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			Chapter II 
			- The llluminati
 
			I AM now arrived at what I should call the great epoch of Cosmo-politism; 
			the scheme communicated to Baron Knigge by the Marchese di Constanza. 
			This obliges me to mention a remarkable Lodge of the Eclectic 
			Masonry, erected at Munich in Bavaria, in 1775; under the worshipful 
			Master; Professor Baader. It was called The Lodge Theodore of Good 
			Counsel. It had its constitutionat patent from the Royal York at 
			Berlin, but had formed a particular system of its own, by 
			instructions from the Loge des Chevaliers Bienfaisants at Lyons; 
			with which it kept up a correspondence. This respect to the Lodge at 
			Lyons had arisen from the preponderance acquired in general by the 
			French party in the convention at Willemsbad.
 
			The deputies of the Rosaic Lodges, as well as the remains of the 
			Templars, and Stricten Observanz, all looking up to this as the 
			mother Lodge of what they called the Grand Orient de la France, 
			consisting (in 1782) of 266 improved Lodges, united under the D. de 
			Chartres. Accordingly the Lodge at Lyons sent Mr. Willermooz as 
			deputy to this convention at Willemsbad.
 
 
			Refining gradually on the simple British 
			Masonry, the Lodge had formed a system of practical morality, which 
			it asserted to be the aim of genuine Masonry, saying, that a true 
			Mason, and a man of upright heart and active virtue are synonymous 
			characters, and that the great aim of Free Masonry is to promote the 
			happiness of mankind by every mean in our power. In pursuance of 
			these principles, the Lodge Theodore professedly occupied itself 
			with economical, statistical, and political matters, and not only 
			published from time to time discourses on such subjects by the 
			Brother Orator, but the Members considered themselves as in duty 
			bound to propagate and inculcate the same doctrines out of doors. 
			Of the zealous members of the Lodge Theodore the most conspicuous 
			was Dr. Adam Weishaupt, Professor of Canon Law in the university of 
			Ingolstadt. This person had been educated among the Jesuits; but the 
			abolition of their order made him change his views, and from being 
			their pupil, he became their most bitter enemy.
 
 He had acquired a high reputation in his profession, and was 
			attended not only by those intended for the practice in the 
			law-courts, but also by the young gentlemen at large, in their 
			course of general education; and he brought numbers from the 
			neighbouring states to this university, and gave a ton to the 
			studies of the place. He embraced with great keenness this 
			opportunity of spreading the favorite doctrines of the Lodge; and 
			his auditory became the seminary of Cosmopolitism.
 
			  
			The engaging pictures of the possible 
			felicity of a society where every office is held by a man of talents 
			and virtue, and where every talent is set in a place fitted for its 
			exertion, forcibly catches the generous and unsuspecting minds of 
			youth, and in a Roman Catholic state, far advanced in the habits of 
			gross superstition (a character given to Bavaria by its neighbours) 
			and abounding in monks and idle dignitaries, the opportunities must 
			be frequent for observing the inconsiderate dominion of the clergy, 
			and the abject and indolent submission of the laity. 
			Accordingly Professor Weishaupt says, in his Apology for 
			llluminatism, that Deism, Infidelity, and Atheism are more prevalent 
			in Bavaria than in any country he was acquainted with. Discourses, 
			therefore, in which the absurdity and horrors of superstition and 
			spiritual tyranny were strongly painted, could not fail of making a 
			deep impression.
 
			  
			And during this state of the minds of 
			the auditory the transition to general infidelity and irreligion is 
			so easy, and so inviting to sanguine youth, prompted perhaps by a 
			latent wish that the restraints which religion imposes on the 
			expectants of a future state might be found, on enquiry, to be 
			nothing but groundless terrors; that I imagine it requires the most 
			anxious care of the public teacher to keep the minds of his audience 
			impressed with the reality and importance of the great truths of 
			religion, while he frees them from the shackles of blind and absurd 
			superstition.  
			  
			I fear that this celebrated instructor 
			had none of this anxiety, but was satisfied with his great success 
			in the last part of this task, the emancipation of his young hearers 
			from the terrors of superstition. I suppose also that this was the 
			more agreeable to him, as it procured him the triumph over the 
			Jesuits, with whom he had long struggled for the direction of the 
			university. 
			This was in 1777. Weishaupt had long been scheming the establishment 
			of an Association or Order; which, in time, should govern the world. 
			In his first fervour and high expectations; he hinted to several 
			Ex-Jesuits the probability of their recovering, under a new name, 
			the influence which they formerly possessed, and of being again of 
			great service to society, by directing the education of youth of 
			distinction, now emancipated from all civil and religious 
			prejudices. He prevailed on some to join him, but they all retracted 
			but two.
 
			After this disappointment Weishaupt became the implacable enemy of 
			the Jesuits; and his sanguine temper made him frequently lay himself 
			open to their piercing eye, and drew on him their keenest 
			resentment; and at last made him the victim of their enmity.
 
			The Lodge Theodore was the place where the abovementioned doctrines 
			were most zealously propagated. But Weishaupfs emissaries had 
			already procured the adherence of many other Lodges; and the 
			Eclectic Masonry had been brought into vogue chiefty by their 
			exertions at the Willemsbad convention. The Lodge Theodore was 
			perhaps less guarded in its proceedings, for it became remarkable 
			for the very bold sentiments in politics and religion which were 
			frequently uttered in their harangues; and its members were noted 
			for their zeal in making proselytes.
 
			Many bitter pasquinades, satires, and other offensive pamphlets were 
			in secret circulation, and even larger works of very dangerous 
			tendency, and several of them were traced to that Lodge. The Elector 
			often expressed his disapprobation of such proceedings, and sent 
			them kind messages, desiring them to be careful not to disturb the 
			peace of the country; and particularly to recollect the solemn 
			declaration made to every entrant into the Fraternity of Free 
			Masons, “That no subject of religion or politics shall ever be 
			touched on in the Lodge;” a declaration which alone could have 
			procured his permission of any secret assembly whatever, and on the 
			sincerity and honor of which he had reckoned when he gave his 
			sanction to their establishment.
 
			But repeated accounts of the same kind increased the alarm, and the 
			Elector ordered a judicial enquiry into the proceedings of the Lodge 
			Theodore.
 
			It was then discovered that this and several associated Lodges were 
			the nursery or preparation-school for another Order of Masons, who 
			called themselves the ILLUMINATED, and that the express aim of this 
			Order was to abolish Christianity, and overturn all civil 
			government.
 
			But the result of the enquiry was very imperfect and unsatisfactory. 
			No llluminati were to be found. They were unknown in the Lodge. Some 
			of the members occasionally heard of certain candidates for 
			illumination called Ml NERVALS, who were sometimes seen among them. 
			But whether these had been admitted, or who received them, was known 
			only to themselves: Some of these were examined in private by the 
			Elector himself.
 
			  
			They said that they were bound by honor 
			to secrecy: But they assured the Elector, on their honor, that the 
			aim of the Order was in the highest degree praiseworthy, and useful 
			both to church and state: But this could not allay the anxiety of 
			the profane public; and it was repeatedly stated to the Elector, 
			that members of the Lodge Theodore had unguardedly spoken of this 
			Order as one that in time must rule the world. 
			He therefore issued an order forbidding, during his pleasure, all 
			secret assemblies, and shutting up the Mason Lodges. It was not 
			meant to be rigorously enforced, but was intended as a trial of the 
			deference of these Associations for civil authority. The Lodge 
			Theodore distinguished itself by pointed opposition, continuing its 
			meetings; and the members, out of doors, openly reprobated the 
			prohibition as an absurd and unjustifiable tyranny.
 
			In the beginning of 1783, four professors of the Marianen Academy, 
			founded by the widow of the late Elector, viz. Utschneider, 
			Cossandey, Renner, and Grunberger, with two others, were summoned 
			before the Court of Enquiry, and questioned, on their allegiance, 
			respecting the Order of the llluminati. They acknowledged that they 
			belonged to it, and when more closely examined, they related several 
			circumstances of its constitution and principles. Their declarations 
			were immediately published, and were very unfavorable.
 
			The Order was said to abjure Christianity, and to refuse admission 
			into the higher degrees to all who adhered to any of the three 
			confessions. Sensual pleasures were restored to the rank they held 
			in the Epicurean philosophy. Self-murder was justified on Stoical 
			principles. In the Lodges death was declared an eternal sleep; 
			patriotism and loyalty were called narrow-minded prejudices, and 
			incompatible with universal benevolence; continual declamations were 
			made on liberty and equality as the unalienable rights of man.
 
			  
			The baneful influence of accumulated 
			property was declared an insurmountable obstacle to the happiness of 
			any nation whose chief laws were framed for its protection and 
			increase. Nothing was so frequently discoursed of as the propriety 
			of employing, for a good purpose, the means which the wicked 
			employed for evil purposes; and it was taught, that the 
			preponderancy of good in the ultimate result consecrated every mean 
			employed; and that wisdom and virtue consisted in properly 
			determining this balance. 
			This appeared big with danger; because it appeared that nothing 
			would be scrupled at, if we could make it appear that the Order 
			could derive advantage from it, because the great object of the 
			Order was held as superior to every consideration. They concluded by 
			saying that the method of education made them all spies on each 
			other and on all around them. But all this was denied by the 
			llluminati. Some of them were said to be absolutely false; and the 
			rest were said to be mistakes. The apostate professors had 
			acknowledged their ignorance of many things. Two of them were only 
			Minervals, another was an llluminatus of the lowest class, and the 
			fourth was but one step farther advanced. Pamphlets appeared on both 
			sides, with very little effect.
 
			The Elector called before him one of the superiors, a young 
			nobleman; who denied these injurious charges, and said that they 
			were ready to lay before his Highness their whole archives and all 
			constitutional papers.
 
			Notwithstanding all this, the government had received such an 
			impression of the dangerous tendency of the Order, that the Elector 
			issued another edict, forbidding all hidden assemblies; and a third, 
			expressly abolishing the Order of llluminati. It was followed by a 
			search after their papers. The Lodge Theodore was immediately 
			searched, but none were to be found. They said now that they had 
			burnt them all, as of no use , since that Order was at an end.
 
			It was now discovered, that Weishaupt was the head and founder of 
			the Order. He was deprived of his Professor’s chair, and banished 
			from the Bavarian States; but with a pension of 800 florins, which 
			he refused. He went to Regensburg, on the confines of Switzerland. 
			Two Italians, the Marquis Constanza and Marquis Savioli, were also 
			banished, with equal pensions (about L.40) which they accepted. One 
			Zwack, a counsellor, holding some law-office, was also banished. 
			Others were imprisoned for some time.
 
			  
			Weishaupt went afterwards into the 
			service of the D. of Saxe Gotha, a person of romantic turn of mind, 
			and who we shall again meet with. Zwack went into the service of the 
			Pr. de Salms, who soon after had so great a hand in the disturbances 
			in Holland. 
			By destroying the papers, all opportunity was lost for 
			authenticating the innocence and usefulness of the Order. After much 
			altercation and paper war, Weishaupt, now safe in Regensburg, 
			published an account of the Order, namely an account which was given 
			to every Novice in a discourse read at his reception. To this were 
			added, the statutes and the rules proceeding, as far as the degree 
			of llluminatus Minor, inclusive.
 
			  
			This account he affirmed to be conform 
			to the real practice of the Order. But this publication did by no 
			means satisfy the public mind. It differed exceedingly from the 
			accounts given by the four professors. It made no mention of the 
			higher degrees, which had been most blamed of them. Besides, it was 
			alleged, that it was all a fiction, written in order to lull the 
			suspicions which had been raised (and this was found to be the case 
			in respect of the very lowest degree.)  
			  
			The real constitution was brought to 
			light by degrees, and shall be laid before the reader, in the order 
			in which it was gradually discovered, that we may be the better 
			judge of things not fully known by the leaders during the detection. 
			The first account given by Weishaupt is correct, as far as I shall 
			make use of it, and shows clearly the methods that were taken to 
			recommend the Order to strangers.
 The Order of ILLUMINATI appears as an accessory to Free Masonry. It 
			is in the Lodges of Free Masons that the Minervals are found, and 
			there they are prepared for Illumination. They must have previously 
			obtained the three English degrees. The founder says more. He says 
			that his doctrines are the only true Free Masonry. He was the chief 
			promoter of the Eclectic System. This he urged as the best method of 
			getting information of all the explanations which have been given of 
			the Masonic Mysteries. He was also a Strict Observanz, and an adept 
			Rosycrucian.
 
			  
			The result of all his knowledge is 
			worthy of particular remark, and shall therefore be given at Large. 
				
				“I declare,” says he, “and I will 
				challenge all mankind to contradict my declaration, that no man 
				can give any account of the Order of Free Masonry, of its 
				origin, of its history, of its object, nor any explanation of 
				its mysteries and symbols, which does not leave the mind in 
				total uncertainty on these points. Every man is entitled, 
				therefore, to give any explanation of the symbols, and any 
				system of the doctrines, that he can render palatable. Hence 
				have sprung up that variety of systems which for twenty years 
				have divided the Order.    
				The simple tale of the English, and 
				the fifty degrees of the French, and the knights of the French, 
				and the knights of Baron Hunde, are equally authentic, and have 
				equally had the support of intelligent and zealous Brethren. 
				These systems are in fact but one. They have all sprung from the 
				blue lodge of Three degrees; take these for their standard, and 
				found on these all the improvements by which each system is 
				afterwards suited to the particular object which it keeps in 
				view.    
				There is no man, nor system, in the 
				world, which can show by undoubted succession that it should 
				stand at the head of the Order. Our ignorance in this particular 
				frets me. Do but consider our short history of 120 years. - Who 
				will show me the Mother Lodge? Those of London we have 
				discovered to be self-erected in 1716. Ask for their archives. 
				They tell you they were burnt. They have nothing but the 
				wretched sophistications of the Englishman Anderson, and the 
				Frenchman Desaguilliers.    
				Where is the Lodge of York, which 
				pretends to the priority, with their king Bouden, and the 
				archives that he brought from the East? These too are all burnt. 
				What is the Chapter of Old Aberdeen, and its Holy Clericate? Did 
				we not find it unknown, and the Mason Lodges there the most 
				ignorant of all the ignorant, gaping for instruction from our 
				deputies? Did we not find the same thing at London? And have not 
				their missionaries been among us, prying into our mysteries, and 
				eager to learn from us what is true Free Masonry? 
				It is in vain, therefore, to appeal to judges; they are no where 
				to be found; all claim for themselves the sceptre of the Order; 
				all indeed are on an equal footing. They obtained followers, not 
				from their authenticity, but from their conduciveness to the end 
				which they proposed, and from the importance of that end. It is 
				by this scale that we must measure the mad and wicked 
				explanations of the Rosycrucians, the Exorcists, and Cabalists.
   
				These are rejected by all good 
				Masons, because incompatible with social happiness. Only such 
				systems as promote this are retained. But alas, they are all 
				sadly deficient, because they leave us under the dominion of 
				political and religious prejudice; and they are as inefficient 
				as the sleepy dose of an ordinary sermon.   
				“But I have contrived an explanation 
				which has every advantage; is inviting to Christians of every 
				communion; gradually frees them from all religious prejudices; 
				cultivates the social virtues; and animates them by a great, a 
				feasible, and speedy prospect of universal happiness, in a state 
				of liberty and moral equality, freed from the obstacles which 
				subordination, rank, and riches, continually throw in our way. 
				My explanation is accurate, and complete, my means are 
				effectual, and irresistible. Our secret Association works in a 
				way that nothing can withstand, and man shall soon be free and 
				happy. 
				“This is the great object held out by this Association: and the 
				means of attaining it is Illumination, enlightening the 
				understanding by the sun of reason, which will dispel the clouds 
				of superstition and of prejudice. The proficients in this Order 
				are therefore justly named the Illuminated. And of all 
				Illumination which human reason can give, none is comparable to 
				the discovery of what we are, our nature, our obligations, what 
				happiness we are capable of, and what are the means of attaining 
				it. In comparison with this, the most brilliant sciences are but 
				amusements for the idle and luxurious.
   
				To fit man by Illumination for 
				active virtue, to engage him to it by the strongest motives, to 
				render the attainment of it easy and certain, by finding, 
				employment for every talent, and by placing every talent in its 
				proper sphere of action, so that all, without feeling any 
				extraordinary effort, and in conjunction with and completion of 
				ordinary business, shall urge forward, with united powers, the 
				general task. This indeed will be an employment suited to noble 
				natures, grand in its views, and delightful in its exercise. 
				“And what is this general object? THE HAPPINESS OF THE HUMAN 
				RACE. Is it not distressing to a generous mind, after 
				contemplating what human nature is capable of, to see how little 
				we enjoy? When we look at this goodly world; and see that every 
				man may be happy, but that the happiness of one depends on the 
				conduct of another; when we see the wicked so powerful, and the 
				good so weak; and that it is in vain to strive, singly and 
				alone, against the general current of vice and oppression; the 
				wish naturally arises in the mind, that it were possible to form 
				a durable combination of the most worthy persons, who should 
				work together in removing the obstacles to human happiness, 
				become terrible to the wicked, and give their aid to all the 
				good without distinction, and should by the most powerful means, 
				first fetter, and by fettering, lessen vice; means which at the 
				same time should promote virtue, by rendering the inclination to 
				rectitude, hitherto too feeble, more powerful and engaging. 
				Would not such an association be a blessing to the world?
 
				“But where are the proper persons, the good, the generous, and 
				the accomplished, to be found? and how, and by what strong 
				motives, are they to be induced to engage in a task so vast, so 
				incessant, so difficult, and so laborious? This Association must 
				be gradual. There are some such persons to be found in every 
				society. Such noble minds will be engaged by the heart-warming 
				object. The first task of the Association must therefore be to 
				form the young members. As these multiply and advance, they 
				become the apostles of beneficence, and the work is now on foot, 
				and advances with a speed increasing every day.
   
				The slightest observation shows that 
				nothing will so much contribute to increase the zeal of the 
				members as secret union. We see with what keenness and zeal the 
				frivolous business of Free Masonry is conducted, by persons knit 
				together by the secrecy of their union. It is needless to 
				enquire into the causes of this zeal which secrecy produces. It 
				is an universal fact, confirmed by the history of every age. Let 
				this circumstance of our constitution therefore be directed to 
				this noble purpose, and then all the objections urged against it 
				by jealous tyranny and affrighted superstition will vanish. The 
				Order will thus work silently, and securely; and though the 
				generous benefactors of the human race are thus deprived of the 
				applause of the world, they have the noble pleasure of seeing 
				their work prosper in their hands.” 
			Such is the aim, and such are the hopes 
			of the Order of the Illuminated. Let us now see how these were to be 
			accomplished. We cannot judge precisely of this, because the account 
			given of the constitution of the Order by its founder includes only 
			the lowest, degree, and even this is suspected to be fictitious. The 
			accounts given by the four Professors, even of this part of the 
			Order, make a very different impression on the mind, although they 
			differ only in a few particulars.
 
			The only ostensible members of the Order 
			were the Minervals.  
			  
			They were to be found only in the Lodges 
			of Free Masons. A candidate for admission must make his wish known 
			to some Minerval; he reports it to a Superior, who, by a channel to 
			be explained presently, intimates it to the Council. No notice is 
			farther taken of it for some time. The candidate is carefully 
			observed in silence, and if thought unfit for the Order, no notice 
			is taken of his solicitation. But if otherwise, the candidate 
			receives privately an invitation to a conference. Here he meets with 
			a person unknown to him, and, previous to all further conference, he 
			is required to peruse and to sign the following oath. 
				
				“I N. N. hereby bind myself, by mine 
				honor and good name, forswearing all mental reservation, never 
				to reveal, by hint, word, writing, or in any manner whatever, 
				even to my most trusted friend, any thing that shall now be said 
				or done to me respecting my wished-for-reception, and this 
				whether my reception shall follow or not; I being previously 
				assured that it shall contain nothing contrary to religion, the 
				state, nor good manners. I promise, that I shall make no 
				intelligible extract from any papers which shall be shewn me now 
				or during my noviciate. All this I swear, as I am, and as I hope 
				to continue, a Man of Honor.” 
			The urbanity of this protestation must 
			agreeably impress the mind of a person who recollects the dreadful 
			imprecations which he made at his reception into the different ranks 
			of Free Masonry. The candidate is then introduced to an llluminatus 
			Dirigens, whom perhaps he knows, and is told that this person is to 
			be his future instructor. There is now presented to the candidate, 
			what they call a table, in which he writes his name, place of birth, 
			age, rank, place of residence, profession, and favorite studies. He 
			is then made to read several articles of this table. It contains,
			 
				
				1st. a very concise account of the 
				Order, its connection with Free Masonry, and its great object, 
				the promoting the happiness of mankind by means of instruction 
				and confirmation in virtuous principles. 
				2d. Several questions relative to the Order. Among these are, 
				“What advantages he hopes to derive from being a member? “What 
				he most particularly wishes to learn? What delicate questions 
				relative to the life, the prospects, the duties of man, as an 
				individual, and as a citizen, he wishes to have particularly 
				discussed to him? In what respects he thinks he can be of use to 
				the Order? Who are his ancestors, relations, friends, 
				correspondents, or enemies? Whom he thinks proper persons to be 
				received into the Order, or whom he thinks unfit for it, and the 
				reasons for both opinions. To each of these questions he must 
				give some answer in writing.
 
			The Novice and his Mentor are known only 
			to each other; perhaps nothing more follows upon this; if otherwise, 
			the Mentor appoints another conference, and begins his instructions, 
			by giving him in detail certain portions of the constitution, and of 
			the fundamental rules of the Order. Of these the Novice must give a 
			weekly account in writing. He must also read, in the Mentor’s house, 
			a book containing more of the instructions of the Order; but he must 
			make no extracts. Yet from this reading he must derive all his 
			knowledge; and he must give an account in writing of his progress.
			 
			  
			All writings received from his Superiors 
			must be returned with a stated punctuality. These writings consist 
			chiefly of important and delicate questions, suited, either to the 
			particular inclination, or to the peculiar taste which the candidate 
			had discovered in his subscriptions of the articles of the table, 
			and in his former rescripts, or to the direction which the Mentor 
			wishes to give to his thoughts. 
			Enlightening the understanding, and the rooting out of prejudices; 
			are pointed out to him as the principal tasks of his noviciate. The 
			knowledge of himself is considered as preparatory to all other 
			knowledge. To disclose to him, by means of the calm and unbiassed 
			observation of his instructor, what is his own character, his most 
			vulnerable side, either in respect of temper, passions, or 
			prepossessions, is therefore the most essential service that can be 
			done him. For this purpose there is required of him some account of 
			his own conduct on occasions where he doubted of its propriety; some 
			account of his friendships, of his differences of opinion, and of 
			his conduct on such occasions.
 
			  
			From such relations the Superior learns 
			his manner of thinking and judging, and those propensities which 
			require his chief attention: 
				
				Having made the candidate acquainted 
				with himself, he is apprised that the Order is not a 
				speculative, but an active association, engaged in doing good to 
				others. The knowledge of human character is therefore of all 
				others the most important. This is acquired only by observation, 
				assisted by the instructions of his teacher. Characters in 
				history are proposed to him for observation, and his opinion is 
				required.  
				  
				After this he is directed to look around him, and to 
				notice the conduct of other men; and part of his weekly rescripts must consist of accounts of all interesting 
				occurrences in his neigbourhood, whether of a public or private 
				nature. Cossandey, one of the four Professors, gives a 
				particular account of the instructions relating to this kind of 
				science.  
				  
				The Novice must be attentive to trifles: For, in 
				frivolous occurrences a man is indolent, and makes no effort to 
				act a part, so that his real character is then acting alone. 
				Nothing will have such influence with the Superiors in promoting 
				the advancement of a candidate as very copious narrations of 
				this kind, because the candidate, if promoted, is to be employed 
				in an active station, and it is from this kind of information 
				only that the Superiors can judge of his fitness. 
			These characteristic anecdotes are not 
			for the instruction of the Superiors, who are men of long 
			experience, and familiar with such occupation. But they inform the 
			Order concerning the talents and proficiency of the young member. 
			Scientific instruction, being connected by system, is soon 
			communicated, and may in general be very completely obtained from, 
			the books which are recommended to the Novice, and acquired in the 
			public seminaries of instruction. But knowledge of character is more 
			multifarious and more delicate.  
			  
			For this there is no college, and it 
			must therefore require longer time for its attainment. Besides, this 
			assiduous and long continued study of men, enables the possessor of 
			such knowledge to act with men, and by his knowledge of their 
			character, to influence their conduct. For such reasons this study 
			is continued, and these rescripts are required, during the whole 
			progress through the Order, and attention to them is recommended as 
			the only mean of advancement. Remarks on Physiognomy in these 
			narrations are accounted of considerable value.” So far Mr. 
			Cossandey. 
			During all this trial, which may last one, two, or three years, the 
			Novice knows no person of the Order but his own instructor, with 
			whom he has frequent meetings, along with other Minervals. In. these 
			conversations he learns the importance of the Order, and the 
			opportunities he will afterwards have of acquiring much hidden 
			science. The employment of his unknown Superiors naturally causes 
			him to entertain very high notions of their abilities and worth.
 
			  
			He is counselled to aim at a resemblance 
			to them by getting rid by degrees of all those prejudices or 
			prepossessions which checked his own former progress; and he is 
			assisted in this endeavour by an invitation to a correspondence with 
			them. He may address his Provincial Superior, by directing his 
			letter Soli, or the General by Primo, or the Superiors in general by 
			Quibus licet. In. these letters he may mention whatever he thinks 
			conducive to the advancement of the Order; he may inform the 
			Superiors how his instructor behaves to him; if assiduous or remiss, 
			indulgent or severe.  
			  
			The Superiors are enjoined by the 
			strongest motives to convey these letters wherever addressed. None 
			but the General and Council know the result of all this; and all are 
			enjoined to keep themselves and their proceedings unknown to all the 
			world. 
			If three years of this Noviciate have elapsed without further 
			notice, the Mi nerval must look for no further advancement; he is 
			found unfit, and remains a Free Mason of the highest class. This is 
			called a Sta Bene.
 
			But should his Superiors judge more favorably of him, he is drawn 
			out of the general mass of Free Masons, and becomes llluminatus 
			Minor. When called to a conference for this purpose, he is told in 
			the most serious manner, that
 
				
				“it is vain for him to hope to 
				acquire wisdom by mere systematic instruction; for such 
				instruction the Superiors have no leisure. Their duty is not to 
				form speculators, but active men, whom they must immediately 
				employ in the service of the Order.    
				He must therefore grow wise and able 
				entirely by the unfolding and exertion of his own talents. His 
				Superiors have already discovered what these are, and know what 
				service he may be capable of rendering the Order, provided he 
				now heartily acquiesces in being thus honorably employed. 
				   
				They will assist him in bringing his 
				talents into action, and will place him in the situations most 
				favorable for their exertion, so that he may be assured of 
				success. Hitherto he has been a mere scholar, but his first step 
				farther carries him into action; he must therefore now consider 
				himself as an instrument in the hands of his Superiors, to be 
				used for the noblest purposes.”  
			The aim of the Order is now more fully 
			told him. It is; in one sentence,  
				
				“to make of the human race, without 
				any distinction of nation, condition, or profession, one good 
				and happy family.” 
			To this aim, demonstrably attainable, 
			every smaller consideration must give way. This may sometimes 
			require sacrifices which no man standing alone has fortitude to 
			make; but which become light, and a source of the purest enjoyment, 
			when supported and encouraged by the countenance and co-operation of 
			the united wise and good, such as are the Superiors of the Order. If 
			the candidate, warmed by the alluring picture of the possible 
			happiness of a virtuous Society, says that he is sensible of the 
			propriety of this procedure, and still wishes to be of the Order; he 
			is required to sign the following obligation. 
				
				“I, N. N. protest before you, the 
				worthy Plenipotentiary a of the venerable Order into which I 
				wish to be admitted , that I acknowledge my natural weakness and 
				inability, and that I, with all my possessions, rank, honors, 
				and titles “ which I hold in political society, am, at bottom, 
				only a man; I can enjoy these things only through my fellow-men, 
				and through them also I may lose them.    
				The approbation and consideration of 
				my fellow-men are indispensably necessary, and I must try to 
				maintain them by all my talents. These I will never use to the 
				prejudice of universal good, but will oppose, with all my might, 
				the enemies of the human race, and of political society. I will 
				embrace every opportunity of saving mankind, by improving my 
				understanding and my affections, and by imparting all important 
				knowledge, as the good and statutes of this Order require of me.
				   
				I bind myself to perpetual silence 
				and unshaken loyalty and submission to the Order, in the persons 
				of my Superiors; here making a faithful and complete surrender 
				of my private judgment, my own will, and every narrow-minded 
				employment of my power and influence. I pledge myself to account 
				the good of the Order as my own, and am ready to serve it with 
				my fortune, my honor, and my blood. Should I, through omission, 
				neglect, passion, or wickedness, behave contrary to this good of 
				the Order, I subject myself to what reproof or punishment my 
				Superiors shall enjoin.    
				The friends and enemies of the Order 
				shall be my friends and enemies; and with respect to both I will 
				conduct myself as directed by the Order, and am ready, in every 
				lawful way, to devote myself to its increase and promotion, and 
				therein to employ all my ability. All this I promise, and 
				protest, without secret reservation, according to the intention 
				of the Society which require from me this engagement. This I do 
				as I am, and as I hope to continue, a Man of Honour.” 
			A drawn sword is then pointed at his 
			breast, and he is asked, Will you be obedient to the commands of 
			your Superiors? He is threatened with unavoidable vengeance, from 
			which no potentate can defend him, if he should ever betray the 
			Order. He is then asked, 1. What aim does he wish the Order to have? 
			2. What means he would choose to advance this aim? 3. Whom he wishes 
			to keep out of the Order? 4. What subjects he wishes not to be 
			discussed in it? 
			  
			Our candidate is now ILLUMINATUS MINOR. 
			It is needless to narrate the mummery of reception, and it is enough 
			to say, that it nearly resembles that of the Masonic Chevalier du 
			Soleil, known to every one much conversant in Masonry. Weishaupfs 
			preparatory discourse of reception is a piece of good composition, 
			whether considered as argumentative (from topics, indeed, that are 
			very gratuitous and fanciful) or as a specimen of that declamation 
			which was so much practised by Lihanius and the other Sophists, and 
			it gives a distinct and captivating account of the professed aim of 
			the Order. 
			The lllumirnatus Minor learns a good deal more of the Order, but by 
			very sparing morsels, under the same instructor. The task has now 
			become more delicate and difficult. The chief part of it is the 
			rooting out of prejudices in politics and religion; and Weishaupt 
			has shown much address in the method which he has employed. Not the 
			most hurtful, but the most easily refuted, were the first subjects 
			of discussion, so that the pupil gets into the habits of victory; 
			and his reverence for the systems of either kind is diminished when 
			they are found to have harboured such untenable opinions.
 
			  
			The proceedings in the Eclectic Lodges 
			of Masonry, and the harangues of the Brother Orators, teemed with 
			the boldest sentiments both in politics and religion. Enlightening, 
			and the triumph of reason, had been the ton of the country for some 
			time past, and every institution, civil and religious, had been the 
			subject of the most free criticism. Above all, the Cosmopolitism, 
			which had been imported from France, where it had been the favorite 
			topic of the enthusiastical economists, was now become a general 
			theme of discussion in all societies of cultivated men.  
			  
			It was a subject of easy and agreeable 
			declamation; and if the Literati found in it a subject admirably 
			fitted for showing their talents, and ingratiating themselves with 
			the young men of fortune, whose minds, unsuspicious as yet and 
			generous, were fired with the fair prospects set before them of 
			universal and attainable happiness.  
			  
			And the pupils of the llluminati were 
			still more warmed by the thought that they were to be the happy 
			instruments of accomplishing all this. And though the doctrines of 
			universal liberty and equality, as imprescriptible rights of man, 
			might sometimes startle those who possessed the advantage of 
			fortune, there were thousands of younger sons, and of men of talents 
			without fortune, to whom these were agreeable sounds.  
			  
			And we must particularly observe, that 
			those who were now the pupils were a set of picked subjects, whose 
			characters and peculiar biases were well known by their conduct 
			during their noviciate as Minervals. They were therefore such as, in 
			all probability, would not boggle at very free sentiments. We might 
			rather expect a partiality to doctrines which removed some 
			restraints which formerly checked them in the indulgence of youthful 
			passions. 
			Their instructors, who have thus relieved their minds from several 
			anxious thoughts, must appear men of superior minds. This was a 
			notion most carefully inculcated; and they could see nothing to 
			contradict it: for except their own Mentor, they knew none; they 
			heard of Superiors of different ranks, but never saw them; and the 
			same mode of instruction that was practised during their noviciate 
			was still retained.
 
			  
			More particulars of the Order were 
			slowly unfolded to them, and they were taught that their Superiors 
			were men of distinguished talents, and were Superiors for this 
			reason alone. They were taught; that the great opportunities which 
			the Superiors had for observation, and their habits of continually 
			occupying their thoughts with the great objects of this Order, had 
			enlarged their views, even far beyond the narrow limits of nations 
			and kingdoms, which they hoped would one day coalesce into one great 
			Society, where consideration would attach to talents and worth 
			alone, and that pre-eminence in these would be invariably attended 
			with all the enjoyments of infiuence and power.  
			  
			And they were told that they would 
			gradually become acquainted with these great and venerable 
			Characters, as they advanced in the Order. In earnest of this, they 
			were made acquainted with one or two Superiors, and with several 
			llluminati of their own rank.  
			  
			Also, to whet their zeal, they are now 
			made instructors of one or two Minervals, and report their progress 
			to their Superiors. They are given to understand that nothing can so 
			much recommend them as the success with which they perform this 
			task. It is declared to be the best evidence of their usefulness in 
			the great designs of the Order. 
			The baleful effects of general superstition, and even of any 
			peculiar religious prepossession, are now strongly inculcated, and 
			the discernment of the pupils in these matters is learned by 
			questions which are given them from time to time to discuss. These 
			are managed with delicacy and circumspection, that the timid may not 
			be alarmed. In like manner, the political doctrines of the Order are 
			inculcated with the utmost caution.
 
			  
			After the mind of the pupil has been 
			warmed by the pictures of universal happiness, and convinced that it 
			is a possible thing to unite all the inhabitants of the earth in one 
			great society, and after it has been made out, in some measure to 
			the satisfaction of the pupil, that a great addition of happiness is 
			gained by the abolition of national distinctions and animosities, it 
			may frequently be no hard task to make him think that patriotism is 
			a narrow-minded monopolizing sentiment, and even incompatible with 
			the more enlarged views of the Order, namely, the uniting the whole 
			human race into one great and happy society. 
			Princes are a chief feature of national distinction. Princes, 
			therefore, may now be safely represented as unnecessary. If so, 
			loyalty to Princes loses much of its sacred character; and the so 
			frequent enforcing of it in our common political discussions may now 
			be easily made to appear a selfish maxim of rulers, by which they 
			may more easily enslave the people; and thus, it may at last appear, 
			that religion, the love of our particular country, and loyalty to 
			our Prince, should be resisted, if, by these partial or narrow 
			views, we prevent the accomplishment of that Cosmo-political 
			happiness which is continually held forth as the great object of the 
			Order.
 
			It is in this point of view that the terms of devotion to the Order 
			which are inserted in the oath of admission are now explained. The 
			authority of the ruling powers is therefore represented as of 
			inferior moral weight to that of the Order.
 
				
				“These powers are despots, when they 
				do not conduct themselves by its principles; and it is therefore 
				our duty to surround them with its members, so that the profane 
				may have no access to them. Thus we are able most powerfully to 
				promote its interests. If any person is more disposed to listen 
				to Princes than to the Order, he is not fit for it, and must 
				rise no higher. We must do our utmost to procure the advancement 
				of llluminati into all important civil offices.” 
			Accordingly the Order laboured in this 
			with great zeal and success. A correspondence was discovered, in 
			which it is plain, that by their influence, one of the “greatest 
			ecclesiastical dignities was filled up in opposition to the right 
			and authority of the Archbishop of Spire, who is there represented 
			as a tyrannical and bigotted priest. 
			They contrived to place their Members as tutors to the youth of 
			distinction. One of them, Baron Leuchtsenring, took the charge of a 
			young prince without any salary. They insinuated themselves into all 
			public offices, and particularly into courts of justice. In like 
			manner, the chairs in the University of Ingolstadt were (with only 
			two exceptions) occupied by llluminati.
 
				
				“Rulers who are members must be 
				promoted through the ranks of the Order only in proportion as 
				they acknowledge the goodness of its great object, and manner of 
				procedure. Its object may be said to be the checking the tyranny 
				of princes, nobles, and priests, and establishing an universal 
				equality of condition and of religion:” The pupil is now 
				informed “that such a religion is contained in the Order, is the 
				perfection of Christianity, and will be imparted to him in due 
				time.” 
			These and other principles and maxims of 
			the Order are partly communicated by the verbal instruction of the 
			Mentor, partly by writings, which must be punctually returned, and 
			partly read by the pupil at the Mentor’s house (but without taking 
			extracts) in such portions as he shall direct. The rescripts by the 
			pupil must contain discussions on these subjects, and of anecdotes 
			and descriptions of living characters; and these must be zealously 
			continued, as the chief mean of advancement. All this while the 
			pupil knows only his Mentor, the Minervals, and a few others of his 
			own rank. All mention of degrees, or other business of the Order, 
			must be carefully avoided, even in the meetings with other Members: 
				
				“For the Order wishes to be secret 
				and to work in silence; for thus it is better secured from the 
				oppression of the ruling powers, and because this secrecy gives 
				a greater zest to the whole.” 
			This short account of the Noviciate, and 
			of the lowest class of llluminati, is all we can get from the 
			authority of Mr. Weishaupt. The higher degrees were not published by 
			him. Many circumstances appear suspicious, and are certainly 
			susceptible of different turns, and may easily be pushed to very 
			dangerous extremes. The accounts given by the four professors 
			confirm these suspicions. They declare upon oath, that they make all 
			these accusations in consequence of what they heard in the Meetings, 
			and of what they knew of the Higher Orders.
 But since the time of the suppression by the Elector, discoveries 
			have been made which throw great light on the subject. A collection 
			of original papers and correspondence was found by searching the 
			house of one Zwack (a Member) in 1786. The following year a much 
			larger collection was found at the house of Baron Bassus; and since 
			that time Baron Knigge, the most active Member next to Weishaupt, 
			published an account of some of the higher degrees, which had been 
			formed by himself.
 
			  
			A long while after this were published, 
			Neueste Arbeitung des Spartacus und Philo in der llluminaten Orden, 
			and Hohere Grander) des Ilium. Ordens. These two works give an 
			account of the whole secret constitution of the Order, its various 
			degrees, the manner of conferring them, the instructions to the 
			intrants, and an explanation of the connection of the Order with 
			Free Masonry; and a critical history.  
			  
			We shall give some extracts from such of 
			these as have been published. 
			Weishaupt was the founder in 1776. In 1778 the number of Members was 
			considerably increased, and the Order was fully established. The 
			Members took antique names. Thus Weishaupt took the name of 
			Spartacus, the man who headed the insurrection of slaves, which in 
			Pompey’s time kept Rome in terror and uproar for three years. Zwack 
			was called Cato. Knigge was Philo. Bassus was Hannibal: Hertel was 
			Marius. Marquis Constanza was Diomedes. Nicholai, an eminent and 
			learned bookseller in Berlin, and author of several works of 
			reputation, took the name of Lucian, the great scoffer at all 
			religion. Another was Mahomet, &c.
 
			It is remarkable, that except Cato and Socrates, we have not a name 
			of any ancient who was eminent as a teacher and practiser of virtue. 
			On the contrary, they seem to have affected the characters of the 
			free-thinkers and turbulent spirits of antiquity. In the same manner 
			they gave ancient names to the cities and countries of Europe. 
			Munich was Athens, Vienna was Rome, &c.
 
			Spartacus to Cato, Feb. 6, 1778.
 
				
				« Mon but est de faire valoir a 
				raison. As a subordinate object I shall endeavour to gain 
				security to ourselves, a backing in case of misfortunes, and 
				assistance from without. I shall therefore press the cultivation 
				of science, especially such sciences as may have an influence on 
				our reception in the world; and may serve to remove obstacles 
				out of the way. We have to struggle with pedantry, with 
				intolerance, with divines and statesmen, and above all, princes 
				and priests are in our way. Men are unfit as they are, and must 
				be formed; each class must be the school of trial for the next. 
				This will be tedious, because it is hazardous. In the last 
				classes I propose academies under the direction of the Order.
				   
				This will secure us the adherence of 
				the Literati. Science shall here be the lure. Only those who are 
				assuredly proper subjects shall be picked out from among the 
				inferior classes for the higher mysteries, which contain the 
				first principles and means of promoting a happy life. No 
				religionist must, on any account, be admitted into these: For 
				here we work at the discovery and extirpation of superstition 
				and prejudices. The instructions shall be so conducted that each 
				shall disclose what he thinks he conceals within his own breast, 
				what are his ruling propensities and passions, and how far he 
				has advanced in the command of himself. This will answer all the 
				purposes of auricular confession.    
				And in particular, every person 
				shall be made a spy on another and on all around him. Nothing 
				can escape our sight; by these means we shall readily discover 
				who are contented, and receive with relish the peculiar 
				state-doctrines and religious opinions that are laid before 
				them; and, at last, the trust-worthy alone will be admitted to a 
				participation of the whole maxims and political constitution of 
				the Order. In a council composed of such members we shall labour 
				at the contrivance of means to drive by degrees the enemies of 
				reason and of humanity out of the world, and to establish a 
				peculiar morality and religion fitted for the great Society of 
				mankind. 
				“But this is a ticklish project, and : requires the utmost 
				circumspection. The squeamish will start at the sight of 
				religious or political novelties; and they must be prepared for 
				them. We must be particularly careful about the books which we 
				recommend; I shall confine them at first to moralists and 
				reasoning historians. This will prepare for a patient reception, 
				in the higher classes, of works of a bolder flight, such as 
				Robinet’s Systeme de 1a Nature - Politique Naturelle - 
				Philosophic de la Nature - Systeme Social - The writings of 
				Mirabaud, &c. Helvetius is fit only for the strongest stomachs. 
				If any one has a copy already, neither praise nor find fault 
				with him. Say nothing on such subjects to intrants, for we don’t 
				know how they will be received - folks are not yet prepared.
 
				Marius, an excellent man, must be dealt with. His stomach, which 
				cannot yet digest such strong food, must acquire a better tone. 
				The allegory on which I am to found the mysteries of the Higher 
				Orders is the fire-worship of the Magi. We must have some 
				worship, and none is so apposite. LET THERE BE LIGHT. AND THERE 
				SHALL BE LIGHT. This is my motto, and is my fundamental 
				principle.
   
				The degrees will be Feurer Orden, 
				Parsen Orden; (1) all very practicable. In the course through 
				these there will be no STA BENE (this is the answer given to one 
				who solicits preferment, and is refused. ) For I engage that 
				none shall enter this class who has not laid aside his 
				prejudices. No man is fit for our Order who is not a Brutus or a 
				Catiline, and is not ready to go every length. - Tell me how you 
				like this?” 
			Spartacus to Cato, March 1778. 
				
				“To collect unpublished works, and 
				information from the archives of States, will be a most useful 
				service. We shall be able to show in a very ridiculous light the 
				claims of our despots. Marius (keeper of the archives of the 
				Electorate) has ferreted out a noble document, which we have 
				got. He makes it, forsooth, a case of conscience -how silly that 
				- since only that is sin, which is ultimately productive of 
				mischief. In this case, where the advantage far exceeds the 
				hurt, it is meritorious virtue. It will do more good in our 
				hands than by remaining for 1000 years on the dusty shelf.” 
			There was found in the hand-writing of 
			Zwack a project for a Sisterhood, in subserviency to the designs of 
			the llluminati. In it are the following passages: 
				
				“It will be of great service, and 
				procure us both much information and money, and will suit 
				charmingly the taste of many of our truest members, who are 
				lovers of the sex. It should consist of two classes, the 
				virtuous, and the freer hearted (i.e. those who fly out of the 
				common tract of prudish manners); they must not know of each 
				other, and must be under the direction of men, but without 
				knowing it. Proper books must be put into their hands, and such 
				(but secretly) as are flattering to their passions.” 
			There are, in the same hand-writing, 
			Description of a strong box, which; if forced open, shall blow up 
			and destroy its contents - Several receipts for procuring abortion - 
			A composition which blinds or kills when spurted in the face - A 
			sheet, containing a receipt for sympathetic ink - Tea for procuring 
			abortion - Herboe quos habent qualitatem deleteriam - A method for 
			filling a bed-chamber with pestilential vapours - How to take off 
			impressions of seals, so as to use them afterwards as seals - A 
			collection of some hundreds of such impressions, with a list of 
			their owners, princes, nobles, clergymen, merchants, &c. - A receipt 
			ad excitandum furorem uterinum - A manuscript entitled, “Better than 
			Horns.”  
			  
			It was afterwards printed and 
			distributed at Leipzig fair, and is an attack and bitter satire on 
			all religion. This is in the hand-writing of Ajax. As also a 
			dissertation on suicide. N. B: His sister-in-law threw herself from 
			the top of a tower. There was also a set of portraits, or characters 
			of eighty-five ladies in Munich; with recommendations of some of 
			them for members of a Lodge of Sister llluminatae; also injunctions 
			to all the Superiors to learn to write with both hands; and that 
			they should use more than one cypher. 
			Immediately after the publication of these writings, many defences 
			appeared. It was said that the dreadful medical apparatus were with 
			propriety in the hands of Counsellor Zwack, who was a judge of a 
			criminal court, and whose duty it was therefore to know such things. 
			The same excuse was offered for the collection of seals; but how 
			came these things to be put up with papers of the llluminati, and to 
			be in the hand writing of one of that Order? Weishaupt says,
 
				
				“These things were not carried into 
				effect-only spoken of, and are justifiable when taken in proper 
				connection.”  
			This however he has not pointed out; but 
			he appeals to the account of the Order; which he had published at 
			Regensburg, and in which neither these things are to be found, nor 
			any possibility of a connection by which they may be justified.
			 
				
				“All men, says he, are subject to 
			errors; and the best man is he who best conceals them. I have never 
			been guilty of any such vices or follies: for proof; I appeal to the 
			whole tenor of my life, which my reputation, and my struggles with 
			hostile cabals, had brought completely into public view long before 
			the institution of this Order, without abating any thing of that 
			flattering regard which was paid to me by the first persons of my 
			country and its neighbourhood; a regard well evinced by their 
			confidence in me as the best instructor of their children.” 
				 
			In some 
			of his private letters, we learn the means which he employed to 
			acquire this influence among the youth, and they are such as could 
			not fail. But we must not anticipate. 
				
				“It is well known that I have made the chair which I occupied in 
				the university Of Ingolstadt, the resort of the first class of 
				the German youth; whereas formerly it had only brought round it 
				the low-born practitioners in the courts of law. I have gone 
				through the whole circle of human” enquiry: I have exorcised 
				spirits - raised ghosts - discovered treasures - interrogated 
				the Cabala - hatte Loto gespielt - I have never transmuted 
				metals.” - (A very pretty and respectable circle indeed, and 
				what vulgar spirits would scarcely have included within the pale 
				of their curiosity.)    
				“The tenor of my life has been the 
				opposite of every thing that is vile; and no man can lay any 
				such thing to my charge. I have reason to rejoice that these 
				writings have appeared; they are a vindication of the Order and 
				of my conduct. I can, and must declare to God, and I do it now 
				in the most solemn manner; that in my whole life I never saw or 
				heard of the so much condemned secret writings; and in 
				particular, respecting these abominable means; such as 
				poisoning, abortion, &c. was it ever known to me in any case, 
				that any of my friends or acquaintances ever even thought of 
				them; advised them, or made any use of them. I was indeed always 
				a schemer and projector; but never could engage much in detail. 
				 
				  
				My general plan is good, though in the detail there may be 
				faults. I had myself to form. In another situation, and in an 
				active station in life, I should have been keenly occupied, and 
				the founding an Order would never have come into my head. But I 
				would have executed much greater things, had not government 
				always opposed my exertions, and placed others in the situations 
				which suited my talents. It was the full conviction of this, and 
				of what could be done, if every man were placed in the office 
				for which he was fitted by nature and a proper education, which 
				first suggested to me the plan of illumination.” 
			Surely Mr. Weishaupt had a very serious 
			charge; the education of youth; and his encouragement in that charge 
			was the most flattering that an llluminatus could wish for, because 
			he had brought round him the youth whose influence in society was 
			the greatest and who would most of all contribute to the diffusing 
			good principles, and exciting to good conduct through the whole 
			state. 
				
					
					“I did not;” says he, “bring 
					deism into Bavaria more than into Rome. I found it here, in 
					great vigour, more abounding than in any of the neighbouring 
					Protestant states. I am proud to be known to the world as 
					the founder of the Order of llluminati; and I repeat my wish 
					to have for my epitaph, 
						
						« Hie situs est Phaethon, 
						currus auriga paterni,« Quem si non tenuit, magnis tamen excidit ausis. »
 
			The second discovery of secret 
			correspondence at Sandersdorff, the feat of Baron Batz (Hannibal) 
			contains still more interesting facts. 
			Spartacus to Cato.
 
				
				“What shall I do? I am deprived of 
				all help. Socrates, who would insist on being a man of 
				consequence among us, and is really a man of talents, and of a 
				right way of thinking, is eternally besotted. Augustus is in the 
				worst estimation imaginable. Alcibiades sits the day long with 
				the vintner’s pretty wife, and there he sighs and pines. A few 
				days ago, at Corinth, Tiberius attempted to ravish the wife of 
				Democides, and her husband came in upon them.    
				Good heavens! what Areopagitce I 
				have got. When the worthy man Marcus Aurelius comes to Athens 
				(Munich) what will he think? What a meeting with dissolute 
				immoral wretches, whore-masters, liars, bankrupts, braggarts, 
				and vain fools! When he sees all this, what will he think? He 
				will be ashamed to enter into an Association,” (observe, Reader, 
				that Spartacus writes this in August 1783, in the very time that 
				he was trying to murder Cato’s sister) “where the chiefs raise 
				the highest expectations, and exhibit such a wretched example; 
				and all this from self-will, from sensuality: Am I not in the 
				right - that this man - that any such worthy man - whose name 
				alone would give us the selection of all Germany - will declare 
				that the whole province of Grecia (Bavaria) innocent and guilty, 
				must be excluded.    
				I tell you, we may study; and write, 
				and toil till death. We may sacrifice to the Order, our health, 
				our fortune; and our reputation (alas the loss!) and these 
				Lords, following their own pleasures, will whore, cheat, steal, 
				and drive on like shameless rascals; and yet must be Areopagitce, 
				and interfere in every thing. Indeed, my dearest friend, we have 
				only enslaved ourselves.” 
			In another part of this fine 
			correspondence, Diomedes has had the good fortune to intercept a Q. 
			L. (Quibus licet) in which it is said, and supported by proofs, that 
			Cato had received 250 florins as a bribe for his sentence in his 
			capacity as a judge in a criminal court; (the end had. surely 
			sanctified the means.) In another, a Mi nerval complains of his 
			Mentor for having by lies occasioned the dismission of a physician 
			from a family, by which he obtained the custom of the house and free 
			access, which favor he repaid by debauching the wife; and he prays 
			to be informed whether he may not get another Mentor, saying, that 
			although that man had always given him the most excellent 
			instructions, and he doubted not would continue
 them; yet he felt a disgust at the hypocrisy, which would certainly 
			diminish the impression of the most salutary truths. (Is it not 
			distressing to think, that this promising youth will by and by laugh 
			at his former simplicity, and follow the steps and not the 
			instructions of his physician.) In another place, Spartacus writes 
			to Marius (in confidence) that another worthy Brother, an 
			Areopagitoe, had stolen a gold and a silver watch, and a ring, from 
			Brutus (Savioly) and begs Marius, in another letter, to try, while 
			it was yet possible, to get the things restored, because the culprit 
			was a most excellent man (Vortrefflich) and of vast use to the 
			Order, having the direction of an eminent seminary of young 
			gentlemen; and because Savioli was much in good company, and did not 
			much care for the Order, except in so far as it gave him an 
			opportunity of knowing and leading some of them, and of steering his 
			way at court.
 
			  
			I cannot help inserting here, though not 
			the most proper place, a part of a provincial report from Knigge, 
			the man of the whole Areopagitoe who shows any thing like urbanity 
			or gentleness of mind. 
				
				“Of my whole colony (Westphalia) the most brilliant is Claudiopolis 
			(Neuwied.) There they work, and direct, and do wonders.” 
			If there ever was a spot upon earth where men may be happy in a 
			state of cultivated society, it was the little principality of 
			Neuwied. I saw it in 1770. The town was neat, and the palace 
			handsome and in good taste; all was clean.  
			  
			But the country was beyond conception 
			delightful; not a cottage that was out of repair, not a hedge out of 
			order; it had been the hobby (pardon me the word) of the Prince, who 
			made it his daily employment to go through his principality 
			regularly, and assist every householder, of whatever condition, with 
			his advice, and with his purse; and, when a freeholder could not of 
			himself put things into a thriving condition, the Prince sent his 
			workmen and did it for him.  
			  
			He endowed schools for the common 
			people, and two academies for the gentry and the people of business. 
			He gave little portions to the daughters, and prizes to the 
			well-behaving sons of the labouring people. His own household was a 
			pattern of elegance and economy; his sons were sent to Paris to 
			learn elegance, and to England to learn science and agriculture. In 
			short, the whole was like a romance (and was indeed romantic.)
			 
			  
			I heard it spoken of with a smile at the 
			table of the Bishop of Treves, at Ehrenbretstein, and was induced to 
			see it next day as a curiosity: And yet even here; the fanaticism of 
			Knigge would distribute his poison, and tell the blinded people, 
			that they were in a state of sin and misery, that their Prince was a 
			despot, and that they would never be happy till he was made to fly, 
			and till they were all made equal. 
			They got their wish; the swarm of French locusts sat down on 
			Neuwied’s beautiful fields in 1793, and entrenched themselves; and 
			in three months, Prince and farmers houses, and cottages, and 
			schools, and academies - all vanished; and all the subjects were 
			made equal, and free (as they were expressly told by the French 
			General) to weep.
 
			Discite justitiam moniti, et non temnere divos!
 
			To proceed:
 
			Spartacus to Cato.
 
				
				”By this plan we shall direct all 
				mankind. In this manner, and by the simplest means, we shall set 
				all in motion and in flames. The occupations must be so allotted 
				and contrived, that we may, in secret, influence all political 
				transactions.” N. B. This alludes to a part that is withheld 
				from the public, because it contained the allotment of the most 
				rebellious and profiigate occupations to several persons whose 
				common names could not be traced. “I have considered,” says 
				Spartacus, “every thing, and so prepared it, that if the Order 
				should this day go to ruin, I shall in a year re-establish it 
				more brilliant than ever.”    
				Accordingly it got up again in about 
				this space of time, under the name of the GERMAN UNION, 
				appearing in the form of READING SOCIETIES. One of these was set 
				up in Zwack’s house; and this raising a suspicion, a visitation 
				was made at Landshut, and the first set of the private papers 
				were found. The scheme was, however, zealously prosecuted in 
				other parts of Germany, as we shall see by and by.    
				“Nor,” continues Spartacus, “will it 
				signify though all should be betrayed and printed. I am so 
				certain of success, in spite of all obstacles (for the springs 
				are in every heart) that I am indifferent, though it should 
				involve my life and my liberty. What! Have thousands thrown away 
				their lives about homoios and homoiousios, and shall not this 
				cause warm even the heart of a coward? But I have the art to 
				draw advantage even from misfortune; and when you would think me 
				sunk to the bottom, I shall rise with new vigour. Who would have 
				thought, that a professor at Ingolstadt was to become the 
				teacher of the professors of Gottingen, and of the greatest men 
				in Germany?” 
			Spartacus to Cato. 
				
				“Send me back my degree of 
				llluminatus Minor; it is the wonder of all men here (I may 
				perhaps find time to give a translation of the discourse of 
				reception, which contains all that can be said of this 
				Association to the public;) as also the two last sheets of my 
				degree, which is in the keeping of Marius, and Celsus, under 100 
				locks which contains my history of the lives of the Patriarchs.”
				 
				N. B. Nothing very particular has 
				been discovered of these lives of the Patriarchs. He says, that 
				there were above sixty sheets of it. To judge by the care taken 
				of it, it must be a favorite work, very hazardous, and very 
				catching. 
			In another letter to Cato, we have some 
			hints of the higher degrees, and concerning a peculiar morality, and 
			a popular religion, which the Order was one day to give the world. 
			He says,  
				
				“There must (a la Jesuite) not a 
				single purpose ever come in sight that is ambiguous, and that 
				may betray our aims against religion and the state. One must 
				speak sometimes one way and sometimes another, but so as never 
				to contradict ourselves, and so that, with respect to our true 
				way of thinking, we may be impenetrable. When our strongest 
				things chance to give offence, they must be explained as 
				attempts to draw answers which discover to us the sentiments of 
				the person we converse with.”  
				N. B. This did not always succeed 
				with him. 
			Spartacus says, speaking of the priests 
			degree,  
				
				“One would almost imagine, that this 
				degree, as I have managed it, is genuine Christianity, and that 
				its end was to free the Jews from slavery. I say, that Free 
				Masonry is concealed Christianity. My explanation of the 
				hieroglyphics, at least, proceeds on this supposition; and as I 
				explain things, no man need be ashamed of being a Christian. 
				Indeed I afterwards throw away this name, and substitute Reason.
				   
				But I assure you this is no small 
				affair; a new religion, and a new state-government, which so 
				happily explain one and all of these symbols, and combines them 
				in one degree, You may think that this is my chief work; but I 
				have three other degrees, all different, for my class of higher 
				mysteries; in comparison with which this is but child’s play; 
				but these I keep for myself as General, to be bestowed by me 
				only on the Benemeritissimi,” (surely such as Cato, his dearest 
				friend, and the possessor of such pretty secrets, as abortives, 
				poisons, pestilential vapours, &c. )    
				“The promoted may be Areopagites or 
				not. Were you here I should give you this degree without 
				hesitation. But it is too important to be intrusted to paper, or 
				to be bestowed otherwise than from my own hand. It is the key to 
				history, to religion, and to every state-government in the 
				world.”(2) 
			Spartacus proceeds,  
				
				“There shall be but three copies for 
				all Germany. You can’t imagine what respect and curiosity my 
				priest-degree has raised; and, which is wonderful, a famous 
				Protestant divine, who is now of the Order, is persuaded that 
				the religion contained in it is the true sense of Christianity. 
				0 MAN, AAAN! TO WHAT MAY’ST THOU NOT BE PERSUADED. Who would 
				imagine that I was to be the founder of a new religion.” 
			In this scheme of Masonic Christianity, 
			Spartacus and Philo laboured seriously together. Spartacus sent him 
			the materials, and Philo worked them up. It will therefore 
			illustrate this capital point of the constitution of the Order, if 
			we take Philo’s account of it. 
			Philo to Cato.
 
				
				“We must consider the ruling 
				propensities of every age of the world. At present the cheats 
				and tricks of the priests have roused all men against them, and 
				against Christianity. But, at the same time superstition and 
				fanaticism rule with unlimited dominion, and the understanding 
				of man really seems to be going backwards. Our task, therefore, 
				is doubled. We must give such an account of things, that 
				fanatics shall not be alarmed, and that shall, notwithstanding, 
				excite a spirit of free enquiry.    
				We must not throw away the good with 
				the bad, the child with the dirty water; but we must make the 
				secret doctrines of Christianity be received as the secrets of 
				genuine Free Masonry. But farther, we have to deal with the 
				despotism of Princes. This increases every day. But then, the 
				spirit of freedom breathes and sighs in every corner; and, by 
				the assistance of hidden schools of wisdom, Liberty and 
				Equality, the natural and imprescriptible rights of man, warm 
				and glow in every breast. We must therefore unite these 
				extremes. We proceed in this manner. 
				“Jesus Christ established no new Religion; he would only set 
				Religion and Reason in their ancient rights. For this purpose he 
				would unite men in a common bond. He would fit them for this by 
				spreading a just morality, by enlightening the understanding, 
				and by assisting the mind to shake off all prejudices. He would 
				teach all men, in the first place, to govern themselves.
   
				Rulers would then be needless, and 
				equality and liberty would take place without any revolution, by 
				the natural and gentle operation of reason and expediency. This 
				great Teacher allows himself to explain every part of the Bible 
				in conformity to these purposes; and he forbids all wrangling 
				among his scholars, because every man may there find a 
				reasonable application to his peculiar doctrines. Let this be 
				true or false, it does not signify. This was a simple Religion, 
				and it was so far inspired; but the minds of his hearers were 
				not fitted for receiving these doctrines. I told you, says he, 
				but you could not bear it. Many therefore were called, but few 
				were chosen. 
				To these elect were entrusted the most important secrets; and 
				even among them there were degrees of information. There was a 
				seventy, and a twelve. All this was in the natural order of 
				things, and according to the habits of the Jews, and indeed of 
				all antiquity. The Jewish Theosophy was a mystery; like the 
				Eleusinian, or the Pythagorean, unfit for the vulgar, And thus 
				the doctrines of Christianity were committed to the Adept)?, in 
				a Disciplina Arcani. By these they were maintained, like the 
				Vestal Fire.
   
				They were kept up, only in hidden 
				societies, who handed them down to posterity; and they are now 
				possessed by the genuine Free Masons.” 
				N. B. This explains the origin of 
				many anonymous pamphlets which appeared about this time in 
				Germany, showing that Free Masonry was Christianity.  
			They have doubtless been the works of 
			Spartacus and his partizans among the Eclectic Masons. Nicholai, the 
			great apostle of infidelity, had given very favorable reviews of 
			these performances, and having always shown himself an advocate of 
			such writers as depreciated Christianity, it was natural for him to 
			take this opportunity of bringing it still lower in the opinion of 
			the people. Spartacus therefore conceived a high opinion of the 
			importance of gaining Nicholai to the Order.  
			  
			He had before this gained Leuchtsenring, 
			a hot-headed fanatic, who had spied Jesuits in every corner, and set 
			Nicholai on his journey through Germany, to hunt them out. This man 
			finding them equally hated by the llluminati, was easily gained, and 
			was most zealous in their cause. He engaged Nicholai, and Spartacus 
			exults exceedingly in the acquisition, saying, “that he was an 
			unwearied champion, et quidem contentissimus.”  
			  
			Of this man Philo says,  
				
				“that he had spread this 
				Christianity into every corner of Germany. I have put meaning,” 
				says Philo, “to all these dark symbols, and have prepared both 
				degrees, introducing beautiful ceremonies, which I have selected 
				from among those of the ancient communions, combined with those 
				of the Rosaic Masonry; and now,” says he, “it will appear that 
				we are the only true Christians. We shall now be in a condition 
				to say a few words to Priests and Princes. I have so contrived 
				things, that I would admit even Popes and Kings, after the 
				trials which I have prefixed; and they would be glad to be of 
				the Order.” 
			But how is all this to be reconciled 
			with the plan of Illumination, which is to banish Christianity 
			altogether. Philo himself in many places says, “that it is only a 
			cloak, to prevent squeamish people from starting back.” This is done 
			pretty much in the same way that was practised in the French 
			Masonry. 
			In one of their degrees, the Master’s degree is made typical of the 
			death of Jesus Christ, the preacher of Brotherly love. But in the 
			next step, the Chevalier du Soleil, it is Reason that has been 
			destroyed and entombed, and the Master in this degree, the Sublime 
			Philosophe, occasions the discovery of the place where the body is 
			hid. Reason tries again, and superstition and tyranny disappear, and 
			all becomes clear; man becomes free and happy.
 
			Let us hear Spartacus again.
 
			Spartacus, in another place.
 
				
				“We must,1st. gradually explain away all our preparatory pious frauds. 
				And when persons of discernment find fault, we must desire them 
				to consider the end of all our labour. This sanctifies our 
				means, which at any rate are harmless, and have been useful, 
				even in this case, because they procured us a patient hearing, 
				when otherwise men would have turned away from us like petted 
				children. This will convince them ofour sentiments in all the 
				intervening points; and our ambiguous expressions will then be 
				interpreted into an endeavour to draw answers of any kind, which 
				may show us the minds of our pupils.
 2d. We must unfold, from history and other writings, the origin 
				and fabrication of all religious lies whatever; and then,
 3d. We give a critical history of the Order. But I cannot but 
				laugh, when I think of the ready reception which all this has 
				met with from the grave and learned divines of Germany and of 
				England; and I wonder how their William failed when he attempted 
				to establish a Deistical Worship in London (what can this 
				mean?(3)) for, I am certain, that it must have been most 
				acceptable to that learned and free people. But they had not the 
				enlightening of our days.”
 
			I may here remark, that Weishaupt is 
			presuming too much on the ignorance of his friend, for there was a 
			great deal of this enlightening in England at the time he speaks of, 
			and if I am not mistaken, even this celebrated Professor of 
			Irreligion has borrowed most of his scheme from this kingdom. This 
			to be sure is nothing in our praise.  
			  
			But the PANTHEISTICON of Toland 
			resembles Weishaupf's Illumination in every thing but its rebellion 
			and its villany. Toland’s Socratic Lodge is an elegant pattern for 
			Weishaupt, and his Triumph of Reason, his Philosophic Happiness, his 
			God, or Anima Mundi, are all so like the harsh system of Spartacus, 
			that I am convinced, that he has copied them, stamping them with the 
			roughness of his own character. But to go on; Spartacus says of the 
			English:  
				
				“Their poet Pope made his Essay on 
				Man a system of pure naturalism, without knowing it, as Brother 
				Chrysippus did with my Priest’s Degree, and was equally 
				astonished when this was pointed out to him. Chrysippus is 
				religious, but not superstitious. Brother Lucian (Nicholai, of 
				whom I have already said so much) says, that the grave Zolikofer 
				now allows that it would be a very proper thing to establish a 
				Deistical Worship at Berlin.    
				I am not afraid but things will go 
				on very well. But Philo; who was entrusted with framing the 
				Priest’s Degree, has destroyed it without any necessity; it 
				would, forsooth, startle those who have a hankering for 
				Religion. But I always told you that Philo is fanatical and 
				prudish. I gave him fine materials, and he has stuffed it full 
				of ceremonies and child’s play, and as Minos says, c’est jouer 
				la religion. But all this may be corrected in the revision by 
				the Areopagitce.” 
				N.B. I have already mentioned Baron Knigge’s conversion to llluminatism by the M. de Constanza, 
				whose name in the Order was Diomedes.  
			Knigge (henceforth Philo) was, next to 
			Spartacus, the most serviceable man in the Order, and procured the 
			greatest number of members. It was chiefly by his exertions among 
			the Masons in the Protestant countries, that the Eclectic System was 
			introduced, and afterwards brought under the direction of the 
			llluminati.  
			  
			This conquest was owing entirely to his 
			very extensive connections among the Masons: He travelled like a 
			philosopher from city to city, from Lodge to Lodge, and even from 
			house to house, before his Illumination, trying to unite the Masons, 
			and he now went over the same ground to extend the Eclectic System, 
			and to get the Lodges put under the direction of the llluminati, by 
			their choice of the Master and Wardens.  
			  
			By this the Order had an opportunity of 
			noticing the conduct of individuals; and when they had found out 
			their manner of thinking, and that they were fit for their purpose, 
			they never quitted them till they had gained them over to their 
			party. We have seen, that he was by no means void of religious 
			impressions: and we often find him offended with the atheism of 
			Spartacus. Knigge was at the same time a man of the world, and had 
			kept good company. Weishaupt had passed his life in the habits of a 
			college. Therefore he knew Knigge’s value, and communicated to him 
			all his projects, to be dressed up by him for the taste of society. 
			Philo was of a much more affectionate disposition, with something of 
			a devotional turn, and was shocked at the hard indifference of 
			Spartacus. After labouring four years with great zeal, he was 
			provoked with the disingenuous tricks of Spartacus, and he broke off 
			all connection with the Society in 1784, and some time after 
			published a declaration of all that he had done in it. This is a 
			most excellent account of the plan and principles of the Order (at 
			least as he conceived it, for Spartacus had much deeper views) and 
			shows that the aim of it was to abolish Christianity, and all the 
			state-governments in Europe, and to establish a great republic.
 
			  
			But it is full of romantic notions and 
			enthusiastic declamation, on the hackneyed topics of universal 
			citizenship, and liberty and equality. Spartacus gave him line, and 
			allowed him to work on, knowing that he could discard him when he 
			chose. I shall after this give some extracts from Philo’s letters, 
			from which the reader will see the vile behaviour of Spartacus, and 
			the nature of his ultimate views. In the mean time we may proceed 
			with the account of the principles of the system. 
			Spartacus to Cato.
 
				
				“Nothing would be more profitable to 
				us than a right history of mankind. Despotism has robbed them of 
				their liberty. How can the weak obtain protection? Only by 
				union; but this is rare. Nothing can bring this about but hidden 
				societies. Hidden schools of wisdom are the means which will one 
				day free men from their bonds. These have in all ages been the 
				archives of nature, and of the rights of men; and by them shall 
				human nature be raised from her fallen state. Princes and 
				nations shall vanish from the earth. The human race will then 
				become one family, and the world will be the dwelling of 
				rational men. 
				“Morality alone can do this. The head of every family will be 
				what Abraham was, the patriarch, the priest, and the unlettered 
				lord of his family, and Reason will be the code of laws to all 
				mankind. THIS,” says Spartacus, “is our GREAT SECRET. True, 
				there may be some disturbance; but by and by the unequal will 
				become equal; and after the storm all will be calm. Can the 
				unhappy consequences remain when the grounds of dissension are 
				removed? Rouse yourselves therefore, 0 men! assert your rights; 
				and then will Reason rule with unperceived sway; and ALL SHALL 
				BE HAPPY. (4)
 
				“Morality will perform all this; and morality is the fruit of 
				Illumination; duties and rights are reciprocal. Where Octavius 
				has no right, Cato owes him no duty. Illumination shews us our 
				rights, and Morality follows; that Morality which teaches us to 
				be of age, to be out of wardenship; to be full grown, and to 
				walk without the leading-strings of priests and princes.
 
				“Jesus of Nazareth, the Grand Master of our Order, appeared at a 
				time when the world was in the utmost disorder, and among a 
				people who for ages had groaned under the yoke of bondage. He 
				taught them the lessons of reason, To be more effective, he took 
				in the aid of Religion - of opinions which were current - and, 
				in a very clever manner, he combined his secret doctrines with 
				the popular religion, and with the customs which lay to his 
				hand. In these he wrapped up his lessons - he taught by 
				parables. Never did any prophet lead men so easily and so 
				securely along the road of liberty.
   
				He concealed the precious meaning 
				and consequences of his doctrines; but fully disclosed them to a 
				chosen few. He speaks of a kingdom of the upright and faithful; 
				his Father’s kingdom, whose children we also are. Let us only 
				take Liberty and Equality as the great aim of his doctrines, and 
				Morality as the way to attain it, and every thing in the New 
				Testament will be comprehensible; and Jesus will appear as the 
				Redeemer of slaves. Man is fallen from the condition of Liberty 
				and Equality, the STATE OF PURE NATURE. He is under 
				subordination and civil bondage, arising from the vices of man. 
				This is the FALL, and ORIGINAL SIN. The KINGDOM OF GRACE is that 
				restoration which may be brought about by
 Illumination and a just Morality. This is the NEW BIRTH. When 
				man lives under government, he is fallen, his worth is gone, and 
				his nature tarnished. By subduing our passions, or limiting 
				their cravings, we may recover a great deal of our original 
				worth, and live in a state of grace. This is the redemption of 
				men - this is accomplished by Morality; and when this is spread 
				over the world, we have THE KINGDOM OF THE JUST.
 
				“But alas! the task of self-formation was too hard for the 
				subjects of the Roman empire, corrupted by every species of 
				profligacy. A chosen few received the doctrines in secret, and 
				they have been handed down to us (but frequently almost buried 
				under rubbish of man’s invention) by the Free Masons. These 
				three conditions of human society are expressed by the rough, 
				the split and the polished stone.
   
				 The rough stone, and the one 
				that is split, express our condition under civil government; 
				rough by every fretting inequality of condition; and split, 
				since we are no longer one family; and are farther divided by 
				differences of government, rank, property, and religion; but 
				when reunited in one family, we are represented by the polished 
				stone. G. is Grace; the Flaming Star is the Torch of Reason.
				   
				Those who possess this knowledge are 
				indeed ILLUMINATI. Hiram is our fictitious Grand Master, slain 
				for the REDEMPTION OF SLAVES; the Nine Masters are the Founders 
				of the Order. Free Masonry is a Royal Art, inasmuch as it 
				teaches us to walk without trammels, and to govern ourselves.” 
			Reader, are you not curious to learn 
			something of this all-powerful morality, so operative on the heart 
			of the truly illuminated - of this disciplines arcani, entrusted 
			only to the chosen few, and handed down to Professor Weishaupt, to 
			Spartacus, and his associates, who have cleared it of the rubbish 
			heaped on it by the dim-sighted Masons, and now beaming in its 
			native lustre on the minds of the Areopagitce?  
			  
			The teachers of ordinary Christianity 
			have been labouring for almost 2000 years, with the New Testament in 
			their hands; many of them with great address, and many, I believe, 
			with honest zeal. But alas! they cannot produce such wonderful and 
			certain effects (for observe, that Weishaupt repeatedly assures us 
			that his means are certain) probably for want of this disciplines 
			arcani, of whose efficacy so much is said.  
			  
			Most fortunately, Spartacus has given us 
			a brilliant specimen of the ethics which illuminated himself on a 
			trying occasion, where an ordinary Christian would have been much 
			perplexed, or would have taken a road widely different from that of 
			this illustrious apostle of light. And seeing that several of the 
			Areopagitce co-operated in the transaction, and that it was 
			carefully concealed from the profane and dim-sighted world, we can 
			have no doubt but that it was conducted according to the disciplina 
			arcani of Illumination. I shall give it in his own words. 
			Spartacus to Marius, September 1783.
 
				
				“I am now in the most embarrassing 
				situation; it robs me of all rest, and makes me unfit for every 
				thing. I am in danger of losing at once my honor and my 
				reputation, by which I have long had such influence. What think 
				you - my sister-in-law is with child. I have sent her to 
				Eurriphon, and am endeavouring to procure a marriage-licence 
				from Rome. How much depends on this uncertainty - and there is 
				not a moment to lose.    
				Should I fail, what is to be done? 
				What a return do I make by this to a person to whom I am so much 
				obliged! (we shall see the probable meaning of this exclamation 
				by and by.) We have tried every method in our power to destroy 
				the child; and I hope she is determined on every thing - even d 
				- . (Can this mean death?) But alas! Euriphon is, I fear, too 
				timid (alas! poor woman, thou art now under the disciplina 
				arcani) and I see no other expedient. Could I be but assured of 
				the silence of Celsus (a physician at Ingoldstadt) he can 
				relieve me, and he promised me as much three years ago. Do speak 
				to him, if you think he will be staunch. I would not let Cato 
				(his dearest friend, and his chief or only confidant in the 
				scheme of Illumination) know it yet, because the affair in other 
				respects requires his whole friendship. (Cato had all the pretty 
				receipts.)    
				Could you but help me out of this 
				distress, you would give me life, honor, and peace, and strength 
				to work again in the great cause. If you cannot, be assured I 
				will venture on the most desperate stroke (poor sister!) for it 
				is fixed. - I will not lose my honor. I cannot conceive what 
				devil has made me to go astray - me who have always been so 
				careful on such occasions. As yet all is quiet, and none know of 
				it but you and Euriphon. Were it but time to undertake any thing 
				- but alas! it is the fourth month. These damned priests too - 
				for the action is so criminally accounted by them, and 
				scandalises the blood. This makes the utmost efforts and the 
				most desperate measures absolutely necessary.” 
			It will throw some light on this 
			transaction if we read a letter from Spartacus to Cato about this 
			time. 
				
				“One thing more, my dearest friend - 
				Would it be agreeable to you to have me for a brother-in-law. If 
				this should be agreeable, and if it can be brought about without 
				prejudice to my honor, as I hope it may, I am not without hopes 
				that the connection may take place. But in the mean time keep it 
				a secret, and only give me permission to enter into 
				correspondence on the subject with the good lady, to whom I beg 
				you will offer my respectful compliments, and I will explain 
				myself more fully to you by word of mouth, and tell you my whole 
				situation. But I repeat it the thing must be gone about with 
				address and caution. I would not for all the world deceive a 
				person who certainly has not deserved so of me.” 
				What interpretation can be put on this? Cato seems to be brother 
				to the poor woman - he was unwittingly to furnish the drugs, and 
				he was to be dealt with about consenting to a marriage, which 
				could not be altogether agreeable to him, since it required a 
				dispensation, she being already the sister-in-law of Weishaupt, 
				either the sister of his former wife, or the widow of a deceased 
				brother. Or perhaps Spartacus really wishes to marry Cato’s 
				sister, a different person from the poor woman in the straw; and 
				he conceals this adventure from his trusty friend Cato, till he 
				sees what becomes of it.
   
				The child may perhaps be got rid of, 
				and then Spartacus is a free man. There is a letter to Cato, 
				thanking him for his friendship in the affair of the child but 
				it gives no light. I meet with another account, that the sister 
				of Zwack threw herself from the top of a tower, and beat out her 
				brains. But it is not said that it was an only sister; if it 
				was, the probability is, that Spartacus had paid his addresses 
				to her, and succeeded, and that the subsequent affair of his 
				marriage with his sister-in-law or something worse, broke her 
				heart. This seems the best account of the matter. For Hertel 
				(Marius) writes to Zwack in November 1782: 
				“Spartacus is this day gone home, but has left his sister-in-law 
				pregnant behind (this is from Bassus Hoss.) About the new year 
				he hopes to be made merry by a --; who will be before all kings 
				and princes - a young Spartacus. The Pope also will respect him, 
				and legitimate him before the time.”
 
			Now, vulgar Christian, compare this with 
			the former declaration of Weishaupt, in page 80, where he appeals to 
			the tenor of his former life, which had been so severely scrutinised, 
			without diminishing his high reputation and great influence, and his 
			ignorance and abhorrence of all those things found in Cato’s 
			repositories. You see this was a surprise - he had formerly 
			proceeded cautiously - He is the best man;” says Spartacus, “who 
			best conceals his faults.” - He was disappointed by Celsus, who had 
			promised him his assistance on such occasions three years ago, 
			during which time he had been busy in “forming himself.” How far he 
			has advanced, the reader may judge. 
			One is curious to know what became of the poor woman: she was 
			afterwards taken to the house of Baron Bassus; but here the foolish 
			woman, for want of that courage which Illumination, and the bright 
			prospect of eternal sleep should have produced, took fright at the 
			disciplina arcani, left the house, and in the hidden society of a 
			midwife and nurse brought forth a young Spartacus, who now lives to 
			thank his father for his endeavours to murder him.
 
			  
			A “damned priest,” the good Bishop of 
			Freysingen, knowing the cogent reasons, procured the dispensation, 
			and Spartacus was obliged, like another dim-sighted mortal, to marry 
			her. The scandal was hushed, and would not have been discovered had 
			it not been for these private writings. 
			But Spartacus says (page 84) “that when you think him *’ sunk to the 
			bottom; he will spring up with double vigour.” In a subsequent work 
			called Short Amendment of my Plan, he says, “If men were not 
			habituated to wicked manners, his letters would be their own 
			justification.” He does not say that he is without fault; “but they 
			are faults of the understanding - not of the heart. He had, first of 
			all, to form himself; and this is a work of time.”
 
			  
			In the affair of his sister-in-law he 
			admits the facts, and the attempts to destroy the child; “but this 
			is far from proving any depravity of heart. In his condition, his 
			honor at stake, what else was left him to do? His greatest enemies, 
			the Jesuits, have taught that in such a case it is lawful to make 
			away with the child,” and he quotes authorities from their books.
			 
				
				“In the introductory fault he has 
				the example of the best of men. The second was its natural 
				consequence, it was altogether involuntary, and, in the eye of a 
				philosophical judge (I presume of the Gallic School) who does 
				not square himself by the harsh letters of a blood-thirsty 
				lawgiver, he has but a very trifling account to settle. He had 
				become a public teacher, and was greatly followed; this example 
				might have ruined many young men.    
				The eyes of the Order also were 
				fixed on him.    
				The edifice rested on his credit; 
				had he fallen, he could no longer have been in a condition to 
				treat the matters of virtue so as to make a lasting impression. 
				It was chiefly his anxiety to support the credit of the Order 
				which determined him to take this step. It makes for him, but by 
				no means against him; and the persons who are most in fault are 
				the slavish inquisitors, who have published the transaction, in 
				order to make his character more remarkable, and to hurt the 
				Order through his person; and they have not scrupled, for this 
				hellish purpose, to stir up a child against its father ! ! I” 
			I make no reflections on this very 
			remarkable, and highly useful story, but content myself with saying, 
			that this justification by Weishaupt (which I have been careful to 
			give in his own words) is the greatest instance of effrontery and 
			insult on the sentiments of mankind that I have ever met with. We 
			are all supposed as completely corrupted as if we had lived under 
			the full blaze of Illumination. 
			In other places of this curious correspondence we learn that Minos, 
			and others of the Areopagitoe, wanted to introduce Atheism at once, 
			and not go hedging in the manner they did; affirming it was easier 
			to show at once that Atheism was friendly to society, than to 
			explain all their Masonic Christianity, which they were afterwards 
			to show to be a bundle of lies. Indeed this purpose, of not only 
			abolishing Christianity, but all positive religion whatever, was 
			Weishaupfs favorite scheme from the beginning.
 
			  
			Before he canvassed for his Order, in 
			1774, he published a fictitious antique, which he called Sidonii 
			Apollinahs Fragmenta, to prepare (as he expressly says in another 
			place) mens minds for the doctrines of Reason, which contains all 
			the detestable doctrines of Robinet’s Systeme de la Nature.  
			  
			The publication of the second part was 
			stopped. Weishaupt says, in his APOLOGY FOR THE ILLUMINATI, that 
			before 1780 he had retracted his opinions about Materialism, and 
			about the inexpediency of Princes. But this is false: Philo says 
			expressly, that every thing remained on its original footing in the 
			whole practice and dogmas of the Order when he quitted it in July 
			1784.  
			  
			All this was concealed, and even the 
			abominable Masonry, in the account of the Order which Weishaupt 
			published at Regensburg; and it required the constant efforts of 
			Philo to prevent bare or flat Atheism from being uniformly taught in 
			their degrees. He had told the council that Zeno would not be under 
			a roof with a man who denied the immortality of the soul. He 
			complains of Minos’s cramming irreligion down their throats in every 
			meeting, and says, that he frightened many from entering the Order. 
			“Truth,” says Philo, “is a clever, but a modest girl, who must be 
			led by the hand like a gentlewoman, but not kicked about like a 
			whore.”  
			  
			Spartacus complains much of the 
			squeamishness of Philo; yet Philo is not a great deal behind him in 
			irreligion. When describing to Cato the Christianity of the 
			Priest-degree, as he had manufactured it, he says,  
				
				“It is all one whether it be true or 
				false, we must have it, that we may tickle those who have a 
				hankering for religion.”  
			All the odds seems to be, that he was of 
			a gentler disposition, and had more deference even for the absurd 
			prejudices of others. In one of his angry letters to Cato he says;
			 
				
				“The vanity and self conceit of 
				Spartacus would have got the better of all prudence, had I not 
				checked him, and prevailed on the Areopagitoe but to defer the 
				developement of the bold principles till we had firmly secured 
				the man: I even wished to entice the candidate the more by 
				giving him back all his former bonds of secrecy, and leaving him 
				at liberty to walk out without fear; and I am certain that they 
				were, by this time, so engaged that we should not have lost one 
				man.    
				But Spartacus had composed an 
				exhibition of his last principles, for a discourse of reception, 
				in which he painted his three favorite mysterious degrees, which 
				were to be conferred by him alone, in colours which had 
				fascinated his own fancy. But they were the colours of hell, and 
				would have scared the most intrepid; and because I represented 
				the danger of this, and by force obtained the omission of this 
				picture, he became my implacable enemy. I abhor treachery and 
				profligacy, and leave him to blow him self and his Order in the 
				air.” 
			Accordingly this happened. It was this 
			which terrified one of the four professors, and made him impart his 
			doubts to the rest. Yet Spartacus seems to have profited by the 
			apprehensions of Philo; for in the last reception, he, for the first 
			time, exacts a bond from the intrant, engaging himself for ever to 
			the Order, and swearing that he will never draw back. Thus admitted, 
			he becomes a sure card. The course of his life is in the hands of 
			the Order, and his thoughts on a thousand dangerous points; his 
			reports concerning his neighbours and friends; in short, his honor 
			and his neck. The Deist, thus led on, has not far to go before he 
			becomes a Naturalist or Atheist; and then the eternal sleep of death 
			crowns all his humble hopes. 
			Before giving an account of the higher degrees, I shall just extract 
			from one letter more on a singular subject.
 
			Minos to Sebastian, 1782.
 
				
				“The proposal of Hercules to 
				establish a Mi nerval school for girls is excellent, but 
				requires much circumspection. Philo and I have long conversed on 
				this subject. We
 cannot improve the world without improving women, who have such 
				a mighty infiuence on the men. But how shall we get hold of 
				them? How will their relations, particularly their mothers, 
				immersed in prejudices, consent that others shall influence 
				their education? We must begin with grown girls. Hercules 
				proposes the wife of Ptolemy Magus. I have no objection; and I 
				have four step-daughters, fine girls. The oldest in particular 
				is excellent. She is twenty-four, has read much, is above all 
				prejudices, and in religion she thinks as I do. They have much 
				acquaintance among the young ladies their relations (N. B. we 
				don’t know the rank of Minos, but as he does not use the word 
				Damen, but Frauenzimmer, it is probable that it is not high.)
   
				It may immediately be a very pretty 
				Society, under the management of Ptolemy’s wife, but really 
				under his management. You must contrive pretty degrees, and 
				dresses, and ornaments, and elegant and decent rituals. No man 
				must be admitted. This will make them become more keen, and they 
				will go much farther than if we were present, or than if they 
				thought that we knew of their proceedings. Leave them to the 
				scope of their own fancies, and they will soon invent mysteries 
				which will put us to the blush, and create an enthusiasm which 
				we can never equal. They will be our great apostles. Reflect on 
				the respect, nay the awe and terror inspired by the female 
				mystics of antiquity. (Think of the Danaids-think of the Theban 
				Bacchantes.)    
				Ptolemy’s wife must direct them, and 
				she will be instructed by Ptolemy, and my step-daughters will 
				consult with me. We must always be at hand to prevent the 
				introduction of any improper question. We must prepare themes 
				for their discussion thus we shall confess them; and inspire 
				them with our sentiments. No man however must come near them. 
				This will fire their roving fancies; and we may expect rare 
				mysteries. But I am doubtful whether this Association will be 
				durable. Women are fickle and impatient. Nothing will please 
				them but hurrying from degree to degree, through a heap of 
				insignificant ceremonies, which will soon lose their novelty and 
				influence.    
				To rest seriously in one rank, and 
				to be still and silent when they have found out that the whole 
				is a cheat (hear the words of an experienced Mason) is a task of 
				which they are incapable. They have not our motives to persevere 
				for years, allowing themselves to be led about; and even then to 
				hold their tongues when they find that they have been deceived. 
				Nay there is a risk that they may take it into their heads to 
				give things an opposite turn, and then, by voluptuous 
				allurements, heightened by affected modesty and decency, which 
				give them an irresistible empire over the best men, they may 
				turn our Order upside down, and in their turn will lead the new 
				one.” 
			Such is the information which may be got 
			from the private correspondence. It is needless to make more 
			extracts of every kind of vice and trick. I have taken such as show 
			a little of the plan of the Order, as far as the degree of 
			llluminatus Minor, and the vile purposes which are concealed under 
			all their specious declamation. A very minute account is given of 
			the plan, the ritual, ceremonies, &c. and even the instructions and 
			discourses, in a book called the Achte llluminat, published at 
			Edessa (Frankfurt) in 1787.  
			  
			Philo says, “that this is quite 
			accurate, but that he does not know the author.” I proceed to give 
			an account of their higher degrees, as they are to be seen in the 
			book called Neueste Arbeitung des Spartacus und Philo. And the 
			authenticity of the accounts is attested by Grollman, a private 
			gentleman of independent fortune, who read them, signed and sealed 
			by Spartacus and the Areopagitos. 
			The series of ranks and progress of the pupil were arranged as 
			follows:
 
				
					NURSERY,    { . . . . . 
					Preparation,{ . . . . . Novice;
 { . . . . . Minerval
 { . . . . . Illumin. Minor.
 MASONRY,    {Symbolic 
					  { . . . . . Apprentice, {                { . . . . . Fellow 
					Craft,
 {                { . . . . . Master,
 { Scotch     {Illum. 
					Major, Scotch Novice,
 {                {Ilum. dirigens, 
					Scotch Knight
 MYSTERIES.  {Lesser,     
					{Presbyter, Priest,{                {Prince, Regent,
 {Greater,    {Magus,
 {                {Rex.
 
			The Reader must be almost sick of so 
			much villany, and would be disgusted with the minute detail, in 
			which the cant of the Order is ringing continually in his ears. I 
			shall therefore only give such a short extract as may fix our 
			notions of the object of the Order, and the morality of the means 
			employed for attaining it. We need not go back to the lower degrees, 
			and shall begin with the ILLUMINATUS DIRIGENS, or SCOTCH KNIGHT. 
			After a short introduction, teaching us how the holy secret Chapter 
			of Scotch Knights is assembled, we have,
 
				
					
					I. Fuller accounts and 
					instructions relating to the whole.II. Instructions for the lower classes of Masonry.
 III. Instructions relating to Mason Lodges in general.
 IV. Account of a reception into this degree, with the bond 
					which each subscribes before he can be admitted.
 V. Concerning the solemn Chapter for reception.
 VI. Opening of the Chapter.
 VII. Ritual of Reception, and the Oath.
 VIII. Shutting of the Chapter.
 IX. Agape, or Love Feast.
 X. Ceremonies of the consecration of the Chapter.
 
					Appendix
 
					A, Explanation of the Symbols of 
					Free Masonry.B, Catechism for the Scotch Knight.
 C, Secret Cypher.
 
			In No. I. it is said that the “chief 
			study of the Scotch Knight is to work on all men in such a way as is 
			most insinuating. II. He must endeavour to acquire the possession of 
			considerable property: III. In all Mason Lodges we must try secretly 
			to get the upper hand.  
			  
			The Masons do not know what Free Masonry 
			is, their high objects, nor their highest Superiors, and should be 
			directed by those who will lead them along the right road. In 
			preparing a candidate for the degree of Scotch Knighthood, we must 
			bring him into dilemmas by catching questions: We must endeavour to 
			get the disposal of the money of the Lodges of the Free Masons, or 
			at least take care that it be applied to purposes favorable to our 
			Order - but this must be done in a way that shall not be remarked.
			 
			  
			Above all, we must push forward with all 
			our skill, the plan of Eclectic Masonry, and for this purpose follow 
			up the circular letter already sent to all the Lodges with every 
			thing that can increase their present embarrassment.” In the bond of 
			No. IV. the candidate binds himself to “consider and treat the 
			llluminati as the Superiors of Free Masonry, and endeavour in all 
			the Mason Lodges which he frequents, to have the Masonry of the 
			Illuminated, and particularly the Scotch Noviciate, introduced into 
			the Lodge.”  
			  
			(This is not very different from the 
			Masonry of the Chevalier de 1’ Aisle of the Rosaic Masonry, making 
			the Master’s degree a sort of commemoration of the passion, but 
			without giving that character to Christianity which is peculiar to 
			llluminatism.)  
			  
			Jesus Christ is represented as the enemy 
			of superstitious observances, and the assertor of the Empire of 
			Reason and of Brotherly love, and his death and memory as dear to 
			mankind. This evidently paves the way for Weishaupfs Christianity. 
			The Scotch Knight also engages  
				
				“to consider the Superiors of the 
				Order as the unknown Superiors of Free Masonry, and to 
				contribute all he can to their gradual union.”  
			In the Oath, No. VII. the candidate 
			says,  
				
				“I will never more be a flatterer of 
				the great, I will never be a lowly servant of princes; but I 
				will strive with spirit, and with address, for virtue, wisdom, 
				and liberty. I will powerfully oppose superstition, slander, and 
				despotism; so, that like a true son of the Order, I may serve 
				the world. I will never sacrifice the general good, and the 
				happiness of the world, to my private interest. I will boldly 
				defend my Brother against slander, will follow out the traces of 
				the pure and true Religion pointed out to me in my instructions, 
				and in the doctrines of Masonry; and will faithfully report to 
				my Superiors the progress I make therein.” 
			When he gets the stroke which dubs him a 
			Knight, the Preses says to him,  
				
				“Now prove thyself, by thy ability, 
				equal to Kings, and never from this time forward bow thy knee to 
				one who is, like thyself, but a man.” 
			No. IX is an account of the Love-Feast. 
				
				1st, There is a Table Lodge, opened 
				as usual, but in virtue of the ancient Master-word. Then it is 
				said, “Let moderation, fortitude, morality, and genuine love of 
				the Brethren, with the overgowing of innocent and careless mirth 
				reign here.” (This is almost verbatim from Toland.) 
				2d, In the middle of a bye-table is a chalice, a pot of wine, an 
				empty plate, and a plate of unleavened bread - All is covered 
				with a green cloth.
 
				3d, When the Table Lodge is ended, and the Prefect sees no 
				obstacle, he strikes on this bye-table the stroke of Scotch 
				Master, and his signal is repeated by the Senior Warden. All are 
				still and silent. The Prefect lifts off the cloth.
 
				4th, The Prefect asks, whether the Knights are in the 
				disposition to partake of the Love-Feast in earnest, peace, and 
				contentment. If none hesitates, or offers to retire, he takes 
				the plate with the bread and says,
 
					
					“J. of N. our Grand-Master, in 
					the night in which he was betrayed by his friends, 
					persecuted for his love for truth, imprisoned, and condemned 
					to die, assembled his trusty Brethren, to celebrate his last 
					Love-Feast which is signified to us in many ways. He took 
					bread (taking it) and broke it (breaking it) and blessed it, 
					and gave it to his disciples, &c. - This shall be the mark 
					of our Holy Union, &c. Let each of you examine his heart, 
					whether love reigns in it, and whether he, in full imitation 
					of our Grand-Master, is ready to lay down his life for his 
					Brethren. 
					“Thanks be to our Grand-Master, who has appointed this feast 
					as a memorial of his kindness, for the uniting of the hearts 
					of those who love him. Go in peace, and blessed be this new 
					Association which we have formed: Blessed be ye who remain 
					loyal and strive for the good cause.”
 
				5th, The Prefect immediately closes 
				the Chapter with the usual ceremonies of the Loge de Table. 
				6th, It is to be observed, that no priest of the Order must be 
				present at this Love-Feast, and that even the Brother Servitor 
				quits the Lodge.
 
			I must observe here, that Philo, the 
			manufacturer of this ritual, has done it very injudiciously; it has 
			no resemblance whatever to the Love-Feast of the primitive 
			Christians, and is merely a copy of a similar thing in one of the 
			steps of French Masonry. Philo’s reading in church-history was 
			probably very scanty, or he trusted that the candidates would not be 
			very nice in their examination of it, and he imagined that it would 
			do well enough, and “tickle such as had a religious hankering.” 
			Spartacus disliked it exceedingly - it did not accord with his 
			serious conceptions, and he justly calls it Jouer la Religion. 
			The discourse of reception is to be found also in the secret 
			correspondence (Nachtrag II. Abtheilung, p. 44). But it is needless 
			to insert it here. I have given the substance of this and of all the 
			Cosmo-political declamations already in the panegyric introduction 
			to the account of the process of education. And in Spartacus’s 
			letter, and in Philo’s I have given an abstract of the introduction 
			to the explanation given in this degree of the symbols of Free 
			Masonry.
 
			  
			With respect to the explanation itself, 
			it is as slovenly and wretched as can be imagined, and shows that 
			Spartacus trusted to much more operative principles in the human 
			heart for the reception of his nonsense than the dictates of 
			unbiased reason.  
			  
			None but promising subjects were 
			admitted thus far - such as would not boggle; and their principles 
			were already sufficiently apparent to assure him that they would be 
			contented with any thing that made game of religion, and would be 
			diverted by the seriousness which a chance devotee might exhibit 
			during these silly caricatures of Christianity and Free Masonry. But 
			there is considerable address in the way that Spartacus prepares his 
			pupils for having all this mummery shown in its true colours, and 
			overturned 
				
				“Examine, read, think on these 
				symbols. There are many things which one cannot find out without 
				a guide nor even learn without instructions. They require study 
				and zeal. Should you in any future period think that you have 
				conceived a clearer notion of them, that you have found a paved 
				road, declare your discoveries to your Superiors; it is thus 
				that you improve your mind; they expect this of you; they know 
				the true path but will not point it out enough if they assist 
				you in every approach to it, and warn you when you recede from 
				it.    
				They have even put things in your 
				way to try your powers of leading yourself through the difficult 
				track of discovery. In this process the weak head finds only 
				child’s play the initiated finds objects of thought which 
				language cannot express, and the thinking mind finds food for 
				his faculties.”  
			By such forewarnings as these Weishaupt 
			leaves room for any deviation, for any sentiment or opinion of the 
			individual that he may afterwards choose to encourage, and “to 
			whisper in their ear (as he expresses it) many things which he did 
			not find it prudent to insert in a printed compend.” 
			But all the principles and aim of Spartacus and of his Order are 
			most distinctly seen in the third or Mystery Class. I proceed 
			therefore to give some account of it. By the Table it appears to 
			have two degrees, the Lesser and the Greater Mysteries, each of 
			which have two departments, one relating chiefly to Religion and the 
			other to Politics.
 
 The Priest’s degree contains,
 
				
					
					1. An Introduction.2. Further Accounts of the Reception into this degree.
 3. What is called Instruction in the Third Chamber, which 
					the candidate must read over.
 4. The Ritual of Reception.
 5. Instruction for the First Degree of the Priest’s Class, 
					called Instructio in Scientificis.
 6. Account of the Consecration of a Dean, the Superior of 
					this Lower Order of Priests.
 
			The Regent degree contains, 
				
					
					1. Directions to the Provincial 
					concerning the dispensation of this degree.2. Ritual of Reception.
 3. System of Direction for the whole Order.
 4. Instruction for the whole Regent degree.
 5. Instruction for the Prefects or Locai Superiors.
 6. Instruction for the Provincials.
 
			The most remarkable thing in the 
			Priest’s degree is the Instruction in the Third Chamber. It is to be 
			found in the private correspondence. (Nachtrage Original Schriften 
			1787, 2nd Abtheilung, page 44.) There it has the title Discourse to 
			the llluminati Dirigentes, or Scotch Knights. In the critical 
			history, which is annexed to the Neueste Arbeitung, there is an 
			account given of the reason for this denomination; and notice is 
			taken of some differences between the instructions here contained 
			and that discourse. 
			This instruction begins with sore complaints of the low condition of 
			the human race; and the causes are deduced from religion and 
			state-government. “Men originally led a patriarchal life, in which 
			every father of a family was the sole lord of his house and his 
			property, while he himself possessed general freedom and equlity. 
			But they suffered themselves to be oppressed-gave themselves up ta 
			civil societies, and formed states.
 
			  
			Even by this they fell; and this is the 
			fall of man, by which they were thrust into unspeakable misery. To 
			get out of this state, to be freed and born again, there is no other 
			mean than the use of pure Reason, by which a general morality may be 
			established, which will put man in a condition to govern himself, 
			regain his original worth, and dispense with all political supports, 
			and particularly with rulers.  
			  
			This can be done in no other way but by 
			secret associations, which will by degrees, and in silence, possess 
			themselves of the government of the States, and make use of those 
			means for this purpose which the wicked use for attaining their base 
			ends. Princes and Priests are in particular, and kat’ exochen, the 
			wicked, whose hands must tie up by means of these associations, if 
			we cannot root them out altogether. 
				
				“Kings are parents. The paternal 
				power ceases with the incapacity of the child; and the father 
				injures his child, if he pretends to retain his right beyond 
				this period. When a nation comes of age, their state of wardship 
				is at an end.” 
			Here follows a long declamation against 
			patriotism, as a narrow-minded principle when compared with true 
			Cosmo-politism. Nobles are represented as “a race of men that serve 
			not the nation but the Prince, whom a hint from the Sovereign stirs 
			up against the nation, who are retained servants and ministers of 
			despotism, and the mean for oppressing national liberty. Kings are 
			accused of a tacit convention, under the flattering appellation of 
			the balance of power, to keep nations in subjection.
 
				
				“The mean to regain Reason her 
				rights - to raise liberty from its ashes - to restore to man his 
				original rights - to produce the previous revolution in the mind 
				of man -to obtain an eternal victory over oppressors - and to 
				work the redemption of mankind, is secret schools of wisdom. 
				When the worthy have strengthened their association by numbers, 
				they are secure, and then they begin to become powerful, and 
				terrible to the wicked, of whom many will, for safety, amend 
				themselves -many will come over to our party, and we shall bind 
				the hands of the rest, and finally conquer them. Whoever spreads 
				general illumination augments mutual security; illumination and 
				security make princes unnessary; illumination performs this by 
				creating an effective Morality, and Morality makes a nation of 
				full age fit to govern itself; and since it is not impossible to 
				produce a just Morality, it is possible to regain freedom for 
				the world.” 
				“We must therefore strengthen our band, and establish a legion, 
				which shall restore the rights of man, original liberty and 
				independence.
 
				“Jesus Christ” - but I am sick of all this. The following 
				questions are put to the candidate:
 
					
					1. “Are our civil conditions in 
					the world the destinations that seem to be the end of our 
					nature, or the purposes for which man was placed on this 
					earth, or are they not? Do states, civil obligations, 
					popular religion, fulfill the intentions of men who 
					established them? Do secret associations promote instruction 
					and true human happiness, or are they the children of 
					necessity, of the multifarious wants, of unnatural 
					conditions, or the inventions of vain and cunning men?”2. “What civil association, what science do you think to the 
					purpose, and what are not?”
 3. “Has there ever been any other in the world, is there no 
					other more simple condition, and what do you think of it?”
 4. “Does it appear possible, after having gone through all 
					the nonentities of our civil constitutions, to recover for 
					once our first simplicity, and get back to this honorable 
					uniformity?”
 5. “How can one begin this noble attempt; by means of open 
					support, by forcible revolution, or by what other way?”
 6. “Does Christianity give us any hint to this purpose? does 
					it not recognize such a blessed condition as once the lot of 
					man, and as still recoverable?”
 7. “But is this holy religion the religion that is now 
					professed by any sect on earth, or is it a better?”
 8. “Can we learn this religion - can the world, as it is, 
					bear the light? Do you think that it would be of service, 
					before numerous obstacles are removed, if we taught men this 
					purified religion, sublime philosophy, and the art of 
					governing themselves? Or would not this hurt, by rousing the 
					interested passions of men habituated to prejudices, who 
					would oppose this as wicked?”
 9. “May it not be more advisable to do away these 
					corruptions bit by bit, in silence, and for this purpose to 
					propagate these salutary and heart-consoling doctrines in 
					secret?”
 10. “Do we not perceive traces of such a secret doctrine in 
					the ancient schools of philosophy, in the doctrines and 
					instructions of the Bible, which Christ, the Redeemer and 
					Liberator of the human race, gave to his trusty disciples? 
					Do you notobserve an education, proceeding by steps of this 
					kind, handed down to us from his time till the present?”
 
			In the ceremonial of Reception, crowns 
			and sceptres are represented as tokens of human degradation.  
				
				“The plan of operation, by which our 
				higher degrees act, must work powerfully on the world, and must 
				give another turn to all our present constitutions.” 
			Many other questions are put to the 
			pupil during his preparation, and his answers are given in writing. 
			Some of these rescripts are to be found in the secret 
			correspondence. Thus,  
				
				“How far is the position true, that 
				all those means may be used for a good purpose which the wicked 
				have employed for a bad?”  
			And along with this question there is an 
			injunction to take counsel from the opinions and conduct of the 
			learned and worthy out of the society. In one of the answers, the 
			example of a great philosopher and Cosmo-polite is adduced, who 
			betrayed a private correspondence entrusted to him, for the service 
			of freedom; the case was Dr. Franklin’s. In another, the power of 
			the Order was extended to the putting the individual to death; and 
			the reason given, was, that  
				
				“this power was allowed to all 
				Sovereignties, for the good of the State, and therefore belonged 
				to the Order, which was to govern the world.”    
				- “N. B. We must acquire the 
				direction of education - of church-management - of the 
				professorial chair, and of the pulpit. We must bring our 
				opinions into fashion by every art - spread them among the 
				people by the help of young writers. We must preach the warmest 
				concern for humanity, and make people indifferent to all other 
				relations. We must take care that our writers be well puffed, 
				and that the Reviewers do not depreciate them; therefore we must 
				endeavour by every mean to gain over the Reviewers and 
				Journalists; and we must also try to gain the booksellers, who 
				in time will see that it is their interest to side with us.” 
			I conclude this account of the degree of 
			Presbyter with remarking; that there were two copies of it employed 
			occasionally. In one of them all the most offensive things in 
			respect of church and state were left out. 
			In the Regent degree, the proceedings and instructions are conducted 
			in the same manner. Here, it is said,
 
				
				“We must as much as possible select 
				for this degree persons who are free, independent of all 
				princes; particularly such as have frequently declared 
				themselves discontented with the usual institutions, and their 
				wishes to see a better government established.” 
			Catching questions are put to the 
			candidate for this degree; such as, 
				
				1. “Would the Society be 
				objectionable which should (till the greater revolution of 
				nature should be ripe) put monarchs and rulers out of the 
				condition to do harm; which in silence prevents the abuse of 
				power, by surrounding the great with its members, and thus not 
				only prevents their doing mischief, but even makes them do 
				good?”
 2. “Is not the objection unjust, That such a Society may abuse 
				its power. Do not our rulers frequently abuse their power, 
				though we are silent? This power is not so secure as in the 
				hands of our Members, whom we train up with so much care, and 
				place about princes after mature deliberation and choice. If any 
				government can be harmless which is erected by man, surely it 
				must be ours, which is founded on morality, fore-sight, talents, 
				liberty, and virtue,” &c.
 
			
			
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