Showing posts with label alchemy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alchemy. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2022

English Mystic John Dee on this Day in History

 

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This day in history: English mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, teacher, occultist and alchemist John Dee was born on this day in 1527. He was the court astronomer for, and advisor to, Elizabeth I, and spent much of his time on alchemy, divination and Hermetic philosophy. As an antiquarian, he had one of the largest libraries in England at the time. As a political advisor, he advocated the foundation of English colonies in the New World to form a "British Empire", a term he is credited with coining.

Dee eventually left Elizabeth's service and went on a quest for additional knowledge in the deeper realms of the occult and supernatural. He aligned himself with several individuals who may have been charlatans, travelled through Europe and was accused of spying for the English crown. Upon his return to England, he found his home and library vandalized. He eventually returned to the Queen's service, but was turned away when she was succeeded by James I. He died in poverty in London and his gravesite is unknown.

Dracula author Bram Stoker wrote the following about John Dee:

Even a brief survey of the life of the celebrated “Doctor Dee,” the so-called “Wizard” of the sixteenth century, will leave any honest reader under the impression that in the perspective of history he was a much maligned man. If it had not been that now and again he was led into crooked bye-paths of alleged occultism, his record might have stood out as that of one of the most accomplished and sincere of the scientists of his time. He was in truth, whatever were his faults, more sinned against than sinning. If the English language is not so elastic as some others in the matter of meaning of phrases, the same or a greater effect can be obtained by a careful use of the various dialects of the British Empire. In the present case we may, if English lacks, well call on some of the varieties of Scotch terminology. The intellectual status of the prime wizard, as he is held to be in general opinion, can be well indicated by any of the following words or phrases “wanting,” “crank,” “a tile off,” “a wee bit saft,” “a bee in his bonnet.” Each of these is indicative of some form of monomania, generally harmless. If John Dee had not had some great qualities, such156 negative weaknesses would have prevented his reputation ever achieving a permanent place in history of any kind. As it is his place was won by many accomplished facts. The following is a broad outline of his life, which was a long one lasting for over eighty years.

John Dee was born in 1527, and came of a Welsh race. A good many years after his start in life he, after the harmless fashion of those (and other) times, made out a family tree in which it was shewn that he was descended from, among other royalties, Roderick the Great, Prince of Wales. This little effort of vanity did not, however, change anything. The world cared then about such things almost as little as it does now; or, allowing for the weakness of human beings in the way of their own self-importance, it might be better to say as it professes to do now. John Dee was sent to the University of Cambridge when he was only fifteen years old. The College chosen for him was St. John’s, and here he showed extraordinary application in his chosen subject, mathematics. He took his probationary degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1545, and was made a Fellow in 1546. In his early years of College life his work was regulated in a remarkable way. Out of the twenty-four hours, eighteen were devoted to study, four to sleep, the remaining two being set apart for meals and recreation. Lest this should seem incredible it may be remembered that three hundred years later, the French Jesuits,157 having made exhaustive experiments, arrived at the conclusion that for mere purposes of health, without making any allowance for the joy or happiness of life, and treating the body merely as a machine from which the utmost amount of work mental and physical could be got without injury, four hours of sleep per diem sufficed for health and sanity. And it is only natural that a healthy and ambitious young man trying to work his way to success would, or might have been, equally strenuous and self-denying. His appointment as Fellow of St. John’s was one of those made when the College was founded. That he was skilled in other branches of learning was shown by the fact that in the University he was appointed as Under Reader in Greek. He was daring in the practical application of science, and during the representation of one of the comedies of Aristophanes, created such a sensation by appearing to fly, that he began to be credited by his companions with magical powers. This was probably the beginning of the sinister reputation which seemed to follow him all his life afterwards. When once an idea of the kind has been started even the simplest facts of life and work seem to gather round it and enlarge it indefinitely. So far as we can judge after a lapse of over three hundred years, John Dee was an eager and ardent seeker after knowledge; and all through his life he travelled in the search wherever he was likely to gain his object. It is a main difficulty of158 following such a record that we have only facts to follow. We know little or nothing of motives except from results, and as in the development of knowledge the measure of success can only bear a small ratio to that of endeavour, it is manifest that we should show a large and tolerant understanding of the motives which animate the seeker for truth. In the course of his long life John Dee visited many lands, sojourned in many centres of learning, had relations of common interests as well as of friendship with many great scholars, and made as thinker, mathematician, and astronomer, a reputation far transcending any ephemeral and purely gaseous publicity arising from the open-mouthed wonder of the silly folk who are not capable of even trying to understand things beyond their immediate ken. Wherever he went he seems to have been in touch with the learned and progressive men of his time, and always a student. At various times he was in the Low Countries, Louvain (from whose University he obtained the degree of LL.D.), Paris, Wurtemberg, Antwerp, Presburg, Lorraine, Frankfort-on-the-Oder, Bohemia, Cracow, Prague, and Hesse-Cassel. He even went so far afield as St. Helena. He was engaged on some great works of more than national importance. For instance, when in 1582, Pope Gregory XIII instituted the reform of the Calendar which was adopted by most of the great nations of the world, Dee approved and worked out159 his own calculations to an almost similar conclusion, though the then opposition to him cost England a delay of over one hundred and seventy years. In 1572 he had proved his excellence as an astronomer in his valuable work in relation to a newly discovered star (Tycho Brahe’s) in Cassiopœia. In 1580 he made a complete geographical and hydrographical map of the Queen’s possessions. He tried—but unhappily in vain—to get Queen Mary to gather the vast collections of manuscripts and old books which had been made in the Monasteries (broken up by Henry VIII) of which the major part were then to be obtained both easily and cheaply. He was a Doctor of Laws (which by the way was his only claim to be called “Doctor” Dee, the title generally accorded to him). He was made a rector in Worcestershire in 1553; and in 1556, Archbishop Parker gave him ten years’ use of the livings of Upton and Long Leadenham. He was made Warden of Manchester College in 1595, and was named by Queen Elizabeth as Chancellor of St. Paul’s. In 1564, he was appointed Dean of Gloucester, though through his own neglect of his own interest it was never carried out. The Queen approved, the Archbishop sealed the deed; but Dee, unmindful, overlooked the formality of acceptance and the gift eventually went elsewhere. Queen Elizabeth, who consistently believed in and admired him, wanted to make him a bishop, but he declined the responsibility. For once the formality at consecration:160 “Nolo Episcopari” was spoken with truthful lips. More than once he was despatched to foreign places to make special report in the Queen’s service. That he did not—always, at all events—put private interest before public duty is shown by his refusal to accept two rectories offered to him by the Queen in 1576, urging as an excuse that he was unable to find time for the necessary duties, since he was too busily occupied in making calculations for the reformation of the Calendar. He seems to have lived a most proper life, and was twice married. After a long struggle with adversity in which—last despair of a scholar—he had to sell his books, he died very poor, just as he was preparing to migrate. At his death in 1608 he left behind him no less than seventy-nine works—nearly one for each year of his life. Just after the time of the Armada, following on some correspondence with Queen Elizabeth, he had returned to England after long and adventurous experiences in Poland and elsewhere, during which he had known what it was to receive the honours and affronts of communities. He took back with him the reputation of being a sorcerer, one which he had never courted and which so rankled in him that many years afterwards he petitioned James I to have him tried so that he might clear his character.

If there be any truth whatever in the theory that men have attendant spirits, bad as well as good, Dr. Dee’s bad spirit took the shape of one who161 pretended to occult knowledge, the so-called Sir Edward Kelley of whom we shall have something to say later on.

Dee was fifty-four years of age when he met Sir Edward Kelley who was twenty-eight years his junior. The two men became friends, and then the old visionary scholar at once became dominated by his younger and less scrupulous companion, who very soon became his partner. From that time Dee’s down-fall—or rather down-slide began. All the longings after occult belief which he had hitherto tried to hold in check began not only to manifest themselves, but to find expression. His science became merged in alchemy, his astronomical learning was forced into the service of Astrology. His belief, which he as a cleric held before him as a duty, was lost in spiritualism and other forms of occultism. He began to make use for practical purposes of his crystal globe and his magic mirror in which he probably had for long believed secretly. Kelley practically ruined his reputation by using for his own purposes the influence which he had over the old man. His opportunities were increased by the arrival in England of Laski, about 1583. The two scholars had many ideas in common, and Kelley did not fail, in the furtherance of his own views, to take advantage of the circumstance. He persuaded Dee to go with his new friend to Poland, in the hope of benefiting further in his studies in the occult by wider162 experience of foreign centres of learning. They journeyed to Laskoe near Cracow, where the weakness of the English scholar became more evident and his form of madness more developed. Dee had now a fixed belief in two ideas which he had hitherto failed to materialise—the Philosopher’s Stone and the Elixir of Life, both of them dreams held as possible of realisation to the scientific dreamer in the period of the Renaissance. Dee believed at one time that he had got hold of the Philosopher’s Stone, and actually sent to Queen Elizabeth a piece of gold taken from a transmuted warming-pan. As it is said in the life of Dee that he and Kelley had found a quantity of the Elixir of Life in the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey, we can easily imagine what part the latter had in the transaction. It was he, too, who probably fixed on Glastonbury as the place in which to search for Elixirs, as that holy spot had already a reputation of its own in such matters. It has been held for ages that the staff used by Joseph of Arimathea took root and blossomed there. Somehow, whatever the Glastonbury Elixir did, the Philosopher’s Stone did not seem to keep its alleged properties in the Dee family. John Dee’s young son Arthur, aged eight, tried its efficacy; but without success. Perhaps it was this failure which made Kelley more exacting, for a couple of years later in 1589, he told his partner that angels had told him it was the divine wish that they should have163 their wives in common. The sage, who was fond of his wife—who was a comely woman, whereas Kelley’s was ill favoured and devoid of charms—naturally demurred at such an utterance even of occult spirits. Mrs. Dee also objected, with the result that there were alarums and excursions and the partnership was rudely dissolved—which is a proof that though the aged philosopher’s mind had been vitiated by the evil promptings of his wily companion he had not quite declined to idiocy.


Sunday, March 27, 2022

Crowd Psychology Writer Charles Mackay on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Scottish writer Charles Mackay was born on this day (March 27) in 1814. Mackay is best known for writing Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.

Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds is an early study of crowd psychology published in 1841 under the title Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions. The book was published in three volumes: "National Delusions", "Peculiar Follies", and "Philosophical Delusions".

The subjects in Mackay's work include alchemy, crusades, duels, economic bubbles, fortune-telling, haunted houses, the Drummer of Tedworth, the influence of politics and religion on the shapes of beards and hair, magnetisers (influence of imagination in curing disease), murder through poisoning, prophecies, popular admiration of great thieves, popular follies of great cities, and relics. Present-day writers on economics, such as Michael Lewis and Andrew Tobias, extol the three chapters on economic bubbles, which is probably the most talked about section of these volumes. The Tulipmania is perhaps the most popular topic.

"In 1600, in the garden of a nobleman, a traveling gentleman saw a rare, exotic flower — a tulip.  Impressed by its unique beauty, he sent bulbs to Amsterdam, where their popularity caught on. The rare flower became a fad among gentlemen, and eventually, '…it was deemed to be in bad taste for any man of fortune to be without a collection of them.'  The mania grew until it affected every cavity of society.  In 1636, a wealthy trader would paid half his fortune for a single bulb. Tulip futures appeared on the European stock exchanges.  Speculators moved in, making fortunes when prices rose, buying again when prices fell.  Everyone, from nobles to chimney sweeps, dabbled in tulips.  There was no reason for it.  It was a pure popular delusion." Source

Mackay describes the Crusades as a kind of mania of the Middle Ages, precipitated by the pilgrimages of Europeans to the Holy Land. Mackay says of the Crusades: "Europe expended millions of her treasures, and the blood of two millions of her children; and a handful of quarrelsome knights retained possession of Palestine for about one hundred years!"

Witch trials in 16th and 17th-century Europe are the primary focus of the "Witch Mania" section of the book, which asserts that this was a time when ill fortune was likely to be attributed to supernatural causes. Mackay notes that many of these cases were initiated as a way of settling scores among neighbors or associates, and that extremely low standards of evidence were applied to most of these trials. Mackay claims that "thousands upon thousands" of people were executed as witches over two and a half centuries, with the largest numbers killed in Germany.

The section on "Alchemysts" focuses primarily on efforts to turn base metals into gold. Mackay notes that many of these practitioners were themselves deluded, convinced that these feats could be performed if they discovered the correct recipe or stumbled upon the right combination of ingredients. Although alchemists gained money from their sponsors, mainly noblemen, he notes that the belief in alchemy by sponsors could be hazardous to its practitioners, as it wasn't rare for an unscrupulous noble to imprison a supposed alchemist until he could produce gold.

Mackay also wrote of The Drummer of Tedworth, which was a case of an alleged poltergeist manifestation in the West Country of England in the 17th century. Charles Mackay considered the phenomena to be undoubtedly fraudulent produced by confederates of the drummer and suggested that the people involved were easily deceived.

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

The Most Evil Man in History, Gilles de Rais, on This Day in History


"Gilles de Rais - one of the most glorious, sinister, enigmatic figures in all European history." -- Henry Miller 

Gilles de Rais was hanged and burned on this day in 1440. 

Baron de Rais was a knight and lord from Brittany, Anjou and Poitou, a leader in the French army, and a companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc. However, he is best known for his reputation and later conviction as a confessed serial killer of children. 

Rais is also believed to be the inspiration for the French horror folktale "Bluebeard." How many people Gilled de Rais killed is not known since most of his victims were either burned or buried. The number of murders is generally placed between 100 and 200; a few have conjectured that there were more than 600. The victims ranged in age from 6 to 18 and were predominantly boys. 

Lewis Spensce wrote the following about Gilles de Rais in 1917:

Of the dark and terrible legends to which Brittany has given birth, one of the most gloomy and romantic is the story of Gilles de Retz, alchemist, magician, and arch-criminal. But the story is not altogether legendary, although it has undoubtedly been added to from the great stores of tradition. Gilles is none other than the Bluebeard of the nursery tale, for he appears to have actually worn a beard bluish-black in hue, and it is probable that his personality became mingled with that of the hero of the old Oriental story.

Gilles de Laval, Lord of Retz and Marshal of France, was connected with some of the noblest families in Brittany, those of Montmorency, Rocey, and Craon, and at his father’s death, about 1424, he found himself lord of many princely domains, and what, for those times, was almost unlimited power and wealth. He was a handsome youth, lithe and of fascinating address, courageous, and learned as any clerk. A splendid career lay before him, but from the first that distorted idea of the romantic which is typical of certain minds had seized upon him, and despite his rank and position he much preferred the dark courses which finally ended in his disgrace and ruin to the dignities of his seigneury.


Gilles took his principal title from the barony of Retz or Rais, south of the Loire, on the marches of Brittany. As a youth he did nothing to justify an evil augury of his future, for he served with zeal and gallantry in the wars of Charles VI against the English and fought under Jeanne Darc at the siege of Orléans. In virtue of these services, and because of his shrewdness and skill in affairs, the King created him Marshal of France. But from that time onward the man who had been the able lieutenant of Jeanne Darc and had fought by her side at Jargeau and Patay began to deteriorate. Some years before he had married Catherine de Thouars, and with her had received a large dowry; but he had expended immense sums in the national cause, and his private life was as extravagant as that of a prince in a fairy tale. At his castle of Champtocé he dwelt in almost royal state; indeed, his train when he went hawking or hunting exceeded in magnificence that of the King himself. His retainers were tricked out in the most gorgeous liveries, and his table was spread with ruinous abundance. Oxen, sheep, and pigs were roasted whole, and viands were provided daily for five hundred persons. He had an insane love of pomp and display, and his private devotions were ministered to by a large body of ecclesiastics. His chapel was a marvel of splendour, and was furnished with gold and silver plate in the most lavish manner. His love of colour and movement made him fond of theatrical displays, and it is even said that the play or mystery of Orléans, dealing with the story of Jeanne Darc, was written with his own hand. He was munificent in his patronage of the arts, and was himself a skilled illuminator and bookbinder. In short, he was obviously one of those persons of abnormal character in whom genius is allied to madness and who can attempt and execute nothing except in a spirit of the wildest excess.

The reduction of his fortune merely served his peculiar and abnormal personality with a new excuse for extravagance. At this time the art of alchemy flourished exceedingly and the works of Nicolas Flamel, the Arabian Geber, and Pierre d’Estaing enjoyed a great vogue. On an evil day it occurred to Gilles to turn alchemist, and thus repair his broken fortunes. In the first quarter of the fifteenth century alchemy stood for scientific achievement, and many persons in our own enlightened age still study its maxims. A society exists to-day the object of which is to further the knowledge of alchemical science. A common misapprehension is current to the effect that the object of the alchemists was the transmutation of the baser metals into gold, but in reality they were divided into two groups, those who sought eagerly the secret of manufacturing the precious metals, and those who dreamed of a higher aim, the transmutation of the gross, terrestrial nature of man into the pure gold of the spirit.

The latter of these aims was beyond the fevered imagination of such a wild and disorderly mind as that of Gilles de Retz. He sent emissaries into Italy, Spain, and Germany to invite adepts in the science to his castle at Champtocé. From among these he selected two men to assist him in his plan—Prelati, an alchemist of Padua, and a certain physician of Poitou, whose name is not recorded. At their instigation he built a magnificent laboratory, and when it was completed commenced to experiment. A year passed, during which the necessities of the ‘science’ gradually emptied many bags of gold, but none returned to the Marshal’s coffers. The alchemists slept soft and fed sumptuously, and were quite content to pursue their labours so long as the Seigneur of Retz had occasion for their services. But as the time passed that august person became greatly impatient, and so irritable did he grow because of the lack of results that at length his assistants, in imminent fear of dismissal, communicated to him a dark and dreadful secret of their art, which, they assured him, would assist them at arriving speedily at the desired end.


The nature of the experiment they proposed was so grotesque that its acceptance by Gilles proves that he was either insane or a victim of the superstition of his time. His wretched accomplices told him that the Evil One alone was capable of revealing the secret of the transmutation of the baser metals into gold, and they offered to summon him to their master’s aid. They assured Gilles that Satan would require a recompense for his services, and the Marshal retorted that so long as he saved his soul intact he was quite willing to conclude any bargain that the Father of Evil might propose.

It was arranged that the ceremony should take place within a gloomy wood in the neighbourhood. The nameless physician conducted the Lord of Retz to a small clearing in this plantation, where the magic circle was drawn and the usual conjurations made. For half an hour they waited in silence, and then a great trembling fell upon the physician. A deadly pallor overspread his countenance. His knees shook, he muttered wildly, and at last he sank to the ground. Gilles stood by unmoved. The insanity of egotism is of course productive of great if not lofty courage, and he feared neither man nor fiend. Suddenly the alchemist regained consciousness and told his master that the Devil had appeared to him in the shape of a leopard and had growled at him horribly. He ascribed Gilles’ lack of supernatural vision to want of faith. He then declared that the Evil One had told him where certain herbs grew in Spain and Africa, the juices of which possessed the power to effect the transmutation, and these he obligingly offered to search for, provided the Lord of Retz furnished the means for his travels. This Gilles gladly did, and of course never beheld the Poitevin knave again.

Days and months passed and the physician did not return. Gilles grew uneasy. It was imperative that gold should be forthcoming immediately, for not only was he being pressed on every side, but he was unable to support his usual magnificence. In this dilemma he turned to Prelati, his remaining alchemical assistant. This man appears to have believed in his art or he would not have made the terrible suggestion he did, which was that the Lord of Retz should sign with his own blood a compact with the Devil, and should offer up a young child in sacrifice to him. To this proposal the unhappy Gilles consented. On the following night Prelati quitted the castle, and returned shortly afterward with the story that the fiend had appeared to him in the likeness of a young man who desired to be called Barron, and had pointed out to him the resting-place of a hoard of ingots of pure gold, buried under an oak in the neighbouring wood. Certain conditions, however, must be observed before the treasure was dug up, the chief of which was that it must not be searched for until a period of seven times seven weeks had elapsed, or it would turn into slates. With these conditions de Retz would not comply, and, alarmed at his annoyance, the obliging Prelati curtailed the time of waiting to seven times seven days. At the end of that period the alchemist and his dupe repaired to the wood to dig up the treasure. They worked hard for some time, and at length came upon a load of slates, inscribed with magical characters. Prelati pretended great wrath, and upbraided the Evil One for his deceit, in which denunciation he was heartily joined by de Retz. But so credulous was the Seigneur that he allowed himself to be persuaded to afford Satan another trial, which meant, of course, that Prelati led him on from day to day with specious promises and ambiguous hints, until he had drained him of nearly all his remaining substance. He was then preparing to decamp with his plunder when a dramatic incident detained him.

For some time a rumour had been circulating in the country-side that numerous children were missing and that they had been spirited away. Popular clamour ran high, and suspicion was directed toward the castle of Champtocé. So circumstantial was the evidence against de Retz that at length the Duke of Brittany ordered both the Seigneur and his accomplice to be arrested. Their trial took place before a commission which de Retz denounced, declaring that he would rather be hanged like a dog, without trial, than plead before its members. But the evidence against him was overwhelming. It was told how the wretched madman, in his insane quest for gold, had sacrificed his innocent victims on the altar of Satan, and how he had gloated over their sufferings. Finally he confessed his enormities and told how nearly a hundred children had been cruelly murdered by him and his relentless accomplice. Both he and Prelati were doomed to be burned alive, but in consideration of his rank he was strangled before being cast into the flames. Before the execution he expressed to Prelati a hope that they would meet in Paradise, and, it is said, met his end very devoutly.

The castle of Champtocé still stands in its beautiful valley, and many romantic legends cluster about its grey old walls. “The hideous, half-burnt body of the monster himself,” says Trollope, “circled with flames—pale, indeed, and faint in colour, but more lasting than those the hangman kindled around his mortal form in 180 the meadow under the walls of Nantes—is seen, on bright moonlight nights, standing now on one topmost point of craggy wall, and now on another, and is heard mingling his moan with the sough of the night-wind. Pale, bloodless forms, too, of youthful growth and mien, the restless, unsepulchred ghosts of the unfortunates who perished in these dungeons unassoiled ... may at similar times be seen flitting backward and forward, in numerous groups, across the space enclosed by the ruined wall, with more than mortal speed, or glancing hurriedly from window to window of the fabric, as still seeking to escape from its hateful confinement.”

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Sunday, October 24, 2021

Tycho Brahe's Urinary Death on This Day in History

 

The History and Mystery of Alchemy is now available on Amazon...and it is only 99 cents.

This Day in History: Famed mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, and alchemist Tycho Brahe died on this day in 1601 from a burst bladder. 

He has been described as "the first competent mind in modern astronomy to feel ardently the passion for exact empirical facts". Most of his observations were more accurate than the best available observations at the time. He was so confident in his superiority as a mathematician that he entered into a sword duel with another man to end an argument as to who was the greatest Danish mathematician. Brahe was one of those alchemists that used that particular science to promote medicine. In his own time, Tycho was also famous for his contributions to medicine; his herbal medicines were in use as late as the 1900s.

However, despite all of this, Brahe is now best known for two things: Having no nose, and dying from refusing to urinate at a party.

The drunken duel he was engaged in resulted in the loss of his nose. From then on, he wore prosthetic noses...one of them being gold.

As to his death, Brahe contracted a bladder or kidney ailment after attending a banquet in Prague, and died eleven days later. According to Kepler's first-hand account, Brahe had refused to leave the banquet to relieve himself because it would have been a breach of etiquette. After he had returned home he was no longer able to urinate, except eventually in very small quantities and with excruciating pain.

His body was exhumed in 1901 and traces of mercury were found in his remains, fueling rumors that the astronomer was poisoned. In 2010, his body was exhumed again, only to find out that the mercury levels were too low to cause his death. So, Brahe did indeed die from not peeing when he should have. 

Brahe also had a pet elk. His elk however reportedly died after drinking too much beer at dinner and then falling down some stairs. 


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Over 220 Books on the Occult and Astrology to Download

Only $3.00You can pay using the Cash App by sending money to $HeinzSchmitz and feel free to send me an email at theoldcdbookshop@gmail.com with your email for this item. 

Books Scanned from the Originals into PDF format


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Contents:

Simplified Scientific Astrology, A Complete Textbook on the Art of Erecting a Horoscope, with philosophic encyclopedia and tables of Planetary Hours by Max Heindel 1919 
 
Occult Theocracy by Lady Queensborough, Edith Starr Miller, an expose of secret societies and conspiracies 
 
Card Fortune-Telling; a Lucid Treatise Dealing with all the Popular & More Abstruse Methods by Charles Pratt 
 
Medicine and Astrology - A Paper Read Before the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society by Henry Phillips Jr. 1866 
 
Were you Born under a Lucky Star? a Complete Exposition of the Science of Astrology 1901 by A. Alpheus 
 
Occult Chemistry by Annie Wood Besant 
 
Clairvoyance by Charles Leadbeater 1918 
 
Seeing the Invisible: Practical Studies in Psychometry, Thought Transference, Telepathy by James Coates 1906 
 
The Hand-book of Astrology Volume 1 by Zadkiel 1861

The Zodiacal Cards and how to use them by Grace Angela 1902

Heliocentric Astrology by Holmes Merton 1899

The Elements of Astrology by Luke D Broughton 1898

Everybody's Astrology by Magnus Jenson 1922

Lessons in Astrology by 1898

The Spherical Basis of Astrology by Joseph G Dalton 1908

The Guide to Astrology by Raphael 1905

The Mediæval Attitude toward Astrology by Theodore Wedel 1920

Shakespeare and Astrology by William Wilson 1903

Practical Astrology by C De Saint-Germain 1901

Stars of Destiny by Trix Devos 1922
 
A Manual of Astrology or The Book of the Stars, by Raphael 1828 
 
Telling Fortunes by Cards, a Symposium of the Several Ancient and Modern Methods as Practiced by Arab Seers etc 1916 
 
Gypsy Sorcery and Fortune Telling: Illustrated by Numerous Incantations, Specimens of Medical Magic, Anecdotes and Tales 1891 by Charles G. Leland 
 
Fingers and Fortune: A Guide-book to Palmistry by Eveline Michell Farwell 1886 
 
The Occult World (1884) by Alfred Percy Sinnett 


 
The Practice of Palmistry for Professional Purposes by C. de Saint-Germain 1897 
 
The Practice of Palmistry for Professional Purposes Volume 2 by C. de Saint-Germain 1897 
 
The Message of the Stars - an Esoteric Exposition of Medical and Natal Astrology explaining the arts of prediction and diagnosis of disease by Max Heindel 1918 
 
Clairvoyance, a system of Philosophy Concerning its Law  by JCF Grumbine 1899 
 
Astrology and Religion Among the Greeks and Romans 
by Franz Valery Marie Cumont 1912 
 
Clairvoyance and Occult Powers by Swami Panchadasi 1916 
 
Voodoo Tales by Mary Alicia Owen 1893 
 
The Influence of the Zodiac Upon Human Life by Eleanor Kirk 1894 
 
The Mysteries of Astrology, and the Wonders of Magic 
by Charles W. Roback 1854 
 
EM or, Spells and Counter-spells by Mary Bramston 1878 
 
Psychometry, its Science and Law of Unfoldment by JCF Grumbine 1900 
 
Astrology in a Nutshell by C.H. Weber 1902 
 
Photographing the Invisible: Practical Studies in Spirit Photography 1911 by James Coates 
 
The Witness to the Stars by EW Bullinger 1893 
 
The Illustrated Key to the Tarot, the Veil of Divination, illustrating the greater and lesser arcana, embracing- The veil and its symbols. Secret tradition under the veil of divination. Art of tarot divination. Outer method of the oracles. The tarot in history. Inner symbolism. The greater keys by L.W. De Laurence1918 
 
A Manual of Cheirosophy - Being a Complete Practical Handbook of the Twin Sciences of Cheirognomy and Cheiromancy, by means whereof the past, the present, and the future may be read in the formations of the hands, preceded by an introductory argument upon the science of cheirosophy and its claims to rank as a physical science by H.A. Edward 1885 
 
ALCHEMY ANCIENT AND MODERN (1922) by H. Stanley Redgrove 
 
A Catalogue RaisonneŽ of Works on the Occult Sciences 1903 Volume 1 by Leigh Gardner 
 
Guardian Spirits, a Case of Vision into the Spiritual World translated from the German of H. Werner, with Parallels from Emanuel Swedenborg 1847 
 
The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading - A Practical Treatise on the Art Commonly Called Palmistry 1901 by William George Benham 
 
Astrology Theologized - The Spiritual Hermeneutics of Astrology and Holy Writ 1886 by Valentin Weigel and Anna Bonus Kingsford 
 
Jap Herron - A novel Written from the Ouija Board 1917 
 
Natural and Mesmeric Clairvoyance 1852 by James Esdaile  
 
Complete Hypnotism - Mesmerism, Mind-Reading & Spiritualism, How to Hypnotize, Being an Exhaustive and Practical System of Method, Application, and Use by A. Alpheus 1903 
 
The New Black Magic and the Truth about the Ouija-board by John Godfrey Raupert 1920 
 
The Perfect Course of Instruction in Hypnotism, Mesmerism, Clairvoyance and the Sleep Cure Giving the Best Methods for Hypnotizing by Syndey Flower 1901 
 
Magic, White and Black - The Science of Finite and Infinite Life by Franz Hartmann 1904 
 
Spells And Voices by Ada Keyne 1865 
 
Luciferianism or Satanism in English Freemasonry by Leon Fouquet 1898 
 
The Magician's Own Book, The Whole Art of Conjuring by George Arnold 1862 
 
Luciferianism or Satanism in English Freemasonry Volume 2 by Leon Fouquet 1898 
 
A Safe View of Spiritism for Catholics by Joseph Sasia 1920 
 
Babylonian Magic And Sorcery by Leonard King 1896 
 
Narratives of Sorcery and Magic by Thomas Wright 1852 
 
Practical Phrenology by Silas Jones 1836 
 
Outlines of phrenology by J. G. Spurzheim 1834 
 
Occult Science in Medicine by Franz Hartmann 1893 


 
A Compleat System of Magick - The History of the Black Art by Daniel Defoe 1729 
 
Occultism and Common Sense by Beckles Willson 1908 
 
Magic and Witchcraft by George Moir 1852 
 
The Hindu book of astrology by Seva Bhakti 1902 
 
A History of Magic, Witchcraft, and Animal Magnetism 1851 Volume 1 by J.C. Colquhoun 
 
A History of Magic, Witchcraft, and Animal Magnetism 1851 Volume 2 by J.C. Colquhoun 
 
The Attitude of the Catholic Church towards Withcraft and the Allied Practices of Sorcery and Magic by Marie Antoinette Pratt 1915 
 
Mysterious Psychic Forces by Camille Flammarion 1907 
 
Studies in Spiritism by Amy Tanner 1910 
 
Hindu Occult Art Magic by Ramasami 1921 
 
Stories of the Occult by Dan Sitzer 1917 
 
Theosophy, Religion and Occult Science by Henry Steel Olcott 1885 
 
Isis Unveiled: A Master Key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science 
by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1919 
  
The Secret Doctrine: The Synthesis of Science, Religion, and Philosophy 
by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1917 
 
The Theosophical Glossary 
by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, George Robert Stow Mead - 1892 
  
Theosophy: An Introduction to the Supersensible Knowledge of the World by Rudolf Steiner 1910 
 
Theosophy: Or, Psychological Religion 
by Friedrich Max Müller - 1895 
 
Theosophy 
by Friedrich Max Müller - 1893 - 594 pages 
  
Theosophy: The Path of the Mystic 
by Katherine Augusta Westcott Tingley - 1922 - 185 pages 
 
Theosophy and Christianity 
by Ernest Reginald Hull - 1905 
 
Madame Blavatsky and Her "theosophy": A Study 
by Arthur Lillie - 1895 
  
Theosophy and the Theosophical Society 
by Annie Wood Besant - 1913 - 95 pages 
 
An Outline of the Principles of Modern Theosophy 
by Claude Falls Wright - 1894 - 188 pages 
 
Thrice-greatest Hermes: Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis 
by Hermes - 1906 
 
Oriental Mysticism: A Treatise on the Sufiistic and Unitarian Theosophy of the Persians 
by Edward Henry Palmer - 1867 
 
Theosophy and the Higher Life, Or, Spiritual Dynamics and the Divine and ... 
by George Wyld 1880 
  
Theosophy and New Thought 
by Henry Clay Sheldon - 1916 - 185 pages 
 
A Guide to Theosophy: Containing Select Articles 
by Tukaram Tatya, Bombay Theosophical Fund 1887 
 
The Kabbala: The True Science of Light; an Introduction to the Philosophy & Theosophy by Seth Pancoast - 1877 
 
The Elements of Theosophy by Lilian Edger 
 
Hints on Esoteric Theosophy 
by India Theosophical Society (Madras - 1882 
Issued under the authority of the Theosophical Society. 
  
The Esoteric Basis of Christianity: Or, Theosophy and Christian Doctrine 
by William Kingsland 1895 
 
Essays in Logos and Gnosis Mainly in Relation to the Neo-Buddhist Theosophy 
by Thomas Simcox Lea - 1905 
 
Thoughts on the Metaphysics of Theosophy 
by S. Sandaram Iyer 1883 
 
Reminiscences of H. P. Blavatsky and "The Secret Doctrine" 
by Constance Wachtmeister 1893 - 162 pages 
 
Modern World Movements: Theosophy and the School of Natural Science by Jirah Dewey Buck 1913 - 191 pages 
 
The Kabbala: Or, The True Science of Light: Especially in its relations to Life and Health and its Applicability as a Remedy in disease 
by Seth Pancoast - 1883 
 
Kabbala Denudata, the Kabbalah Unveiled, Containing some Books of the Zohar 
by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, Christian Knorr von Rosenroth 1912 
 
Hebraic Literature: Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and Kabbala 
by Maurice Henry Harris - 1901 - 395 pages 
 
Key to the Hebrew-Egyptian Mystery in the Source of Measures Originating the Sources of Measure by James Ralston Skinner - 1875 
 
Also: The Occult World by Alfred Percy Sinnett 1885 
    
Occult Science in India and Among the Ancients by Louis Jacolliot, Willard L. Felt 1901 
    
A Catalogue Raisonné of Works on the Occult Sciences by Frederick Leigh Gardner, William Wynn Westcott 1903 


 
Totem and Taboo: Resemblances Between the Psychic Lives of Savages and Neurotics by Sigmund Freud, Abraham Arden Brill 1919 
 
The Law of Psychic Phenomena by Thomson Jay Hudson 1908 
    
The Awakening of Woman: Suggestions from the Psychic Side of Feminism by Florence Guertin Tuttle 1915 
    
The Best Psychic Stories by Joseph Lewis French 1920 
 
Your Psychic Powers and how to Develop Them by Hereward Carrington 1920 
    
The Psychic Riddle by Isaac Kaufman Funk 1907 
 
Insight- a Record of Psychic Experiences: A Series of Questions and Answers by Emma Crow Cushman 1918 
    
The Widow's Mite and Other Psychic Phenomena by Isaac Kaufman Funk 1911 
 
Book of Knowledge, Psychic Facts by Nellie Beighle 1903


Letters on Occult Meditation by Alice Bailey 1922



Some Philosophy of the Hermetics 1898



The Duality of Truth - The Occult Forces of Nature from the Standpoint of Hermetic Philosophy by Henry Wagner 1899

The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses - the wonderful magical and spirit arts of Moses and Aaron by LW De Laurence 1910

Self Mastery by Jesse Ross Deamude 1922

A Dweller on Two Planets by FS Oliver 1905

Within the Temple of Isis by Belle M Wagner 1899

Which? Impulse, Instinct or Intuition by CT Taylor 1919

The Consciousness of the Atom by Alice Bailey 1922

Mysteries Unveiled by William A Redding 1896

Curiosities of Occult Literature by Christopher Cooke - 1863

Scientific Occultism by David Hatch 1905

Fragments of Truth by Richard Ingalese 1921 (Psychic Phenomena, Moses the Magician, Stray Leaves of Occult History, the Esoteric Christ, etc)

The Mystic Thesaurus by Willis F Whitehead 1899

Were you Born in July? 1909

Planting, Harvesting and Surgical Operations According to the Signs of the Zodiac by AF Seward 1920

Saturn, the Reaper by Alan Leo 1916

Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos, Four Books of the Influence of the Stars by JM Ashmand 1900

The Voice of the Stars by Prof C.A. Grimmer 1879

The Stellar Laws Governing the Reproduction of the Human Race by PA Graves 1885

How to Succeed - Secrets of Astrology Revealed by J MacDonald 1898

The New Thought of the Planets Influence upon Children at the hour of their Birth by Karen M Phillips 1914

The Law and the Prophets - A Scientific Work on the relationship between Physical Bodies, Vegetable, Animal, Human and Planetary by Frank Earl Ormsby 1893

An Introduction to Astrology by William Lilly 1852

Astrology, Science of Knowledge and Reason by Ellen H Bennett 1897

Under a Lucky Star by Charlotte Walker 1901

Earthology - Humanity Characterized by the Earth, Sun, and Zodiac, with Prognostications from the Moon by Albert Raphael 1901

Facts of Science, New and Ancient Knowledge by Benjamin Judkins 1897

Significance of Birthdays by WJ Colville 1911

The Coming Catastrophe by CA Grimmer 1881

Astrology the Key to Roulette by John Rove 1908

Superstition in Medicine by Hugo Magnus 1905

The Sages Key to Character at Sight by Frank Earl Ormsby 1919

Astrology and its connection with Vedanta by C Venkata Rao 1899

Ogilvie's Astrological Birthday Book - Is Your Birthday Today? by Leo Bernart 1915

Myths and Marvels of Astronomy by Richard Proctor 1878

Our Place among Infinities by Richard Proctor 1876

The Tree of Life - an Expose of Physical Regenesis on the Three-fold Plane of Bodily, Chemical and Spiritual Operation by George W Carey 1917

Astrology and Religion among the Greeks and Romans by Franz Cumont 1912

Shakespeare and Astrology by William Wilson 1903

The Cross of the Magi, an unveiling of the greatest of all the Ancient Mysteries by Frank C Higgins 1912 



The Astral Origin of the Emblems - the Zodiacal Signs, and the Astral Hebrew Alphabet by John Henry Broome 1881

Researches into the Lost Histories of America - The Zodiac shown to be an Old Terrestrial Map in which the Atlantic isle is delineated so that light can be thrown upon the obscure histories of the earthworks and ruined cities of America by WS Blacket 1884

A Dissertation on the Calendar and Zodiac of Ancient Egypt by W Mure 1832

Automatic or Spirit Writing by Sara Underwood 1896

Automatic Writing by June Downing 1915

The Mysteries of Freemasonry by John Fellows 1860

The Astral World Higher Occult Powers by Joel Tiffany 1910

Ellu, the Oracle of the _Other Self_ by Charles H Emerson 1912
 
Household Gods by Aleister Crowley

Plus you get the following book on the Kabbalah:


The Kabbalah - its doctrines, Development, and Literature by Christian Ginsburg 1920

The Doctrine and Literature of the Kabalah by Arthur Edward Waite 1902

The Secret Doctrine in Israel - a study of the Zohar and its connections by Arthur Edward Waite 1913

Jewish Mystics by Samuel Hirsch 1907

Jewish Mysticism by J Ableson 1913

Kabbalah, the Harmony of Opposites, a treatise elucidating Bible allegories and the significance of numbers by WJ Colville 1916

The Kabbalah Unveiled by S.L. MacGregor Mathers 1912

Sepher Yetzirah: The Book of Formation and the Thirty Two Paths of Wisdom by William W Westcott 1893

The Sepher Ha-Zohar - The Book of Light, articles in The Word 1912 by Nurho de Manhar

The Sepher Ha-Zohar - The Book of Light, continued, articles in The Word 1913 by Nurho de Manhar

The Cabala, its influence on Judaism and Christianity by Bernhard Pick 1913

The Kabbala: the True Science of Light by S Pancoast 1877

The Canon - an Exposition of the Pagan Mystery Perpetuated in the Cabala as the rule of all the arts by William Stirling 1897

The Golden Fleece - a book of Jewish cabalism by Thomas F Page 1888

Biblia Cabalistica - The Cabalistic Bible showing how the various numerical cabalas have been curiously applied to the Holy Scriptures, with numerous textual examples ranging from Genesis to the Apocalypse by Walter Begley 1903

The Hidden Treasures of Ancient Qabalah - The transmutation of passion into power by Elias Gewurz 1918

Mysteries of the Qabalah, Vol. 2 by Elias Gewurz 1922

The Cabbalists and other essays by Samuel A Hirsch 1922

Qabbalah: The Philosophical Writings of Solomon Ben Yehudah Ibn Gebirol Or Avicebron by Isaac Myer 1888

Numbers: Their Occult Power and Mystic Virtue By William Wynn Westcott 1890

The Blazing Star With an Appendix Treating of the Jewish Kabbala by William Batchelder Greene 1872

A Talmudic Miscellany - A Thousand and one extracts from the Talmud, the Midrashim and the Kabbalah by Paul Isaac Hershon 1880

The Kabala of Numbers by Sepharial 1920

The origin of letters and numerals according to the Sefer Yetzirah by Phineas Mordell 1914

The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion by Sir James George Frazer 1922

The Secret Doctrine of the Tarot by Paul Case 1917

The Doctrine of the Ether in the Kabbalah 1908

The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses - Moses' Magical Spirt Art 1880

Cabala - or the Rites and ceremonies of the Cabalist 1875

Anacalypsis: an attempt to draw aside the veil of the Saitic Isis, Volume 1 by Godfery Higgins 1836

Anacalypsis: an attempt to draw aside the veil of the Saitic Isis, Volume 2 by Godfery Higgins 1836

Sephardim - The history of the Jews in Spain and Portugal by James Finn 1841

The History of the Jews from the earliest period to the present time by Henry Hart Milman 1800, Volume 1

The History of the Jews from the earliest period to the present time by Henry Hart Milman 1800, Volume 2

The History of the Jews from the earliest period to the present time by Henry Hart Milman 1800, Volume 3

Pathological aspects of religions by Josiah Morse 1906 (has a section on the Qabala)

The Soul According to the Qabalah by C De Leiningen 1889

Sefer Maftea Shelomoh,(Book of the Key of Solomon) an exact facsimile of an original book of magic in Hebrew with illustrations 1914 by Hermann Gollancz (Hebrew with some English)

Babylonian Oil Magic in the Talmud and in the later Jewish literature by Samuel Daiches 1913

The Two Creation Stories in Genesis, A study of their Symbolism by James S Forrester-Brown 1920

Hebrew Literature, comprising Talmudic treatises, Hebrew melodies and The Kabbalah Unveiled by E Wilson 1901

The Pythagorean Triangle: Or, The Science of Numbers by George Oliver 1875
(Something of this sort was used by the Jewish cabalists and hence one of the rules of their cabala was called gemetria, or numeration, which was chiefly confined to the interpretation of their sacred writings. The letters of the Hebrew language being numerals, and the whole Bible being composed of different combinations of those letters, it was supposed that the correct meaning of difficult passages could only be ascertained by resorting to their numerical value.)

The Ancient Wisdom by Annie Besant 1918

Numbers & Letters, or the 32 Paths of Wisdom by Margaret B Peeke 1908

Sect, Creed and Custom in Judaism -a study in Jewish nomology 1907

An Esoteric Reading of Biblical Symbolism by Harrit T Bartlett 1916

The Cosmic Man and the Homo Signorum 1921

The Great Mother - a gospel of the eternally feminine by Carl Bjerregaard 1913

The Maternity of God 1906

The True Church of Christ Exoteric and Esoteric by John William Brodie-Innes 1892

The History of Magic - including a clear and precise exposition of its procedure, its rites and its mysteries by Eliphas Levi 1922

A New Light of Mysticism: Azoth; Or, The Star in the East by Arthur Edward Waite 1893

Modern Mystics and Modern Magic (poor quality) by Arthur Lillie 1894

A sketch of the history of Judaism and Christianity by GT Bettany 1892

The Kabbalah in Ancient Craft Masonry, article in the New Age magazine 1914

 gdixierose

Thursday, September 10, 2015

The Legend and Quest of the Holy Grail - 50 Books to Download



Only $3.00 -  You can pay using the Cash App by sending money to $HeinzSchmitz and send me an email at theoldcdbookshop@gmail.com with your email for the download. You can also pay using Facebook Pay in Messenger


Books Scanned from the Originals into PDF format

For a list of all of my disks click here Contact theoldcdbookshop@gmail.com for questions

Books are in the public domain. I will take checks or money orders as well.

Contents:

Alchemy and the Holy Grail, article in Baconiana 1907

The Buddha's Alms-Dish and the Holy Grail by Alfred Nutt 1889

The legend of the Holy Grail and the Perceval of Crestien by William Wells Newell 1902

Romances and epics of our Northern Ancestors, Norse, Celt and Teuton by W Wagner 1907 (The Amelungs, Legend of Dietrich and Hildebrand, The Nibelung story, The Hegeling legend, The Legend of Beowulf, Legends of the Holy Grail, Legend of Lohengrin, Romance of Tristram and Isolde)

In Quest of the Holy Grail - an introduction to the study of the legend by Sebastian Evans 1898

The legend of the Holy Grail by George McLean Harper 1893

The Hidden Church of the Holy Graal its Legends and Symbolism considered in their affinity with certain mysteries of initiation and other traces of a secret tradition in Christian times by Arthur E Waite 1909

Studies on the Legend of the Holy Grail by Alfred Nutt 1888

The Holy Grail by Alfred Tennyson 1901

The Holy Grail the silent teacher by Mary Hanford Finney Ford 1897

The Legend of the Holy Grail, article in Journal of American folklore 1898

Christ Lore - being the Legends, traditions, myths, symbols, customs & superstitions of the Christian church by Frederick William Hackwood 1902

The Social Evolution of Religion by George Cooke 1920

The Quest of the Holy Grail by Charles Bradley 1896

The High History of the Holy Graal by Sebastian Evans 1903

Malory's history of King Arthur and the Quest of the Holy Grail 1886

The Legend of the Holy Grail by Dorothy Gardiner 1905



King Arthur in history and Legend by William Jones 1914

The Legend of the Holy Grail as set forth in the frieze painted by Edwin A. Abbey 1904

The Holy Grail: Six Kindred Addresses and Essays by James Augustin Brown Scherer 1905

The Holy Grail: a study and a retrospect by JW Morris 1869

Myths & Legends of the Celtic Race by TW Rolleston 1911

The mystic vision in the Grail legend and in the Divine comedy by LA Fisher 1917

The Knights of the Round table; stories of King Arthur and the Holy Grail by William Henry Frost 1898

Joseph of Arimathie, otherwise called The romance of the Seint Graal by Walter Joseph 1871

Perronik the Innocent - The quest of the golden basin and diamond lance, one of the sources of stories about the Holy Grail, a Breton legend, after Souvestre by Kenneth Guthrie 1915

The Christ of the Holy Grail by James Bain 1909

The Story of the Grail and The Passing of Arthur by Howard Pyle 1910

Seynt Graal, or, The Sank Ryal. The History of the Holy Graal 1861, Volume 1 by Henry Lovelich

Seynt Graal, or, The Sank Ryal. The History of the Holy Graal 1861, Volume 2 by Henry Lovelich

Legend of the Holy Grail and the Parsifal of Richard Wagner by Helen K. Rhodes 1903

The San Greal: an inquiry into the origin and Signification of the Romances By Frederic Guillaume Bergmann 1870

The Mediaeval Mind - a History of the development of thought and emotion in the middle ages by Henry Osborn Taylor 1911, Volume 1

The Mediaeval Mind - a History of the development of thought and emotion in the middle ages by Henry Osborn Taylor 1911, Volume 2

Legends of the Middle Ages by HA Guerber 1896

The Middle Low German version of the legend of Mary Magdalen by Carl Eggert 1902

St Mary Magdalene and the Early Saints of Provence, article in The Month 1899

The life of Saint Mary Magdalen by Domenico Cavalca 1904

A Guide to the Middle English Metrical Romances by Anna Hunt Billings 1901

The Apocryphal and legendary life of Christ by James De Quincey Donehoo - 1903

Lives and legends of the Evangelists, Apostles, and other early Saints by  D'Anvers 1901

The Buddhas Alms-Dish and the Holy Grail, article in the Archeological Review 1889

King Arthur in history and legend by Lewis Jones 1914

The Legend of the Grail- article in Theosophical Siftings

The Mythology of the British Islands by Charles Squire 1905

Sir Gawain at the Grail Castle by Jessie Laidlay Weston - 1903

Studies in the fairy mythology of Arthurian romance by Lucy A Paton 1903

The Quest of the Holy Grail: an interpretation and a paraphrase By Ferris Greenslet 1902

The Old French Grail romance Perlesvaus: a study of its principal sources (1902)

An Introduction to the Science of Comparative Mythology and folklore by George Cox 1883

Curious myths of the middle ages by S Baring-Gould 1868

Traces of a Hidden Tradition in Masonry and mediæval mysticism by Isabel Cooper-Oakley 1900