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p. 161
The Chemical Marriage
THE self-admitted author of
The Chemical Marriage, Johann Valentin Andreæ, born in Württemberg in
1586, was twenty-eight years of age when that work was first published. It was
presumably written about twelve years prior to its publication--or when the
author was fifteen or sixteen years old. The fact is almost incredible that
one so young could produce a volume containing the wealth of symbolic thought
and philosophy hidden between the lines of The Chemical Marriage. This
book makes the earliest known reference to Christian Rosencreutz, and is
generally regarded as the third of the series of original Rosicrucian
manifestoes. As a symbolic work, the book itself is hopelessly irreconcilable
with the statements made by Andreæ concerning it. The story of The Chemical
Marriage relates in detail a series of incidents occurring to an aged man,
presumably the Father C.R.C. of the Fama and Confessio. If
Father C.R.C. was born in 1378, as stated in the Confessio, and is
identical with the Christian Rosencreutz of The Chemical Marriage, he
was elevated to the dignity of a Knight of the Golden Stone in the
eighty-first year of his life (1459). In the light of his own statements, it
is inconceivable that Andreæ could have been Father Rosy Cross.
Many figures found in the
various books on symbolism published in the early part of the seventeenth
century bear a striking resemblance to the characters and episodes in The
Chemical Marriage. The alchemical wedding may prove to be the key to the
riddle of Baconian Rosicrucianism. The presence in the German text of The
Chemical Marriage of some words in English indicates its author to have
been conversant also with that language. The following summary of the main
episodes of the seven days of The Chemical Marriage will give the
reader a fairly comprehensive idea of the profundity of its symbolism.
THE FIRST DAY
Christian Rosencreutz, having
prepared in his heart the Paschal Lamb together with a small unleavened loaf,
was disturbed while at prayer one evening before Easter by a violent storm
which threatened to demolish not only his little house but the very hill on
which it stood. In the midst of the tempest he was touched on the back and,
turning, he beheld a glorious woman with wings filled with eyes, and robed in
sky-colored garments spangled with stars. In one hand she held a trumpet and
in the other a bundle of letters in every language. Handing a letter to C.R.C.,
she immediately ascended into the air, at the same time blowing upon her
trumpet a blast which shook the house. Upon the seal of the letter was a
curious cross and the words In hoc signo vinces. Within, traced in
letters of gold on an azure field, was an invitation to a royal wedding.
C.R.C. was deeply moved by the
invitation because it was the fulfillment of a prophecy which he had received
seven years before, but so unworthy did he feel that he was paralyzed with
fear. At length, after resorting to prayer, he sought sleep. In his dreams he
found himself in a loathsome dungeon with a multitude of other men, all bound
and fettered with great chains. The grievousness of their sufferings was
increased as they stumbled over each other in the darkness. Suddenly from
above came the sound of trumpets; the cover of the dungeon was lifted, and a
ray of light pierced the gloom. Framed in the light stood a hoary-headed man
who announced that a rope would be lowered seven times and whoever could cling
to the rope would be drawn up to freedom.
Great confusion ensued. All
sought to grasp the rope and many were pulled away from it by others. C.R.C.
despaired of being saved, but suddenly the rope swung towards him and,
grasping it, he was raised from the dungeon. An aged woman called the "Ancient
Matron" wrote in a golden yellow book the names of those drawn forth, and each
of the redeemed was given for remembrance a piece of gold bearing the symbol
of the sun and the letters D L S. C.R.C., who had been injured while
clinging to the rope, found it difficult to walk. The aged woman bade him not
to worry, but to thank God who had permitted him to come into so high a light.
Thereupon trumpets sounded and C.R.C. awoke, but so vivid was the dream that
he was still sensible of the wounds received while asleep.
With renewed faith C. R. C.
arose and prepared himself for the Hermetic Marriage. He donned a white
linen coat and bound a red ribbon crosswise over his shoulders. In his hat he
stuck four roses and for food he carried bread, water, and salt. Before
leaving his cottage, he knelt and vowed that whatever knowledge was revealed
to him he would devote to the service of his neighbor. He then departed from
his house with joy.
THE SECOND DAY
As he entered the forest
surrounding his little house, it seemed to C.R.C. that all Nature had joyously
prepared for the wedding. As he proceeded singing merrily, he came to a green
heath in which stood three great cedars, one bearing a tablet with an
inscription describing the four paths that led to the palace of the King: the
first short and dangerous, the second circuitous, the third a pleasant and
royal road, and the fourth suitable only for incorruptible bodies. Weary and
perplexed, C.R.C. decided to rest and, cutting a slice of bread, was about to
partake thereof when a white dove begged it from him. The dove was at once
attacked by a raven, and in his efforts to separate the birds C.R.C.
unknowingly ran a considerable distance along one of the four paths--that
leading southward. A terrific wind preventing him from retracing his steps,
the wedding guest resigned himself to the loss of his bread and continued
along the road until he espied in the distance a great gate. The sun being
low, he hastened towards the portal, upon which, among other figures, was a
tablet bearing the words Procul hinc procul ite profani.
A gatekeeper in sky-colored
habit immediately asked C.R.C. for his letter of invitation and, on receiving
it, bade him enter and requested that he purchase a token. After describing
himself as a Brother of the Red Rosie Cross, C.R.C. received in exchange for
his water bottle a golden disk bearing the letters S C. Night drawing
near, the wanderer hastened on to a second gate, guarded by a lion, and to
which was affixed a tablet with the words Date et dabitur volis, where
he presented a letter given him by the first gatekeeper. Being urged to
purchase a token bearing the letters S M, he gave his little package of
salt and then hastened on to reach the palace gates before they were locked
for the night.
A beautiful virgin called
Virgo Lucifera was extinguishing the castle lights as C.R.C. approached,
and he was barely able to squeeze through the closing gates. As they closed
they caught part of his coat, which he was forced to leave behind. Here his
name was written in the Lord Bridegroom's little vellum book and he was
presented with a new pair of shoes and also a token bearing the letters S P
N. He was then conducted by pages to a small chamber where the "ice-grey
locks" were cut from the crown of his head by invisible barbers, after which
he was ushered into a spacious hall where a goodly number of kings, princes,
and commoners were assembled. At the sound of trumpets each seated himself at
the table, taking a position corresponding to his dignity, so that C.R.C.
received a very humble seat. Most of the pseudo-philosophers present being
vain pretenders, the banquet became an orgy, which, however, suddenly ceased
at the sound of
TITLE PAGE OF 1616 EDITION OF
CHYMISCHE HOCHZEIT: CHRISTIAN ROSENCREUTZ.
From Rosencreutz' Chemical
Marriage.
The most remarkable of all the
publications involved in the Rosicrucian controversy is that of The
Chemical Marriage, published in Strasbourg. This work, which is very rare,
should be reproduced in exact facsimile to provide students with the
opportunity of examining the actual text for the various forms of cipher
employed. Probably no other volume in the history or literature created such a
profound disturbance as this unpretentious little book. Immediately following
its publication the purpose for which the volume was intended became the
subject of popular speculation. It was both attacked and defended by
theologians and philosophers alike, but when the various contending elements
are simmered down the mysteries surrounding the book remain unsolved. That its
author was a man of exceptional learning was admitted, and it is noteworthy
that those minds which possessed the deepest understanding of Nature's
mysteries were among those profoundly impressed by the contents of The
Chemical Marriage.
p. 162
stately and inspired music. For
nearly half an hour no one spoke. Then amidst a great sound the door of the
dining hall swung open and thousands of lighted tapers held by invisible hands
entered. These were followed by the two pages lighting the beautiful Virgo
Lucifera seated on a self-moving throne. The white-and-gold-robed Virgin
then rose and announced that to prevent the admission of unworthy persons to
the mystical wedding a set of scales would be erected the following day upon
which each guest would be weighed to determine his integrity. Those unwilling
to undergo this ordeal she stated should remain in the dining hall. She then
withdrew, but many of the tapers stayed to accompany the guests to their
quarters for the night.
Most of those present were
presumptuous enough to believe that they could be safety weighed, but
nine--including C.R.C.--felt their shortcomings so deeply that they feared the
outcome and remained in the hall while the others were led away to their
sleeping chambers. These nine were bound with ropes and left alone in
darkness. C.R.C. then dreamed that he saw many men suspended over the earth by
threads, and among them flew an aged man who, cutting here and there a thread,
caused many to fall to earth. Those who in arrogance had soared to lofty
heights accordingly fell a greater distance and sustained more serious injury
than the more humble ones who, falling but a short distance, often landed
without mishap. Considering this dream to be a good omen, C.R.C. related it to
a companion, continuing in discourse with him until dawn.
THE THIRD DAY
Soon after dawn the trumpets
sounded and the Virgo Lucifera, arrayed in red velvet, girded with a
white sash, and crowned with a laurel wreath, entered accompanied by two
hundred men in red-and-white livery. She intimated to C.R.C. and his eight
companions that they might fare better than the other, self-satisfied guests.
Golden scales were then hung in the midst of the hall and near them were
placed seven weights, one good-sized, four small, and two very large. The men
in livery, each carrying a naked sword and a strong rope, were divided into
seven groups and from each group was chosen a captain, who was given charge of
one of the weights. Having remounted her high throne, Virgo Lucifera
ordered the ceremony to begin. The first to step on the scales was an emperor
so virtuous that the balances did not tip until six weights had been placed
upon the opposite end. He was therefore turned over to the sixth group. The
rich and poor alike stood upon the scales, but only a few passed the test
successfully. To these were given velvet robes and wreaths of laurel, after
which they were seated upon the steps of Virgo Lucifera's throne. Those
who failed were ridiculed and scourged.
The "inquisition" being
finished, one of the captains begged Virgo Lucifera to permit the nine
men who had declared themselves unworthy also to be weighed, and this caused
C.R.C. anguish and fear. Of the first seven one succeeded and was greeted with
joy. C.R.C. was the eighth and he not only withstood all the weights but even
when three men hung on the opposite end of the beam he could not be moved. A
page cried out: "THAT IS HE!" C.R.C. was quickly set at liberty and permitted
to release one of the captives. He chose the first emperor. Virgo Lucifera
then requested the red roses that C.R.C. carried, which he immediately gave
her. The ceremony of the scales ended about ten o'clock in the forenoon.
After agreeing upon the
penalties to be imposed upon those whose shortcomings had been thus exposed, a
dinner was served to all. The few successful "artists," including C.R.C., were
given the chief seats, after which the Golden Fleece and a Flying Lion were
bestowed upon them in the name of the Bridegroom. Virgo Lucifera then
presented a magnificent goblet to the guests, stating that the King had
requested all to share its contents, Following this, C.R.C. and his companions
were taken out upon a scaffolding where they beheld the various penalties
suffered by those who failed. Before leaving the palace, each of the rejected
guests was given a draught of forgetfulness. The elect then returned to the
castle, where to each was assigned a learned page, who conducted them through
the various parts of the edifice. C.R.C. saw many things his companions were
not privileged to behold, including the Royal Sepulcher, where he learned
"more than is extant in all books." He also visited a magnificent library and
an observatory containing a great globe thirty feet in diameter and with all
the countries of the world marked upon it.
At supper the various guests
propounded enigmas and C.R.C. solved the riddle which Virgo Lucifera
asked concerning her own identity. Then entered the dining hall two youths and
six virgins beautifully robed, followed by a seventh virgin wearing a coronet.
The latter was called the Duchess, and was mistaken for the Hermetic Bride.
The Duchess told C.R.C. that he had received more than the others, therefore
should make a greater return. The Duchess then asked each of the virgins to
pick up one of the seven weights which still remained in the great room. To
Virgo Lucifera was given the heaviest weight, which was hung in the
Queen's chamber during the singing of a hymn. In the second chamber the first
virgin hung her weight during a similar ceremony; thus they proceeded from
room to room until the weights had been disposed of. The Duchess then
presented her hand to C. R. C. and his companions and, followed by her
virgins, withdrew. Pages then conducted the guests to their sleeping chambers.
The one assigned to C.R.C. was hung with rare tapestries and with beautiful
paintings.
THE FOURTH DAY
After washing and drinking in
the garden from a fountain which bore several inscriptions--among them one
reading, "Drink, brothers, and live"--the guests, led by Virgo Lucifera,
ascended the 365 steps of the royal winding stairs. The guests were given
wreaths of laurel and, a curtain being raised, found themselves in the
presence of the King and Queen. C.R.C. was awestruck by the glory of the
throne room and especially by the magnificence of the Queen's robes, which
were so dazzling that he could not gaze upon them. Each guest was presented to
the King by one of the virgins and after this ceremony the Virgo Lucifera
made a short speech in which she recited the achievements of the honest
"artists" and begged that each be questioned as to whether she had properly
fulfilled her duty. Old Atlas then stepped forward and in the name of their
Royal Majesties greeted the intrepid band of philosophers and assured Virgo
Lucifera that she should receive a royal reward.
The length of the throne room
was five times its width. To the west was a great porch in which stood three
thrones, the central one elevated. On each throne sat two persons: on the
first an ancient king with a young consort; on the third a black king with a
veiled matron beside him; and on the central throne two young persons over
whose heads hung a large and costly crown, about which hovered a little Cupid
who shot his arrows first at the two lovers and then about the hall. Before
the Queen a book bound in black velvet lay on a small altar, on which were
golden decorations. Beside this were a burning candle, a celestial globe, a
small striking-watch, a little crystal pipe from which ran a stream of clear
blood-red liquor, and a skull with a white serpent crawling in and out of the
orbits. After their presentations, the guests retired down the winding stairs
to the great hall.
KEY TO THE GREAT PHILOSOPHICAL SECRET.
From Ashmole's Theatrum
Chemicum Britannicum.
This plate, which is the key to
mystic Christian alchemy, is missing from almost every copy of the Theatrum
Chemicum Britannicum, a work compiled by Elias Ashmole and containing
about a score of pieces by English poets treating of the Philosopher's Stone
and the Hermetic mysteries. In view of the consistent manner in which the
plate disappeared, it is possible that the diagram was purposely removed
because it revealed too plainly the Rosicrucian arcana. Worthy of notice also
is the care with which owners' names have been effaced from early books
pertaining to alchemy and Hermeticism. The original names are usually rendered
illegible being covered with heavy ink lines, the procedure often seriously
defacing the volume, While an occasional exception is found, in practically
every instance the mutilated books either deal with Rosicrucianism or contain
cryptic writings of suspected Rosicrucian origin. It is presumed that this
Practice of obliterating the owners names was to prevent the early
Rosicrucians and Hermetists from being discovered through the volumes
composing their libraries. Elias Ashmole's plate shows the analogies between
the life of Christ and the four grand divisions of the alchemical process.
Herein is also revealed the teaching that the Philosopher's Stone itself is a
macrocosm and a microcosm, embodying the principles of astronomy and
cosmogony, both universal and human.
p. 163
Later the Virgo Lucifera
announced that a comedy was to be performed for the benefit of the six royal
guests in a building called the House of the Sun. C.R.C. and his companions
formed part of the royal procession, which after a considerable walk arrived
at the theater. The play was in seven acts, and after its happy ending all
returned through the garden and up the winding stairs to the throne room.
C.R.C. noticed the young King was very sad and that at the banquet following
he often sent meat to the white serpent in the skull. The feast over, the
young King, holding in his hand the little black book from the altar, asked
the guests if they would all be true to him through prosperity and adversity,
and when they tremblingly agreed he asked that each should sign his name in
the little black book as proof of his fealty. The royal persons then drank
from the little crystal fountain, the others afterwards doing likewise. This
was called the "Draught of Silence." The royal persons then sadly shook hands
with all present. Suddenly a little bell tinkled and immediately the kings and
queens took off their white garments and donned black ones, the room was hung
in sable draperies, and the tables were removed. The eyes of the royal persons
were bound with six black taffeta scarfs and six coffins were placed in the
center of the room. An executioner, a Moor, robed in black and bearing an axe,
entered, and beheaded in turn each of the six royal persons. The blood of each
was caught in a golden goblet, which was placed in the coffins with the body.
The executioner was also decapitated and his head placed in a small chest.
The Virgo Lucifera,
after assuring C.R.C. and his companions that all should be well if they were
faithful and true, ordered the pages to conduct them to their rooms for the
night while she remained to watch with the dead. About midnight C.R.C.
awakened suddenly and, looking from his window, beheld seven ships sailing
upon a lake. Above each hovered a flame; these he believed to be the spirits
of the beheaded. When the ships reached shore, the Virgo Lucifera met
them and on each of six of the vessels was placed a covered coffin. As soon as
the coffins had been thus disposed of, the lights were extinguished and the
flames passed back over the lake so that there remained but one light for a
watch in each ship. After beholding this strange ceremony, C.R.C. returned to
his bed and slept till morning.
THE FIFTH DAY
Rising at daybreak and
entreating his page to show him other treasures of the palace, C.R.C. was
conducted down many steps to a great iron door bearing a curious inscription,
which he carefully copied. Passing through, he found himself in the royal
treasury, the light in which came entirely from some huge carbuncles. In the
center stood the triangular sepulcher of Lady Venus. Lifting a copper door in
the pavement, the page ushered C.R.C. into a crypt where stood a great bed
upon which, when his guide had raised the coverlets, C.R.C. beheld the body of
Venus. Led by his page, C.R.C. then rejoined his companions, saying nothing to
them of his experience.
Virgo Lucifera, robed in
black velvet and accompanied by her virgins, then led the guests out into the
courtyard where stood six coffins, each with eight pallbearers. C.R.C. was the
only one of the group of "artists" who suspected the royal bodies were no
longer in these coffins. The coffins were lowered into graves and great stones
rolled over them. The Virgo Lucifera then made a short oration in which
she exhorted each to assist in restoring the royal persons to life, declaring
that they should journey with her to the Tower of Olympus, where the medicines
necessary to the resurrection of the six royal persons could alone be found.
C.R.C. and his companions followed Virgo Lucifera to the seashore,
where all embarked on seven ships disposed according to a certain strange
order. As the ships sailed across the lake and through a narrow channel into
the open sea, they were attended by sirens, nymphs, and sea goddesses, who in
honor of the wedding presented a great and beautiful pearl to the royal
couple. When the ships came in sight of the Tower of Olympus, Virgo
Lucifera ordered the discharge of cannon to signal their approach.
Immediately a white flag appeared upon the tower and a small gilded pinnace,
containing an ancient man--the warden of the tower--with his white-clad guards
came out to meet the ships.
The Tower of Olympus stood upon
an island which was exactly square and was surrounded by a great wall.
Entering the gate, the group was led to the bottom of the central tower, which
contained an excellent laboratory where the guests were fain to beat and wash
plants, precious stones, and all sorts of things, extract their juice and
essence, and put these latter into glasses. Virgo Lucifera set the
"artists" to work so arduously that they felt they were mere drudges. When the
day's work was finished, each was assigned a mattress on the stone floor.
Being unable to sleep, C.R.C. wandered about contemplating the stars. Chancing
upon a flight of steps leading to the top of the wall, he climbed up and
looked out upon the sea. Remaining here for some time, about midnight he
beheld seven flames which, passing over the sea towards him, gathered
themselves on the top of the spire of the central tower. Simultaneously the
winds arose, the sea became tempestuous, and the moon was covered with clouds.
With some fear C.R.C. ran down the stairs and returned to the tower and, lying
down on his mattress, was lulled to sleep by the sound of a gently flowing
fountain in the laboratory.
THE SIXTH DAY
The next morning the aged
warden of the tower, after examining the work performed by the wedding guests
in the laboratory and finding it satisfactory, caused ladders, ropes, and
large wings to be brought forth, and addressed the assembled "artists" thus:
"My dear sons, one of these three things must each of you this day constantly
bear about with him." Lots were cast and to C.R.C., much to his chagrin, fell
a heavy ladder. Those who secured wings had them fastened to their backs so
cunningly that it was impossible to detect that they were artificial. The aged
warden then locked the "artists" in the lower room of the tower, but in a
short time a round hole was uncovered in the ceiling and Virgo Lucifera
invited all to ascend. Those with wings flew at once through the opening,
those with ropes had many difficulties, while C.R.C. with his ladder made
reasonable speed. On the second floor the wedding guests, musicians, and
Virgo Lucifera gathered about a fountain-like contrivance containing the
bodies of the six royal persons.
Virgo Lucifera then
placed the if Moor's head in a kettle-like receptacle in the upper part of the
fountain and poured upon it the substances prepared on the previous day in the
laboratory. The virgins placed lamps beneath. These substances when they
boiled passed out through holes in the sides of the kettle and, falling upon
the bodies in the fountain below, dissolved them. The six royal bodies having
been reduced thus to a liquid state, a tap was opened in the lower end of the
fountain and the fluid drained into an immense golden globe, which, when
filled, was of great weight. All but the wedding guests then retired and
shortly a hole in the ceiling opened as before and the guests ascended
pell-mell to the third floor. Here the globe were suspended by a strong chain.
The walls of the apartment were of glass, and mirrors were so arranged that
the sun's rays were concentrated upon the central globe, thus causing it to
become very hot. Later the sun's rays were deflected and the globe permitted
to cool, after which it was cut open with a diamond, revealing a beautiful
white egg. Carrying this with her, Virgo Lucifera departed.
The guests, having ascended
through another trap door, found
THE UNIVERSE CREATED BY THE DUAL PRINCIPLE OF LIGHT AND DARKNESS.
From Fludd's Philosophia
Mosaica.
The Supreme Deity is symbolized
by the small globe at the top, which is divided into two hemispheres, the dark
half representing the divine darkness with which the Deity surround Himself
and which serves as His hiding place. The radiant hemisphere signifies the
divine light which is in God and which, pouring forth, manifests as the
objective creative power. The large dark globe to the left and beneath the
dark half of the upper sphere signifies the potential darkness which was upon
the face of the primordial deep and within which moved the Spirit of God. The
light globe to the right is the Deity who is revealed out of the darkness.
Here the shining Word has dissipated the shadows and a glorious universe has
been formed. The divine power of this radiant globe is cognizable to man as
the sun. The large light and a dark section represents the created universes
partaking of the light and darkness which are in the nature of the Creator.
The dark half represents the Deep, or Chaos, the Eternal Waters pouring forth
out of the Deity; the light half-circle containing the figure of Apollo
represents the diurnal hemisphere of the world, which in the ancient Mysteries
was ruled over by Apollo. The dark half-circle is the nocturnal hemisphere
ruled over by Dionysius (Dionysos), whose figure is faintly visible in the
gloom.
p. 164
themselves upon the fourth
floor, where stood a square kettle filled with silver sand warmed by a gentle
fire. The great white egg was placed upon the warm sand to mature. In a short
time it cracked and there emerged an ugly, ill-tempered bird, which was fed
with the blood of the beheaded royal persons diluted with prepared water. At
each feeding its feathers changed color; from black they turned to white and
at last they became varicolored, the disposition of the bird improving the
while. Dinner was then served, after which Virgo Lucifera departed with
the bird. The guests ascended with ropes, ladders, and wings to the fifth
floor, where a bath colored with fine white powder had been prepared for the
bird, which enjoyed bathing in it until the lamps placed beneath the bath
caused the water to become uncomfortably warm. When the heat had removed all
the bird's feathers it was taken out, but the fire continued until nothing
remained in the bath save a sediment in the form of a blue stone. This was
later pounded up and made into a pigment; with this, all of the bird except
the head was painted.
The guests thereupon ascended
to the sixth floor, where stood a small altar resembling that in the King's
throne room. The bird drank from the little fountain and was fed with the
blood of the white serpent which crawled through the openings in the skull.
The sphere by the altar revolved continuously. The watch struck one, two, and
then three, at which time the bird, laying its neck upon the book, suffered
itself to be decapitated. Its body was burned to ashes, which were placed in a
box of cypress wood. Virgo Lucifera told C.R.C. and three of his
comrades that they were lazy and sluggish "labourators" and would therefore be
excluded from the seventh room. Musicians were sent for, who with cornets were
to "blow" the four in ridicule from the chamber. C.R.C. and his three
companions were disheartened until the musicians told them to be of good cheer
and led them up a winding stair to the eighth floor of the tower directly
beneath the roof. Here the old warden, standing upon a little round furnace,
welcomed them and congratulated them upon being chosen by Virgo Lucifera,
for this greater work. Virgo Lucifera then entered, and after laughing
at the perplexity of her guests, emptied the ashes of the bird into another
vessel, filling the cypress box with useless matter. She thereupon returned to
the seventh floor, presumably to mislead those assembled there by setting them
to work upon the false ashes in the box.
C.R.C. and his three friends
were set to work moistening the bird's ashes with specially prepared water
until the mixture became of doughlike consistency, after which it was heated
and molded into two miniature forms. Later these were opened, disclosing two
bright and almost transparent human images about four inches high (homunculi),
one male and the other female. These tiny forms were laid upon satin cushions
and fed drop by drop with the blood of the bird until they grew to normal size
and of great beauty. Though the bodies had the consistency of flesh, they
showed no signs of life, for the soul was not in them. The bodies were next
surrounded with torches and their faces covered with silk. Virgo Lucifera
then appeared, bearing two curious white garments. The virgins also entered,
among them six bearing great trumpets. A trumpet was placed upon the mouth of
one of the two figures and C.R.C. saw a tiny hole open in the dome of the
tower and a ray of light descend through the tube of the trumpet and enter the
body. This process was repeated three times on each body. The two newly
ensouled forms were then removed upon a traveling couch. In about half an hour
the young King and Queen awakened and the Virgo Lucifera presented them
with the white garments. These they donned and the King in his own person most
graciously returned thanks to C.R.C. and his companions, after which the royal
persons departed upon a ship. C.R.C. and his three privileged friends then
rejoined the other "artists," making no mention of that which they had seen.
Later the entire party were assigned handsome chambers, where they rested till
morning.
THE SEVENTH DAY
In the morning Virgo
Lucifera announced that each of the wedding guests had become a "Knight of
the Golden Stone. " The aged warden then presented each man with a gold medal,
bearing on one side the inscription "At. Nat. Mi. " and on the other, "Tem.
Na. F." The entire company returned in twelve ships to the King's palace. The
flags on the vessels bore the signs of the zodiac, and C.R.C. sat under that
of Libra. As they entered the lake, many ships met them and the King and
Queen, together with their lords, ladies, and virgins, rode forth on a golden
barge to greet the returning guests. Atlas then made a short oration in the
King's behalf, also asking for the royal presents. In reply the aged warden
delivered to Cupid, who hovered about the royal pair, a small, curious-shaped
casket. C.R.C. and the old lord, each bearing a snow-white ensign with a red
cross on it, rode in the carriage with the King. At the first gate stood the
porter with blue clothes, who, upon seeing C.R.C., begged him to intercede
with the King to release him from that post of servitude. The King replied
that the porter was a famous astrologer who was forced to keep the gate as a
punishment for the crime of having gazed upon Lady Venus reposing upon her
couch. The King further declared that the porter could be released only when
another was found who had committed the same crime. Upon hearing this,
C.R.C.'s heart sank, for he realized himself to be the culprit, but he
remained silent at that time.
The newly created Knights of
the Golden Stone were obliged to subscribe to five articles drawn up by His
Royal Highness: (1) That they would ascribe their Order only to God and His
handmaid, Nature. (2) That they should abominate all uncleanness and vice. (3)
That they should always be ready to assist the worthy and needy. (4) That they
should not use their knowledge and power for the attainment of worldly
dignity. (5) That they should not desire to live longer than God had decreed.
They were then duly installed as Knights, which ceremony was ratified in a
little chapel where C. R. C. hung up his Golden Fleece and his hat for an
eternal memorial, and here he inscribed the following: Summa Scientia nihil
Scire, Fr. Christianus Rosencreutz. Eques aurei Lapidis. Anno 1459.
After the ceremony, C.R.C.
admitted that he was the one who had beheld Venus and consequently must become
the porter of the gate. The King embraced him fondly and he was assigned to a
great room containing three beds--one for himself, one for the aged lord of
the tower, and the third for old Atlas.
The Chemical Marriage
here comes to an abrupt end, leaving the impression that C.R.C. was to assume
his duties as porter on the following morning. The book ends in the middle of
a sentence, with a note in italics presumably by the editor.
Under the symbolism of an
alchemical marriage, mediæval philosophers concealed the secret system of
spiritual culture whereby they hoped to coordinate the disjecta membra
of both the human and social organisms. Society, they maintained, was a
threefold structure and had its analogy in the triune constitution of man, for
as man consists of spirit, mind, and body, so society is made up of the
church, the state, and the populace. The bigotry of the church, the tyranny of
the state, and the fury of the mob are the three murderous agencies of society
which seek to destroy Truth as recounted in the Masonic legend of Hiram Abiff.
The first six days of The Chemical Marriage set forth the processes of
philosophical "creation" through which every organism must pass. The three
kings are the threefold spirit of man and their consorts the corresponding
vehicles of their expression in the lower world. The executioner is the mind,
the higher part of which--symbolized by the head--is necessary to the
achievement of the philosophical labor. Thus the parts of man--by the
alchemists symbolized as planets and elements--when blended together according
to a certain Divine formula result in the creation of two philosophic "babes"
which, fed upon the blood of the alchemical bird, become rulers of the world.
From an ethical standpoint, the
young King and Queen resurrected at the summit of the tower and ensouled by
Divine Life represent the forces of Intelligence and Love which must
ultimately guide society. Intelligence and Love are the two great ethical
luminaries of the world and correspond to enlightened spirit and regenerated
body. The bridegroom is reality and the bride the regenerated being who
attains perfection by becoming one with reality through a cosmic
marriage wherein the mortal part attains immortality by being united with its
own immortal Source. In the Hermetic Marriage divine and human
consciousness are united in holy wedlock and he in whom this sacred ceremony
takes place is designated as "Knight of the Golden Stone"; he thereby becomes
a divine philosophic diamond composed of the quintessence of his own
sevenfold constitution.
Such is the true interpretation
of the mystical process of becoming "a bride of the Lamb." The Lamb of God is
signified by the Golden Fleece that Jason was forced to win before he could
assume his kingship. The Flying Lion is illumined will, an absolute
prerequisite to the achievement of the Great Work. The episode of weighing the
souls of men has its parallel in the ceremony described in the Egyptian
Book of the Dead. The walled city entered by C.R.C. represents the
sanctuary of wisdom wherein dwell the real rulers of the world--the initiated
philosophers.
Like the ancient Mysteries
after which it was patterned, the Order of the Rose Cross possessed a secret
ritual which was lived by the candidate for a prescribed number of years
before he was eligible to the inner degrees of the society. The various floors
of the Tower of Olympus represent the orbits of the planets. The ascent of the
philosophers from one floor to another also parallels certain rituals of the
Eleusinian Mysteries and the rites of Mithras wherein the candidate ascended
the seven rungs of a ladder or climbed the seven steps of a pyramid in order
to signify release from the influences of the Planetary Governors. Man becomes
master of the seven spheres only when he transmutes the impulses received from
them. He who masters the seven worlds and is reunited with the Divine Source
of his own nature consummates the Hermetic Marriage.
Next: Bacon, Shakspere, and
the Rosicrucians