|
|
|||||
|
| ||||||
|
||||||
Whatsoever you have heard, O mortals, concerning our Fraternity by the trumpet sound of the Fama R.C., do not either believe it hastily, or wilfully suspect it. It is Jehovah who, seeing how the world is falling to decay, and near to its end, doth hasten it again to its beginning, inverting the course of Nature, and so what heretofore hath been sought with great pains and dayly labor He doth lay open now to those thinking of no such thing, offering it to the willing and thrusting it on the reluctant, that it may become to the good that which will smooth the troubles of human life and break the violence of unexpected blows of Fortune, but to the ungodly that which will augment their sins and their punishments.
Although we believe ourselves to have sufficiently unfolded to you in the Fama
the nature of our order, wherein we follow the will of our most excellent
father, nor can by any be suspected of heresy, nor of any attempt against the
commonwealth, we hereby do condemn the East and the West (meaning the Pope and
Mahomet) for their blasphemies against our Lord Jesus Christ, and offer to the
chief head of the Reman Empire our prayers, secrets, and great treasures of
gold. Yet we have thought good for the sake of the learned to add somewhat
more to this, and to make a better explanation, if there be anything too deep,
hidden, and set down over dark, in the Fama, or for certain reasons altogether
omitted, whereby we hope the learned will be more addicted unto us, and easier
to approve our counsel.
Concerning the amendment of philosophy, we have (as much as at this present is needful) declared that the same is altogether weak and faulty; nay, whilst many (I know not how) alledge that she is sound and strong, to us it is certain that she fetches her last breath.
But as commonly even in the same place where there breaketh forth a new disease, nature discovereth a remedy against the same, so amidst so many infirmities of philosophy there do appear the right means, and unto our Fatherland sufficiently offered, whereby she may become sound again, and new or renovated may appear to a renovated world.
No other philosophy we have then that which is the head of all the faculties,
sciences, and arts, the which (if we behold our age) containeth much of
Theology and Medicine, but little of Jurisprudence; which searcheth heaven and
earth with exquisite analysis, or, to speak briefly thereof, which doth
sufficiently manifest the Microsmus man, whereof if some of the more orderly
in the number of the learned shall respond to our fraternal invitation, they
shall find among us far other and greater wonders then those they heretofore
did believe, marvel at, and profess.
Wherefore, to declare briefly our meaning hereof, it becomes us to labor
carefully that the surprise of our challenge may be taken from you, to shew
plainly that such secrets are not lightly esteemed by us, and not to spread an
opinion abroad among the vulgar that the story concerning them is a foolish
thing. For it is not absurd to suppose many are overwhelmed with the conflict
of thought which is occasioned by our unhoped graciousness, unto whom (as yet)
be unknown the wonders of the sixth age, or who, by reason of the course of
the world, esteem the things to come like unto the present, and, hindered by
the obstacles of their age, live no otherwise in the world then as men blind,
who, in the light of noon, discern nothing onely by feeling.
Now concerning the first part, we hold that the meditations of our Christian father on all subjects which from the creation of the world have been invented, brought forth, and propagated by human ingenuity, through God's revelation, or through the service of Angels or spirits, or through the sagacity of understanding, or through the experience of long observation, are so great, that if all books should perish, and by God's almighty sufferance all writings and all learning should be lost, yet posterity will be able thereby to lay a new foundation of sciences, and to erect a new citadel of truth; the which perhaps would not be so hard to do as if one should begin to pull down then destroy the old, ruinous building, then enlarge the forecourt, afterwards bring light into the private chambers, and then change the doors, staples and other things according to our intention.
Therefore it must not be expected that new comers shall attain at once all our weighty secrets. They must proceed step by step from the smaller to the greater, and must not be retarded by difficulties.
Therefore should we not freely acquiesce in the onely truth then seek through
so many windings and labyrinths, if onely it had pleased God to lighten unto
us the sixth Candelabrum? Were it not sufficient for us to fear neither
hunger, poverty, diseases nor age? Were it not an excellent thing to live
always so as if you had lived from the beginning of the world, and should
still live to the end thereof? So to live in one place that neither the people
which dwel beyond the Ganges could hide anything, nor those which live in Peru
might be able to keep secret their counsels from thee? So to read in one onely
book as to discern, understand, and remember whatsoever in all other books
(which heretofore have been, are now, and hereafter shal come out) hath been,
is, and shal be learned out of them? So to sing or to play that instead of
stony rocks you could draw pearls, instead of wild beasts spirits, and instead
of Pluto you could soften the mighty princes of the world? O mortals, diverse
is the counsel of God and your convenience, Who hath decreed at this time to
encrease and enlarge the number of our Fraternity the which we with such joy
have undertaken, as we have heretofore obtained this great treasure without
our merits, yea, without any hope or expectation; the same we purpose with
such fidelity to put in practice, that neither compassion nor pity for our own
children (which some of us in the Fraternity have) shal move us, since we know
that these unhoped for good things cannot be inherited, nor be conferred
promiscuously.
If there be anybody now which on the other side wil complain of our discretion, that we offer our treasures so freely and indiscriminately, and do not rather regard more the godly, wise, or princely persons then the common people, with him we are in no wise angry (for the accusation is not without moment), but withall we affirm that we have by no means made common property of our arcana, albeit they resound in five languages within the ears of the vulgar, both because, as we well know, they will not move gross wits, and because the worth, of those who shal be accepted into our Fraternity will not be measured by their curiosity, but by the rule and pattern of our revelations. A thousand times the unworthy may clamour, a thousand times may present themselves, yet God hath commanded our ears, that they should hear none of them, and hath so compassed us about with his clouds that unto us, His servants, no violence can be done; wherefore now no longer are we beheld by human eyes, unless they have received strength borrowed from the eagle.
For the rest, it hath been necessary that the Fama should be set forth in
everyone's mother tongue, lest those should not be defrauded of the knowledge
thereof, whom (although they be unlearned) God hath not excluded from the
happiness of this Fraternity, which is divided into degrees; as those which
dwell in Damcar, who have a far different politick order from the other
Arabians; for there do govern onely understanding men, who, by the king's
permission, make particular laws, according unto which example the government
shall also be instituted in Europe (according to the description set down by
our Christianly Father), when that shal come to pass which must precede, when
our Trumpet shall resound with full voice and with no prevarications of
meaning, when, namely, those things of which a few now whisper and darken with
enigmas, shall openly fill the earth, even as after many secret chafings of
pious people against the pope's tyranny, and after timid reproof, he with
great violence and by a great onset was cast down from his seat and abundantly
trodden under foot, whose final fall is reserved for an age when he shall be
torn in pieces with nails, and a final groan shall end his ass's braying, the
which, as we know, is already manifest to many learned men in Germany, as
their tokens and secret congratulations bear witness.
We could here relate and declare what all the time from the year 1378 (when
our Christian father was born) till now hath happened, what alterations he
hath seen in the world these one hundred and six years of his life, what he
left after his happy death to be attempted by our Fathers and by us, but
brevity, which we do observe, will not permit at this present to make
rehearsal of it; it is enough for those which do not despise our declaration
to have touched upon it, thereby to prepare the way for their more close union
and association with us. Truly, to whom it is permitted to behold, read, and
thenceforward teach himself those great characters which the Lord God hath
inscribed upon the world's mechanism, and which He repeats through the
mutations of Empires, such an one is already ours, though as yet unknown to
himself; and as we know he will not neglect our invitation, so, in like
manner, we abjure all deceit, for we promise that no man's uprightness and
hopes shall deceive him who shall make himself known to us under the seal of
secresy and desire our familiarity. But to the false and to impostors, and to
those who seek other things then wisdom, we witness by these presents
publikely, we cannot be betrayed unto them to our hurt, nor be known to them
without the will of God, but they shall certainly be partakers of that
terrible commination spoken of in our Fama, and their impious designs shall
fall back upon their own heads, while our treasures shall remain untouched,
till the Lion shall arise and exact them as his right, receive and employ them
for the establishment of his kingdom.
One thing should here, O mortals, be established by us, that God hath decreed to the world before her end, which presently thereupon shall ensue, an influx of truth, light, and grandeur, such as he commanded should accompany Adam from Paradise and sweeten the misery of man: Wherefore there shall cease all falshood, darkness, and bondage, which little by little, with the great globe's revolution, hath crept into the arts, works, and governments of men, darkening the great part of them. Thence hath proceeded that innumerable diversity of persuasions falsities, and heresies, which make choice difficult to the wisest men, seeing on the one part they were hindered by the reputation of philosophers and on the other by the facts of experience, which if (as we trust) it can be once removed, and instead thereof a single and self-same rule be instituted, then there will indeed remain thanks unto them which have taken pains therein, but the sum of the so great work shall be attributed to the blessedness of our age.
As we now confess that many high intelligences by their writings will be a
great furtherance unto this Reformation which is to come, so do we by no means
arrogate to ourselves this glory, as if such a work were onely imposed on us
but we testify with our Saviour Christ, that sooner shall the stones rise up
and offer their service then there shall be any want of executors of God's
counsel.
God, indeed, hath already sent messengers which should testifie His will, to wit, some new stars which have appeared in Serpentarius and Cygnus, the which powerful signs of a great Council shew forth how for all things which human ingenuity discovers, God calls upon His hidden knowledge, as likewise the Book of Nature, though it stands open truly for all eyes, can be read or understood by only a very few.
As in the human head there are two organs of hearing, two of sight and two of
smell, but onely one of speech, and it were but vain to expect speech from the
ears, or hearing from the eyes, so there have been ages which have seen,
others which have heard, others again that have smelt and tasted. Now, there
remains that in a short and swiftly approaching time honour should be likewise
given to the tongue, that what formerly saw, heard, and smelt shall finally
speak, after the world shall have slept away the intoxication of her poisoned
and stupefying chalice, and with an open heart, bare head, and naked feet
shall merrily and joyfully go forth to meet the sun rising in the morning.
These characters and letters, as God hath here and there incorporated them in
the Sacred Scriptures, so hath He imprinted them most manifestly on the
wonderful work of creation, on the heavens, the earth, and on all beasts, so
that as the mathematician predicts eclipses, so we prognosticate the
obscurations of the church, and how long they shall last. From these letters
we have borrowed our magick writing, and thence have made for ourselves a new
language, in which the nature of things is expressed, so that it is no wonder
that we are not so eloquent in other tongues, least of all in this Latin,
which we know to be by no means in agreement with that of Adam and of Enoch,
but to have been contaminated by the confusion of Babel. (The original reads
Babylonis confusione, "by the confusion of Babylon.")
But this also must by no means be omitted, that, while there are yet some
eagle's feathers in our way, the which do hinder our purpose, we do exhort to
the sole, onely, assiduous, and continual study of the Sacred Scriptures, for
he that taketh all his pleasures therein shall know that he hath prepared for
himself an excellent way to come into our Fraternity, for this is the whole
sum of our Laws, that as there is not a character in that great miracle of the
world which has not a claim on the memory, so those are nearest and likest
unto us who do make the Bible the rule of their life, and the end of all their
studies and the compendium of the universal world, from whom we require not
that it should be continually in their mouth, but that they should
appropriately apply its true interpretation to all ages of the world for it is
not our custom so to debase the divine oracle, that while there are
innumerable expounders of the same, some adhere to the opinions of their
party, some make sport of Scripture as if it were a tablet of wax to be
indifferently made use of by theologians, philosophers, doctors, and
mathematicians, Be it ours rather to bear witness, that from the beginning of
the world there hath not been given to man a more excellent, admirable, and
wholesome book then the Holy Bible; Blessed is he who possesses it more
blessed is he who reads it, most blessed of all is he who truly understandeth
it, while he is most like to God who both understands and obeys it.
Now, whatsoever hath been said in the Fama, through hatred of impostors,
against the transmutation of metals and the supreme medicine of the world, we
desire to be so understood, that this so great gift of God we do in no manner
set at naught, but as it bringeth not always with it the knowledge of Nature,
while this knowledge bringeth forth both that and an infinite number of other
natural miracles, it is right that we be rather earnest to attain to the
knowledge of philosophy, nor tempt excellent wits to the tincture of metals
sooner then to the observation of Nature. He must needs be insatiable to whom
neither poverty, diseases, nor danger can any longer reach, who, as one raised
above all men, hath rule over that which doth anguish, afflict, and pain
others, yet will give himself again to idle things, will build, make wars, and
domineer, because he hath of gold sufficient, and of silver an inexaustible
fountain. God judgeth far otherwise, who exalteth the lowly, and casteth the
proud into obscurity; to the silent he sendeth his angels to hold speech with
them, but the babblers he driveth into the wilderness, which is the judgment
due to the Roman impostor who now poureth his blasphemies with open mouth
against Christ nor yet in the full light, by which Germany hath detected his
caves and subterranean passages, will abstain from lying, that thereby he may
fulfil the measure of his sin, and be found worthy of the axe. Therefore, one
day it will come to pass that the mouth of this viper shall be stopped, and
his triple crown shall be brought to nought, of which things more fully when
we shall have met together.
For conclusion of our Confession we must earnestly admonish you, that you cast
away, if not all, yet most of the worthless books of pseudo chymists, to whom
it is a jest to apply the Most Holy Trinity to vain things, or to deceive men
with monstrous symbols and enigmas, or to profit by the curiosity of the
credulous; our age doth produce many such, one of the greatest being a stage
player, a man with sufficient ingenuity for imposition; such doth the enemy of
human welfare mingle among the good seed, thereby to make the truth more
difficult to be believed, which in herself is simple and naked, while falshood
is proud, haughty, and coloured with a lustre of seeming godly and humane
wisdom. Ye that are wise eschew such books, and have recourse to us, who seek
not your moneys, but offer unto you most willingly our great treasures. We
hunt not after your goods with invented lying tinctures, but desire to make
you partakers of our goods. We never reject parables, but invite you to the
clear and simple explanation of all secrets; we seek not to be received of
you, but call you unto our more then kingly houses and palaces, by no motion
of our own, but(lest you be ignorant of it) is as forced thereto by the Spirit
of God, Commanded by the testament of our most excellent Father, and impelled
by the occasion of this present time.
What think you, therefore, O mortals, seeing that we sincerely confess Christ,
execrate the pope, addict ourselves to the true philosophy, lead a worthy
life, and dayly call, entreat, and invite many more unto our Fraternity, unto
whom the same Light of God likewise appeareth? Consider you not that, having
pondered the gifts which are in you, having measured your understanding in the
Word of God, and having weighed the imperfection and inconsistencies of all
the arts, you may at length in the future deliberate with us upon their
remedy, cooperate in the work of God, and be serviceable to the constitution
of your time? On which work these profits will follow, that all those goods
which Nature hath dispersed in every part of the earth shall at one time and
altogether be given to you, tanquam in centro solis et lunae. Then shall you
be able to expel from the world all those things which darken human knowledge
and hinder action, such as the vain (astronomical) epicycles and eccentric
circles.
You, however, for whom it is enough to be serviceable out of curiosity to any ordinance or who are dazzled by the glistering of gold, or who, though now upright, might be led away by such unexpected great riches into an effeminate, idle, luxurious, and pompous life, do not disturb our sacred silence by your clamour but think, that although there be a medicine which might fully cure all diseases, yet those whom God wishes to try or to chastise shall not be abetted by such an opportunity, so that if we were able to enrich and instruct the whole world, and liberate it from innumerable hardships, yet shall we never be manifested unto any man unless God should favour it, yea, it shall be so far from him who thinks to be partaker of our riches against the will of God that he shall sooner lose his life in seeking us, then attain happiness by finding us.
FRATERNITAS R. C.
---------------------
Translated by Eugenius Philalethes
Edited by A. E. Waite
First published: 1615