
Past
and Present, At Home and Abroad
An Address to the Soc. Rosic.
In Anglia
By William Wynn Westcott

The
Rosicrucians: Past
and Present, At Home and Abroad
It is well at certain times to consider
our status as Rosicrucians, and to remind ourselves of the origin of the
Society to which we belong, to notice how far we moderns have strayed from
the original paths laid down by our Founder, C.R., and to take a note of
the kindred Societies of Rosicrucians which are now in being, so far as
we know of them.
With regard to past history we must not
be suprised that extant published records are very scanty, for the purpose
of the Rosicrucians was to be unknown to the people among whom they Lived.
Some few notable persons only appear to have had the right to function
as recognised members of the Rosicrucian Colleges, for instance, Michael
Maier the German student of Alchemy who died in 1662, and Dr. Robert Fludd
of London and Bearstead near Maidstone who died in 1637.
The Star of Rosicrucianism is now once
more in the ascendant and our Society has made rapid strides in the past
ten years. It is curious to note that waves of interest in occult and mystical
subjects, seem to sweep over a nation at intervals; periods of Rosicrucian
enlightenment alternate with other periods of materialistic dogmatism.
We must remember that Rosicrucianism itself
was "no new thing" but only a revival of still earlier forms
of Initiation, and was a lineal descendant of the Philosophies of the Chaldean
Magi, of the Egyptian priests, of the Neo-Platonists, of the Hermetists
of Alexandria of the Jewish Kabalists and of Christian Kabalists such as
Raymond Lully and Pic de Mirandola.
The nominal Founder of our Society--Christian
Rosencreuz, did not invent, at least in our modern sense of the word, the
doctrines he promulgated, and which we should now study. It is narrated
that he journeyed to Arabia, to Palestine, to Egypt and to Spain, and in
the seats of learning in those countries he found and collected the mystic
lore, which was made anew by him into a code of doctrine and knowledge.
On his return from these foreign travels he settled in Germany, founded
a Collegium, selected certain friends and transformed them into enthusiastic
pupils, and giving his new Society his own name, he laid the foundation
of that scheme of Mystical Philosophy, which we are now here to perpetuate
and carry into practice: let us remember that he died in the year 1484,
that is so far back as the reign of our King Richard the Third.
The fratres of the original Collegium,
who met in the "Domus Sanctus Spiritus," or " House of the
Holy Spirit," were learned men, earnest students and public benefactors.
Their rules were: That none of the members should profess any art except
to relieve the sick and that gratis; each one should wear the ordinary
dress of the country, and should attend on Corpus Christi day at a general
Convocation every year, whenever possible to do so; each one should seek
a suitable pupil to succeed him: that the secret mark of each one should
be C.R or R.C., and that the Society should remain secret for 100 years.
As time went on the purposes and duties
of the fratres became altered, the cure of the sick especially was taken
over by the development of the medical profession.
About 1710, one Sigmund Richter, using
the motto of "Sincerus Renatus," published at Breslau his work
called "The perfect and true preparation of the Philosophical Stone
according to the secret of the Brotherboods of the Golden and Rosy Cross."
In this volume we find a series of 52 rules for the guidance of Rosicrucian
members; these rules are such as were likely to lead to useful and orderly
lives.
Again, about 1785, there was published
at Altona in Germany a most important volume of coloured theosophical plates
with eludicatory words and phrases and several essays on Rosicrucian subjects:
its title was "Geheime Figuren der Rosenkreuzer"; it was in two
portions. An English translation of some part of this work was published
in 1888 by Franz Hartmann, a German Theosophist.
We catch a further glimpse of the purposes
of the Rosicrucians at a later date, from a curious little tract relating
to a French branch of the Society, which relates the Reception of Dr. Sigismund
Bacstrom in the Mauritius--French colony--by the Comte de Chazal in 1794.
I cannot say where the original MS. now is, but our copy was made by the
secretary of the well-known Rosicrucian and crystal-gazer Frederick Hockley,
who died in 1885. Bacstrom signed his pledge to fourteen promises;--to
piety and sobriety, to keep the secrecy of his admission, to preserve the
secret knowledge, to choose suitable successors, to carry on the great
work, to give aid and charity privately, to share discoveries with his
fellows, to avoid politics, to help strangers, and to show gratitude to
those who had led to his reception; etc.
During a recent visit to East Africa I
met in Natal a Mauritius born doctor whose wife was a Miss de Chazal, a
native of Mauritius; among her ancestors about I780-90 there was this M.
de Chazal who was an eccentric genius and was considered to possess curious
arts; he also became a notable Swedenborgian and held classes of mystical
philosophy. The name is many times mentioned in a French history of Mauritius
which was lent to me by Dr. Dumat of Durban. At the time of the French
Revolution it would be natural for our count de Chazal to drop his title,
as did many of the French nobility.
The aim of our own Society at the present
day is to afford mutual aid and encouragement in working out the great
problems of Life, and in discovering the Secrets of Nature; to facilitate
the study of the system of Philosophy founded upon the Kabalah and the
doctrines of Hermes Trismegistus, which was inculcated by the original
Fratres Rosae Crucis. of Germany, A.D. 1450; and to investigate the meaning
and symbolism of all that now remains of the wisdom, art and literature
of the Ancient World.
The Rosicrucian Societies of Anglia, Scotia
and the United States, alike Masonic bodies, are by no means the only descendants
of the original Collegium, for in Germany, and Austria there are other
Rosicrucian Colleges of more direct descent than our own, which are not
fettered by any of the limitations which Freemasonry has imposed upon us,
and some of these, although not composed of many members, include students
who understand many curious phenomena, which our Zelators have not studied.
The German Rosicrucians keep their Colleges and membership entirely secret,
they print no transactions nor even any notices, and it is almost impossible
to identify any member.
The German groups of Rosicrucians now existing
are much more immersed in mystic and occult lore than ourselves; they endeavour
to extend the human faculties beyond the material toward the ethereal,
astral and spiritual worlds: at the present time I understand that they
use no formulated Ritual, but German Colleges have experienced a notable
revival and the teachings of Rudolf Steiner are considered as giving an
introduction of their system of occult Theosophy. Several of Steiner's
volumes are now available in English translations, such are his "Initiation
and its Results," "The Gates of Knowledge," and "Way
of Initiation." They are well worthy of study.
The Societas Rosicruciana in Scotia, as
well as the Societas Rosicruciana in the U.S.A. were branches from the
same Rosicrucian source and sprang from a rejuvenation by Frater Robert
Wentworth Little of that lapsed Rosicrucian College in England which is
mentioned by Godfrey Higgins in his notable work "The Anacalypsis,"
or "An attempt to withdraw the Veil of the Isis of Sais," which
was published in 1836; he remarks that he did not join the old College
there referred to.
About fifty years earlier a certain eminent
Jew named Falk, or Dr. Falcon, lived in London (a reference to whom will
be found in the "Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry" by Kenneth Mackenzie)
and was of high repute as a teacher of the kabalah and of other studies
of a Rosicrucian character; he was indeed said to have magical powers.
Falk could not have fully affiliated to any Rosicrucian College because
he was a strict Jew of the Jews, and the members of all true Rosicrucian
Colleges have always been Christians, but perhaps not of an orthodox type,
for there was a tendencv in the teachings toward Gnostic ideals. Mackenzie
classes Dr. Falk among the Rosicrucians of eminence, and certainly told
me he had first hand evidence of his connection with the Society; manv
Christian students adopted a modification of the old Jewish kabalah, so
perhaps some Jews have been allied to the Christian Rosicrucians.
Our own Magus Frater R. W. Little surrounded
himself with several other notable Rosicrucian students, of whom I may
mention the late Supreme Magus in Anglia, Dr. William Robert Woodman, a
learned Kabalist and Hebrew scholar; W.J. Hughan, the great Masonic historian;
William Carpenter, editor of Calmet's "Dictionary of the Bible";
Alphonse Constant, better known as "Eliphaz Levi," who gave Fratres
Little and Kenneth Mackenzie much assistance, and was in return elected
an honorary member of the Metropolitan College in 1873. Our Society unfortunately
lost Frater Little at a very early age. Frater H. C. Levander, too, a Professor
at University College, London, was a learned member; and took great interest
in the mystic lore of the Society.
The late Lord Lytton, the author of "Zanoni"
and "The Strange Story," who was in 1871 Grand Patron of our
Society, took very great interest in this form of Philosophy, although
he never reached the highest degree of knowledge; for public reasons he
once made a disavowal of his membership of the Rosicrucians, but
he had been admitted as a Frater of the German Rosicrucian College at Frankfort
on the Main; that Coliege was closed after 1850.
Among the Fratres who have recently been
ornaments to our Colleges, I may draw attention to the lately deceased
and quaintly cultured John Yarker of Didsbury; to our late Adept of York,
T. B. Whytehead, who was famous as an antiquarian: to Frater Fendelow of
the Newcastle College, who was the author of a learned and suggestive Rosicrucian
Lecture: to Frater F. F. Schnitger, who made deep researches into the French
and German Rosicrucian Treatises: to Samuel Liddell Mathers, the translator
of portions of the Hebrew "Zohar," and to Frederick Holland,
the author of "The Temple Rebuilt," and "The Shekinah Revealed."
Another deceased Frater of eminence was Benjamin Cox of Weston-super-Mare,
and with him I naturally couple the greater name of Frater Major F. G.
Irwin, who, however has now also gone to a Temple far away.
Among the learned juniors of our Society,
I may name Fratres Dr. Vaughan Bateson, Thomas Henry Pattinson, the Rev.
C. E. Wright, Sir John A. Cockburn, W. J. Songhurst, Herbert Burrows, A.
Cadbury Jones, W. Wonnacott, Dr. Wm Hammond, Dr. B. J. Edwards, and Dr.
W. C. Blaker.
Our Colleges need not languish for want
of subjects of study; the narrative of the foundation of our Society is
singularly suggestive of points for future investigation. The German "Fama
Fraternitatis" of 1614, in an English translation by Thomas Vaughan
of 1652, presents you with the History of Christian Rosenkreuz: its companion
tract the "Confessio Fraternitatis" gives you a slight insight
into the views of the Rosicrucians of a date a hundred years later. The
"Chymische Hochzeit" or "Chemical Wedding" by C.R.,
and the "Secret Symbols of the Rosicrucians" by F. Hartman, are
tractates of Rosicrucian Allegory which will well repay, not only perusal,
but deep study; while the elucidation of the whole set of Medieval Divinatory
Sciences, Astrology, Geomancy, etc, are suitable themes for lectures in
your College For such as can understand medieval Latin a most interesting
work is the "Oedipus Aegyptiacus" of Athanasius Kircher. It is
desirable that our students should make themselves acquainted with the
Ancient Mysteries of Egypt, of Greece and of Rome. The basis of the Western
occultism of medieval Europe is the Kabalah of the medieval Hebrew Rabbis,
to which I have published "An Introduction." This philosophy,
although at first sight barbarous and crude, yet will be found, when one
has grown familiar with the nomenclature, to be a concrete, coherent and
far-reaching scheme of Theology, cosmology, ethics and metaphysics, serving
to throw light on many obscure Biblical passages and to suggest original
views of the meaning of most of the allegorical descriptions found in the
Old Testament. A copy of a very curious old Kabalistic picture from a Syriac
Gospel with a descriptive essay by Dr. Carnegie Dickson, a notable Scotch
Rosicrucian Adept, has just been given to our Library.
The works of the great Rosicrucian Kabalist,
Eliphaz Levi, are, to those who read French with ease, a mine of mystic
lore, full of fine imagery, and replete with magical formulas. His "Histoire
de la Magie" is a storehouse of information relating to the Secret
Sciences and Secret Fraternities of all times and among many nations, while
in English the two volumes of the new edition of Heckethorn's "Secret
Societies" should he read as an introduction to deeper personal research.
The work of Franz Hartmann, named "Magic,
White and Black," I can recommend to serious enquirers, for it elucidates
the real aims of the Higher Magic, with which alone we are concerned, and
it clears away many misconceptions which exist in the minds of the uninitiated.
To such as desire to follow more closely
the Old Testament religious element, I should advise a perusal of the Commentaries
of Dr. Allen Barnes on "Daniel" and "The Book of Revelation,"
and the symbolical descriptions of the book of Ezekiel. On the Christian
aspect I recommend "The Perfect Way," or "The Finding of
Christ," by the late Dr. A. Kingsford; in this volume will be found
worked out the broader scheme of Christian teaching which is so apt to
be obscured by sectarian forms of worship. The tenets of this work are
closely approximate to those of the earliest of the followers of Christian
Rosencreuz, whose name was probably a mystic title, motto or synonym, and
not a family cognomen:- "Christian" referring to the general
theological tendency, and "Rosenkreuz" to the Cross of Suffering
whose explanation and key may need a Rose or secret explanation.
There is one doctrine for the learned,
and a simpler formula for those who are unable to bear it yet, even as
the new testament itself tells us, of the Great Master who taught his immediate
disciples the true keys, but to others he spake only in parables,--"and
without a parable spake he not unto them."
Such, my Fratres, are suitable subjects
for the attention of your members, but there are many allied topics which
might form suitable centres of interest and instruction, for example the
whole range of church architecture as crystalised symbolism, the dogmas
of the Gnostics, the several systems of philosophy of the Hindoos, the
paralleiism between Rosicrucian doctrine and Eastern Theosophy, for which
read Max Heindel's "Rosicrucian Cosmo Conception," and that enticing
subject, the origin and meaning of the 22 Trumps or symbolic designs of
the "Tarocchi" or pack of Tarot cards, which Eliphaz Levi says
form a group of keys which will unlock every secret of Theology and Cosmology.
For such as are interested in the Alchemy of the past I recommend a perusal
of "A Suggestive Enquiry into the Hermetic Mystery" 1850, by
an anonymous author, and E. A. Hitchcock's "Remarks on Alchemy and
the Alchemists," 1857. And, lastly, we may make researches into that
most interesting problem--Did Speculative Masonry arise from the Rosicrucians?
I am to understand that the German Rosicrucians say that before the Masonic
revival of 1717 these were identical in Europe.
Let us not forget, that not only as Rosicrucians,
but even as Freemasons, we are pledged, not only to Brotherhood and Benevolence,
but also to look below the surface of things, and to seek and to search
out the hidden secrets of Nature and of Science. Let us bear in mind that
a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but that deeper study reveals
the roots of knowledge, as well as increases our store of information.
Let us not, with folded arms, float with the tide of indolence, but ever
strive after increase of that true knowledge which is wisdom and remember
that "to labour is to pray," or as the Latin motto has it, "Laborare
est Orare," for the day is coming to each one of us when no man can
work, and the value of the work of each man will be tried in the balance
of justice, and if we have done well we shall gain a rich reward.
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