THE MASONIC CAREER OF A. E. WAITE

BY BRO. R.A. GILBERT
ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM 
VOLUME 99 FOR THE YEAR 1986

INTRODUCTION

'In English Freemasonry the seal of a certain distinction attaches to the
name of Arthur Edward Waite, while it has proved of such appeal in
America that an important Grand lodge has conferred upon him, causa
honoris, one of its highest official positions.  Among his many publications
those on the mystical and symbolical aspects of the Secret Tradition in
Christian Times occupy a place apart, being things unattempted otherwise
in the records of research'.  So Waite referred to himself in the prospectus
for the revised edition of his book, The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry (1),
but it is doubtful if a single masonic scholar of his time - or since - could
be found who would agree that this self-adulation was justified.  During his
lifetime Waite was castigated, and with justification, for his peculiarities of
style, for his frequent errors of historical fact and for his cavalier attitude
and contemptuous references to his contemporaries.  All this must be
admitted against him, but he was also a highly original thinker who broke
completely new ground with his studies of what he termed the 'Secret
Tradition', while, for the esoteric school of thought within Freemasonry, he
has been the most pervasive and powerful influence of this century.  As
such, his writings deserve more careful and objective analysis than they
have received to date, and it is the purpose of this paper to encourage
such analysis by demonstrating, through a study of his masonic career,
both Waite's originality and his continuing influence.

Unlike many of his contemporaries, Waite was meticulous about recording
the minutiae of his life, and he took great care that all the records of his
work and career should be preserved after his death.  These records, now
kept in private hands and to which the present writer has been granted full
access, comprise his private diaries from 1909 to 1942, an extended diary
for 1902-1903, the Minute Books of his Rosicrucian Order, working notes
and proofs of many of his published books, and a long series of bound
volumes of his periodical contributions, reviews and masonic ephemera. 
Waite was also a prolific letter-writer, and I have been fortunate in being
able to examine his correspondence with the late Bro. Harold van Buren
Voorhis of New Jersey, with the late Bro. W.R. Semken (Supreme Magus,
1956-69 of the Societes Rosicruciana in Anglia), and his official
correspondence with the Independent Great Priory of Helvetia.  But, while
these manuscript sources are crucial for an understanding of Waite's life
and masonic activities, his ideas and attitudes towards Freemasonry are set
out openly and clearly in his published work (see Appendix B).  The events
of his early life are, however, obscure and difficult to establish in any detail
- almost certainly because he wished to hide them.

WAITE'S EARLY YEARS AND THE PRELUDE TO FREEMASONRY

In Waite's autobiography, Shadows of Life and Thought, (2) he states that
'The suppressio veri has been minimized so far as possible, while the
suggestio falsi is absent, I hope, throughout' (p. 5), but this is less than the
truth.  He was born in Brooklyn, New York, on 2 October 1857; his father,
Charles Waite, a captain in the American merchant marine, did die at sea;
his mother, Emma Lovell, the daughter of a wealthy London merchant
involved in the East India trade, did return to England shortly afterwards
with the two-year-old Arthur and his infant sister Frederika.  What he does
not say is that both he and his sister were illegitimate, for Captain Waite
and Emma Lovell were never married (3), and that it was not pride but her
family's ostracism that forced her to rear her children in poverty in a
succession of unfashionable suburbs in north and west London.  Rejection
by her family was almost certainly the cause, too, of her conversion to the
Roman Catholic Church - an event that was to have an even greater effect
upon Waite than his illegitimacy.  By virtue of his early life style Waite
turned in upon himself and, being unable to receive a formal education of
any kind, (4) he simultaneously educated himself and found a way of
escape by reading 'penny dreadfuls' and medieval romances. (5)

After his sister's death in 1874 Waite began to lose his faith in Roman
Catholicism, although he retained a great love for its ceremonial, utilizing
a number of elements of the Roman liturgy for the rituals which he
constructed in later life for his various secret Orders.  He turned instead
towards Spiritualism but found no spiritual consolation and moved on to the
Theosophical Society, which fascinated him although he disliked the
anti-Christian bias of the works of H. P. Blavatsky who was its driving force.
In this way he approached magic in general and Eliphas Levi (6) in
particular, and began to realize where his real dedications lay.  He had
already written and published many poems and imitation romances (7) but
was forced to recognize, reluctantly, his shortcomings as a writer of fiction
and entered instead upon his career as a critical expounder of the history
and doctrines of occultism in all its forms.  Waite was never happy with
popular occultism and he rejected from the start its follies and pretensions,
for he was an acute, if untrained, critic and recognized the need for
historical and textual accuracy if anything of value was to be drawn from his
chosen field.

His first essay in occultism was an anthology of the writings of Eliphas Levi
(8), which he followed with a study of the Rosicrucian manifestos, written
as a corrective to the lunacies of Hargrave Jennings. (9) The translations
from Levi contained a few incidental references to Freemasonry, but for his
Real History of the Rosicrucians Waite was obliged to consider the subject
more carefully.  He rejected the thesis of Buhle that Freemasonry was
derived from Rosicrucianism and set out the differences between the two
brotherhoods: 'Originally an association for the diffusion of natural morality,
it [Freemasonry] is now simply a benefit society. The improvement of
mankind and the encouragement of philanthropy were and are its
ostensible objects, and these also were the dream of the Rosicrucian but,
on the other hand, it has never aimed at a reformation in the arts and
sciences, for it was never at any period a learned society, and a large
proportion of its members have been chosen from illiterate classes.  It is
free alike from the enthusiasm and the errors of the elder Order,... it has
been singularly devoid of prejudices and singularly unaffected by the
crazes of the time ... It preaches a natural morality, and has so little interest
in mysticism that it daily misinterprets and practically despises its own
mystical symbols'. (10) In such a way Waite clearly exhibited his disdainful
attitude to the Craft, a disdain that he extended to the higher degrees for,
in a careful distinction between the Rose Croix degree and Rosicrucianism
proper, he is most unflattering to the former: 'when ill-informed persons
happen to hear that there are "Sovereign Princes of Rose-Croix," "Princes
of Rose-Croix de Heroden", &c, among the masonic brethren, they naturally
identify these splendid inanities of occult nomenclature with the mysterious
and awe-inspiring Rosicrucians. The origin of the Rose-Cross degree is
involved in the most profound mystery. Its foundation has been attributed
to Johann Valentin Andreas, but this is an ignorant confusion, arising from
the alleged connection of the theologican of Wurtemberg with the society
of Christian Rosencreutz'. (11)

Merely impolite references such as these could have been ignored, but not
so his final chapter 'Modern Rosicrucian Societies', which printed (pp.
416-22) the 'Rules and Ordinances of the Rosicrucian Society of England'
quoted verbatim from The Rosicrucian. (12) This was followed by an
accurate account of the society's history and concluded by Waite's own
sarcastic and unkind critical comments: 'The most notable circumstance
connected with this society is the complete ignorance which seems to have
prevailed amongst its members generally concerning everything connected
with Rosicrucianism.  This is conspicuous in the magazine which they
published'. (13) The Fratres of the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (S.R.I.A.)
were, not surprisingly, upset by this and the Secretary-General, Dr. William
Wynn Westcott, wrote to Waite threatening legal action if the 'Rules and
Ordinances' were not immediately withdrawn.  In his reply (14) Waite
apologized and offered to omit the offending text from subsequent editions
of the book.  Honour was thus satisfied but it is probable that Waite wrote
his apology solely to ensure that there should be no loss of sales to
potential purchasers within the S.R.I.A.; he would have known, as Westcott
certainly did," that The Rosicrucian had never been copyrighted.

Waite returned to the subject of Freemasonry in 1890 with an article in The
British Mail, (16) a journal that he edited for Horatio Bottomley.  In this brief
article, entitled simply 'Freemasonry', Waite's ambivalent attitude to the
fraternity is evident: 'The true object of the masonic fraternity differs from
the aims which have been ascribed to it precisely in that way in which a
universal institution would be expected to differ from the purpose of a
fanatical craze.  In its vulgar aspect its object is benevolence and
providence; in its esoteric significance it is an attempt to achieve the moral
regeneration of the human race; by the construction of a pure, unsectarian
system of morality, to create the perfect man'.  This secret purpose remains
inviolate because 'the vacuous nature of the great arcanum of allegorical
architecture is its permanent protection'. (17) His conviction that
Freemasonry had lost its way is stressed in The Occult Sciences", in which
he says: 'From a century of contradictory sources it borrows a
many-splendoured aureole of romance and of esoteric fable, which is
eminently liable to attract the soul-student at the threshold of mystic
research ... We must counsel him to overcome this gravitation of his desires
towards Masonry.  There is no light there; there is no secret of the soul
enshrined in the recesses of its suggestive ceremonial; whatever it may
have been in the past, at the present day it neither is, nor claims to be,
more than "a beautiful system of morality veiled in allegories and illustrated
by symbols"' (pp. 214-15).  Its true principles, according to Waite, are
these: 'The foundation of all transcendental philosophy is the doctrine of
interior regeneration, and its end is the Perfect Man. This also is the
foundation, and such the end, of Masonry' (p. 213).  These principles are
now obscured, but can yet be recovered. 'It has been corrupted by worldly
wealth and magnificence; it has turned away its eyes from its objects ... but
the principles are there, and let us hope that within the ranks of the
brotherhood, but without if not within, it will be possible to inform them with
new life' (p. 213). And the reader is left in little doubt that it is Waite who
can and will restore Freemasonry to its lost glory: 'At the same time, we ask
only a tentative faith. In a forthcoming "Esoteric History of Freemasonry' he
will find the entire subject exposed, with the necessary proofs, documents
and available sources of knowledge' (p. 214)."

Shortly before The Occult Sciences was published Waite had joined the
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a society of would-be magicians
founded in 1887 by Westcott, Dr. W. R. Woodman and S. L. MacGregor
Mathers, on the basis of manuscript rituals written in cipher and produced
under highly suspicious circumstances. (20) These were supplemented by
a series of letters - of even more questionable authenticity - allegedly
emanating from a Fraulein Anna Sprengel of Nuremberg (known within the
Order as Soror Sapiens Dominabitur Astris; each member was obliged to
take a pious motto, usually in Latin) who gave Westcott authority from the
German centre of the Order to found a Temple in London, to be known by
the name of Isis Urania.  The hierarchical structure of the Golden Dawn and
its system of grades paralleled those of the S.R.I.A. - which was scarcely
to be wondered at, given that all three founders were prominent members
of the S.R.I.A. - and were derived ultimately from the eighteenth-century
German Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross.  The grades and their
symbolism were far from secret as they had been printed in 1877 as 'two
tables illustrative of Rosicrucian Philosophy' in Kenneth Mackenzie's Royal
Masonic Cyclopedia. (21)

Waite was certainly aware of the Order's existence, and of its nature, before
he joined it in June 1891, (22) for he had used the motto of Fraulein
Sprengel under his own pseudonym of 'Grand Orient' on the title-page of
his Handbook of Cartomancy (23) in 1889.  Whether the pseudonym and
motto were intended to irritate Westcott, by the implication that his German
mentor was involved with the Grand Orient of France, or whether Waite
hoped that by using the motto he would increase sales of the book is
unclear, but they do indicate an irreverent attitude to the Order that he was
to maintain for a number of years.

Waite's initial sojourn in the Golden Dawn was short, apparently because
he was unhappy with the activities of some of his superiors: 'I began to
hear things which, in my several positions at the moment, told me that I
should be well out of the whole concern. It was not on the score of
morality, seeing that there were Fratres et Sorores; for on this ground it is
just to say that no breath of scandal ever arose in the G.'.D.'. during all that
period.  It was a question of things which had an equivocal legal aspect
and in which leading members of the Order should not have been
concerned, had I been informed accurately, as there seems no doubt that
I was'. (24) His scruples were eventually overcome however and, after three
years, during which time he issued a series of alchemical translations and
edited an occult journal entitled The Unknown World, he rejoined the
Golden Dawn on 17 February 1896, although he was not to enter the
Second Order, the Ordo Rosae Rubeae et Aureae Crucis, (25) until March
1899.  Waite's account of his return is inaccurate; he states that he was
urged to rejoin by Ralph Palmer-Thomas, an enthusiastic collector of
masonic degrees, who 'assured me that I was missing things that I should
value and of which I could have no notion at the stage of my demission. 
I had been moderately certain that there was little enough to miss; but his
keenness prevailed in the end, and I made an application to rejoin ... and
I returned to the dubious fold by the unanimous voice of the Fellowship'.
(26). But Palmer-Thomas did not join the Golden Dawn until November
1896 and it seems probable that it was the Second Order that he
encouraged Waite to enter, as he himself had done in April 1898.  Waite
goes on to say that it was his membership of the Second Order that led
him ultimately to seek initiation into Freemasonry, but there were other
influences at work upon him before this time.

DIANA VAUGHAN AND Devil-Worship in France

From 1886 onwards French anti-masonic feeling had been exacerbated by
the writings of all apparently reformed anti-clerical writer, Gabriel Jogand
Pages, who wrote under the pseudonym of Leo Taxil and began to issue
a series of outrageous and inflammatory works hostile to Freemasonry. (27)
Each successive work became more extravagant in its allegations of satanic
practices within Freemasonry, until the publication in 1891 of Y-a-t-il des
Femmes dans la Franc-Maconnerie?, in which 'Leo Taxil' described the
rituals of the 'New and Reformed Palladium', an androgynous and satanic
rite ultimately derived from Albert Pike, one of the most prominent of
American masons.  This nonsense was avidly swallowed by the French
anti-masonic lobby, as were the utterly fantastic tales of 'Dr. Bataille' (Dr.
Charles Hacks) in Le Diable au XIX' Siecle (1892-4).  Further fuel was
added to the anti-masonic fire with the revelations of the supposed head
of the 'New and Reformed Palladium', Miss Diana Vaughan, soi-disant
descendant of Thomas Vaughan the alchemist, and recent convert to
Rome.  Her Memoires d'une Ex-Palladiste (1895-7) equals the work of 'Dr.
Bataille' in its ridiculous tales of satanic wonders, but surpasses it in libels
upon living English freemasons. She claimed that 'Le chef actuel des
Luciferiens anglais est M.le docteur William- Wynn Westcott, demeurant a
Londres, Camden-Road, No. 396 ... c'est lui le Supreme Mage de la
Rose-Croix socinienne pour l'Angleterre.  Ses adjoints sont: en premier
degri, M. John-Lewis Thomas (Senior Sub-Magus), qui est aussi le tresorier
general de le Fraterniti; en second degri, M. MacGregor Mathers (Junior
Sub-Magus)'. (28) This is followed by a list of members of the High Council
of the S.R.I.A., all described as chiefs of the 'Third Luciferian Order, and
including John Yarker, who is also correctly described as head of the Rite
of Memphis and Misraim.  By this time, and with such allegations, the
controversy over Diana Vaughan had spread to England, where Waite took
a leading role in the counter-attacks upon this suppositions lady freemason. 
A series of detailed rebuttals of her claims was published in the
correspondence columns of the Spiritualist journal Light, (29) and Waite
then analyzed the whole of the literature about the Palladium in his book
Devil-Worship in France, (30) demonstrating conclusively the fictitious
nature of the whole affair - and this a year before Jogand-Pages admitted
that it had been a hoax designed to embarrass the French anti-masons.

Waite had described the Diana Vaughan affair as 'among the most
extra-ordinary literary swindles of the present, perhaps of any, century' (31)
and claimed, with justice, to have 'unveiled the mass of fraud, falsehood
and forgery contained in their depositions, and has placed the position of
the Roman Catholic Church in regard to the whole conspiracy in an
unenviable light'. (32) He had also earned the gratitude of both Westcott
and Yarker for refuting the outrageous allegations of their involvement with
Satanism, and for giving a far kinder description of the S.R.I.A. than he had
done nine years before in The Real History of the Rosicrucians. (33) Yarker,
especially, was impressed.  In a brief review of Devil-Worship in France, in
The Freemason for 31 October 1896, he said: 'Mr. Waite's well-written book
is as interesting as a romance, which in some sort it is, and though a
non-mason, the Order has fallen into good hands, and owes him some
gratitude; the book is critical, scholarly and dispassionate'.  He repeated his
praise in an article, 'Freemasonry and Devil-Worship', in the same journal
two weeks later (11 November), describing it as a 'most interesting book,
written in critical and dispassionate style by a non-mason, the end of which
is that Mr. Waite pronounces the charges to be "lying myths"'. Thus pleased
with Waite, Yarker was soon to have further and more significant contact
with him.

Non-masonic reviews of Devil Worship in France were generally favourable,
(34) although they tended to suggest that the author had taken a
sledgehammer to crack a nut, and popular interest in masonic Satanists
waned rapidly so that Waite's sequel, Diana Vaughan and the Question of
Modern Palladism, (35) was never published.  It is, nonetheless, worth
quoting its conclusion for it shows a significant change in Waite's attitude
to Freemasonry: 'It is a satisfaction to be able to add that the reception of
my book among masons has not at all justified the common accusation of
languid interest shown by the rank and file of the brethren towards all that
concerns the Craft.  It is sometimes said that the fraternity in England
possesses no literature because masons fail to support any enterprise of
the kind.  Possibly the average brother is not a more serious personage
than the average man anywhere, and I must admit that it is frequently the
members of the higher and so-called spurious grades who take a literary
interest in the Order, but personally I have no cause to complain of what
has resulted from my first attempt to interest and vindicate the
institution'.(36)

This change on Waite's part had already been perceived by the more rabid
of Roman-Catholic anti-masons who saw him as a prime mover of the
satanic conspiracy: 'It is perfectly apparent that during the last thirty years
the English leading masonic knights, whether in Europe or America, have
imbibed more or less of the magical teachings of the French Magician
(Eliphas Levi), and we do not known anyone who contributed to this result
more than Mr. A.E. Waite did in England', and 'No one has contributed as
he did to the propagation of mystico-magic among the English occultists
in or out of Freemasonry' (37) Colonel Ratton, in his pseudonymous and
rather silly attack upon Freemasonry, The X-rays in Freemasonry, (38) went
further and claimed that Waite 'professes himself to be both a "mystic" and
a mason' (p. 60) which claim is manifestly untrue - although he was here
slightly less off the mark than when he claimed that 'Waite is a Rosicrucian,
and cannot be suspected of Catholic leanings' (p. 110).  He was evidently
unfamiliar with both Waite's life and his published works.

MARTINISM AND THE ROAD TO THE CRAFT

After the diversions of the Diana Vaughan affair, Waite returned to his more
serious literary pursuits.  He was becoming increasingly interested in the
philosophy of Louis Claude de Saint-Martin, 'The Unknown Philosopher'
(1743-1803), and in the newly-created Martinist Order of the French
occultist 'Papus' (Dr. Gerard Encausse, 1865-1916).  He wrote to Yarker for
advice about joining the Martinist Order; Yarker was enthusiastic: 'I found
an objection in the Masonic branch of the Order of St. Martin to receive a
non-mason, and I have no doubt that it would be found inconvenient both
to you and them.  However that need not interfere with my conferring the
Order upon you as I had it myself from a non-mason, the Baron Surdi of
Prague. The ritual is properly in four books - I enclose you the first, and you
need only send me a short note that you conform soundly entirely to carry
out the Ob ... You can then proceed on your own account to form a
non-masonic branch, and when you have done something I daresay you
might get a Charter from "Papus" for a London body'. (39)

Waite was delighted at this response and sent his obligation by return,
expressing at the same time his own wish to promote the Order: 'I thank
you most cordially for the honour which you have done me in conferring
upon me the Order of St. Martin.  The fact that I am not a mason makes
that honour somewhat exceptional, and I can but value it the more highly
in consequence.  I entirely conform to the obligation required of the
candidate, and I hereby pledge myself never to reveal the name of my
Initiator to anybody or to make it public in what manner soever.  I have
read with great interest and have carefully transcribed the MS. containing
the first two books of the ritual, and I return it herewith.  I shall look forward
to the receipt of the third. I trust that I shall prove useful, as I shall certainly
endeavour to be active, in the diffusion of the Order among occult students
who are not masons'. (40)

No correspondence with 'Papus' survives from this period and it is not
possible to determine whether or not Waite applied for a Charter but, in an
address to the International Congress (of Spiritualists) in 1898, 'Papus'
referred to the progress of his Order, which had added two new Martinist
'Formations' in England during 1897. (41) One of these may well have
involved Waite, although in 1902 he broke completely with 'Papus' when
he learned of the bad odour in which the latter was held by orthodox
masonic bodies.  However his enthusiasm for the doctrines of Saint-Martin
remained and in 1899 he completed a major study which is still the only
significant English work on Saint-Martin. (42)

The doctrines of Saint-Martin are diffuse and difficult to elucidate with any
clarity but Waite succeeded admirably in his presentation.  It is
unnecessary here to expound them except to record that Waite treated
Martinism as 'a body of mystic doctrine, and not a masonic rite devised by
Saint-Martin to replace the Elect Cohens'. (43) He was also sceptical of
'Papus's' claims as to Saint-Martin's masonic connections and advised his
readers 'to bear in mind that upon historical questions the criterion of
evidence is not invariably so rigorous in France as it is in England'.  (44)
What is most significant about Louis Claude de Saint-Martin is that it
represents a turning-point in Waite's career, for it was effectively the first of
his many books on what he called 'The Secret Tradition' and it was
Martinism rather than the Golden Dawn that brought him into Freemasonry.

Louis Claude de Saint-Martin was published in May 1901 but review copies
had been sent out several months earlier.  On 25 May Waite wrote to
'Papus', advising him that a second copy of the book was on its way from
the publisher, and expressing satisfaction that 'Papus' liked the book: 'I
learned with very sincere satisfaction that you had formed a good opinion
of the book. There is no opinion that I could hold in such high estimation
as you have every means of knowing and have done such admirable work
yourself in the same direction'. (41) But 'Papus' had offered a more tangible
reward than mere praise: 'Please accept my best thanks for your kind offer
to obtain for me the degree of Doctor from the Ecole Hermetique. I shall
value the distinction highly'. (46) The degree was quite worthless but Waite
did use it on one occasion much later when he wished to use a
pseudonym - 'Doctor of Hermetic Science' - to hide his connection with an
anthology of the writings of Andrew Jackson Davis, an early American
spiritualist." The first copy of the book on Saint-Martin sent to 'Papus' had
almost certainly been forwarded to Edouard Blitz, the head of the Martinist
Order in America, who became a frequent correspondent of Waite and who
encouraged him to become a freemason. Waite refers to Blitz in his
autobiography as one 'who had been long and intimately acquainted with
the occult schools of Paris, but was a mason under an orthodox
obedience, probably in the United States', (48) and adds 'I cannot
remember whether I was already a mason when he and I began to talk of
these things in letters, or whether what I learned from him decided me to
seek Initiation'. (49)

As will be seen, what he learned was of yet another source of secret rites,
and it was unquestionably the continuing quest for rituals that led Waite to
Freemasonry.  He was already dissatisfied with the rituals of the Golden
Dawn in both form and content, and he had determined to reshape them
and to divert the course of the Order down mystical rather than magical
paths; in this endeavour he was supported by Marcus Worsley Blackden,
a fellow adept and amateur Egyptologist: 'A day came when Blackden and
I began to think seriously of Freemasonry and to wonder whether a deeper
insight into the meaning and symbolism of Ritual would be gained by
joining the most predominant and world-wide combination of Rites . . .
There is no question that an important side of the tentative consideration
was whether, were such a course adopted, the Order of the Golden Dawn
might profit thereby'. (50) This was not exactly the whole truth for Waite
already knew enough of masonic ceremonial and its symbolism to satisfy
the needs of any reconstituted rituals within the Golden Dawn, and his
further statement, 'that I did not fail to anticipate an extreme probability of
meeting in the high grade circles, if not in Craft and Arch, with at least a
few others of our own dedications, to whom symbolism spoke a language
and ritual opened a realm of grace', (51) gives a wrong emphasis for those
few freemasons who were 'of our own dedications' were already within the
confines of the Golden Dawn.

The most probable reason for Waite's seeking admission to Freemasonry
at this time is a growing awareness on his part through his correspondence
with Blitz, that only by passing through the Craft degrees and the Holy
Royal Arch would he be able to enter those higher degrees whose rites he
so eagerly desired. To this end he sought the help of Palmer-Thomas, who
'offered high encouragement; and when the time came he prepared our
way and was duly present as a guest when Blackden and I were at length
made masons at Runymede Lodge in the Province of Bucks'. (52) And so,
on 19 September 1901, at the age of 43, Waite was initiated in Runymede
Lodge No. 2430 at Wraysbury in Buckinghamshire.

WAITE AND CRAFT MASONRY

As a courtesy to Runymede Lodge both Waite and Blackden were raised,
on 10 February 1902, in St. Marylebone Lodge No. 1305 and, as neither of
them knew anyone in either lodge, it must be conjectured, in the absence
of further information, (53) that Palmer-Thomas was a personal friend of G.
S. Beeching who was then both Master of Runymede and Secretary of St.
Marylebone.

Initiation into Craft Masonry brought no spiritual enlightenment to Waite:
'For myself it was a curious experience in more ways than one, and
perhaps especially because it was so patent throughout that I could have
told the Worshipful Master all that he was communicating to me.  My
Initiation was nothing therefore but a means to an end: I awaited the
Grades beyond'. (54) He was not enthusiastic about his brother masons:
'I like that phrase "Brother of the Appearance of Light" applied to the
masonic brethren to show that their attributed illumination is but
phantasmal', (51) nor about the formal management of a lodge: 'The
revised Byelaws of the Runymede Lodge have been sent me.  It is not to
be expected that they should make for the Life Eternal and I suppose that
they are not more eternally voided of all importance than other legislative
documents framed for lodges and chapters by "hollow hearts and empty
heads". (56) He also disliked office: 'I had a hideous experience yesterday
at the Runymede Lodge, on the occasion of the installation of a new
Master. I took the last possible train which would have brought me in time
for my part of the ceremony and arrived only in time for the dinner.  I was
made Steward in my absence and this caused the dinner itself to be very
nearly intolerable and some slight functions afterwards caused me to lose
the last train'. (57)

But despite these inner reservations he was popular with his
fellow-members of Runymede Lodge, who saw him in a dual role: primarily
as the London Manager of Horlick's Food Company (a post he held from
1900 to 1909) and, less importantly, as an enthusiast for esoteric subjects. 
In 1907 G.S. Beeching, an adept at doggerel verse, referred to both roles
when describing the Senior Deacon:

Here am I - my name is Waite,
Rosicrucian up to date,
One hot night I had a dream,
Dreamt I swam in Malted Cream. (58)

Waite, too, produced verse for Runymede, albeit of a heavier kind, and his
'Ode of Wlelcome' in 1909 records his own quests as well as the drinking
habits of his fellows:

Give me another glass - who do the speaking -
I've look'd for Secret Rites from zone to zone;
High grades and orders answer to my seeking,
But there's no Warrant and Diploma
Which bears the incense sweetness and aroma
Of Runymede's - my first, my very own! (59)

In 1910 Waite was installed as Master of Runymede Lodge, and during his
year of office he celebrated the Winter Dinner of the lodge, on 1 February
1911, 'by conferring on all brethren present the Great Mystery of the Vault
of the Adepts (under dispensation from the unknown Superior of the
Sodality of the Shades)'. (60) This was the closest he came to introducing
his brethren to the mysteries of the Golden Dawn, although he had
persuaded Bernard Springett, (61) a member of Runymede from 1901 to
1905, to join the Independent & Rectified Rite of the Golden Dawn in 1910,
and he introduced Percy Bullock, a prominent member of the Isis Urania
Temple, to Freemasonry via Runymede Lodge.  Bullock was initiated on 14
June 1904, but resigned from membership in the following year.  Waite
regularly attended meetings of Runymede Lodge until 1920 when he moved
from Ealing in West London to Ramsgate in Kent, after which time his
association with Craft Masonry faded although he remained a member of
his mother lodge until his death.

THE HIGHER DEGREES AND THE SECRET TRADITION

As soon as he had been raised, Waite began his quest for higher degrees
in earnest.  On 10 April 1902 he and Blackden were admitted to the grade
of Zelator in the S.R.I.A., having been proposed by Palmer-Thomas and
seconded by Westcott - both of whom were keen to have Waite as a
member. The two new Rosicrucians then proceeded to the Holy Royal
Arch, being exalted in Metropolitan Chapter No. 1507 on 1 May 1902,
following this one week later with their Installation as Knights Templar at the
Consecration of the King Edward VII Preceptory.  Here they rested, and
Waite prepared for a journey to Switzerland and for reception into the one
Rite he craved the most: the Rigime Ecossais et Rectifie and its grade of
Chevalier Bienfaisant de la Cite Sainte (C.B.C.S.).

As a result of his earlier correspondence with Blitz, Waite had come to see
the Regime Ecossais et Rectifie as maintaining more than any other rite the
essence in ritual form of that secret tradition that 'tells us not alone that the
Soul "cometh from afar" and that the Soul returns whence it came, but it
delineates the Path of Ascent'. (61a) The theory that all esoteric practices
and traditions, whether alchemy, the Hebrew Kabbalah, the legends of the
Holy Grail, Rosicrucianism, Christian mysticism or Freemasonry, were
secret paths to a direct experience of God had been developed by Waite
over many years.  He was convinced that the symbolism in each of these
traditions had a common root and a common end, and that their correct
interpretation would lead to a revelation of concealed ways to spiritual
illumination.  In his published works it is difficult to find this theory of the
secret tradition clearly expressed, but it is put quite succinctly in The Secret
Tradition in Freemasonry: (62) 'The Secret Tradition contains, firstly, the
memorials of a loss which has befallen humanity; and, secondly, the
records of a restitution in respect of that which was lost ... the keepers of
the tradition perpetuated it in secret by means of Instituted Mysteries and
cryptic literature' (vol. 1, P. ix).

In itself 'The Secret Tradition is the immemorial knowledge concerning
man's way of return whence he came by a method of the inward life' (vol. 
II, p. 379).  Common to all its forms is the evidence that 'testifies to (a) the
aeonian nature of the loss; (b) the certitude of an ultimate restoration; (c)
in respect of that which was lost, the perpetuity of its existence somewhere
in time and the world, although interned deeply; (d) and more rarely its
substantial presence under veils close to the hands of all' (vol.  I, p. xi). 
For Freemasonry 'that loss and restoration are essential . . . the middle
term is absence, out of which quest arises.  When one of the triad is
wanting, whether implicitly or explicitly, the grade is not masonic' (vol. 11,
p. 379).  He further believed that a proper understanding of the tradition in
Freemasonry would enable him to construct rituals of his own devising, the
working of which would lead all those who took part to a spiritual
enlightenment of their own.

It was thus of crucial importance for Waite to gain access to the Rectified
Rite which represented, par excellence, the secret tradition in practice but,
while he prepared the ground for his visit to Geneva, he was also collecting
other rites and planning the moves that would lead him in 1903 to gain
control of the faction-ridden Golden Dawn. (63) Contrary to appearances,
he was not driven by a desire for power; all his eager gathering of masonic
rites was for the dual purpose of bringing together the various lines of what
he saw as a type of 'Masonic Apostolic Succession' and the subsequent
quarrying of their rituals for the benefit of his own projected Order.

Waite had no intention of encroaching on the jurisdiction of Grand lodge,
Grand Chapter, Great Priory or Supreme Council, and sought possession
only of rites that were moribund, quasi-masonic or unrecognized in
England.  They were to be brought together under the control of a 'Secret
Council of Rites' that had been created by himself with the aid of Blackden
and Palmer-Thomas, at the latter's home on 2 December 1902: 'I proposed
that we should constitute ourselves a Secret Council of Rites which was
carried with great joy, it being further agreed that the news of this Council
should never transpire.  We shall be indeed an occult Order of Unknown
Philosophers - a concealed kind' (64) At a later meeting the C.B.C.S. was
specifically excluded although it was restored to the Council's control when
a Constitution was finally drawn up in April 1903 (see Appendix D for the
whole text of this curious document).

Greater satisfaction was anticipated by Waite from the C.B.C.S. than he had
so far gained from the Knights Templar. 'I attended this evening the
meeting of the Templar Preceptory [King Edward VII] when two installations
took place. It is by far the most interesting of all of the Christian chivalries
with the rites of which I am acquainted, though such gleanings as I can
make concerning the Perfect Knights' charges seem to hope for greater
significance therein'. (65) He was also far from adept when he 'tried to play
at toy soldiers', (66) finding that 'my feet refused to do anything that was
required of them ... By a curious fatality I always turn the wrong way.  I do
not know why this should be, and really it is very confusing.  I do not know
whether I am proud of my infirmity like St. Paul or ashamed like the
ordinary individual when convinced of his stupidity'. (67) His own rituals
were to be easier to perform.

As a prelude to his Swiss journey Waite travelled to Scotland to receive the
Early Grand Rite of 47 degree which he felt would be of some use to him:
'So far as cyclopedias and masonic historians are concerned, this rite is
utterly unknown, nor have I so much as met with the sequence of its
grades.  Obscure or not 47 degree means at least 44 rituals which cannot
fail of material for my paper against the time when I shall unsay all that has
till now been said as to the symbolic builders'. (68) His visit did not begin
well: 'My projected journey to Scotland ... took place by the midnight train
on Friday and I reached Kilmarnock in the early morning, as might well
have been expected, amidst drenching rain'. (69) And it was afternoon
before he met his host, Colonel Spence, 'coming from the station through
a sea of mud'. Spence did not impress him 'as being of any particular
attainments or of more than average education', nor did the other
Kilmarnock masons meet his expectations: 'A considerable proportion of
them belonged to the mechanic order while one or two looked as if they
were shepherds'.  Waite was also disappointed with the ceremony: 'It was
proposed to confer upon me the 41st Degree called Priestly Order or White
Mason. I went through an almost indescribable initiation, the officiating
brethren wearing white surplices and holding small pieces of tallow candle
in their hands. There was no attempt at reciting the ritual from memory,
books being used for the purpose and the ceremony was simply muddled
through ... The Obligation Degree was administered to me with very curious
variations on the part of the Grand Master so as to enable me to receive
anything else which I wanted, but it is quite impossible to make any clear
inference from the wording of the pledge. At the time I took it I understood
it to refer only to the degrees of what they are pleased to term White
Masonry, but it was explained to me afterwards that it was binding also as
regards all the forty-seven degrees and I think for Memphis and Mizraim as
well as anything in the way of adoptive Orders and perhaps the Royal
Order of Scotland'. 

Worse was to follow: 'After the meeting I was introduced to my brethren
and, a good deal to my dismay, Colonel Spence then engineered the
assembly, still through the pouring rain, back to my hotel where in a small
smoking-room he ordered drinks for all; they then proceeded to make
speeches on the subject of my visit to Scotland, on my literary labours,
etc., and to these I had to reply.  The whole experience was incredibly
squalid and yet more curious than I can give an account of in a hasty
description'.  But he had obtained the rites he sought in embarrassing
abundance: 'I purchased the rituals of the Early Grand Rite from the 4th to
the 44th Degrees and ... found I was also in possession of the Order of the
Temple for Scotland which, having regard to my affiliation with the Grand
Priory of England, was the very last thing I wanted ... in like manner I am
in possession by the most heterodox means possible of the Mark Degrees
of Masonry, of a rival Royal Arch Knight of Malta, Red Cross of Rome and
Constantine and even the Royal Ark Mariners ... If the fact that I had been
affiliated should transpire generally it will no doubt lead to a good deal of
trouble'.

His reception in Geneva was to be a happier affair for his path had been
smoothed by Edouard Blitz who, in his capacity of Great Prior for America,
both introduced Waite to the Rectified Rite and highly recommended him.
In February 1903 Waite received the preliminary forms of admission and
pledge and a series of Questions d'Ordre, all of which he duly completed,
signed and returned - with a curious error; he gave his year of birth as
1859. In his replies to the questions he stated his belief 'that there is a
Masonry which is behind Masonry and is not commonly communicated in
lodges, though at the right time it is made known to the right person.  But
it is requisite that he should come in by the door and should pass through
the preliminary grades to attain the ineffable ends', (70) and in his covering
letter he intimated that he 'was going among the brethren of Geneva to
learn and not to teach'. (71) He was also 'required to choose (1) a mystic
name; (2) a motto, also symbolical; (3) armorial bearings prior to my being
armed as a knight in the secret conclave.  I have chosen therefore as
follows: (1) Eques a longe aspiciens; (2) Sacramentum Regis abscondere
bonum est; (3) argent, a cross sable, between four roses gule, which is, of
course, purely Rosicrucian and is assigned to me by myself for that
reason'. (72)

Thus prepared, he travelled to Geneva, arriving early on 28 February 1903,
to be received by Joseph Leclerc (1835-1927), Great Prior of the
Independent Great Priory of Helvetia.  On the evening of the same day
Waite received the two grades of Squire Novice and Knight Beneficent of
the Holy City although, under normal circumstances, a period of one year
was supposed to elapse between receiving the first and the second.
Waite's account of the evening emphasizes his innate snobbery: 'The
gathering from an English point of view was exceedingly mixed, consisting
(a) of respectable tradesmen, as e.g. booksellers; (b) members of the
French parliament; (c) persons who had the appearance of Genevan
gentlemen of good position; (d) an Englishman holding some official
appointment under this government; (e) a few who might have belonged
to a class inferior to the tradesmen so far as their appearance goes; (f)
various representatives of the Genevan government.  I had throughout
especial marks of kindness and consideration from all those who were
evidently the better placed of the gathering'. (73) The ceremonies however
greatly impressed him: 'the ceremony throughout was read or recited, the
rituals not being committed to memory as in English Masonry.  The effect
was in reality much better, but it is possible that the ritual lends itself
especially to this kind of delivery as it was more narrative and exhortatory
than are the Craft degrees.  I wish in any case to record that as regards
both grades the rites could have scarcely been simpler, more impressive
or worked with more smoothness and dignity.'

Later he found the ceremony of raising to the grade of Knight Beneficent
to be 'done very beautifully and very affectingly' and noticed in the
Profession of Faith 'the stress which it laid upon the doctrine of the Fall of
Man and the distinctly Martinistic flavour which characterized the wording
of the doctrine and was apparent also in other parts of this document'.  On
the following day he returned to England well-pleased and anticipating the
news that finally reached him early in May: 'The Helvetian Priory in its
session of 16 April has agreed to confer upon me the full powers required
for the establishment of the Secret Order in England and the Colonies and
that the necessary papers will be sent to me in due course'. (74) This had
been his real object in going to Geneva, as he had confided to his diary in
the previous October: 'I will not undertake a journey to Geneva ... merely
for affiliation with that rite, much as I desire to possess it.  I must have its
custody for England, and it will be something to possess a rite which
requires no reconstitution, as in the case of Martinism ... If I do secure the
Rite of the Holy City, there will be trouble, I suppose, in this case with the
English Council of Rites . .. But unless some such connection based on a
reasonable modus vivendi should suit my purpose, I will frighten the Grand
Council with the rumour of secret associations behind my rite and they
shall be glad to leave it alone'. (75)

His plans for the C.B.C.S. in England were destined to come to nothing,
however, for, although he translated the rituals into English (76) and was
received in 1907 into the degrees of Profes and Grand Profes - by
correspondence, he did not make a second visit to Geneva; (77) he made
no attempt to work the two grades that had been conferred upon him and
the only dissemination of the rite in England was, according to G.E.W.
Bridge, by 'Waite personally and through his literary references to the Rite'.
(78) Bridge felt, however, that 'this advance has developed itself naturally
and smoothly and I'd let it continue on the same quiet lines'. (79) They
were quiet lines indeed for Waite's sole activity had been to recommend
B.H. Springett, in 1924, and Bridge, in 1929, to the authorities in Geneva.
In the letter recommending Bridge he explained his inactivity: 'There was
a time when I hoped to found the Regime Ecossais et L'Ordre Interieur in
England ... The jealousy of the High Grades here made the scheme
impossible, and I look sometimes with sore regret on the great parchment
which is the evidence of my appointment'. (80) In the same letter Waite
doubted that Bridge 'could do anything of a practical kind for the
furtherance of the Order in this country ... I should have done it long since,
had any path opened'.  He was yet pleased when the rite was
re-established in America in 1934 (Blitz's Charter having fallen into
abeyance), for the two brethren concerned, Dr. William Moseley Brown and
J. Ray Shute, had learned of the rite and its significance through Waite's
writings.

Waite still believed that he was the sole authority for disseminating the rite
in England, but the Independent Great Priory of Helvetia did not see him
in that light and they did not inform him when, in 1938, fearful of the Axis
threat to Masonry in Switzerland, they had agreed to grant a Charter to the
Great Priory of England and Wales for the C.B.C.S. in England.  He learned
of the new Charter through a letter from Shute, and expressed his surprise
and annoyance in his reply: 'It should be clearly understood, in view of
other rumours, that I have held for many years, and still hold, the Warrant
of the Helvetian Priory which placed the Rite in my hands .. . You might tell
me further about those 'printed reports that the Templar Great Priory of
England has taken over the C.B.C.S.' in this country.  I have heard nothing
about it and cannot imagine what it means, as there is nothing less likely
in the world of Masonry than that it should attempt to work them here'. (81)
With the failure to propagate its most important rite, Waite's 'Secret Council
of Rites' had, masonically speaking, long since come to naught.  He had
attempted to resurrect it in 1922 but the attempt came to nothing; there
were, however, other ways to propagate the secret tradition.

Ever since his marriage in 1888 Waite had officially styled himself as an
author, despite his involvements in publishing and with the Horlick's Food
Company, and it was through his books that he was best known to most
of his masonic brethren.  His authority in all matters occult was widely
accepted, as was his great knowledge of the esoteric byways of
Freemasonry, and this undoubtedly helped him to gain entrance to the
various lodges, chapters and preceptories he sought to join - all of which
contained potential converts to his ideas.  Once converted they tended to
seek admission to the Independent & Rectified Rite of the Golden Dawn
and to its successor, the Fellowship of the Rosy Cross, but it must be
stressed that Waite never actively sought recruits.  He did, however, seize
every opportunity to propagate his doctrine of the secret tradition, not only
through his lectures (see Appendix C) but also when speaking informally.

His first masonic venture into public debate was at a meeting of Quatuor
Coronati Lodge on 3 October 1902, when he commented on E.J. Castle's
paper, 'The Reception (Initiation) of a Knight Templar', (82) and, with all the
authority of a knight of five months' standing (Castle was not a member of
the Order of the Temple), asked a series of questions about Castle's
sources.  The paper was unexceptionable and Castle's answers more than
adequate, but Waite was convinced of his own superior knowledge and
scornful of the members of Quatuor Coronati Lodge.  He recorded in his
diary that the paper was 'ill-conceived, ill-defined and altogether male
sonans.  These people know not whither they are going.  I asked certain
questions at the end but there was no one to answer them.  These are not
brethren; they are simulacra - "antic figures which a juggler dances"'. (83)
Later he referred to the paper again: 'Of course I must not say what I think
really - that it is an incoherent and slovenly paper ... I begin to see very
clearly how much a real history of the Templars is wanted in England to set
matters right, so far as they can be set, once and for all.  This is of course
a scheme of my own doing for my seminal work on the secret doctrine of
religious societies'. (84) Waite's strictures on Castle's paper were, of
course, quite unjust but his diary entry is highly significant in that it reveals
how his unpublished Esoteric History of Freemasonry was being
transformed into The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry.

MAGNUM OPUS I

Before this great work was published Waite had written a series of articles
on the origins of Freemasonry and on the more obscure of the higher
degrees, for his own journal, Horlick's Magazine; these were then published
in Studies in Mysticism (1906).  He followed these with a paper on 'The
Place of Masonry in the Rites of Initiation' for the S.R.I.A. and a series of
papers on Templar symbolism and history, delivered between 1908 and
1910 at the Sancta Maria Preceptory, of which Waite had been a founding
member in 1906.  All these were, however, but a foretaste of the glory that
was to come.  In July 1911 Waite's 'first contribution to masonic literature'
appeared, seeming to him 'in respect of production - the most beautiful
work which has ever been issued in any land or language on the masonic
subject'. (85) But it was the contents not the covers that mattered.  'As the
Mark restored to Masonry the lost notion of Christhood, so did the Royal
Arch bring it back to Trinitarian Doctrine . . . These were convictions which
lay behind my first contribution to masonic literature'. (86) It also set out in
exhaustive detail his theory of the secret tradition and it was this that
brought him a host of favourable reviews.

The non-masonic press praised the book while not understanding it," the
occult press enthused over it, and the masonic press approved of it and
commended it to its readers.  W.L. Wilmshurst produced reviews in all three
categories, for The Bookman, The Occult Review and The Freemason, all
being favourable.  This can only be presumed in the case of The Occult
Review, for Wilmshurst there achieved the almost impossible feat of writing
in a style at once more verbose and more incomprehensible than Waite at
his worst. (88) In The Freemason he claimed that the book 'unquestionably
exceeds in importance any that has yet appeared in regard to what may be
called the problem of Freemasonry', praised Waite and added that 'the
whole Craft is deeply obligated to him for presenting it with so admirable
a mirror and exegesis of its own doctrine'.  Another favourable review
appeared in Ars Quatuor Coronatorum 25, (pp. 133-5) but it was, perhaps,
less than objective, being written by B.E.J. Edwards, who was a
long-standing member of the Golden Dawn.  The only carping note was
struck by John Yarker who reviewed the work for The Co-Mason (vol. 4, pp.
29-32, 1912).  He was upset because Waite 'does not seek to hide his
contempt, often expressed in uncourteous language, against all who differ
from him, or otherwise against those degrees from which he could extract
nothing to confirm his theories, and the writer of this review comes in, with
many better men, for a "slating"', and he rightly criticized the factual errors
and condemned Waite for his sneers at 'the thing called Co-Masonry': 'We
may not like Co-Masonry; for one thing, it affords less opportunity for the
gourmandizing proclivities of the ordinary freemason, but the system has
come to stay and we might treat it with civility'.

Most co-masons were, however, quite happy with Waite.  The following
issue of their journal contained a second and highly favourable notice of
the book, written by Revd. A.H.E. Lee, who was an active member of
Waite's Golden Dawn but who preferred Co-Masonry to the legitimate Craft.
He also, and quite inexplicably, was among the 'few persons who
attempted to carry on by themselves' when, in 1914, Waite 'put an end to
the Isis-Urania or Mother Temple, owing to internecine feuds on the
authenticity of documents'. (89) Other co-masons supported Waite and,
after he founded his new Order, the Fellowship of the Rosy Cross, in the
following year, he drew more of its members from Co-Masonry than from
Freemasonry proper. The co-masons were also to prove more friendly
when Waite's second magnum opus appeared.

MAGNUM OPUS II

As we have seen, Waite had an inordinately high opinion of his own
scholarship, and a correspondingly low one of the more usually recognized
masonic scholars. 'Brother R. F. Gould, who has written a rather illiterate,
albeit pretentious work on Freemasonry, and writes also a rather illiterate
letter, asks me to suggest some picture or portrait to illustrate a chapter on
Rosicrucianism in some concise history of the fraternity which he is about
to publish', (90) while 'of the two Masonic cyclopedias which have
appeared in English, one - that of Woodford - swarms with the
mis-statements and inaptitudes of ignorance, and one - that of Mackenzie
- with the mis-statements and extravagances of a lying fancy'. (91) About
his fellow-Rosicrucians he was even more scathing.  In 1903 he was
chairman of the S.R.I.A. Study Circle and found that its reports 'are
diseased memorials and the malady from which they suffer requires the
continued process of the cemetery.  Such instances of inability to state with
any clearness what the speaker intended to say I have never met with
previously'. (92) At the same time he admitted to himself. 'I have noted that
in certain instances my share in the discussion is open to the same
criticism' - such self-criticism of his literary abilities was rare indeed.

After The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry had run its course, Waite
conceived the idea of compiling a masonic encyclopedia that would reflect
his own predilections for the higher degrees and their symbolism.  Literary
researches and the affairs of the Fellowship of the Rosy Cross were
occupying much of his time, and his involvement with Craft Masonry had
practically ceased, but he found that 'my activities had increased rapidly in
the High Grade circles. It is another way of recording that I saw more than
ever the unexpressed things that lie behind the rites'. (93) At the same time,
'I had no wish to include among my writings still another Encyclopedia
added to those that existed already in the world of English Masonry.  On
reflection however, it seemed to me that here was the most convenient
form in which to introduce a multitude of personal views and standpoints'.
(94) Accordingly, in May 1917 he went to see Ralph Shirley, who owned the
publishing house of Rider & Co., and 'proposed by inspiration a great new
masonic encyclopedia'. (95) A draft agreement was drawn up in June and
by 3 July Waite had assembled 'over 200 pp. of rough materials collected
from old MS. sources in three days'. (96) By Boxing Day his rough notes
had risen to 1,000 pages; three months later they were in rough
alphabetical order and, by December 1918, he had completed over 500
pages of his final draft.

Throughout 1919 he was involved in complicated discussions with Shirley
and with the printers, Brendons of Plymouth, over the layout of the
rapidly-expanding book, over its illustrations and over money.  Waite
received a series of small sums in advance of royalties, an agreement to
extend the book to two volumes and a new contract.  After much
last-minute addition and correction to the text, A New Encyclopedia of
Freemasonry was finally published in March 1921, Waite's delight at its
appearance being tempered by his expectation that 'the vested authorities
and the diehards of dead Masonry might rise up of course to curse me'.
(97) And so they did.

Volume II of the Transactions of the Manchester Association for Masonic
Research contains the text of Waite's paper 'Robert Fludd and
Freemasonry', which he had delivered to the Association in September
1921; it also contains an anonymous review of A New Encyclopedia of
Freemasonry.  The reviewer was shocked both by Waite's cavalier attitude
to historical fact and by his contempt for earlier scholars; 'There are many
errors of date and name which students, however, will readily detect, but
it is when men like John Yarker are referred to as illiterate and other even
more gifted writers of the past are almost as contemptuously alluded to that
the value of the compiler's opinions is discounted' (p. 139).  He also
disapproved of Waite's views: 'It seems quite out of place to endeavour to
incorporate the view that Freemasonry is part of a Divine Quest which after
all, is only the author's fancy' (p. 139), but finally, and grudgingly, admitted
that it might have some value: 'The book is not likely to replace former
encyclopedias, although it may find its own place in masonic literature' (p.
139).

The task of demolishing Waite utterly was left to AQC 33 (1920) and the two
reviewers of the book, W.J. Songhurst and J.E.S. Tuckett, went to work with
a will. Songhurst found that 'the impression left on my mind after reading
the work is that Bro. Waite has merely linked together a series of essays
embodying personal opinions, by means of lists and tabulations for which
he has very little respect' (p. 169).  He also attacked Waite's arbitrary and
bizarre arrangement of subject matter: 'It is surely unusual to find an index
in a Dictionary or Encyclopedia, ... That an index was needed for Bro.
Waite's Encyclopedia seems to show that a faulty arrangement of the
matter has been recognized.  True, it is planned on a alphabetical basis ...
but to find any particular subject one has to resort to a system of
guess-work, the index affording scarcely any help' (p. 169).  Waite's errors
of fact and examples of his ignorance of recent scholarship are listed with
glee, as are his abusive and unjust comments on earlier writers, with the
question posed, 'What particular advantage or abilities does Bro.  Waite
claim to possess which enable him to take a position superior to that of
earlier writers' (p. 172).  Songhurst concluded by criticizing the imaginary
picture of Ramsay in volume 2 and disputing Waite's ascription of an
alleged portrait of James Anderson in Volume 1: 'Can it be that it is so set
down in ignorance, or is it to be understood as yet another deliberate flight
into the realms of fantasy?' (p.173) His views on the frontispiece to volume
1 - which shows Waite in the robes of Imperator of the Fellowship of the
Rosy Cross - he refrained from printing.

The second review reinforced the first. Tuckett substantially enlarged the list
of factual errors and condemned Waite for his contemptuous remarks about
his fellow masonic writers.  He then reinforced Songhurst's criticisms by
tabulating the more glaring inconsistencies of Waite's apparent alphabetical
arrangement and listing examples of Waite's self-advertisement, adding the
query, 'would it not have been better to avoid such direct claims to
profound knowledge, leaving the reader to discern it for himself?'(p. 175).
Unlike Songhurst, Tuckett concluded his review with praise for Waite's
position as an authority on 'the doctrine of the Great Quest in Masonry', but
as an encyclopedia 'the work now under consideration does not compare
favourably with its predecessors, and, as an exposition of the Quest
Theory, it cannot compete with the same author's Secret Tradition' (p. 180).

For Waite such comments were wormwood and gall, but he could take
comfort in the laudatory reviews by Philip Wellby in The Occult Review
(although Wellby was a close personal friend and Waite had, in any case,
helped to write the review), (98) and by Miss Bothwell-Gosse in The
Co-Mason (vol. 13, p. 104, 1921).  Even more satisfying was a detailed and
favourable review by Revd. A. Cohen in The Jewish Guardian for 3 June
1921. Despite detecting errors of fact Cohen found that 'there is more to
admire than to criticize in these handsome volumes.  The author has
earned the gratitude of every mason who is curious to learn all that the
Craft has to teach him'.  Even more satisfying for Waite was Cohen's
reference to Waite's claim that, prior to 1717, Freemasonry was exclusively
Christian and 'that the Jew and the Heathen had no part therein', and his
admission that 'the correctness of Mr. Waite's statement seems to me
unquestionable'.  But Cohen may have been inclined to be especially
lenient as the Jewish press had been praising Waite earlier in 1921 for his
detailed refutation, in The Occult Review, (99) of Mrs. Nesta Webster's
anti-Semitic and anti-masonic articles in The Morning Post.

Such reviews undoubtedly helped sales of the New Encyclopedia and by
1930 some 7,000 sets had been sold, but through flaws in his contract
Waite lost his rights to the book when it passed to Virtue & Co. in 1925,
and he received little more than 3OO pounds in total royalties.  Worse was
to follow as, for all his protestations to the contrary, Waite valued the
esteem of masonic scholars and he took the hostile reviews to heart.  He
began to revise and correct the text for a projected new edition but, when
the 'New and Revised Edition' of 1923 was issued, Waite was horrified to
find that it was merely an exact reprint of the fault-ridden original.  For
himself his proud boast that by 1938 'no less than nineteen thousand sets
of the costly volumes have been sold', (100) must have been a hollow one.
It was also erroneous, for the maximum sales could have been little more
than half that number.

WAITE AND THE HIGHER DEGREES

By this time he was turning away from the world of masonic scholarship,
although he was still to produce his highly important study of
Rosicrucianism, The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross, (101) and in 1924 he
resigned from the Masonic Study Society which he had helped to found in
1921, confining such lectures as he still gave to those higher degree bodies
with which he was increasingly involved.  He was now a member of virtually
every rite that was worked in England and he played an active role in many
of them. In 1905 he had entered Mark Masonry, which he believed had
'originated to recall Grand Lodge Masonry from the muddled Deism of the
Anderson Constitutions to the Christology and high Catholicism of the Old
Charges', (102) and in 1930 he was still actively promoting the Mark when
he became a founder and first Master of Tower Hamlets Mark Lodge No.
892.

He had long ceased to see the Rose Croix degree as one of the 'splendid
inanities of occult nomenclature' and, having been perfected in the
Orpheus Chapter Rose Croix No. 79 in 1909, he became its Sovereign in
1915, and from 1918 onwards he was its Recorder.  But it was for the Order
of the Temple that he felt the greatest affection and to the Sancta Maria
Preceptory that he gave his greatest support.  He had been Preceptor in
1909 and from 1910 to 1940 acted as its Registrar; his early speculations
on 'Templar history and symbolism had been first presented as lectures in
the Preceptory and his last, and most important, paper - 'The Knights
Templar and their alleged perpetuation in Freemasonry' - had been
delivered therein 1930.

Waite's Rosicrucian activities, in their masonic context at least, had ceased
in 1914 when he resigned from the S.R.I.A. after failing in his bid to be
elected as Celebrant.  He had also quarrelled bitterly with Blackden over
the workings of the Isis-Urania Temple of the Golden Dawn and felt that the
same Rosicrucian body could not happily contain them both. (103) All his
energies in this direction were now bent towards the creation of rituals for
his Fellowship of the Rosy Cross (F.R.C.), an androgynous and avowedly
Christian Order structured in a series of grades that represented a
symbolical ascent of the Kabbalistic Tree of Life.  Its rituals and officers
were based on those of the Independent and Rectified Rite of the Golden
Dawn, but the ultimate derivation from Freemasonry is immediately evident
when the rituals are read. (104) The first meeting of the F.R.C. was held on
9 July 1915 at De Keyser's Hotel on Victoria Embankment. Of the ten
Fratres who, with one Soror, were present at that Consecration of the
Salvator Mundi Temple of the F.R.C., five can be identified, all of whom
were freemasons. (105) The F.R.C. did not demand a masonic qualification
from its Fratres but in practice most who joined were not only members of
the Craft but active in the higher degrees.  They were also increasingly
outnumbered by the ranks of co-masonic and theosophical Sorores.

Nor were all the members English.  The single Soror present at the first
meeting was an American medical practitioner, Dr. Helen Worthington, and
in 1921 the American photographer, Alvin Langdon Coburn, joined the
Order.  He rapidly entered the Second Order, the Ordo Sanctissima Roseae
et Aureae Crucis, but became more concerned with his own Neoplatonic
Society, known as The Universal Order, borrowing parts of Waite's rituals
for use within it.  This was unforgivable to Waite and, at the end of 1924,
the two men broke completely with each other.  Coburn, however, still
recognized Waite's preeminence in the field of esoteric research and
continued to recommend Waite's writings to his own followers. (105a)
Relations with other American freemasons were to prove more satisfactory
to Waite.

In July 1915 Waite had published a fulsome review, under the title of
'Master Building', (106) of Dr. Joseph Fort Newton's book, The Builders: a
Story and Study of Masonry (1914).  This was only just for Fort Newton had
referred to Waite in glowing terms as a 'master of the vast literature and
lore of his subject, to the study of which he brought a religious nature, the
accuracy and skill of a scholar, a sureness and delicacy of insight at once
sympathetic and critical, the soul of a poet, and a patience as untiring as
it is rewarding; qualities rare indeed, and still more rarely blended'. (107)
Fort Newton was also editor of the American masonic journal The Builder,
and, given that he saw Waite in such a light, it is not surprising that he
should reprint Waite's review and ask him to contribute to its columns.

Waite's first contribution, a three part study entitled 'Some Deeper Aspects
of Masonic Symbolism', was reprinted and used as a set lecture in a
reading course for Lodges in Iowa and, as a copy of The Builders was
given to every newly-made mason under the Grand Lodge of Iowa, Waite's
name and ideas were rapidly made known to a far greater number of
masons in America than was ever the case in England.  This, in fact, is still
the case for The Builders has remained constantly in print and Waite has
thus remained constantly before American freemasons.  So great was the
esteem in which Waite was held that, shortly after Fort Newton's meeting
with Waite during his visit to England in 1916, (108) the Grand Lodge of
Iowa awarded him the rank of Past Senior Grand Warden, which rank was,
in due course, prominently displayed on the title-page of the New
Encyclopedia.

During the 1920s a number of young American freemasons became
fascinated by Waite and his work and became regular correspondents. The
most enthusiastic was Harold van Buren Voorhis, who amassed a
remarkable collection of Waite's books (now housed in the library of the
Grand Lodge of Iowa) and became successively a frequent correspondent,
confidant and personal friend. (109) He went on to propagate many of
Waite's ideas through the occasional miscellanies of masonic papers he
edited under the title of Miscellanea.  Other correspondents were Dr. W. M.
Brown and J. Ray Shute, whom he had helped indirectly to enter the
C.B.C.S. Shute recalled their visit to Waite, in 1934, in his book Soft Tolls
the Bell (1953) describing how 'we spent our days and nights in the
company of one who will be remembered as one of the truly great Christian
mystics' (p. 31) and discreetly ignoring the co-masonic impedimenta that
surrounded them - they met at 104 Maida Vale, the Headquarters of one of
the co-masonic bodies, where Waite's second wife (his first wife died in
1924) had a flat and where one room was used as a temple by the F.R.C.
Although Shute remembered the visit as lasting 'for about two weeks' (p.
31), the two Americans were with Waite for only two days, during which
time they received the first four grades of the F.R.C. with the intention of
setting up an American branch of the Order.  In return they awarded Waite
the honourary degree of Doctor of Literature from Atlantic University,
Virginia Beach, of which they were both trustees.

Both gestures were, as it turned out, empty.  The F.R.C. was never
established in the United States of America and Waite's doctorate was
worthless, for Atlantic university had closed down in 1932 (110) and had
never been accredited to award degrees of any kind.  Waite, however,
knew nothing of either failure and fondly believed that his Order was secure
in America and that the academic world had at last recognized his ability.

By the time of the visit Waite had retired from virtually all masonic activity
and spent his days revising his works on the secret tradition.  The last of
these was The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry, which was published in
1937; it was more than a simple revision of his earlier work.  It incorporated
much of Emblematic Freemasonry (1925) and material from The
Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross and, in his own words, 'it is so altered,
extended and transformed that it may claim to be a new undertaking and
to supersede in fact that which it preserves in name'. (111) For all its
transformations, and its attempt to be less cavalier over matters of fact, the
book is still principally a restatement of Waite's thesis that the essence of
Masonry lies in the Mystic Quest.  All his work was devoted to that end,
and the question whether or not his thesis is viable should not prevent
recognition of its importance.

Waite died in 1942 and was accorded a brief, three-paragraph obituary in
The Freemasons' Chronicle (vol. 135, p. 178, 6 June 1942) in which he was
characterized as a poet and writer on Freemasonry.  There was no attempt
to appraise his work or to state his primary thesis.  He was buried in the
churchyard at Bishopsbourne in Kent where he spent most of his later
years, and his grave is now obscured by a thick growth of deadly
nightshade - an appropriate parallel to the blight that has fallen on his
reputation.

His besetting faults were a conscious refusal to accept his limitations as a
historian - limitations that were inevitable, given his lack of academic
training - and the sub-conscious recognition of them that led to an
inordinate conceit and to constant belittling of his predecessors.  Serious
though these faults are they are not serious enough to deny him a place
amongst the foremost masonic scholars.  Indeed, he was, and is still, the
only such scholar to have attempted to unite the outward history of the
higher degrees with their inward spirituality.  The danger of such an attempt
is that of falling into the follies of occultism, but Waite avoided that danger,
as Fort Newton had observed in 1916: 'Brother Waite warns us against the
dark alleys that lead nowhere, and the false lights that lure to ruin, and he
protests against those who would open the Pandora's Box of the Occult on
the altar of Masonry.  After a long study of occultism, magic, omens,
talismans and the like, he has come to draw a sharp line between the
occult and the mystical, and therein he is wise'. (112) We too, perhaps,
would be wise if we did him the courtesy of studying his work and
recognizing its peculiar genius.

REFERENCES

(1) The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry (Rider, 1937). The prospectus is
a 4 pp. quarto sheet, written by Waite although not so attributed.

(2) Shadows of Life and Thought.  A Retrospective Review in the Form of
(Selwyn and Blount, 1938). Hereafter referred to as SLT.

(3) There is no record of a marriage between two people of these or similar
names over a period from 1848 to 1857 at St. Catherine's House, nor is
there any reference in the registers of Kensington Parish Church where
Waite claims that the marriage took place.

(4) Waite's education was of the 'dame school' variety, save for two terms
at the Roman Catholic school, St. Charles's college in Bayswater, in 1874.

(5) SLT, chapter 2, passim

(6) Eliphas Levi was the pseudonym of the French occultist Alphonse Louis
Constant (1810-75). The standard biography is by Chacornac, Eliphas Levi
(Paris, Chacornac, 1926).

(7) His first published work was An Ode to Astronomy (1877).  He
published many poems and stories in minor literary journals between 1876
and 1886

(8) The Mysteries of Magic, a Digest of the Writings of Eliphas Levi, with a
Biographical and Critical Essay (Redway, 1886)

(9) Jennings's book was The Rosicrucians, their Rites and Mysteries
(Chatto & Windus, 1879, 2nd ed.). It was savaged by Waite in Redway's
journal, Walford's Antiquarian and with justice; it is a hotch-potch of
irrelevant and misleading data.

(10) The Real History of the Rosicrucians, founded on their own Manifestos
and on Facts and Documents collected from the Writings of Initiated
Brethren (Redway, 1887) pp. 403-4
(11) Ibid., p. 405

(12) The Rosicrucian; a Quarterly Record, No. 1, July 1868, pp. 6-9. This
journal was the official organ of the Societes Rosicruciana in Anglia, a body
for which the qualification for membership as that the applicant must be a
Master Mason.

(13) Real History of the Rosicrucians, p. 424

(14) Published in the Minutes of the High Council of the S.R.I.A. for 13
October 1887, pp. 5-6

(15) Westcott pointed out the lack of copyright at the High Council meeting
(above), See p. 5 of the Minutes.

(16) The British Mail, vol. 20, No. 172, New Series, March 1890, pp. 20-1

(17) Ibid., P. 21

(18) The Occult Sciences, a Compendium of Transcendental Doctrine and
Experiment (Kegan Paul, 1891)

(19) This unpublished work was advertised occasionally as 'forthcoming'
in others of Waite's publications during the 1890s. The manuscript, if one
was ever written, has not survived.

(20) A full, documented account of the origins and history of the Golden
Dawn is to be found in Ellic Howe, The Magicians of the Golden Dawn
(Routledge, 1972). 

(21) The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia of History, Rites, and Biography (John
Hogg, 1877). The tables are on pp. 617-18

(22) According to the Golden Dawn's address book and record of
members' progress, Waite had attained the grade of Zelator in September
1891. He was no. 98 on the Order's Roll and, from the dates of initiation of
surrounding members, June 1891 seems to be his date of entry. He
demitted in 1893

(23) An insignificant work on fortune-telling, published by Redway. Waite
never permitted his connection with it to be known publicly, but he admitted
it to Voorhis and others in private.

(24) SLT, p. 126

(25) The Second Order worked a spectacular Rosicrucian Initiation, devised
by S.L. MacGregor Mathers who had a genius for constructing such rituals.
It is printed in Israel Regardie's four-volume work, The Golden Dawn
(Chicago, Aries Press, 1937-1940).

(26) SLT, p. 160

(27) There are twelve in all, the most important being Revelations
completes sur la Franc-Maconnerie (1896) and Les Freres Trois-Points
(1885).

(28) Op. cit., p. 247

(29) Waite's letters were printed in the issues of 7 December 1895, 4
January, 28 March and 6 June 1896.

(30) Devil Worship in France, or the Question of Lucifer.  A Record of things
seen and heard in the Secret Societies according to the evidence of
Initiates (Redway, 1896)

(31) Ibid, p. 306

(32) In the prospectus for Devil-Worship in France, written by Waite himself.
(33) Devil Worship in France.  See pp. 214 and 254 for Yarker, pp. 227 and
279-81 for Westcott. and pp. 282 3 for the S.R.I.A.

(34) e.g. The Echo, 11 July 1896; The New Saturday, 12 September 1896,
and F. Legge's review in The Contemporary Review (date not ascertained).

(35) The typescript survives.  It is on 130 leaves, typed on one side only.

(36) Ibid, ff. 121 and 122

(37) L. Floquet, Luciferianism or Satanism in English Freemasonry
(Montreal, Cadieux and Derome, 1898). Quoted in Light for 7 January 1899.

(38) The X-Rays in Freemasonry by 'A. Cowan' (Effingham Wilson, 1901).
The cover design, free-style lettering in red on black boards, is consciously
modelled on the cover of Waite's Devil-Worship in France.

(39) Letter from Yarker to Waite, Manchester 30 January, 1897.  In the
collection of the late Geoffrey Watkins.

(40) Letter from Waite to Yarker, Gunnersbury, 5 February 1897.  Formerly
in the Yarker Library, now in private hands.

(41) Printed in Light, for 2 July 1898

(42) The Life of Louis Claude de Saint-Martin, The Unknown Philosopher,
and the Substance of his Transcendental Doctrine (Wellby, 1901).  The
book was to have been issued in 1900 by Redway but his business had
failed in the interim and was taken over by Wellby.

(43) Ibid., P. 73

(44) Ibid., p. 459

(45) Letter from Waite to Papus, London, 25 May 1901.  Original in the
Martinist Order archives at Lyon. Copy supplied by M. Robert Amadou.

(46) Ibid.

(47) The Harmonial Philosophy.  A Compendium and Digest of the Works
of Andrew Jackson Davis, the Seer of Poughkeepsie, edited by 'A Doctor
of Hermetic Science' (Rider, 1917)

(48) SLT, p. 164

(49) Ibid., p. 165

(50) Ibid., p. 161

(51) Ibid., p. 161

(52) Ibid., p. 162

(53) It has not been possible, in spite of several requests, to see the Minute
Books Of Runymede Lodge.

(54) SLT, p. 162

(55) Diary for 1902/1903, 10 October.  Waite called this diary 'Annus
Mirabilis Redivivus' because of its record of his great successes in ritual
matters.

(56) Ibid., 18 March 1903

(57) Ibid., 17 July 1903

(58) Beeching's verses were printed as a broadsheet entitled 'The Masque
of Runymede'.

(59) 'An Ode of Welcome', Runymede Lodge, 21 January 1909.  The verse
quoted is no. 5. Waite also wrote an 'Ode on a Distant Prospect of
Preferment in Runymede lodge' (1907).  It was privately printed as a
broadsheet for members of the lodge.

(60) Quoted as item (d) on the summons for the Winter Dinner of the lodge,
15 January 1911

(61) Springett wrote a number of books on secret societies and on masonic 
symbolism. He was an active supporter of the F.R.C. and of the later
Golden Dawn before it, but there is no evidence that he was involved prior
to 1910 and thus it cannot be assumed that it was he who introduced Waite
to Runymede Lodge

(61a) SLT, p. 164
(62) The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry and an analysis of the
Inter-Relation between the Craft and the High Grades in respect of their
term of Research (New York, Rebman, 1911) 2 vols
(63) For the complex tale of the schism in the Golden Dawn, see Howe, op.
cit.

(64) Diary, 2 December 1902

(65) Ibid., 23 October 1902

(66) Ibid., 30 March 1903 

(67) Ibid.,  7 April 1903

(68) Ibid., 13 October 1903

(69) Ibid., Diary for 8 February 1903.  All the quotations concerning his visit
to Kilmarnock are from this entry.
(70) Quoted from his carbon copy of the replies, pasted into his Diary for
1902/03 

(71) Diary, 16 February 1903

(72) Ibid., 22 February 1903. The motto was that which he used in the
Golden Dawn and in the F.R.C. It is taken from the Vulgate (of the Book of
Tobit). The arms are reproduced on the covers of A New Encyclopedia of
Freemasonry.

(73) Diary, 3 March 1903 

(74) Ibid., 2 May 1903
(75) Ibid, 27 October 1902

(76) In 1905; they were printed, or rather mimeographed, in 1934 by F.F.
Bahnson at Warrenton in North Carolina.

(77) His letter of Obligation is dated 26 November 1907. It is preserved in
the archives of the Independent Great Priory of Helvetia at Geneva.

(78) Letter from Bridge to F. Amez-Droz, Chancellor of the Order, 27
September 1929.  In the same archives.

(79) Ibid.

(80) Letter from Waite to Amez-Droz, 18 May 1929

(81) Letter from Waite to Shute, 22 November 1938

(82) AQC 15 (1902), pp 163-74.  Waite's comments are printed on
pp.170-2.
(83) Diary, 3 October 1902

(84) Ibid., 18 October 1902

(85) SLT, p. 179

(86) SLT, p. 178

(87) E.g. The Saturday Review, 18 November 1911

(88) The Bookman, October 1911; The Occult Review, October, 1911; The
Freemason, 25 May 1912

(89) SLT, p. 229

(90) Diary, 30 April 1903

(91) Ibid., 5 October 1902

(92) Ibid., 23 March 1903

(93) SLT, p. 207

(94) Ibid., pp. 207-8

(95) Diary, 21 May 1917

(96) Ibid., 3 July 1917

(97) SLT, p. 208

(98) Diary, 12 March 1921.  The review appeared in The Occult Review for
April, 1921.

(99) 'Occult Freemasonry and the Jewish Peril', The Occult Review, vol. 3
2, September 1920, pp. 142-53

(100) SLT, p. 208
(101) The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross, being Records of the House of
the Holy Spirit in its Inward and Outward History (Rider, 1924)

(102) SLT, p. 177

(103) The details of the quarrel and of the demise of the Isis-Urania Temple
are given in R. A. Gilbert, The Golden Dawn: Twilight of the Magicians
(Aquarian Press, 1983)

(104 ) Twelve of the rituals were printed in 1916 and 1917.  Many of them
are in the library of the United Grand Lodge of England.

(105) The five were Waite himself, G. Barrett-Dobb, E. B. Florence, H.J.
Lloyd and B. H. Springett.

(105a) E.g. Coburn's paper, 'The Kabbalah', for the Lancashire College of
the S.R.I.A. lists fourteen books in its bibliography - two are by Waite.

(106) In The Occult Review for July 1915

(107) The Builders, pp. 55-6

(108) On 3 July 1916 Waite was a guest at the reception for Fort Newton
held at America Lodge No. 3368.  On 20 July Fort Newton was Waite's
guest at Runymede Lodge.

(109) Voorhis first wrote in August 1928 and continued his correspondence
up to Waite's death, continuing then to correspond with Mrs. Waite until her
death in 1955.

(110) Information from the Commonwealth of Virginia, State Department of
Education.

(111) The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry (1937), p. x

(112) Some Deeper Aspects of Masonic Symbolism (1916).  The foreword
is by Fort Newton, pp. 6-7.

APPENDIX A

A.E. WAITE'S MASONIC AFFILIATIONS

CRAFT

1901 Initiated in Runymede Lodge No. 2430, Wraysbury, 19 September
(Raised in St. Marylebone Lodge No. 1305, London, 10 February 1902)
Master of Runymede Lodge 1910-11, Installed 21 July 1910

1906 Founder Member of Anglo-Colonial Lodge No. 3175 (resigned in June
1912)

1914 Provincial Deputy Grand Director of Ceremonies, Buckinghamshire,
28 October

1918 Honourary Past Senior Grand Warden, Grand Lodge of Iowa, A.F. &
A.M. (U.S.A.) 11 June

1921 Founder Member and Deputy Vice-President of the Masonic Study
Society (resigned in 1924)

ROYAL ARCH

1902 Exalted in Metropolitan Chapter No. 1507, London, 1 May
First Principal in 1913

ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE

1909 Perfected in Orpheus Chapter Rose Croix No. 79, London, 17
November 
Sovereign 1915
Recorder 1919-36(?)

1935 30th Degree 12 November

MARK MASONRY

1905 Advanced in Temperance in the East Mark Lodge No. 350 (The name
changed afterwards to Emblematic Mark Lodge) 18 January
Master in 1912
Honourary Member from 1937
1913 Appointed Grand Inner Guard, Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons

1930 Founder and First Master of Tower Hamlets Mark Lodge No. 892,
London
Honourary Member from 1936

1931 Promoted to Past Assistant Grand Director of Ceremonies, Grand
Lodge of Mark Master Masons

ORDER OF THE TEMPLE

1902 Installed as a Knight Templar in King Edward VII Preceptory No. 173,
London, 8 May

1906 Joining Member of Empress Preceptory No. 178, London
Joining Member and Founder of Sancta Maria Preceptory No. 183, London
Preceptor in 1909
Registrar 1910 to 1940
1912 Appointed Great Captain of Guards, Great Priory

1928 Promoted to Past Great Aide-de-Camp, Great Priory


ORDER OF MALTA

1902 Installed in St. George's Priory No. 6, London, 9 May

RED CROSS OF CONSTANTINE

1907 Installed as a Knight of Constantine, Rose and Lily Conclave No. 3,
London, 19 June

Viceroy 1910
Sovereign  1911
1912 Grand Standard Bearer, Grand Imperial Conclave
1913 Grand Historiographer, Grand Imperial Conclave

SECRET MONITOR

1906 Zacharie Conclave No. 9, London, 4 October 
Prince of the Order 1908
Supreme Ruler 1912

OTHER RITES AND DEGREES

Regime Ecossais et Rectifie

1903 Chevalier Bienfaisant de la Cite Sainte, Installed at Geneva, 28
February 

SWEDENBORGIAN RITE

1902 Hermes Lodge and Temple No. 8, London, 30 August

SOCIETAS ROSICRUCIANA IN ANGLIA

1902 Admitted to Zelator grade in the Metropolitan College, London, 10
April
Chairman of Study Circle 1903 (resigned 1914)

WORSHIPFUL SOCIETY OF FREEMASONS, ROUGH MASONS, WALLERS,
SLATERS, PAVIORS, PLAISTERERS, & BRICKLAYERS

1916  Admitted as Fellow of the Craft of Operative Freemasons, &c, in
Channel Row Assembly, Westminster Division, 9 February (resigned 22
October 1917)

EARLY GRAND SCOTTISH RITE

1903 Knight Templar Priest 41 degree, at the Moira Union Council No. 2,
Kilmarnock, February

NATIONAL MASONIC RESEARCH SOCIETY (U.S.A.)

1915 Honourary Life Member, 2 January

SOCIETY OF BLUE FRIARS [OF MASONIC AUTHORS] (U.S.A.)

1938 Fellow No. 8

PHILALETHES SOCIETY (U.S.A.)

1936 Fellow No. 5 (replacing Rudyard Kipling who was Fellow, No. 40)

APPENDIX B
MASONIC WRITINGS OF A. E. WAITE

(1) BOOKS WHOLLY OR PARTLY RELATING TO FREEMASONRY

The Real History of the Rosicrucians founded on their own Manifestos, and
on facts and documents collected from the writings of initiated Brethren
(Redway, 1887)

The Occult Sciences, a Compendium of Transcendental Doctrine and
Experiment  (Kegan Paul, 1891) (Part 3, Section 3: The Freemasons)

Azoth, or The Star in the East (Theosophical Publishing Society, 1893)
(Appendix 11: The Secret of Freemasonry)

Devil-Worship in France, of The Question of Lucifer.  A Record of things
seen and heard in the Secret Societies according to the evidence of
Initiates (Redway, 1896)

The Life of Louis Claude de Saint-Martin, The Unknown Philosopher, and
the substance of his Transcendental Doctrine (Wellby, 1901) (Appendix IV:
Martinism and the Masonic Rite of Swedenborg)

Studies in Mysticism (Hodder & Stoughton, 1906) (Part III, chapters 4, 5, 6
and 7 concern Freemasonry)

The Hidden Church of the Holy Graal, its Legends and Symbolism (New
York, Rebman, 1909) (Book IX, chapter 8: The Analogies of Masonry)

The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry and an analysis of the Inter Relation
between the Craft and the High Grades in respect of their term of research
(Rebman, 1911) 2 vols. 

Some Deeper Aspects of Masonic Symbolism (Anamosa, N.M.R.S., 1916)

A New Encyclopedia of Freemasonry (Ars Magna Latomirzim) and of
cognate Instituted Mysteries: their Rites, Literature and History (Rider, 1921)
2 vols. (The issue of 1934 adds an account of The Masonic Peace
Memorial)

'Robert Fludd and Freemasonry', Manchester Association for Masonic
Research (Offprint), 1922

The Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross, being Records of the House of the
Holy Spirit in its Inward and Outward History (Rider, 1924) (Chapters XV to
XXI and XXIV relate to Freemasonry)

Emblematic Freemasonry and the Evolution of its Deeper Issues (Rider,
1925)

The Liturgy of the Rite of the Strict Observance (Warrenton, N.C., 1934,
Mimeographed)

The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry (Rider, 1937)

Shadows of Life and Thought, being a Retrospective Review in the form of
Memoirs (Selwyn and Blount, 1938) (Chapter 17, and passim)

(2) CONTRIBUTIONS TO PERIODICALS

ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM

1902 Comment on E. J. Castle, 'The Reception (Initiation) of a Templar' vol.
15, pp. 170-2 

THE BRITISH MAIL

1890 'Freemasonry', vol. 20, New Series, No. 172, March, pp. 20-1

THE BUILDER

1915 'Master Building', vol. 1, pp. 240-1 (Reprinted from The Occult
Review)

1916 Criticism of 'The Great Work', vol. 2
'Some Deeper Aspects of Masonic Symbolism', vol. 2, pp. 107-9; 144-6;
175-6

1917 'Discourse on the Fellowcraft Degree', vol. 3, pp. 334-5

1918 Note on the Origin of Co-Masonry, vol. 4, p. 112

1920 'London Morning Post's attack on Freemasonry', vol. 6, p. 333

1921 'Emblematic Freemasonry', vol. 7, pp. 160-5

1922 Note concerning the Comacini, vol. 8, p. 25
Review of Dudley Wright, 'Masonic Legends and Traditions', vol. 8, p. 221

THE FREEMASON

1915 Reply to Welcome at Author's lodge Nu. 3456, 6 March, vol. 55

1920 'The Recent attacks on Freemasonry', vol. 60, pp- 133-5 (Reprinted,
in abridged form, from The Occult Review)

1921 'The Laureate of Masonry', vol.6l, p. 576

FREEMASONS' CHRONICLE

1930 'The Knights Templar and their alleged perpetuation in Freemasonry',
vol. 111, pp. 257, 290, 315; vol. 112, pp. 73, 91, 108-9, 124

HORLICK'S MAGAZINE AND HOME JOURNAL, FOR AUSTRALIA, INDIA
AND THE COLONIES

1904 'The Keeping of the Brotherhood', vol. 2, pp. 365-74 
'The Freedom of the Brotherhood', vol. 2, pp. 429-42 
'The Transformations of the Brotherhood', vol. 2, pp. 559-68

1905 'The Innermost Sanctuary', vol. 3, pp. 241-8

LIGHT

1895 Letter, 'The Mystery of Miss Diana Vaughan', vol. 15, pp. 593-4

1896 Letter on 'Diana Vaughan', vol. 16, pp. 11-12 
'The Question of Lucifer', vol. 16, pp. 271-2
Letter, 'The Question of Lucifer', vol. 16, pp. 321-2

MANCHESTER ASSOCIATION FOR MASONIC RESEARCH,
'TRANSACTIONS 

1921 'Robert Fludd and Freemasonry: a speculative excursion', vol. 11,
pp.65-80 

THE MASONIC SECRETARIES' JOURNAL 

1918 'The Rite of the Strict Observance', vol. 1, pp. 179-81 

THE MASTER MASON

1927 'The Royal and Masonic Art', vol. 4, pp. 745-53

NOCALORE (TRANSACTIONS OF THE NORTH CAROLINA LODGE OF
RESEARCH)

1946 'An Introduction to the C.B.C.S.', vol. 16, pp. 62-91

THE OCCULT REVIEW

1907 'Satanism and the Black Mass' by S.R. (on Leo Taxil) vol. 5, pp.
318-21

1908 'The Latin Church and Freemasonry', vol. 8, pp. 146-50

1911 'Count Cagliostro and Freemasonry', vol. 13, pp. 48-50
'Freemasonry and the French Revolution', vol. 14, pp. 140-7

1913 'A Master of the Inward Way' (Saint-Martin & Martines de Pasqually),
vol. 18, pp. 259-67

1915 'Master Building' (Review of  J. Fort Newton, The Builders), vol. 22,
pp. 39-42

1917 'A Lodge of Magic' (Martines de Pasqually and the Elect Cohens),
vol.26, pp.228-34

1919 Review of Buckmaster, The Royal Order of Scotland, vol. 29, pp. iv-v

1920 'Occult Freemasonry and the Jewish Peril', vol. 32, pp. 142-53 
Letter, 'Mark Degree', vol. 32, p. 183

1921 Review of Churchward, The Origin and Evolution of Freemasonry, vol.
33, p. 121 
Review of Wright, Masonic Legends and Traditions, vol. 34, p. 186

1925 Review of Haywood, Symbolical Masonry, vol. 41, pp. 127-8 
Review of Haywood, Great Teachings of Masonry, vol. 41, p. 128 
Review of Fort Newton, The Men's House, vol. 41, p. 199

1927 'The Templar Orders in Freemasonry', vol. 45, pp. 12-19; 161-70

1930 'An Elect Priesthood' (Review of Forestier, La Franc-Maconnerie
Occultists), vol. 52, pp. 383-7

1939 Review of van Rijnberk, Martines de Pasqually, vol. 66, p. 262

1911-1931 Waite contributed a monthly feature, 'Periodical Literature', in
which he reviewed contemporary journals, including many masonic
journals.

SOMERSET MASTERS' LODGE, TRANSACTIONS

1921 'Masonic Tradition and the Royal Arch', pp.244-55

S.R.I.A., TRANSACTIONS OF THE METROPOLITAN COLLEGE 

1906 'The Place of Masonry in the Rites of Initiation', pp. 9-16

1909 'Preliminary Considerations on the nature of Ritual and Symbolism',
pp. 15-20

APPENDIX C

MASONIC LECTURES DELIVERED By A.E. WAITE

1906 'The Place of Masonry in the Rites of Initiation', 11 January S.R.I.A.,
Metropolitan College (printed in Transactions)

1908 'The Higher side of Templar Symbolism', 12 October, Sancta Maria
Preceptory (read also at King Edward VII Preceptory, 11 May 1916)

1910 'Inner Relations of the Craft and High Grades', 14 February, Sancta
Maria Preceptory

1911 'The Alleged Perpetuation of the Temple through three distinct
Channels', 13 February, Sancta Maria Preceptory

1912 'Some deeper intimations in the Grade of Knight of the Holy
Sepulchre', 29 January, Lily of the Valley Conclave
'Some Inner Meanings of Rosicrucian Grades', 11 March, S.R.I.A. Study
Group

1914 'Some Deeper Aspects of Symbolism in the Craft Grades; 11
February, Holden Lodge No. 2496 (printed in The Builder with an altered
title)

1921 'Robert Fludd and Freemasonry', 29 September, Manchester
Association for Masonic Research (printed in Transaction)
'Masonic Tradition and the Royal Arch', 28 February, Somerset Masters'
Lodge No. 3746 (printed in Transactions)

1922 'The Mystical Quest in Freemasonry,' 16 September, Mid-Kent
Masters' Lodge 3173 (printed in Emblematic Freemasonry)

1923 'The Second Birth of Masonry in Continental Rites', 8 January,
Mid-Kent Masters' Lodge 3173 (printed in Emblematic Freemasonry)

1925 'The Templar Orders in Freemasonry: An Historical Consideration of
their Origin and Development,' 6 April, Sancta Maria Preceptory (printed,
in revised form, in The Occult Review)

1926 "The Secret Tradition in French Grades analogous to the Royal Arch',
13 December, Hello Chapter No. 3900

1927 'The Secret Tradition in Christian Times and the directions in which
Research is baffled', 9 September, Kingsgate Lodge No. 4882

1930 'The Knights Templar and their alleged Perpetuation in Freemasonry',
10 February, Sancta Maria Preceptory (printed in Freemasons' Chronicle)

APPENDIX D

The Secret Council of Rites

S+C+R

CONSTITUTION

(1) The S.C.R. was constituted on December 2nd, 1902 for the
determination in a particular direction of existing Mystic Interests, more
especially in connection with Masonry and the Orders which are connected
with and dependent upon it. 

(2) The work of the S.C. lies entirely outside that of any legislative bodies,
Grand Lodges, Grand Chapters or Supreme Councils; it does not seek to
intrude among them and it will not tolerate their interference in its concerns.
(3) The S.C. will for its better protection vigilantly conserve an occult and
anonymous character and, save in the Supreme Degrees of the Council,
will at no time divulge the names of its Members to any person in the
world.

(4) The S.C. consists of the following brethren: Frater L.S.; Frater M.W.G.;
Frater S.R., under the conditions now to be set forth:- The S.C. of R. does
not exist and no person is, therefore, a Member of it, except when it is
called into being and declared to be in activity by some one or more of the
above mentioned Fratres or their successors for executive or consultive
purposes and on the completion of the work in hand or before if so
declared it automatically lapses until again in like manner revived. 
Membership of the S.C.R is therefore to be understood in the sense just
defined whenever referred to in this Constitution. 

(5) Frater L.S., Frater M.W.O. and Frater S.R. being Members ab initio by
whom the C. was constituted simultaneously, there is no priority or
precedence in respect of them and this fact is to be borne in mind more
especially by the Frater S.R. who first suggested the constitution of the
Secret Body for those objects which are known to the C. 

(6) The Members of the S.C. can mark only in common for the furtherance
of the objects which it proposes and therefore no action must be taken by
one independently of the others in respect of any O. matters

(7) The S.C. has no power to add to its numbers and the absence of any
Member from the country of its present location does not constitute a
vacancy, since an efficient inter communication can always be preserved.

This rule is absolute and invariable in respect of both its clauses. 

(8) Vacancy is constituted by death or permanent alienation as also by
insanity or unfitness to act; agreement on the part of the other two
Members as to the existence of either disability being alone necessary in
order to take action.  Each Member has the right to nominate his
successor, who shall be of the male sex and a Royal Arch Mason.

Such nomination may be made absolute prior to decease by the approval
of the other Members and ranks alternatively as a very serious and urgent
recommendation to be adopted if possible, failing which, the appointment
rests with the survivors. 

(9) In the event of permanent alienation, insanity or unfitness to act without
a successor having been nominated previously, the other Members shall
appoint a suitable Mystic Mason to complete the Triad at such time as may
be advisable and in any case within a period of twelve months.

(10) In the event of the death of a Member suddenly and without
nomination, similar procedure shall be adopted, as two Members cannot
constitute a complete C. 

(11) The C. as it now stands is complete, perfect and permanent, without
power of expulsion or the right to insist on resignation.

(12) The S.C. will always deprecate resignation on the part of a Member,
but it must not disallow it altogether.  In such event the right of nomination
is abrogated but one of counsel remains, such counsel to be regarded with
great respect and followed if reasonable and desirable.

(13) In the event of two Members resigning simultaneously, the C. would
cease to exist, and this therefore is interdicted by the honourable pledge
which has been taken by each Member, as will appear hereinafter.

(14) As it is necessary for the furtherance of its objects that the S.C. shall
have a certain acknowledged existence, it has appointed the Frater S.R. as
its present Envoy-Extraordinary with full powers in conjunction with the
whole C. only.

(15)  The Envoy-Extraordinary is not as such a Member of the C.

(16) The S.C. may and will appoint Envoys-Subordinate for different
countries or districts for the spread and representation of the Rites
conserved by the C. but such Envoys shall represent special Rites only.

(17) The Frater S.R. is at this time the sole Envoy-Extraordinary
representing all Rites of the C., under the obedience of the C., with the
special Envoys to him subordinate, also under the obedience of the C., and
this rule shall be absolute henceforward for every Envoy-Extraordinary
successively appointed and for the Envoys-Subordinate.

(18) The S.C. will obtain and exercise jurisdiction over Independent Lodges,
Chapters and Temples of the following Rectified Occult Orders and
Masonic Rites:-

Occult Orders

(a) The Independent and Rectified Rite of Martinism.
(b) The Reformed Order of the GD.  Masonically reconstituted.
(c) The Rectified Rite R.R. et A.C.

Masonic Rites

a. The Rectified Rite of Swedenborg.
b. The Independent Order of the Illuminati.
c. The Order of the Novices and Knights Beneficent of the Holy City of
Jerusalem.
d. The New and Reformed Rite of Adoptive Masonry.
e. The Incorporated Order of the Eastern Star.

(19) Members of the S.C. are Members of these Bodies and will work them
in a constitutional manner for the purposes of the C., and all other Rites
and Orders which it may subsequently acquire for the same purposes in
like manner. 

(20) The Members of the S.C. will if possible obtain their reception into the
Secret Order 7.16., as it is requisite for the purposes of the C.

(21) The S.C. will if necessary and desirable acquire other Rites and
Orders, Masonic and non-Masonic, to work in connection with its purposes
and will at the proper time constitute two further Rites for the completion of
the existing series as follows:-

a* The Order of the Daughters of Zion. 
b* The -Third Order R.R. et A.C.

(22) The C, will distribute these Rites upon an ascending scale as follows:-

a* Rite of Martinism, referred to Malkuth.
b* Rite of the G.D., referred to Jesod.
c* Rite of Swedenborg, referred to Hod. (with its complement)
d* Rite of the Eastern Star, referred to Netzach.
e* Rite of the R.R. et A.C., referred to Tiphereth.
f* Rite of the Illuminate, referred to Chesed. (with its complement)
g* Rite of Adoption, referred to Geburah.
h* Rite of the Novices and Knights of the Holy City, referred to Chockmah.
(with its complement)
i* Rite of the Daughters of Zion, referred to Binah.
j* Rite of 7.16, (intermediate) referred to Death.
k* Rite of the Supreme Crown or Third Order R.R. et A.C., referred to
Kether.

(23) This distribution is in part a matter of convenience and in part arises
naturally from the ascent of the Grades.  Its design and arrangements are
entirely a C. Secret, as ostensibly there will be an independent working of
all the Rites. 

(24)  The scheme of Rites belonging to the Pillar of Benignity can be
entered only through Martinism, with the exception of that referable to
Death.

(25) The Masonic Rites can be entered independently without passing from
one to another.

(26) The Adoptive Rites can be entered only through the Order of the
Eastern Star.

(27) By the design of the S.C., the Rite of Martinism will act as a drag net
for all Rites, but especially for those of the Central Pillar, and the most
suitable Members who have drifted independently into the Masonic and
Adoptive Orders will ultimately be absorbed by the Androgynous Centre.

(28) With the exception of the Third Order R.R. et A.C., all Rites will meet
and recognise each other in Death, and so far the Scheme of the S.C. will
be at last unveiled. 

(29) Those who attain the Third Order will meet the C. for the first time face
to face, and it is hoped that in the course of Nature the C. will be recruited
therefrom. 

(30) The Members of the S.C. pledge themselves hereby to communicate
to one another all occult knowledge and all knowledge concerning occult
Orders which they may possess now or obtain hereafter, and in the case
of such knowledge being communicated to them individually under binding
obligations, each will do his best to obtain for the two others a participation
of such knowledge and reception by such Rites. 

(31) The Members also honourably pledge themselves, each to each and
all to all, to work seriously and in harmony for the objects of the S.C., to
keep their names unknown, not to desert one another, to resign only by
necessity, simultaneous resignation being interdicted unless it be
unanimously determined to dissolve the C., and to bear in mind the
desirability of finding someone to succeed them if possible.

(32) The objects of the S.C. of R. are the stimulation and the nourishment
of Mystic Aspiration, more especially in Freemasonry, towards the Great
Work of Reintegration with the Centre, or Union with the Divine as the
Supreme End of all research, such objects to be pursued by all legitimate
means, from which any identification with social or political movements is
expressly excluded, the same being neither means nor ends.

These are the 32 Paths of the Absolute in respect of the S.C. of R. and are
the irremovable Landmarks thereof, to which, in token of their agreement,
the contracting parties here append the initials by which they are known to
each other within the C.

V.
in succession to L.S.
May 25th, 1910

L.S..........................................................
M.W.O.....................................................
S.R..........................................................

Dated this 25th day of May, in the year of our Lord 1903.


