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p. vii
PREFACE
TO THE NEW
EDITION
By M.
MACGREGOR MATHERS
As a pupil of my late husband and in later
years collaborator in his more esoteric studies, I take this opportunity to
say a few words in regard to himself and his work. Moreover, since his death
at the end of 1918, I have received innumerable visits, letters and enquiries
from all parts of the world from students of his writings. As most of these
questions would appear to bear on his more esoteric knowledge, I will quote
his own words (see page 13, paragraph 22, of the Introduction): "The term
'Unwritten Qabalah' is applied to certain knowledge which is never entrusted
to writing, but communicated orally. I may say no more on this point, nor even
whether I myself have or have not received it."
Simultaneously with the publication of the
Qabalah in 1887, he received instructions from his occult teachers to prepare
what was eventually to become his esoteric school. In this connection were
associated with him the late Dr. Woodman and the late Dr. Wynn-Westcott, both
eminent Masons and Qabalists. They, with my husband, held high Office in the
Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia, and other Masonic bodies.
Since the year 1887, when the first edition of
the Qabalah Unveiled appeared, the whole attitude of the thinking world has
changed considerably towards occult philosophy and science. The gigantic
strides made by science since the end of the last century, the staggering
facts disclosed by its practical demonstrations, simultaneously with the
development of the great occult movement, must strike all thoughtful people as
the evidence of some imminent change in the evolution of this planet. Material
science would appear to be spiritualizing itself and occult science to be
materializing itself. If not clasping hands, they are certainly making
tentative attempts in that direction. The Ancient
p. viii
[paragraph continues]
Wisdom, the Sacred Books, taught. that we cannot understand Matter without
understanding Spirit, that we cannot understand Spirit without understanding
Matter. That Matter and Spirit are only opposite poles of the same universal
substance. All through the Qabalah runs this axiom: "that Malkuth is in
Kether, that Kether is in Malkuth." The same idea is repeated through the
Gnostic teaching: "the earth that is in the heaven, the heaven that is in the
earth."
Religion has its word, science its promises and
demonstrations, philosophy its systematized theories, art its creations and
ideals, and yet these in their fundamental separations fall short of that
Synthetical ideal which the Spirit of Humanity unceasingly demands. There
remains always the perpetual cry of humanity, that plaint of a world in pain
demanding apparently in vain some solution to the problem of existence. The
answer of the ancient world to this cry of the Spirit of Humanity is to be
found in the establishment of the Mysteries, as containing in their penetralia
that which even the highest then known forms of religion had not, namely, a
philosophico-religious reply resumed in Formulas and Ceremonies, to the
problems of Life and Death, of Nature, of the Gods, of Spiritual Beings, etc.,
and lastly of the linking of these as a whole back to the First Cause of all
things.
In 1888, after the publication of the Qabalah
Unveiled, my husband started the working of his esoteric school. To write the
consecutive history of an occult Order is a difficult matter, as difficult as
to write the life of an Adept, there being so much of an inner and secret
nature necessarily involved in both; so much of the symbolical in the
historical, so much of the latter in the symbology.
The general constitution of the teaching, the
skeleton of the work, was handed to him by his occult teachers together with a
vast amount of oral instruction. The object of the establishment of this
school was similar to that of the foundation in ancient times of centres for
the Celebration of the Mysteries. The literature of this school, with a few
exceptions, was written by my husband under the direction of these teachers,
based upon the ancient mysteries, chiefly those of Egypt, Chaldea and Greece,
and brought up to date to suit the needs of our modern mentalities. It is a
system eminently suited to Western occultism, which
p. ix
a man can follow while living the ordinary life
of the world, given that this is understood in its highest sense. Dr. Woodman
and Dr. Wynn-Westcott aided in the administrative side of this school and its
teaching to a certain extent.
As a pioneer movement, for the first ten or
twelve years it encountered many of the difficulties that beset work that is
given ahead of its time, but we had been told that the beginning would be in
the nature of an experiment and that the students would be sifted. Dr. Woodman
had died in the year 1890, and in 1897 Dr. Wynn-Westcott resigned, after which
my husband entirely reorganized the school under orders, and further teachings
were given him. The teaching is principally by Ceremony, Ritual, and Lecture.
Purity of aspiration and of life are the first and essential qualities
demanded of the student. A simultaneous development of soul, mind and body is
insisted upon. The curriculum comprises the study of the intelligent forces
behind Nature, the Constitution of man and his relation to God. The whole aim
and object of the teaching is to bring a man to the knowledge of his higher
self, to purify himself, to strengthen himself, to develop all qualities and
powers of the being, that he may ultimately regain union with the Divine Man
latent in himself, that Adam Qadmon, whom God hath made in His Own Image.
Great stress is laid on the ideal of
Fraternity. The potency of Fraternity has ever been an essential factor in an
Occult order, apart from its altruistic aspect; there are. also the spiritual
and psychic. Any breach in the harmony of a circle will permit the entry of an
opposing force. A Spiritualist of experience will bear witness to the truth of
this statement.
Through all the Sacred Books, be they our
Bible, the Qabalah, the Egyptian Books, the Vedantic Teachings, the
Druidic traditions, etc., the Symbols of the Rose and of the Lily or Lotus and
of the Cross, reveal themselves as veritable living images of some great
fundamental truth. I am prepared to affirm that any Order, Society, group of
students, etc., forming themselves with the aim of studying the composition
and nature of the manifested Universe, must inevitably fall under the
symbolism of the Rose, of the Lily or Lotus, and of the Cross. The Rose with
its mysterious centre, its nucleus, the central
p. x
Sun, is a symbol of the infinite and harmonious
separations of nature.
The symbol of the Lily or Lotus is very similar
to that of the Rose, with some slight differentiations.
We know that the symbol of the Cross is
practically the Key-note of the New Testament. It is the Quaternary in Nature,
the four letters of the Holy Name, I.H.V.H., the Tetragrammaton, Jehovah,
which with the addition of the letter of the Holy Spirit, Shin, becomes
Yeheshuah, the Name of the Messiah. In Alchemy, whether Spiritual or physical,
we are told that the ultimate secret is to find the centre of the Cross. A
true understanding of the four-lettered Name, containing as it does the powers
of the four elements of nature, Air, Water, Fire, and Earth, from their lowest
degree to their highest aspect, would imply a knowledge and power of creation
as well as that of death and destruction. Is it not for this reason that its
pronunciation has been forbidden by the Qabalist? The Ancient Wisdom implied
that this Name might only be pronounced by the Initiate who has attained the
Supreme Initiation, that is to say "He who has learnt to be One with the FIRST
MOVER and be His Will."
Regarding the distinction between monotheism,
polytheism and pantheism, this distinction hardly exists for the Initiate.
Verily there is little difference between a single God and a harmony of
Supreme Forces, so absolutely linked that the effect would be that of an
indivisible unit, a plurality whose action is unified, an unity whose action
is pluralised.
Concerning Science and its "missing links,"
occult Science has asserted that there exists no void in the Universe, and
that the "missing links" are to be found in the invisible world. Modern
Science and Philosophy are continually demonstrating that our physical senses
are limited and cognize but little in proportion to that perceived by the more
subtle methods. Sir Oliver Lodge says: "A physicist is never limited to direct
sensory impressions. He has to deal with a multitude of conceptions and things
for which he has no physical organ: the dynamical theory of heat, for
instance, and of gases, the theory of electricity, of Magnetism, of chemical
affinity, of cohesion, aye, and his apprehension of the ether itself, lead him
into regions where sight and hearing and touch are impotent as direct
p. xi
witnesses . . . . . . . in such regions
everything has to be interpreted in terms of the insensible, the apparently
unsubstantial, and in a definite sense, the imaginary." Again he says: "I am
reasonably convinced of the existence of grades of beings not only lower in
the scale than man, but higher also, grades of every order of magnitude, from
zero to infinity, and I know from experience that among these Beings are some
who care for and help and guide humanity . . . . . and further it is my
faith--however humbly it may be held--that among these lofty beings, highest
of those who concern themselves directly with this earth, of all the myriads
of worlds in infinite space, is ONE on Whom the right instinct of Christianity
has always lavished heartfelt reverence and devotion." 1
Here is an almost parallel idea taken from Egyptian Symbolism: 2
"Concerning the harmonious linking together of the divine and the natural; as
in the vision of the ladder of Jacob whereon the Angels of God ascended and
descended. As also in the very ancient ideals of Egypt, Chaldea, China, India,
etc., there was the conception of an unbroken chain proceeding from the
highest Godhead, through Gods; angels; spirits, genii; souls, whether in our
life or another; spiritual beings; and ultimating through the sacred animals
upon the very Ground of Earth Itself, and also even through the trees, plants
and minerals. What, then, can be such a chain that links all things unto their
divine Origin? Surely it cannot be other than the Descending Divine Influence
MEZLA; the Influence of the HOLY and DIVINE SPIRIT."
Take this Divine Spirit in its Triune
Manifestation, call it Light, Life, and Love, call it Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, or Father, Mother, Son; take Radium as being so very close in nature
to the one element of the Ancients and note its triune manifestation, through
the alpha, beta and gamma rays.
Regarding seers and mediums, as before
remarked, our school lays great stress on the simultaneous development of,
crudely speaking, the three planes of being. which development must precede
psychic experiment. The methods employed to equilibrate the nature entail
considerable study, time and patience. There is no royal road to any science,
let alone the science of the occult. Before touching such experiments as
obtain in spiritualism, the student would be supposed to be in a measure aware
of the nature
p. xii
of the entities he would be likely to
encounter, and especially to have some idea of the constitution of Man. When
this is achieved he will be equipped and enabled to face the many dangers and
difficulties he will encounter in the invisible world.
Take the astral plane in its varied divisions,
where some of the adventures described by the seer take place. This plane may
be described as a hall panelled with mirrors, where one is confronted with
bewildering reflexes. Manifesting therein are numerous and varying entities.
Spiritualism is distinctly a Western movement
and has certainly been the means of bringing conviction of the after life to
many. The methods employed by spiritualists may be very dangerous, in that
they frequently lack the preliminary preparation and knowledge necessary
before approaching psychic phenomena. The spiritualist who lacks this
specialized knowledge must be prepared to encounter all the dangers with which
explorers in unknown lands are beset. He who enters into these regions has
sometimes found it easier to open the door than to close it.
A few words which may be of interest on my
husband's life. As a very young boy he was intensely interested in mysticism
and symbolism generally. He was educated at Bedford Grammar School,
-specializing on the Classical side. During his spare moments he collected and
made a special study of Celtic tradition and symbolism. This love of Celtic
Symbology was inherited from his Highland ancestry. His ancestor, Ian
MacGregor of Glenstrae, an ardent Jacobite, after the /45 Rebellion went over
to France and under Lally Tolendal fought at Pondicherry. This ancestor was
created Comte de Glenstrae by Louis XV. This French title was inherited by my
husband and he always used it when living in France. As a young man he came
into contact with Kenneth Mackenzie, with whom he had a strong occult link.
Kenneth Mackenzie, author of the Encyclopędia of Masonry, had been a great
friend of Bulwer Lytton. After some years of seclusion in the country, where
my husband led a student's life in preparation for his future work, he met
Anna Kingsford, who introduced him to Madame Blavatsky. Madame Blavatsky
invited him to collaborate with her in the formation of her Society. After
deliberation, notwithstanding his profound admiration for that remarkable
woman, this invitation he was compelled to decline. Their ideals were not
entirely the same. At that time he was more in sympathy with Anna Kingsford's
p. xiii
ideals of esoteric Christianity and of the
advancement of woman. Moreover he was profoundly interested in her campaign
against vivisection, in which he vigorously aided her. Three or four years
later he was told by his Occult teachers to transfer his centre to Paris,
where my husband and I lived for the rest of his life. I wish here to record
my thanks to my occult masters, and the deepest gratitude to the memory of my
husband, comrade and teacher, all of whom have shed such light upon my path.
M. MACGREGOR MATHERS.
Footnotes
xi:1
Raymond, pages 375-6. Sir Oliver Lodge.
xi:2
Egyptian Symbolism. S. L. MacGregor-Mathers.
Next: Introduction