The Golden Dawn

    (Taken from the Book "Secrets of a Witches Coven" by Morwyn)

    ...During the same time, ceremonial magic, which followed
    the patterns of ficino, Mirandola, the Roscrucians, and the
    Freemasons, was evolving.  Alphonse Louise Constant (1810-
    1875), better known by his nome de plume Eliphas Levi, was a
    magician who borrowed from treatuses dating back to
    Paracelsus.  Trained as a preist but never ordained, he
    attempted to reconcile religeon, science, and mysticism in
    his writings.  He proposed that the adept could receive
    spiritual teachings from a high plane by tapping into what
    he called the "astral light of divine power" by force of
    will.  He was also the first to connect the twenty-two
    trumps of the major Arcana of the tarot with the Qabalistic
    Tree of Life.  Levi's influence on end-of-the-century
    magicians was immense.  Some people believe that Aleister
    Crowly was his reincarnation, since Crowley was born shortly
    after Levi died.

    Levi's works, which have been translated by A.E. Waite,
    reveal a highly imaginative interpretation of magic, so his
    claims should be taken with a grain of salt.  Among Levi's
    books are The Great Secret, This History of Magic, and The
    Book of Splendors.

    Another magician who contributed to the enrichment of the
    tarot was Gerard Encausse, better known as Papus.  Author of
    the celebrated book The Tarot of the Bohemians, he became
    chief of the order of the Rose-Croix, which was founded in
    France as an hermetic organization.  Papus equated the Tarot
    with the Bible and posited that an entire system of
    metaphysical knowledge was contained within the cards that
    sythesized the teachings of many cultures.  This view of the
    Tarot is still held widely today, and magicians and Witches
    meditate upon the cards to tap this knowledge, as well as
    using tarot for divination.  Papus influenced the works of
    Oswald Wirth, a key occult figure of the twentieth century.

    Both Levi and Papus fired the imaginationss of budding
    occultists all over europe and America.  Here their
    doctrines were disseminated by Albert Pike and Emma
    Hardinge-Britten.  Englishmen inspired by Levi and Papus
    include Francis Barret, whose book The Magus is a classic
    work in the field, and Kennith Mackenzie.

    Mackenzie had a friend whom he had entrusted a cipher
    manuscript for safe keeping.  Mackenzie died, his friend
    died, and a clergyman friend of the friend discovered the
    manuscript.  The clergyman in turn, passed on the manuscript
    to Dr. Wynn Westcott, who, with the help of his friend, S.L.
    MacGregor Mathers, deciphered it.  On the basis of these
    papers and other researchers, the two men founded the Isis-
    Urania Temple of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn in
    March 1888.

    Wynn Westcott (1848-1925) was a London coroner and friend of
    Madame Helena P. Blavatsky, and the Christian mystic, Anna
    Kingsford.  He had also read extensively the works of Levi
    and the alchemists.  S.L. MacGregor Mathers (1854-1918), a
    London commercial clerk, was a friend of Westcott's and
    shared his absorption in the occult.  He studied Egyptology
    and other magical systems, including most of those touched
    upon in this brief history, and sythesized them with the
    Mackenzie manuscript into the basic tenets of their new
    occult fraternity.  For awhile the leaders claimed to have
    received their teachings and permission to found a new order
    from German Rosicurcian adept named Anna Sprengel.  But
    these allegations proved false.  The rites and rituals of
    the Golden Dawn owe their genesis to the geniuses of
    Westcott and Mathers.

    Various  branches were established in London, Paris, and
    Edinburgh.  However these organizations were plequed with
    internal disputes and the Order eventually dissolved.  Some
    believe that the disintegration occured because the
    initiates did not take care to protect themselves
    sufficiently from the powerful influences they invoked.
    According to Gareth Knight, Gerald Yorke, an author who
    wrote a history of the order declared that the protective
    training that failed to be assimilated by the initiates was:

    "the assumption that man has fallen from a condition of
    orinal grace which can only be remedied by a re-orientation
    of the will, in repentance and reconciliation, with God.
    Although lip service was given to this in certain teachings
    of the Golden Dawn there was unfortunately, a general and
    stronger tacit assumption that members of the Order were
    somewhat superior to the rest of the human race, and by
    virtue of secret ceremonies, knowledge and practices could
    elevate themselves to be considerably more superior."

    The importance of the Golden Dawn, besides teaching by
    example this lesson in human nature, is that the Order
    inspired many twentieth century occultists and thus played a
    significant role in the magical evolution of the present
    occult revival.  Interest in the teachings of the Golden
    Dawn has never flagged.