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			Introduction
 
			BEING AT a friend’s house in the country during some part of the 
			summer 1795, I there saw a volume of a German periodical work, 
			called Religions Begebenheiten, i.e. Religious Occurrences; in which 
			there was an account of the various schisms in the Fraternity of 
			Free Masons, with frequent allusions to the origin and history of 
			that celebrated association. This account interested me a good deal, 
			because, in my early life, I had taken some part in the occupations 
			(shall I call them) of Free Masonry; and having chiefly frequented 
			the Lodges on the Continent, I had learned many doctrines, and seen 
			many ceremonials, which have no place in the simple system of Free 
			Masonry which obtains in this country.
 
			I had also remarked, that the whole was much more the object of 
			reflection and thought than I could remember it to have been among 
			my acquaintances at home. There, I had seen a Mason Lodge considered 
			merely as a pretext for passing an hour or two in a fort of decent 
			conviviality, not altogether void of some rational occupation. I had 
			sometimes heard of differences of doctrines or of ceremonies, but in 
			terms which marked them as mere frivolities. But, on the Continent, 
			I found them matters of serious concern and debate.
 
			Such too is the contagion of example, that I could not hinder myself 
			from thinking one opinion better founded, or one Ritual more 
			apposite and significant, than another; and I even felt something 
			like an anxiety for its being adopted, and a zeal
			for making it a general practice. I had been initiated in a very 
			splendid Lodge at Liege, of which the Prince Bishop, his Trefonciers, 
			and the chief Noblesse of the State, were members. I visited the 
			French Lodges at Valenciennes, at Brussels, at Aix-la-Chapelle, at 
			Berlin, and Koningsberg; and I picked up some printed discourses 
			delivered by the Brother-orators of the Lodges.
 
			At St. Petersburgh I connected myself with the English Lodge, and 
			occasionally visited the German and Russian Lodges held there. I 
			found myself received with particular respect as a Scotch Mason, and 
			as an Eleve of the Lodge de In Parfaite Intelligence at Liege. I was 
			importuned by persons of the first rank to pursue my masonic career 
			through many degrees unknown in this country.
 
			But all the splendour and elegance that I saw could not conceal a 
			frivolity in every part. It appeared a baseless fabric, and I could 
			not think of engaging in an occupation which would consume much 
			time, cost me a good deal of money, and might perhaps excite in me 
			some of that fanaticism, or, at least, enthusiasm that I saw in 
			others, and perceived to be void of any rational support.
 
			I therefore remained in the English Lodge, contented with the rank 
			of Scotch Master, which was in a manner forced on me in a private 
			Lodge of French Masons, but is not given in the English Lodge. My 
			masonic rank admitted me to a very elegant entertainment in the 
			female Loge de la Fidelite, where every ceremonial was composed in 
			the highest degree of elegance, and every thing conducted with the 
			most delicate respect for our fair sisters, and the old song of 
			brotherly love was chanted in the most refined strain of sentiment. 
			I do not suppose that the Parisian Free Masonry of forty-five 
			degrees could give me more entertainment.
 
			I had profited so much by it, that I had the honour of being 
			appointed the Brother-orator. In this office I gave such 
			satisfaction, that a worthy Brother sent me at midnight a box, which 
			he committed to my care, as a person far advanced in masonic 
			science, zealously attached to the order, and therefore a fit 
			depositary of important writings. I learned next day that this 
			gentleman had found it convenient to leave the empire in a hurry, 
			but taking with him the funds of an establishment of which her 
			Imperial Majesty had made him the manager. I was desired to keep 
			these writings till he should see me again. I obeyed.
 About ten years afterward I saw the gentleman on the street in 
			Edinburgh, conversing with a foreigner. As I passed by him, I 
			saluted him softly in the Russian language, but without stopping, or 
			even looking him in the face. He coloured, but made no return: I 
			endeavoured in vain to meet with him, intending to make a proper 
			return for much civility and kindness which I had received from him 
			in his own country.
 
			I now considered the box as accessible to myself, and opened it. I 
			found it to contain all the degrees of the Parfait Macon Ecossois, 
			with the Rituals, Catechisms, and Instructions, and also four other 
			degrees of Free Masonry, as cultivated in the Parisian Lodges. I 
			have kept them with all care, and mean to give them to some 
			respectable Lodge. But as I am bound by no engagement of any kind, I 
			hold myself as at liberty to make such use of them as may be 
			serviceable to the public, without enabling any uninitiated person 
			to enter the Lodges of these degrees.
 
 This acquisition might have roused my former relish for Masonry, had 
			it been merely dormant; but, after so long separation from the Loge 
			de la Fidelite, the masonic spirit had evaporated.
 
			Some curiosity, however, remained, and some wish to trace this 
			plastic mystery to the pit from which the clay had been dug; which 
			has been moulded into so many different shapes, “some to honor, and 
			some to dishonor.” But my opportunities were now gone. I had given 
			away (when in Russia) my volumes of discourses, and some far-fetched 
			and gratuitous histories, and nothing remained but the pitiful work 
			of Anderson, and the Maconnerie Adonhiramique devoilee, which are in 
			every one’s hands.
 
			My curiosity was strongly roused by the accounts given in the 
			Religions Begebenheiten. There I saw quotations without number; 
			systems and schisms of which I had never heard; but what 
			particularly struck me, was a zeal and fanaticism about what I 
			thought trifles, which astonished me. Men of rank and fortune, and 
			engaged in serious and honorable public employments, not only 
			frequenting the Lodges of the cities where they resided, but 
			journeying from one end of Germany or France to the other, to visit 
			new Lodges, or to learn new secrets or new doctrines. I saw 
			conventions held at Wismar, at Wisbad, at Kohlo; at Brunswick, and 
			at Willemsbad, consisting of some hundreds of persons of respectable 
			stations. I saw adventurers coming to a city, professing some new 
			secret, and in a few days forming new Lodges, and instructing in a 
			troublesome and expensive manner hundreds of brethren.
 
			German Masonry appeared a very serious concern, and to be implicated 
			with other subjects with which I had never suspected it to have any 
			connection. I saw it much connected with many occurrences and 
			schisms in the Christian church; I saw that the Jesuits had several 
			times interfered in it; and that most of the exceptionable 
			innovations and dissentions had arisen about the time that the order 
			of Loyola was suppressed; so that it should seem, that these 
			intriguing brethren had attempted to maintain their influence by the 
			help of Free Masonry.
 
			I saw it much disturbed by the mystical whims of J. Behmen and 
			Swedenborg-by the fanatical and knavish doctrines of the modern 
			Rosycrucians-by Magicians-Magnetise rs-Exorcists, &c. And I observed 
			that these different sects reprobated each other, as not only 
			maintaining erroneous opinions, but even inculcating opinions which 
			were contrary to the established religions of Germany, and contrary 
			to the principles of the civil establishments.
 
			At the same time they charged each other with mistakes and 
			corruptions, both in doctrine and in practice; and particularly with 
			falsification of the first principles of Free Masonry, and with 
			ignorance of its origin and its history; and they supported these 
			charges by authorities from many different books which were unknown 
			to me.
 
			My curiosity was now greatly excited. I got from a much respected 
			friend many of the preceding volumes of the Religions Begebenheiten, 
			in hopes of much information from the patient industry of German 
			erudition. This opened a new and very interesting scene; I was 
			frequently sent back to England, from whence all agreed that Free 
			Masonry had been imported into Germany. I was frequently led into 
			France and into Italy.
 
 There, and more remarkably in France, I found that the Lodges had 
			become the haunts of many projectors and fanatics, both in science, 
			in religion, and in politics, who had availed themselves of the 
			secrecy and the freedom of speech maintained in these meetings, to 
			broach their particular whims, or suspicious doctrines, which, if 
			published to the world in the usual manner, would have exposed the 
			authors to ridicule, or to censure.
 
			These projectors had contrived to tag their peculiar nostrums to the 
			mummery of Masonry, and were even allowed to twist the masonic 
			emblems and ceremonies to their purpose; so that in their hands Free 
			Masonry became a thing totally unlike, and almost in direct 
			opposition to the system (if it may get such a name) imported from 
			England; and some Lodges had become schools of irreligion and 
			licentiousness.
 
			No nation in modern times has so particularly turned its attention 
			to the cultivation of every thing that is refined or ornamental as 
			France, and it has long been the resort of all who hunt after 
			entertainment in its most refined form; the French have come to 
			consider themselves as the instructors of the world in every thing 
			that ornaments life, and feeling themselves received as such, they 
			have formed their manners accordingly-full of the most condescending 
			complaisance to all who acknowledge their superiority, lighted, in a 
			high degree, with this office, they have become zealous missionaries 
			of refinement in every department of human pursuit, and have reduced 
			their apostolic employment to a system, which they prosecute with 
			ardour and delight.
 
			This is not groundless declamation, but sober historical truth. It 
			was the professed aim (and it was a magnificent and wise aim) of the 
			great Colbert, to make the court of Louis XIV, the fountain of human 
			refinement” and Paris the Athens of Europe.
 We need only look at the plunder of Italy by the French army, to be 
			convinced their low-born generals and statesmen have in this respect 
			the same notions with the Colberts and the Richlieus.
 
			I know no subject in which this aim at universal influence on the 
			opinions of men, by holding themselves forth as the models of 
			excellence and elegance, is more clearly seen than in the care that 
			they have been pleased to take of Free Masonry. It seems indeed 
			peculiarly suited to the talents and taste of that vain and ardent 
			people. Baseless and frivolous, it admits of every form that Gallic 
			refinement can invent, to recommend it to the young, the gay, the 
			luxurious; that class of society which alone deserves their care, 
			because, in one way or another, it leads all other classes of 
			society.
 
			It has accordingly happened, that the homely Free Masonry imported 
			from England has been totally changed in every country of Europe, 
			either by the imposing ascendancy of French brethren, who are to be 
			found every where, ready to instruct the world; or by the 
			importation of the doctrines, and ceremonies, and ornaments of the 
			Parisian Lodges. Even England; the birth-place of Masonry, has 
			experienced the French innovations; and all the repeated 
			injunctions, admonitions, and reproofs of the old Lodges, cannot 
			prevent those in different parts of the kingdom from admitting the 
			French novelties, full of tinsel and glitter, and high-sounding 
			titles.
 
 Were this all, the harm would not be great. But long before good 
			opportunities had occurred for spreading the refinements on the 
			simple Free Masonry of England, the Lodges in France had become 
			places of very serious discussion, where opinions in morals, in 
			religion, and in politics, had been promulgated and maintained with 
			a freedom and a keenness, of which we in this favored land have no 
			adequate notion, because we are unacquainted with the restraints, 
			which, in other countries, are laid on ordinary conversation.
 
			In consequence of this, the French innovations in Free Masonry were 
			quickly followed in all parts of Europe, by the admission of similar 
			discussions, although in direct opposition to a standing rule, and a 
			declaration made to every newly received Brother,
			“that nothing touching the religion or government shall ever be 
			spoken of in the
			Lodge.”
 
			But the Lodges in other countries followed the example of France, 
			and have frequently become the rendezvous of innovators in religion 
			and politics, and other disturbers of the public peace. In short, I 
			have found that the covert of a Mason Lodge had been employed in 
			every country for venting and propagating sentiments in religion and 
			politics, that could not have circulated in public without exposing 
			the author to great danger. I found, that this impunity had 
			gradually encouraged men of licentious principles to become more 
			bold, and to teach doctrines subversive of all our notions of 
			morality - of all our confidence in the moral government of the 
			universe - of all our hopes of improvement in a future state of 
			existence - and of all satisfaction and contentment with our present 
			life, so long as we live in a state of civil subordination.
 
			I have been able to trace these attempts, made, through a course of 
			fifty years, under the specious pretext of enlightening the world by 
			the torch of philosophy, and of dispelling the clouds of civil and 
			religious superstition which keep the nations of Europe in darkness 
			and slavery. I have observed these doctrines gradually diffusing and 
			mixing with all the different systems of Free Masonry; till, at 
			last, AN ASSOCIATION HAS BEEN FORMED for the express purpose of 
			ROOTING OUT ALL THE RELIGIOUS ESTABLISHMENTS, AND OVERTURNING ALL 
			THE EXISTING GOVERNMENTS OF EUROPE.
 
			I have seen this Association exerting itself zealously and 
			systematically, till it has become almost irresistible: And I have 
			seen that the most active leaders in the French Revolution were 
			members of this Association, and conducted their first movements 
			according to its principles, and by means of its instructions and 
			assistance, formerly requested and obtained: And, lastly, I have 
			seen that this Association still exists, still works in secret, and 
			that not only several appearances among ourselves show that its 
			emissaries are endeavoring to propagate their detestable doctrines 
			among us, but that the Association has Lodges in Britain 
			corresponding with the mother Lodge at Munich ever since 1784.
 
			If all this were a matter of mere curiosity, and susceptible of no 
			good use, it would have been better to have kept it to myself, than 
			to disturb my neighbours with the knowledge of a state of things 
			which they cannot amend. But if it shall appear that the minds of my 
			countrymen are misled in the very same manner as were those of our 
			continental neighbours - if I can show that the reasonings which 
			make a very strong impression on some persons in this country are 
			the same which actually produced the dangerous association in 
			Germany; and that they had this unhappy
			influence solely because they were thought to be sincere, and the 
			expressions of the sentiments of the speakers - if I can show that 
			this was all a cheat, and that the Leaders of this Association 
			disbelieved every word that they uttered, and every doctrine that 
			they taught; and that their real intention was to abolish all 
			religion, overturn every government, and make the world a general 
			plunder and a wreck - if I can show, that the principles which the 
			Founder and Leaders of this Association held forth as the perfection 
			of human virtue, and the most powerful and efficacious for forming 
			the minds of men, and making them good and happy, had no influence 
			on the Founder and Leaders themselves, and that they were, almost 
			without exception, the most insignificant, worthless, and profligate 
			of men; I cannot but think, that such information will make my 
			countrymen hesitate a little, and receive with caution, and even 
			distrust, addresses and instructions which flatter our self-conceit, 
			and which, by buoying us up with the gay prospect of what is perhaps 
			attainable by a change, may make us discontented with our present 
			condition, and forget that there never was a government on earth 
			where the people of a great and luxurious nation enjoyed so much 
			freedom and security in the possession of every thing that is dear 
			and valuable.
 
			When we see that these boasted principles had not that effect on the 
			leaders which they assert to be their native, certain, and 
			inevitable consequences, we will distrust the fine descriptions of 
			the happiness that should result from such a change.
 
			  
			And when we see 
			that the methods which were practiced by this Association for the 
			express purpose of breaking all the bands of society, were employed 
			solely in order that the leaders might rule the world with 
			uncontrollable power, while all the rest, even of the associated, 
			will be degraded in their own estimation, corrupted in their 
			principles, and employed as mere tools of the ambition of their 
			unknown superiors; surely a free-born Briton will not hesitate to 
			reject at once; and without any farther examination, a plan so big 
			with mischief, so disgraceful to its underling adherents, and so 
			uncertain in its issue.
 
			These hopes have induced me to lay before the public a short 
			abstract of the information which I think I have received. It will 
			be short, but I hope sufficient for establishing the fact, that this 
			detestable Association exists, and its emissaries are busy among 
			ourselves. 
			I was not contented with the quotations which I found in the 
			Religions Begebenheiten, but procured from abroad some of the chief 
			writings from which they are taken. This both gave me confidence in 
			the quotations from books which I could not procure, and furnished 
			me with more materials. Much, however, remains untold, richly 
			deserving the attention of all those who feel themselves disposed to 
			listen to the tales of a possible happiness that may be enjoyed in a 
			society where all the magistrates are wise and just, and all the 
			people are honest and kind.
 
			I hope that I am honest and candid. I have been at all pains to give 
			the true sense of the authors. My knowledge of the German language 
			is but scanty, but I have had the assistance of friends whenever I 
			was in doubt. In compressing into one paragraph what I have 
			collected from many, I have, as much as I was able, stuck to the 
			words of the author, and have been anxious to give his precise 
			meaning.
 
			I doubt not but that I have sometimes failed, and will receive 
			correction with deference. I entreat the reader not to expect a 
			piece of good literary composition. I am very sensible that it is 
			far from it - it is written during bad health, when I am not at ease 
			- and I wished to conceal my name - but my motive is, without the 
			smallest mixture of another, to do some good in the only way I am 
			able, and I think
			that what I say will come with better grace, and be received with 
			more confidence, than any anonymous publication. Of these I am now 
			most heartily sick. I throw myself on my country with a free heart, 
			and I bow with deference to its decision.
 
			The Association of which I have been speaking, is the Order of 
			ILLUMINATI, founded in 1775, by Dr. Adam Weishaupt, professor of 
			Canon law in the university of Ingolstadt, and abolished in 1786 by 
			the Elector of Bavaria, but revived immediately after, under another 
			name, and in a different form, all over Germany.
 
			It was again detected, and seemingly broken up; but it had by this 
			time taken so deep root that it still subsists without being 
			detected, and has spread into all the countries of Europe. It took 
			its first rise among the Free Masons, but is totally different from 
			Free AAasonry. It was not, however, the mere protection gained by 
			the secrecy of the Lodges that gave occasion to it, but it arose 
			naturally from the corruptions that had gradually crept into that 
			fraternity, the violence of the party-spirit which pervaded it, and 
			from the total uncertainty and darkness that hangs over the whole of 
			that mysterious Association. It is necessary, therefore, to give 
			some account of the innovations that have been introduced into Free 
			Masonry from the time that it made its appearance on the continent 
			of Europe as a mystical Society, possessing secrets different from 
			those of the mechanical employment whose name it assumed, and thus 
			affording entertainment and occupation to persons of all ranks and 
			professions.
 
			It is by no means intended to give a history of Free Masonry. This 
			would lead to a very long discussion. The patient industry of German 
			erudition has been very seriously employed on this subject, and many 
			performances have been published, of which some account is given in 
			the different volumes of the Religions Begebenheiten, particularly 
			in those for 1779, 1785, and 1786. It is evident, from the nature of 
			the thing, that they cannot be very instructive to the public; 
			because the obligation of secrecy respecting the important matters 
			which are the very subjects of debate, prevents the author from 
			giving that full information that is required from an historian, and 
			the writers have not, in general, been persons qualified for the 
			talk.
 
			Scanty erudition, credulity, and enthusiasm; appear in almost all 
			their writings; and they have neither attempted to remove the heap 
			of rubbish with which Anderson has disgraced his Constitutions of 
			Free Masonry (the basis of masonic history) nor to avail themselves 
			of information which history really affords to a sober enquirer. 
			Their Royal art must never forsooth appear in a state of infancy or 
			childhood, like all other human acquirements; and therefore, when 
			they cannot give proofs of its existence in a state of manhood, 
			possessed of all its mysterious treasures, they suppose what they do 
			not see, and say that they are concealed by the oath of secrecy.
 
			  
			Of 
			such instructions I can make no use, even if I were disposed to 
			write a history of the Fraternity. I shall content myself with an 
			account of such particulars as are admitted by all the masonic 
			parties, and which illustrate or confirm my general proposition, 
			making such use of the accounts of the higher degrees in my 
			possession as I can, without admitting the profane into their 
			Lodges. Being under no tie of secrecy with regard to these, I am 
			with-held by discretion alone from putting the public in possession 
			of all their mysteries. 
			  
			
			
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