268 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
268 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.X September, 1932 No.9
|
||
|
||
GOETHE, FREEMASON
|
||
|
||
by: Unknown
|
||
|
||
Germany celebrates this year the Centennial of the death of her
|
||
greatest man of letters, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, as the United
|
||
States celebrates the bicentennial of the birth of George Washington,
|
||
her greatest General, Statesman and President.
|
||
Both were Freemasons!
|
||
It is a continual puzzle to Masons, why Washington’s biographers so
|
||
seldom - almost never - mention either his Masonic correspondence,
|
||
membership and Mastership; or the tremendous, if quiet, influence
|
||
which Freemasonry had upon his life, character and activities.
|
||
The same puzzle exists about the biographers of the great Germany
|
||
Poet. To an interested and understanding Freemason, his works are
|
||
replete with Masonic allusions; some of them obviously inspired by
|
||
Masonic teachings. To the Profane, this influence may be non-
|
||
existent; perhaps it is because so few of the passionate admirers of
|
||
the great German - who have sung the ever-increasing chorus of praise
|
||
for his life and labors - have been Masons, and therefore the
|
||
majority have no background of Craft understanding.
|
||
Many of his biographers put great stress upon his stay in Strassburg
|
||
and his studies of Gothic Architecture, particularly under the
|
||
tutelage of the great thinker,, Herder, who is credited with
|
||
inspiring Goethe with his love - even his veneration - for Gothic
|
||
buildings. Freemasons will see in his stay in Strassburg, where the
|
||
great Gothic minister dominated his thought with its beauty, the
|
||
progenitor of that desire to know more of the Craft which had built
|
||
it - a desire to be gratified when he was thirty-one years of age.
|
||
He was initiated in Lodge Amalia, at Weimar (where he lived most of
|
||
his life and where he died) on the eve of the Feast of St. John the
|
||
Baptist, in 1780.
|
||
Just how or why he became a Mason we do not know; neither can we know
|
||
much of what impression his initiation made upon him. For it must
|
||
not be supposed that the Masonry practiced then by the Lodge Amalia
|
||
was the Masonry we know; although doubtless it held some of our
|
||
essentials.
|
||
The Lodge at Weimar was then under the “Rite of Strict Observance,”
|
||
that curious compound of politics, religion and Knights Templarism.
|
||
Of this Rite, Mackey says:
|
||
“The Rite of Strict Observance” was a modification of Freemasonry,
|
||
based on the Order of Knights Templar, and introduced into Germany in
|
||
1754 by its founder, the Baron von Hund. It was divided into the
|
||
following seven degrees: 1. Apprentice; 2. Fellow Craft; 3.
|
||
Master; 4. Scottish Master; 5. Novice; 6. Templar, and 7.
|
||
Professed Knight. According to the system of the founder of this
|
||
Rite, upon the death of Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master of the
|
||
Templars, Pierre d’ Aumont, the Provincial Grand Master of Auvergne,
|
||
with two Commanders and five Knights retired for purposes of safety
|
||
into Scotland, which place they reached disguised as Operative
|
||
Masons, and there finding the Grand Commander, George Harris, and
|
||
several Knights, they determined to continue the Order. Aumont was
|
||
nominated Grand Master at a Chapter held on St. John’s Day 1313. To
|
||
avoid persecution the Knights became Freemasons. In 1361, the Grand
|
||
Master of the Temple removed his seat to Old Aberdeen, and from that
|
||
time the Order under the veil of Freemasonry, spread rapidly through
|
||
France, Germany, Spain, Portugal and elsewhere. These events
|
||
constituted the principal subject of many of the Degrees of the Rite
|
||
of Strict Observance. The others were connected with alchemy, magic,
|
||
and other superstitious practices. The great doctrine contended for
|
||
by the followers of this Rite was, that every true Mason is a Knight
|
||
Templar.”
|
||
The seeds of death were sown in the Strict Observance by its very
|
||
fundamental - that the “Unknown Superiors” supposed to be at its
|
||
head, would communicate valued esoteric, not to say occult, secrets
|
||
to its initiates. Obviously, no such secrets were ever communicated,
|
||
and on the truth of history vanquishing the fiction that Strict
|
||
Observance was really connected with the Order of Chivalry, the Rite
|
||
died.
|
||
Luckily for Goethe’s feeling for the Ancient Craft (?) had the
|
||
advantage of a great admiration for Lessing - indeed, for all we know
|
||
to the contrary, it may have been Lessing’s love for Freemasonry
|
||
which first led Goethe to seek the light. Goethe was far too broad-
|
||
minded a man, and much too deep a thinker, to condemn all that he
|
||
found good in the Lodge at Weimar, merely because it dropped from
|
||
under his feet almost as he secured a foothold!
|
||
Two years after Goethe’s initiation, the Rite of Observance received
|
||
its death blow, and Frederich Ludwig Schroeder, one of Germany’s
|
||
greatest actors and an ardent Freemason, brought his influence to
|
||
bear upon German Freemasonry. Dissatisfied then (as thousands of
|
||
devoted Freemasons are dissatisfied today when any one attempts to
|
||
“improve” upon ritual or doctrine) Schroeder, as Master of Lodge
|
||
Emanuel at Hamburg, resolved to attempt to complete reformation of
|
||
Masonry in Germany; to rid it of all its corruptions, “advanced”
|
||
degrees, spurious Rites and fantastic “side orders,” founded on
|
||
alchemy, Rosicrucianism, Hermetic philosophy; even upon magic and
|
||
mysticism.
|
||
His theory was that, despite the traditions of the Steinmetzen,
|
||
Freemasonry had begun in Gothic England and spread to the continent.
|
||
According to his belief, the English Book of Constitutions and the
|
||
English Ritual held the only pure Freemasonry. Securing a copy of
|
||
“Jachin and Boaz,” Shroeder translated it and made it the foundation
|
||
of that which speedily became known as Shroeder’s Rite or Shroeder’s
|
||
System. It was adopted by the Provincial Grand Lodge in 1801 and,
|
||
later, by many other German Lodges. The Hamburg Grand Lodge, under
|
||
which Lodge Amalia now holds, still works according to this system.
|
||
(How the “Gentlemen belonging to the Jeruselam lodge” who wrote the
|
||
pamphlet, would have turned in his grave had he known how his famous
|
||
expose was to be used!)
|
||
Otto Caspari, historian, Goethe admirer and Masonic enthusiast,
|
||
couples Goethe and Schroeder in the change of the working of Lodge
|
||
Amalia. He says:
|
||
“Frederich Ludwig Schroeder was the man who, meantime, made his
|
||
appearance as the reformer of Freemasonry. He also went to Weimar
|
||
and succeeded in persuading Goethe and the Duke Carl Augustus to take
|
||
an interest in his system. Amalia Lodge accepted Schroeder’s system
|
||
and in 1808 opened its Temple again.”
|
||
“Jachin and Boaz” may be found in any good Masonic Library. The
|
||
modern Freemason will miss much that he knows in its pages, and find
|
||
much that he does not know as Masonry; but he will see that many
|
||
essential Masonic principles are therein set forth.
|
||
Goethe remained a member of Amalia Lodge to the day of his death.
|
||
What was to him the “new system” must have made a far greater appeal
|
||
than the Rite of Strict Observance. Shortened, abbreviated, scanty
|
||
as is the Masonry set forth in “Jachin and Boaz,” to us who are heir
|
||
of the rich ritual and symbolism of Preston, Oliver, Desaugliers et
|
||
al; it is yet Masonic, which the Strict Observance can hardly be
|
||
considered to be in the light by which we moderns see. At any rate,
|
||
Goethe embraced the Schroeder system as the real and Ancient
|
||
Freemasonry, and it was this which influenced both his life and his
|
||
writings.
|
||
Because Goethe was a follower of Spinoza, ignorant fanatics have
|
||
falsely accused him of atheism; a charge as ridiculous as it is
|
||
unfounded. No one today finds Spinoza atheistic; no one ever read
|
||
Goethe to find anything but a humble man marveling at the greatness
|
||
of a nature he could not comprehend. Goethe stands awestruck before
|
||
creation; his characters are often blinded by the magnificence of the
|
||
cosmos. Goethe revered the Bible; merely because he could not accept
|
||
the narrow definition of God and heaven which were the professions of
|
||
his time, he has been thought by the ignorant to have denied the God
|
||
all his works praise by their spirit of reverence for nature and its
|
||
miracles.
|
||
Throughout the works of this greatest of German poets - a genius so
|
||
stupendous that he is not infrequently bracketed with Shakespeare -
|
||
are countless Masonic thoughts, ideas, references and allusions.
|
||
Some of these, like those found in Kipling, are evidently conscious
|
||
and intentional. Others - and these the Masonic student of Goethe
|
||
loves best - are as evidently without intent; they are but the
|
||
breathing into poem or drama of those ideas of life, death.
|
||
hereafter, moral principles and ethical doctrine, which, inculcated
|
||
by Freemasonry, were a part of Goethe’s life.
|
||
To English speaking Masons Goethe’s best known Masonic work is the
|
||
short poem “Masonic Lodge.” It can be found in any collection of
|
||
Goethe’s works, and in Volume Twenty of the Little Masonic Library.
|
||
It is given in full here, not only for purposes of short discussion,
|
||
but because, by some unaccountable and distressing error, the first
|
||
five lines, which are the keynote of the whole poem, are omitted in
|
||
the (1929) Clegg edition of Mackey’s Encyclopedia.
|
||
The Masons’s ways are A Type of Existence
|
||
And his persistence Is as the days are
|
||
Of men in this world. The future hides it
|
||
Gladness and Sorrow, We press still thorow,
|
||
Naught that abides in it Daunting us - onward.
|
||
And Solemn before us Veiled, the dark portal,
|
||
Goal of all mortal; Stars are silent o’er us
|
||
Graves under us silent. While earnest thou gazest
|
||
Comes boding of terror, Comes phantasm and error
|
||
Perplexes the bravest With doubt and misgiving.
|
||
But heard are the voices - Heard are the Sages,
|
||
The Worlds and the Ages; “Choose well; your choice is
|
||
“Brief and yet endless; “Here eyes do regard you
|
||
“In eternity’s stillness; “Here is all fullness,
|
||
“Ye have to reward you, “Work, and despair not.”
|
||
The word “thorow (first stanza) is an obsolete variant of thorough
|
||
meaning “through”, “forward,” “ahead,” or “onward.”
|
||
No short poem could more beautifully express the Masonic legend and
|
||
doctrine; of continuity from “time immemorial;” of hope so great that
|
||
though we ascend the Winding Stair of life without knowing whether
|
||
gladness or sorrow are hidden in the future, still we climb, pressing
|
||
ever onward, undaunted; of the terror and fear of the “grim tyrant,”
|
||
the voiceless grave, the unrevealed mystery; of the comfort and hope
|
||
of the immortal voices from sage, experience, history and nature; of
|
||
those “eyes” which “regard you” from beyond - does not Freemasonry
|
||
teach of an All Seeing Eye? - of that “all fullness” of the future
|
||
which is ours if we “choose well” - choice brief as a moment, result
|
||
endless as eternity! And finally, that courageous, inspiring closing
|
||
admonition - “work” - and despair not!”
|
||
It is impossible to compress the mighty allegorical drama of Faust
|
||
into a paragraph as to do the same for Hamlet. Goethe did not invent
|
||
the character of Faust, nor did the legend of his “selling himself to
|
||
the devil.” Faust was an actual historical character, a “scoundrelly
|
||
magician and astrologer” about whom many legends clustered. In 1587,
|
||
Faust appears as the hero of a popular book in the pride of his
|
||
strength and knowledge. He sells his soul to the devil in return for
|
||
a life of pleasure, luxury and gratification of desire on earth.
|
||
Goethe added to the old legend a tender and tragic love story and
|
||
wove into it a philosophic content entirely foreign to the material
|
||
which began as an old wives tale, expanded into a plot for puppet
|
||
shows, and finally became a popular book. He makes of Faust a
|
||
student and a thinker, but also a man, with all of man’s desires.
|
||
Mephistopheles is the wile and specious tempter; Margaret is part of
|
||
the bait. Throughout the tragedy the struggle for ascendancy between
|
||
good and evil is made manifest, just as in the Masonic drama. It is
|
||
here that the keen student of Freemasonry and the lover of Goethe
|
||
finds so many contacts between mind of the poet and teachings of
|
||
Freemasonry. As in the Legend of Hiram Abif, Faust at last finds
|
||
that evil may not forever strive successfully with good; his final
|
||
and greatest satisfaction is not in selfish pleasure, which means
|
||
death for the soul, but in work for humanity.
|
||
Difference of language, of Rite, and of age; make Masonic parallels
|
||
in Goethe’s works and the story and ritual we know, anything but
|
||
literal. Such a study of an author is not for the literal minded.
|
||
To read Goethe literally is on a par with scanning Hamlet’s soliloquy
|
||
for knowledge of the physical phenomena of sleep! To discuss the
|
||
Legend of Hiram Abif from a literal standpoint is wholly to miss its
|
||
significance and its beauty. Goethe makes of his great character an
|
||
allegory; allegorically, Faust and Hiram are not unalike. Though
|
||
one first resists while the other first yields to severe temptation,
|
||
in the end the same lesson is taught by both - that truth overcomes
|
||
error and evil, and that the divine is always within humanity do we
|
||
but seek far enough.
|
||
However, it is not only in Faust, the greatest of his works, that the
|
||
interested Freemason will find the influence of the gentle Craft upon
|
||
the great German poet. Wilhelm Meister’s progress is through what
|
||
may be called a series of Apprenticeships (at least they are periods
|
||
of learning) to a stage of “further light” in which he learns that
|
||
only by reverence for God, man and self can a firm character
|
||
foundation be builded. Werther, Edmont and Gotz von Berlichingen,
|
||
are all exemplars of thee poet’s concern for inner spiritual freedom.
|
||
Iphigenia denies the traditional barriers of race and religion, just
|
||
as does Freemasonry today (and has ever since the Mother Grand Lodge
|
||
of 1717). Both poet and Fraternity contend for the right of the
|
||
individual to erect his own spiritual plumb line, as told by Amos of
|
||
the Jehovah of old who said, “I will set a plumb line in the midst of
|
||
my people Israel, I will not again pass by them any more.” In Tasso.
|
||
the hero is seriously threatened with political and social powers but
|
||
overcomes them by faith in the God-given powers within him.
|
||
It may be argued that as these themes of poets and playwrights of all
|
||
ages, there is no more reason for ascribing a Masonic origin for them
|
||
in Goethe’s works, than to reason that Shakespeare must have been a
|
||
Mason because in many of his plays truth overcomes error, wrong is
|
||
supine against right and virtue triumphant over evil.
|
||
The difference is that we know Goethe to have been an interested,
|
||
thoughtful and zealous Freemason; Lodge Amalia celebrated the
|
||
fiftieth anniversary of his initiation with the aged but still
|
||
vigorous poet taking part in the celebration. Of this important
|
||
event in Goethe’s life, Brother Otto Caspari has beautifully written:
|
||
“On to old age he remained the intellectual center of Amalia Lodge.
|
||
It was a sacred and hollowed day when Goethe celebrated his fiftieth
|
||
anniversary in the Temple Weimar. There he stood, the great and
|
||
venerable poet, who had lived to see so much - the symbol of true and
|
||
pure human love, no hypocrite, openly confessing his human
|
||
weaknesses, but relying on his noble, good and imperishable heart, or
|
||
which it has been said Goethe’s heart, which but few people knew, was
|
||
as great as his intellect, which everybody knows.
|
||
“It must have been an impressive moment, when the grand old Mason,
|
||
after receiving numerous ovations, responded by citing that
|
||
Masonic poem which shows us clearly how he, an aged man, had
|
||
retained eternal youth and love in his heart. He praised
|
||
Freemasonry as the sublime and everlasting union of humanity.”
|
||
The greatest of men have to die; Goethe was called to the Celestial
|
||
Lodge above on March 22, 1832.
|
||
Pathetically, yet most beautifully, his last words were Masonic -
|
||
Masonic in the language of the Craft of all Freemasons of all lands
|
||
and all Rites know. Perhaps this cry was but a physical craving for
|
||
increased illumination as his eyes failed him. But thinking of his
|
||
life, and the stupendous gifts he made to mankind, the urge to learn,
|
||
to know, to reach out into the unknown for the solution of all
|
||
mystery, which breathes through many of his poems and dramas, it is
|
||
difficult to think of them except as symbolic of the man, his works,
|
||
his Freemasonry and his character.
|
||
With his last breath, Goethe cried the immortal phrase
|
||
“More Light!”
|
||
|
||
|