[306] R. A. Vaughan, "Hours with the Mystics," vol. i. bk. i. ch. v.
[307] In a list published by Papus from the archives of the Martinists, we find such diverse names as Averroes, St. Thomas Aquinas, Vincent of Beauvais, and Swedenborg, given as followers of the occult tradition!
[308] See R. Steiner, "The Way of Initiation," p. 111.
[309] Supra, pp. 70 seq.
[310] A. E. Waite, "The Occult Sciences," p. 1.
[311] Steiner, "The Way of Initiation," p. 66.
[312] See E. Towne, "Joy Philosophy" (1903) and "Just How to Wake the Solar Plexus" (1904); R. D. Stocker, "New Thought Manual" (1906) and "Soul Culture" (1905); Floyd Wilson, "Man Limitless" (1905). The literature of these sects is enormous. For a critical and entertaining account, see C. W. Ferguson, `The Confusion of Tongues." (1929).
[313] It must here be pointed out that the genuine "Hermetica"--a body of ancient philosophic and religious pieces collected under this general title--are entirely unconnected with occultism. Cf. "Hermetica," ed. with English translation by W. Scott. 3 vols. 1924-8.
[314] A. E. Waite, a life-long student of these byeways of thought, gives, as the main channels by which "an arcane knowledge is believed to have been communicated to the West," Magic, Alchemy, Astrology, the occult associations which culminated in Freemasonry, and, finally, "an obscure sheaf of hieroglyphs known as Tarot cards." He places in another class "the bewitchments and other mummeries of Ceremonial Magic." ("The Holy Kabbalah," pp. 518-19.)
[315] For a discussion of the Gnostic and Theosophic elements in Blake's work see D. Surat, "Blake and Modern Thought" (1929).
[316] A. E. Waite, "Doctrine and Literature of the Kabbalah," p. 48.
[317] I offer no opinion as to the truth or falsity of these "occult" claims. For a more detailed discussion the reader is referred to Steiner's curious little book, "The Way of Initiation."
[318] C. W. Leadbeater, "The Science of the Sacraments," p. 38.
[319] Compare the following: "Imagine that all the world and the starry hosts are waiting, alert and with shining eyes, to do your bidding. Imagine that you are to touch the button now, and instantly they will spring to do the rest. The instant you say, `I can and I will,' the entire powers of the universe are to be set in motion" (E. Towne, "Joy Philosophy," p. 52).
[320] "Rituel de la Haute Magie," pp. 35, 36.
[321] "The Occult Sciences," p. 14. But references in Mr. Waite's most recent work to "the puerilities and imbecility of ceremonial magic" suggest that he has modified his views. Cf. "The Holy Kabbalah" (1929), p. 521.
[322] "Rituel de la Haute Magie," p. 71.
[323] "Rituel de la Haute Magie," p. 139.
[324] "Dogme de la Haute Magie," p. 361 et seq.
[325] "Rituel de la Haute Magie," p. 32.
[326] "Dogme de la Haute Magie," p. 129.
[327] "Rituel," p. 312.
[328] "Dogma," p. 134.
[329] "Histoire de la Magie," p. 514.
[330] "The Rod, the Root, and the Flower," "Knowledge and Science," xxii.