_ which supports the view that the terrible
+experiences of the Jews in the Middle Ages have affected their nervous
+system, and therefore that the cause of mental derangement amongst them
+"is not due to racial disposition, is not an ethnic principle, but is the
+result of the tragic lot of the Jewish people."[860] It might perhaps
+be traced more surely to the habit of brooding on that tragic lot. At
+any rate, it is curious to notice that the two symptoms recognized in
+the first stages of "general paralysis of the insane," the mania that
+one is the object of persecution and "exalted ideas" (known in France as
+the _folie des grandeurs_), are the two obsessions that the Talmud and
+the Cabala with their dreams of world-domination under an avenging
+Messiah have inculcated in the mind of the Jew.
+
+But whatever are the causes of this neurosis, it is surely undesirable
+that a race which exhibits it should be allowed to control the destinies
+of the British Empire or indeed of any country. If "all the Jewish women
+in Palestine are hysterical," presumably many of their menkind suffer
+from the same disability, which certainly does not promise well for the
+luckless Arab who is to live beneath their sway. How much of the trouble
+that has occurred already in Palestine may be attributed to this cause
+it is impossible to know. The increasing number of Jews in positions of
+authority in England presents, however, a far greater subject for alarm.
+Jews and Arabs are at any rate both Semites and may be expected to have
+certain ideas in common, but to place a highly civilized Aryan race
+under Semitic control is another matter. The time has come for every
+Briton to ask himself whether he seriously desires to see the traditions
+of his country, those great traditions of honour, integrity, and justice
+which have made the name of England great, replaced by Oriental
+standards. I do not say that there are no honourable and upright Jews,
+but I do maintain that the spirit of fair play which is the essence of
+the British character is not the characteristic of the Jewish race in
+general. The complete absence of this spirit shown in the attempts of
+agitators to suppress free speech during elections cannot be attributed
+to English working-men--whose "sporting" instinct is highly
+developed--and testifies to the alien character of the so-called Labour
+movement. If England loses the spirit of fair play, she will have lost
+her most priceless national heritage.
+
+Conservatism, which has always stood for these great traditions, allows
+itself to be hypnotized by the memory of Disraeli and accepts his dictum
+that "the natural tendency of the Jews is to Conservatism"--hence the
+advisability of placing Jews in control of its interests. The late Mr.
+Hyndman saw further when he warned us that "those who are accustomed to
+look upon all Jews as essentially practical and conservative, as
+certain, too, to enlist on the side of the prevailing social system,
+will be obliged to reconsider their conclusions."[861] The causes of
+the recent _debacle_ of the Conservative Government are still obscure,
+but the fact remains that it was precisely at a moment when Conservative
+organization had passed largely into Jewish hands that Conservatism met
+with the most astounding disaster in the whole of its history. If the
+manner in which Conservative propaganda was conducted at this moment was
+an example of Jewish efficiency, it might be well to consider whether on
+a future occasion the task should not be confided into the hands of
+simple Britons.
+
+_The only effectual way of combating Socialism is to show up the alien
+influences behind it_. As long as the working man believes it to be the
+outcome of a genuine British labour movement, he will turn a deaf ear to
+all warnings and anti-Socialist propaganda will merely serve to drive
+more recruits into the Socialist camp. But let him once suspect that he
+is being made the tool of foreign intrigue, and all his national feeling
+will assert itself. We have only to ask him whether he wants his work
+taken from him by the import of alien goods, his housing accommodation
+appropriated by alien immigrants, finally to make him understand who are
+the people behind the scenes advocating a policy so disastrous to his
+true interests, in order to gain his support. The Secret Service has
+overwhelming evidence on this last point, which under a Conservative
+Government might have been made public, but unseen influences in high
+places have ordained its suppression. The slogan "Britain for the
+Britons," that would form the strongest counterblast to the false
+slogans of Socialism, has been barred from Conservative platforms and
+the very word "alien" avoided lest it should offend Jewish
+susceptibilities. Thus out of deference to the Jews, Conservatism allows
+its most powerful weapon to rust in its armoury.
+
+In reality these tactics avail nothing to the Conservative cause. The
+great weight of Jewry will never be thrown into the scale of true
+Conservatism; only in so far as Conservatism abandons its patriotic
+traditions and compromises with the forces of Internationalism will it
+win any considerable Jewish support. We have but to follow the
+commitments on current politics in the Jewish press in order to realize
+that the only standard by which the Jews judge of any political party is
+the measure in which it will confer exclusive advantages on their own
+race. The Jewish question, therefore, does not turn on whether the Jews
+shall be accorded everywhere equal rights with the rest of mankind, but
+whether they shall be placed above the law, whether they shall be
+allowed to occupy everywhere a privileged position.[862] Nothing less
+will satisfy them, and any attempt to oppose this claim will always be
+met by them with the cry of "persecution." Further, this position of
+privilege represents to a section of Jewry merely a stage on the road to
+world-domination. For if, as we have seen by documentary evidence, this
+plan has always existed in the past, is it likely that it has been
+abandoned at the very moment which seems most propitious for its
+realization? The trend of present events and the tone of the Jewish
+press certainly do not warrant any such conclusion.
+
+To sum up, then, I do not think that the Jews can be proved to provide
+the sole cause of world-unrest. In order to establish this contention we
+should be obliged to show the Jews to have been the authors of every
+past social convulsion in the history of modern civilization, to
+discover their influence behind the heretical sects of Islam, as behind
+the Bavarian Illuminati and the Anarchists of Russia. In the absence of
+any such conclusive evidence we must therefore recognize the existence
+of other destructive forces at work in the world.
+
+But this is not to underrate the importance of the Jewish peril.
+Although the existence of an inner circle of Masonic "Elders" remains
+problematical, Jewry in itself constitutes the most effectual
+Freemasonry in the world. What need of initiations, or oaths, or signs,
+or passwords amongst people who perfectly understand each other and are
+everywhere working for the same end? Far more potent than the sign of
+distress that summons Freemasons to each other's aid at moments of peril
+is the call of the blood that rallies the most divergent elements in
+Jewry to the defence of the Jewish cause.
+
+The old complaint of the French merchants already quoted would thus
+appear to be justified, that "the Jews are particles of quicksilver,
+which at the least slant run together into a block." One must therefore
+not be deceived by the fact that they often appear disunited. There may
+be, and indeed is, very little unity amongst Jews, but there is immense
+solidarity. A Jew named Morel, referring to the persecution of the
+converted Rabbi Drach by the Jews, observes:
+
+ What can the wisest measures of the authorities of all countries do
+ against _the vast and permanent conspiracy of a people_ which, like
+ a network as vast as it is strong, stretched over the whole globe,
+ brings its force to bear wherever an event occurs that interests
+ the name of Israelite?[863]
+
+It is this solidarity that constitutes the real Jewish Peril and at the
+same time provides the real cause of "anti-Semitism." If in a world
+where all patriotism, all national traditions, and all Christian virtues
+are being systematically destroyed by the doctrines of International
+Socialism one race alone, a race that since time immemorial has
+cherished the dream of world-power, is not only allowed but encouraged
+to consolidate itself, to maintain all its national traditions, and to
+fulfil all its national aspirations at the expense of other races, it is
+evident that Christian civilization must be eventually obliterated. The
+wave of anti-Jewish feeling that during the last few years has been
+passing over this country has nothing in common with the racial hatred
+that inspires the "anti-Semitism" of Germany; it is simply the answer to
+a pretension that liberty-loving Britons will not admit. Those of us
+who, sacrificing popularity and monetary gain, dare to speak out on this
+question have no hatred in our hearts, but only love for our country. We
+believe that not only our national security but our great national
+traditions are at stake, and that unless England awakens in time she
+will pass under alien domination and her influence as the stronghold of
+Christian civilization will be lost to the world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+
+We have now followed the course of associations working throughout
+nineteen centuries to undermine social and moral order and above all
+Christian civilization. We have also seen that although on the one hand
+the unholy spirit of destruction and on the other the natural spirit of
+revolt against oppression have always existed independently of any
+organization, it is to secret societies using and organizing these
+forces that the revolutionary movement has owed its success. Further, we
+have considered the possibility that behind both open and secret
+subversive societies there may exist a hidden centre of direction, and
+finally we have observed that at the present time many lines of
+investigation reveal a connexion between these groups and the Grand
+Orient, or rather with an invisible circle concealed behind that great
+masonic power. At the same time this circle is clearly not French in
+character since everywhere the activities of World Revolution are
+directed against France and England but seldom against Germany and never
+against the Jews. It would not be an exaggeration to say that no
+subversive movement in the world to-day is either pro-French,
+pro-British, or "anti-Semitic." We must conclude then that if one Power
+controls the rest it is either the Pan-German Power, the Jewish Power or
+what we can only call Illuminism.
+
+This last hypothesis is one that deserves serious consideration. In the
+light of our present knowledge it does not appear impossible that if an
+inner circle of World Revolution exists it consists of a purely
+International group of men whose aim is that of Weishaupt--the
+destruction of the present system of society. That such an aim can be
+seriously entertained is shown by the fact that it is openly proclaimed
+by a whole school of writers and thinkers ranging from gentle Idealists
+to ferocious Anarchists who, whilst widely differing as to methods and
+the ultimate ends to be attained, are agreed on the common purpose
+expressed by Rabaud de Saint-Etienne in the words: "Everything, yes,
+everything must be destroyed, since everything must be re-made."
+
+It is idle to say that so insane a project can present no danger to the
+world; the fact remains that an increasing number of people regard it
+with perfect equanimity. The phrase: "All civilizations have passed
+away; ours will doubtless pass away likewise," is continually to be
+heard on the lips of apparently sane men and women who, whether they
+advocate such an eventuality or not, seem prepared to accept it in a
+spirit of complete fatalism and to put up no resistance. The point they
+ignore is that when civilization existed only in isolated spots on the
+earth's surface it might pass away in one spot only to spring to life in
+another, but now that civilization is world-wide the dream of a return to
+nature and the joys of savagery conjured up by Rousseau and Weishaupt
+can never be realized. Yet if civilization in a material sense cannot be
+destroyed, it is none the less possible to take the soul out of it, to
+reduce it to a dead and heartless machine without human feelings or
+divine aspirations. The Bolsheviks continue to exist amidst telephones,
+electric light, and other amenities of modern life, but they have almost
+killed the soul of Russia. In this sense then civilization may pass
+away, not as the civilizations of the ancient world passed away, leaving
+only desert sands and crumbling ruins behind them, but vanishing
+imperceptibly from beneath the outward structure of our existing
+institutions. Here is the final goal of world revolution.
+
+If, then, one inner circle exists, composed of Illuminati animated by a
+purely destructive purpose it is conceivable that they might find
+support in those Germans who desire to disintegrate the countries of the
+Allies with a view to future conquests, and in those Jews who hope to
+establish their empire on the ruins of Christian civilization--hence the
+superb organization and the immense financial resources at the disposal
+of the world revolutionaries. On the other hand it may be that the
+hidden centre of direction consists in a circle of Jews located in the
+background of the Grand Orient, or perhaps, like the early
+nineteenth-century Illuminati, located nowhere but working in accord and
+using both Pan-Germans and Gentile Illuminati as their tools.
+
+On this point I think it would be dangerous at present to dogmatize. But
+that the problem is capable of elucidation I have no doubt whatever. If
+the Secret Services of the world had chosen to co-ordinate and make
+public the facts in their possession the whole plot might long since
+have been laid bare. A "Department for the Investigation of Subversive
+Movements" should have had a place in every ordered government. This
+might have been created by the recent Conservative Government in
+England, but the same mysterious influence that protected the enemy
+during the Great War has throughout prevented disclosures that would
+have enlightened the country on the real nature of the peril confronting
+it. In the present state of European politics the only course open to
+those who would save civilization is to act independently of
+governments, and form a counter-organization in each country with
+unofficial bureaux of information maintaining relations with each other,
+yet each retaining its national character.
+
+As far as this country is concerned I am convinced that only a great
+national movement can save us from destruction--a movement in which men
+of all classes and above all of the working-class will take part.
+Fascismo triumphed in Italy, because it was not, as it has been absurdly
+represented, a reactionary movement, but because it was essentially
+democratic and progressive, because by appealing to the noblest
+instincts in human nature, to patriotism and self-sacrifice, it rallied
+all elements in a disorganized and disunited nation around the standard
+of a common cause.
+
+One cannot bring about any great movement without first kindling a
+sacred fire in the hearts of men; one cannot move masses of people
+merely by appealing to self-interest; they must have a cause to fight
+for, a cause that is not entirely their own. Socialism, whilst enlisting
+a large proportion of its following by appealing to their baser
+instincts, has nevertheless, by its false ideals and promises, been able
+to kindle a fire in many generous hearts, and to persuade deluded
+enthusiasts that they are working for the welfare of humanity. The only
+way to combat Socialism is to create counter enthusiasm for a true
+ideal.
+
+Yet even Mussolini found that a purely secular ideal was not enough, and
+that the spirit of religious fervour was necessary to defeat the spirit
+of materialism and destruction. For behind the concrete forces of
+revolution--whether Pan-German, Judaic, or Illuminist--beyond that
+invisible secret circle which perhaps directs them all, is there not yet
+another force, still more potent, that must be taken into account? In
+looking back over the centuries at the dark episodes that have marked
+the history of the human race from its earliest origins--strange and
+horrible cults, waves of witchcraft, blasphemies, and desecrations--how
+is it possible to ignore the existence of an Occult Power at work in the
+world? Individuals, sects, or races fired with the desire of
+world-domination, have provided the fighting forces of destruction, but
+behind them are the veritable powers of darkness in eternal conflict
+with the powers of light.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+
+
+I
+
+JEWISH EVIDENCE ON THE TALMUD
+
+
+The denunciation of the Talmud by the Jew Pfefferkorn in 1509 and the
+ex-Rabbi Drach in 1844 have been quoted in the course of this book.
+Graetz however, in his _History of the Jews_, quotes an earlier incident
+of this kind.[864] In the thirteenth century a converted Jew and former
+Talmudist Donin who, on his baptism, assumed the name of Nicholas,
+presented himself before the Pope, Gregory IX, "and brought charges
+against the Talmud, saying that it distorted the words of Holy Writ, and
+in the Agadic portions of it there were to be found disgraceful
+representations of God," that it contained many gross errors and
+absurdities, further that "it was filled with abuse against the founder
+of the Christian religion and the Virgin. Donin demonstrated that it was
+the Talmud which prevented the Jews from accepting Christianity, and
+that without it they would certainly have abandoned their state of
+unbelief." Again "he stated that the Talmudical writings taught it was a
+meritorious action to kill the best man among the Christians[865] ...
+that it was lawful to deceive a Christian without any scruple; that it
+was permitted to Jews to break a promise made on oath." These Graetz
+describes as lying charges.
+
+The Jews were accordingly ordered by the Pope to hand over all their
+copies of the Talmud to the Dominicans and Franciscans for examination,
+and if their judgment should corroborate the charges of Nicholas Donin,
+they were to burn the volumes of the Talmud (June 9, 1239).
+
+In France Graetz goes on to relate that "the priest-ridden and
+weak-minded Louis IX"--that is to say, Saint Louis--pursued the same
+course. "The Talmud was put on its trial. Four distinguished Rabbis of
+North France were commanded by the King to hold a public disputation
+with Nicholas, either to refute the imputations levelled against the
+Talmud, or to make confession of the abuse against Christianity and the
+blasphemies against God that it contained."
+
+It is impossible to imagine a fairer decision, and the queen-mother,
+Blanche de Castille, was careful to assure the first witness summoned
+that if the lives of the Rabbis were in danger she would protect them
+and that he was only required to answer the questions that would be
+asked of him. Now, there would have been nothing simpler than for the
+Rabbis to admit honestly that these offensive passages existed, that
+they had been written perhaps in moments of passion in a less
+enlightened age, that they recognized the indelicacy of insulting the
+religion of the country in which they lived, and that therefore such
+passages should henceforth be deleted. But instead of adopting this
+straightforward course, which might have put an end for ever to attacks
+on the book they held sacred, the Rabbis proceeded to deny the existence
+of the "alleged blasphemous and immoral expressions" and to declare that
+"the odious facts related in the Talmud concerning a Jesus, the son of
+Pantheras, had no reference to Jesus of Nazareth, but to one of a
+similar name who had lived long before him." Graetz, who admits that
+this was an error and that the passages in question did relate to the
+Jesus of the Christians, represents the Rabbis as being merely "misled"
+on the question. But the King, who was not misled by the Rabbis, ordered
+all copies of the Talmud to be burnt, and in June 1242 these were
+committed to the flames.[866]
+
+The Talmud, however, continued to exist, and it was not until 1640 that,
+as we have already seen, the offending passages against Christ were
+expunged by the Rabbis as a measure of expediency. Now that they have
+been replaced, no further attempt is made to deny that they refer to the
+founder of Christianity. As far as I am aware they are not included in
+any English translation of the Talmud, but may be found in an English
+version of Dr. Gustav H. Dalman's book, _Jesus Christus im Talmud_
+(1891).
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE "PROTOCOLS" OF THE ELDERS OF ZION
+
+
+Contrary to the assertions of certain writers, I have never affirmed my
+belief in the authenticity of the Protocols, but have always treated it
+as an entirely open question.[867] The only opinion to which I have
+committed myself is that, whether genuine or not, the Protocols do
+represent the programme of world revolution, and that in view of their
+prophetic nature and of their extraordinary resemblance to the protocols
+of certain secret societies in the past, they were either the work of
+some such society or of someone profoundly versed in the lore of secret
+societies who was able to reproduce their ideas and phraseology.
+
+The so-called refutation of the Protocols which appeared in the _Times_
+of August 1922, tends to confirm this opinion. According to these
+articles the Protocols were largely copied from the book of Maurice
+Joly, _Dialogues aux Enfers entre Machiavel et Montesquieu_, published
+in 1864. Let it be said at once that the resemblance between the two
+works could not be accidental, not only are whole paragraphs almost
+identical, but the various points in the programme follow each other in
+precisely the same order. But whether Nilus copied from Joly or _from
+the same source whence Joly derived his ideas_ is another question. It
+will be noticed that Joly in his preface never claimed to have
+originated the scheme described in his book; on the contrary he
+distinctly states that it "personifies in particular a political system
+which has not varied for a single day in its application since the
+disastrous and alas! too far-off date of its enthronement." Could this
+refer only to the government of Napoleon III, established twelve years
+earlier? Or might it not be taken to signify a Machiavellian system of
+government of which Napoleon III was suspected by Joly at this moment of
+being the exponent? We have already seen that this system is said by M.
+de Mazeres, in his book _De Machiavel et de l'influence de sa doctrine
+sur les opinions, les moeurs et la politique de la France pendant la
+Revolution_, published in 1816, to have been inaugurated by the French
+Revolution, and to have been carried on by Napoleon I against whom he
+brings precisely the same accusations of Machiavellism that Joly brings
+against Napoleon III. "The author of _The Prince_," he writes, "was
+always his guide," and he goes on to describe the "parrot cries placed
+in the mouths of the people," the "hired writers, salaried newspapers,
+mercenary poets and corrupt ministers employed to mislead our vanity
+methodically"--all this being carried on by "the scholars of Machiavelli
+under the orders of his cleverest disciple." We have already traced the
+course of these methods from the Illuminati onwards.
+
+Now precisely at the moment when Joly published his _Dialogues aux
+Enfers_ the secret societies were particularly active, and since by this
+date a number of Jews had penetrated into their ranks a whole crop of
+literary efforts directed against Jews and secret societies marked the
+decade. Eckert with his work on Freemasonry in 1852 had given the
+incentive; Cretineau Joly followed in 1859 with _L'Eglise Romaine en
+face de la Revolution_, reproducing the documents of the Haute Vente
+Romaine; in 1868 came the book of the German anti-Semite Goedsche, and
+in the following year on a higher plane the work of Gougenot Des
+Mousseaux, _Le Juif, le Judaisme, et la Judaisation des Peuples
+Chretiens_. Meanwhile in 1860 the _Alliance Israelite Universelle_ had
+arisen, having for its ultimate object "the great work of humanity, the
+annihilation of error and fanaticism, the union of human society in a
+faithful and solid fraternity"--a formula singularly reminiscent of
+Grand Orient philosophy; in 1864 Karl Marx obtained control of the
+two-year-old "International Working Men's Association," by which a
+number of secret societies became absorbed, and in the same year Bakunin
+founded his _Alliance Sociale Democratique_ on the exact lines of
+Weishaupt's Illuminism, and in 1869 wrote his _Polemique contre les
+Juifs_ (or _Etude sur les Juifs allemands_) mainly directed against the
+Jews of the _Internationale_. The sixties of the last century therefore
+mark an important era in the history of the secret societies, and it was
+right in the middle of this period that Maurice Joly published his book.
+
+Now it will be remembered that amongst the sets of parallels to the
+Protocols quoted by me in _World Revolution_, two were taken from the
+sources above quoted--the documents of the Haute Vente Romaine and the
+programme of Bakunin's secret society, the _Alliance Sociale
+Democratique_. Meanwhile Mr. Lucien Wolf had found another parallel to
+the Protocols in Goedsche's book. "The Protocols," Mr. Wolf had no
+hesitation in asserting, "are, in short, an amplified imitation of
+Goedsche's handiwork"[868] and he went on to show that "Nilus followed
+this pamphlet very closely." The Protocols were then declared by Mr.
+Wolf and his friends to have been completely and finally refuted.
+
+But alas for Mr. Wolfe's discernment! The _Times_ articles came and
+abolished the whole of his carefully constructed theory. They did not,
+however, demolish mine; on the contrary, they supplied another and a
+very curious link in the chain of evidence. For is it not remarkable
+that one of the sets of parallels quoted by me appeared in the same year
+as Joly's book, and that within the space of nine years no less than
+four parallels to the Protocols should have been discovered? Let us
+recapitulate the events of this decade in the form of a table and the
+proximity of dates will then be more apparent:
+
+ 1859. Cretineau Joly's book published containing documents of
+ Haute Vente Romaine (parallels quoted by me).
+
+ 1860. _Alliance Israelite Universelle_ founded.
+
+ 1864. _1st Internationale_ taken over by Karl Marx.
+
+ " _Alliance Sociale Democratique_ of Bakunin founded
+ (parallels quoted by me).
+ " Maurice Joly's _Dialogue aux Enfers_ published
+ (parallels quoted by _Times_).
+
+ 1866. 1st Congress of Internationale at Geneva.
+
+ 1868. Goedsche's _Biarritz_ (parallels quoted by Mr. Lucien
+ Wolf).
+
+ 1869. Gougenot Des Mousseaux's _Le Juif_, etc.
+
+ " Bakunin's _Polemique contre les Juifs_.
+
+It will be seen, then, that at the moment when Maurice Joly wrote his
+_Dialogues_, the ideas they embodied were current in many different
+circles. It is interesting, moreover, to notice that the authors of the
+last two works referred to above, the Catholic and Royalist Des
+Mousseaux and the Anarchist Bakunin, between whom it is impossible to
+imagine any connexion, both in the same year denounced the growing power
+of the Jews whom Bakunin described as "the most formidable sect" in
+Europe, and again asserted that a leakage of information had taken place
+in the secret societies. Thus in 1870 Bakunin explains that his secret
+society has been broken up because its secrets have been given
+away,[869] and that his colleague Netchaieff has arrived at the
+conclusion that "in order to found a serious and indestructible society
+one must take for a basis the policy of Machiavelli."[870] Meanwhile
+Gougenot Des Mousseaux had related in _Le Juif_, that in December 1865
+he had received a letter from a German statesman saying:
+
+ Since the revolutionary recrudescence of 1848, I have had relations
+ with a Jew who, from vanity, betrayed the secret of the secret
+ societies with which he had been associated, and who warned me
+ eight or ten days beforehand of all the revolutions which were
+ about to break out at any point of Europe. I owe to him the
+ unshakeable conviction that all these movements of "oppressed
+ peoples," etc., etc., are devised by half a dozen individuals, who
+ give their orders to the secret societies of all Europe. The ground
+ is absolutely mined beneath our feet, and the Jews provide a large
+ contingent of these miners....[871]
+
+These words were written in the year after the _Dialogues aux Enfers_
+were published.
+
+It is further important to notice that Joly's work is dated from Geneva,
+the meeting-place for all the revolutionaries of Europe, including
+Bakunin, who was there in the same year, and where the first Congress of
+the _Internationale_ led by Karl Marx was held two years later. Already
+the revolutionary camp was divided into warring factions, and the
+rivalry between Marx and Mazzini had been superseded by the struggle
+between Marx and Bakunin. And all these men were members of secret
+societies. It is by no means improbable then that Joly, himself a
+revolutionary, should during his stay in Geneva have come into touch
+with the members of some secret organization, who may have betrayed to
+him their own secret or those of a rival organization they had reason
+to suspect of working under the cover of revolutionary doctrines for an
+ulterior end. Thus the protocols of a secret society modelled on the
+lines of the Illuminati or the Haute Vente Romaine may have passed into
+his hands and been utilized by him as an attack on Napoleon who, owing
+to his known connexion with the Carbonari, might have appeared to Joly
+as the chief exponent of the Machiavellian art of duping the people and
+using them as the lever to power which the secret societies had reduced
+to a system.
+
+This would explain Maurice Joly's mysterious reference to the "political
+system which has not varied for a single day in its application since
+the disastrous and alas! too far-off date of its enthronement."
+Moreover, it would explain the resemblance between all the parallels to
+the Protocols from the writings of the Illuminati and Mirabeau's _Projet
+de Revolution_ of 1789 onwards. For if the system had never varied, the
+code on which it was founded must have remained substantially the same.
+Further, if it had never varied up to the time when Joly wrote, why
+should it have varied since that date? The rules of lawn tennis drawn up
+in 1880 would probably bear a strong resemblance to those of 1920, and
+would also probably follow each other in the same sequence. The
+differences would occur where modern improvements had been added.
+
+Might not the same process of evolution have taken place between the
+dates at which the works of Joly and Nilus were published? I do not
+agree with the opinion of the _Morning Post_ that "the author of the
+Protocols must have had the _Dialogues_ of Joly before him." It is
+possible, but not proven. Indeed, I find it difficult to imagine that
+anyone embarking on such an elaborate imposture should not have
+possessed the wit to avoid quoting passages verbatim--without even
+troubling to arrange them in a different sequence--from a book which
+might at any moment be produced as evidence against him. For contrary to
+the assertions of the _Times_ the _Dialogues_ of Joly is by no means a
+rare book, not only was it to be found at the British Museum but at the
+London Library and recently I was able to buy a copy for the modest sum
+of 15 francs. There was therefore every possibility of Nilus being
+suddenly confronted with the source of his plagiarism. Further, is it
+conceivable that a plagiarist so unskilful and so unimaginative would
+have been capable of improving on the original? For the Protocols are a
+vast improvement on the _Dialogues_ of Joly. The most striking passages
+they contain are not to be found in the earlier work, nor, which is more
+remarkable, are several of the amazing prophecies concerning the future
+which time has realized. It is this latter fact which presents the most
+insuperable obstacle to the _Times_ solution of the problem.
+
+To sum up then, the Protocols are either a mere plagiarism of Maurice
+Joly's work, in which case the prophetic passages added by Nilus or
+another remain unexplained, or they are a revised edition of the plan
+communicated to Joly in 1864, brought up to date and supplemented so as
+to suit modern conditions by the continuers of the plot.
+
+Whether in this case the authors of the Protocols were Jews or whether
+the Jewish portions have been interpolated by the people into whose
+hands they fell is another question. Here we must admit the absence of
+any direct evidence. An International circle of world revolutionaries
+working on the lines of the Illuminati, of which the existence has
+already been indicated, offers a perfectly possible alternative to the
+"Learned Elders of Zion." It would be easier, however to absolve the
+Jews from all suspicion of complicity if they and their friends had
+adopted a more straightforward course from the time the Protocols
+appeared. When some years ago a work of the same kind was directed
+against the Jesuits, containing what purported to be a "Secret Plan" of
+revolution closely resembling the Protocols,[872] the Jesuits indulged
+in no invectives, made no appeal that the book should be burnt by the
+common hangman, resorted to no fantastic explanations, but quietly
+pronounced the charge to be a fabrication. Thus the matter ended.
+
+But from the moment the Protocols were published the Jews and their
+friends had recourse to every tortuous method of defence, brought
+pressure to bear on the publishers--succeeded, in fact, in temporarily
+stopping the sales--appealed to the Home Secretary to order their
+suppression, concocted one clinching refutation after another, all
+mutually exclusive of each other, so that by the time the solution now
+pronounced to be the correct one appeared, we had already been assured
+half a dozen times that the Protocols had been completely and finally
+refuted. And when at last a really plausible explanation had been
+discovered, why was it not presented in a convincing manner? All that
+was necessary was to state that the origin of the Protocols had been
+found in the work of Maurice Joly, giving parallels in support of this
+assertion. What need to envelop a good case in a web of obvious romance?
+Why all this parade of confidential sources of information, the pretence
+that Joly's book was so rare as to be almost unfindable when a search in
+the libraries would have proved the contrary? Why these allusions to
+Constantinople as the place "to find the key to dark secrets," to the
+mysterious Mr. X. who does not wish his real name to be known, and to
+the anonymous ex-officer of the Okhrana from whom by mere chance he
+bought the very copy of the _Dialogues_ used for the fabrication of the
+Protocols by the Okhrana itself, although this fact was unknown to the
+officer in question? Why, further, should Mr. X., if he were a Russian
+landowner, Orthodox by religion and a Constitutional Monarchist, be so
+anxious to discredit his fellow Monarchists by making the outrageous
+assertion that "the only occult Masonic organization such as the
+Protocols speak of"--that is to say, a Machiavellian system of an
+abominable kind--which he had been able to discover in Southern Russia
+"was a Monarchist one"?
+
+It is evident then that the complete story of the Protocols has not yet
+been told, and that much yet remains to be discovered concerning this
+mysterious affair.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+Abdullah ibn Maymun, 37, 197
+
+Abraham, Book of, 8
+
+"Abraham the Jew," 85
+
+"Absolutes," the, 265
+
+Adam, Book of (see _Codex Nasaraeus_)
+
+Adamites, the, 31
+
+Additional Degrees, the 132-148
+
+Akhnaton (see Ikh-naton)
+
+Albigenses, the, 74-76
+
+Alemanus (or Datylus), 85
+
+_Aliance Sociale Democratique_, 268, 295
+
+Alsace, Jews of, 247
+
+Alta Vendita (or Haute Vente Romaine), 266
+
+Altotas, 174, 200
+
+Amaury, King of Jerusalem, 50
+
+Amelie, Queen of Portugal, 283
+
+_Amis Reunis_ (Loge des), 165, 170, 236
+
+Ampthill, Lord, 287
+
+Anabaptists, 180
+
+Ancient Masonry, 304
+
+Anderson's Constitutions, 129, 148
+
+Anna of Courland, 165
+
+Anthroposophical Society, 316
+
+Antin, Duc d', 137 note, 145, 148, 155, 162
+
+Antitacts, 31
+
+Architecture, Gothic, 111
+
+Aristobulos, 28
+
+Athanasius, Kircher, 86
+
+Ashkenazim, 247
+
+Ashmole, Elias, 102, 122
+
+Asiatic Brethren, 169
+
+Assassins, the 44-48, 113
+
+
+Ba'al Shems, 181, _et seq_.
+
+Babeuf, 252
+
+Bacon, Francis, 97, 119
+
+Bacon, Roger, 143
+
+Bakunin, Michel, 268, 384
+
+Baldwin II, 49
+
+Balsamo, Joseph (see Cagliostro)
+
+Baphomet, 64, 72
+
+Barbusse, H., 321
+
+Baron, Andre, 188
+
+Barruel, Abbe, vi, ix, 121, 147, 254, 382
+
+Barthou, Monsieur, 203, 204
+
+Bavaria, Duke of, 86
+
+Bela Kun, 386
+
+Belgium, Freemasonry in, 282
+
+Belle-Isle, Marechal de, 173
+
+Berage, Chevalier de, 139
+
+Berckheim, Francois Charles de, 258, _et seq._
+
+Besant, Mrs. Annie, 297, _et seq._
+
+Bielfeld, Baron de, 152
+
+Bismarck, Prince von, 356, 357, 366
+
+Blanc, Louis, 268
+
+Blavatsky, Madame, 298, _et seq._
+
+Bode, Christian, 211, 233-234, 236, 255
+
+Bogomils, 63, _et seq._
+
+Bolshevism, 357, _et seq._, 384, _et seq._
+
+Bordeaux Jews of, 246, 247
+
+Bourbon, Duc de, 136, 137
+
+Bourbon, Duchesse de, 295
+
+Brinvilliers, Marquise de, 93
+
+Bruce, Robert, 111, 112, 142
+
+Brunswick, Duke of, 154, 191, 252, _et seq._, 350
+
+Bullock, 314
+
+Buonarotti, 252
+
+Bussell, Dr. F. W., 50, 128
+
+
+Cabala, the ancient, 111
+-- the Jewish, 6, _et seq._;
+ origins of, 7 _et seq._; 71, 78, 81, 85, 86, 106, 107, 109, 110,
+ 119, 124, 166, 181, 228, 318, 371, _et seq._
+
+Cabalists, the Christian, 15, 85
+-- the Jewish, ch. viii.
+
+Cagliostro, 174, 191, 233, 235
+
+Cainites, 30, 76
+
+Cambaceres, Prince, 255
+
+Carbonari, 266, 342, 351
+
+Carlos, King of Portugal, 283
+
+Carpocratians, the, 30, 31
+
+Carvajal, 178
+
+Catherine de Medicis, 79
+
+Chambers, Ephraim, _Cyclopaedia_, 161
+
+Charles VI, King of France, 246
+
+Charles Edward, Prince, 153, 154
+
+Charter of Larmenius, 66, 135, 157
+
+Chefdebien d'Armisson, Marquis de, 171, 234, 236, 256
+
+Choiseul, Duc de, 172
+
+"Christians of St. John" (see Mandaeans)
+
+Clarte, 321, 322
+
+_Clavicules de Solomon_, 166
+
+Clement V, 51, 53, 54, 59
+
+Clement XII, 138
+
+Coat-of-Anns of Grand Lodge, 123
+
+_Codex Nasaraeus_, 71
+
+Co-Masonry, 301, _et seq._, 319
+
+Compagnonnages, 108
+
+Condorcet, Marquis de, 162, 171
+
+_Confessia Fraternitatis_, 87
+
+Copin Albancelli, Monsieur, 278, _et seq_.
+
+Cornelius Agrippa of Nettesheim, 86
+
+Cosse Brissac, Duc de, 150
+
+"Council of the Emperors of the East," 149
+
+Court de Gebelin, 171
+
+Cremieux, Adolphe, 268
+
+Croix, Madame de la, 194
+
+Cromwell, Oliver, 125, 126, 179
+
+Crowley, Aleister, 314, 315
+
+Crypto-Jews, 178
+
+
+D'Alembert, 161
+
+Danton, 245
+
+Darazi, Ismail, 43
+
+Dar ul Hikmat, 40, 113
+
+D'Aumont, Pierre, 111
+
+Deraismes, Maria, 296
+
+Derwentwater, Lord, 134
+
+Dasmoulins, Camille, 245
+
+Diderot, 160, 161
+
+Disraeli, Benjamin, (Earl of Beaconsfield), 383
+
+Drach, P.L.B., 11, 12, 14, 15, 402
+
+Druses, 43, 44, 284
+
+Duchanteau, 234
+
+
+Eckhoffen, Baron von, 169
+
+Edward II, 55, 111
+
+Egyptian Rite, 174
+
+_Einwohnerwehr_, 362
+
+Eliphas Levi, 60, 62, 65, 68, 77, 79, 83, 310
+
+Elymas the sorcerer, 29
+
+Emden, 186
+
+Encausse, Dr. Gerard (see Papus)
+
+_Encyclopedie_, 160-165
+
+Engel, Leopold, 311
+
+Ephrain, 249
+
+_Ernst und Folk_, 191-195
+
+Esperanto, 346
+
+_Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_, 240, _et seq._, 258
+
+Essenes, the, 23-27, 110
+
+Euchites, 76
+
+
+Fabre Palaprat, 67, 68, 135
+
+Falk, Hayyim Samuel Jacob, 185, _et. seq._
+
+_Fama Fraternitatis_, 86
+
+Fare, Monseigneur de la, 247
+
+Fascismo, 282
+
+Fatimites, 40
+
+Felkin, Dr. R., 313-316
+
+Fenelon, 144
+
+Flamel, Nicholas, 85
+
+Fleury, Cardinal, 137, 138
+
+Florence, Secret Society at, 190, 191
+
+Fludd, Robert, 84, 97, 121
+
+Frank, Jacob (alias Baron von Offenbach), 182
+
+Frankists, 182
+
+Frederick the Great, 152, 156, 163-165, 206, 213, 366
+-- and Freemasonry, 152, 156, 159, 160
+-- and Voltaire, 157, 158
+
+Freemasonry, origins of, ch. v
+-- Grand Lodge Era of, ch. vi
+-- Modern, ch. xi
+-- British, 103, 126-131, 285-293
+-- Grand Orient, 149, 273-285
+-- -- and the Cabala, 105-110, 123
+-- -- and the Essenes, 110
+-- -- and the Roman Colelgia, 101, 108
+-- -- and the _compagnonnages_, 110
+-- in Belgium, 282
+-- in Spain, 283
+-- in Portugal, 283
+-- in Hungary, 284
+-- in Turkey, 284
+-- and Templarism, 110-117, 138-142
+-- and Rosicrucianism, 98, 119-122
+-- and the Catholic Church, 272, 288
+-- and women, 294-296
+-- in Germany, 356
+-- in France, 273-285
+
+
+Galcerandus de Teus, 68
+
+Gassner, 175
+
+"German Union," 236
+
+Gilles de Rais, 77-79
+
+Ginsburg, Dr. Christian, 23-26
+
+Gleichen, Baron de, 165, 189, 190
+
+Gnostics, 27-32
+
+Gobel, Archbishop, 249
+
+Godefroi de Bouillon, 49, 139
+
+Goldsmid, Aaron, 187
+
+"Goose and Gridiron," 127, 128
+
+Gordon, Lord George, 194
+
+Goudchaux, Juliet, 193
+
+Gougenot des Mousseaux, 10, 11, 381
+
+Grand Chapitre General de France, 150
+
+Grand Orient, 149, 160, 171, 273, _et seq._, 303, 304, 323, 352, 384
+
+Grand Orient of Italy, 284
+
+Granjo, Dr. Antonio, 283
+
+Great Rebellion, 178
+
+Gregoire, Abbe, 69
+
+
+Hakim, 43
+
+Hamburg, Grand Lodge of, 133-152
+
+"Harnouester," Lord, 145
+
+Hartmann, Franz, 316
+
+Hasan and Husein, 35
+
+Hasan Saba (The Old Man of the Mountain), 44-48
+
+Hashishyin (see Assassins)
+
+Hasidim, 182, _et. seq._
+
+Heguerty, Squire, 134
+
+Heilprin (Joel ben Uri), 182
+
+Heindl, Max, 317
+
+Helvetius, 162
+
+Heredom, 112
+
+Hertz, David Moses, 169
+
+Herz, Henrietta, 230
+
+Hesse, Prince Charles of, 125, 129, 154, 171
+
+Heydon, John, 97
+
+Hiram Abiff, 106-108, 110, 164
+
+Hiram, King of Tyre, 106
+
+_Hiram or the Grand Master Key_, 130
+
+Hiramic legend, 106, 107, 110, 217
+
+Holbach, Baron d', 162
+
+Horos, Mme, 314
+
+Hugues de Pavens, 49, 66, 67
+
+Hundt, Baron von, 153, 154, 157
+
+
+"Idealists," 265
+
+Ikhnaton (or Akhnaton), 6, 297
+
+Illuminati, Bavarian, ch. ix and x, 350
+-- Modern Order of, 311
+
+_Illumines d'Avignon_, 166
+
+_Illumines, French_ (_Martinistes_), 165-176, 233, 310
+
+_Illumines Theosophes_, 166
+
+_In Eminenti_, Papal Bull, 138
+
+Innes, B., 314
+
+Institute for Harmonius Development of Man, 323
+
+International Bureau for Masonic Affairs, 320
+
+Israel of Podolia (Ba'al Shem Job), 182
+
+"Italian Order," 133, 191
+
+
+Jachin and Boaz, 107, 111;
+ pamphlet so-called, 130, 131
+
+Jacques du Molay, 51, 52, 56, 110, 147, 164
+
+James II, 126
+
+Jeanne d'Arc, 77
+
+Jechiel, Rabbi, 85
+
+Jesuits, 125, 197, 414
+
+Jesus Christ, Birth of, 17
+-- and Rabbis, 17, 18
+
+Jews, the, xi, xii; ch. xv
+-- as Cabalists, 6-16, 78-82, 85, 86, 166-168, ch. viii
+-- and magic, 29, 78-82, 175, 178, 181, 182, 184-188, 384
+-- and medicine, 81, 82
+-- and Jesus Christ, 17-23, 68, 86, 374
+-- and Christianity, 374, 378-380
+-- and Freemasonry, 108-110, 122-124, 130, 169, 277, 280, 284, 384
+-- in France, 246, _et seq._, 365, _et seq._
+-- and Germany, 365-368
+
+Johannism, 68-71, 157
+
+Johnson (alias Leucht or Becker), 155, 158
+
+
+Karmath (Hamdan), 38
+
+Karmathites, 38-40
+
+Kay, John de, 365
+
+Kilmarnock, Lord, 153
+
+Kilwinning, Lodge of, 112
+
+Knigge, Baron von, alias Philo, 210-211, 234, 266
+
+Knight Kadosch, 147, 159, 164, 280
+
+Knights of the East, 149
+
+Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, 59, 116
+
+Knights Templar (see Templars)
+
+_Knorr_, Baron von Rosenroth, 86
+
+Kollowrath-Krakowski, Comte Leopold de, 236
+
+Kolmer, 199
+
+Koran, 22
+
+Krishnamurti, 301, 305
+
+_Kropotkine_, Peter, Prince, 268
+
+Kuentz, R., 318
+
+"Kundalini," 325
+
+
+Labour Party, the, 360, 362, 368, 389
+
+Lacorne, 149, 163
+
+Lafayette, 162, 236
+
+Lamballe, Princesse de, 295
+
+Lambert, Alexandre, 250, 251
+
+Lanze, the Illuminatus, 235
+
+Larmenie, Jacques de (see Charter of Larmenius)
+
+Lazare, Bernard, 122, 177
+
+Leadbeater, Mr., 301, 308
+
+"Leon, the Jew," 175
+
+_Le Secret des Francs-Macons_, 131
+
+_Les Francis-Macons ecrases_, 131, 169
+
+Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim, 191, 229
+
+Levellers, the, 180
+
+_Libres Penseurs_, Lodge of the, 296
+
+Lippe-Buckeburg, Graf von, 152
+
+Little, Robert Wentworth, 310
+
+Lima, Magalhaes, 283
+
+Lodge "Theodore de Bon Conseil," 205, 228
+
+Loge des Neuf L[oe]urs, 236, _et seq._
+
+_Loi Chapelier_, 206
+
+_L'Ordre des Francs-Macons trahi_, 131
+
+Luchet, Marquis de, 169, 239, _et seq._, 350
+
+Luciferians, the, 63, 64, 76
+
+Lulli, Raymond, 85
+
+Luria, Isaac, 78
+
+Luther, Martin, and the Jews, 21
+
+
+Machiavelli, 354, 355
+
+Mackenzie, Kenneth, 90, 189
+
+_Maconnerie d'Adoption_, 295
+
+_Maconnique Mixte Internationale, Ordre_, 296, 301, _et seq._
+
+Magic, branches of, 84
+
+Magicians, 172-176
+
+Maitland, Edward, 310
+
+Manasseh ben Israel, 123, 179
+
+Mandaites (see Mandaeans)
+
+Mandaeans, 70, 71
+
+Manes (Cubricus), 33, 107
+
+Manicheism, 32, _et seq._, 74, 75
+
+Marat, 245
+
+Marcosians, 31
+
+Maria Theresa, 183
+
+Marie Antoinette, 164, 195, 283
+
+Marotti, Abbe, 209
+
+Marschall, Baron von, 153, 156
+
+Martin, Dr. George, 296
+
+Martines de Pasqually, 165, 166, 310
+
+_Martinistes_ (see _Illumines, French_)
+
+Mary, Mother of Jesus, 22
+
+Marx[D], Karl, 385
+
+Maskeline, Chevalier, 134
+
+Mathers, M., 312-314
+
+Mauvillon, 210
+
+Mayas, 4, 119
+
+Meakin, 316
+
+Melchisedeck Lodges, 169
+
+Mendelssohn, Moses, 191, 229
+
+"Mercaba, The," 123
+
+Mesmer, 175
+
+Mirabeau, Honore Gabriel Riquetti, Comte de, 89, 90, 155, 203-205, 230,
+ 236, 241-243;
+ his _Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne_, 205
+
+Momoro, 249
+
+Monotheism, 5
+
+Morley, Lord, 160
+
+Moses de Leon, 9, 28
+
+Mounier, vii, 227
+
+Mount Moriah, 106
+
+Mussolini, 405
+
+Mysteries, Eleusinian, 5, 32
+
+
+_Nathan der Weise_, 191
+
+Nazarenes, 71
+
+Nazarites, 71
+
+Nazoreans, 70
+
+Necklace, Affair of, 234
+
+_New Atlantis_, 119
+
+"New Saints, The," 182
+
+_Nishmat Hayim_, 81, 179
+
+Nizam ul Mulk, 45
+
+Nizzachon (see Sepher Nizzachon)
+
+
+Olcott, Colonel, 298
+
+Omar Khayyam, 45
+
+Ophites, the, 30
+
+_Ordre du Temple_ (modern), 65, 116, 135, 136, 150, 156, 300
+
+Ordre de Saint-Lazare, 136
+
+Orleans, Phillippe, Duc d' (the Regent), 135, 136
+
+Orleans, Louis Phillippe Joseph (Duc de Chartres), 149, 150, 159, 160,
+ 193, 194, 244
+
+Osiris, 16, 107
+
+_Ostmarkenverein_, 362
+
+
+Pan-Germanism, 353, _et seq._
+
+_Pantheisticon_, Toland's, 129
+
+Papus (Dr. Gerard Encausse), 162, 310
+
+Paracelsus, 85, 86
+
+Paris, Comte de, 194
+
+"Parvus," alias Helphandlt (Israel Lazarewitch), 363
+
+Paulicians, the, 63
+
+Pepys, Samuel, 181
+
+Pernetti, Dom, 166
+
+Pfefferkorn, 86
+
+_Philalethes_, 171, 234
+
+Phillippe le Bel, 51, 57, 59, 147
+
+Philo (of Alexandria), 28
+
+"Philo" (see Knigge)
+
+Pico della Mirandola, 85, 93
+
+Pike, Albert, 160
+
+Poale Zion, 383
+
+Pompadour, Marquise de, 173
+
+Portugal, Freemasonry in, 283, 384
+-- Carbonarios of, 342
+
+Pott, Mrs., 96, 119
+
+Prelati, 77
+
+Prie, Marquise de, 136
+
+_Protocols of the Elders of Zion_, 381, and Appendix II
+
+Proudhon, 268
+
+Psycho-analysis, 345, 393
+
+Pythagoras, 6
+
+
+Ragon (Francois), 65, 122, 310
+
+Rainsford, General, 168, 234
+
+Ramsay, Andrew M., Chevalier, 136, 137, 161, 163
+
+Ranking, Dr., 73
+
+Raymond, Comte de Tripoli, 50, 75
+
+Reuchlin, 86
+
+Richelieu, Cardinal, 85
+
+Richter, Samuel, alias Sincerus Renatus, 169
+
+_Rit Primitif_, 171, 175
+
+Rite of Perfection, 145, 159, 167
+
+Rite of Swedenborg, 166
+
+Robison, 212, 254, see also Preface vi-viii
+
+Roman Catholic Church, 288
+
+Rosenkreutz, Christian, 87, 88, 91, 316, 319
+
+Rose-Croix, degree of, 112, 142-145, 157, 164, 166-169, 202, 235, 277
+
+Rosicrucians, 84-98, 119-122, 168;
+ Brothers of the Golden and Rosy Cross, 169;
+ modern Rosicrucians, 310, _et seq._
+
+Rosy Cross, Brothers of (see Rosicrucians)
+
+Royal Arch Degree, 132, 133, 277
+
+
+Sabians (see Mandaeans)
+
+Sade, Marquis de, 78, 246
+
+St. Bernard, 49
+
+"Saint-Germaine, Comte de," 172-175, 234, 306
+
+St. John the Baptist, 70
+
+St. John, the Evangelist, 72, 73
+-- Gospel of, 31, 69, 73, 74, 188
+-- Knights and Brethren of, 169
+
+Saladin, 49
+
+Salisbury Cathedral, 111
+
+Salonica, lodges of, 284
+
+Sand, George, 207
+
+Satanael, 72
+
+Satanism, 63, 76-84, 324-326
+
+Savalette de Lange, 170, 171, 190, 234, 237
+
+Savine, Monsignor de, 257, 351
+
+Schem Hamphorasch
+(see _Tetragrammaton_)
+
+Schroeder, 190
+
+Schroepfer, 172
+
+Scottish Rite (or Ancient and Accepted Rite), 132, 142, 145, 159, 277
+
+Seal of Solomon, 189
+
+Sephardim, 246-247
+
+Sepher Nizzachon, 86
+
+Sepher Toldoth Jeschu (see _Toledot Yeshu_)
+
+_Sepher Yetzirah_, 7, 313
+
+Shabbethai, Zebi, 181, 183
+
+Shiahs, 36, 37
+
+Simon ben Jochai, 8
+
+Simon Magus, 29
+
+Sixtus IV, 85
+
+Socialism, ch. xiii
+-- and Freemasonry, 273-275
+
+Solomon, 106, 109
+
+Solomon, Temple of, 49, 106-108, 110, 113, 271
+
+Spedalieri, Baron, 310
+
+Sprengel, Anna, 311-313
+
+Star, five-pointed, 111
+
+Star in the East, Order of, 301, 307
+
+Steiner, Rudolf, 316-318
+
+Stella Matutina, 316, 319, 325
+
+"Stricte Observance," Order of the, 135, 154, 233
+
+Sunnis, 36
+
+Swedenborg Emmanuel, 166
+
+Switzerland, Masonic Congress in, 287
+-- a centre of revolution, 364
+
+Syed Ameer Ali, 35, 113, 309
+
+
+Talmud, the, 6, 71, 80, 183, 369, _et seq._
+
+Taxil, Leo, 76, 324
+
+Templars (see Knights Templar)
+
+Templar tradition in Freemasonry, 110, _et seq._
+
+Temple of Solomon (see Solomon)
+
+Templo, Rabbi Jacob Jehuda Leon, 123
+
+_Tetragrammaton_, 21, 27, 167, 176, 181, 185, 313, 352
+
+Theosophy, 297, _et seq._
+
+Theosophical Society, 300, 307, _et seq._
+
+_Toledot Yeshu_ (or Sepher Toldoth Jeschu), 20, 68, 71, 86, 299, 300
+
+Trans-Himalayan Brotherhood, 299
+
+Tschoudy, Baron, 139, 140
+
+Tugendbund, 265
+
+
+"United States of Europe," 275, 336
+
+"Universal Republic," 275, 336
+
+
+Valentinians, the, 31, 32
+
+Vaughan, Thos., 316
+
+Vehmgerichts, 117
+
+Voltaire, 79, 152, 153, 156, 162, 213
+
+Vulliaud, Monsieur Paul, 7, 8
+
+
+Waechter, Baron de, 190
+
+Waite, Mr. A. E., 91, 96, 113, 133, 315
+
+Westminster Abbey, 111
+
+Weishaupt, Adam, ch. ix, 255-257, 311
+
+Wilhelmsbad, Congress of, 233
+
+Willermoz, 166, 171
+
+William of Orange, 180
+
+Winstanley, Gerard, 180
+
+Witches, 81
+
+Witt Doehring, 265
+
+Wolf, Lucien, 123, 381
+
+Women Masons, 295 (see also "Co-Masonry" and "_Maconnerie Mixte_")
+
+Woodford, Rev. A. F. A., 311
+
+
+Young Turk Movement, 284
+
+
+Zaddikim, 181
+
+Zerdascht, 14
+
+_Zohar, The_, 8, 9, 81, 182, 183, 371, 373
+
+Zoharites, 182
+
+Zoroastrians, 14, 201
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+
+[1] _Moniteur_ for the 14th Fructidor, An II.
+
+[2] Seth Payson, _Proofs of the Real Existence and Dangerous Tendency of
+Illuminism_ (Charleston, 1802), pp. 5-7.
+
+[3] Ibid., p. 5 note.
+
+[4] Quoted in the Life of John Robison (1739-1805) by George Stronach in
+the _Dictionary of National Biography_, Vol. XLIX. p. 58.
+
+[5] _Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh_, Vol. VII, pp. 538,
+539 (1815).
+
+[6] _Freemasonry, its Pretensions Exposed_ ... by a Master Mason, p. 275
+(New York. 1828).
+
+[7] _Memoires sur le Jacobinisme_, II. 195 (1818 edition).
+
+[8] Barruel, op. cit., II. 208.
+
+[9] Ibid., II. 311.
+
+[10] I use the word "anti-Semitism" here in the sense in which it has
+come to be used--that is to say, anti-Jewry, but place it in inverted
+commas because it is in reality a misnomer coined by the Jews in order
+to create a false impression. The word anti-Semite literally signifies a
+person who adopts a hostile attitude towards all the descendants of
+Shem--the Arabs, and the entire twelve tribes of Israel. To apply the
+term to a person who is merely antagonistic to that fraction of the
+Semitic race known as the Jews is therefore absurd, and leads to the
+ridiculous situation that one may be described as "anti-Semitic and
+pro-Arabian." This expression actually occurred in _The New Palestine_
+(New York), March 23, 1923. One might as well speak of being
+"anti-British and pro-English."
+
+[11] Augustus le Plongeon, _Sacred Mysteries among the Mayas and the
+Quiches_, p. 53 (1909)
+
+[12] Ibid., pp. 56, 58.
+
+[13] Adolf Erman, _Life in Ancient Egypt_, p. 45 (1894).
+
+[14] J.H. Breasted, _Ancient Times: a History of the Early World_, p. 92
+(1916).
+
+[15] This word is spelt variously by different writers thus: Cabala,
+Cabbala, Kabbala, Kabbalah, Kabalah. I adopt the first spelling as being
+the one employed in the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_.
+
+[16] Fabre d'Olivet, _La Langue Hebraique_, p. 28 (1815).
+
+[17] "According to the Jewish view God had given Moses on Mount Sinai
+alike the oral and the written Law, that is, the Law with all its
+interpretations and applications."--Alfred Edersheim, _The Life and
+Times of Jesus the Messiah_, I. 99 (1883), quoting other Jewish
+authorities.
+
+[18] _Solomon Maimon: an Autobiography_, translated from the German by
+J. Clark Murray, p. 28 (1888). The original appeared in 1792.
+
+[19] Alfred Edersheim, _The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah_, II.
+689 (1883).
+
+[20] "There exists in Jewish literature no book more difficult to
+understand than the Sepher Yetzirah."--Phineas Mordell in the _Jewish
+Quarterly Review_, New Series, Vol. II. p. 557.
+
+[21] Paul Vulliaud, _La Kabbale Juive: histotre et doctrine_, 2 vols.
+(Emile Nourry, 62 Rue des Ecoles, Paris, 1923). This book, neither the
+work of a Jew nor of an "anti-Semite," but of a perfectly impartial
+student, is invaluable for a study of the Cabala rather as a vast
+compendium of opinions than as an expression of original thought.
+
+[22] "Rab Hanina and Rab Oschaya were seated on the eve of every Sabbath
+studying the Sepher Ietsirah; they created a three-year-old heifer and
+ate it."--Talmud treatise Sanhedrim, folio 65.
+
+[23] Koran, Sura LXXXVII. 10.
+
+[24] Zohar, section Bereschith, folio 55, and section Lekh-Lekha, folio
+76 (De Pauly's translation, Vol. I. pp. 431, 446).
+
+[25] Adolphe Franck, _La Kabbale_, p. 39; J. P. Stehelin, _The
+Traditions of the Jews_, I. 145 (1748).
+
+[26] Adolphe Franck, op. cit., p. 68, quoting Talmud treatise Sabbath,
+folio 34, Dr. Christian Ginsburg, _The Kabbalah_, p. 85; Drach, _De
+l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, I. 457.
+
+[27] Adolphe Franck, op. cit., p. 69.
+
+[28] Dr. Christian Ginsburg (1920), _The Kabbalah_, pp. 172, 173.
+
+[29] Vulliaud, op. cit., I. 253.
+
+[30] Ibid., p. 20, quoting Theodore Reinach, _Historie des Israelites_,
+p. 221, and Salomon Reinach, _Orpheus_, p. 299.
+
+[31] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[32] Adolphe Franck, op. cit., p. 288.
+
+[33] Vulliaud, op. cit., I. 256, quoting Greenstone, _The Messiah Idea_,
+p. 229.
+
+[34] H. Loewe, in an article on the Kabbala in Hastings' _Encyclopaedia
+of Religion and Ethics_, says: "This secret mysticism was no late
+growth. Difficult though it is to prove the date and origin of this
+system of philosophy and the influences and causes which produced it, we
+can be fairly certain that its roots stretch back very far and that the
+mediaeval and Geonic Kabbala was the culmination and not the inception of
+Jewish esoteric mysticism. From the time of Graetz it has been the
+fashion to decry the Kabbala and to regard it as a later incrustation,
+as something of which Judaism had reason to be ashamed." The writer goes
+on to express the opinion that "the recent tendency requires adjustment.
+The Kabbala, though later in form than is claimed by its adherents, is
+far older in material than is allowed by its detractors."
+
+[35] Vulliaud, op. cit., I. 22.
+
+[36] Ibid., I. 13, 14, quoting Edersheim, _La Societe Juive an temps de
+Jesus-Christ_ (French translation), pp. 363-4
+
+[37] See chapters on this question by Gougenot des Mousseaux in _Le
+Juif, le Judaisme et la Judaisation des Peisples Chretiens_, pp. 499 and
+following (2nd edition, 1886). The first edition of this book, published
+in 1869, is said to have been bought up and destroyed by the Jews, and
+the author died a sudden death before the second edition could be
+published.
+
+[38] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, pp. 46, 105. (Eliphas Levi
+was the pseudonym of the celebrated nineteenth-century occultist the
+Abbe Constant.)
+
+[39] _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 323.
+
+[40] Ginsburg op. cit. p. 105; _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[41] Gougenot des Mousseaux, _Le Juif, le Judaisms el la Judaisation des
+Peuples Chretiens_, p. 503 (1886).
+
+[42] P. L. B. Drach _De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, Vol.
+I. p. xiii (1844). M. Vulliaud (op. cit., II. 245) points out that, as
+far as he can discover Drach's work has never met with any refutation
+from the Jews, by whom it was received in complete silence. The _Jewish
+Encyclopaedia_ has an article on Drach in which it says he was brought up
+in a Talmudic school and afterwards became converted to Christianity,
+but makes no attempt to challenge his statements.
+
+[43] Drach, op. cit., Vol. II. p. xix
+
+[44] Franck, op. cit., p. 127.
+
+[45] De Pauly's translation. Vol. V. pp. 336-8, 343-6.
+
+[46] Zohar, treatise Beschalah, folio 59_b_ (De Pauly, III. 265).
+
+[47] Zohar, Toldoth Noah, folio 69_a_ (De Pauly, I. 408).
+
+[48] Zohar, treatise Beschalah, folio 48_a_ (De Pauly, III. 219).
+
+[49] Ibid., folio 44a (De Pauly, III. 200).
+
+[50] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[51] Adolf Erman, _Life in Ancient Egypt_, p. 32.
+
+[52] Zohar, treatise Toldoth Noah, folio 59b (De Pauly, I. 347).
+
+[53] Zohar, treatise Lekh-Lekha, folio 94a (De Pauly, I. 535).
+
+[54] Zohar, treatise Bereschith, folio 26a (De Pauly, I. 161).
+
+[55] The _Emek ha Melek_ is the work of the Cabalist Napthali, a
+disciple of Luria.
+
+[56] Drach, _De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, I. 272.
+
+[57] Ibid., p. 273.
+
+[58] D'Herbelot, _Bibliotheque Orientale_ (1778), article on Zerdascht.
+
+[59] Ibid., I. 18.
+
+[60] Rom. iii. 2.
+
+[61] Drach, _De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, II. 19.
+
+[62] Ibid., I. 280.
+
+[63] Vulliaud, op. cit., II. 255, 256.
+
+[64] Ibid., p. 257, quoting Karppe, _Etudes sur les Origines du Zohar_,
+p. 494.
+
+[65] Ibid., I. 13, 14. In Vol. II. p. 411, M. Vulliaud quotes Isaac
+Meyer's assertion that "the triad of the ancient Cabala is Kether, the
+Father; Binah, the Holy Spirit or the Mother; and Hochmah, the Word or
+the Son." But in order to avoid the sequence of the Christian Trinity
+this arrangement has been altered in the modern Cabala of Luria and
+Moses of Cordovero, etc.
+
+[66] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala, p. 478.
+
+[67] "...All that Israel hoped for, was national restoration and
+glory. Everything else was but means to these ends; the Messiah Himself
+only the grand instrument in attaining them. Thus viewed, the picture
+presented would be of Israel's exaltation, rather than of the salvation
+of the world.... The Rabbinic ideal of the Messiah was not that of 'a
+light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of His people Israel'--the
+satisfaction of the wants of humanity, and the completion of Israel's
+mission--but quite different, even to contrariety."--Edersheim, _The
+Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah_, I. 164 (1883).
+
+[68] Zohar, section Schemoth, folio 8; cf. ibid., folio 9b: "The period
+when the King Messiah will declare war on the whole world." (De Pauly,
+III. 32, 36).
+
+[69] A blasphemous address entitled _The God Man_, given by Tom
+Anderson, the founder of the Socialist Sunday Schools, on Glasgow Green
+to an audience of over 1,000 workers in 1922 and printed in pamphlet
+form, was founded entirely on this theory.
+
+[70] J.G. Frazer, _The Golden Bough_, Part VI. "The Scapegoat," p. 412
+(1914 edition); E.R. Bevan endorses this view.
+
+[71] _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 69.
+
+[72] The Magi or Wise Men are generally believed to have come from
+Persia; this would accord with the Zoroastrian prophecy quoted above.
+
+[73] Drach, op. cit., II. p. 32.
+
+[74] Ibid., II. p. xxiii.
+
+[75] Joseph Barclay, _The Talmud_, pp 38, 39; cf. Drach, op. cit., I 167
+
+[76] _The Talmud_, by Michael Rodkinson (alias Michael Levy
+Rodkinssohn).
+
+[77] _Le Talmud de Babylone_ (1900).
+
+[78] Le Zohar, translation in 8 vols by Jean de Pauly, published in 1909
+by Emile Lafuma-Giraud. Wherever possible in quoting the Talmud or the
+Cabala I shall give a reference to one of the translations here
+mentioned.
+
+[79] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article Talmud.
+
+[80] Drach, op. cit., I. 168, 169. The text of this encyclical is given
+by Drach in Hebrew and also in translation, thus: "This is why we enjoin
+you, under pain of excommunication major, to print nothing in future
+editions, whether of the Mischna or of the Gemara, which relates whether
+for good or evil to the acts of Jesus the Nazarene, and to substitute
+instead a circle like this O, which will warn the Rabbis and
+schoolmasters to teach the young these passages only viva voce. By means
+of this precaution the savants amongst the Nazarenes will have no
+further pretext to attack us on this subject." Cf. Abbe Chiarini, _Le
+Talmud de Babylone_, p. 45 (1831).
+
+[81] On this point see Appendix I.
+
+[82] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on "Jesus."
+
+[83] Eliphas Levi, _La Science des Esprits_, p. 40.
+
+[84] Origen, _Contra Celsum_.
+
+[85] S. Baring-Gould, _The Counter-Gospels_, p. 69 (1874).
+
+[86] Cf. Baring-Gould, op. cit., quoting Talmud, treatise Sabbath, folio
+104.
+
+[87] Ibid., p. 55, quoting Talmud, treatise Sanhedrim, folio 107, and
+Sota, folio 47; Eliphas Levi, _La Science des Esprits_, pp. 32, 33.
+
+[88] According to the Koran, it was the Jews who said, "'Verily we have
+slain the Messiah, Jesus the son of Mary, an apostle of God.' Yet they
+slew him not, and they crucified him not, but they had only his
+likeness.... No sure knowledge had they about him, but followed an
+opinion, and they did not really slay him, but God took him up to
+Himself."--Sura iv. 150. See also Sura iii. 40. The Rev. J.M. Rodwell,
+in his translation of the Koran, observes in a footnote to the latter
+passage: "Muhammad probably believed that God took the dead body of
+Jesus to Heaven--for three hours, according to some--while the Jews
+crucified a man who resembled him."
+
+[89] Sura iii. 30, 40.
+
+[90] Sura xxi. 90.
+
+[91] Sura iv. 150.
+
+[92] Sura ii. 89, 250; v. 100.
+
+[93] Sura v. 50.
+
+[94] In the masonic periodical _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, Vol. XXIV, a
+Freemason (Bro. Sydney T. Klein) observes: "It is not generally known
+that one of the reasons why the Mohammedans removed their Kiblah from
+Jerusalem to Mecca was that they quarrelled with the Jews over Jesus
+Christ, and the proof of this may still be seen in the Golden Gate
+leading into the sacred area of the Temple, which was bricked up by the
+Mohammedans, and is bricked up to this day, because they declared that
+nobody should enter through that portal until Jesus Christ comes to
+judge the world, and this is stated in the Koran." I cannot trace this
+passage in the Koran, but much the same idea is conveyed by the Rev.
+J.M. Rodwell, who in the note above quoted adds: "The Muhammadans
+believe that Jesus on His return to earth at the end of the world will
+slay the Antichrist, die, and be raised again. A vacant place is
+reserved for His body in the Prophet's tomb at Medina."
+
+[95] Graetz, _Geschichte der Juden_, III. 216-52.
+
+[96] _The Essenes: their History and Doctrines_, an essay by Christian
+D. Ginsburg, LL.D. (Longmans, Green & Co., 1864).
+
+[97] Ibid., p. 24.
+
+[98] Edersheim (op. cit., I. 325) ably refutes both Graetz and Ginsburg
+on this point, and shows that "the teaching of Christianity was in a
+direction the opposite from that of Essenism." M. Vulliaud (op. cit., I.
+71) dismisses the Essene origin of Christianity as unworthy of serious
+attention. "To maintain the Essenism of Jesus is a proof of frivolity or
+of invincible ignorance."
+
+[99] Luke xvii. 7-9.
+
+[100] Ginsburg, op. cit., pp. 15, 22, 55.
+
+[101] Ginsburg, op. cit., p. 12.
+
+[102] Fabre d'Olivet thinks this tradition had descended to the Essenes
+from Moses: "If it is true, as everything attests, that Moses left an
+oral law, it is amongst the Essenes that it was preserved. The
+Pharisees, who flattered themselves so highly on possessing it, only had
+its outward forms (_apparences_), as Jesus reproaches them at every
+moment. It is from these latter that the modern Jews descend, with the
+exception of a few real _savants_ whose secret tradition goes back to
+the Essenes."--_La Langue Hebraique_, p. 27 (1815).
+
+[103] Matter, _Histoire du Gnosticisme_, I. 44 (1844).
+
+[104] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[105] Matter, op. cit., II. 58.
+
+[106] Ragon, _Maconnerie Occulte_, p. 78.
+
+[107] "The Cabala is anterior to the Gnosis, an opinion which Christian
+writers little understand, but which the erudites of Judaism profess
+with a legitimate assurance."--Matter, op. cit.. Vol. I. p. 12.
+
+[108] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[109] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 167; Matter, op. cit., II.
+365, quoting Irenaeus.
+
+[110] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 189.
+
+[111] Eliphas Levi, op. cit., p. 218.
+
+[112] Dean Milman, _History of the Jews_ (Everyman's Library edition),
+II. 491.
+
+[113] Matter, II. 171; E. de Faye, _Gnostiques et Gnosticisme_, p. 349
+(1913).
+
+[114] De Luchet, _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_, p. 6.
+
+[115] _Manuel d'Histoire Ecclesiastique_, par R. P. Albers, S.J., adapte
+par Rene Hedde, O.P., p. 125 (1908); Matter, op. citt., II. 197.
+
+[116] Matter, op. cit., II. 188.
+
+[117] Matter, op. cit., II. 199, 215.
+
+[118] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, pp. 217, 218.
+
+[119] Matter, op. cit., II. 115, III. 14; S. Baring-Gould, _The Lost and
+Hostile Gospels_ (1874).
+
+[120] Matter, op. cit., II 364.
+
+[121] Ibid., p. 365.
+
+[122] Ibid., p. 369.
+
+[123] _Some Notes on Various Gnostic Sects and their Possible Influence
+on Freemasonry_, by D. F. Ranking, republished from _Ars Quatuor
+Coronatorum_ (Vol. XXIV, p. 202, 1911) in pamphlet form, p. 7.
+
+[124] Hastings, _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_, article on
+Manicheism.
+
+[125] Zohar, treatise Bereschith, folio 54 (De Pauly's translation, I.
+315).
+
+[126] The Yalkut Shimoni is a sixteenth-century compilation of Haggadic
+Midrashim.
+
+[127] Principal authorities consulted for this chapter: Joseph von
+Hammer, _The History of the Assassins_ (Eng. trans., 1835); Silvestre de
+Sacy, _Expose de le Religion des Druses (1838) and Memoires sur la
+Dynastie des Assassins_ in _Memoires de l'Institut Royal de France_,
+Vol. IV. (1818); Hastings _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_; Syed
+Ameer Ali, _The Spirit of Islam_ (1922); Dr. F. W. Bussell, _Religious
+Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages_ (1918).
+
+[128] Reinhart Dozy, _Spanish Islam_ (Eng. trans.), pp. 403-5.
+
+[129] Claudio Jannet, _Les Precurseurs de la Franc-Moconnerie_, p. 58
+(1887).
+
+[130] The following account is given by de Sacy in connexion with
+Abdullah ibn Maymun (op. cit., I. Ixxiv), and Dr. Bussell (_Religious
+Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages_, p. 353) includes it in his
+chapter on the Karmathites. Von Hammer, however, gives it as the
+programme of the Dar ul Hikmat, and this seems more probable since the
+initiation consists of nine degrees and Abdullah's society of Batinis,
+into which Karmath had been initiated, included only seven. Yarker (_The
+Arcane Schools_, p. 185) says the two additional degrees were added by
+the Dar ul Hikmat. It would appear then that de Sacy, in placing this
+account before his description of the Karmathites, was anticipating. The
+point is immaterial, the fact being that the same system was common to
+all these ramifications of Ismailis, and that of the Dar ul Hikmat
+varied but little from that of Abdullah and Karmath.
+
+[131] Von Hammer, op. cit. (Eng. trans.), pp. 36, 37.
+
+[132] Von Hammer, _The History of the Assassins_, pp. 45, 46.
+
+[133] Dr. F.W. Bussell, _Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle
+Ages_, p. 368.
+
+[134] Von Hammer, op. cit., p. 55.
+
+[135] Von Hammer, op. cit., pp. 83, 89.
+
+[136] Ibid., p. 164.
+
+[137] _Developpement des abus introduits dans la Franc-maconnerie_, p.
+56 (1780).
+
+[138] Jules Loiseleur, _La doctrine secrete des Templiers_, p. 89.
+
+[139] Dr. F W. Bussell, D.D., _Religions Thought and Heresy in the
+Middle Ages_, pp. 796, 797 note.
+
+[140] G. Mollat, _Les Popes d'Avignon_, p. 233 (1912).
+
+[141] Michelet, _Proces des Templiers_, I. 2 (1841). This work largely
+consists of the publication in Latin of the Papal _bulls_ and trials of
+the Templars before the Papal Commission in Paris contained in the
+original document once preserved at _Notre Dame_. Michelet says that
+another copy was sent to the Pope and kept under the triple key of the
+Vatican. Mr. E. J. Castle, K.C., however, says that he has enquired about
+the whereabouts of this copy and it is no longer in the Vatican
+(_Proceedings against the Templars in France and in England for Heresy_,
+republished from _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, Vol. XX. Part III. p. 1).
+
+[142] M. Raynouard, _Monuments historiques relatifs a la condemnation
+des Chevaliers du Temple et de l'abolition de leur Ordre_, p. 17 (1813).
+
+[143] Michelet, op. cit. I. 2 (1841).
+
+[144] Michelet, _Proces des Templiers_, II. 333.
+
+[145] Ibid., pp. 295, 333.
+
+[146] Ibid., pp. 290, 299, 300.
+
+[147] "Dixit per juramentum suum quod ita est terribilis figure et
+aspectus quod videbatur sibi quod esset figura cujusdam demonis, dicendo
+gallice _d'un maufe_, et quod quocienscumque videbat ipsum tantus timor
+eum invadebat, quod vix poterat illud respicere nisi cum maximo timore
+et tremore."--Ibid., p. 364.
+
+[148] Ibid., pp. 284, 338. "Ipse minabatur sibi quod nisi faceret, ipse
+ponereteum in carcere perpetuo."--Ibid., p. 307.
+
+[149] "Et fuit territus plus quam unquam fuit in vita sua: et statim
+unus eorum accepit eum per gutur, dicens quod oportebat quod hoc
+faceret, vel moreretur."--Ibid., p. 296.
+
+[150] Mollat, op. cit., p. 241.
+
+[151] _Proces des Templiers_, I. 3: Mr. E.J. Castle, op. cit. Part III.
+p. 3. (It should be noted that Mr. Castle's paper is strongly in favour
+of the Templars.)
+
+[152] Ibid., I. 4.
+
+[153] _Proces des Templiers_, I. 5.
+
+[154] Michelet in Preface to Vol. I. of _Proces des Templiers_.
+
+[155] Jules Loiseleur, _La Doctrine Secrete des Templiers_, p. 40
+(1872).
+
+[156] Ibid., p. 16.
+
+[157] _Proceedings against the Templars in France and England for
+Heresy_, by E. J. Castle, Part I. p. 16, quoting Rymer, Vol. III. p. 37
+
+[158] Ibid., Part II. p. 1.
+
+[159] Ibid., Part II. pp. 25-7.
+
+[160] Ibid., Part II. p. 30.
+
+[161] "Another witness of the Minor Friars told the Commissioners he had
+heard from Brother Robert of Tukenham that a Templar had a son who saw
+through a partition that they asked one professing if he believed in the
+Crucified, showing him the figure, whom they killed upon his refusing to
+deny Him, but the boy, some time after, being asked if he wished to be a
+Templar said no, because he had seen this thing done. Saying this, he
+was killed by his father.... The twenty-third witness, a Knight, said
+that his uncle entered the Order healthy and joyfully, with his birds
+and dogs, and the third day following he was dead, and he suspected it
+was on account of the crimes he had heard of them, and that the cause of
+his death was he would not consent to the evil deeds perpetrated by
+other brethren."--Ibid., Part II. p. 13.
+
+[162] F. Funck-Brentano, _Le Moyen Age_, p. 396 (1922).
+
+[163] Ibid., p. 384.
+
+[164] F. Funck Brentano, op. cit., p. 396.
+
+[165] Ibid., p. 387.
+
+[166] Dean Milman, _History of Latin Christianity_, VII. 213.
+
+[167] E.J. Castle, op. cit., Part I. p. 22.
+
+[168] Thus even M. Mollat admits: "En tout cas leurs depositions,
+defavorables a l'Ordre, l'impressionnerent si vivement que, par une
+serie de graves mesures, il abandonna une a une toutes ses
+oppositions."--_Les Papes d'Avignon_, p. 242.
+
+[169] F. Funck-Brentano, op. cit., p. 392.
+
+[170] E.J. Castle, _Proceedings against the Templars, A.Q.C._, Vol. XX.
+Part III, p. 3.
+
+[171] Even Raynouard, the apologist of the Templars (op. cit., p. 19),
+admits that, if less unjust and violent measures had been adopted, the
+interest of the State and the safety of the throne might have justified
+the abolition of the Order.
+
+[172] Funck-Brentano, op. cit., p. 386.
+
+[173] "The bourgeoisie, whenever it has conquered power, has destroyed
+all feudal, patriarchal, and idyllic relations. It has pitilessly torn
+asunder all the many-coloured feudal bonds which united men to their
+'natural superiors,' and has left no tie twixt man and man but naked
+self-interest and callous cash payment."--_The Communist Manifesto_.
+
+[174] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 273.
+
+[175] E.J. Castle, op. cit., _A.Q.C._, Vol. XX. Part I. p. 11.
+
+[176] Ibid., Part II. p. 24.
+
+[177] Loiseleur, op. cit., pp. 20, 21.
+
+[178] _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 277.
+
+[179] Dr. F.W. Bussell, _Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle
+Ages_, p. 803.
+
+[180] _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p. 85.
+
+[181] _History of the Assassins_, p. 80.
+
+[182] F. T. B. Clevel, _Histoire Pittoresque de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p.
+356 (1843).
+
+[183] Loiseleur, op. cit., p. 66
+
+[184] Ibid., p. 143.
+
+[185] Ibid., p. 141.
+
+[186] "Dixit sibi quod non crederet in eum, quia nichil erat, et quod
+erat quidam falsus propheta, et nichil valebat; immo crederet in Deum
+Celi superiorem, qui poterat salvare."--Michelet, _Proces des
+Templiers_, II. 404. Cf. ibid., p. 384: "Quidem falsus propheta est;
+credas solummodo in Deum Celi, et non in istum."
+
+[187] Loiseleur, op. cit., p. 37.
+
+[188] Raynouard, op. cit., p. 301.
+
+[189] Wilhelm Ferdinand Wilcke, _Geschichte des Tempelherrenordens_, II,
+302-12, (1827).
+
+[190] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 273.
+
+[191] J.M. Ragon, _Cours Philosophique et Interpretatif des Initiations
+anciennes et modernes_, edition sacree a l'usage des Loges et des Macons
+SEULEMENT (5,842), p. 37. In a footnote on the same page Ragon, however,
+refers to John the Baptist in this connexion.
+
+[192] J. B. Fabre Palaprat, _Recherches historiques sur les Templiers_,
+p. 31 (1835).
+
+[193] Ibid., p. 37.
+
+[194] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 277.
+
+[195] Eliphas Levi, _La Science des Esprits_, pp. 26-9, 40, 41.
+
+[196] Raynouard, op. cit., p. 281.
+
+[197] Matter, _Histoire du Gnosticisme_, III. 330.
+
+[198] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 275.
+
+[199] M. Gregoire, _Histoire des Sectes religieuses_. II. 407 (1828).
+
+[200] Matter, _Histoire du Gnosticisme_, III. 323.
+
+[201] Ibid., III. p. 120.
+
+[202] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Mandaeans.
+
+[203] Gregoire, op. cit., IV. 241.
+
+[204] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, and Hastings' _Encyclopaedia of Religion and
+Ethics_, article on Mandaeans.
+
+[205] _Codex Nasaraeus_, Liber Adam appellatus, trans. from the Syriac
+into Latin by Matth. Norberg (1815), Vol. I. 109: "Sed, Johanne hae
+aetate Hierosolymae nato, Jordanumque deinceps legente, et baptismum
+peragente, veniet Jeschu Messias, summisse se gerens, ut baptismo
+Johannis baptizetur, et Johannis per sapientiam sapiat. Pervertet vero
+doctrinam Johannis, et mutato Jordani baptismo, perversisque justitiae
+dictis, iniquitatem et perfidiam per mundum disseminabit."
+
+[206] Article on the _Codex Nasaraeus_ by Silvestre de Sacy in the
+_Journal des Savants_ for November 1819, p. 651; cf. passage in the
+Zohar, section Bereschith, folio 55.
+
+[207] Matter, op. cit., III. 119, 120. De Sacy (op. cit., p. 654) also
+attributes the _Codex Nasaraeus_ to the eighth century.
+
+[208] Matter, op. cit., III. 118.
+
+[209] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Mandaeans.
+
+[210] Loiseleur, op. cit., p. 52.
+
+[211] Ibid., p. 51; Matter, op. cit., III. 305.
+
+[212] Hastings' _Encyclopaedia_, article on Bogomils.
+
+[213] The Sabbatic goat is clearly of Jewish origin. Thus the Zohar
+relates that "Tradition teaches us that when the Israelites evoked evil
+spirits, these appeared to them under the form of he-goats and made
+known to them all that they wished to learn."--Section Ahre Moth, folio
+70a (de Pauly, V. 191).
+
+[214] Eliphas Levi, _Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie_, II. 209.
+
+[215] _Some Notes on various Gnostic Sects and their Possible Influence
+on Free-masonry_, by D.F. Ranking, reprinted from _A.Q.C._, Vol. XXIV.
+pp. 27, 28
+
+[216] "Their meetings were held in the most convenient spot, often on
+mountains or in valleys; the only essentials were a table, a white
+cloth, and a copy of the Gospel of St. John, that is, their own version
+of it."--Dr. Ranking, op. cit., p. 15 (_A.Q.C._, Vol. XXIV.). Cf.
+Gabriele Rossetti, _The Anti-Papal Spirit_, I. 230, where it is said
+"the sacred books, and especially that of St. John, were wrested by this
+sect into strange and perverted meanings."
+
+[217] Michelet, _Histoire de France_, III. 18, 19 (1879 edition).
+
+[218] Michelet, op. cit., p. 10. "L'element semitique, juif et arabe,
+etait fort en Languedoc." Cf. A.E. Waite, _The Secret Tradition in
+Freemasonry_, I. 118: "The South of France was a centre from which went
+forth much of the base occultism of Jewry as well as its theosophical
+dreams."
+
+[219] Michelet, op. cit., p. 12.
+
+[220] Ibid., p. 15.
+
+[221] Graetz, _History of the Jews_, III. 517.
+
+[222] Thus Hastings' _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_ omits all
+reference to Satanism before 1880 and observes: "The evidence of the
+existence of either Satanists or Palladists consists entirely of the
+writings of a group of men in Paris." It then proceeds to devote five
+columns out of the six and a half which compose the article to
+describing the works of two notorious romancers, Leo Taxil and Bataille.
+There is not a word of real information to be found here.
+
+[223] Precis of Eliphas Levi's writings by Arthur E. Waite, _The
+Mysteries of Magic_, p. 215.
+
+[224] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Cabala.
+
+[225] _Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie_, II. 220 (1861). It is curious
+to notice that Sir James Frazer, in his vast compendium on magic, _The
+Golden Bough_, never once refers to any of the higher adepts--Jews,
+Rosicrucians, Satanists, etc., or to the Cabala as a source of
+inspiration. The whole subject is treated as if the cult of magic were
+the spontaneous outcome of primitive or peasant mentality.
+
+[226] _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 289.
+
+[227] Talmud, treatise Berakhoth, folio 6. The Talmud also gives
+directions on the manner of guarding against occult powers and the
+onslaught of disease. The tract Pesachim declares that he who stands
+naked before a candle is liable to be seized with epilepsy. The same
+tract also states that "a man should not go out alone on the night
+following the fourth day or on the night following the Sabbath, because
+an evil spirit, called Agrath, the daughter of Ma'hlath, together with
+one hundred and eighty thousand other evil spirits, go forth into the
+world and have the right to injure anyone they should chance to meet."
+
+[228] Talmud, treatise Hullin, folios 143, 144.
+
+[229] Hastings' _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_, article on Jewish
+Magic by M. Caster.
+
+[230] Margaret Alice Murray, _The Witch Cult in Western Europe_, and
+Jules Garinet, _Histoire de la Magie en France_, p. 163 (1818).
+
+[231] Hastings' _Encyclopaedia_, article on Jewish Magic by M. Gaster.
+See the Zohar, treatise Bereschith, folio 54_b_, where it is said that
+all men are visited in their sleep by female devils. "These demons never
+appear under any other form but that of human beings, but they have no
+hair on their heads.... In the same way as to men, male devils appear in
+dreams to women, with whom they have intercourse."
+
+[232] The Rev. Moses Margoliouth, _The History of the Jews in Great
+Britain_, I. 82. The same author relates further on (p. 304) that Queen
+Elizabeth's Hebrew physician Rodrigo Lopez was accused of trying to
+poison her and died a victim of persecution.
+
+[233] The Rev. Moses Margoliouth, _The History of the Jews in Great
+Britain_, I. 83.
+
+[234] Hastings' _Encyclopaedia_, article on Teutonic Magic by F. Halsig.
+
+[235] Talmud, tract Sabbath.
+
+[236] Hermann L. Strack, _The Jews and Human Sacrifice_, Eng. trans.,
+pp. 140, 141 (1900).
+
+[237] See pages 215 and 216 of _The Mysteries of Magic_, by A.E. Waite.
+
+[238] See also A.S. Turberville, _Mediaeval Heresy and the Inquisition_,
+pp. 111-12 (1920), ending with the words: "The voluminous records of the
+holy tribunal, the learned treatises of its members, are the great
+repositories of the true and indisputable facts concerning the
+abominable heresies of sorcery and witchcraft."
+
+[239] _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 15.
+
+[240] _The Mysteries of Magic_, p. 221.
+
+[241] A.E. Waite, _The Real History of the Rosicrucians_, p. 293.
+
+[242] _Histoire de la Magie_, p. 266.
+
+[243] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 205.
+
+[244] Drach (_De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, II. p. 30)
+says that Pico della Mirandola paid a Jew 7,000 ducats for the
+Cabalistic MSS. from which he drew his thesis.
+
+[245] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, articles on Cabala and Reuchlin.
+
+[246] Ibid., article on Cabala.
+
+[247] The following resume is taken from the recent reprint of the
+_Fama_ and _Confessio_ brought out by the "Societas Rosicruciana in
+Anglia," and printed by W. J. Parrett (Margate, 1923). The story, which,
+owing to the extraordinary confusion of the text, is difficult to resume
+as a coherent narrative is given in the _Fama_; the dates are given in
+the _Confessio_.
+
+[248] Incidentally Paracelsus was not born until 1493, that is to say
+nine years after Christian Rosenkreutz is supposed to have died.
+
+[249] _Nachtrag von weitern Originalschriften des Illuminatenordens_
+Part II p. 148 (Munich, 1787).
+
+[250] Mackey, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 265.
+
+[251] Ibid., p. 150.
+
+[252] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Shabbethai Horowitz.
+
+[253] Mirabeau, _Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne_, V. 76.
+
+[254] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p. 97.
+
+[255] Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnerie dans sa veritable signification_, II.
+48.
+
+[256] A. E. Waite, _The Real History of the Rosicrucians_, p. 216.
+
+[257] "_Traicte des Atheistes, Deistes, Illuminez d'Espagne et Nouveaux
+Pretendus Invisibles, dits de la Confrairie de la Croix-Rosaire, elevez
+depuis quelques annees dans le Christianisme_," forming the second part
+of the "_Histoire Generale de Progres et Decadence de l'Hereie
+Moderne_--_A la suite du Premier_" de M. Florimond de Raemond,
+Conseiller du Roy, etc.
+
+[258] See G.M. Trevelyan, _England under the Stuarts_, pp. 32, 33, and
+James Howell, _Familiar Letters_ (edition of 1753), pp. 49, 435. James
+Holwell was clerk to the Privy Council of Charles I.
+
+[259] Th.-Louis Latour, _Princesses, Dames el Adventurieres du Regne de
+Louis XIV_, p. 278 (Eugene Figutere, Paris, 1923).
+
+[260] Ibid., p. 297.
+
+[261] Ibid., p. 306.
+
+[262] _Oeuvres completes de Voltaire_, Vol. XXI. p. 129 (1785 edition);
+_Biographie Michaud_, article on Glaser.
+
+[263] This assertion finds confirmation in the _Encyclopaedia
+Britannica_, article on the Rosicrucians, which states: "In no sense are
+modern Rosicrucians derived from the Fraternity of the seventeenth
+century."
+
+[264] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on the Cabala.
+
+[265] _A Free Mason's Answer to the Suspected Author of a Pamphlet
+entitled "Jachin and Boaz," or an Authentic Key to Freemasonry_, p. 10
+(1762).
+
+[266] Quoted by R.F. Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, I. 5, 6.
+
+[267] _Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man_, p. 1 (1910).
+
+[268] _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, XXXII. Part I. p. 47.
+
+[269] Preston's _Illustrations of Masonry_, pp. 143, 147, 153 (1804).
+
+[270] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, pp. 269, 327, 329.
+
+[271] Published in the _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_ by the Marquis
+de Luchet, p. 236 (1792 edition).
+
+[272] Brother Chalmers Paton, _The Origin of Freemasonry: the 1717
+Theory Exploded_, quoting ancient charges preserved in a MS. in
+possession of the Lodge of Antiquity in London, written in the reign of
+James II, but "supposed to be really of much more ancient date."
+
+[273] _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, XXV. p. 240, paper by J.E.S. Tuckett on
+_Dr. Rawlinson and the Masonic Entries in Elias Ashmole's Diary_, with
+facsimile of entry in Diary which is preserved in the Bodleian Library
+(Ashmole MS. 1136, fol. 19).
+
+[274] Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 383.
+
+[275] Preston's _Illustrations of Masonry_, p. 208 (1804).
+
+[276] _The Origins of Freemasonry: the 1717 Theory Exploded_.
+
+[277] The Rev. G. Oliver, _The Historical Landmarks of Freemasonry_, pp.
+55, 57, 62, 318 (1845).
+
+[278] _Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man_, p. 185 (1910).
+
+[279] _Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man_, p. 8 (1910).
+
+[280] Ibid., p. 7. The German Freemason Findel disagrees with both the
+Roman Collegia and the Egypt theory, and, like the Abbe Grandidier,
+indicates the _Steinmetzen_ of the fifteenth century as the real
+progenitors of the Order: "All attempts to trace the history of
+Freemasonry farther back than the Middle Ages have been ... failures,
+and placing the origin of the Fraternity in the mysteries of Egypt ...
+must be rejected as a wild and untenable hypothesis."--_History of
+Freemasonry_ (Eng. trans.), p. 25.
+
+[281] Dr. Oliver and Dr. Mackey thus refer to true and spurious Masonry,
+the former descending from Noah, through Shem, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
+and Moses to Solomon--hence the appellation of Noachites sometimes
+applied to Freemasons--the latter from Cain and the Gymnosophists of
+India to Egypt and Greece. They add that a union between the two took
+place at the time of the building of the Temple of Solomon through Hiram
+Abiff, who was a member of both, being by birth a Jew and artificer of
+Tyre, and from this union Freemasonry descends. According to Mackey,
+therefore, Jewish Masonry is the true form.--_A Lexicon of Freemasonry_,
+pp. 323-5; Oliver's _Historical Landmarks of Freemasonry_, I. 60.
+
+[282] Rev. G. Oliver, _The Historical Landmarks of Freemasonry_, pp. 55,
+57 (1845).
+
+[283] _The Jewish Encyclopaaedia_ (article on Freemasonry) characterizes
+the name Hiram Abifi as a misunderstanding of 2 Chron. ii. 13
+
+[284] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 340;
+Matter, _Histoire du Gnosticisme_, I. 145.
+
+[285] _Quoted_ in _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 36.
+
+[286] Article on Freemasonry, giving reference to Pesik, R.V. _25a_ (ed.
+Friedmann).
+
+[287] Clavel, op. cit., 364, 365; Lecouteulx de Canteleu, _Les Sectes et
+Societes Secretes_, p. 120.
+
+[288] Clavel, op. cit., p. 82.
+
+[289] Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 257.
+
+[290] Ibid., p. 242.
+
+[291] "According to Prof. Marks and Prof. Hayter Lewis, the story of
+Hiram Abiff is at least as old as the fourteenth century."--J.E.S.
+Tuckett in _The Origin of Additional Degrees, A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p.
+14. It should be noted that no Mason who took part in the discussion
+brought evidence to show that it dated from before this period. Cf.
+_Freemasonry Before the Existence of Grand Lodges_ (1923), by Wor. Bro.
+Lionel Vibert, I.C.S., p. 135, where it is suggested that the Hiramic
+legend dates from an incident in one of the French building guilds in
+1401.
+
+[292] Yarker, op. cit., p. 348; Eckert, op. cit., II. 36.
+
+[293] Eckert, op. cit., II. 28.
+
+[294] "The Essenes, in common with other Syrian sects, possessed and
+adhered to the 'true principles' of Freemasonry."--Bernard H. Springett,
+_Secret Sects of Syria and the Lebanon_, p. 91.
+
+[295] "The esoteric doctrine of the Judeo-Christian mysteries evidently
+penetrated into the masonic guilds (ateliers) only with the entry of the
+Templars after the destruction of their Order."--Eckert, op. cit., II.
+28.
+
+[296] _La Comtesse de Rudolstadt_, II. 185.
+
+[297] Ragon, _Cours philosophique des Initiations_, p. 34.
+
+[298] Mr. Sidney Klein in _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, XXXII. Part I. pp.
+42, 43.
+
+[299] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, pp. 195, 318, 341, 342, 361.
+
+[300] Ibid., p. 196.
+
+[301] Official history of the Order of Scotland quoted by Bro. Fred. H.
+Buckmaster in _The Royal Order of Scotland_, published at the offices of
+_The Freemason_, pp. 3, 5, 7; A.E. Waite, _Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry_,
+II. 219; Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 330; Mackey, _Lexicon of
+Freemasonry_, p. 267.
+
+[302] Baron Westerode in the _Acta Latomorum_ (1784), quoted by Mackey,
+op. cit., p. 265. Mr. Bernard H. Springett also asserts that this degree
+originated in the East (_Secret Sects of Syria and the Lebanon_, p.
+294).
+
+[303] Chevalier de Berage, _Les Plus Secrets Mysteres des Hauts Grades
+de la Maconnerie devoiles, ou le vrai Rose Croix_ (1768); Waite, _The
+Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, I. 3.
+
+[304] In 1784 some French Freemasons wrote to their English brethren
+saying: "It concerns us to know if there really exists in the island of
+Mull, formerly Melrose ... in the North of Scotland, a Mount Heredom, or
+if it does not exist." In reply a leading Freemason, General Rainsford,
+referred them to the word [Hebrew: **] (Har Adonai), i.e. Mount of God
+(_Notes on the Rainsford Papers in A.Q.C._, XXVI. 99). A more probable
+explanation appears, however, to be that Heredom is a corruption of the
+Hebrew word "Harodim," signifying princes or rulers.
+
+[305] F.H. Buckmaster, _The Royal Order of Scotland_, p. 5. Lecouteulx
+de Canteleu says, however, that Kilwinning had been the great
+meeting-place of Masonry since 1150 (_Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_,
+p. 104). Eckert, op. cit., II. 33.
+
+[306] Mackey, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 267.
+
+[307] Clavel, op. cit., p. 90; Eckert, op. cit., II. 27.
+
+[308] A.E. Waite, _The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, I. 8.
+
+[309] "Our names of E.A., F.C., and M.M. were derived from
+Scotland."--_A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 40. Clavel, however, says that
+these existed in the Roman Collegia (_Histoire pittoresque_, p. 82).
+
+[310] _Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages_, p. 372.
+
+[311] _The Spirit of Islam_, p. 337.
+
+[312] _Secret Sects of Syria and the Lebanon_, p. 181 (1922).
+
+[313] See, for example, Bouillet's _Dictionnaire Universel d'Histoire et
+de Geographie_ (1860), article or Templars: "Les Francs-Macons
+pretendent se rattacher a cette secte."
+
+[314] _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 185.
+
+[315] _Findel, Geschichte der Freimaurerei_, II. 156, 157 (1892
+edition). Dr. Bussell (op. cit., p. 804), referring to Dupuy's work,
+also observes: "An editor of a later edition (Brussels, 1751)
+undoubtedly was a Freemason who tried to clear the indictment and
+affiliate to the condemned Order the new and rapidly increasing
+brotherhood of speculative deism."
+
+[316] The Royal Order of Scotland.
+
+[317] _Manuel des Chevaliers de l'Ordre du Temple_, p. 10 (1825
+edition).
+
+[318] Oration of Chevalier Ramsay (1737); Baron Tschoudy, _L'Etoile
+Flamboyante_, I. 20 (1766).
+
+[319] The description of the Vehmic Tribunals that follows here is
+largely taken from Lombard de Langres, _Les Societes Secretes en
+Allemagne_ (1819), quoting original documents preserved at Dortmund.
+
+[320] Clavel derides this early origin and says it was the
+_Francs-juges_ themselves who claimed Charlemagne as their founder
+(_Histoire pittoresque_, p. 357).
+
+[321] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p. 100.
+
+[322] According to Walter Scott's account of the Vehmgerichts in _Anne
+of Geierstein_, the initiate was warned that the secrets confided to him
+were "neither to be spoken aloud nor whispered, to be told in words or
+written in characters, to be carved or to be painted, or to be otherwise
+communicated, either directly or by parable and emblem." This formula,
+if accurate, would establish a further point of resemblance.
+
+[323] Lombard de Langres, _Les Societes Secretes en Allemagne_, p. 341
+(1819); Lecouteulx de Canteleu, _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p.
+99.
+
+[324] A. le Plongeon, _Sacred Mysteries among the Mayas and the Quichas_
+(1886).
+
+[325] Findel, _History of Freemasonry_ (Eng. trans., 1866), pp. 131,
+132.
+
+[326] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 216, 431.
+
+[327] _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 298.
+
+[328] Waite, _The Real History of the Rosicrucians_, p. 403.
+
+[329] Ibid., p. 283.
+
+[330] Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 430.
+
+[331] "Yarker pronounces Elias Ashmole to have been circa 1686 'the
+leading spirit, both in Craft Masonry and in Rosicrucianism,' and is of
+opinion that his diary establishes the fact 'that both societies fell
+into decay together in 1682.' He adds: 'It is evident therefore that the
+Rosicrucians ... found the operative Guild conveniently ready to their
+hand, and grafted upon it their own mysteries ... also, from this time
+Rosicrucianism disappears and Freemasonry springs into life with all the
+possessions of the former.' "--_Speculative Freemasonry, an Historical
+Lecture_, delivered March 31, 1883, p. 9; quoted by Gould, _History of
+Freemasonry_, II. 138.
+
+[332] _L'Antisemitisme_, p. 339.
+
+[333] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, articles on Leon and Manasseh ben Israel.
+
+[334] Article on "Anglo-Jewish Coats-of-arms" by Lucien Wolf in
+_Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society_, Vol. II. p. 157.
+
+[335] _Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England_, Vol.
+II. p. 156. A picture of Templo forms the frontispiece of this volume,
+and a reproduction of the coat-of-arms of Grand Lodge is given opposite
+to p. 156.
+
+[336] Zohar, section Jethro, folio 70_b_ (de Pauly's trans., Vol. III.
+311).
+
+[337] The Cabalistic interpretation of the Mercaba will be found in the
+Zohar, section Bereschith, folio 18_b_ (de Pauly's trans., Vol. I. p.
+115).
+
+[338] "By figure of a man is always meant that of the male and female
+together."--Ibid., p. 116.
+
+[339] _Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne_, VI. 76.
+
+[340] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, op. cit., p. 105.
+
+[341] Ibid., p. 106; Lombard de Langres, _Les Societes Secretes en
+Allemagne_, p. 67.
+
+[342] Monsignor George F. Dillon, _The War of Anti-Christ with the
+Church and Christian Civilization_, p. 24 (1885).
+
+[343] Brother Chalmers I. Paton, _The Origin of Freemasonry: the 1717
+Theory Exploded_, p. 34.
+
+[344] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, op. cit., p. 107; Robison's _Proofs of a
+Conspiracy_, p. 27; Dillon, op. cit, p. 24; Mackey, _Lexicon of
+Freemasonry_, p. 148.
+
+[345] Preston's _Illustrations of Masonry_, p. 209 (1804); Anderson's
+_New Book of Constitutions_ (1738).
+
+[346] _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, XXV. p. 31. See account of some of
+these convivial masonic societies in this paper entitled "An Apollinaric
+Summons."
+
+[347] _Religious Thought and Heresy in the Middle Ages_, p. 373. A "Past
+Grand Master," in an article entitled "The Crisis in Freemasonry," in
+the _English Review_ for August 1922, takes the same view. "It is true
+... that the Craft Lodges in England were originally Hanoverian clubs,
+as the Scottish lodges were Jacobite clubs."
+
+[348] Dr. Anderson, a native of Aberdeen and at this period minister of
+the Presbyterian Church in Swallow Street, and Dr. Desaguliers, of
+French Protestant descent, who had taken holy orders in England and in
+this same year of 1717 lectured before George I, who rewarded him with a
+benefice in Norfolk (_Dictionary of National Biography_, articles on
+James Anderson and John Theophilus Desaguliers).
+
+[349] _The Free Mason's Vindication, being an answer to a scandalous
+libel entitled (sic) The Grand Mystery of the Free Masons discover'd_,
+etc. (Dublin, 1725). It is curious that this reply is to be found in the
+British Museum (Press mark 8145, h. I. 44), but not the book itself. Yet
+Mr. Waite thinks it sufficiently important to include in a "Chronology
+of the Order," in his _Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry_, I. 335.
+
+[350] _Gentleman's Magazine_ for April 1737.
+
+[351] Dates given in _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. pp. 11, 12, and Deschamps,
+_Les Societes Secretes et la Societe_, III. 29. The writer of the paper
+in _A.Q.C._ appears not to recognize the authorship of the second work
+_L'Ordre des Francs-Macons trahi_; but on p. xxix of this book the
+signature of Abbe Perau appears in the masonic cypher of the period
+derived from the masonic word LUX. This cypher is, of course, now well
+known. It will be found on p. 73 of Clavel's _Histoire pittoresque_.
+
+[352] The British Museum possesses no earlier edition of this work than
+that of 1797, but the first edition must have appeared at least
+thirty-five years earlier, as _A Free Mason's Answer to the suspected
+Author of ... Jachin and Boaz_, of which a copy may be found in the
+British Museum (Press mark 112, d. 41), is dated 1762. This book bears
+on the title-page the following quotation from Shakespeare:
+
+ "Oh, that Heaven would put in every honest Hand a Whip
+ to lash the Rascal naked through the World."
+
+
+[353] The author of _Jachin and Boaz_ says in the 1797 edition that in
+reply to this work he has received "several anonymous Letters,
+containing the lowest Abuse and scurrilous Invectives; nay some have
+proceeded so far as to threaten his Person. He requests the Favour of
+all enraged Brethren, who shall chuse to display their Talents for the
+future, that they will be so kind as to pay the Postage of their Letters
+for there can be no Reason why he should put up with their ill Treatment
+and pay the Piper into the Bargain. Surely there must be something in
+this Book very extraordinary; a something they cannot digest, thus to
+excite the Wrath and Ire of these hot-brained Mason-bit Gentry." One
+letter he has received calls him "a Scandalous Stinking Pow Catt (sic)."
+
+[354] _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 34.
+
+[355] Ibid.
+
+[356] Ibid., p. 15. Mackey also thinks that R.A. was introduced in 1740,
+but that before that date it formed part of the Master's degree
+(_Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 299).
+
+[357] Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 437.
+
+[358] Review by Yarker of Mr. A. E. Waite's book _The Secret Tradition
+in Freemasonry_ in _The Equinox_, Vol. I. No. 7, p. 414.
+
+[359] _Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry_, II. 56.
+
+[360] _A.Q.C._, Vol. XXXII, Part I. p. 23.
+
+[361] Correspondence on Lord Derwentwater in _Morning Post_ for
+September 15, 1922. Mr. Waite (_The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, I.
+113) wrongly gives the name of Lord Derwentwater as John Radcliffe and
+in his _Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry_ as James Radcliffe. But James was
+the name of the third Earl, beheaded in 1716.
+
+[362] Gould, op. cit. III. 138. "The founders were all of them
+Britons."--_A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 6.
+
+[363] "If we turn to our English engraved lists we find that whatever
+Lodge (or Lodges) may have existed in Paris in 1725 must have been
+unchartered, for the first French Lodge on our roll is on the list for
+1730-32.... It would appear probable ... that Derwentwater's Lodge ...
+was an informal Lodge and did not petition for a warrant till
+1732."--Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, III. 138.
+
+[364] John Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, p. 462.
+
+[365] Gautier de Sibert, _Histoire des Ordres Royaux,
+Hospitaliers-Militaires de Notre-Dame du Carmel et de Saint-Lazare de
+Jerusalem_, Vol. II. p. 193 (Paris, 1772).
+
+[366] This oration has been published several times and has been
+variously attributed to Ramsay and the Duc d'Antin. The author of a
+paper in _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I., says on p. 7: "Whether Ramsay
+delivered his speech or not is doubtful, but it is certain that he wrote
+it. It was printed in an obscure and obscene Paris paper called the
+_Almanach des Cocus_ for 1741 and is there said to have been
+'pronounced' by 'Monsieur de R--Grand Orateur de l'Ordre.' It was again
+printed in 1742 by Bro. De la Tierce in his _Histoire, Obligations et
+Statuts, etc.,..._ and De la Tierce says that it was 'prononce par le
+Grand Maitre des Francs-Macons de France' in the year 1740.... A. G.
+Jouast (_Histoire du G.O._, 1865) says the Oration was delivered at the
+Installation of the Duc d'Antin as G.M. on 24th June, 1738, and the same
+authority states that it was first printed at the Hague in 1738, bound
+up with some poems attributed to Voltaire, and some licentious tales by
+Piron.... Bro. Gould remarks: 'If such a work really existed at that
+date, it was probably the original of the "_Lettre philosophique par M.
+de V---- _, _avec plusieurs pieces galantes_," London, 1757.'" Mr. Gould
+has, however, provided very good evidence that Ramsay was the author of
+the oration by Daruty's discovery of the letter to Cardinal Fleury,
+which together with the oration itself (translated from De la Tierce's
+version) he reproduces in his _History of Freemasonry_, Vol. III. p. 84.
+
+[367] _A.Q.C., XXII_. Part I. p. 10.
+
+[368] _Les plus secrets mysteres des Hants Grades de la Maconnerie
+devoiles, ou le vrai Rose-Croix._ A Jerusalem. M.DCC.LXVII. (_A.Q.C._,
+Vol. XXXII. Part I. p. 13, refers, however, to an edition of 1747).
+
+[369] As Godefroi de Bouillon died in 1100, I conclude his name to have
+been introduced here in error by de Berage or the date of 1330 to have
+been a misprint.
+
+[370] Dr. Mackey confirms this assertion, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p.
+304.
+
+[371] _Etoile Flamboyante_, I. pp. 18-20.
+
+[372] The same theory that Freemasonry originated in Palestine as a
+system of protection for the Christian faith is given almost verbatim in
+the instructions to the candidate for initiation into the degree of
+"Prince of the Royal Secret" published in _Monitor of Freemasonry_
+(Chicago, 1860), where it is added that "the brethren assembled round
+the tomb of Hiram, is a representation of the disciples lamenting the
+death of Christ on the Cross." Weishaupt, founder of the
+eighteenth-century Illuminati, also showed--although in a spirit of
+mockery--how easily the legend of Hiram could be interpreted in this
+manner, and suggested that at the periods when the Christians were
+persecuted they enveloped their doctrines in secrecy and symbolism.
+"That was necessary in times and places where the Christians lived
+amongst the heathens, for example in the East at the time of the
+Crusades."--_Nachtrag zur Originalschriften_, Part II. p. 123.
+
+[373] _Etoile Flamboyante_, pp. 24-9.
+
+[374] Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, III. 92.
+
+[375] Mackey's _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 267.
+
+[376] Oliver's _Landmarks of Freemasonry_, II. 81, note 35.
+
+[377] _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 270.
+
+[378] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 166.
+
+[379] _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part 1. p. 17.
+
+[380] _The Royal Order of Scotland_, by Bro. Fred. H. Buckmaster, p. 3
+
+[381] _Histoire de la Vie et des Ouvrages de Messire Francois de
+Salignac de la Mothe-Fenelon, archeveque de Cambrai_, pp. 105, 149
+(1727).
+
+[382] J.M. Ragon, _Ordre Chapitral, Nouveau Grade de Rose-Croix_, p. 35.
+
+[383] The identity of Lord Harnouester has remained a mystery. It has
+been suggested that Harnouester is only a French attempt to spell
+Derwentwater, and therefore that the two Grand Masters referred to were
+one and the same person.
+
+[384] In 1786 the seventh and eighth degrees were transposed, the
+eleventh became Sublime Knight Elect, the twentieth Grand Master of all
+Symbolic, the twenty-first Noachite or Prussian Knight, the twenty-third
+Chief of the Tabernacle, the twenty-fourth Prince of the Tabernacle, the
+twenty-fifth Knight of the Brazen Serpent. The thirteenth is now known
+as the Royal Arch of Enoch and must not be confounded with the Royal
+Arch, which is the complement of the third degree. The fourteenth is now
+the Scotch Knight of Perfection, the fifteenth Knight of the Sword or of
+the East, and the twentieth is Venerable Grand Master.
+
+[385] _History of Freemasonry_, III. 93. Thory gives the date of the
+Kadosch degree as 1743, which seems correct.
+
+[386] Zohar, section Bereschith, folio 18b.
+
+[387] _A.Q.C._, XXVI: "Templar Legends in Freemasonry."
+
+[388] "This degree is intimately connected with the ancient order of the
+Knights Templars, a history of whose destruction, by the united efiorts
+of Philip, King of France, and Pope Clement V, forms a part of the
+instructions given to the candidate. The dress of the Knights is black,
+as an emblem of mourning for the extinction of the Knights Templars, and
+the death of Jacques du Molay, their last Grand Master...."--Mackey,
+_Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 172.
+
+[389] Mr. J.E.S. Tuckett, in the paper before mentioned, quotes the
+Articles of Union of 1813, in which it is said that "pure ancient
+Masonry consists of three degrees and no more," and goes on to observe
+that: "According to this view those other Degrees (which for convenience
+may be called Additional Degrees) are not real Masonry at all, but an
+extraneous and spontaneous growth springing up around the 'Craft'
+proper, later in date, and mostly foreign, i.e. non-British in origin,
+and the existence of _any_ such degrees is by some writers condemned as
+a contamination of the 'pure Ancient Freemasonry' of our
+forefathers."--_A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 5.
+
+[390] J. J. Mounier, _De l'Influence attribuee aux Philosophes, aux
+Francs-Macons et aux Illumines sur la Revolution Francaise_, p. 148
+(1822). See also letter from the Duke of Northumberland at Alnwick to
+General Rainsford dated January 19, 1799, defending Barruel from the
+charge of attacking Masonry and pointing out that he only indicated the
+upper degrees, _A.Q.C._, XXVI, p. 112.
+
+[391] Em. Rebold, _Histoire des Trots Grandes Loges de Francs-Macons en
+France_, pp. 9, 10 (1864).
+
+[392] _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. 21.
+
+[393] _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. 22. It is curious that in this discussion
+by members of the Quatuor Coronati Lodge the influence of the Templars,
+which provides the only key to the situation, is almost entirely
+ignored.
+
+[394] Yarker, _The Arcane Schools_, pp. 479-82.
+
+[395] Mackey, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 119.
+
+[396] _Martines de Pasqually_, par Papus, president du Supreme Conseil
+de l'Ordre Martiniste, p. 144 (1895). Papus is the pseudonym of Dr.
+Gerard Encausse.
+
+[397] Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, III. 241.
+
+[398] See the very important article on this question that appeared in
+_The National Review_ for February 1923, showing that Carlyle was
+assisted gratuitously throughout his work by a German Jew named Joseph
+Neuberg and was supplied with information and finally decorated by the
+Prussian Government.
+
+[399] Executed in 1746 as a partisan of the Stuarts.
+
+[400] Gould, op. cit., Vol. III. pp. 101, 110; _A.Q.C._, Vol. XXXII.
+Part I. p. 31.
+
+[401] A. E. Waite, _The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, I. 296, 370,
+415.
+
+[402] Clavel (_Histoire pittoresque de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 185)
+says it was afterwards discovered that "the Pretender, far from having
+made de Hundt a Templar, on the contrary was made a Templar by him." But
+other authorities deny that Prince Charles Edward was initiated even
+into Freemasonry.
+
+[403] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p. 242;
+Clavel, op. cit., p. 184.
+
+[404] Gould, op. cit., III. 100.
+
+[405] Ibid., III. 99, 103; Waite, _Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, I.
+289: "The Rite of the Stricte Observance was the first masonic system
+which claimed to derive its authority from Unknown Superiors,
+irresponsible themselves but claiming absolute jurisdiction and
+obedience without question."
+
+[406] _Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne_, V. 61 (1788).
+
+[407] _Les Sectes et Societes Secretes_, p. 246.
+
+[408] Gould, op. cit., III. 102. Waite (_Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry_,
+II. 23) says Johnson was "in reality named Leucht, an Englishman by his
+claim--who did not know English and is believed to have been a Jew."
+
+[409] Mackey, op. cit., p. 331.
+
+[410] Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, III. 93; _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I.
+p. 24.
+
+[411] _Levitikon_, p. 8 (1831); Fabre Palaprat, _Recherches historiques
+sur les Templiers_, p. 28 (1835)
+
+[412] M. Gregoire, _Histoire des Sectes Religieuses_, II. 401. Findel
+says that very soon after Frederick's return home from Brunswick "a
+lodge was secretly organized in the castle of Rheinsberg" (_History of
+Freemasonry_, Eng. trans., p. 252). This lodge would appear then to have
+been a Templar, not a Masonic Lodge.
+
+[413] Oliver, _Historical Landmarks in Freemasonry_, II. 110
+
+[414] Findel, _History of Freemasonry_ (Eng. trans.), p. 290.
+
+[415] On this point see _inter alia_ Mackey, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_,
+pp. 91, 328. In England and in the Grand Orient of France most of the
+upper degrees have fallen into disuse, and this rite, known in England
+as the Ancient and Accepted Rite and in France as the Scottish Rite,
+consists of five degrees only in addition to the three Craft degrees
+(known as Blue Masonry), which form the basis of all masonic rites.
+These five degrees are the eighteenth Rose-Croix, the thirtieth Kniqht
+Kadosch, and the thirty-first to the thirty-third. The English
+Freemason, on being admitted to the upper degrees, therefore advances at
+one bound from the third degree of Master Mason to the eighteenth degree
+of Rose-Croix, which thus forms the first of the upper degrees. The
+intermediate degrees are, however, still worked in America.
+
+[416] _Scottish Rite of Freemasonry: the Constitutions and Regulations
+of_ 1762, by Albert Pike, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Supreme
+Council of the Thirty-third Degree for the Southern Jurisdiction of the
+United States, p. 138 (A.M. 5632).
+
+[417] RO. State Papers, Foreign, France, Vol. 243, Jan. 2 and Feb. 19,
+1752.
+
+[418] John Morley, _Diderot and the Encyclopaedists_, Vol. I. pp. 123-47
+(1886).
+
+[419] Gould, op. cit., III. 87. Mr. Gould naively adds in a footnote to
+this passage: "The proposed Dictionary is a curious crux--- is it
+possible that the Royal Society may have formed some such idea?" The
+beginning already made in London was of course the _Cyclopaedia_ of
+Chambers, published in 1728, and Chambers, who in the following year was
+made a Fellow of the Royal Society, if not himself a Mason numbered many
+prominent Masons amongst his friends, including the globe-maker Senex to
+whom he had been apprenticed and who published Anderson's
+_Constitutions_ in 1723. (See _A.Q.C._, XXXII. Part I. p. 18.)
+
+[420] Papus, _Martines de Pasqually_, p. 146 (1895).
+
+[421] Evidently a reference to the seven liberal arts and sciences
+enumerated in the Fellow Craft's degree--Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic,
+Arithmetic, Geometry, Music, and Astronomy.
+
+[422] In 1767 Voltaire writes to Frederick asking him to have certain
+books printed in Berlin and circulated in Europe "at a low price which
+will facilitate the sales." To this Frederick replies: "You can make use
+of my printers according to your desires," etc. (letter of May 5, 1767).
+I have referred elsewhere to the libels against Marie Antoinette
+circulated by Frederick's agents in France. See my _French Revolution_,
+pp. 27, 183.
+
+[423] Eliphas Levi, _Histoire de la Magie, p_ 407. The role of
+Freemasonry in preparing the Revolution habitually denied by the
+conspiracy of history is nevertheless clearly recognized in masonic
+circles--applauded by those of France, deplored by those of England and
+America. An American manual in my possession contains the following
+passage: "The Masons ... (it is now well settled by history) _originated
+the Revolution_ with the infamous Duke of Orleans at their head."--_A
+Ritual and Illustrations of Freemasonry_, p. 31 note.
+
+[424] Papus, _Martines de Pasqually, p_. 150.
+
+[425] Benjamin Fabre, _Eques a Capite Galeato_, p. 88.
+
+[426] _Souvenirs du Baron de Gleichen_, p. 151.
+
+[427] Henri Martin, _Histoire de France_, XVI. 529.
+
+[428] Heckethorn, _Secret Societies_, I. 218; Waite, _Secret Tradition_,
+II. 155, 156.
+
+[429] "The ceremonial magic of Pasqually followed that type which I
+connect with the debased Kabbalism of Jewry."--A. E. Waite, _The Secret
+Tradition in Freemasonry_, II. 175.
+
+[430] An eighteenth-century manuscript of _Les vrais clavicules du roi
+Salomon_, translated from the Hebrew, was sold in Paris in 1921.
+
+[431] Mackev, _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 156
+
+[432] A.E. Waite, _The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabbalah_, p. 369.
+Ragon elsewhere gives an account of the philosophical degree of the
+Rose-Croix, in which the sacred formula I.N.R.I., which plays an
+important part in the Christian form of this degree, is interpreted to
+mean Igne Natura Renovatur Integra--Nature is renewed by fire.--_Novueau
+Grade de Rose Croix_, p 69. Mackev gives this as an alternative
+interpretation of the Rosicrucians.--_Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 150.
+
+[433] Ragon, _Mafonnerie Occulte_, p. 91.
+
+[434] Gustave Bord, _La Franc-Maconnerie en Francs, des Origines a_
+1815, p. 212 (1908).
+
+[435] Letter from General Rainsford of October 1782, quoted in
+_Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society_, Vol. VIII. p. 125.
+
+[436] De Luchet (_Essai sur la Sects des Illumines_, p. 212) refers to
+the following works in connexion with the Order:
+
+ 1. _Nouvelles authentiques des Chevaliers et Freres Inities
+ d'Asie_.
+
+ 2. _Recoit-on, peut-on recevoir les Juifs parmi les Franc-Macons_?
+
+ 3. _Nouvelles authentiques de l'Asie_, by Frederick de Bascamp,
+ nomme Lazapolski (1787).
+
+Wolfstieg, in his _Bibliograpkie der Freimaurischer Literatur_, Vol. II.
+p. 283, gives Friedrich Munter as the author of the first of the above,
+and also mentions amongst others a work by Gustave Brabee, _Die
+Asiatischen Bruder in Berlin und Wien_. But none of these are to be
+found in the British Museum, nor is the book of Rolling (published in
+1787), which gives away the secrets of the sect.
+
+[437] Books in Wolfstieg's list refer to the Order as "the only true and
+genuine Freemasonry" (die einzige wahre und echte Freimaurerei).
+
+[438] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque_, etc., p. 167.
+
+[439] The Baron de Gleichen, in describing the "Convulsionists," says
+that young women allowed themselves to be crucified, sometimes head
+downwards, at these meetings of the fanatics. He himself saw one nailed
+to the floor and her tongue cut with a razor. (_Souvenirs da Baron de
+Gleichen_, p. 185.)
+
+[440] Barruel, _Memoires sur le Jacobinisme_, IV. 263.
+
+[441] _Franciscus, Eques a Capite Galeato_, published by Benjamin Fabre
+with preface by Copin Albancelli. A paper on this book appears in _Ars
+Quatuor Coronatorum_, Vol. XXX. Part II. The author, Mr. J. E. S.
+Tuckett, describes it as a book of extraordinary interest to Freemasons.
+Without sharing Mr. Tuckett's admiration for the members of the Rit
+Primitif, I agree with him that M. Fabre attributes to them too much
+guile and fails to substantiate his charge of revolutionary designs.
+They appear to have been the perfectly honourable dupes of subtler
+brains. Incidentally Mr. Tuckett erroneously gives the real name of
+"Eques a Capite Galeato" as Chefdebien d'Armand; it should be
+d'Armisson.
+
+[442] De Luchet, _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_, p. 208. Gould, op.
+cit., III. 116.
+
+[443] It is amusing to note that Mr. Waite confuses him with the
+rightful bearer of the name, Claude Louis, Comte de Saint-Germain,
+Minister of War under Louis XVI, for in _The Secret Tradition in
+Freemasonry_, Vol. II., a picture of the real Count is appended to a
+description of the adventurer.
+
+[444] _Biographic Michaud_, article on Saint-Germain.
+
+[445] _Souvenirs de la Marquise de Crequy_, III. 65. Francois Bournand
+(_Histoire de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 106) confirms this story: "The
+man who called himself the Comte de Saint-Germain was in reality only
+the son of an Alsatian Jew named Wolf."
+
+[446] _Nouvelle Biographie Generale_, article on Saint-Germain.
+
+[447] Frederick Bulau, _Geheime Geschichten und rathselhafte Menschen_,
+I. 311 (1850); Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnene dans sa veritable
+signification_, II. 80, quoting Lening's _Encyclopedie des
+Franc-Mafons_.
+
+[448] Lecouteulx de Canteleu, op. cit., pp. 171, 172.
+
+[449] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque_, p. 175.
+
+[450] Ibid., p. 175.
+
+[451] Figuier, _Histoire du Merveilleux_, IV. 9-11 (1860).
+
+[452] Mounier, _De l'influence attribuee_, etc., p. 140.
+
+[453] Benjamin Fabre, _Franciscus eques a Capite Galeato_, p. 24.
+
+[454] De Luchet, _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_ (1792 edition), p.
+234.
+
+[455] _L'Antisemitisme_, p. 335.
+
+[456] Ibid., p. 328.
+
+[457] Article by Mr. Lucien Wolf, "The First English Jew," in
+_Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England_, Vol. II. p.
+18. On this question see also the pamphlets by Mr. Lucien Wolf:
+_Crypto-Jews under the Commonwealth_ (1894), Cromwell's _Jewish
+Intelligencers_ (1891), and _Manasseh ben Israel's Mission to Oliver
+Cromwell_ (1901), also articles on Cromwell, Carvajal, and Manasseh ben
+Israel in the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_.
+
+[458] Lucien Wolf, "The First English Jew," in _Transactions of the
+Jewish Historical Society of England_, II. 20.
+
+[459] Tovey, _Anglia Judaica_, p. 275.
+
+[460] The _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, in its article on Manasseh ben Israel,
+says: "He was full of cabalistic opinions, though he was careful not to
+expound them in those of his works that were written in modern languages
+and intended to be read by Gentiles." In its article on "Magic" the
+_Jewish Encyclopaedia_ refers to the "Nishmat Hayyim," a work by Manasseh
+ben Israel which "is filled with superstition and magic" and adds that
+"many Christian scholars were deluded."
+
+[461] Tovey, _Anglia Judaica_, p. 259; Margoliouth, _History of the Jews
+in England_, II. 3.
+
+[462] Mirabeau (_Sur la Reforme politique des Juifs_, 1787) thinks they
+may not have been allowed to return unconditionally until 1664. It was
+certainly at this date that they were formally granted free permission
+to live in England and practice their religion (Margoliouth, op. cit.,
+II. 26).
+
+[463] Margohouth, op cit., II 43.
+
+[464] _The Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth_, by Lewis H.
+Berens, pp. 36, 74, 76, 98, 141 (1906).
+
+[465] Claudio Jannet, _Les Precurseurs de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 47
+(1187).
+
+[466] _Harmsworth Encyclopaedia_, article on Jews.
+
+[467] _Diary of Samuel Pepys_, date of February 19, 1666
+
+[468] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Shabbethai Zebi B. Mordecai.
+
+[469] Henry Hart Milman, _History of the Jews_ (Everyman's Library),
+Vol. II. p. 445.
+
+[470] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Ba'al Shem Tob.
+
+[471] Milman, op. cit, II. 446.
+
+[472] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Heilprin, Joel Ben Uri.
+
+[473] Heckethorn, _Secret Societies_, I. 87.
+
+[474] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Jacob Frank.
+
+[475] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Jacob Frank.
+
+[476] Ibid.
+
+[477] Milraan, op. cit., II. 447.
+
+[478] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Jacob Frank.
+
+[479] Ibid.
+
+[480] Ibid.: Heckethorn. _Secret Societies_, I. 87.
+
+[481] Milman, op. cit., II. 448. Cf. description of pomp displayed by
+another member of the oppressed race named Frankel, who appeared at a
+parade of Jewry at Prague in 1741 in a carriage drawn by six horses and
+surrounded by footmen and horseguards.--_Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article
+on Frankel, Simon Wolf.
+
+[482] _Jewish Encyclopedia_, article on Falk, of whom a good portrait by
+Copley is given. On Falk see also _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, Vol. XXVI.
+Part I. pp. 98-105, and Vol. XXX. Part II; _Transactions of the Jewish
+Historical Society_, Vol. V. p. 148, article on "The Ba'al Shem of
+London," by the Rev. Dr. H. Adler, Chief Rabbi, and Vol. VIII, "Notes on
+some Contemporary References to Dr. Falk, the Ba'al Shem of London, in
+the Rainsford MSS. at the British Museum," by Gordon P.G. Hills. The
+following pages are taken entirely from these sources.
+
+[483] Falk does not appear to have brought good fortune to the Goldsmid
+family, for Margoliouth in a passage which evidently relates to Falk
+says that, according to Jewish legend, the suicide of Abraham Goldsmid
+and his brother was attributed to the following cause: "A Ba'al Shem, an
+operative Cabalist, in other words a thaumaturgos and prophet, used to
+live with the father of the Goldsmids. On his death-bed he summoned the
+patriarch Goldsmid, and delivered into his hands a box, which he
+strictly enjoined should not be opened till a tertain period which the
+Ba'al Shem specified, and in case of disobedience a torrent of fearful
+calamities would overwhelm the Goldsmids. The patriarch's curiosity was
+not aroused for some time; but in a few years after the Ba'al Shem's
+death, Goldsmid, the aged, half sceptic, half curious, forced open the
+fatal box, and then the Goldsmids began to learn what it was to
+disbelieve the words of a Ba'al Shem."--Margoliouth, _History of the
+Jews_, II. 144.
+
+[484] _Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society_, V. 162.
+
+[485] Benjamin Fabre, _Eques a Capite Galeato_, p. 84.
+
+[486] Benjamin Fabre, op cit., pp. 88, 90, 98, 110.
+
+[487] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque_, pp. 188, 390; Robison's _Proofs of
+a Conspiracy_, p. 77.
+
+[488] _The Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia_ describes both _Nathan der Weise_
+and _Ernst und Falk_ as prominent works on Masonry.
+
+[489] There is, however, the possibility that Lessing may have had in
+mind another Falk living at the same period; this was "John Frederick
+Falk, born at Hamburg of Jewish parents, reported to have been head of a
+Cabalistic College in London and to have died about 1824" (_Tranactions
+of the Jewish Historical Society_, VIII. 128). But in view of the part
+which the correspondence of Savalette de Langes shows the Ba'al Shem of
+London to have played in the background of Freemasonry, it seems more
+probable that he was the Falk in question. At any rate, both were Jews
+and Cabalists.
+
+[490] Who can this have been?
+
+[491] The Duchesse de Gontaut relates in her _Memoires_ that the Due
+d'Orleans was one day driving through the forest of Fontainebleau when a
+man, half clothed and with a demented air, sprang towards the carriage,
+grimacing horribly. The Duke's suite, taking him for a madman, would
+have kept him at bay, but the Duke, at that moment awaking from sleep,
+unbuttoned his shirt and showed his assailant an iron ring suspended
+round his neck. At this sight the man took to his heels and disappeared
+into the wood. The mystery of this incident was never elucidated, and
+the Duke, when questioned on the matter, would offer no explanation.
+Could this ring have been Falk's talisman?
+
+[492] Margoliouth, op. cit., II. 121-4. See also _Life of Lord George
+Gordon_ by Robert Watson (1795), pp. 71, 72.
+
+[493] Friedrich Bulau, _Geheime Geschichten und rathselhafte Menschen_,
+I. 325 (1850). _The Public Advertiser_, Aug. 22, 24, 1786.
+
+[494] Barruel, Vol. III. p. xi., quoting Gaultier.
+
+[495] Silvestre de Sacy, "Memoires sur la Dynastie des Assassins," in
+_Memoires de l'Institut Royal de France_, Vol. IV. (1818).
+
+[496] _History of Freemasonry_, III. 121.
+
+[497] _Memoires sur le Jacobinisme_ (edition of 1819), Vol. III. p. 9.
+
+[498] Ibid., III. 55, 56.
+
+[499] _Essat sur la Secte des lllumines_, pp. 28-39.
+
+[500] "Our worst enemies the Jesuits."--Letter from Spartacus,
+_Originalschriften_, p. 306.
+
+[501] Figuier, _Histoire de Merveilleux_, IV. 77.
+
+[502] _Originalschriften des Illuminatenordens_, p. 230.
+
+[503] Ibid., p. 331.
+
+[504] In _World Revolution_ I suggested a resemblance between the Jewish
+calendar and that of the Illuminati. This was an error; the Jewish
+calendar was adopted by the Scottish Rite, which, as we have seen,
+derived partly from Judaic sources.
+
+[505] Thus Zwack (alias Cato) writes: "We have not only hindered the
+enlistings of the Rose-Croix but rendered their very name
+contemptible."--_Originalschriften_, p. 8.
+
+[506] _Originalschriften_, p. 363. The word Illuminism is always
+represented by this symbol in the correspondence of the Illuminati.
+
+[507] Ibid., p. 202.
+
+[508] Ibid., p. 331.
+
+[509] A. E. Waite, "Freemasonry and the Jewish Peril," in _The Occult
+Review_ for September 1920, p. 152.
+
+[510] _Memoires de Mirabeau ecrats par lui-meme, par son pere, son oncle
+et son fils adoptif, et precedes d'une etude sur Mirabeau par Victor
+Hugo_, Vol. III. p. 47 (1834).
+
+[511] I have expressly made use of M. Barthou's resume instead of making
+one of my own, lest I should be said to have made judicious selections
+in order to suit the purpose of showing the resemblance between this
+Memoir and the passage from Mirabeau's other writings which follows. But
+M. Barthou's impartiality cannot be impugned, for he appears to know
+nothing about the Illuminati or Mirabeau's connexion with them, and
+regards the Memoir in question as solely the outcome of Mirabeau's mind
+which had "ripened" since 1772.
+
+[512] F. Barthou, _Mirabeau_, p. 57.
+
+[513] In the Memoir drawn up by Mirabeau quoted above we find this
+passage: "It must be a fundamental rule never to allow any prince to
+enter the association were he a god for virtue."--_Memoires de
+Mirabeau_, III. 60.
+
+[514] _Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne_, V. 99.
+
+[515] Henry Martin, _Histoire de France_, XVI. 533.
+
+[516] Louis Blanc, _Histoire de la Revolution Francaise_, II. 84.
+
+[517] _History of Freemasonry_, III. 121.
+
+[518] _Originalschriften_, p. 258.
+
+[519] Ibid., p. 297.
+
+[520] Ibid., p. 285.
+
+[521] Ibid., p. 286.
+
+[522] _Originalschriften_, p. 300. It seems that when a Freemason
+appeared likely to fall in with the scheme of Illuminism, he was soon
+allowed to know of the further system. Thus in the case of "Savioli"
+"Cato" writes: "Now that he is a Mason I have put all about this (*)
+before him, shown him what is unimportant and at this opportunity taken
+up the general plan of our (*), and as this pleased him I said that such a
+thing really existed, whereat he gave me his word that he would enter
+it."--_Originalschriften_, p. 289.
+
+[523] Ibid., p. 303.
+
+[524] Ibid., p. 361.
+
+[525] Ibid., p. 363.
+
+[526] Ibid., p. 360.
+
+[527] _Originalschriften_, p. 200.
+
+[528] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 67.
+
+[529] _Ibid._, p. 95.
+
+[530] _Lexicon of Freemasonry_, p. 142. See also Oliver's _Historical
+Landmarks of Freemasonry_, I. 26, where the Illuminati are rightly
+included amongst the enemies of Masonry. Nevertheless, both Mackey and
+Oliver proceed to revile Barruel and Robison as enemies of Masonry, and
+in order to substantiate this accusation Oliver descends to the most
+flagrant misquotation. For if we look up in the original the passages he
+quotes on page 382 from Robison and on page 573 from Barruel as evidence
+of their calumnies on Masonry, we shall find that they refer
+respectively to the Rose-Croix Cabalists and the Illuminati and not to
+the Freemasons at all! See Robison's _Proofs of a Conspiracy_, p. 93,
+and Barruel's _Memoires sur le Jacobinisme_ (1818 edition), II. 244.
+
+[531] _Oeuvres Completes de Voltaire_ (1818 edition). Vol. XLI. p. 153.
+
+[532] Ibid., pp. 165, 168.
+
+[533] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_. II. 54-57.
+
+[534] Ibid., p. 82.
+
+[535] Ibid., p. 59.
+
+[536] Ibid., p. 63.
+
+[537] Ibid., p. 65.
+
+[538] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 67.
+
+[539] Ibid., pp. 80, 81.
+
+[540] Ibid., pp. 98, 99.
+
+[541] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 100-101.
+
+[542] Ibid., p. 105: "He Himself lived with His disciples in community
+of goods."
+
+[543] Ibid, p. 101. This was one of the earliest heresies of the
+Christian era refuted by Origen: "Moreover, he [Celsus] frequently calls
+the Christian doctrine a secret system, we must refute him on this point
+... to speak of the Christian doctrine as a secret system is altogether
+absurd."--Origen, _Contra Celsum_, in _The Ante-Nicene Christian
+Library_, p. 403 (1869).
+
+[544] Ibid., p. 106.
+
+[545] Ibid., p. 113.
+
+[546] Ibid., p. 96.
+
+[547] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 111.
+
+[548] Ibid., II. 123.
+
+[549] Ibid., II. 124.
+
+[550] Ibid., I. 68.
+
+[551] Ibid., II. 113.
+
+[552] Ibid., II. 115.
+
+[553] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 13, 14.
+
+[554] Ibid., I. 104.
+
+[555] Ibid., I. 104-106.
+
+[556] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 76.
+
+[557] _Originalschriften_, p. 8.
+
+[558] Ibid., p. 9.
+
+[559] Ibid., p. 10
+
+[560] _Neuesten Arbeiten des Spartacus und Philo_, pp. 143, 163.
+
+[561] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 3.
+
+[562] _Originalschriften_, p. 215.
+
+[563] Ibid., p. 173.
+
+[564] Ibid., p. 175.
+
+[565] Ibid., pp. 237-8.
+
+[566] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 12.
+
+[567] _Originalschriften_, p. 231.
+
+[568] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 2.
+
+[569] _Originalschriften_, p. 51.
+
+[570] Ibid., p. 52.
+
+[571] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 45.
+
+[572] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 51.
+
+[573] _Originalschriften_, p. 210.
+
+[574] Ibid., p. 72.
+
+[575] Ibid., p. 271.
+
+[576] Ibid., p. 50.
+
+[577] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 32.
+
+[578] _Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia_, article on Illuminati.
+
+[579] Feder, a preacher at the Court who had joined the Illuminati.
+
+[580] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 42.
+
+[581] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 39, 40.
+
+[582] Ibid., I. 47.
+
+[583] _Originalschriften_, pp. 370, 371.
+
+[584] Ibid., pp. 257, 258.
+
+[585] Given in the cypher of the Illuminati: "Denken sie, meine 18. 10.
+5. 21. 12. 6. 8. 17. 4. 13. ist 18. 10. 5. 21. 12. 13. 6. 8. 17. (meine
+Schwagerin ist schwanger)." See cypher on p. 1 of _Originalschnften_.
+
+[586] Note, then, that this was no sudden lapse on the part of
+Weishaupt.
+
+[587] _Nachtrag von ... Onginalschrtften_, I. 14-16.
+
+[588] Ibid., I. 21.
+
+[589] Ibid., I. 99.
+
+[590] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, I. 112.
+
+[591] Author of the very interesting work _La Verite sur les Societes
+Secretes en Allemagne_, par un Ancien Illumine (Paris, 1819).
+
+[592] _De l'Influence attribuee aux Philosophes, aux Francs-Macons et
+aux Illumines sur la, Revolution de France_, par J.J. Mounier (1822), p.
+181.
+
+[593] It has several times been stated that Weishaupt was himself a Jew.
+I cannot find the slightest evidence to this effect.
+
+[594] _Originalschriften_, pp. 107-10.
+
+[595] "Foresight indicates," says Falk, "that an end must be made to the
+whole of the present scheme of Freemasonry [_dem ganzen jetzigen Schema
+der Freimaurerei ein Ende zu machen_]," and he goes on to show that this
+must be done by picked men in the secret societies who know the true
+secrets of Masonry. This is precisely Weishaupt's idea.
+
+[596] In 1779 Spartacus writes to Marius and Cato suggesting that
+instead of Illuminati the Order should be called the "Order of Bees
+[Bienenorden oder Bienengesellschaft]," and that all the statutes should
+be clothed in this allegory--_Originalschriften_, p. 320.
+
+[597] _Nachtrag von ... Originalschriften_, II. 81.
+
+[598] My italics.
+
+[599] Where are they called this? The Cabala distinctly states that
+Israel alone is to possess the future world (Zohar, section Vayschlah,
+folio 177b), whilst the Talmud even excludes the lost tribes: "the ten
+tribes have no share in the world to come" (Tract Sanhedrim, Rodkinson's
+translation, p. 363).
+
+[600] _Memoirs of Moses Mendelssohn_, by M. Samuels, pp. 56, 57 (1827).
+
+[601] Letter to the _Jewish Chronicle_, September 1, 1922, quoting
+Henrietta Herz.
+
+[602] Goethe was initiated into Freemasonry on St. John's Eve, 1780.
+_The Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia_ observes: "There exist two great
+classical Masonic writers, Lessing and Goethe." Dr. Stauffer, in _New
+England and the Bavarian Illuminati_ (p. 172), points out further that
+Goethe's connexion with the Illuminati is fully established by both
+Engel (_Geschichte des Illuminatenordens_, pp. 355 and following) and by
+Le Forestier (_Les Illumines de Baviere_, pp. 396 and following). It is
+possible that _Faust_ may be the history of an initiation by a
+disillusioned Illuminatus.
+
+[603] Henri Martin, _Histoire de France_, Vol. XVI. p. 531.
+
+[604] _Historie de la Monarchie prussienne_, V. 73.
+
+[605] _Ars Quatuor Coronatorum_, Vol. XXVI. p. 98.
+
+[606] "Notes on the Rainsford Papers" in _A.Q.C._, Vol. XXVI. p. 111.
+
+[607] _Morning Herald_ for November 2, 1786.
+
+[608] Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnerie dans sa veritable signification_,
+Vol. II. p. 92.
+
+[609] _Drei merkwurdige Aussagen_, etc., evidence of Grunberger,
+Cosandey, and Renner (Munich, 1786); _Grosse Absichten des Ordens der
+Illuminaten_, etc., Ditto, with Utzschneider (Munich, 1786).
+
+[610] Gustave Bord, _La Franc-Maconnerie en France_, etc., p. 351
+(1908). This Australian Count is referred to in the correspondence of
+the Illuminati more as an agent than as an adept. Thus Weishaupt writes:
+"I must attempt to cure him of theosophy and bring him round to our
+views" (_Nachtrag von ... Originalschnften_, I. 71); and Philo, before
+the Congress of Wilhelmsbad, observes: "Numenius is not yet of much use.
+I am only taking him up so as to stop his mouth at the Congress [_um ihn
+auj dem Convente das Meul zu stopfen_]; still, if he is well led we can
+make something out of him." (ibid., p. 109).
+
+[611] _Die Neuesten Arbeiten des Spartacus und Philo in dem
+Illuminaten-Orden._ p. viii (1794).
+
+[612] De Luchet, _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_, p. vii.
+
+[613] Cretineau Joly, _L'Eglise Romaine en face de la Revolution_, I. p.
+93.
+
+[614] In my _World Revolution_ I accepted erroneously the opinion of
+several well-known writers who attribute this pamphlet to Mirabeau. The
+fact that it was printed at the end of Mirabeau's _Histoire Secrete de
+la Cour de Berlin_ and that a further edition revised by Mirabeau was
+published in 1792 no doubt gave rise to this supposition. But apart from
+the fact that Mirabeau as an Illuminatus was unlikely himself to
+denounce the Order, the proof that he was not the author may be found at
+the British Museum, where the copy of the 1792 edition bears on the
+title-page the words in ink "Donne par l'auteur," and Mirabeau died in
+the spring of the preceding year.
+
+[615] British Museum press-mark F. 259 (14).
+
+[616] _Oeuvres posthumes de Marmontel_, IV. 77.
+
+[617] Lombard de Langres, _Histoire des Jacobins_, p. 31 (1820).
+
+[618] Deschamps, _Les Societes Secretes et la Societe_, II. 151, quoting
+document amongst the papers of Cardinal Bernis entitled: _Discours
+prononce au comite de la Propagande par M. Duport, un de ses memoires,
+le 21 mai 1790._
+
+[619] Galart de Montjoie, _Histoire de Marie Antoinette de Lorraine_, p.
+156 (1797).
+
+[620] Lombard de Langres, _Histoire des Jacobins_, p. 117 (1820).
+
+[621] Ibid., p. 236.
+
+[622] See _Die Neuesten Arbeiten des Spartacus und Philo_, p. 71, where
+the Illuminati are described as wearing "fliegende Haare und kleine
+vierekte rothe samtne Hute." An alternative theory is, however, that the
+"cap of liberty" was copied from that of the galley-slaves.
+
+[623] _Histoire des Jacobins_, p. 117.
+
+[624] A.E. Waite, _The Mysteries of Magic_, p. 215.
+
+[625] _Moniteur_, Vol. II., seance du 23 decembre, 1789.
+
+[626] Theophile Malvezin, _Histoire des Juifs a Bordeaux_, p. 262
+(1875).
+
+[627] _Requete des six corps de marchands et negociants de Paris contre
+l'admission des Juifs_ in Archives Nationales, quoted by Henri Delassus,
+_La Question Juive_, p. 60 (1911).
+
+[628] Leon Kahn, _Les Juifs de Paris pendant la Revolution_ (1898).
+
+[629] Ibid., p. 167. Cf. Arthur Chuquet, _La Legion Germanique_, p. 139
+(1904).
+
+[630] Archives Nationales, F*. 2486.
+
+[631] My _French Revolution_, p. 274.
+
+[632] Kahn, op. cit., pp. 140, 141, 170, 201, 241.
+
+[633] _Nouvelle Adresse des Juifs a l'Assemblee Nationale_, le 24
+decembre, 1789.
+
+[634] _Moniteur_, Vol. XVIII., seances of 21st and 22nd Brumaire, An 2
+(November, 1793).
+
+[635] _Discours de morale, prononce le 2ieme decadi, 20 frimaire, l'an
+2ieme de la republique ... an temple de la Verite, ci-devant l'eglise
+des benedictins a Angely Boutonne ... fait par le citoyen Alexandre
+Lambert, fils, juif et eleve dans les prejuges du culte judaique_
+(1794), British Museum press-mark F. 1058 (4).
+
+[636] Kahn, op. cit., p. 311.
+
+[637] _Crimes de la Revolution_, III. 44.
+
+[638] Archives Nationales, _Piece remise par le Cabinet de Vienne_
+(1824), F* 7566.
+
+[639] Chevalier de Malet, _Recherches politiques et historiques_, p. 2
+(1817).
+
+[640] Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnerie dans sa veritable signification_, II.
+125.
+
+[641] Mr. Lucien Wolf, "The Jewish Peril," article in the _Spectator_
+for June 12, 1920.
+
+[642] A.E. Waite, "Occult Freemasonry and the Jewish Peril," in _The
+Occult Review_ for September, 1920.
+
+[643] Deschamps, op. cit., II. 197, quoting _Tableau historique de la
+Maconnerie_, p. 38.
+
+[644] _Eques a Capite Galeato_, pp. 362, 364, 366.
+
+[645] Ibid., p. 423.
+
+[646] _The War of Anti-Christ with the Church and Christian
+Civilization_, p. 30 (1885).
+
+[647] G. Lenotre, _Le Dauphin_ (Eng. trans.), p. 307.
+
+[648] Archives Nationales, F* 6563.
+
+[649] Archives Nationales F* 6563 No. 2449, Serie 2. No. 49.
+
+[650] _Piece remise par le Cabinet de Vienne_, F* 7566.
+
+[651] _Lettres d'un Voyageur a l'Abbe Barruel_, p. 30 (1800).
+
+[652] _World Revolution_, pp. 86 and following, where extracts from the
+correspondence of the Alta Vendita (or Haute Vente Romaine) were given.
+This correspondence will be found in _L'Eglise Romaine en face de la
+Revolution_, by Cretineau Joly, who published it from the documents
+seized by the Pontifical Government at the death of one of the members.
+The documents were communicated to Cretineau Joly by the Pope Gregoire
+XVI, and published with the approval of Pius IX. Their authenticity has
+never been questioned. They are still in the secret archives of the
+Vatican, or at any rate were there at the beginning of the present year.
+
+[653] Jan Witt, dit Buloz, _Les Societes Secretes de France et
+d'ltalie_, pp. 20, 21 (1830).
+
+[654] Ibid., p. 6.
+
+[655] Louis Blanc, _Histoire de Dix Ans_, I. 88, 89.
+
+[656] Deschamps, _Les Societes Secretes et la Societe_, II. 534, quoting
+the _Monde Maconmque_ for July, 1867.
+
+[657] _Correspondence de Michel Bakounine_, published by Michael
+Dragomanov, pp. 73, 209 (1896).
+
+[658] A. E. Waite, _The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, Vol. I. p. ix.
+
+[659] _The Real History of the Rosicrucians_, p. 403.
+
+[660] Paul Nourrisson, _Les Jacobins an Pouvoir_, pp. 202, 215 (1904).
+
+[661] J.M. Ragon, _Cours philosophique ... des Initiations_, etc.,
+edition sacree (5,842), p. 19.
+
+[662] Ibid., p. 38.
+
+[663] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, p. 124
+(1908).
+
+[664] Ibid., p. 125.
+
+[665] Ragon, op. cit., p. 38, note 2.
+
+[666] Ibid., p. 39.
+
+[667] Ibid., p. 52.
+
+[668] Ibid., p. 53.
+
+[669] Clavel, _Histoire pittoresque de la Franc-Maconnerie_, p. 21.
+
+[670] Ibid., p. 23.
+
+[671] In _La Republique universelle_, published in 1793.
+
+[672] Georges Goyau, _L'Idee de Patrie et l'Humanitarisme_, p. 242
+(1913), quoting speech of F. Troubat in 1886. A periodical called _Les
+Etats Unis de l'Europe_ was published by Ferdinand Buisson in 1868.
+Ibid., p. 113.
+
+[673] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvoir occults contre la France_, p. 89.
+
+[674] Gould, _History of Freemasonry_, III. 191, 192.
+
+[675] Ibid., III. 26.
+
+[676] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, p. 97.
+
+[677] Ibid., p. 90.
+
+[678] _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, pp. 274-7.
+
+[679] Ibid., pp. 284-6.
+
+[680] _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, p. 44.
+
+[681] Ibid., p. 263.
+
+[682] Ibid., p. 294.
+
+[683] _La Conjuration juive contre le Monde Chretien_ (1909).
+
+[684] _Morning Post_ for February 1 and February 26, 1923.
+
+[685] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, p. 132.
+
+[686] Gautrelet, _La Franc-Maconnerie et la Revolution_, p. 87 (1872).
+
+[687] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvoir occulte contre la France_, p. 85.
+
+[688] Louis Daste, _Marie Antinette et le Complot Maconnique_, pp. 49-51
+(1910).
+
+[689] _Times_ for December 30, 1921; _A Epoca_, November 28, 1921.
+
+[690] These documents were published in a book entitled _A
+Szabadkomivesseg Bunei_ by Adorjan Barcsay.
+
+[691] _Two Centuries of Freemasonry_, p. 79. Published by the
+International Bureau for Masonic Affairs, of Neuchatel, 1917.
+
+[692] Article on "The Popes and Freemasonry," by the Rev. Herbert
+Thurston, S.J., in _The Tablet_ for January 27, 1923.
+
+[693] _Evening Standard_, June 26, 1923.
+
+[694] Ragon, _Cours des Initiations_, p. 33.
+
+[695] Alliance de la Democratic Socialiste, etc., publie par l'ordre du
+Congres International de la Haye, p. 93 (1873).
+
+[696] _Histoire des Clubs de Femmes_, by the Baron Marc de Villiers, p.
+380.
+
+[697] Rene Guenon, _Le Theosophisme_, p. 245 (1921).
+
+[698] Guenon, op. cit., p. 248, quoting _La Lumiere Maconnique_,
+Nov.--Dec. 1912, p. 522.
+
+[699] Alice Leighton Cleather, _H. P. Blavatsky: her Life and Work for
+Humanity_ p. 17 (Thacker, Spink & Co., Calcutta, 1922).
+
+[700] Rene Guenon, op. cit., p. 17.
+
+[701] Rene Guenon, op. cit., p. 30.
+
+[702] Guenon, op cit., p. 193, quoting _Le Lotus_ for December, 1887.
+
+[703] I refrain from giving the name of this book as the author has now
+left the Theosophical Society and may regret having written these words.
+
+[704] Adolphe Franck, _La Kabbale_, pp. ii-iv.
+
+[705] See _ante_, pp. 21, 66, 92.
+
+[706] Alice Leighton Cleather, _A Great Betrayal_, p. 13 (1922).
+
+[707] See on this subject the ravings contained in the book _Christ and
+the New Age_ (1922), edited by G. Leopold, under the auspices of "The
+Star in the East."
+
+[708] Dudley Wright, _Roman Catholicism and Freemasonry_, p. 221 (1922).
+
+[709] In a few lodges the purely British ritual has been adopted under
+the name of the Verulam working, whilst recently a third ritual has been
+introduced by "Bishop Wedgwood," which in the opinion of a high British
+Mason "upsets the whole working of the Craft degrees and reduces it all
+to an absurdity."
+
+[710] Alice Leighton Cleather, _H.P. Blavatsky: her Life and Work for
+Humanity_, p. 24 (Thacker. Spink & Co., Calcutta, 1922).
+
+[711] Alice Leighton Cleather, _H.P. Blavatsky: her Life and Work for
+Humanity_, p. 24. (Thacker, Spink & Co., Calcutta, 1922).
+
+[712] Ibid., p. 14.
+
+[713] Ibid., pp. 20, 311.
+
+[714] Nos. of January 11 to March 22, 1923.
+
+[715] A. L. Cleather, _H. P. Blavatsky' a Great Betrayal_, p. 69 (Thacker,
+Spink & Co., Calcutta, 1922).
+
+[716] _John Bull_, June 7, 1919; _The Patriot_, February 15, 1923.
+
+[717] _The War and the Builders of the Commonwealth_, a lecture given at
+the Queen's Hall by Annie Besant on October 5, 1919, pp. 15, 18 (printed
+by the Theosophical Publishing Co.).
+
+[718] Diary of the Theosophical Society for April-July, 1924, p. 43.
+
+[719] On June 26, 1923
+
+[720] _The Theosophical Quarterly_ for October 1920, April 1921, and
+April 1922 (published by the Theosophical Society, New York).
+
+[721] Syed Ameer Ali expresses the opinion that even to Eastern minds
+esoteric speculation presents a danger: "Sufism in the Moslem world,
+like to its counterpart in Christendom, has, in its practical effect,
+been productive of many mischievous results. In perfectly well-attuned
+minds mysticism takes the form of a noble type of idealistic philosophy;
+but the generality of mankind are more likely to unhinge their brains by
+busying themselves with the mysteries of the Divine Essence and our
+relations thereto. Every ignorant and idle specimen of humanity, who,
+despising real knowledge, abandoned the fields of true philosophy and
+betook himself to the domains of mysticism, would thus set himself up as
+one of the Ahl-i-Ma 'rifat."--_The Spirit of Islam_, p. 477.
+
+[722] Confirmed by A.Q.C. 1. 54.
+
+[723] Guenon, op. cit., p. 296. It would appear to be this MS. or a copy
+which was recently offered for sale by a Paris bookseller under the
+following description: "Manuscrit de Kabbale.--Spedalieri (Baron de. Le
+Sceau de Salomon). Traite sur les Sephiroth, en un in-f. de 16 pp....
+le baron Spedalieri fut le disciple le plus instruit et le plus intime
+d'Eliphas Levi.--Son trate kabalistique 'Le Sceau de Salomon' est fonde
+sur la tradition hebraique et hindoue et nous revele le sens occulte du
+grand pantacle mystique. Dans une etude sur les sephiroth, Eliphas Levi
+annoncait que le temps venu il revelerait a ses disciples ce grand
+mystere jusqu'ici cache.--Spedalieri entreprend cette revelation." Le
+Bibliophile es Sciences Psychiques, No. 16 (1922). Librairie Emile
+Nourry, 62 ru des Ecoles, Paris, Ve.
+
+[724] See ante, p. 34.
+
+[725] Robert Kuentz, _Le Dr Steiner et la Theosophie actuelle_, series
+of articles in the review _Le Feu_ for October, November and December
+1913 and reprinted in pamphlet form.
+
+[726] The year of the General Strike.
+
+[727] Letter from Meakin to Baron Walleen, a Dane and member of the S.M.
+
+[728] Bertrand Russell, _The practice and Theory of Bolshevism_, p. 65
+(1920).
+
+[729] Amongst ths "subsidiary activities" of the Theosophical Society
+may be mentioned the Liberal Catholic Church, the Guild of the Citizens
+of Tomorrow, the Order of the Brothers of Service, the Golden Chain, the
+Order of the Round Table, the Bureau of Social Reconstruction, the
+Braille League, the Theosophical Educational Trust, etc.
+
+[730] _Le Pouvoir Occulte contre la France_, p. 291.
+
+[731] "The struggle to instil into the masses the idea of the Soviet
+State control, and accounting, that this idea may be realised and a
+break be made with the accursed past, which accustomed the people to
+look upon the work of getting food and clothing as a 'private' affair
+and on purchase and sale as something that 'concerns only myself'--this
+is a most momentous struggle, of universal historical significance, a
+struggle for Socialist consciousness against bourgeois-anarchistic
+'freedom.'"--Lenin, _The Soviets at Work_, p. 22 (The Socialist
+Information and Research Bureau, 196 St. Vincent Street, Glasgow, 1919).
+
+[732] Mr. Bernard Shaw on "Railway Strike Secrets," reported in _Morning
+Post_ for December 3, 1919.
+
+[733] Mr. Bernard Shaw in the _Labour Monthly_ for October 1921.
+
+[734] Report of interview with Maxim Gorky in _Daily News_ for October
+3, 1921.
+
+[735] Opinion expressed to me in conversation with a Socialist. Cf. Keir
+Hardie, "Communism, the final goal of Socialism" (_Serfdom to
+Socialism_, p. 36).
+
+[736] "By the decree of May 22 1922, the right of private ownership of
+means of production and for production itself was re-established." See
+article by Krassin on "The New Economic Policy of the Soviet Government"
+in _Reconstruction_ (the monthly review edited by Parvus) for September
+1922.
+
+[737] See Guillaume's _Documents de l'Internationale_ and Mrs. Snowden's
+_A Political Pilgrim in Europe_.
+
+[738] _Les Societes de Pensee et la Democratie_ (1921). M. Augustin
+Cochin collaborated with M. Charles Charpentier in throwing new light on
+the French Revolution, and triumphantly refuted M. Aulard in 1908.
+Unhappily his work was cut short by the war and he was killed at the
+front in July 1916, leaving his great history of the Revolution
+unfinished.
+
+[739] Mr. Philip Snowden in debate on Socialism in the House of Commons
+on March 20, 1923: "By far the greatest time that man has been upon this
+globe he has lived not under a system of private enterprise, not under
+capitalism, but under a system of tribal communism, and it is well worth
+while to remember that most of the great inventions that have been the
+basis of our machinery and our modern discoveries were invented by men
+who lived together in tribes."
+
+[740] _The Red Catechism_, by Tom Anderson, p. 3.
+
+[741] E.g. the following extract from an address by Miss Esther Bright
+to the Esoteric School of Theosophy quoted in _The Patriot_ for March
+22, 1923: "The hearty and understanding co-operation between E.S.T.
+members of many nations will form a nucleus upon which the nations may
+build the big brotherhood which we hope may become the United States of
+Europe. United States! What a fine sound it has when one looks at the
+Europe of to-day!" A review named _Les Etats-Unis d'Europe_ existed as
+early as 1868, and M. Goyau shows that this formula and also that of the
+"Republique Universelle" were slogans current amongst the pacifists
+before and during the war of 1870 which they signally failed to
+avert.--_L'Idee de Patrie et l'Humanitarisme_, pp. 113, 115.
+
+[742] How bitterly this attitude is still resented by the Jews is shown
+in the article on Jesus in the _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, which observes
+that: "In almost all of his public utterances he was harsh, severe, and
+distinctly unjust ... toward the ruling and well-to-do classes. After
+reading his diatribes against the Pharisees, the Scribes, and the rich,
+it is scarcely to be wondered at that these were concerned in helping to
+silence him" (vol. vii, p. 164).
+
+[743] The execution of Monseigneur Butkievitch, the Roman Catholic
+Archbishop of Petrograd, was condoned by the _Daily Herald_, the _New
+Statesman_, and the _Nation_. See the _Daily Herald_ for April 7, 1923.
+
+[744] Letters from a friend of the present writer in Russia, dates of
+August 1922 and February 1923.
+
+[745] _Daily Herald_ for February 21, 1922.
+
+[746] Ibid., March 18, 1920.
+
+[747] See Report of Annual Conference of the Social Democratic
+Federation in _Morning Post_ for August 6, 1923, where it is said that
+"Whole-hearted denunciation of Sovietism was the chief feature of the
+day's discussion," etc.
+
+[748] _Evening Standard_ for January 15, 1924.
+
+[749] _Daily Telegraph_ for January 8, 1923; _Daily Mail_ for January
+24, 1923.
+
+[750] Report of speech by Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, at a public
+meeting to protest against the treatment of political prisoners in
+Portugal, April 22, 1913, quoted in _Portuguese Political Prisoners_, p.
+89 (published by Upcott Gill & Son).
+
+[751] _Evening Standard_, May 14, 1923.
+
+[752] That this use of the cinema for revolutionary propaganda is
+deliberate was proved to me by personal experience. A man who had been
+struck with the dramatic possibilities of something I had written wrote
+to ask if he might place it before a certain well-known film producer in
+America. I gave my consent, and some time later he informed me that the
+producer in question regretted he could not film my work as it might
+appear to be anti-Bolshevist propaganda. Soon after this the same
+producer brought out a film on the same subject with the moral turned
+round the other way, so as to make the whole thing subtly revolutionary,
+and brought this over to England, where he advertised it as
+anti-Bolshevist propaganda! This is typical of the duplicity displayed
+by these propagandists.
+
+[753] Quoted in _Le Probleme de la Mode_, by the Baronne de Montenach,
+p. 30(1913).
+
+[754] Robison, _Proofs of a Conspiracy_, pp. 251, 252 (1798).
+
+[755] Article by A. Quiller in _The Equinox_ for September 1910, p. 338.
+
+[756] _New York Herald_ for September 6 and 7, 1921.
+
+[757] Private communication to the author.
+
+[758] Paul Bureau, _La Crise morale des Temps nouveaux_, p. 108 (1907).
+
+[759] _Daily Mail_, July 14, 1922.
+
+[760] _Le Smorfie dell' Anima_, by Mario Mariani (1919).
+
+[761] A leader writer in one of the most important literary
+Constitutional journals in this country observed to me in conversation
+that "all such nonsense as patriotism ought to be done away with";
+another writer for the same paper told me he would not in the least
+regret to see the British Empire broken up.
+
+[762] Astolphe de Custine, _La Russie en_ 1839, I. 149 (1843).
+
+[763] _Essai sur la Secte des Illumines_ (1792 edition), p. 48. On p. 46
+de Luchet expresses his idea in a curious passaqe which I find difficult
+to render in English: "Il s'est forme au sein des plus epaisses
+tenebres, une societe d'etres nouveaux qui se connaissent sans s'etre
+vus, qui s'entendent sans s'etre expliques, qui se servent sans amitie.
+Cette societe a le but de gouverner le monde...."
+
+[764] Ibid., p. 171.
+
+[765] Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnerie dans sa veritable signification_,
+translated by the Abbe Gyr (1854), II. 133, 134.
+
+[766] My italics.
+
+[767] Galart de Montjoie, _Histoire de Marie Antoinette_, p. 156 (1797).
+
+[768] G. Lenotre, _The Dauphin_, Eng. trans., p. 307.
+
+[769] _Recherches politiques et historiques sur l'existence d'une secte
+revolutionnaire_, p. 2 (1817).
+
+[770] J. Cretineau-Joly, _L'Eglise Romaine en face de la Revolution_,
+II. 143 (1859).
+
+[771] _Lord George Bentinck, A Political Biography_, pp. 552-4 (1852).
+
+[772] _Les Societes Secretes et la Societe_, I. 91
+
+[773] Ibid., II. 243.
+
+[774] Ibid., II. 521.
+
+[775] Robison's _Proofs of a Conspiracy_, p. 107.
+
+[776] A good account of this was contained in a letter to _The Times_ of
+January 23, 1924.
+
+[777] _The Prince_, Eng. trans, by Henry Morley, p. 61.
+
+[778] Ibid., p. 110.
+
+[779] Ibid., p. 110.
+
+[780] Ibid., p. 131.
+
+[781] _The Prince_, Eng. trans, by Henry Morley, pp. 143, 144.
+
+[782] M. Mazeres, _De Machiavel et de l'influence de sa doctrine sur les
+opinions, les maeurs et la politique de la France pendant la Revolution_
+(1816).
+
+[783] Deschamps, _Les Societes Secretes, etc._, I. p. xcii., quoting
+"Discours du F. Malapert a la Loge Alsace-Lorraine" in _La Chains
+d'Umon_, pp. 88, 89 (1874); ct. Eckert, _La Franc-Maconnerie dans sa
+veritable signification_, II. 293.
+
+[784] Deschamps, op. cit., II. 681.
+
+[785] _Politica Segreta Italiana_, by Diamilla Muller, p. 346 (1891).
+
+[786] Copin Albancelli, _Le Pouvotr occulte contre la France_, p. 388.
+
+[787] Series of article entitled "Boche and Bolshevik" by Nesta H.
+Webster and Herr Kurt Kerlen, which appeared in the _Morning Post_ for
+April 26, 27, June 10, 11, 15, 16, 1922. Reprinted in book form by the
+Beckwith Company of New York.
+
+[788] _Boche and Bolshevik_, p 39.
+
+[789] _The General Staff and its Problems_, II. 556
+
+[790] One of the pamphlets emanating from the first of these lines and
+entitled "England's War Guilt" reached the present writer. Its purport
+is to show that "England alone was the chief agent of the war," and that
+Lord Haldane and Sir Edward Grey, by encouraging Germany to believe that
+England would not intervene, led her into a trap.
+
+[791] Georges Goyau, _L'Idee de Patrie et l'Humanitarisme_, p. in
+(1913).
+
+[792] August 19, 1919.
+
+[793] My italics.
+
+[794] _Daily Herald_ for January 26, 1923. So tender a regard did the
+_Daily Herald_ entertain for the feelings of German magnates that its
+susceptibilities were deeply shocked at the correspondent of another
+paper, who, after lunching with Herr Thyssen, was so "ungentlemanly" as
+to comment afterwards on the display of wealth he had witnessed (_Daily
+Herald_ for February 2, 1923). Yet the _Daily Herald_ reporter had seen
+nothing ungentlemanly in attending a garden party at Buckingham Palace
+and publishing a sneering account of it afterwards under the heading of
+"Pomp and Farce in the Palace" (date of July 21, 1921).
+
+[795] Karl Marx in his _Preamble of the Provisional Rules of the
+Internationale_ (1864).
+
+[796] _The Times_, June 30, 1922; the _Morning Post_, June 26 and 30,
+1922. A very curious and well-informed article, from which some of these
+details are taken, appeared in the _West Coast Leader_, Lima, Peru, of
+December 14, 1921.
+
+[797] _Lettres inedites de Joseph de Maistre_, p. 415 (1851).
+
+[798] Letter from the Rev. B. S. Lombard to Lord Curzon, March 23, 1919.
+
+[799] _Jewish Guardian_ for January 18, 1924.
+
+[800] _Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on Zionism.
+
+[801]_La Republique universelle_, p. 186 note (1793).
+
+[802] _Daily Mail_, September 21, 1923.
+
+[803] Reported in the _Jewish World_, January 5, 1922.
+
+[804] _Morning Post_ for August 1, 1921.
+
+[805] Michael Rodkinson (i.e. Rodkinssohn), in Preface to translation of
+the Talmud, Vol. I. p. x.
+
+[806] Drach, _De l'Harmomie entre l'Eglise[C] et la Synagogue_, I. 167,
+quoting the treatise Aboda-Zara, folio 13 verso, and folio 20 recto;
+also treatise Baba Kamma, folio 29 verso. Drach adds: "We could multiply
+these quotations almost to infinity."
+
+[807] Zohar, section Toldoth Noah, folio 63_b_ (de Pauly's trans., I
+373).
+
+[808] Zohar, section Toldoth Noah, folio 646 (de Pauly's trans., I.
+376).
+
+[809] J.P. Stehelin, _The Traditions of the Jews_, II. 215-20, quoting
+Talmud treatises Baba Bathra folio 74_b_, Pesachim folio 32, Bekhoroth
+folio 57, Massektoth Ta'anith folio 31. The Zohar also refers to the
+female Leviathan (section Bo, de Pauly's trans., III. 167). Drach shows
+that amongst the delights promised by the Talmud after the return to
+Palestine will be the permission to eat pork and bacon.--_De l'Harmonie
+entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, I. 265, 276, quoting treatise Hullin,
+folio 17, 82.
+
+[810] Stehelin, op. cit., II. 221-4.
+
+[811] The Very Rev. Sir George Adam Smith, _Syria and the Holy Land_, p.
+49 (1918).
+
+[812] Zohar, section Schemoth, folio 7 and 9_b_; section Beschalah,
+folio 58b (de Pauly's trans., III. 32, 36, 41, 260).
+
+[813] Ibid., section Vayschlah, folio 177_b_ (de Pauly's trans., II. p.
+298).
+
+[814] Hastings' _Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics_, article on the
+Kabbala by H. Loewe.
+
+[815] Eugene Tavernier, _La Religion Nouvelle_, p. 265 (1905).
+
+[816] _Jewish Guardian_ for January 25, 1924.
+
+[817] Deuter. ix. 5.
+
+[818] Dan. ix. 11.
+
+[819] Neh. ix. 26.
+
+[820] Isa. i. 1-17. See also Ezek. xx. 13.
+
+[821] _Jewish Guardian_ for October 1, 1920.
+
+[822] Josephus, _The Jewish War_ (Eng. trans.), IV. 170, 334.
+
+[823] Ibid., V. 152.
+
+[824] See, for example, the descriptions of the horrible cruelty
+practised in the Jewish schools of Poland in the eighteenth century,
+given in _The Autobiography of Solomon Maimon_ (Eng. trans., 1888), p.
+32.
+
+[825] Treatise Hullin, folio 27_a_.
+
+[826] Talmud, treatise Sanhedrim (Rodkinson's trans, p. 156).
+
+[827] _Encyclopaedia Britannica_ (1911 edition), article on Lord
+Beaconsfield.
+
+[828] Drach, _De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue_, II. 336.
+This custom is still in force; see the very legitimate complaint of a
+Jewess in the _Jewish World_ for December 21, 1923, that women are still
+relegated to the gallery "to be hidden behind the grille, whence they
+may hear their menfolk bless the Almighty in strident tones that 'Thou
+hast not made me a woman.'"
+
+[829] Drach, op. cit., II. 335, 336, quoting Talmud, treatise Meghilla
+folio 23 verso, treatise Berachoth folio 21 verso, treatise Sanhedrim
+folio 2 recto, Maimonides chap. viii. art 6; Schulchan Arukh, etc.
+
+[830] In this connexion see article on "Jesus" in the _Jewish
+Encyclopaedia_, where the reader is referred to the work of O. Holtzmann
+(_War Jesus Ekstattker_?), who "agrees that there must have been
+abnormal mental processes involved in the utterances and behaviour of
+Jesus."
+
+[831] _Jewish World_ for December 22. 1920.
+
+[832] Exod. i 10.
+
+[833] Sura v. 60 (Everyman's Library edition, p. 493).
+
+[834] Reinhardt Dozy, _Spanish Islam_ (Eng. trans.), p. 651.
+
+[835] J. Denais-Darnays, _Les Juifs en France_, p. 17 (1907).
+
+[836] On the question of the Protocols, see Appendix II.
+
+[837] "Jews have been most conspicuous in connexion with Freemasonry in
+France since the Revolution."--_Jewish Encyclopaedia_, article on
+Freemasonry.
+
+[838] A.E. Waite, _The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry_, II. 115.
+
+[839] It is significant to notice that in the second and abridged
+edition of the white Paper issued by the Foreign Office these two most
+important passages marked with an asterisk were omitted and the first
+edition was said to be unobtainable.
+
+[840] On this point see also a very interesting pamphlet _From Behind
+the Vail_, published by Victor Hornyanszky (Budapest, 1920), also Madame
+Cecile Tormay, _The Diary of an Outlaw_ (1923).
+
+[841] _Revolutionary Radicalism, its History, Purpose, and Tactics, with
+an Exposition and Discussion of the Steps being taken and required to
+curb it, being the Report of the Joint Legislative Committee
+investigating Seditious Activities, filed April_ 24, 1920. _in the
+Senate of the State of New York_ (Albany, J.B. Lyon Company, Printers,
+1920).
+
+[842] _Revolutionary Radicalism_, Vol. I. p. 374.
+
+[843] Ibid., p. 24.
+
+[844] Among those who prominently showed their profound grief at the
+death of Lenin were Jews, and not merely Jews by origin but conforming
+Jews. Children from Jewish schools, we learn, joined in the procession,
+while the Hebrew Art Theatre (Habima) sent a banner with the inscription
+in Hebrew: "You freed the nations; you will be remembered for ever.' In
+addition Rabbi Jacob Mase, of Moscow, the Jewish Relief Committee of
+that city and other Jewish bodies, sent telegrams of condolence; while
+the Association of Jewish Authors issued a special memorial magazine in
+Yiddish dedicated to the memory of Lenin."--_Jewish World_ for January
+21, 1924.
+
+[845] _Patriot_, for April 26, 1923.
+
+[846] Ibid., May 3, 1923.
+
+[847] _Jewish World_ for January 10, 1924.
+
+[848] Quoted in the _Jewish World_ for January 10, 1924,
+
+[849] _Jewish World_ for November 9, 1922.
+
+[850] _Le Probleme Juif_. pp. 41, 43.
+
+[851] Lenin, _The Soviets at Work_, p. 18.
+
+[852] I do not here ignore the work of the Trade Unions; but the Trade
+Unions would have been powerless to better conditions without the
+support of upper and middle-class men in Parliament.
+
+[853] Private communication to author.
+
+[854] See _ante_, p. 343.
+
+[855]Madame Cecile Tormay, in her description of the Jewish Bolshevist
+regime in Hungary, eloquently observes: "It is said that only a
+misguided fraction of the Jews is active in the destruction of Hungary.
+If that be so, why do not the Jews who represent Jewry in London, in New
+York, and at the Paris Peace Conference disown and brand their tyrant
+co-religionists in Hungary? Why do they not repudiate all community with
+them? Why do they not protest against the assaults committed by men of
+their race?" (_An Outlaw's Diary_, p. 110, 1923).
+
+[856] For example, when religious persecution in Russia was said to have
+turned against the Jews in the spring of 1923.
+
+[857] _Jewish Intelligence, and Monthly Account of the Proceedings of
+the London Society for Promoting Christianity amongst the Jews_, April
+1846, pp. 111, 112: Letter from the Rev. B.W. Wright.
+
+[858] Gustave Le Bon goes so far as to say that "the Jews have never
+possessed either arts, sciences, or industries, or anything that
+constitutes a civilization.... At the time of their greatest power under
+the reign of Solomon it was from abroad that they were obliged to bring
+the architects, workmen, and artists, of which no rival then existed in
+Israel."--_Les Premieres Civilisations_, p. 613 (1889). It should be
+remembered, however, that Hiram, the master-builder, was half, if not
+wholly, an Israelite.
+
+[859] _Jewish Encyclopedia_, article on Nervous Diseases.
+
+[860] _Jewish World_ for November 9, 1922.
+
+[861] H.M. Hyndman, "The Dawn of a Revolutionary Epoch," in _The
+Nineteenth Century_ for January 1881.
+
+[862] A committee has recently been formed by the Jewish Board of
+Guardians to sit on all "anti-Semitic" movements in this country. At a
+meeting of this body it was complacently announced that "the Committee
+had obtained the removal of the posters of an anti-Semitic paper from
+the walls of an important establishment, and steps had been taken to get
+others removed."--_Jewish Guardian_, February 22, 1924. We wonder
+whether the Welsh would be able to obtain the removal of posters
+advertising literature of an anti-Celtic nature. This comes perilously
+near to a fulfilment of the Protocols.
+
+[863] Drach, _De l'Harmonie entre l'Eglise et la Synagogue._ I. 79
+(1844). It is curious to notice that the Jewish writer Margoliouth makes
+use of the same expression where he says, "It was well remarked that the
+house [of Rothschild] 'was spread like a network over the
+nations.'"--_History of the Jews in Great Britain_, II. 161 (1851).
+
+[864] Eng. trans., Vol. III. p. 591 ff.
+
+[865] Confirmed by Werner Sombart, _The Jews and Modern Capitalism_
+(Eng. trans.), p. 203: "The Talmud says: 'Kill even the best of the
+Gentiles.'" The Zohar also says: "Tradition tells us that the best of
+the Gentiles deserves death."--Section Vaiqra, folio 14_b_ (de Pauly's
+trans., Vol. V. p. 42).
+
+[866] Professor H. Graetz, _The History of the Jews_ (Eng. trans.), III.
+591-6.
+
+[867] See my _World Revolution_, pp. 296-307. The misapprehension
+referred to above may have arisen from the resemblance between the title
+of my book and the series of articles which appeared in the _Morning
+Post_ under the name of _The Cause of World Unrest_. In view of the fact
+that these articles were on some points at variance with my own
+theories, it seems hardly necessary to state that they were not my work.
+As a matter of fact, I did not know of their existence until they were
+in print, and later I contributed four supplementary articles signed by
+my name.
+
+[868] _Spectator_ for June 12, 1920.
+
+[869] James Guillaume, _Documents de l'Internationale_, I. 131.
+
+[870] _Correspondance de Bakounine_, published by Michael Dragomanov, p.
+325.
+
+[871] _Le Juif_, etc., pp. 367, 368.
+
+[872] _Revolution and War or Britain's Peril and her Secret Foes_, by
+Vigilant (1913). A great portion of this book exposing the subtle
+propaganda of Socialism and Pacifism is admirable; it is only where the
+author attempts to lay all this to the charge of the Jesuits that he
+entirely fails to substantiate his case.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER NOTES
+
+
+
+Footnotes have been renumbered and placed after the index (before these
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+frequently. In the ASCII version of this text, it is represented
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+
+Where obvious, typos have been corrected in the text and marked with an
+alphabetic footnote. Details of each change are listed below.
+
+[A] Changed "centry" to "century".
+
+[B] Changed "Pavly" to "Pauly".
+
+[C] Changed "l'Elise" to "l'Eglise".
+
+[D] Changed "Mara" to "Marx".
+
+
+
+
+
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