Visitors To The Inner Earth
Visitors To The Inner Earth
Visitors To The Inner Earth
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True tales (or so it was claimed) of men and
women who visited the Inner Earth
Enkidu
T
is found in the Epic of Gilgamesh. This ancient poem,
lost for centuries, was recovered in the ruins of
Nineveh. It is perhaps the oldest literary work in existence.*
The Epic of Gilgamesh is the story of a historical figure:
Gilgamesh, son of Lugalbanda. This Sumerian ruled the
city of Uruk around 2500 .. The fifth king of Uruk, Gil-
gamesh built the formidable walls that surrounded the city.
He also built the Temple of Ishtar, a ziggurat that towered
over the mud-brick houses and narrow lanes of Uruk.
Neither walls nor temple would endure as a monument
to the king. His fame was preserved, however, by the Epic
of Gilgamesh. The poem tells of Gilgamesh’s friendship with
a wild man. And it includes an account of that friend’s visit
to the Netherworld.
The wild man was Enkidu (IN-ka-doo), a rough, unruly
fellow who had been raised by gazelles. Enkidu was gener-
ally to be found in their company, roaming the grasslands
or drinking at water holes. But one afternoon he showed up
in Uruk; wrestled with Gilgamesh; and became the king’s
close friend and sidekick. Together, they embarked upon a
series of adventures (most notably, the slaying of the ogre
who guarded the Cedar Forest).
One day, in the main square of Uruk, they were compet-
ing in a ball game—a croquetlike sport that was played
piggyback. Gilgamesh was mounted on Enkidu’s back,
wielding the mallet. The pair lurched about as the game
grew heated. Suddenly the ball, along with their mallet, fell
into a hole and plummeted into the Netherworld—the
Land of No Return—the abode of the dead.
Gilgamesh wept at the loss. For the ball and mallet had
been carved from a special tree: one that belonged to the
goddess Ishtar. Moved by his tears, Enkidu offered to
descend into the Netherworld and retrieve the fallen items.
Enkidu prepared for his descent into that gloomy place.
And Gilgamesh warned him about the Netherworld. As a
visitor, he must be respectful to its inhabitants, the shades
of the dead. He must maintain a grave demeanor. And he
must not attract attention to himself, by either his actions
or appearance. The shades must not be alerted to the fact that
he was alive. Should he fail to heed these warnings, Enkidu
would be seized by the shades and permanently detained.
Enkidu promised to heed the warnings. And he lowered
himself into the hole and descended into the Netherworld.
Arriving there and searching for the ball and mallet, he
passed among the shades of the dead. But Enkidu ignored
the warnings and acted foolishly—talking with the shades,
laughing loudly, and neglecting to don a shroud. Recog-
nized as an intruder, he was taken captive.
His cries of distress rose to the surface. Gilgamesh
became aware of Enkidu’s predicament. And he appealed to
the gods for help. He pointed out that his friend had not
died, and therefore did not belong among the dead. The
sun god agreed, and helped Enkidu to free himself from the
shades.
It was with a cry of relief that Enkidu emerged from the
hole. With copious tears he embraced Gilgamesh. And Gil-
gamesh chided him for ignoring the warnings.
“At least I learned an important lesson,” said Enkidu.
“What was that?”
“Never visit a place known as the Land of No Return!”
Gilgamesh questioned him about the Netherworld. How
did different individuals fare in the afterlife? Were condi-
tions the same for everyone? Did a king maintain his privi-
leged status?
Enkidu thought back to his conversations with the shades.
And he replied that a man fared according to his past
behavior—and according to the funerary rites of his sons.
“Their remembrance offerings of food and water are crit-
ical,” said Enkidu. “The more offerings in your behalf, the
more agreeable your existence in the Netherworld. A shade
who receives daily offerings from his sons? He will sit in the
company of the gods, dine well, and listen to soothing
music.”
“And a shade who receives no daily offerings?”
“He eats scraps and crumbs that are tossed to him.”
Gilgamesh thought about his late father, Lugalbanda,
who had preceded him on the throne. And he resolved to
be diligent in making offerings—that the shade of his father
might thrive in the Netherworld.*
2.
Orpheus
T
-
assortment of cults known as the Mystery Religions.
Among them were the Eleusinian Mysteries, the
Dionysian Mysteries, and the Mithraic Mysteries. Their
doctrines and rites were secret, revealed only to initiates.
And the most secret of these cults? The Orphic Mysteries,
or Orphism.
Due to its secrecy, our knowledge of Orphism is limited.
We know that its devotees led an ascetic life, and sought
personal salvation. We know that their prime goal involved
the afterlife: by embracing Orphism, they hoped to escape
the cycle of reincarnation and achieve communion with the
gods. And we know that they worshipped the chthonian, or
subterranean, gods—deities whose home was Hades rather
than Mount Olympus.
In addition, we have some knowledge of the founder of
the cult: a musician named Orpheus. His descent into Hades,
of course, is a familiar tale in Greek mythology, retold by
both Virgil (in the Georgics) and Ovid (in the Metamorpho-
ses). But what more is known of the life of Orpheus? And
what is the real story of his descent into Hades?
Orpheus was born in Thrace (according to a brief biog-
raphy by Diodorus Siculus, the first century .. historian);
his father was King Oeagrus. From an early age he showed
a gift for music and poetry. With his lyre he roamed the hills
of Thrace, singing of things divine. His music was said to
charm men and beasts alike. (Even trees, it was claimed,
swayed to his music!) And at some point he traveled to
Egypt. There he acquired the mystic knowledge that would
form the basis of his own teachings.*
* It has been alleged (by Aristotle and others) that accounts of
his life are fictional, and that Orpheus was purely a mythological
Such was his renown as a musician that Orpheus was
asked to join the Argonauts—the Greek heroes who sailed
in search of the Golden Fleece. (For this chapter in his life,
our source is the Argonautica of Apollonius of Rhodes.) He
sang the dedication hymn at the launching of the Argo. And
as its keleustes, he set the rowing tempo, spurring his ship-
mates on with his melodious voice. But the magic of his
song proved useful in other ways. With music he calmed the
sea; settled a quarrel; stilled the Clashing Rocks; drowned
out the song of the Sirens; and lulled into sleep the dragon
that guarded the Golden Fleece. Thanks to Orpheus and
his lyre, the Argonauts were successful in their quest.
But upon his return to Thrace, the musician was dealt a
cruel blow by the gods. He fell in love with a nymph named
Eurydice. But on their wedding day, Eurydice—dancing in
the grass with her bridesmaids—was bit by a snake and
died.
Grief-stricken, Orpheus languished on a lonely beach,
singing dirges to the waves. But finally he decided to visit
a necromancer.*
The necromancer lived in a cave near the town of Ephyra.
Orpheus went to her and begged to be reunited with his
bride. The necromancer agreed to assist him, for a fee.
Seating him in the rear of the cave, she performed a sacri-
fice; gave him a potion to drink; and chanted spells. Her
voice echoed from the stone walls; her eyes glinted in the
torchlight.
Finally, she pointed to a portal. “That is the entrance to
the Underworld,” she said. “Descend to Hades, seek out
Eurydice, and bring her back with you!”
The potion had induced in Orpheus a sleeplike trance.
Now he felt himself separating from his body. It slumped
to the ground. And leaving it behind, he stepped through
the portal.
Before him was a stairway, steep and luminescent. Orphe-
us started down it. And he descended into the depths of the
earth.
•
At the bottom of the stairway Orpheus passed through
another portal. He emerged into a wasteland—a desolate
landscape of strewn rocks and stunted trees. Before him
flowed the river Acheron. All was dark, silent, and devoid
of life.
He approached a boat that was moored on the river. On
the boat sat Charon, the ferryman of the dead.*
Charon looked at Orpheus and shook his head. The liv-
ing, he said, were not permitted to cross over into Hades.
But then Orpheus sang; and his music charmed the ferry-
man. Waving him aboard, Charon transported him to the
opposite bank.
There waited Cerberus, the watchdog of Hades. His
three heads barked furiously at the visitor. But again Orpheus
sang and was allowed to pass. And still singing, he drew
near to the palace of Hades.*
The singing could be heard throughout the Underworld.
Such was its power that Sisyphus—about to roll his rock up
the mountain—instead sat down on it and listened. Tanta-
lus—reaching for the grapes that kept retreating—shifted
his attention to the music. And drawn by the music were
the shades of the dead. Hundreds of them flitted about
Orpheus, murmuring eerily.†
Entering the palace, Orpheus approached Pluto and
Persephone on their ebony thrones. The rulers of Hades
day of one such figure: the Angel of Death. Taking a break from
his grim rounds, the Angel of Death has stopped in a tavern for
a beer. One of the regulars sidles up to him and asks how many
souls he gathers in a typical day.
“‘A hundred or so.’
“‘How far do you range? Do you operate outside Israel?’
“‘Presently, no, I gather only Israelites. Other nations have their
own psychopomps.’
“‘Psychopomps?’
“‘That’s what we call ourselves. Skilled professionals who con-
duct souls to a realm of the dead. The Greeks, for example, have
Charon the Ferryman. Good friend of mine, by the way.’”
(My translation of The Book of King Solomon is available from
Top Hat Press.)
* His frequent singing made Orpheus the perfect subject for
one of the earliest operas: Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo (1607).
† Virgil describes them as “quam multa in foliis avium se milia
condunt”—“like a multitude of birds gathering in the foliage of a
tree.”
glowered at him. Undaunted, he greeted them.*
Pluto asked him what he wanted. And Orpheus begged
that Eurydice’s fate be reversed. Let her return to the land
of the living, he pleaded.
At first the rulers of Hades refused his request. But then
Orpheus sang; and their hearts were softened. It was
agreed that Eurydice could return with him—on one con-
dition. She was to follow behind Orpheus. And he must
refrain from looking back at her until they reached the
upper world. If he did look back, her reprieve would be
annulled.
Eurydice was summoned. The situation was explained to
her. And she followed Orpheus—his gaze fixed straight ahead
—out of the palace.
The reunited couple approached the river. Charon
was dozing on his boat and had to be roused. His eyes
widened in astonishment at the sight of Eurydice—a
resident of Hades, allowed to leave! But he ferried them
across.
And the two lovers, in single file, climbed the stairway
toward the land of the living. Their faces were bright with
joy; but their eyes could not yet meet—their lips could not
yet touch. Above them a dim light appeared; and they
quickened their pace on the stairs.
Orpheus reached the portal and stepped through it. He
was back the cave. With a cry of exultation, he turned and
looked at his beloved.
And Eurydice began to fade away. For she had yet to reach
the portal—and Orpheus had violated the condition of her
release.
“Farewell,” said Eurydice. And with a heartbroken cry,
she vanished.
Orpheus darted forward, grasped at empty air, and real-
ized what had happened.
•
Why, it may be wondered, did Orpheus look back? Why
did he violate the prohibition, thus losing Eurydice for a
second time? Various explanations have been offered:
had been imposed.
2. Having himself reached the upper world, he assumed
he was free to look at her.
3. He was assailed by a sudden doubt—that she was
no longer behind him.
4. He feared that she might falter at the last moment
and need his help.
5. The action was instinctive—he looked back before
he could stop himself.
Any of the above might explain his blunder. But did that
blunder really undo their reunion? Or had reunion been a
false hope from the start?
According to Phædrus (quoted by Plato in the Sympos-
ium), the latter was the case. Phædrus argues that Eurydice
was a mere shade—a ghost whom the gods had no intention
of restoring to life. They were offering a false hope to Orphe-
us, to chastise him for his lack of courage. He wished to
rejoin his beloved? He should have done so in the only way
possible—by dying as she had.
And Phædrus has a point. For if Eurydice was a shade,
she had to return to Hades—whether Orpheus looked back
or not. Their reunion, in the land of the living, was never a
possibility.
•
Orpheus still had years of life before him. It was during
those years that he apparently founded Orphism—a cult
based on his descent into Hades, and on the knowledge he
had acquired in Egypt. But he also wandered about Thrace,
singing mournful songs.*
And the death of Orpheus?
In the second century .., a Greek named Pausanias
traveled about the country, taking notes for a guidebook he
planned to write. In the course of his travels, he visited the
town of Dium. There he was shown a monument: a pillar
surmounted with an urn. The urn, he was informed by
locals, contained the bones of Orpheus.
And Pausanias was told two versions of the musician’s
death. In one, Orpheus was slain by a group of angry women,
whose husbands had left them to join his cult. In the other,
he was struck by lightning—punishment from the gods for
revealing their secrets.
But the death of Orpheus, whatever its circumstances,
does not conclude his tale. Ovid describes what happened
next:
3.
Æneas
A
,
Avernus—Lago d’Averno—draw a modest number
of tourists. The lake’s claim to fame? The ancient
Romans deemed it to be an entrance to the Underworld.
Thomas Bulfinch, in The Age of Fable, describes it thus:
of the Sibyl. For it was here, he explains, that dwelt the
Cumæn Sibyl.
And who was the Cumæn Sibyl? She was the soothsayer
—the chief prophetess—of the Romans. Over the course of
a millennium, a succession of women occupied the posi-
tion. Their qualification for the job? The ability to enter
into a trance, receive inspiration from Apollo, and utter
prophecies.
The caretaker does not wish to confuse his listeners. So
he does not mention the other Grotto of the Sibyl, about a
mile away. But it too is worth visiting. The second cave is
man-made—carved into a hillside near the ruins of Cumæ
—and impressive. A long passageway, trapezoidal in shape,
leads to an Inner Sanctum. It was there that the Sibyl, seated
on a throne and flanked by a pair of hounds, chanted her
oracles. (The dog-ties are still visible in the wall.) This improved
Grotto was her home from the fourth century .. onward.
Before that, according to the historian Strabo, she dwelt in
the cave by the lake.
But the Sibyl was not only a prophetess. She was also a
necromancer—a medium who communicated with the dead.
And it was a desire for such communication that brought,
to her doorstep one morning, Æneas, prince of Troy.
•
The Trojan War had ended, with the defeat of the Trojans
and the burning of Troy. But one of their chief warriors had
managed to escape: Æneas, a cousin of King Priam. As a
reward for his piety, the gods had allowed him to survive;
and Æneas—along with hundreds of his countrymen, includ-
ing his elderly father, Anchises, whom he had carried on his
back—had fled the burning city.
These Trojans fled to the port of Antandros; assembled a
fleet of ships; and, with Æneas as their leader, sailed off.
During the next few years they made attempts to settle else-
where: in Thrace, and on the islands of Delos and Crete.
But the attempts failed; and the refugees kept moving on.
They stopped briefly at Buthrotum; and its king uttered
a prophecy: “You will settle in Italy—such is the will of the
gods. There you will found a city that will achieve greatness.
And the descendants of Æneas will rule this city.”
Perhaps the king simply hoped to keep them moving.
But heedful of his prophecy, the Trojans headed for Italy.
Their route took them through the strait of Messia, with its
deadly whirlpool. And they made a stopover on Sicily (where
they spotted a Cyclops). During the stopover Anchises died;
and Æneas buried his father on the island.
But then came an abrupt change of course. As the Trojans
were leaving Sicily, a storm arose. (Had they offended Nep-
tune in some way?) Their ships were driven across the sea,
and blown ashore near Carthage.
The queen of Carthage was a young and attractive widow
named Dido. She welcomed the Trojans to her city, and
held a banquet in honor of Æneas. By the end of the meal,
she had fallen in love with him. But Dido struggled with
these feelings. For she had vowed to remain faithful to the
memory of her late husband.
Soon after the banquet, Æneas and Dido went hunting
together. It began to rain; and the pair took shelter in a cave.
Stranded there for hours, they wound up making love.
For several months they lived together as lovers. Finally,
Dido made a proposal to Æneas. His people would settle in
Carthage, alongside hers. And he and she would rule jointly.
Æneas seriously considered the proposal. For he had
become enamored with the queen; and his countrymen
needed a home. But as he slept one night, he was visited by
Mercury. The messenger of the gods reminded him of his
destiny. Æneas was to found a city in Italy—a city that
would achieve greatness. “O Trojan, sail on!” urged Mer-
cury.
Æneas agonized—and decided to sail on. As much as he
wished to remain with her, he would have to leave Dido.
Destiny and the gods were calling. Yet he could not bring
himself to inform her of his decision. So in secret, he read-
ied the Trojan ships for departure.
Dido discovered his plan, and berated him—cajoled him
—pleaded with him. But Æneas insisted that he had no
choice. And with his countrymen, he departed.
As they sailed away, Æneas looked back to the shore and
saw the smoke from a funeral pyre. He feared the worst;
and his fears (as he later learned) were justified. For Dido—
devastated by his departure—had taken her own life.
With his fleet of ships, Æneas sailed towards Italy. On
the way he stopped at Sicily, to perform funeral rites in
memory of his father. And the ghost of his father appeared
to him in a dream.
“Come visit me in the land of the dead,” said Anchises.
“But how shall I get there?” asked Æneas.
“Seek out the Sibyl at Lake Avernus. She will conduct
you to the Underworld.”
Æneas left Sicily with his fleet, and sailed along the west
coast of Italy. He was looking for a place to settle—and for
Lake Avernus.
•
Æneas stood outside the cave. His sword and helmet glint-
ed in the sun. “Hello?” he called out.
A local had given him directions. And he had hiked up
from the beach and followed a path through the woods. At
the lake he had turned left, as instructed, and walked along
the shore. And there it was—the cave of the Sibyl.
His greeting was answered with silence. The place seemed
deserted. There was not a sound—not even the singing of
birds nor the humming of insects.
Then an elderly woman emerged from the cave. The Sibyl
was a crone—bent, wizened, and disheveled. She stared at
him and cackled.*
* How elderly was the Sibyl? During their return from Hades,
she would tell Æneas the following story:
As a young neophyte, Deiphobe (her given name) had caught
the eye of Apollo; and the god had sought to seduce her. To ingra-
tiate himself, he had offered her any gift she desired. Deiphobe
Æneas started to introduce himself. But the Sibyl cut
him short—his identity was known to her. And she began
to prophesy. The Trojans, she said, would encounter hard-
ships as they sought to establish a new home. They would
have to fight for possession of the land. And Æneas would
be called upon to be brave and stalwart.
Æneas thanked the Sibyl for her prophecies (obvious
though they were). And he explained his purpose in seeking
her out. He wished to visit his father in Hades. Would she
take him there?
To his surprise, the Sibyl readily agreed—with two con-
ditions. First, he was to return to his ship and sacrifice to
Persephone. For the queen of Hades must be acknowledged
with an offering. Secondly, he was to acquire the Golden
Bough. It would serve as his passport to the Underworld.*
had pointed to a small heap of sand and said: “I wish to live for
as many years as there are grains of sand in that heap.” Apollo had
granted her wish—a thousand years of life! But alas, she had neg-
lected to ask that they be years of youth. Thus, as the years passed,
she became increasingly cronish in appearance. She was now 700
years old.
“Who, seeing me today,” she would lament to Æneas, “would
think that a god once found me lovely?”
* Here’s Virgil on the Golden Bough:
latet arbore opaca
aureus et foliis et lento vimine ramus,
Iunoni infernae dictus sacer; hunc tegit omnis
lucus et obscuris claudunt convallibus umbrae.
sed non ante datur telluris operta subire,
auricomos quam qui decerpserit arbore fetus.
hoc sibi pulchra suum ferri Proserpina munus
instituit
Amidst the branches of a shady tree
There grows a bough that’s hidden, hard to see,
With leaves and stem of gold. This Golden Bough
The queen of Hades with holiness did endow,
But did conceal it in a forest deep
Æneas returned to his ship and performed the sacrifice.
Then, rejoining the Sibyl, he followed her into the forest.
“You’re supposed to find it yourself,” she said. “But I’ll take
you to it.”
The Sibyl led him to the Golden Bough, which was grow-
ing on an oak, and told him to break it off. But only if he
was worthy, she said, would he be able to do so.
Æneas grasped the Golden Bough and broke it off. The
Sibyl purred with satisfaction and led him back to the cave.
There she sat him down on a stool; lit the contents of a tri-
pod; and instructed him to inhale the fumes. Æneas did so
(as did the Sibyl) and fell into a trance.
“Follow me,” she said. “The gate to the land of the dead
is always open. And getting to that land is easy. What’s not
so easy is getting back—but we’ll worry about that later.”
She hobbled to the rear of the cave. Æneas rose from the
stool—and from his inert body—and followed after her.
They passed through a portal, stepped onto a stairway, and
descended into the earth.
•
The river Acheron lay before them. The Sibyl hobbled
towards it, with Æneas close behind her. His head was still
spinning—from the monstrous forms they had encoun-
tered upon emerging into the Underworld. Gorgons and
harpies had swirled about them, along with the specters of
such ills as War and Famine and Disease. Trembling with
terror, Æneas had reached for his sword. But the Sibyl had
stayed his hand. She had assured him that these were but
illusions—apparitions that greeted new arrivals. “Ignore
them. And let’s get moving—your time with your father
will be limited.”
Charon was loading some shades into his boat. As the
two visitors approached, he shook his head and waved them
off. “The living may not cross over into Hades,” he said.
“Read the sign.”
“This is Æneas, prince of Troy,” said the Sibyl. “He has
come at the behest of his late father. And take a look at this.”
She held up the Golden Bough.
The ferryman’s mouth fell open. And he allowed them
into the boat.
He punted the boat across the river. No sooner had it
reached the opposite bank than the shades disembarked
and passed into Hades—on their way to rewards or punish-
ments.
But Cerberus was barking at Æneas and the Sibyl. The
Sibyl tossed him a morsel; and the three heads fought for it.
One gobbled it down; and the watchdog sank into a stupor.
“Drugged,” said the Sibyl with a wink. And she led Æneas
into Hades.
They passed through a forest that bordered the river. The
forest was the dwelling place, said the Sibyl, of innocent
souls who had died prematurely. Among them were chil-
dren, she said—“Flowers plucked from life before they
could bud!” Here too were men executed for crimes they
had not committed.
And the Sibyl pointed out a grove of myrtle trees. It was
known as the Grove of Grief, she told Æneas. Disappointed
lovers roamed its paths—unhappy souls who had died from
the pangs of unrequited love. Yet not even death could alle-
viate their grief. “These unfortunates water the grove with
their tears,” said the Sibyl.
Suddenly Æneas stopped and stared. Walking in the grove
was a young woman in royal garb.
“Dido!” he cried.
Indeed it was she. For the queen of Carthage halted at
the sound of her name.
“Dido!”
But she would not acknowledge him. Dido bowed her
head and gazed at the ground.
“Alas,” said Æneas, tears welling in his eyes. “It was true
then—that funeral pyre was yours. Was I the cause of your
death? Forgive me, my love! I parted from you unwillingly
—I had no choice! The gods had decreed that I sail on to
Italy. Did I dare oppose the will of the gods? Shirk my duty?
Argue with my destiny? Yet had I known that your grief
would be so profound—O Dido, Dido, my love!”
As he addressed her, Dido had remained silent and expres-
sionless. She had looked down at the ground, refusing to
the clanging of chains, cries and groans. The wicked were
receiving their due, said the Sibyl. And she named the
crimes for which they were being punished.
“Your father, thankfully, is in Elysium—the home of the
blest.”
They set off in that direction. Along the way they stopped
at the entrance to the palace of Hades, and left the Golden
Bough there—as a gift for Persephone. And continuing on,
they entered Elysium.
They found Anchises in a meadow. Æneas ran up to his
father and sought to embrace him. But they passed through
one another. (Living souls and shades are of different den-
sities.) So instead of embracing, they exchanged looks of
joy. “You’ve come at last,” said Anchises. “I knew you would.”
He led his son on a tour of Elysium. They strolled through
fragrant fields and leafy groves. Everywhere were shades.
Clad in white robes, the shades were picnicking, tossing
balls, reciting poetry, singing and dancing. An appreciative
crowd had gathered around Orpheus, who was playing his
lyre. And on every brow was a white headband—the badge
of the blest.
A number of shades were lined up at a river. Æneas asked
why.
“That is Lethe, the river of forgetfulness,” said Anchises.
“If you need to reincarnate, you drink of its waters—to erase
your memories.”
Anchises led his son to a bocce-ball court. A game was in
progress; and a group of shades—some in armor, others in
togas—had gathered to watch.
“This is why I asked you to visit,” said Anchises. “I wanted
you to behold these men.”
“Are they my ancestors?”
“No, your descendants! For you shall engender a noble
line. And they shall establish a city—a city that shall achieve
greatness and bring order to the world.The city of Rome!
“You see that fellow with the spear? That’s Romulus, the
founder of the city. Beside him is Tullus, an early king. And
he with the plume on his helmet? That’s Fabius Maximus,
the general who will outwit Hannibal. Those two fellows
sipping on nectar? The Gracchi brothers, civic reformers.
And Cato and Pompey and Scipio Africanus. And over
there by the refreshment stand—Julius Cæsar, conqueror of
Gaul. And Augustus Cæsar, the emperor who will preside
over Rome’s most glorious era.
“These are the heroes who will distinguish your lineage.
And who will honor you as the founder of their nation. For such
is your destiny.
“Go now, my son—beach your ships in Italy and find a
home for our people. Carry an olive branch, yet gird your-
self for war. And may the gods bestir themselves in your
behalf.”
“I shall do so, father,” said Æneas. “That your lineage
may be distinguished.”
The Sibyl tapped him on the shoulder. “Our time here is
nearly up,” she said.
Father and son sought to embrace; but again they passed
through one another. So they parted instead with salutes of
farewell.
“Let us return to the land of the living,” said the Sibyl.
And she added with a cackle: “If we can find our way
back!”*
* Our main sources for the life of Æneas are the poets Virgil and
Ovid. Virgil, of course, is the author of the Æneid—the epic that
recounts his travels and tribulations. And Virgil’s own sources?
The Iliad; the historical writings of Hellanicus; and the chroni-
cles of Nævius and Ennius. So the Æneid may possess a degree of
historical accuracy.
To be sure, Virgil commits a number of anachronisms. For
instance, he has Æneas consult the Sibyl in the man-made grotto
at Cumæ—not built until centuries later—rather than in the
cave at Lake Avernus. And his Trojans conduct themselves like
Romans. But Virgil’s aim was to inspire, not inform. The Æneid
is a patriotic epic. It seeks to glorify Rome, in the person of a heroic
ancestor.
Central to the Æneid is the Roman virtue of pietas, of which
Æneas is the embodiment. Pietas may be translated as “devotion
4.
Apollonius of Tyana
A
.
Yet according to G. R. S. Mead, his biographer, “Apol-
lonius of Tyana was the most famous philosopher of
the Græco-Roman world of the first century.” During a
busy and influential lifetime, Apollonius was a traveler (rang-
ing as far as India); an advisor to emperors; a sage with dis-
ciples; an author (none of whose works have survived); a
healer; and a reformer who, says Mead, “devoted the major
part of his long life to the purification of the many cults of
the Empire and to the instruction of the ministers and priests
of its religions.”*
He was also a visitor to the Inner Earth. For while in
India, Apollonius descended to the Abode of the Wise Men
and studied there.
Apollonius was born to a wealthy family in Tyana, a town
in Cappadocia (a Greek-speaking region of Asia Minor, in
what is now central Turkey). A precocious child, he was
educated initially by learned tutors. Then, at the age of
fourteen, he was sent to study in nearby Tarsus. (Saul of
Tarsus—the future Saint Paul—may have been around at
the time.) But a year later Apollonius moved on to Ægeæ,
a seaport in Cilicia, to study at the local temple of Ascle-
pius.†
* G. R. S. Mead—private secretary to Madame Blavatsky and
editor of The Theosophical Review —was the author of Apollo-
nius of Tyana: The Philosopher-Reformer of the First Century A.D.
(1901).
† Scattered throughout the Græco-Roman world, the temples of
Asclepius (known as asclepieia) were the hospitals of their day. An
afflicted person would make a pilgrimage to one of these temples.
There he would pray and sacrifice to Asclepius, the god of heal-
ing. He would then spend a night in the temple—sleeping in its
The priests at the temple adhered to various philoso-
phies. But it was to a Pythagorean that young Apollonius
was drawn. And he was soon adopting the philosophy and
lifestyle of Pythagoras.*
As part of that lifestyle, Apollonius became a vegetarian,
dressed plainly in white linen, wore his hair long and went
barefoot, remained chaste, meditated, and gave away his
property. But most notably, he took the Pythagorean oath
of silence (the echemythia), vowing not to utter a single
word for five years. And Apollonius kept his oath, allowing
himself not even a murmur.*
What were the benefits of Pythagoreanism? Later in
life, Apollonius would send this letter to a rival philoso-
pher:
the Wise Men and partake of their wisdom.*
Apollonius began his journey in Antioch, accompanied
by two servants. (One was a stenographer; the other, a cal-
ligrapher. Among their duties was to record his thoughts as
he traveled.) His seven disciples had declined to accompany
Apollonius, and had tried to dissuade him from making so
arduous a journey. To which he had replied: “Since you are
faint-hearted, I bid you farewell. As for myself, I must go
where wisdom and my guardian spirit may lead me. The
gods are my advisors and I can but rely on their counsels.”
But while passing through Hierapolis in Syria, he acquired
another companion: a young man named Damis. “Let us go
together—you will follow God, and I shall follow you!” said
Damis, who would become his chief disciple and his Boswell.†
Apollonius continued eastward, with Damis serving as
guide and translator. They soon arrived at the Euphrates
river—the border between the Roman and Parthian
empires. A customs official asked if Apollonius had any-
thing to declare.
“Moderation, Justice, Virtue, Temperance, Courage, and
Endurance,” he replied.*
“You must register these servants,” said the official, mis-
taking the feminine nouns for the names of slaves.
“That I cannot do,” said Apollonius, “since these are not
my servants that I bring across the border, but my masters.”
Apollonius, Damis, and the two servants crossed the
river and continued on to Babylon. They wound up staying
there for eighteen months. During that time Apollonius
studied with the Magi and was initiated into their myster-
ies. He also became a confident of the king, to whom he
explained the Pythagorean lifestyle; offered advice on rul-
ing; and talked about the nature of the soul—talks so
enlightening that the king ceased to fear death.
Finally it was time to resume their journey. The king gave
Apollonius camels, provisions, and a guide. And he asked
what gift the philosopher would bring back to him from
India.
“A fine gift, O king,” said Apollonius. “For if my meeting
with those men makes me wiser, so will I return to you a
better man than I am now.”
His route took him and his companions through the Cau-
casus. There they passed the mountain where Prometheus
had been chained. (Locals showed them the remains of the
chains.) And one moonlit night, they were set upon by an
empusa, or vampire. (Apollonius repelled it with a rebuke.)
But for the most part, the journey through Central Asia was
uneventful; and Apollonius and Damis passed the time by
engaging in philosophical discussions.*
Then one day they began to see men riding on elephants,
and realized they had reached India. Crossing the Indus
river, they arrived in the capital city of Taxila. And there,
for three days, they were the guests of King Phraotes.
Despite his wealth, Phraotes lived a life of moderation and
restraint. A devotee of philosophy, he was honored to host
a philosopher; and during one of their talks he asked Apollo-
nius: “In Greece would you deign to accept me as a guest?”
“What do you mean?” said Apollonius.
“Because I consider you far superior to myself; wisdom
is greater than royal rank.”
On the morning of Apollonius’s departure, Phraotes pro-
vided him with a new guide. He also gave him a letter of
introduction—to Iarchas, head of the Abode of the Wise
Men. The letter began:
Apollonius might have. “Ask away,” he said, “as you have
come among Masters who have knowledge of all things.”
“Do you have self-knowledge?” asked Apollonius.
“Of course!” replied Iarchas. “We are able to know all
things because we began by knowing ourselves. Otherwise,
we would not have dared to embark upon the quest for
philosophical knowledge.”
A lengthy conversation ensued, touching on such topics
as virtue, the nature of the soul, and Homer. Afterwards a
banquet was held.*
Apollonius spent four months with the Wise Men.
During that time he learned their doctrines and absorbed
their wisdom. Eventually, Damis too was allowed to attend
the philosophical discourses and the rites in the temple.
Witnessing the levitation of the Wise Men, his eyes fairly
popped.†
Finally it was time for Apollonius to depart. Iarchas pro-
vided him with camels and a guide, and presented him with
seven healing rings—one for each planet and day of the
week.
Ten days later Apollonius and his companions reached
the sea, and boarded a ship that was bound for Babylon.
In the decades that followed, Apollonius of Tyana rose to
prominence. Combining the wisdom of the East with that
of Pythagoras, he became the foremost philosopher of the
Græco-Roman world. And he continued to travel. For he
saw himself now as having a mission: the restoration of reli-
gious practices to their original purity. “I shall never forget
my Masters,” he said of the Wise Men, “and journey through
the world teaching what I have learned from them.”
His fame and influence grew. Cities summoned him,
to instruct their priests in the proper conduct of ritual.
(Among the reforms that he advocated: the cessation of ani-
mal sacrifice.) And he busied himself with the standard
duties of a sage: healing, interpreting dreams, installing tal-
ismans—and, of course, teaching and preaching. With his
disciples he discussed matters both mundane and meta-
physical. Nothing escaped his scrutiny, from the challenges
of daily life to the nature of the soul.*
And always at his side was Damis, recording his words
and deeds.
The Peripatetics were philosophers who supposedly walked
as they talked; and Apollonius carried the practice to new
heights. He was probably the greatest traveler of antiquity,
roaming the length and breadth of the Roman Empire. He
would lodge at temples, inns, and the homes of dignitaries.
G. R. S. Mead lists the many places he visited (including the
Upper Nile retreat of the Gymnosophists, or Naked Philos-
ophers), and observes:
served as an advisor to emperors—in particular Titus and
Vespasian. He lectured them on the duties of a wise ruler;
and the emperors paid attention to him. Said Titus: “I have
indeed captured Jerusalem, but you, Apollonius, have cap-
tured me.”*
And like any philosopher, he wrote books—among them
a life of Pythagoras, a treatise on sacrifices, and a treatise
on divination. (Nothing has survived of these works save
fragments.) Yet despite his intellectual acuity, Apollonius
remained at heart a simple, pious man—one who thrice
daily prayed to the sun.
He lived to be nearly a hundred years old. At that time
he was still teaching, at a temple in Ephesus—the conclu-
sion to a long and illustrious career as a philosopher.
Here are some comments on that career:
[His] one idea seems to have been to spread abroad among
the religious brotherhoods and institutions of the Empire
some portion of the wisdom which he had brought back
from India. (G. R. S. Mead)
It would not surprise if, in the feverish religious atmosphere
of the Severan court, Philostratus had turned a remarkable
but not exceptional Pythagorean teacher of the first century
into a holy man for a new age. (Translator Christopher Jones)
5.
King Herla
O
.
was resting after a day of hunting with his knights.
Seated against a tree, he dozed off.*
Herla was awakened by a rustling sound. A goat was
emerging from the forest. Riding it was a dwarf—a short,
stocky creature with a ruddy face and full beard. And a
crown upon his head.
The dwarf halted in front of Herla and introduced him-
self. He was the Dwarf King, he said. He had heard good
things about Herla, and wished to honor the Briton by
attending his wedding.
And with cartloads of food and drink, Herla and his
knights followed after the Dwarf King.
He led them to a cave in the forest. They entered it on
their horses; rode along a tunnel that descended into the
earth; and emerged in a vast cavern. Lit by hundreds of
lamps, it was richly furnished. The Dwarf King welcomed
them to his palace.
Other guests arrived: scores of boisterous dwarfs. The
nuptial ceremony was held; and the festivities began. Herla
had reciprocated by bringing food and drink. For his part,
the Dwarf King provided music and other entertainment.
And for three days, the cavern reverberated with sounds of
merriment.
Finally the guests began to leave. The Dwarf King thanked
Herla and the knights for coming. And as a parting gift, he
presented them with a small dog.
“On the ride homeward,” said the Dwarf King, “carry
this dog with you. And do not dismount until it leaps to the
ground.”
“A strange warning, O king of the dwarfs,” said Herla.
“But we shall heed it. And I myself shall carry the dog.”
Mounting their horses, Herla and the knights left the
subterranean cavern; ascended via the tunnel; and exited
the cave. And emerging into daylight, they were dumb-
founded by what they saw.
For the forest was gone. In its place were fields and houses.
Smoke curled up from chimneys. And nearby, an elderly
shepherd was tending his flock.
They rode over to him. The shepherd stared at them
blankly.
“Do you not recognize your king?” said Herla. “Are you
not one of my loyal subjects? Greetings, shepherd. I am
King Herla!”
“My lord,” said the shepherd, “I speak your language
but haltingly. For I am a Saxon and you are a Briton. As for
‘Herla,’ we have no such king—though legend tells of a
Briton king by that name. He is said to have accompanied
a dwarf into that cave, and to have been seen no more upon
the earth. But that was long ago. We Saxons, having driven
out the Britons, have possessed this land for nearly three
centuries.”
Herla’s eyes widened with astonishment. “Three centu-
ries!” he exclaimed. “Yet for us, only three days have elapsed.
How can that be? What sorcery is afoot? What spell was
cast upon us, whilst carousing in that cavern?”
Just then one of the knights dismounted from his horse
—and crumbled into dust.
Herla recalled the warning they had been given. “Do not
dismount!” he cried to his knights. “Not until this dog leaps
to the ground. Come, let us ride—until it alights!”
And they galloped off in a thunder of hoofbeats.
•
What caused the plight of King Herla and his knights?
The Dwarf King may be suspected of mischief.
And what became of these ancient Britons? It is said that
they are riding still. Like a band of ghosts, they roam the
countryside—waiting for the dog to alight.
Listen at night, and you may hear a sound like thunder.
It is the rumble of their horses.*
ing willows, towers the color of cinnabar, pavilions of red jade,
and far-flung palaces.”
There a group of seductive women befriended him. They took
him to a pleasure house and plied him with music and wine. And
the peasant was about to yield to their blandishments, when he
recalled his beloved wife and children—and fled. A dancing light
led him back through the passageway.
Upon reaching his village, however, he recognized no one. And
arriving at his house, he found it to be inhabited by strangers. To
his amazement, they were his descendants! Hundreds of years
ago, they told him, their ancestor had disappeared into the moun-
tains, and was never seen again.
6.
Cuchulain
C
[--]
became aware of a woman standing before him. Clad
in crimson, she was smiling in what he took to be a
seductive manner. The famed warrior of Ulster purred with
expectation.
He was resting against a sacred pillar, near his stronghold
of Dun Delgan. Intoxicated, Cuchulain had wandered from
the stronghold; plopped down against the pillar; and fallen
asleep. Just before dozing off, he had glimpsed a bird with
crimson plumage, alighting at his feet. Now the bird was
gone; and in its place, to his delight, this attractive woman.
But his delight turned swiftly to dismay. For the woman
laughed and began to lash him with a horsewhip.
Later that day, he was found by his fellow warriors, still
seated against the pillar. Afflicted by a mysterious malady,
Cuchulain had fallen into a stupor, unable to move or to
speak. They carried him back to the stronghold and laid
him on his bed.
For weeks he continued in this state. His wife, Emer,
would sit at the bedside and sing to him. “Arise, O hero of
Ulster,” she sang. “Come back to us, my love.” She also con-
sulted with the local Druid. But even he, with his spells and
potions, was unable to cure Cuchulain.*
Then one day a messenger arrived. He stated that he had
been sent by Fand, the queen of the fairies; that Fand was
responsible for the malady; and that she was offering to cure
Cuchulain, if he would come to Tir-nan-Og and visit her
realm.*
His fellow warriors conferred. And deciding that he must
go to Tir-nan-Og, they loaded Cuchulain onto his horse.
Emer watched from a window, weeping and praying. And
the messenger led the horse, with its human cargo, out of
the stronghold.
Night was falling when the messenger arrived at a fairy
hill. He clapped his hands and a portal opened. Leading the
horse through it, he descended along a passageway. Slumped
on the horse, Cuchulain murmured to himself. The clomp
clomp of hooves echoed in the passageway.
Finally they emerged in Tir-nan-Og. And awaiting them
in a meadow was Queen Fand—the woman in crimson. She
introduced herself to Cuchulain and welcomed him to her
realm.
Then she touched him. Instantly, he was cured of his
malady. His sickly pallor vanished; his vitality returned.
With a triumphant cry he sat up on the horse. The hero of
Ulster was himself again.
“Come live with me and be my consort,” said Fand.
And Cuchulain—entranced by her beauty—agreed to
the proposal.
Fand escorted him to her palace. There he listened to
celestial music; drank the nectar of the fairies; dined on del-
icacies. “This is indeed for me!” said Cuchulain. And they
became lovers. A month went by (though Cuchulain had
lost all sense of time).
Then he asked if he might pay a brief visit to his strong-
hold. For Cuchulain had decided to remain in Tir-nan-Og;
and he wanted to make known his decision to his wife and
* Tir-nan-Og (“Land of Eternal Youth”) was the Celtic Otherworld
—the dwelling place of the gods, the fairies, and the dead. It was
located inside the earth (although some accounts place it on an
island in the Western Sea). One could enter it via a “fairy hill”—
one of the mysterious mounds found throughout the British Isles.
For there the Otherworld interpenetrated with our own.
warriors. Fand acceded to the request, after securing his
promise to return to her. And she had him escorted back to
the surface world.
Arriving at his stronghold, Cuchulain was greeted with
jubilation. The warriors crowded about him, cheering and
slapping him on the back. Emer tearfully embraced him.
And there followed a day of feasting and celebration.
But finally he announced his intention. He was going to
return to Tir-nan-Og and take up residence with the fairy
queen.
Emer was devastated. She pleaded with him to change
his mind. But Cuchulain was deaf to her pleas. He described
the attractions of Tir-nan-Og—the nectar of the fairies; the
freedom from care; the promise of eternal youth. And he
extolled Queen Fand. In her presence, said Cuchulain, he
felt like a divine being.
At the mention of Fand, his wife grew livid. “I am as
good a woman as she!” cried Emer. And she predicted that,
as the queen’s novelty wore off, Cuchulain would tire of
her. “New things are glittering,” she told him. “But they
soon tarnish and get tossed aside. Moreover, you are dis-
honoring your wife. The women of Ulster are laughing at
me!”
But Cuchulain would not listen. His decision was firm,
he said. He planned to return to Tir-nan-Og in the morn-
ing.
Emer let out a cry of anguish and fled to her chamber.
There she brooded—and arrived at a decision of her own.
Slipping out of the stronghold, she went to visit the
Druid. She found him sitting in his hut, amid jars of med-
icine and piles of manuscripts. A concoction was bubbling
on the stove.
The Druid listened to her tale of woe. Emer told him of
the conversation with her husband. And she described the
pain she was feeling, and the rage.
“And what would you have me do?” he asked.
“Provide me with poison. For I wish to send Cuchulain
to his grave. At least there he will still be mine.”
“An extreme solution. One that should not be undertaken
lightly. But listen, I have a better idea.”
He searched through his potions, located a vial of amber
liquid, and handed it to her.
“Take this. It is the deog dermaid—the Potion of Forget-
fulness.”
The Druid instructed her on its use. Emer thanked him
and returned to the stronghold. There she mixed the potion
into a cup of ale, and took the cup to Cuchulain.
“Drink this, O husband,” she said. “As a farewell toast to
the years we have spent together.”
“Gladly,” said Cuchulain.
He drank from the cup. A shiver ran through him. And
all of his recent memories were erased. His stay in Tir-nan-
Og, his liaison with Fand, his promise to return to her—all
were forgotten. It was as if none of it had happened. He
looked at his wife and smiled lovingly.
Now she too drank from the cup. And her memories
were likewise erased. Cuchulain’s sojourn in Tir-nan-Og,
his decision to leave her, her intent to poison him—all were
forgotten. She had no remembrance of any of it. And she
returned his smile.
The Potion of Forgetfulness had brought them back
together.*
7.
Elidore
E
—as a twelve-year-old boy—a subterranean king-
dom. His tale was recorded by Giraldus Cambrensis,
the medieval chronicler. Giraldus heard the tale from the
bishop of St. David’s, who had heard it from Elidore him-
self.*
Young Elidore, we are told, had been a pupil in the
monastery school of St. David’s. But he had resented the
harsh discipline. (“‘The root of learning is bitter, although
the fruit is sweet,’” observes Giraldus, quoting from the
Book of Proverbs.) So he had neglected his studies, and
received frequent blows from his teacher. Finally he aban-
doned his books altogether and ran away.
For two days Elidore hid in the hollow of a river bank.
Weary and hungry, he began to regret having run away.
Then he heard a voice and looked up. Two little men were
standing before him. “Come with us,” said one, “and we
shall lead you to a land of delights and games.” Elidore
assented, and followed them through a dark passageway
that led down into the earth.
They emerged in a subterranean realm—“a most fair
country,” says Giraldus, “replete with rivers and meadows,
forests and plains.” Thick clouds obscured the sky; and a
described to her the splendor of the subterranean world; the
manners and customs of its inhabitants; and his carefree life
among them. Elidore also told her of the vast quantities of
gold that the king possessed. Hearing this, his mother urged
him to bring back some gold; and he agreed to do so.
The prince had a golden ball, which he and Elidore used
as a plaything. One morning Elidore stole the ball. He hid
it in his shirt, slipped out of the palace, and returned to the
surface via the passageway. Unbeknownst to Elidore, the
two little men were following close behind him.
Arriving at his house, Elidore stumbled on the doorstep
and dropped the ball. The little men grabbed it and sped
off. As they did so, they spit at Elidore and denounced him
for his greed and treachery.
Ashamed of his deed, Elidore rebuked his mother for hav-
ing suggested it. He ran after the little men; but they had
vanished. And when he walked along the river and looked
for the passageway, it was nowhere to be found.
In the months that followed, he searched repeatedly for
the passageway. Alas, it seemed to have disappeared. There
would be no returning, he realized, to that carefree land.
So he returned instead to school. And having resolved to
mend his ways, he applied himself to his studies. Eventually,
he entered the priesthood.
Many years later, Elidore—now an elderly priest—told
the bishop of St. David’s about his visit to the subterranean
kingdom. And recalling his happy days there, he burst into
tears.
Giraldus recorded the tale in his chronicle. But what was
his appraisal of it? Was it credible? His conclusion was this:
place—as Augustine implied—among those things which
are neither to be strongly affirmed nor denied.
8.
Sir Owen
A
Purgatory. Located on an island in Lough Derg, the
cave was known as St. Patrick’s Purgatory. For St.
Patrick himself had discovered it.
The discovery took place in the year 445. St. Patrick had
retreated to the island to pray. While asleep in the cave, he
experienced a vision of Purgatory. And a voice revealed that
the cave was an entrance to Purgatory—and that by spend-
ing a night in it, one might be purged of one’s sins. Years
later, his disciple Dabheoc founded a monastery on the
island; and the monks served as keepers of the cave.*
Its fame spread; and by the twelfth century, St. Patrick’s
Purgatory had become a major destination for pilgrims.
They came from throughout Ireland and from abroad. The
site (which now comprised two islands: a monastery on one,
the Purgatory on the other) was administered by Augus-
tinian monks. They would greet the pilgrim; try to dissuade
him from entering the Purgatory; and (if he persisted) super-
vise him in a regimen of fasting and prayer. He was then
shut up inside the cave. The next day the gate was unlocked;
of their sins.
Then it was Owen’s turn to be punished. The demons
flew him to a fiery abyss and dropped him into it. He plum-
meted through flames. The heat was unbearable. Sulphur-
ous vapors seared his lungs. In agony he cried out: “Jesus
Christ, Son of the living God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”
And he was lifted out of the abyss, as if by an invisible hand.
The demons took him next to a river of fire. Spanning it
was a narrow bridge—barely a foot wide. “This is the River
of Hell,” they told him. “Cross it if you can!” Owen started
across. But so narrow was the bridge, and slippery, that he
could not gain a foothold. Flames were shooting up from
below. And the demons were taunting him and throwing
stones.
“O Jesus help me,” said Owen. And the bridge widened,
as if stretched by an invisible hand. He scampered across.
On the opposite bank was a wall. A gate in it swung open;
and he entered a garden. There he was met by an angel,
who welcomed him to the earthly paradise. This was a tem-
porary residence, explained the angel—a way station for
souls that had been purified in Purgatory and were bound
for Heaven. The angel pointed to a gate that shimmered in
the distance: the Gate of Heaven.
Owen asked if he could remain here. No, said the angel;
he must return to the world and complete his allotted span.
One could reside in the earthly paradise only after relin-
quishing one’s flesh and bones.
Then the angel gave him a taste of heavenly food. Owen
grew faint with rapture. And then it was time to return to
the cave.
When morning came, the monks unlocked the gate and
found him asleep on the floor of the cave. They roused him
and led him back to the monastery, for further fasting and
prayer.
And finally, they said farewell to the knight. A monk
rowed him from the island. He mounted his horse and
headed home.
Sir Owen was a new man. He had been purged of his
sins—relieved of a heavy burden—and restored to God’s
grace.*
* Many in Europe were soon learning about Owen and his
descent. Here is how that happened:
In 1156 Gilbert of Louth, an English monk, was sent to Ireland
to establish a monastery. In need of an interpreter, he was intro-
duced to the bilingual Owen. (After his return from Lough Derg,
the knight had joined a monastic order.) During their time together,
Owen described his descent into Purgatory.
Upon his return to England, Gilbert passed the story on. Among
those who heard it was Henry of Saltrey, who committed it to
writing. Henry titled his manuscript Tractatus de Purgatorio
Sancti Patricii (A treatise on Saint Patrick’s Purgatory). It began
with a discourse on the nature of Purgatory, then recounted the
visit there of Sir Owen. Copies of the Tractatus were widely cir-
culated—a medieval bestseller. (Some 150 manuscripts have sur-
vived.) Moreover, the Latin text was translated and adapted into
vernaculars.
But what was one to make of it? Was Owen’s tale to be taken
literally? Did he actually descend into Purgatory? According to
Henry, Owen denied that his experience had been a dream or a
vision. No, insisted Owen, he had descended bodily into a real
place. And a local bishop, reported Henry, had affirmed the
authenticity of his account.
The Tractatus inspired many pilgrimages to Lough Derg. Such
pilgrimages would continue into the present—with one dark
interlude. In 1632 the English Parliament condemned St. Patrick’s
Purgatory, deeming it a flagrant instance of “Papist” superstition.
The pilgrimage was banned; the monks were expelled; and the
monastery was demolished. In Lough Derg and Its Pilgrimages
(1879), Father Daniel O’Connor laments:
“The apostate English determined to destroy that shrine of reli-
gion, where their forefathers in the Ages of Faith had done
penance; where King Aldfred of Northumbria had prayed to St.
Patrick.. . and where Harold, afterwards King of England (not to
speak of many other princes and nobles of that country, who had
done likewise), made pilgrimage about the year 1050 to the
‘miraculous cave of St. Patrick.’”
Yet it was not long before pilgrims were showing up again,
despite the threat of punishment. Finally the monks returned;
and rebuilding began.
“’Mid weal and woe,” says Father O’Connor, “the Irish heart
had entwined round the holy island of Lough Derg. . . .the ruined
church and crosses and oratories were again put in some sort of
repair by loving hands; and the pilgrimage rose again, phoenix-
like, from its ashes.”
Today the shrine of Lough Derg is the most revered in Ireland.
Tens of thousands of penitents arrive each summer. The cave is
long gone, destroyed by the English. But penitential exercises are
conducted. The pilgrims fast (dry toast and black tea are allowed);
pray in a modern basilica; conduct all-night vigils; confess their
sins; and perform barefoot circuits of the island. Though a far cry
from the fiery abyss, the experience can be profoundly affecting.
9.
T
young men; take them to her castle in Fairyland;
and enslave them. She preferred those who were
handsome and skilled at reciting poetry. Such a one was
Thomas of Ercildoune—or Thomas the Rhymer, as he was
known.
Thomas was a Scottish laird of the thirteenth century.
He dwelt in a tower at Ercildoune, in the Eildon Hills.
Little is known of his life or family. But Thomas was known
in his day as both a poet and a prophet. He wrote a rhymed
narrative titled Sir Tristrem—the earliest such work in
English. As for his prophecies, they invariably came true.
And a tale began to circulate—of how Thomas the Rhymer
acquired the power of prophecy.*
•
Thomas was lounging, the tale began, on a river bank.
Young and handsome, he was admiring his reflection in the
water. Suddenly, he heard hoofbeats. And a woman on a
white horse emerged from the woods, rode up to him, and
halted.
She wore a velvet cape and a green silk gown. There was
an unearthly quality to her beauty; and Thomas wondered
if he was having a vision. “Are you Mary, the Queen of
Heaven?” he asked. The woman laughed. “I am a queen,”
she replied, “but not of Heaven.” And she asked Thomas to
kiss her.
Taken with her beauty, he did so—and his fate was
sealed. For the kiss cast a spell upon Thomas. He was now
in the thrall of the queen of the fairies. She told him to get
up behind her on the horse. Thomas complied. And together
they rode off into the forest.
At dusk they arrived at a fairy hill. The queen clapped
her hands; and a portal opened. They entered the hill and
followed a passageway down into the earth. The horse trot-
ted along, its bells jingling. Its hoofbeats echoed from the
walls, which were luminous.
The sound of rushing water became audible. The sound
grew louder; and they came to a subterranean river. Dark
waters flowed into the depths of the earth. The horse waded
through them and trotted on.
Finally a light became visible; and they emerged from the
passageway. Before them lay a vast plain, strewn with boul-
ders. A gray sky hung oppressively low, like the roof of a
cavern. Bats were gliding about.
“We are in the Underworld,” said the queen.
She spread her cape on the ground; brought out food and
wine; and sat down with Thomas to dine. Then she drew his
attention to a roadway, which branched into four separate
roads. And she said:
is the king of the country, and I am his queen.”*
townsfolk crowded about their missing laird. They were
amazed at his return. For seven years had elapsed.*
Thomas explained his absence: the queen of the fairies
had been holding him captive. But the explanation drew a
mixed reaction. Some of the townsfolk believed him. But
others were skeptical. Surely, they insisted, he had simply
been roaming the countryside as a vagabond.
“Here’s proof,” he said, and showed them the apple. “A
gift from the queen of the fairies. And it will grant me the
power of prophecy.”
Thomas returned to his tower. There he resumed his life
began to awaken. King Arthur himself—on a velvet couch—
bolted upright.
“False alarm, false alarm!” shouted Thomas. “Go back to sleep!”
And he ushered the horse-dealer out of the cave.
10.
Paiute Chief
T
Fate magazine an article titled “Tribal Memories of
the Flying Saucers.” Its author was identified as Oge-
Make, a Navaho Indian.
Oge-Make tells of going to the foothills of the Panamint
Mountains; seeking out an old man of the Paiute tribe; and
asking him about the “mystery ships” that were being seen
in the skies. Were flying saucers something new? asked Oge-
Make. Or had Indians known about them in earlier times,
and preserved that knowledge in legend?
At dusk the two sat beside a fire and smoked together.
And the old man told Oge-Make a tale.
•
Long ago, said the elderly Paiute, a tribe called the Hav-
musuv migrated to the Panamint Mountains. And in a sub-
terranean cavern, they built a city. For they wished to dwell
in seclusion, hidden from the warring tribes of the region.
The nearby Paiutes, however, were aware of their pres-
ence. For the Hav-musuvs were both technologically and
culturally advanced; and when they traveled, they did so in
silver airships—flying disks that would emerge from the
cavern and disappear into the clouds.*
The Paiutes feared their subterranean neighbors and
* That issue of Fate had two articles on flying saucers. For editor
Ray Palmer was zealously promoting the phenomenon. Initially,
he proposed an extraterrestrial origin for UFOs. But he would
later change his mind, and argue that they came from inside the
earth.
The career of Ray Palmer (who has been called “the man who
invented flying saucers”) will be examined in chapter 20.
and eloquent. Yet her monthly columns—never collected into a
book—are slowly disappearing. For the pages of old issues of
Amazing (which was printed on pulp paper) are turning brittle
and crumbling. Like the culture she sought to commemorate,
these writings by L. Taylor Hansen are vanishing.
For more on Hansen, see Partners in Wonder: Women and the
Birth of Science Fiction by Eric Leif Davin.
11.
Robert Kirk
O
, , -
man was abducted by fairies. They took him to
their underground realm and held him captive.
His attempts to escape failed; and the clergyman became a
resident of Fairyland.
He is apparently still there.
His name was Robert Kirk. He grew up in Aberfoyle
(known today as “the gateway to the Highlands”), where his
father was the local minister. After studying at Edinburgh
University, Kirk was himself ordained and assigned to the
town of Balquidden. For twenty years he served as minister
there. He then succeeded his late father at Aberfoyle—where
he remained until that fateful evening.
In both places Kirk attended diligently to the needs of
his parishioners. Yet he also had time for scholarship. He
translated the Psalms into Gaelic. And he supervised the
publication of a Gaelic Bible—that the Holy Scriptures
might be read in the Highlands. But an endeavor of a dif-
ferent sort would come to preoccupy him.
For the Reverend Kirk had begun a study of local folk-
lore—specifically, of fairy lore. Notebook in hand, he would
visit his parishioners and record what they had to say (in
Gaelic) about “the little people.” His notebooks filled, with
traditions about the fairies—and with eyewitness accounts.
For some of his informants, endowed with second sight,
spoke of personal encounters.*
A funeral was held. And Robert Kirk—or what was believed
to be him—was buried in the churchyard. And there, pre-
sumedly, his tale had ended.
But there was more to come. For a few days later Kirk—
still clad in his nightshirt—appeared to a relative in a dream.
And he said:
on Dun Shi:
•
In the years that followed, he appeared in dreams to res-
idents of Aberfoyle, with a plea for help. And occasionally,
someone crossing the bridge near Dun Shi would feel a sud-
den burden on his back—the soul of Robert Kirk, seeking
to escape. But the clergyman’s fate had been sealed. And he
remained among the fairies.
Three centuries have passed since his abduction; and
Kirk has probably become resigned to his captivity. And he
may even be making the best of it. Perhaps he is joining the
fairies at their banquets (along with Thomas the Rhymer)...
visiting them in their homes...taking notes for a sequel to
his treatise (the fairies themselves now his informants).
And—futile as it may seem—preaching the gospel to the
fairies.*
* That manuscript that Kirk left behind in a drawer? It fell into
the possession of his eldest son, and was eventually deposited in
a library in Edinburgh. And in 1815 The Secret Commonwealth
was published in a limited edition.
The book begins with a preamble:
“ on the Nature and Actions of the Subterranean (and,
for the most Part) Invisible People, heretofore going under the
names of , and , or the like. . . as they are
described by those who have the ; and now, to
occasion further Inquiry, collected and compared, by a Circum-
spect Inquirer residing among the Scottish-Irish in Scotland.”
The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies (as later
editions were titled) is a study of the inhabitants of Fairyland—
by a man who believed in their existence. It describes their origin,
appearance, customs, crafts, food, social organization, and lifestyle
—information that Kirk had collected from his parishioners. And
it includes a discourse on second sight, in which he seeks to show
that the talent is “not unsuitable to Reason nor the Holy Scrip-
tures.” For Kirk viewed such subjects as second sight, ghosts, and
fairies through a dual lens: the scientific spirit that arose in the
seventeenth century, and the traditional world view of a Christian.
He discusses in his treatise the nature of fairies. Materially, they
evince “a middle Nature betwixt Man and Angel, as were Dæmons
thought to be of old . . .somewhat of the Nature of a condensed
Cloud and best seen in Twilight.” As for their character, fairies
can be as troublesome as humans. “These Subterraneans have
Controversies, Doubts, Disputes, Feuds, and Siding of Parties;
there being some Ignorance in all Creatures. . . .they transgress
and commit Acts of Injustice, and Sin.”
And sadly, the fairies are godless. They have “no discernible
Religion, Love, or Devotion towards God, the blessed Maker of
all: they disappear whenever they hear his Name invoked, or the
Name of .”
Clearly, such creatures bear little resemblance to the dainty
fairies—the sprites with gossamer wings—of the Victorian era.
Robert Kirk was a folklorist, who specialized in traditions about
the supernatural. And he holds a unique position among folk-
lorists. For not only did Kirk believe in the factual nature of the
lore he collected; he became, with his alleged abduction, the stuff
of lore himself.
12.
Hans Dietrich
T
he ,
and has become a popular tourist destination. Its
principal inhabitants are of German descent. But
they share the island with another people—a mysterious
race who dwell underground; are short of stature (barely
knee-high to the Germans); and are known as zwergen, or
dwarfs.
The dwarfs reside beneath the Nine Hills, near the village
of Rambin. There they labor as silversmiths and goldsmiths.
During the winter the dwarfs keep to their workshops, deep
within the earth. But in the spring they emerge from the
hills, to enjoy the sunshine and flowers. And at night they
cavort upon the grass, making music and dancing. The vil-
lagers hear the music, but cannot see the dwarfs, who make
themselves invisible.
Now a family named Dietrich once resided in Rambin.
The youngest child was Hans—an intelligent, well-behaved,
and studious boy, whose passion was to listen to stories.
One summer Hans was sent to work on an uncle’s farm.
He was eight years old at the time. His job was to help old
Klas, the cowherd, graze the cows on the Nine Hills. As they
worked together, Klas entertained him with tales. Thus did
Hans learn about the dwarfs who dwelt beneath the hills.
And he yearned to visit their subterranean home. Klas
had even revealed the means of doing so: the cap of a dwarf.
Donning such a cap, one could see the dwarfs, descend safely
into their realm, and even master them.
Finally, Hans could restrain himself no longer. During
the night he slipped away from the farm; made his way to
the hill where, according to Klas, the dwarfs held their noc-
turnal revels; and lay there, pretending to be asleep.
A distant church bell tolled midnight. And soon there-
after, a medley of sounds arose: humming and drumming,
whispering and singing, jingling and whirling. The dwarfs
were dancing on the hill. But peeking out, Hans could see
nothing of them. For they were as invisible as the wind.
So he did not see the prank: one dwarf snatching the cap
of another and tossing it. But as it landed near Hans, the
cap—peaked and topped with a bell—became visible.
“A dwarf cap!” cried Hans. And leaping to his feet, he
picked it up and donned it.
The dwarfs became visible. Dozens of them were cavort-
ing on the hilltop. They were all dressed alike. Glinting in
the moonlight were the bells on their caps—the buttons on
their vests—the buckles on their shoes.
The cap’s owner approached Hans and tried to snatch it
back. When Hans dodged him, the dwarf begged for its
return. But Hans refused to give it up. “I shall keep your
cap,” said Hans, “for it makes me your master. Dwarf, you
are my servant now! You shall cater to my needs. And you
shall take me underground to the dwelling place of your
people.”
The dwarf wept, but to no avail. Hans ordered him to
fetch food. And as the dancing continued, Hans feasted.
At dawn a trumpet sounded. A portal opened in the hill;
and the dwarfs swarmed into it. Led by his servant, Hans
too entered the hill.
Inside, the dwarfs were crowding into tubs. The tubs—
attached to chains drawn from below—were rising and
descending in a shaft. Hans and his servant climbed into a
tub. Ethereal music rose from below; and as they descended
in the shaft, Hans was lulled into sleep.
When he awoke, Hans found himself lying in a bed. He
was in a richly furnished room. His servant entered with
breakfast. And thus began his visit with the dwarfs—and
his ten-year stay among them.
Later that day, Hans joined the dwarfs at a banquet. His
servant had provided him with suitable clothes; and Hans
still wore the cap that was his passport to the subterranean
realm. The banquet hall was lit by luminescent gems that
were embedded in the ceiling. Entering the hall, Hans had
been welcomed by all; introduced to the dwarf leaders; and
seated between two females, who fawned upon him. Amid
general merriment an elaborate meal was served.
The servers, Hans noted with surprise, were human chil-
dren like himself. Wearing white jackets, they bustled from
table to table. These children, he learned, had been taken
from their homes and made to serve the dwarfs. After fifty
years they would be allowed to return to their villages. Hans
pondered their fate for a moment. Then he said to himself:
“The children seem happy enough. And they’re not so badly
off, serving the dwarfs. It’s better than tending cows!”
Mechanical birds had been launched into the air; and
their singing filled the hall. When the meal ended, the bird
song became livelier; and it served as music for dancing.
Hans joined in the dancing. Finally, the merriment ended;
and the dwarfs filed out of the hall—some to their work-
shops, others to their quarters.
Hans was an honored guest of the dwarfs—a status con-
ferred upon him by the cap. So he was given no work to do.
But as the weeks went by, he developed a routine of activi-
ties. After the daily banquet, he would wander about the
Abode (as their rambling residence was called). He looked
at the pictures on the walls, and explored nooks and cran-
nies. Hans played on a flute. He went outside and took walks
in the subterranean fields. And most agreeably, he played
games with the human children. For when not serving the
dwarfs, they were free to do as they liked.
This pleasurable idleness continued for a while. Then
Hans learned that the dwarfs had a school. Its classes were
taught by the Wise—elderly dwarfs with long white beards.
Some of the Wise were thousands of years old, and had
acquired vast stores of knowledge over the millennia.
Hans was permitted to enroll in the school. He began
with classes in Latin and math. An apt pupil, he went on to
study chemistry and other scientific subjects. And he mas-
tered the art of riddle-making, which was highly esteemed
among the dwarfs.
Hans was pleased with the new life he had found. The
world of the dwarfs offered all that he might want. And as
he pursued his studies, played with the servant children,
and danced at the banquets, his former life was forgotten.
He gave no thought to the cows on the Nine Hills, the vil-
lage of Rambin, or the family he had left behind. And so
the years passed.
Now among his playmates was a girl named Elizabeth.
Two years younger than he, Elizabeth was also from Ram-
bin; her father was its minister. Unlike the other servants,
she had not been stolen from her home. Rather, she had
joined the children of the village in a ramble through the
hills. Lying down to rest, she had fallen asleep in the grass—
and been left behind. When she awoke, Elizabeth found
herself in the Abode. The dwarfs had discovered her asleep
in the grass, and taken her as a servant.
As they played together, Hans and Elizabeth grew fond of
one another. The fondness blossomed into love. And by the
time he was eighteen and she, sixteen, the two had become
inseparable.
They delighted in taking walks together. Hand in hand,
they would stroll through the subterranean fields. And they
would marvel at the stone sky and mysterious light of the
home of the dwarfs. Elizabeth enjoyed these walks, yet found
herself saddened by them, too. For gazing up at the sky, she
was reminded of the world beyond it. Of the sun, the moon,
and the stars. And of the parents who had loved her.
One evening, while strolling, they passed the entrance to
the shaft. From the world above, they heard the crowing of
a cock. It was a sound neither of them had heard since leav-
ing that world. Elizabeth broke into tears. And she said:
“The dwarfs have always been kind to me. Yet I have
never felt truly at home here. And I have you—yet that isn’t
enough. How I miss my father and mother, and the church
where we worshipped God. Every night I dream of that
church! Hans, it is no Christian life that we lead among the
dwarfs. Nor can we ever marry, without a minister to bind
us. Let us find a way to leave this place and return to Ram-
bin. That we may dwell among Christian folk and worship
God.”
Hans too had been affected by the crowing of the cock.
And listening to Elizabeth, he realized that his own feel-
ings were no different than hers. His family, his village, his
church—how could he have gone for so long without giving
them a thought? How could he have succumbed so totally
to the blandishments of the Abode? Surely he had been
bewitched!
“You are right,” said Hans. “It is wrong for us to dwell
among the dwarfs. That crowing was a wake-up call. Let us
return to Rambin. It was a sin for me to have come to this
place—may I be forgiven on account of my youth. But I
shall remain here no longer! For am I not free to leave when
I wish?”
At these final words of his, Elizabeth turned pale—for
she recalled the terms of her servitude. As their captive, she
was bound to serve the dwarfs for fifty years.
“Alas, I may not accompany you,” she said. “For I must
remain in the home of the dwarfs for fifty years. Such is the
law. We’ll both be gray-haired when I join you in Rambin.
And my parents will be gone!”
But Hans swore he would not leave without her. And the
next day he approached the dwarf leaders. They were seated
together in the banquet hall, drinking and singing. Hans
greeted them respectfully, and announced that he was leav-
ing. The dwarfs expressed regret at his decision, and wished
him well. Then Hans asked if he might take with him one
of the servant girls. For he wished to marry her.
The dwarf leaders denied his request. It was a fixed law,
they said—servants must complete their fifty years of serv-
ice before departing. The girl would have to wait until then.
Hans begged them to make an exception. But the dwarfs
were adamant. And turning away from him, they resumed
their merrymaking.
That evening Hans and Elizabeth stood outside the en-
trance to the shaft, and gazed at it wistfully. Hans assured
her that a solution would be found. But Elizabeth shook her
head. “There is the gateway to the surface world,” she said.
“Yet for me it is sealed shut. For the dwarfs are not going to
let me go.”
Just then a toad came hopping out of the shaft. And Hans
recalled something old Klas had told him—that dwarfs
could not endure the smell of a toad. Indeed, just seeing one
was a torment to them. One could threaten a dwarf with a
toad, and compel him to do anything. Hans picked up the
toad and took it back with him to the Abode.
The next day he again petitioned the leaders. And again
they turned him down. The law was inflexible, they insisted.
The girl would have to complete her fifty years of service.
“In that case,” said Hans, “I have a present for you.” And
pulling the toad from his pocket, he dangled it in front of
them.
At the sight of it, the dwarfs were overcome with revul-
sion. They began to whimper, howl, and roll about on the
floor. “Take that odious creature away!” cried one of them.
“Gladly. If you’ll agree to my request. Allow the servant
girl to depart.”
“Take her! We’ll suspend the law.”
“One more thing—we’d like a wedding gift. How about
a sackful of gold coins?”
“You shall have it!”
That afternoon the pair were escorted to the shaft. They
were given a sackful of coins, loaded into a tub, and drawn
to the top of the shaft. The portal opened; and they emerged
into sunlight.
They were on top of the hill. Hans tossed away the cap.
And they headed for Rambin.
The villagers greeted them with amazement; for both
had long ago been given up as lost. Rejoining their families,
Hans and Elizabeth rejoiced to be back. And that summer
they were wed.
With the sackful of coins, Hans was now a wealthy man.
He purchased a farm of his own. And he performed many
charitable acts. Among them was the building of a new
church for Rambin—which stands to this day.*
13.
Reuben
I
, ,
Rabbi Pinchas (1728–1790). The rabbi was a Hasid—
a disciple of the Baal Shem Tov.*
Rabbi Pinchas was both saintly and scholarly. His days
were devoted to prayer, meditation, and study. He was par-
ticularly devoted to the Zohar, the central text of Jewish
mysticism. He studied it daily and urged his own disciples
to do likewise. Those disciples revered Rabbi Pinchas, and
believed him to possess special powers.†
Oblivious to mundane matters, Rabbi Pinchas lived a life
of poverty. He dwelt in a dilapidated house with his wife
and daughter. There he was always available to those who
sought his guidance, knowledge, or working of wonders.
And one day a young man named Reuben appeared on his
doorstep.
A yeshiva student, Reuben had come to Koretz from a
distant town—prompted by a series of dreams. In these
dreams his late father had appeared to him. The father had
told him to travel to Koretz and seek out Rabbi Pinchas.
Summoned to the door, Rabbi Pinchas welcomed Reuben
to Koretz. He told his wife to prepare a meal for their “spe-
cial guest.” For a moment he gazed intently at the young
man. Then he suggested that Reuben visit the mikvah. For
the Feast of the New Moon was to begin that evening.*
Reuben made his way to the mikvah hut, which was locat-
ed behind the house. He stepped through the doorway.
Before him a stairway descended into darkness. Reuben
peered into the darkness, but could not discern the pool. A
warbling sound, like that of a bird, rose from below.
He began to descend the stairway. Oddly, no pool pre-
sented itself. Instead, the stairs continued downward.
As he descended further, the darkness enveloped him. Reu-
ben kept on going, as if drawn by the warbling, or impelled
by some hypnotic force. His footsteps echoed as he descended
into the earth.
Finally he reached the bottom of the stairway and emerged
into light. To his astonishment, he found himself in an under-
ground forest. A bird warbled in a canopy of foliage. A
bluish light illumined the trees. There was no mikvah pool
in sight.
Puzzled, Reuben took a stroll through the forest. And he
was about to return to the stairway, when he heard voices
approaching. Frightened now, he climbed a tree and hid in
the foliage.
Two men emerged from the woods. They were drinking
from a jug and laughing. Near the tree in which Reuben
was hiding they came to a halt, dug a hole, and buried
something.
“What a prize we have stolen!” said one of the men.
“Come, let us go celebrate.”
When they were gone, Reuben climbed down from the
tree. “Thieves have buried their loot here,” he said. “What
* The mikvah is a pool in which ritual baths are taken, for pur-
poses of purification. Hasidic men immerse themselves on the eve
of the Sabbath and of certain holidays.
The practice is said to have originated with Adam. As an act of
penitence, Adam immersed himself in a river that flowed out of
Eden.
am I bound to do?”
Digging in the ground, he uncovered a bag. Inside was a
large emerald. Like a living thing, it glowed and pulsated.
“What a marvelous gem,” said Reuben. “And surely of
great value. But I must return it to its rightful owner, or at
least make a sincere attempt to do so. For so we are taught
by our sages.”
And pocketing the emerald, he set off in the direction
from which the men had come.
He soon emerged from the forest and beheld a vista of
rolling hills. A road wound through them; and rising in the
distance were the ramparts of a castle. A gray mist obscured
the sky. No habitation was visible, except for the castle. So
he set out on the road and headed towards it.
When he reached the castle, its residents were in an
uproar. A guard informed him that a theft had occurred.
The royal emerald—a jewel that brought good fortune to
the kingdom—had been stolen. And the king was offering
a reward for its return.
“What sort of reward?” asked Reuben.
“His daughter’s hand in marriage.”
“Indeed? Well, I have news of the emerald.”
Admitted to the throne room, Reuben gave the emerald
to the king and explained how it had come into his posses-
sion. The king was overjoyed to have it back. And true to
his word, he summoned his daughter; introduced her to
Reuben—her name was Rachel; and announced their
betrothal. Soon thereafter, the two were wed.
The marriage was a happy one. For as it happened, Reu-
ben and Rachel were suited to one another. They settled
into a wing of the castle. And in the years that followed,
three children were born to them.
Then one day the sky darkened. Thunder shook the cas-
tle. And torrents of rain came pouring down.
The flood waters rose; and the castle was inundated. The
waters surged about its walls and poured in through its win-
dows. And suddenly a colossal wave swept through the castle.
Caught up in the wave, Reuben was borne away. Like a
* Like most Hasidic tales, this story was transmitted orally for
many years. In 1881 a version was included in Maaysiot ve’shichot
Tsaddikim, a collection of tales published in Warsaw. And most
recently, Howard Schwartz has retold it in Gabriel’s Palace. The
tale describes one of the many wonders that Rabbi Pinchas is said
to have performed.
As for the teachings of Rabbi Pinchas, they were preserved in a
near miraculous fashion. His teachings had been recorded by his
disciples. Finally they were gathered together in a manuscript,
which remained unpublished. During World War II the manu-
script vanished.
But a few years later, a parcel was brought to the Jewish com-
munity house in Breslau. It contained that manuscript. Attached
was a letter, written in Yiddish by Rabbi Chodorov of Tarnov.
The letter read as follows:
“To him into whose hands this manuscript may fall: These
papers contain one volume of commentaries by the illustrious
Rebbe Pinchas of Koretz, one of the disciples of the Baal Shem
Tov. They are the only originals extant. They contain a vast treas-
ure of priceless holy thoughts and insights.. . .Since I left my
home three years ago, a deportee, driven from place to place, I
have carried these papers in my valise, never abandoning them—
until now. Now that the ‘rage of the oppressor’ has overtaken us
(my dear wife and son and daughter have been stolen from me,
may it be the will of our Father in Heaven that I will see them
again), and we, the ones who remained, the life we face is precar-
ious and we do not know what the day will bring. Therefore I
decided to give these manuscripts which are so dear to me to one
of my non-Jewish acquaintances who will hide them until G-d
will return the captives from among His people.
“I fervently pray that the One Above has decreed that I may
live, and that I myself will have the merit of publishing these
manuscripts. But if, G-d forbid, my tracks will not be known, I
ask him into whose hand this letter will fall, to be aware that
Heaven bestowed on you this holy treasure in order that you
bring to light the teachings of the saintly Rebbe Pinchas of Kor-
etz. My request is that you include also my own commentaries,
so that they be an everlasting memorial for me.
“My hands are extended to G-d in prayer that I may live to see
the consolation of His oppressed nation and the return of G-d to
Zion.”
14.
Captain Seaborn
I
,
learned societies in America and Europe, along with indi-
vidual scientists, heads of state, and members of Con-
gress, received a circular in the mail. It contained a startling
announcement:
The circular had been mailed from St. Louis, and was
signed by one John Cleves Symmes. Appended to it was a
letter—signed by prominent citizens—attesting to Symmes’s
good character and sanity.
Who was this fellow, who had authored so provocative a
notice? Who had spent a considerable sum to print and dis-
seminate it? (500 copies had been mailed out.) And who
feared (not unreasonably) that his sanity might be ques-
tioned?
Born in New Jersey, John Cleves Symmes (1779–1829)
had enlisted as a young man in the Army. He had served
with distinction in the War of 1812, rising to the rank of
captain. After the war he had been posted to a fort in
Missouri, where he had married the widow (with six chil-
dren) of a soldier. Finally, he had resigned his commission
and moved with his family to the frontier town of St. Louis.
There he had run a trading post, furnishing supplies to the
Army and the local Indians.
The proprietor of a trading post enjoyed an abundance
of free time; and Symmes had occupied himself with the
study of science and mathematics—and with the formula-
tion of a theory. His formal education had ended early; but
he had the self-discipline, enthusiasm for knowledge, and
unfettered imagination of an autodidact. The result was
that circular, which was soon followed by Circular No. 2
and Circular No. 3.*
But business at the trading post was declining. So Symmes
packed up his books, loaded his family (four more children
had been added) onto a steamboat, and moved to a town
near Cincinnati. And now began in earnest the crusade that
would occupy him for the rest of his life. Obsessively, he
sought to promulgate his theory of a hollow earth, and to
seek financial support for an expedition.
Symmes wrote newspaper articles. (Deemed a crackpot,
he also inspired them.) He issued circulars, published pam-
phlets, sent off letters. And he traveled about, giving lec-
tures and soliciting donations. Despite his deficiencies as a
speaker (“the arrangement of his subject was illogical, con-
fused, and dry, and his delivery was poor,” laments one
account), Symmes’s lectures attracted large audiences. The
topic was enticing; and the props he used—a globe with
openings at the poles; spinning bowls of sand; magnets and
iron filings—provided a theatrical touch. And indeed, his
audiences came more for entertainment than for edifica-
tion. To many, Symmes’s theory of a hollow earth was risi-
ble; and he was regularly heckled. (Heckling him could be
dangerous. On at least one occasion, Captain Symmes
physically ejected a heckler from the lecture hall.)*
Symmes also petitioned both Congress and the General
Assembly of Ohio, urging them to finance an expedition.
For he believed that the interior of the earth could be settled
and made part of the Union. (In fulfilling its Manifest Des-
tiny, the U.S. could expand downward as well as westward!)
And Congress did in fact consider such a project. In 1823
Representative Johnson of Kentucky proposed that the fed-
resident of Hamilton, Ohio. McBride was taken with
Symmes’s theory; befriended him; and bankrolled his trav-
els. Symmes had been lecturing and raising funds in the
general vicinity of Cincinnati; now he could range further
afield. McBride also published a monograph: Symmes’s Theory
of Concentric Spheres; demonstrating that the earth is hollow,
habitable within, and widely open about the poles. It eluci-
dated, and enthusiastically embraced, the hollow-earth
theory.*
What exactly was that theory? Symmes believed that the
earth consisted of five or more concentric spheres—hollow
globes, one within the other. (He later changed his mind,
deciding that the earth was a single hollow globe.) Each
sphere was surrounded by an atmosphere. And each had an
opening at its north and south poles.
The openings in the outer sphere were thousands of
miles wide. Upon reaching them, the sea flowed into the
earth. The waters clung to the descending rim of the open-
ing; then—inverted now—to the inner surface of the sphere.
(Symmes had original ideas about gravity too.) But the cur-
vature of the rim was gradual. Thus, a ship’s crew would be
unaware (initially at least) that they had sailed into an
opening.
As evidence for his theory, Symmes cited the annual
migrations that had been observed in the Arctic. In March
or April herds of reindeer moved southward along the ice;
in October they returned northward. Vast shoals of fish,
and flocks of birds, migrated in a similar fashion. Where
were they coming from and returning to? The interior of the
earth, insisted Symmes. And the odd behavior of compasses
in northern latitudes? Further evidence of a polar opening.
But Captain Symmes was a man of action as well as a
thinker. To confirm his theory—and to serve his country—
he was prepared to lead an expedition. The idea was to visit
the Arctic in October, follow the reindeer across the ice, and
see where they went.
To this goal of polar exploration Symmes devoted him-
self—publicizing his theory, soliciting funds, and petition-
ing the government. Yet his efforts might have been in vain,
were it not for those of an equally determined disciple.
•
Jeremiah Reynolds was a young newspaper editor in Wil-
mington, Ohio. He heard Symmes lecture and became a
believer. Reynolds wound up joining Symmes on the lecture
circuit, serving as his manager and co-lecturer. Together,
they embarked on a nationwide tour.
But the two men eventually had a falling out. The point
of contention was the hollow earth. While Reynolds con-
tinued to credit the idea (or at least to deem it a possibility),
it became increasingly less important to him. What should
be emphasized, he felt, was the goal of polar exploration—
for the sake of scientific advancement, commercial gain,
and national prestige. But Symmes refused to downplay his
theory of polar openings. The partners split and became
rivals, each offering his own version of the lecture. On one
occasion, they gave competing lectures in Manhattan on
the same day.
Symmes had been a vigorous crusader in behalf of his
theory. The rigors of travel, however, led to a deterioration
of his health. In 1827 he suffered a collapse, and was forced
to retire from lecturing and writing. His years of crusading
had ended.
Reynolds now assumed the mantle. As chief advocate for
a polar expedition, he spoke in numerous places and to siz-
able audiences. He was a better lecturer than Symmes:
articulate, and endowed with a sense of humor. And his
talks scarcely mentioned the hollow earth. His subject was
the need for polar exploration.
He also wrote a report on the South Polar regions. It was
based on interviews with those who had been there: the
captains of whaling and sealing ships. Finally, he succeeded
in eliciting government support for an expedition. Presi-
dent John Quincy Adams endorsed the idea; a Navy sloop
was fitted out; and plans began to be laid. Unfortunately,
Adams was not reelected; and the project was canceled.
Reynolds, however, was determined. He turned now to
the private sector, and was able to interest a group of
investors in financing an expedition. And in October 1829,
three ships—the Annawan, the Seraph, and the Penguin—
set sail for the Antarctic. Their purpose was threefold: to
hunt seals (and thus earn a profit for the investors); to gath-
er scientific data; and to make a landing in Antarctica. The
captains of the ships were all veterans of the seal trade. And
included among the scientific corps was Reynolds himself.
But the enterprise was ill-starred. Few seals were found;
and the crew (whose pay was to be shares of the catch)
began to grumble. Barriers of ice prevented the ships from
reaching Antarctica. And when a landing party in a long-
boat attempted to circumvent the ice, it got separated from
the ships and nearly perished.
Finally, as the ships made stops along the coast of Chile,
crew members began to desert. Faced with a deficiency of
manpower, the captains decided to head home. Reynolds
(for reasons that remain unclear) was put ashore in Chile.
For some time he wandered about the country. Then the
USS Potomac—on its way back from a mission in Sumatra
—docked in Valparaiso. Reynolds was taken aboard. And
for the next eighteen months, he served as private secretary
to the commodore. Upon returning to the U.S., he pub-
lished an account of the voyage of the Potomac.*
* Its full title was Voyage of the United States Frigate Potomac,
Under the Command of Commodore John Downes, During the
Circumnavigation of the Globe, in the years 1831, 1832, 1833, and
1834; Including a Particular Account of the Engagement at Quallah-
But Reynolds had not given up on Antarctica. He con-
tinued to lecture and to call for exploration of the South
Polar regions. And in 1836 he was invited to address the
House of Representatives. He delivered a speech that was
both impassioned and persuasive.
The result was the United States Exploring Expedition
of 1838–1842, or Wilkes Expedition, after its commander.
Six American ships surveyed islands of the South Pacific;
charted the coastline of Antarctica; and collected specimens
of flora and fauna. (The specimens would become the
nucleus of the Smithsonian collection.) No entrance to the
hollow earth was discovered—though admittedly, the Ant-
arctic remained largely unexplored. But much scientific
data was gathered.
Reynolds’s only disappointment was personal. Due to a
clash with the Secretary of the Navy, he had not been
permitted to accompany the expedition. Still, he could be
proud of his achievement. His efforts had brought about a
major advance in knowledge, and had established the gov-
•
The Wilkes Expedition conducted the first organized
exploration of the Antarctic. But informal exploration had
been going on for years (as Reynolds had learned from his
the distance.’”
And Robert Almy offers a similar explanation:
“Is it not likely, therefore, that in his last illness, when Poe called
to Reynolds, he was calling from the verge of that polar chasm
whose shadow was as the shadow of death and whose concentric
circles led downward to the incommunicable?”
Perhaps. Yet such speculation makes an assumption: that Dr.
Moran correctly transcribed what he heard. But what if the doc-
tor was mistaken? What if Poe had called out, not “Reynolds!”
but some other word?
What might that word have been?
Poe had a problem with alcohol. But a month prior to his death,
he had joined the Sons of Temperance and taken the oath of
abstinence. (He had gotten engaged to a woman in Richmond;
and a precondition to the marriage may have been that he swear
off alcohol.) A common form of the oath of abstinence was this:
“I am now fully determined to renounce this destructive beverage,
from this day, to the day of my death. Yes, I do renounce it, fully,
totally.” [emphasis added]
He seems to have adhered to the pledge—until a fateful day in
October. As described by J. P. Kennedy, a friend in Baltimore:
“On Tuesday last Edgar A. Poe died in town here at the hospital
from the effects of a debauch.... He fell in with some companion
here who seduced him to the bottle, which it was said he had
renounced [emphasis added] some time ago. The consequence was
fever, delirium, and madness, and in a few days a termination of
his sad career in the hospital. Poor Poe! ...A bright but unsteady
light has been awfully quenched.”
Poe—susceptible to the worst effects of alcohol—was dying
and delirious. Yet surely he was aware of the lapse that had caused
his condition. And as if possessed by the voice of Temperance, he
had cried out: “Renounce! Renounce!”
Alas, it was too late. That same morning he uttered his last
words—“Lord help my poor soul!”—and expired.
interviews with sea captains). Whaling and sealing ships
had penetrated, and charted, the southernmost latitudes.
But these were highly competitive enterprises; and the cap-
tains kept their findings secret.
One of them, however, made an astounding discovery (or
so he claimed). And in 1820 he published an account of it.
The book was titled Symzonia: A Voyage of Discovery. It
was printed in New York by the firm of J. Seymour. Its
author was identified as Captain Adam Seaborn—clearly, a
pseudonym. Few copies were sold; and the book attracted
little notice. Yet its contents (if factual) were momentous.
Captain Seaborn prefaced his account with these
remarks:
nails had been used in its construction—only wooden pegs
and copper bolts. For a colossal lodestone was believed to
rise out of the polar waters. “I remembered the misfortune
of the discoverer ,” writes Seaborn, “whose ship,
when he approached the magnetic mountain, fell to pieces,
in consequence of the iron being all drawn out of it.”
Thus prepared, the Explorer cruised the Antarctic. Few
seals were found; and as the ship passed deeper into un-
charted waters, the crew grew mutinous. But Seaborn was
hopeful:
day which was to disclose to me the wonders of the internal
world, and probably to decide the question whether it was
or was not inhabited by rational beings.
causes for admiration at the infinite diversity and excel-
lence of the works of an inscrutable Deity.. . .My imagina-
tion became fired with enthusiasm, and my heart elated
with pride. I was about to secure to my name a conspicuous
and imperishable place on the tablets of History, and a
niche of the first order in the temple of Fame.
perhaps a mode of salutation. So Seaborn redonned his hat,
stood erect, and pulled his nose.
The action had the desired effect. A few individuals, then
a crowd, emerged from the building. They stared at the
American, talking among themselves. Finally one of them
stepped forward, put his thumb to his nose, and waved.
Seaborn waved back in a similar fashion. Then the two
tried to converse, but were mutually unintelligible.
Their mode of government, Surui explained, was demo-
cratic. Public affairs were directed by a Grand Council
(hundreds of thousands of members); an Ordinary Council
(one hundred members); and a chief executive known as
the Best Man. The Best Man was elected by the Grand
Council, and held the position for life. He was advised in
day-to-day matters by the Ordinary Council.
The Councils were comprised of men known as Wor-
thies. Selected from the general populace, the Worthies
consisted of three orders: the Good, the Wise, and the
Useful. The Good were men of benevolence and exemplary
conduct, who had worked to promote the happiness of their
fellow citizens. The Wise were the philosophers of the land,
who had benefitted society by adding to its store of knowl-
edge. And the Useful were individuals with practical skills,
whose resourcefulness and inventiveness had advanced the
various arts.
Contrary to what might be expected, the Wise men con-
stituted only a small percentage of the Worthies. For their
pursuit of knowledge was deemed largely irrelevant to the
daily needs of people. And who was eligible for selection as
a Worthy, or as the Best Man? One trait that disqualified a
candidate was ambition. Anyone who sought an office was
—ipso facto—considered unfit for it. Thus, Symzonia was
governed by the most valuable and upright of its citizens,
chosen with the sole aim of advancing the best interests of
the nation.
Seaborn was impressed by the Symzonian form of govern-
ment—a fact that he made known to his host:
much the same, at least in the State of New-York, where I
am best acquainted.”
describes his “extreme mortification” as Symzonians gazed
upon him “with evident pity, if not disgust.” He was treated
kindly, though, with gifts of food and flowers.
Finally they arrived at the place of assembly, known as
the Auditory. It was a colossal structure, covering eight acres
and roofed with a dome. Gazing at it, Seaborn was struck
with awe and admiration. The Council had adjourned for
the day; and the two men were allowed to enter the empty
building.
They stood amid its vastness and silence. Rising in tiers
were hundreds of thousands of seats—for the Worthies who
comprised the Council. The seats surrounded a platform,
which held a seat for the Best Man. And another platform
held the chairs and music stands for a 500-man orchestra.
Each assembly, said Surui, began with sacred music and
silent prayer. For the Auditory was both the seat of govern-
ment and a temple. The idea was for the Council to delib-
erate in the presence of the Supreme Being.
The next day Seaborn was granted an audience with the
Best Man. They met in the garden of his modest residence.
Graciously received by the head of state, Seaborn was put
at ease by his frank, unaffected manner. And with Surui
translating, they conversed.
The Best Man inquired as to whence he had come. Sea-
born replied that his country was on the surface of the
earth. And the Best Man expressed amazement—that
humans could survive in the direct rays of the sun.
And why, the Best Man inquired, had he ventured inside
the earth?
Seaborn refrained from mentioning an additional mo-
tive: his desire to profit financially from the venture. For he
was sufficiently acquainted by now with Symzonian high-
mindedness, to know that such a disclosure would arouse
aversion and contempt.
Other matters were equally problematical:
This was the most unhappy subject I had yet touched upon.
Instead of exciting his admiration, I found it difficult to
convince him that my account was true, for he could not
conceive it possible that beings in outward form so much
like himself, could be so entirely under the influence of base
and diabolical passions, as to make a science of worrying
and destroying each other, like the most detestable reptiles.
stay, information on any subject that interested him—with
the exception of the Engine of Defense—would be made avail-
able, Captain Seaborn took his leave.
In the months that followed, he was able to speak with
Worthies; meet again with the Best Man; and observe Sym-
zonians in their daily activities. And he learned about the
way of life of this enlightened people. They had simple
tastes in both food and dress (everyone wore that white
tunic). Greed and selfishness, he discovered, were virtually
unknown among them. Instead, doing good was deemed
the highest of earthly satisfactions. Symzonians strove to
benefit one another. And while an economic system was
necessarily in place, it was rational and just. Taxes were light
—the equivalent of one or two days’ labor per year. At the
same time, the accumulation of wealth was disreputable;
and most Symzonians devoted any surplus to the well-
being of their fellows.
Seaborn was able to learn much about Symzonia. He dis-
covered, for example, that pearls—abundant in the local
waters—were ground up for use as paint. (He resolved to
acquire a rich supply of these pearls.) But in one regard, his
curiosity remained unsatisfied. What was that Engine of
Defense, he wondered? Against whom did it defend? And
why were Symzonians reluctant to speak of it?
He made discreet inquiries; and eventually the facts
came out. The Engine of Defense was a highly destructive
machine, which had been instrumental in winning the war
with Belzubia.
Seaborn already knew about the Belzubians, from con-
versations with Surui. They were a people on the northern
continent of the interior world, descended in part from
expelled Symzonians. These Symzonians had yielded to base
instincts, formed pernicious habits, and turned to crime.
Considered dangerous to society and incorrigible, they had
been exiled to the northern continent, and left to pursue
their vicious ways.*
* When Seaborn had first learned of Belzubia, and of its
proximity to the North Polar opening, a sobering thought had
Over the course of centuries, the two countries had
maintained an uneasy relationship. Then one day, Belzub-
ian warships showed up and began to conquer Symzonia.
Unarmed and adverse to bloodshed, the Symzonians stood
by helplessly. The total subjection of their country, and the
termination of their way of life, seemed to be at hand.
At this juncture, a citizen named Fultria came forward
with an invention. The Engine of Defense, as he called it,
was a huge machine on wheels. It shot flames, and could
destroy anything in its path. Fultria demonstrated his inven-
tion, and urged that it be used to exterminate the invaders.
But the Worthies denounced his proposal. It was bar-
barous and inhumane, they declared. Not even the most
righteous end could justify such a means.
In response, Fultria appeared before the Council, and
delivered an eloquent and impassioned speech. His argu-
ment was compelling. War could be abolished, he insisted,
by making inevitable the destruction of those who would
wage it. “Let all who take the sword perish by the sword,
and war will be known no more.”
The Worthies deliberated. And while remaining stead-
fast in their principles, they arrived at a plan.
cessful. The enemy fled.. .. and since that time war had not
been known.
and that commerce with this people would be harmful to
Symzonia. Therefore, Seaborn was to return to his vessel
and, when conditions were favorable for sailing, depart for
home. Nor was he to take with him any goods that might
arouse the cupidity of his countrymen. For Symzonia want-
ed no further contact with externals.
Captain Seaborn was devastated by this lecture, and by
his expulsion from Symzonia.
But the Best Man would not relent. And within a few
weeks, the Explorer was weighing anchor and sailing away.
The ship was headed towards the polar opening.
By the time they had sailed through it and reemerged in
the Antarctic, Seaborn was feeling elated. He was thinking
of the celebrity he would acquire, as the discoverer of a new
world, and of the “unbounded encomiums” that would be
lavished upon him. He was also thinking of the fortune that
would be his, if the seal hunt had been successful.
It had been. Arriving at Seaborn’s Land, he learned that
tens of thousands of seals had been slain. Seaborn had the
skins further preserved and loaded onto the ship. And the
Explorer headed for China, to trade its cargo.
During the passage, Seaborn had time to reflect. And he
arrived at a decision. Though avid for celebrity, he would not
disclose his discoveries. Such disclosure, he feared, would
be met with disbelief and ridicule. Or if believed, others
would take advantage of it, fitting out their own expedi-
tions.
Thus resolved, he assembled the crew and made them an
offer. If the men would take an oath of secrecy, they could
join him on future voyages—to Seaborn’s Land, and even
to Belzubia. The profits would be shared by all. Enthusi-
astically, the men accepted.
After weeks at sea, they reached the bustling port of Can-
ton. There the sealskins were exchanged for tea, silks, and
porcelain. And laden now with finished goods, the Explorer
set out on the last leg of its journey.
The passage was uneventful, save for a hurricane off the
coast of Africa. And finally the spires of New York appeared
on the horizon. The men cheered as the ship sailed into the
harbor.
Seaborn engaged an agent to dispose of the cargo. And
his tale concludes with a rise to riches—and an abrupt fall.
Seaborn signed over his goods. And for several months,
he was able to draw sums of money from Slippery’s account.
He purchased a spacious house of his own; assisted friends
and relatives; and “felt myself perfectly secure of all the
good things of this world for the remainder of my days.”
But the good things came suddenly to an end. One morn-
ing he opened the newspaper and learned that Slippery had
cheated him of his fortune. Not only was he now destitute,
but heavily in debt.
Seaborn entered into a period of mortification and mis-
ery. He lost his house. His friends deserted him. And he was
forced to declare bankruptcy.
On account of his debts, he was confined to the garret of
a debtors’ prison. There he wrote Symzonia: A Voyage of Dis-
covery. For he hoped to raise money from sales of the book,
and free himself from “my present uncomfortable situation.”
And there too he found solace—in his memories of Sym-
zonia and the lesson they offered. As we learn in the final
chapter:
simply a convenient place to locate a utopia. As for that ref-
erence to a “profound philosopher,” it comes with a wink.
We are meant to hear “crackpot.”
And finally, Symmes was an avid supporter of American
expansionism. The earth’s interior, in his view, was waiting
to be colonized. The author of Symzonia condemns such
rapacity.
Who then wrote the book, if not Symmes? Who was
“Captain Adam Seaborn”? Whose was the plume behind
the nom de plume?
One guess is that it belonged to Nathaniel Ames. The
son of a Massachusetts congressman, Ames (1796–1835)
dropped out of Harvard, ran away to sea, and later wrote
newspaper sketches recounting his experiences. Did he also
write Symzonia? He had the requisite knowledge of seafar-
ing; had visited some of the places mentioned in the book;
and displays a satiric bent in his writings. But there is noth-
ing to connect him directly with Symzonia—the evidence
for authorship is wholly circumstantial. And most critically,
Ames fails the style test: his prose, while engaging, is scarcely
elegant.*
So who wrote Symzonia? No one knows. The book is a
minor classic—a gem of American literature. Yet the iden-
tity of its author remains a mystery.†
* For the theory that Ames was “Seaborn,” see “The Authorship
of Symzonia: The Case for Nathaniel Ames” by Hans-Joachim
Lang and Benjamin Lease (New England Quarterly, Vol. 48, No. 2).
† During the first half of the nineteenth century, America’s
most esteemed writer was Washington Irving. Could he have
been the author of Symzonia? A case can be made. Consider the
following:
1. Irving published all his early works under pseudonyms:
“Jonathan Oldstyle,” “Launcelot Langstaff,” “Anthony Evergreen,
Gent.,” “Diedrich Knickerbocker,” “Geoffrey Crayon.” Might
not “Captain Adam Seaborn” be added to the list?
2. Like Captain Seaborn, Irving was a New Yorker.
3. Irving is credited with having dubbed the city “Gotham”
—a name that appears in his earliest writings. It also appears
in Symzonia.
4. Washington Irving was no stranger to literary hoaxes. His
History of New York claimed to be the work of Diedrich Knicker-
bocker, an elderly Dutchman who had vanished and left the
manuscript behind in a hotel room.
5. While not a sailor like Ames, Irving had been a passenger on
transatlantic vessels—and was observant. Moreover, as a youth
he had been an avid reader of tales of exploration. “Books of voy-
ages and travels became my passion,” he recalls in The Sketch
Book, “and in devouring their contents I neglected the regular
exercises of the school. How wistfully would I wander about the
pier-heads in fine weather, and watch the parting ships bound to
distant climes—with what longing eyes would I gaze after their
lessening sails, and waft myself in imagination to the ends of the
earth!”
6. The Irving family business went bankrupt in 1818; where-
upon, Washington turned to writing to make money. Captain
Seaborn does likewise after his own bankruptcy.
7. Symzonia must have been written between 1818 (when
Symmes announced his theory) and 1820 (when the book
was published)—the very period in which Irving began to write
•
There were some, however, for whom the authorship of
Symzonia was no mystery at all. For whom the work was just
what it claimed to be: a seafarer’s account of his voyage to
the earth’s interior. Among the believers was Americus Ves-
pucius Symmes, for whom Symzonia was confirmation that
the earth was hollow.
Americus was the son and disciple of John Cleves
Symmes. In 1878 he published The Symmes Theory of
Concentric Spheres, which reprinted his father’s circulars
and articles. And the book included a theory of his own:
that the inhabitants of the earth’s interior were the Ten Lost
professionally.
8. Compare these passages (published within eighteen months
of one another) that describe sailing up a river:
“As we sailed up the Mersey, I reconnoitered the shores with a
telescope. My eye dwelt with delight on neat cottages, with their
trim shrubberies and green grass-plots.” (The Sketch Book)
“Much occurred to gratify my senses...and delight my heart.
We ascended the river, the banks of which, and all the country
near them, appeared like one beautiful and highly cultivated gar-
den, with neat low buildings scattered throughout the scene.”
(Symzonia)
9. Irving was a skilled satirist, as was the author of Symzonia.
At the same time, he was known for his geniality. The author of
Symzonia was described by the Literary Gazette of Philadelphia as
“good-natured.”
10. Irving was an elegant stylist—again, like the author of
Symzonia. (By his own admission, Nathaniel Ames may be exclud-
ed in this regard. When a critic recommended that his next book
“should savor more of the style of Goldsmith or Washington
Irving,” Ames responded: “I should have no objection whatever
to writing like either of these distinguished authors, if I could; but
as the case is, I must be content to write as well as I can.”)
Thus, it is conceivable that Symzonia was written by Washing-
ton Irving. But until a publisher’s account book turns up (“$50
pd. to W. I. for Sym.”), or some other evidence, the attribution
remains purely speculative.
Tribes of Israel.
The book was not his only tribute to his late father. Years
before, Americus had arranged for a monument to be placed
on his father’s grave. It was a stone obelisk, topped with a
hollow globe that was open at the poles.
The monument still stands, fenced off in a park in Ham-
ilton, Ohio. A local curiosity, it is weathered and forlorn,
with inscriptions that are barely legible. One inscription
reads as follows:
15.
Saint-Yves d’Alveydre
I
-
d’Alveydre had been about to publish, at his own ex-
pense, a work titled Mission de l’Inde en Europe (Mission
of India in Europe). But no sooner had the books arrived
from the printers than he destroyed them all—except for
one copy. Threats had been received from India, Saint-Yves
would confide to friends; he had been warned not to reveal
secrets. Not until after his death, in 1909, would the book
be reprinted and released to the public.*
Who was Saint-Yves d’Alveydre? And what were the
secrets revealed in his book—a book with this dedication:
- ’
Pandit threatened his student with a knife. Saint-Yves evict-
ed him from the house; and Sharif disappeared from Paris.
(Years later, he was spotted in Le Havre, supporting himself
as a dealer in exotic birds.)
But the mysterious Easterner had fulfilled his mission.
Obsessed now with Agharta, Saint-Yves began to receive
telepathic messages from its sages. And he began to travel
to Agharta via astral projection! These communications and
dream journeys would confirm the principles of Synarchy.
And they would inspire the writing of a book.
In Mission de l’Inde Saint-Yves describes the kingdom of
Agharta and its system of government. Agharta is a utopia,
hidden away inside the earth. It is a place of advanced tech-
nology and exotic architecture. (The main building is a
colossal temple—a “subterranean dome where the Sages
celebrated their mysteries.”) Its inhabitants speak Vattan-
ian, the original language of mankind. They are vegetari-
ans. And they are healthy and happy.
Agharta is governed, we are told, by a hierarchy of wise
men. There is a Sovereign Pontiff; his two assistants, Mahat-
ma and Mahanga; twelve archis, who sit on a council; 360
bagwandas; and 5000 pundits. A kind of “sacred university,”
these sages govern Agharta. But they also take an interest in
the upper world, using their powers to combat its negative
energies. And from time to time they even send an emissary
to the surface, to instruct its wayward inhabitants.
The Sovereign Pontiff (to whom the book is dedicated)
dwells in a palace. And in the palace library, accessible to
the sages, is the accumulated knowledge of mankind. With
its miles of shelves, the Aghartan library is a storehouse of
ancient wisdom—much of it derived from Atlantis. For the
original settlers of Agharta were refugees from Atlantis.
Saint-Yves made repeated visits to Agharta. He did so via
astral travel—an out-of-body technique he refers to as
“attunement.” In Mission de l’Inde he describes the kingdom
that he visited in these dreams. And he insists that a similar
society could be established in the West. But first, Christi-
anity must promote its own teachings (Saint-Yves was a
devout Catholic); and government must base itself on the
principles of Synarchy. For Synarchy is the cure for the ills
of society.
A Synarchical society would be governed by three coun-
cils, representing the executive, economic, and spiritual
powers. Comprised of wise men, these councils would rule
indirectly. By dint of their moral authority, they would
guide and inspire the governmental powers; and as a result
of this tutelage, class strife and other social pathologies
would disappear. And Saint-Yves offers a warning to those
powers: “O emperors and kings of Europe, and presidents
of republics—without an authority above you, you are
doomed to the mutual destruction of your peoples, your
powers, and your might.”
- ’
published, titled L’Archéomètre. Archeometry was described
as “the key to all the religions and all the sacred sciences of
Antiquity.” A complex system of symbols and interpreta-
tions, it sought to “measure” the principles of the universe.
These measurements were made with a cardboard disk
called the planisphere. The device (which Saint-Yves had
patented) contained signs of the Zodiac, letters of the
Atlantean alphabet, musical notes, and colors. One put
questions—relating to philosophical or spiritual matters—
to the planisphere, and received answers. It was a kind of
Ouija board for advanced thinkers.
So what are we to make of the Marquis Saint-Yves
d’Alveydre—in particular, his claims regarding Agharta?
Did he in fact travel to such a place? Did he receive mes-
sages from its sages? And did the planisphere really work?
Some considered him to be mad. (His psychiatrist father
is said to have remarked: “Of all the lunatics I have known,
my son is the most dangerous.”) Others denounced him as
a fraud, or dismissed him as a crank. Yet to judge from his
writings, Saint-Yves was sane, sincere, and clear-thinking.
He was a serious intellectual (awarded the Legion of Honor
medal), who moved in the highest circles of French society.
So he must be taken seriously, whatever one’s view of those
visits to Agharta.
And what exactly were those visits? Were they merely
dreams, expressive of his deepest concerns? Or were they
visionary experiences, with a reality of their own? Or even
actual travels?*
* In his introduction to the English translation of Mission de
l’Inde, Joscelyn Godwin concludes that the visits were visionary.
And he explains them:
“What is the source, and the ontological status, of such visions?
There are, one gathers, definite places or complexes in the Astral
World.. .which present to the clairvoyant visitor certain invari-
able features. I have heard reliable reports, for instance, that
libraries are to be found there, in which the initiate is able to fur-
ther his philosophical study while his body rests. But the inciden-
tal circumstances of such a place vary, according to the visitor’s
- ’
In other words, did Saint-Yves visit the Inner Earth? Or
simply plumb the depths of his inner self?
Where, that is to say, is Agharta?
•
Our awareness of this mysterious place began in the
nineteenth century, with another Frenchman. Louis Jacol-
liot was an official in colonial India, who befriended the
local Brahmins. They showed him ancient texts—palm-
leaf manuscripts moldering in a temple. And they told him
about Agharta: a subterranean kingdom, ruled by a semi-
divine priest called Brahatma. In his book Le Fils de Dieu
(The Son of God, 1873), Jacolliot relates what he learned
about Agharta.
A decade later, Saint-Yves d’Alveydre began to travel to
Agharta in his dreams. In Mission de l’Inde he describes
these visits, and reveals the general location of Agharta:
somewhere beneath the Himalayas.
The book (when it was finally published) found an audi-
ence among occultists. And a year later, Agharta was men-
tioned in a magazine article by Swami Narad Mani:
a travel diary and adventure tale by Ferdinand Ossendow-
ski. Fleeing the Bolsheviks, Ossendowski (a Polish chemist
who had been working in Siberia) traveled through Bud-
dhist Mongolia. As he did so, he spoke with monks and
lamas. They told him about the “King of the World,” who
ruled from the underground realm of Agharta. Agharta, he
was told, was a land of wonders and wisdom. It was illumi-
nated by a strange light that brought growth to crops and
longevity to people; and it was connected by tunnels with
other such realms.
Ossendowski sought to learn more about Agharta. And
he tells of being shown a cave:
- ’
entrances to a subterranean kingdom:
a vast, underground region containing several thousand
inhabitants. Science has been greatly developed; plants are
grown by the aid of a special light; and cars travel through
the caverns at great speeds....The story of Agharti is by no
means a myth.
- ’
men. From his lamasery on East 107th Street, Dickhoff
urged seekers to “attach thyself to the Wise”; promoted
Buddhism (“the Aghartan philosophy”); and marketed his
books. (Other titles included Homecoming of the Martians
and The Martian Alphabet and Language.)
Among Dickhoff ’s admirers was Walter Siegmeister, or
Raymond Bernard, as he called himself. (The name-change
was due to difficulties with the postal authorities, who had
banned Siegmeister’s pamphlets, with their medical claims,
from the mails.) Dr. Bernard was a philosopher, health-
food advocate, and Inner Earth researcher. (The doctorate
was in education.) In 1960 he published Agharta: The Sub-
terranean World. The book reveals that the Aghartans are
fruitarians (and thus long-lived); that their weather is per-
fect, due to cool air from the North Polar opening; and that
their capital city is Shambhala. Also, they were the origina-
tors of Buddhism. The religion was brought to the upper
world by Aghartan sages, who traveled there via UFOs.
As for UFOs, Dr. Bernard has this to say about them:
penalties.”
Since then, two additional books have sought to unveil
that mystery. One is The Lost World of Agharti (1982). In
this comprehensive study, Alec Maclellan examines what is
known about Agharta, and concludes:
•
Where then is Agharta? Deep within the earth, accord-
ing to our sources.
And how does one get there? Those entrances shown on
Dr. Bernard’s map await the intrepid traveler.†
16.
Olaf Jansen
W
(‒)
Angeles banker and novelist. His fiction (such
titles as The Treasure of Hidden Valley and My
Pardner and I ) is largely forgotten today. But he also pub-
lished, in 1908, a work that presented itself as a factual
account, and that has continued to provoke controversy.
Titled The Smoky God, or A Voyage to the Inner World, it tells
the story of Olaf Jansen.
Emerson describes the work as “a truthful record of the
unparalleled experiences related by one Olaf Jansen.” And
he claims that Jansen, an elderly neighbor, summoned him
one night. On his deathbed, Jansen spoke to the novelist of
an ocean voyage he had made as a young man. And Jansen
entrusted him with a manuscript—an account of the voy-
age—and elicited a promise to have it published.
Dutifully, Emerson tells us, he fulfilled his promise to the
dying man. He edited the manuscript; wrote a foreword
and an afterword; and placed the book with Forbes & Com-
pany, his own publisher. And the story of Olaf Jansen’s voy-
age became known at last.
•
The story begins in the spring of 1829, with two Nor-
wegian fishermen setting out in a small sloop. But what
started as a fishing trip for Olaf and his father became a voy-
age of discovery. For they decided impulsively to seek out
the Land beyond the North Wind—a land legendary among
fishermen.
They steered their vessel northward. “Our little fishing-
sloop,” recalls Olaf, “sprang forward as if eager as ourselves
for adventure.” And they soon found themselves navigating
a wilderness of icebergs.
A storm arose; and for hours their fragile craft was bat-
tered and tossed by tremendous waves. When the waters
calmed, the two men found themselves in a green sea. The
sky had turned purple; the icebergs flashed like prisms.
Sailing onward, they noted that their compass was behav-
ing oddly. The needle was pressing up against the glass.
They noted too that the air was growing warmer. And they
were struck by an apparition that had appeared on the hori-
zon: a small reddish sun surrounded by haze. The rumored
“mock sun” of the far north! This mirage would soon fade
away, they assumed.
But as they sailed on, the sun gradually climbed in the
sky. And they realized that it was no mirage, but a reality—
“a planet of some sort.”
The Jansens took naps in the cabin of the sloop. And
Olaf was slumbering, when he was roused by his father.
“Olaf, awaken; there is land in sight!” Visible in the dis-
tance was a shoreline green with vegetation.
For several days they sailed along the shore. Finally they
anchored in a river, waded ashore, and gathered nuts from
gigantic trees. A tropical forest, in the northernmost clime
of the globe! How was it possible?
Then came an even greater surprise. For they heard voices
singing. And a huge ship sailed into view—filled with sing-
ing giants.
The ship approached them. A boat was lowered; and a
party of giants—twelve-feet-tall, bearded, garbed in tunics
and knee breeches—rowed over to inspect the voyagers.
The giants were friendly and curious; and communicating
with gestures, they invited the two men to board their ship.
Olaf and his father were taken to the country of the
giants. There they dwelt for nearly two years, learning the
language (similar to Sanskrit) and observing the customs
and lifestyle of this gargantuan race. Housed with a family,
they were taken on tours and shown natural and technolog-
ical wonders. But the most startling revelation was geo-
graphical. For they learned that the country of the giants—
the Land beyond the North Wind—was located inside the
earth.
The earth was hollow, it was explained to them. The globe
had a thick crust enclosing its vacancy, with an opening at
each pole. Into these openings, and down the sides of an
abyss, passed the waters of the ocean. The waters then con-
tinued along the underside of the crust—held in place by
“the immutable law of gravitation.”
A single continent rose from the interior ocean. And its
inhabitants suffered no lack of warmth or illumination. For
at the center of the earth was a small sun. This central sun
had come into view as the Jansens, unaware that they were
doing so, had entered the abyss and sailed down along its
side. And finally—as they sailed “upside down” on the inte-
rior ocean—the sun had hovered overhead.*
During their stay in the Land beyond the North Wind,
the Jansens became acquainted with its inhabitants. The
giants were wise and knowledgeable, and had life spans of
up to 800 years. They were good-natured—possibly due to
the ionized atmosphere inside the earth. The air “was a con-
stant vitalizer,” reports Olaf. “I never felt better in my life.”
And the giants were musical. “Their cities were equipped
with vast palaces of music, where not infrequently as many
as twenty-five thousand lusty voices of this giant race swell
forth in mighty choruses of the most sublime symphonies.”
Their capital was a garden city called Eden—the same
Eden, Olaf learned, that was the cradle of the human race.
The giants worshipped a deity who dwelt in the haze of
their sun, and whom they called the Smoky God. And ruling
over them, from his residence in Eden, was the High Priest.
One day an emissary of the High Priest visited the Jan-
sens, and questioned them about their homeland. They
* Around the time that Symmes and Reynolds were calling for
a government-sponsored expedition, these fishermen had discov-
ered the North Polar opening on their own.
were then taken to Eden (via a monorail) for an audience
with the ruler himself.
Garbed in rich robes and taller even than his subjects, the
High Priest questioned them further. Then he invited them
to tour the cities of his realm. And he informed them that
their sloop had been preserved. They were free, he said, to
return home if they wished; but the journey would be dif-
ficult and dangerous.
Accepting his invitation, Olaf and his father toured the
cities. But finally, “we decided to cast our fortunes once
more upon the sea, and endeavor to regain the ‘outside’ sur-
face of the earth.”
Loading the sloop with provisions, they sailed toward the
South Polar opening (to take advantage of the prevailing
winds). And they succeeded in returning to the outer world.
But the dangers had not been exaggerated. His father per-
ished in the Antarctic; and Olaf got stranded on an iceberg.
Rescued by a whaling ship, he eventually returned home.
But more woe was in store for him there. Olaf ’s story was
not believed. And deemed to be mad, he was committed to
a mental asylum and confined for many years.
Finally released, Olaf resumed his life as a fisherman. He
prospered and was able to retire to a cottage in California.
And there the old man set down “the record of my strange
travels and adventures.”
Which he bequeathed to a neighbor, the novelist Willis
George Emerson.
•
And that is the tale of Olaf Jansen. But how is it to be
taken? Is it fact or fiction?
In an afterword, Emerson discusses his editing of the
manuscript, affirming that “the original text has neither
been added to nor taken from.” And he gives a list of literary
and historical works that “are strangely in harmony with
the seemingly incredible text found in the yellow manu-
script of the old Norseman, Olaf Jansen, and now for the
first time given to the world.”
So what is The Smoky God ? A novel by Emerson—one
that employs the literary device of a found manuscript? The
delusional memoir of a lunatic? Or indeed a factual account,
entrusted to Emerson and corroborated by the works of oth-
ers?
It is a question that the reader—wary of found manu-
scripts—must decide for himself.*
17.
Morgan
A
— “-
thor’s Edition”—in Cincinnati in 1895, and sent to
newspapers, journals, and select individuals to be
reviewed. (For some of their reactions, see Appendix 2.) Its
title page suggests the eccentric character of the book:
ETIDORHPA
OR
AND
plants of North America. And as Professor Lloyd, he taught
chemistry at the Eclectic Medical Institute.*
Lloyd was a prolific writer, having published several
books and hundreds of scientific articles. So his fellow
Cincinnatians would not have been surprised to learn of a
forthcoming publication. When Etidorhpa appeared, how-
ever, they were perhaps puzzled by the fact that only its
preface was credited to Lloyd. And surely they were taken
aback by its subject matter: a journey to the Earth’s interior.
In his preface Lloyd discusses the manuscript of Etidorh-
pa. It has been in his possession for seven years, he says; but
he is not permitted to reveal the circumstances of its acqui-
sition. Due to the controversial nature of the material, he
has been reluctant to publish it. But at last he is honoring
his commitment to do so.
As the reader learns, Etidorhpa is actually a composite of
two manuscripts. One (the bulk of the book) had been in
the custody of one Llewellyn Drury, who had received it
from a mysterious stranger. The other was penned by Drury
himself, and describes his encounters with this stranger. All
of this material was passed on to Lloyd.
Drury’s contribution—a prologue, a series of interludes,
and an epilogue—serves to frame the story that is narrated
by the stranger. In the prologue Drury introduces himself;
assures the reader of his “sincerity and responsibility”; and
warns that what he is about to describe will be “strange, not
to say marvelous.” But he urges the reader to maintain an
open mind.
He lived alone, Drury tells us, amid a “unique library
largely on mystical subjects, in which I took the keenest
* The distinguishing feature of Eclectic Medicine was its exclu-
sive use of herbal remedies. Eclectic physicians vied unsuccessful-
ly with their chief rivals, the allopathic physicians (today’s
M.D.s), and eventually faded from the scene. However, their dis-
cipline has survived in the healing science known as naturopathy.
The name “Eclectic Medicine” was coined by Constantine
Rafinesque, a backwoods doctor who lived among the Indians
and studied their medical use of plants.
delight.” One wintry night in November—the bells of the
nearby cathedral had just chimed eleven o’clock—he was
sitting in his library, restless and morose.
As he stared into the fire and pondered a Latin quotation,
Drury was startled by a voice. And he discovered that he
was not alone in his library. Seated on the opposite side of
the room, gazing at him intently, was a white-haired man.
He was nearly six feet tall, and perfectly straight; well pro-
portioned, with no tendency either to leanness or obesity.
But his head was an object from which I could not take my
eyes,—such a head surely I had never before seen on mortal
shoulders. ...surmounted by a forehead so vast, so high,
that it was almost a deformity, and yet it did not impress
me unpleasantly; it was the forehead of a scholar, a pro-
found thinker, a deep student. The nose was inclined to
aquiline, and quite large. The contour of the head and face
impressed me as indicating a man of learning, one who had
given a lifetime to experimental as well as speculative
thought. His voice was mellow, clear, and distinct, always
pleasantly modulated and soft, never loud nor unpleasant
in the least degree. One remarkable feature I must not fail
to mention—his hair; this, while thin and scant upon the
top of his head, was long, and reached to his shoulders; his
beard was of unusual length, descending almost to his
waist; his hair, eyebrows, and beard were all of singular
whiteness and purity, almost transparent, a silvery white-
ness that seemed an aureolar sheen in the glare of the
gaslight. What struck me as particularly remarkable was
that his skin looked as soft and smooth as that of a child;
there was not a blemish in it. His age was a puzzle none
could guess; stripped of his hair, or the color of it changed,
he might be twenty-five—given a few wrinkles, he might
be ninety. Taken altogether, I had never seen his like, nor
anything approaching his like, and for an instant there was
a faint suggestion to my mind that he was not of this earth,
but belonged to some other planet.
of his visit. He had come to acquaint Drury with “a narra-
tive of unusual interest.” It was contained in a manuscript
that the stranger had drafted, and which he intended to
read aloud. The reading would take place over the course of
several visits. As it proceeded, Drury would be able to ask
questions and engage in discussion. Subsequently, he was to
take possession of the manuscript; safeguard it for thirty
years; then publish it.
Intrigued, Drury agreed to this plan. Whereupon, the
mysterious stranger (who never reveals his name) said, “I
will see you again—good night,” and departed.
No sooner was he alone than Drury wondered if he had
imagined the encounter. “Had not my peculiar habits of
isolation, irregular and intense study, erratic living, all con-
spired to unseat reason?”
But the stranger (whom we shall refer to as “Morgan”—
see note in Appendix 2) did eventually return to the library.
He had with him the manuscript. Seating himself, he began
to read it aloud. And Drury listened spellbound to his tale.
•
In upstate New York, the tale began, flourished a “frater-
nity of adepts”—a secret society devoted to esoteric knowl-
edge. But within the society, a tiny faction had arisen. This
dissenting group wished to share the knowledge with all of
mankind.
To that end they communicated with Morgan, a student
of alchemy, and induced him to join the society, learn its
secrets, and write a book revealing those secrets. But when
his project became known, the society “endeavored to pre-
vail upon me to relent of my design.” Morgan refused, and
was condemned by the membership, for violating his oath
of secrecy.
For a time he was harassed and persecuted. Then one
night he was abducted. Men in top hats and overcoats
forced him into a carriage. And they informed him of his
punishment. He was to be initiated into highly secret knowl-
edge. For the society was benevolent; and its rule was that
a punishment must both instruct the offender and elevate
the human race.
always to be strongest in their immediate vicinity.
breathe was waning. Finally, these physical effects, along
with the eerie surroundings, were too much for him.
would be returned to the surface.
And he was about to drink, when the true face of the fig-
ure became visible. Grinning at him from behind a mask
was a demon.
“No, I will not drink!” shouted Morgan, dashing the cup
to the ground. And the monstrous forms vanished.
His vision took on now a different character. First, a faint
music became audible. It grew louder. And the musicians
appeared.
speed down into the seven thousand miles of vacancy.
Instinctively I murmured a prayer of supplication.
•
The reading of the manuscript had concluded. Drury’s
visitor put down the final sheet and gazed into the fire.
Then he reminded his listener of their agreement—Drury
was to become custodian of the manuscript.
But Drury protested that the tale had ended abruptly.
Did not more remain to be told? What lay beyond the end
of the earth? What was the nature of the Unknown Coun-
try?
The mysterious stranger shook his head. Nothing further
could be revealed, he said. Men were not yet ready for the
full story—nor were they ready for the contents of the man-
uscript. Therefore, thirty years were to elapse before its
publication. Drury was to place it in his safe. And he was
to draw up a will, providing for a new custodian in the
event of his death. Finally, the visitor held up a sealed enve-
lope. It was to be opened thirty years hence, and would pro-
vide more detailed instructions.
He tied the manuscript into a bundle and gave it to
Drury. And the stranger began now to weep. For he was for-
bidden, he said, to meet with his loved ones, or to visit the
scenes of his former life. Rather, he had to return to the
Unknown Country—to the realm of Etidorhpa.
And he bid Drury farewell.
He held out his hand, I grasped it, and as I did so, his form
became indistinct, and gradually disappeared from my
gaze, the fingers of my hand met the palm in vacancy, and
with extended arms I stood alone in my room, holding the
mysterious manuscript.
Nonetheless, he preserved the manuscript as directed.
Thirty years later he opened the envelope. Inside was a
letter, with instructions concerning publication. Drury was
to make any necessary revisions to the text; engage an illus-
trator; and find a publisher. Also, he was to add a prologue
describing his connection with the author of the book.
“Write the whole truth, for although mankind will not now
accept as fact all that you and I have experienced, strange
phases of life phenomena are revealing themselves, and
humanity will yet surely be led to a higher plane.” And
enclosed was a photograph of the author, to be used as a
frontispiece.
Though aware that the publication would subject him to
accusations, Drury set out to follow the instructions. He
composed a prologue. And in an epilogue he challenged the
reader:
18.
Doreal
I
,
of the White Temple survives to this day. Founded in
1930, the Brotherhood is dedicated to the study and
dissemination of ancient wisdom. That wisdom was uncov-
ered by the founder of the group: a shadowy figure known
as Doreal.
Doreal was born on an Indian reservation in Oklahoma.
His original name was Claude Doggins. After serving in the
Signal Corps during World War I, he began his pursuit of
esoteric knowledge. Doreal claimed to have spent a number
of years in Tibet, studying with the Dalai Lama and oth-
ers.*
During his lifetime Doreal published dozens of pam-
phlets, about such things as Kabbala, reincarnation, and
UFOs. He is best-known, however, for a book:The Emerald
Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean. This work purports to be a
translation of the original Emerald Tablets. The Tablets
were engraved, says Doreal, 38,000 years ago—by Thoth,
the High Priest of Atlantis. Thoth took the Tablets to
Egypt, where he built the Great Pyramid as a repository for
them. The Tablets were later taken to the Yucatan; and
there, in the ruins of a Mayan temple, Doreal discovered
them. According to an ad for the book, “The powerful and
rhythmic verse of Thoth is wonderfully retained in Doreal’s
translation.Ӡ
* While there, he may have run into George Adamski, who like-
wise claimed to have studied in Tibet during the 1920s. Professor
Adamski (as he styled himself ) went on to found the Royal Order
of Tibet, a New Age study group. And he achieved fame as a fly-
ing saucer contactee. (See my How to Make the Most of a Flying
Saucer Experience [Top Hat Press, 1998].)
† Doreal describes the Emerald Tablets as “the most stupendous
With his store of esoteric knowledge (much of it derived
from Theosophy), Doreal gave lectures, issued pamphlets,
and guided the Brotherhood. His leadership style was flam-
boyant. A reporter from Time magazine visited the group’s
headquarters in Denver. He describes Doreal as wearing a
gold-trimmed robe of purple silk and sitting on a throne.*
In 1946 Doreal—anticipating a nuclear war—moved
the Brotherhood to a secluded valley in the Rocky Moun-
tains. There he continued to serve as its “Supreme Voice,”
until his death in 1963.
Doreal is said to have accumulated a sizable library:
30,000 volumes of occult, metaphysical, and science-fic-
tional works. Yet he was not simply a scholar. For besides his
international travels, Doreal made several visits to the Inner
Earth.
The first occurred during his sojourn in Tibet. He trav-
eled in his astral body, says Doreal, to a library located deep
beneath Lhasa. There he studied the ancient wisdom of
Tibet, which was recorded on spools of wire.
Back in the U.S., he visited the underground home of the
Deros. (These malevolent creatures will be discussed in
chapter 20.)
And in 1931 Doreal visited a subterranean city, located
beneath Mount Shasta in California. In a pamphlet titled
“Mysteries of Mount Shasta,” he describes the visit. It
began when two strangers took him to the top of the moun-
tain. Doreal stood with the pair on a large flat rock. A sec-
tion of the rock then descended like an elevator into the
mountain. They traveled miles into the earth, arriving
finally in a vast cavern.
There Doreal was escorted into “a small city of beautiful
white houses. ..so beautiful that they almost blinded the
eye.” Inhabited by several hundred people, the city beneath
Shasta was a former colony of Atlantis. His guides led him
about the city; showed him its temple; and demonstrated
the transmutation of sand into gold. (The gold, they
explained, was used to purchase supplies from the outer
world.) They also gave him instruction in secret matters.
seen, but whose laughter could be heard.
The white settlers who replaced the Indians preserved these
legends. But they were soon coming up with lore of their
own. Much of it originated with a book titled A Dweller on Two
Planets.
A Dweller on Two Planets was published in 1905 (though it had
been written twenty years earlier). Its author was Frederick Spen-
cer Oliver, a resident of Yreka—a town just north of the moun-
tain. But Oliver was no ordinary author; for he claimed to be
channeling “Phylos the Thibetan.” He describes the process of
taking dictation from Phylos, via automatic writing: “At such
times I am as fully conscious of my surroundings as at any other
time, though I feel lifted as into a Master’s presence, and gladly
do for him the work of an amanuensis.” Phylos revealed that a
secret brotherhood dwelt within Mount Shasta—a society of
Masters who carried on the traditions of Atlantis.
Or was it the traditions of Lemuria—the lost continent of the
Pacific—that these Masters were carrying on? According to
Harve Spencer Lewis, founder of the Rosicrucian Order, such
was indeed the case. In 1925 Lewis (writing as “Selvius”) pub-
lished an article titled “Descendants of Lemuria: A Description
of an Ancient Cult in America.” It revealed that Mount Shasta
was the home of Lemurians. There was even a credible eyewit-
ness, said Lewis. For had not Professor Larkin, science writer for
the Hearst newspapers, aimed his telescope at Mount Shasta and
spotted Lemurians? And had not Larkin also heard them chant-
ing, as they performed their rituals?
(Professor Larkin had written about lost continents, and had
described A Dweller on Two Planets as a “mighty, majestic, impos-
ing, fascinating book.” But a claim to have spotted Lemurians
has yet to be located in his writings.)
And in 1931 Lewis (writing as “Wishar Spenle Cervé”—an
anagram of his name) published Lemuria: The Lost Continent of
the Pacific. The book has a chapter about the Lemurians who
inhabit Mount Shasta. They are described as tall, graceful, and
garbed in robes. Local shopkeepers have encountered them; for
they come into stores and purchase basic commodities—paying
with bags of gold.
But it was an article in the Los Angeles Times that drew public
attention to the Lemurians. In 1932, journalist Edward Lanser was
traveling in the observation car of the Mount Shasta Limited. As
the train passed by Mount Shasta at sunrise, Lanser noted a
strange reddish-green light ablaze on the mountain. He asked a
conductor about it.
“Lemurians,” said the conductor. “They hold ceremonials up
there.”
Intrigued, Lanser paid a subsequent visit to the mountain. He
interviewed local residents and made a startling discovery: “The
existence of a ‘mystic village’ on Mt. Shasta was an established
fact. Businessmen, amateur explorers, officials and ranchers in
the country surrounding Shasta spoke freely of the Lemurian
community, and all attested to the weird rituals that are per-
formed on the mountain-side at sunset, midnight and sunrise.”
He also learned that encounters with Lemurians had occurred.
“Various merchants in the vicinity of Shasta report that these
white-robed men come to their stores. Their purchases are of a
peculiar nature. They have bought enormous quantities of sul-
phur as well as a great deal of salt. They buy lard in bulk quan-
tities, for which they bring their own containers [emphasis added].
...Their purchases are always paid for with gold nuggets.”
Had the journalist been beguiled with a tall tale? Was he writ-
ing tongue-in-cheek? Or was he simply reporting the facts? In
any case, the legend was now fully launched. Mount Shasta was
the home of Lemurians!
Since then, the legend has taken root. And the sightings have
continued. Each year there are reports of men in robes, roaming
the slopes of Mount Shasta. Invariably, they are said to have long,
flowing hair and a soulful look. They murmur a greeting, then
disappear into the forest.
Who are these mystery men? Lemurians? New Age hermits?
Spaced-out hippies? Their identity remains an enigma. It should
be noted, however, that they shop with their own containers—
avoiding plastic bags. Environmentally sensitive, these are surely
the wise men of the mountain.
19.
Guy Ballard
I
, — ,
medium, and Theosophist—was hiking on Mount Shas-
ta, enjoying its scenic splendor. The 52-year-old Ballard
was wont to take such hikes, whenever in need of pondering
some matter or of making a decision. Moreover, he had
heard rumors of an occult fraternity—a Brotherhood of
Mount Shasta—dwelling in the vicinity, and hoped to learn
more about it.
Ballard had stopped to drink from a stream, when
(according to Unveiled Mysteries, the book he would write
about his experiences) he sensed a presence and turned
around. Behind him stood a young man, who smiled and
said: “My brother, if you will hand me your cup, I will give
you a much more refreshing drink than spring water.”
Ballard obeyed; and the stranger handed him back a cup-
ful of creamy liquid. (The cup had filled instantly, from no
apparent source.) Ballard drank and gasped with surprise—
for he felt an immediate surge of energy.
“That which you drank comes directly from the Univer-
sal Supply, pure and vivifying as Life itself—in fact, it is
Life,” said the stranger, who then launched into a meta-
physical discourse.
After speaking at length, he revealed his identity—in a
startling fashion. His face, body, and clothing transformed
themselves (Ballard would claim) into a figure in a white
robe—an angelic being whose eyes sparkled with love. And
whom Ballard recognized, from visions experienced as a
medium. It was Saint Germain, the Ascended Master.
Saint Germain began another discourse. He discussed
the nature of Ascended Masters, and of the “God Self ”
within each of us. Then he turned to the subject of reincar-
nation—and the discourse became a demonstration.
For Ballard found himself separating from his physical
body. Saint Germain put an arm about him, and journeyed
with him through time and space. Ballard was shown two
of his former lives: one as a medieval French singer, another
as an Egyptian priest. Such reincarnations would continue,
said Saint Germain, until he accessed the Divine within
him and achieved an understanding of the Law of Life.
Saint Germain then returned Ballard to his body; took
him back to the lodge where he was staying; and vanished
before his eyes.
•
Several days later Ballard set out again on the mountain
trail. For he had found a note in his room:
enable men to attain perfection.
Ballard learned much during this second meeting with
Saint Germain; and it was with a feeling of exultation that
he returned to the lodge. But it was their third meeting that
would be truly unforgettable. For Ballard would be taken
on a visit to the Inner Earth.
•
That morning a dove had alighted on his windowsill. In
its bill was a note, summoning him to the trysting place.
Ballard hiked there and was greeted by Saint Germain.
With the Ascended Master was the panther.
Once again Ballard was separated from his body, which
slumped to the ground. Saint Germain assured him that the
panther would guard it during their absence. And together
they flew to a mountaintop.
There Saint Germain rolled aside a boulder. Revealed
was a bronze door, which opened at a touch. They descended
a stairway to an elevator; and the elevator sped them further
downward. It came to a halt at another bronze door. “We
have descended two thousand feet into the very heart of the
mountain,” said Saint Germain, opening the door.
They entered a reception room. On the wall hung a tap-
estry, depicting a pair of Cosmic Beings—the founders, said
Saint Germain, of this underground retreat.
He led Ballard into the next room—a council chamber.
It was filled with plush seats that faced a viewing screen. A
soft light permeated the room and glimmered in its pol-
ished walls. Set in the ceiling were gold disks. A divine ener-
gy, Ballard would learn, emanated from these disks.
Saint Germain led him on a brief tour of the retreat, vis-
iting a library and a treasure room. Then they returned to
the council chamber, where the seats had begun to fill. For
the Ascended Masters were assembling.
Garbed in robes, the Masters wandered in, until seventy
of them had seated themselves. With them were a few ordi-
nary humans—guests like Ballard. The council chamber
echoed with chatter. But then a hush fell upon the gather-
ing. For by the viewing screen an oval of light was forming.
Out of the light stepped a tall, majestic figure, clad in a
luminous robe. Wavy blond hair tumbled to his shoulders.
He asked if everyone was ready, then gestured at the screen.
The screen came alive, with a presentation that might
have been titled “The March of Civilizations.” The scenes
were dramatic and breathtaking. One after another, power-
ful nations were seen to rise and fall. The glories of ancient
Lemuria flashed across the screen, followed by the cata-
clysm that sank that land beneath the waters of the Pacific.
Airships flew over the towers of Atlantis, then it too was
engulfed by the sea; and fish swam amid the towers. A
mighty kingdom flourished in what is now the Gobi
Desert, and crumbled before an onslaught of barbarians.
Egypt, Rome, modern-day Europe—each in turn rose to
prominence, then declined. The presentation concluded
with the rise of America.
The screen went dark. And in a blaze of light, Lanto
appeared. The Great Ascended Master welcomed Ballard
and the other guests. He urged them to fully accept the
God Within. And he invited them to return on New Year’s
Eve, when some Venusians would be visiting. Lanto then
blessed everyone; and the assembly was adjourned.
Saint Germain led Ballard to a music room and played
for him on a harp. Finally the two of them exited the sub-
terranean retreat and flew back to Mount Shasta.
In the months that followed, Ballard occasionally met
with Saint Germain. For the most part, however, he
returned to prospecting—searching for gold in the hills of
California.
But he was also spending time at his desk. For he had
begun to write a book about his experiences.
•
The book was titled Unveiled Mysteries. It was self-pub-
lished in 1934, four years after his encounters on Mount
Shasta. Authorship was ascribed to one Godfré Ray King: a
pseudonym, and spiritual identity, that Ballard had adopted.
After two years in California, he had returned home to
Chicago, rejoining his wife Edna. Ballard was done with
gold prospecting. Instead, he was about to embark upon an
equally uncertain venture. For he and Edna had decided to
launch a new religion—or at least a New Age movement.
And Unveiled Mysteries was to be its foundation text.
Guy and Edna Ballard were not new to the New Age. For
years they had taken a strong interest in spiritualism and
Theosophy, and had belonged to a number of esoteric
groups. Both had practiced mediumship and been in con-
tact with the spirit world. And Edna worked at a bookstore
called the Philosopher’s Nook; conducted classes on meta-
physical subjects; and edited a periodical called The Ameri-
can Occultist. She also performed as a harpist.
The Activity (as their movement would become
known) had a modest start. The Ballards taught a series of
classes in the living room of their Chicago home. Ten people
—sworn to secrecy—attended these classes. They were
introduced to the basic ideas of , and listened as mes-
sages from Saint Germain were read aloud. They also pur-
chased copies of Unveiled Mysteries.
For Unveiled Mysteries was the gateway to . In an
introductory note, Ballard describes the origins of the book:
The time has arrived when the Great Wisdom held and
guarded for many centuries in the Far East is now to come
forth in America at the command of these Great Ascended
Masters who direct, protect, and assist in expanding the
Light within mankind upon this Earth.
—that bastion of the New Age—that the movement really
took off.
The Los Angeles classes were a success from the start.
Crowds of truth-seekers (along with the merely curious)
showed up to see what was all about. During the
spring and summer of 1935, the Ballards had to find pro-
gressively larger halls to accommodate their audiences.
Finally, they rented the Shrine Civic Auditorium, with its
6000 seats. The Shrine would become the center, with
national conventions held there twice a year.
For quickly grew into a nationwide phenomenon—
a kind of craze. During that summer, the Ballards also
toured the West Coast, lecturing to packed houses. (Their
success in Los Angeles had generated widespread publicity.)
And they were soon making forays back East, to speak in
various cities. As the movement grew, they established
sanctuaries in the cities they visited, appointing local lead-
ers of study groups.
Initially, the Ballards’ lectures had been simple, straight-
forward affairs. Guy and Edna had dressed plainly, assumed
a modest air, and lectured from a bare stage. But the pro-
ceedings evolved into something more elaborate and the-
atrical—more exciting. A typical evening with the Ballards
unfolded as follows:
Drawn by newspaper ads and word of mouth, prospec-
tive students filed into a downtown auditorium; there was
no admission fee. Smiling, white-clad ushers led them to
their seats. As the seats filled, a buzz of anticipation filled
the hall.
The stage was brightly lit. On it were a lectern, a micro-
phone, portraits of Saint Germain and Jesus, American flags,
a piano, and a harp. Painted on an illuminated backdrop
was the emblem: a diagram of the Magic Presence. It
showed halos and rays emanating from a divine figure.
Beneath the figure was a human being, struck by a ray of
enlightenment.
The houselights dimmed; a pianist sat down at the piano;
and a hush fell upon the audience—as if a play were about
to begin.
The master of ceremonies came on stage and welcomed
everyone. He read aloud telegrams of praise that the
Ballards had received; spoke glowingly of the couple; and
introduced a singer, who sang a rousing anthem.
Then the pianist played a triumphal air. And Guy
Ballard—or Godfré Ray King, as he was introduced—
made his entrance. He swept onto the stage to a standing
ovation. In his formal white suit and blue satin cape,
Ballard was a precursor to latter-day televangelists. A dia-
mond pin flashed on his shirt. He was tall, slender, and
erect; his gray hair was combed straight back. He bowed
and began to speak.
In the mellifluous tones of an accomplished orator,
Ballard held the audience spellbound. He discussed the
Mighty Presence; talked about the Ascended Masters;
described his meetings with Saint Germain. The Mighty
, he declared, was the key to health, wealth, and hap-
piness. The Ascended Masters wanted to teach us their wis-
dom; and the Ballards were their Accredited Messengers.
Saint Germain, he told the audience, was the wisest of the
Masters—and the most potent, with the power to heal ill-
ness.
Finally, he introduced Lotus Ray King.
Edna’s entrance was no less theatrical. Clad in a blue silk
gown with trailing ribbons, she swept onto the stage like an
opera diva. A spotlight followed her, as the pianist pounded
out the triumphal air. Greeted by enthusiastic applause,
Edna smiled back with an imperial graciousness. Her gray
hair was elaborately coifed. A diamond tiara—along with
jeweled rings and necklace—flashed in the spotlight.
Edna now took charge of the proceedings. Her voice was
slightly strident; but what the grande dame of the
Activity lacked in smoothness, she made up for in forceful-
ness. In a commanding tone, she passed on messages from
the Ascended Masters. She led the audience in shouting out
“decrees”—ritualistic appeals to the Masters. (These included
pleas for the annihilation of communism; for the exorcism
of psychic entities that threatened humanity; and for the
chastisement of ’s enemies.) She conducted “affirma-
tions”—declarations of attunement to the Divine. (These
were intended to elicit blessings.) She spoke of the greatness
of America and the virtue of patriotism. She urged everyone
to study the wisdom of the Ascended Masters. Then she sat
down at the harp and played.
The evening concluded with the channeling of an
Ascended Master. Guy’s voice deepened, his eyes closed;
and the Great Hercules spoke through him. The audience
was then dismissed—with a reminder to leave their “love
gifts” in the baskets.
As they passed through the lobby, they were offered a
miscellany of merchandise. Arrayed on tables were copies
of the Ballards’ books (including Braille editions), portraits
of Saint Germain, charts of the Magic Presence, recordings
of Edna playing the harp, rings and pins, jars of New
Age Cold Cream, and the magazine.
The lectures introduced tens of thousands of Americans
to the fundamentals of . Those wishing to learn more
could join a study group, held in their local sanctuary. By
1939, the Activity had become the most popular New
Age movement—and the most controversial.
•
What were the tenets of ? What was being taught by
the Ballards?
In their lectures and writings, Guy and Edna presented
themselves as mere messengers. They had been selected by
Saint Germain as a channel for his teachings and healings.
Central to those teachings was the existence of the Mighty
Presence—a divine energy in each of us. In the chan-
neled words of Saint Germain:
Our primary task is to release that energy and allow it to
permeate our being. And the key to doing so is Love:
and to buy their books.*
•
By 1939, the Ballards had reached the peak of their suc-
cess. The lectures (to which they traveled in a Cadillac,
towing a trailer with Edna’s harp) were still attracting
crowds; the study groups were flourishing. And the couple
had become prosperous and famous.
But they had also experienced setbacks—in the form of
adverse publicity.
One such blow had come the previous year, in their home
town of Chicago. After a lecture at the Civic Opera House,
Guy Ballard had been signing books in the lobby—when
he was abruptly served with legal papers. A local woman
was accusing him of having swindled her out of thousands
of dollars. Ten years before, she claimed, he had sold her
stock in a worthless gold mine.
The next day, headlines such as “ ‘
’” were bannered in the Chicago newspapers. The glee
was unmistakable. In the days that followed, the newspa-
pers provided details of the alleged scam, which involved an
undeveloped gold mine in California.
The Ballards fought back. They dismissed the allegations
as falsehoods; denounced the lawsuit as a “vicious attack” by
their enemies; and praised the students for the courage
* Eventually, twelve books would be published by the Ballards.
These books were issued in a uniform edition, with green leather-
ette covers, sewn bindings, and dark-violet ink—a set of scrip-
tures. Unveiled Mysteries was the inaugural publication. It was
followed by a sequel, The Magic Presence, describing further
encounters with Saint Germain. Subsequent volumes contained
discourses that had been channeled from various Ascended Mas-
ters.
In listing these later works, bibliographies give the Ascended
Master (rather than the channeler) as author. His name is fol-
lowed by the designation “[spirit].”
The books were said to emit Cosmic Radiation.
view, they were charlatans, hungry for wealth and power.
Like that gold mine, the Accredited Messengers, and their
“channeled” teachings, were bogus.
Bryan would eventually rework the pamphlets into a
book, Psychic Dictatorship in America. Self-published in
1940, the book is based on his own experiences; testimony
solicited from others; and the movement’s own literature.
In it he doggedly presents his case against the Ballards.
He tells us, for example, that in 1929 Guy Ballard was
indicted for fraud by a Chicago grand jury. The charges
involved the sale of stock in a California gold mine. Ballard
fled the city and avoided arrest.
Where did he go? To Los Angeles, says Bryan, where he
lived under an assumed name; attended New Age lectures;
and sought to locate—by psychic means—another gold
mine. (During an earlier stay in California, he had discov-
ered the mine that prompted the indictment.) Ballard
remained in California for two years. Only after the
charges were apparently dropped did he rejoin Edna in
Chicago.
It was during this period that he claimed to have met
Saint Germain on Mount Shasta—a spurious claim, accord-
ing to Bryan.
Bryan also tracks down the inspiration for the
Activity. During his first stay in California, Ballard had vis-
ited a New Age church. According to the friend who had
accompanied him:
church upon the same lines with his illuminated back-
ground.”
Finally, Bryan condemns the authoritarian rule imposed
by the Ballards. The Activity, he declares, is a psychic
dictatorship—a nefarious cult; and his mission is to expose
it.
Bryan’s writings caused definite harm to the movement.
But there was worse to come. For on December 29, 1939,
at his son’s home in Los Angeles, Guy Ballard died after a
brief illness.
Edna would carry on—capably—as sole leader; but lead-
ership was not the problem brought on by her husband’s
death. Rather, their credibility was further challenged. Why,
it was wondered, had the man who claimed to have healed
thousands—via the power of the Mighty —not been
able to heal himself? Moreover, Guy had always maintained
that he would make an Ascension. That is to say, he would
escape the limitations of the physical body and join the
Ascended Masters—without having to die. His failure to do
so dismayed his followers (who had entertained similar hopes
for themselves); and many began to leave the movement.
And six months later came the most serious blow of all.
A federal grand jury indicted Edna Ballard, along with her
son and other leaders. (Guy had narrowly escaped—
if not the limitations of the physical body—inclusion in the
indictment.) They were charged with fraudulent use of the
mails.
•
There now began a series of trials and appeals that would
become a landmark case in the annals of constitutional law.
The Ballards were accused of having operated—for the pur-
pose of making money—a bogus religion, and of having
used the U.S. mails to do so. Their claims of communicat-
ing with the spirit world, and of healing the sick, were
knowingly untrue and therefore fraudulent. One of the
twelve counts in the indictment accused the Ballards of an
inflated view of themselves:
teachings, he told them, was not relevant to the charges of
fraud. The sole issue was whether or not the Ballards had
believed those teachings. Their sincerity was on trial, not
the metaphysics of . It did not matter (to the law) if
Saint Germain actually existed in the spirit world. Rather,
the question was: Did the Ballards truly believe that he was
appearing to them, communicating his wisdom to them,
healing the sick? Or were they merely pretending to do so,
for the purpose of bringing in dollars? The latter would con-
stitute fraud. As Judge O’Connor put it (after reading aloud
a portion of the First Amendment):
tial guidance of their “Saint Germain,” however doubtful it
seems to me, it is hard to say that they do not get what they
pay for.
Supreme Court; and the guilty verdict was void.
The government could have sought to reindict her. It
chose not to. So after six years of inactivity, Edna Ballard
was free once again to channel the Ascended Masters. And
to convey their wisdom to mankind.
•
Edna had relocated both the headquarters and her-
self to Santa Fe, New Mexico. A new start had been needed.
Guy’s death, and the adverse publicity arising from the tri-
als, had harmed the movement; and membership had
declined significantly. So now, with her legal problems
resolved, Edna carried on in Santa Fe—the sole leader of a
shrunken but still active movement.
She proved to be an effective leader. Gerald Bryan (that
disgruntled ex-member) describes her as “a dynamic, author-
itarian, battling kind of person,” who led with the martial
vigor of an Amazon. When the Santa Fe newspaper ran a
negative story about her, Edna had her followers descend
upon and disrupt its offices. For the next 25 years this strong-
willed woman kept the movement alive.
Indeed, she was probably the main force behind it from
the beginning. Bryan quotes from a letter he received:
dry. And their former manager wrote to Bryan:
wrote Unveiled Mysteries), were “as real and true as man-
kind’s existence on this Earth today, and...they all occurred
during August, September, and October of 1930, upon
Mount Shasta.”
So what was going on here? Were the Ballards deceiving
us, or what? Several possibilities suggest themselves:
and greater Help to them; but the rejection of Us, by those
who do not agree with this Truth, does not remove Us or
change Its Activity in the Universe.”
their own set of Masters: Nada, Che Ara, Lanto, Cyclopea, the
Great Master of Venus, Arcturus, Beloved Bob—and of course,
Saint Germain.
And who is Saint Germain?
The Saint Germain of is an elusive figure. He is not to be
confused with the actual saint (a French monk canonized in the
eighth century). Rather, he would seem to be a manifestation of
the Count de St.-Germain—the great mystery-man of the eigh-
teenth century. Nothing is known of the origins of this self-styled
count. (The title was one that he had simply coined and adopt-
ed.) But with his black satin outfit, powdered wig, diamond
rings, and snuffbox, the Count de St.-Germain did have an aris-
tocratic air. He was a wealthy traveler (with no known source of
income); a master of languages; an accomplished musician; a
witty conversationalist; and a confidant of kings. Moreover, he
was a latter-day alchemist, who was said to possess the Elixir of
Life. Voltaire referred to him as “a man who knows everything
and who never dies”; and Frederick the Great called him “one of
the most enigmatical personages of the eighteenth century.”
(St.-Germain was rumored to be centuries old—to have
known Dante, and even Cleopatra! Partly responsible for these
rumors was a Paris comedian known as Milord Gower, who did
imitations of St.-Germain—comic turns that found their way
into his legend.)
It was Madame Blavatsky who praised him as a master of East-
ern wisdom, and strengthened his reputation as an occultist.
“The Compte de St. Germain,” she wrote, “was certainly the
greatest Oriental Adept Europe has seen during the last century.”
Blavatsky believed that he was still alive and influential in human
affairs. And as late as 1925, he was supposedly spotted at a
Masonic convention in France.
But it was the Ballards who introduced us to the semi-divine
Saint Germain. In The Magic Presence, the black satin has given
way to “a robe of marvelous, dazzling white fabric”; and Saint
Germain is described as follows:
“I opened my eyes and there was the Blessed, Wonderful Pres-
ence of our Beloved Master. He stood fully six feet one inch in
height, slender, royal and real. His hair was dark brown, wavy
and abundant. His face portrayed a Beauty, Majesty and Power
no words can describe—a face revealing Eternal Youth, with eyes
of the deepest violet one can imagine through which the Wisdom
of the Ages poured out upon the world expressing the Love and
Mastery that are His.”
(On another occasion, his eyes are like the grin of the Cheshire
cat: “The last thing that remained visible, as he gradually disap-
peared, were his marvelous, beautiful eyes shining back at me.”)
Saint Germain, then, was the chief representative of the
Guardians of humanity—those “Masters of Love, Light, and
Wisdom” who keep an eye on us from above.
20.
Richard Shaver
T
( , -
came known to its detractors) began with a letter to
the editor. Years later, Ray Palmer would recall the
letter:
By December, 1943, I had become editor-in-chief of a
large string of pulp paper magazines published by the Ziff-
Davis Publishing Company of Chicago, Illinois. One of
these magazines was the original science fiction magazine,
Amazing Stories, first published in 1926....One day a letter
arrived giving the details of an “ancient alphabet” that
“should not be lost to the world.” It was opened by my
managing editor, Howard Browne, who tossed it into the
wastebasket with the comment: “The world is sure full of
crackpots!”
Even through the intervening wall I heard his remark, and
the word “crackpot” drew me like a magnet.. . .I retrieved
the letter from the wastebasket.
As he read it, Ray Palmer’s eyes lit up. He published the letter
in the next issue of Amazing Stories. The response delighted
him (and discomforted Browne). Hundreds of letters poured
in, from readers fascinated by that “ancient alphabet.”
Palmer contacted now the sender of the letter—one
Richard Shaver—and requested further information. Even-
tually, there arrived from Shaver a second communication:
a manuscript 10,000 words long. The story it told was
indeed amazing.
And the Shaver Mystery—which Palmer would bill as
“the most sensational true story ever told”—was born.
•
The pulp magazines published by Ziff-Davis were filled
authors such as Horatio Alger. With entrepreneurial zest, he
shortened the title to Argosy; switched to lively fiction for
adults; sought to entertain rather than uplift; and—to lower
the price of his magazine and thus increase sales—began
using woodpulp paper. (Such paper deteriorated rapidly,
but so what?) With its tales of action and adventure, Argosy
sold well—half a million copies per issue at its height.
Another of his publications, All-Story, became popular, too.
And Frank Munsey grew rich, as a purveyor of lowbrow,
magazine fiction.*
But at the turn of the century a rival pulpster arose.
Street & Smith had been a publisher of dime novels. Now
it imitated Munsey, with pulp periodicals that were devoted
to general fiction. Its Popular Magazine was the first of the
pulps to have a color cover. And in 1915, Street & Smith
came up with another innovation. It began to publish
magazines that specialized in a particular genre of fiction.
Among these were Detective Story, Western Story, and Sea
Stories.
Not to be outdone, Munsey followed suit with Detective
Fiction Weekly. Other publishers joined in; and the new
species proliferated. Newsstands blossomed with its garish
covers. Every taste was catered to. There were pulps dedi-
cated to sports stories, aviation stories, love stories, “spicy”
stories. There was even Weird Tales, which specialized in
fantasy.
But surprisingly (given their subsequent popularity),
there were not yet any science-fiction magazines. Indeed,
the term had yet to be invented. Munsey had published an
occasional “scientific romance.” (Under the Moons of Mars,
for instance, by Edgar Rice Burroughs, had been serialized
in All-Story.) But as a magazine genre, science fiction did
not exist.
It was awaiting its founder.
•
Hugo Gernsback (1884–1967) arrived in the U.S. in
1904. An electrical engineer, he had come to market a dry-
cell battery that he had invented. Two of these batteries
were packed in his trunk, along with his tailor-made suits
and expensive shirts.*
What had drawn Gernsback to America from his native
Luxembourg? In his autobiography he explains:
Issued regularly, the catalog was 64-pages long and pro-
fusely illustrated. To educate his customers in the basics of
radio, Gernsback included articles. And then, in 1908, he
went a step further. He published the first issue of a maga-
zine, called Modern Electrics.*
Modern Electrics was written and edited by Gernsback.
It was intended to stimulate interest in radio, and thereby
boost sales for his supply house. He hoped, too, that the
magazine itself might be profitable. Included in it were arti-
cles on all aspects of radio—in particular, how-to articles.
The magazine found a readership. And it marked the
beginning of his career as a publisher. Between 1908 and
1952, Hugo Gernsback would publish some fifty different
magazines. They were edited, initially, in the offices of the
Experimenter Publishing Co., and later, of Gernsback Pub-
lications. Most of them were technology titles, such as
Radio News, Practical Electrics, and The Electrical Experi-
menter. But there was also Scientific Detective Monthly,
Pirate Stories, Sexology.
And then there were his science-fiction magazines.
Gernsback came to science fiction via his technology
magazines. In 1911 he published—amidst the articles in
Modern Electrics—a scientific romance. Filled with specu-
lation on the future of technology, it was written by Gerns-
back himself. Such speculation had been common in his
editorials. But now speculative fiction—written by Gernsback
and others—began to appear regularly in his radio and
electrical magazines.
Predictions about the future became a Gernsback spe-
cialty. He envisioned, for example, an “electronic doctor”—
conveyor belts that took patients past a series of diagnostic
machines—and domed cities in orbit. He published stories
that forecast advances in science and technology. And he
put forward ideas for inventions—inventions that he would
sometimes go on to invent.*
For more than a decade, Gernsback included scientific
fiction in his magazines. And then he had an idea. Why not
publish a magazine that consisted solely of such fiction?
A magazine of “scientifiction,” as he would call it.
•
The first issue of Amazing Stories appeared in March
1926. (Gernsback had tested the idea first with an issue of
Science and Invention that consisted mostly of scientific fic-
tion.) With its cheap paper and lurid cover, the magazine
* Hugo Gernsback was an accomplished inventor. He is cred-
ited with having built the first walkie-talkie. And as a broadcast
pioneer (the founder of an early radio station), he was involved in
the creation of television. Among his inventions were the Oso-
phone (an innovative hearing-aid), and the Isolator. The Isolator
was a thinking cap. A helmet with its own air supply, it blocked
out distractions that interfered with thinking. Gernsback was
photographed using one in his office.
resembled the other pulps that had sprouted on the news-
stands. Yet it targeted a special readership: “radio bugs” and
others with an interest in science and technology. (As things
turned out, it attracted readers with a taste for fantastic
adventure.)
An editorial announced that Amazing Stories would offer
“charming romances intermingled with scientific fact and
prophetic vision.” The stories in the first issue were all
reprints, and included tales by H. G. Wells, Jules Verne,
and Edgar Allan Poe. But subsequent issues increasingly
contained original material. The editor was T. O’Connor
Sloane, an elderly chemist who had previously edited one of
the technology titles.
Amazing Stories was a success; and its circulation soon
surpassed 100,000. But in 1929 Gernsback was sued by his
printer and paper supplier (possibly at the instigation of
Bernarr Macfadden, a rival publisher), and forced into bank-
ruptcy. Placed into receivership, Amazing and the other
magazines continued to be published. The staff remained
intact, except for Gernsback, who was ousted as director.
And two years later, the Gernsback magazines were
acquired by Macfadden Publications.*
Under the continued editorship of T. O’Connor Sloane,
Amazing Stories remained afloat. But it was in competition
now with other science-fiction magazines. And deprived of
Gernsback’s leadership, Amazing declined in quality. It was
reduced to a bimonthly; and in 1938—circulation down to
15,000—the magazine was sold to Ziff-Davis of Chicago.
* Bernarr Macfadden was a magazine mogul. His True Story
(filled with fiction masquerading as fact) had the largest circula-
tion of any magazine during the 1920s. And he was pleased to
add these new titles to his list.
Meanwhile, Gernsback had formed a new company. And he
was publishing Radio-Craft, Science Wonder Stories, and Air
Wonder Stories—magazines that competed directly with the ones
he had lost. “I now intend to bring out a new and better maga-
zine,” he had written to his scientifiction authors. And he had
come up with a new term for the genre: “science fiction.”
Ziff-Davis looked around for a younger editor. (Sloane
was approaching ninety.) And it hired Ray Palmer, a 29-
year-old who had published stories in Amazing, and who
was active in science-fiction fandom.
•
Ray Palmer (1910–1977) was born and raised in Mil-
waukee. At the age of seven, he was struck by a truck and
severely injured. The accident, which broke his back, would
profoundly affect his life. For he grew up to be a hunchback
—a gnomelike figure, barely four-feet tall, who was partial-
ly crippled.
Yet the accident gave rise to something positive. During
much of his youth, Palmer was bedridden—confined to the
hospital or his home. Unable to attend school, he was edu-
cated by a tutor. Also, the Milwaukee Public Library sent
him a weekly crate of books. In the prison of his bed, Palmer
eagerly read these books—sometimes a dozen in a day.
Thus did he become a voracious reader and an autodidact.*
By his fifteenth year, Palmer was able to attend school. A
self-described “lone-wolf,” he enrolled at St. Anne’s Catholic
School in Milwaukee. Unlike most of his fellow students,
he needed no encouragement to read.
And a year later, he was browsing at a newsstand—when
a magazine cover caught his eye. It was the first issue of
Amazing Stories. Palmer bought it, read it cover to cover,
and became a fan—an avid reader of the magazine. He
* As an invalid with little to do but read, Palmer was in good
company. Nathaniel Hawthorne was injured (playing bat-and-
ball) when he was nine. Bedridden for a year, he too became an
insatiable reader.
And Willard Huntington Wright, an art and literary critic,
spent two years confined to his bed, on account of an ailment. To
pass the time, he read mystery novels—stacks of them. Upon
recovering, he began to write mysteries. They were published
under the name “S. S. Van Dine,” and featured Philo Vance—an
aristocratic sleuth who resembled Wright.
wrote letters to the editor, commenting on stories. And he
submitted a story of his own, “The Time Ray of Jandia,”
which he had written for his English class. To his immense
satisfaction, he received a letter of acceptance and a $40
check. Hugo Gernsback had bought the story. (It would not
be published, though, until several years later.)
After high school, Palmer attended business college.
Then he found a job as bookkeeper for a sheet-metal com-
pany. But his real interest—his passion—was to write sci-
ence fiction and other types of popular fiction. At night he
was writing, in a dreary rented room; and more sales fol-
lowed, to various pulps. With friends he formed the Science
Correspondence Club, an organization of science-fiction
fans. And he published a fanzine—cranked out on a mimeo-
graph machine—called The Comet.
In 1938 Ziff-Davis acquired Amazing Stories and sought
a new editor—someone with science-fiction “credentials.”
By now Palmer was a prominent figure in fandom. Offered
the job, he accepted it and moved to Chicago.
He found himself at the helm of a moribund magazine.
Its brand of science fiction—scientific and educational—
was no longer in vogue. Determined to restore Amazing to
life, Palmer switched to tales of action and adventure—
swordplay in Space, damsels in distress, bug-eyed monsters.
He sought out writers who could deliver such stories, and
also published stories of his own (under pseudonyms). He
engaged the services of skilled illustrators; ran a column on
the paranormal; and began each issue with a lively editorial.
It wasn’t long before the circulation of the magazine had
soared from 15,000 to more than 135,000.
And it would soar even higher—thanks to that letter
plucked from a wastebasket.
•
Years later, his managing editor would recall the letter:
“Ray, who loved to show his editors a trick or two about the
business, fished it out of the basket, ran it in Amazing—and
a flood of mail poured in.”
The letter, ill-typed, was from a reader: Richard Shaver
of Barto, Pennsylvania. Shaver described a language called
Mantong. It was the original language of mankind, he
claimed, and had been spoken by the inhabitants of
Atlantis. All other languages were descended from it. Thus,
English had its roots in Mantong—roots that could be
explored for hidden meanings.
Shaver listed the sounds of Mantong—its alphabet. And
he gave the meaning of each sound. These meanings were
intrinsic, he explained; and unlike words, they did not
change over time. So the Mantong alphabet could be used
to decode English words. The word desolate, for example,
consists of the sounds de, “destructive,” sol, “sun,” and ate,
“devour”—i.e., “devoured by a destructive sun.”*
Shaver concluded with a plea:
Palmer set to work. “I put a clean piece of paper into my
typewriter,” he would later reminisce, “and using Mr. Shav-
er’s strange letter-manuscript as a basis, I wrote a 31,000
word story which I entitled ‘I Remember Lemuria!’”
Readers were given advance notice that something excit-
ing was in the works. “For the first time in its history,” Palmer
announced in an editorial, “Amazing Stories is preparing to
present a true story.”
And in the March 1945 issue, “I Remember Lemuria!”
was featured, with a cover illustration.
The Shaver Mystery was launched.
•
Palmer transformed “A Warning to Future Man” in two
ways. First, he gave it a makeover into pulp fiction:
I started with the first word of page one, and I took a factual
presentation. ..and I turned it into a “story” suitable for
publication in a fiction magazine. I added dialogue, so that
Mutan Mion, Arl, and all the other characters mentioned,
actually spoke and moved and breathed in the account,
rather than seemed to be statistics in a deadly serious pres-
entation.. ..Under no stretch of imagination could that
original 10,000 word manuscript have been said to be a
“story,” in the sense that it had action, dialogue, romance,
intrigue, plot, suspense and whatever else a good action
story in a pulp magazine must have. Nor was Shaver averse
to having the editor make these changes, if it was the only
way the message could be gotten across.
I could not bring myself to believe that Mr. Shaver had
actually gotten his Alphabet, and his Warning to Future
Man, and all the “science” he propounded, from actual
caves in the earth, and actual people living there. Instead,
I translated his thought-records into “racial memory,” and
felt sure this would be more believable to my readers.
But the tales were no longer presented as “racial memo-
ries.” Had they been, Shaver could have been dismissed as
a mere daydreamer. Anyone can imagine a previous lifetime.
It is an altogether different matter to claim—as Shaver
did—to have entered a subterranean realm; dwelt among
its inhabitants; and discovered an ancient set of plates—
engraved by a Lemurian!
For such were the claims that would spark the controver-
sy known as the Shaver Mystery.
•
The second Shaver tale appeared in the June 1945 issue.
(That is to say, in the next issue—Amazing was being pub-
lished quarterly, due to the wartime rationing of paper.) It
was titled “Thought Records of Lemuria.” And it came
with an apology. In his editorial remarks, Palmer confessed
to having misrepresented its predecessor. That business
about “racial memory”? That had been his own explanation
for the origins of the story. For he had been unable to accept
Shaver’s.
But he was prepared now to be straight with his readers
—to “present the truth as Mr. Shaver has told it to us.”
“Thought Records of Lemuria” was based on personal expe-
riences. It was autobiography, in the guise of fiction. Said
Palmer:
The tale begins in a Detroit auto plant. The narrator,
Richard Shaver himself, is at work on an assembly line. He
is surrounded by “the muted roar of an auto factory—the
clanging, clattering, mingling maelstrom of busy machines
and busier men.” Suddenly, he starts to hear voices. They
are the thoughts, he realizes, of his fellow workers. When
he lays down his welding gun, the voices cease—resuming
when he picks it up again. Somehow the gun is acting as a
receiver.
Then he hears voices from some distant place. These
voices are disturbing. For they are discussing the torment of
a captive. Trembling, Shaver wonders if he is losing his
mind. Or, he asks himself, is his mind functioning all too
well ?
Then he hears a scream—a sound “as might be imagined
only in Dante’s Inferno.” And he can stand it no longer. He
quits his job and heads home. But the voices continue on
the street car.
At this point in his tale, Shaver adds a footnote to the
narrative:
behind. And they use them to torment human beings.
Finally, he has learned too much; and the Deros set out
to destroy him. They target Shaver with rays from the
machines, and induce him to commit a crime. He is arrest-
ed and sentenced to prison. There the Deros torment him
with rays. And he languishes in his cell, on the verge of
madness and despair.
fear of an attack by Deros. But she is hopeful that Shaver
will be able to help thwart these attacks. She leads him to
a “visi-screen” and shows him a group of Deros. They are
goggle-eyed and dwarfish.*
Then she leads him into a library. It is a repository of
metal cases that contain a kind of microfilm. Preserved
on the microfilm are the “thought records” of individual
Lemurians—their recorded experiences. Says Nydia: “You
should read the story of the great race who builded these
imperishable caves and the indestructible machinery which
is capable of who knows what miracles.” These records will
teach him how to operate certain machines, which can then
be used against the Deros.
Nydia straps him into a huge chair, puts a helmet on his
head, and plays a thought record. And Shaver becomes
Duli, an early settler of Lemuria. He relives Duli’s experi-
ences. They seem to be happening to him, as he sits there
in the chair.
Then Nydia plays another record for him. And he
becomes Bar Mehat, a Lemurian warrior. Bar Mehat is lead-
ing the fight against an invasion of lizard-men.
When the record ends, Shaver is slumped in the chair.
Nydia unstraps him and helps him to his feet. The thought
records have exhausted him. But he has acquired a vivid
sense of the lives of two Lemurians.
A gong sounds. Shaver and Nydia make their way to a
dining hall. There he throws in his lot with the band of
Teros. And “Thought Records of Lemuria” concludes.
•
This sequel prompted another flood of letters; and
Palmer knew he had struck a nerve. For the next three years,
he would feature a Shaver tale in almost every issue of the
magazine.
The tales were based on fact, Palmer insisted. For their
author had visited the cavern world, and had discovered
there a history of Lemuria. His tales made use of that histo-
ry. In publishing them, Amazing was offering a glimpse into
the earliest years of mankind.
And as each tale appeared, more about Lemuria became
known. In a nutshell, here is its story:
The earth was originally inhabited by a race of giants.
(They averaged twenty feet in height.) These Titans, as
they called themselves, had migrated from another planet
and settled on two continents: Lemuria and Atlantis. There
they developed an advanced civilization.*
This civilization enjoyed the fruits of advanced technol-
ogy. But while machines did much of the work, menial
laborers were still needed. So the Lemurians bred a race of
workers. Of ordinary stature, these servants performed var-
ious tasks. And though fully human, they were known as
robots—Mantong for “workers.”
Life was good for the Lemurians. They had no enemies;
led a leisurely existence; and enjoyed a life span of thou-
sands of years, retaining all the while their vigor and youth-
ful appearance.
But then the idyll came to an end. The sun underwent a
transformation, and began to emit deadly radiation. And
the Lemurians began to fall ill and die.
So they retreated to the interior of the earth, to escape
the radiation. With disintegrator beams, they enlarged
existing caverns and created new ones. Cities were built
within these caverns. And Lemurian civilization reestab-
lished itself in the depths of the earth.
The Lemurians thrived in their new home. But finally,
the radiation penetrated even there; and again, they began
to die. So they decided to leave the earth altogether, and
find some other planet on which to live.
* Cf. Genesis 6:4: “In those days there were giants in the earth.”
They departed in spaceships, leaving behind their cav-
erns, their cities, and their technological wonders. And
leaving behind, too, the Deros—those “demented dwarfs”
with whom they had fought a war.
Who exactly were the Deros? They were the descendants
of the workers whom the Lemurians had bred—the so-
called “robots.” For the workers too had been affected by
radiation, from both the sun and the machines they tended.
And they had degenerated into monsters—deranged crea-
tures who jabbered in their dens.*
Once the Lemurians were gone, the Deros swarmed into
the abandoned cities. They took up residence, and became
the new rulers of the cavern world.
And they inhabit it still, insisted Shaver.
How did he know?
He had been to the caverns.
•
Richard Shaver (1907–1975) grew up in rural Pennsyl-
vania. His father managed a succession of restaurants; his
mother was a housewife (who published an occasional
poem). As a child, he had an imaginary friend—and an imag-
inary enemy, too. At the age of eighteen he brought home
the first issue of Amazing Stories, and became a lifelong fan.
His first jobs were in Philadelphia, for a meatpacking
house and a landscaping company. Then he moved, with
his parents and siblings, to Detroit. There he attended art
school; read voraciously at the public library; and was active
in the John Reed Club, a communist group. (A photo in the
Detroit Times shows him speaking at a May Day rally. It is
captioned “Orator Haranguing Crowd.”) He married a fel-
low art student and fathered a child.
In 1932 he found employment in a Ford motor plant.
His history during the next decade has two versions: his
own, and one that is based on hospital records. Shaver’s
account—expressed mainly in the guise of fiction—was
often inconsistent. But it was essentially as follows:
While laboring as a welder on the assembly line, he began
to hear voices. They belonged, he says, to Deros—demonic
creatures who dwelt beneath the surface of the earth. Tor-
mented by the voices, he quit his job and began to roam
from city to city. “I took a vacation from my job to try other
surroundings for some mitigation of my sufferings,” he
recalls. “Then began many years of running away, many
years of desperate jumping from place to place.” He became
an itinerant—a Depression-era hobo—surviving on odd
jobs that came his way.
But wherever he went, Shaver was plagued by the Deros.
From within the earth, they beamed rays at him. (The ray
machine, he later learned, resembled a giant bedspring.)
The rays put thoughts into his head, created illusions,
caused him to make mistakes or to injure himself. Shaver
suffered constant misfortunes, brought on by the Deros.
The full scope of their malevolence became evident to him.
Flat tires, traffic accidents, plane crashes, fires, landslides,
open manholes, illness, war—all human ills were caused by
the Deros. For their sole pleasure lay in bringing misery to
mankind.
His wandering continued. Finally, in Vermont, he was
arrested for vagrancy and jailed. But one night a mysterious
young woman appeared in his cell. It was none other than
the “imaginary” friend of his childhood! And she helped
him to escape.
She led him to a cavern that was filled with machines.
These machines had belonged to the Lemurians, she
explained. And she told him about the cavern world and its
inhabitants, past and present.
For a period of time, says Shaver, he remained in the cav-
erns. (The period varies in his accounts, from two weeks to
several years.) Then he wandered on. Finally, he returned
to Pennsylvania and settled on a farm that belonged to his
family.
Such was Richard Shaver’s account of that period of his
life. Though exceeding the bounds of credibility, it could be
construed as semi-factual. But a different—and disturbing—
story would eventually surface.
It became known that Shaver had been committed, in
August 1934, to Ypsilanti State Hospital. Suffering from
paranoid delusions, he believed that people were watching
and following him, and calling him a communist. He was
also convinced that the doctors were trying to poison him.
And he was hearing voices.
So he was confined to a psychiatric ward. Then, in 1936,
he was given a furlough to visit his family in Pennsylvania
—and he failed to return. This delinquency has prompted
his detractors to characterize him as “an escaped lunatic.”
More likely, an overcrowded hospital allowed him to re-
main in the care of his family.
But at some point he seems to have left home and become
a hobo. Finally, he is known to have been reinstitutional-
ized. For there is a record of his discharge, in May 1943,
from Ionia State Institution in Michigan.
How did Shaver respond to these revelations? He did
admit to a stay “in the bughouse.” But he insisted that his
condition had been caused by heat stroke, and that he was
released after two weeks.
And Palmer’s response? In a radio interview, he describes
his chagrin at learning that his star author had spent eight
years in an asylum!
So Shaver had a history as a mental patient. But in 1945
he was no longer institutionalized. He was living with his
mother, on a farm called Bittersweet Hollow; working at
Bethlehem Steel, as a crane operator; and creating a stir
with his stories.
•
Beginning with the March 1945 issue, a story by Shaver
appeared in almost every issue of Amazing. And the maga-
zine’s circulation (which Palmer had already increased sig-
nificantly) rose to new heights. Shaver’s “fact-based tales”
—with their mysterious caverns, ancient Lemurians, and
malevolent Deros—had struck a chord with readers.
The impact of the tales could be measured by the number
of letters they provoked. According to Palmer, the magazine
had previously received about fifty letters per month. Now
the number was several thousand!
Striking too was the nature of the letters. For many were
from readers eager to report similar experiences. They too
had encountered strange beings in caves—had been hear-
ing voices—were harassed by rays—could recall their past
life as a Lemurian—had a Dero for a neighbor!*
As the Shaver Mystery grew in popularity, such letters
piled up on Palmer’s desk. So he expanded the letters sec-
tion (known as “Discussions”); filled it with a sampling of
these letters, along with his replies; and announced: “The
editors of this magazine are intensely interested in hearing
from people who ‘hear voices’ or ‘just know’ things in line
with these Lemuria stories.” It wasn’t long before the letters
section had become a forum, for the discussion of fringe
phenomena in general.†
* One reader claimed to have received messages from Deros, via
automatic writing. When other readers questioned his claim, he
responded:
“I wish to say this to anyone interested: I am on the level. I actu-
ally can talk to the dero and tero. I call them this because that is
what they claim to be. They agree with the Shaver stories. I am
rather confused myself.”
† Shaver too encouraged the participation of readers. In the
foreword to “I Remember Lemuria!” he writes:
“What I tell you is not fiction! How can I impress that on you
as forcibly as I feel it must be impressed?
“I intend to put down these things, and I invite—challenge!—
any of you to work on them; to prove or disprove, as you like.
Whatever your goal, I do not care. I care only that you believe me
or disbelieve me with enough fervor to do some real work on those
things I will propound. The final result may well stagger the sci-
But the prime topic remained the Shaver tales and their
alleged factual basis. For their author remained adamant: he
was passing on “the ancient lore and history of Earth’s for-
gotten days that was given to me during my stay inside the
Earth as was related in my second story, published in the
June issue.”
Was such indeed the case? Was Shaver telling the truth?
Had he visited the Inner Earth? On that question the readers
were of two minds. Palmer describes their reaction to one of
the tales:
Most of the letters were not praising the story as a story but
supporting it as a fact (or, to be sure, condemning it vio-
lently as a fiction). On all sides, there were letter “shouts”
of ’ or ’ .
Sirs:
Mr. Shaver’s story in has aroused our
deep interest by its reference to large caves, etc., due to the
fact that the National Speleological Society consists of peo-
ple who have, in their leisure time, discovered, studied, and
mapped thousands of miles of caves, and we simply drool
at the slightest mention of a hole in the ground.
As we haven’t yet run into anything such as Mr. Shaver
mentioned, we wonder if this was a figment of his imagina-
tion (if so, he did a magnificent job) or if he really had a
basis for his claims and had in mind particular caves or spe-
cial sections of the country.
For our records, and in the interest of science, we would
be grateful for any information you are at liberty to give us
on the matter.*
And some letters contained warnings. Most notably,
Doreal—of the Brotherhood of the White Temple—wrote
in from Colorado; his advice was to stay out of the caverns.
Other warnings—from readers identifying themselves as
Deros—were obvious jokes.†
Palmer was pleased by the response of his readers. In an
editorial note, he informed them: “As this issue goes to
press, more discussion is raging than has been aroused by
any manuscripts published in Amazing Stories in 19 years!”
The morning mail, he said, was something he looked for-
ward to.
And the Shaver Mystery (which comprised, said Palmer,
“the entire mass of Shaver stories, letters from readers, and
all related subjects”) continued to enliven the pages of
Amazing. It reached its apogee with the June 1947 issue—
the special Shaver Mystery issue. Promised was “the low-
down on the caves!” The cover showed a cavern, in which
a car is speeding past huge, menacing idols. All of the stories
were by Shaver.**
* “Your group is an intensely interesting one,” Palmer replied,
“and we are sorry that we can’t provide you with the information
you want, but we are keeping you in mind, just as soon as we get
a strong (and safe) lead. In your work, have you ever considered
the Mound Builders of Ohio? We have definitely linked them
with the Shaver Mystery, and it seems that the Mound Builders
records, when studied, may offer corroborative clues to the
ancient people of Mu [alternative name for Lemuria].”
† Palmer agreed with Doreal as to the peril. When Shaver—
challenged by skeptics to reveal the actual location of a cave—
refused to do so, Palmer defended him: “Mr. Shaver refused, and
his reason is well-known to you. Because of the great danger!
Because the are as real as the caves, and they ’
!”
** The all-Shaver issue came close to being canceled, due to
missing manuscripts, typesetting mishaps, and other problems.
Palmer speculated that the Deros were trying to sabotage it.
Meanwhile, the controversy had spread—from the pages
of Amazing to science-fiction fan clubs. Many fans (espe-
cially those partial to Astounding, with its higher-quality
fiction) resented the Shaver Mystery. They accused it of
being a hoax—a publicity stunt instigated by Palmer. It was
drawing ridicule, they insisted, onto the entire field of sci-
ence fiction. These fans began to circulate a petition, call-
ing for an end to the Shaver Mystery. And they organized a
letter-writing campaign, protesting directly to Ziff-Davis,
the publishers.
One group of fans promised to expose the alleged hoax.
Palmer responded:
•
Palmer spent another year as editor of Amazing Stories.
But his attention now was focused elsewhere—outside of
Ziff-Davis. For in the spring of 1948 he and a fellow editor
had scraped together the money and launched a magazine
of their own. Called Fate, it was devoted to “true reports of
the strange, the unusual, the unknown”—everything from
sea serpents and ghosts to clairvoyance and abominable
snowmen. And on the cover of the first issue was a forma-
tion of UFOs—those “flying disks” that were being seen in
the sky.
Palmer had wanted to edit a special UFO issue of Amaz-
ing. But the idea had been quashed by Davis (who may have
sensed another Shaver Mystery in the making). At Fate there
was no one to overrule him; and Palmer became a promoter
of UFOs, publishing stories about them—and guessing
that they were extraterrestrial in origin. Fictional spacecraft
had abounded in the pages of Amazing. Now, according to
Palmer, the real ones may have arrived.*
In 1949 Ziff-Davis decided to move its offices to New
York. Unwilling to relocate there, Palmer quit. So he was
full-time now as an independent publisher-editor. With Fate
doing well, he launched a second publication: a science-
fiction magazine called Other Worlds Science Stories.†
Other Worlds
Mystic (Palmer had sold his share in Fate and started a
similar magazine.)
Search (He renamed Mystic and gave it a broader scope.)
Universe Science Fiction
Flying Saucers (“The only publication devoted to present-
ing all the facts and all the latest news concerning uniden-
tified flying objects.”)
Space World (Rockets, satellites, and space exploration.)
Forum (A kind of newsletter, consisting solely of editorials
and letters-to-the-editor. The editorials were increasingly
about conspiracies.)
And in 1961, he brought out the first issue of The Hidden
World—a revival of the Shaver Mystery. Along with some
new material, it contained reprints of the Shaver tales. (The
goal was to make available the entire oeuvre.) Fifteen more
issues would follow. But the Shaver Mystery had lost its
allure; and The Hidden World had a limited circulation.
Such were the exotic offerings of Palmer Publications.
Mysticism! Science fiction! Deros! Flying Saucers! Conspir-
acies! And it all emanated from a farmhouse in a small town
in Wisconsin.
Ray Palmer was an outsider in conservative Amherst—
an urban refugee who had chosen an improbable (if peace-
ful) location from which to disseminate his publications.
He did, however, have one close friend in the town—none
other than Richard Shaver! For both of them had moved to
Amherst. With his wife Dorothy, Shaver was living on a
farm just down the road. He was still writing (conventional
science fiction, for the most part). And he was farming—or
attempting to do so. A photo in The Hidden World shows
him sitting atop a tractor, with a manic grin.
The two men were unlikely residents of rural Wisconsin:
a hunchbacked dwarf who promoted flying saucers, and his
loony pal who claimed to have visited the cavern world. But
apparently they were tolerated.
•
Did Palmer really believe in a cavern world—a subter-
ranean realm of ancient Lemurians and malevolent Deros?
And did he believe that Shaver had visited this place? Or
was the whole thing a publicity stunt—an outrageous (and
successful) scheme to sell magazines?
Initially, on the question of a factual basis for the tales,
he declared himself to be agnostic. As editor of Amazing, he
was simply presenting the material to his readers. It was up
to them to accept or reject the author’s claims.
But eventually Palmer made known his opinion. Had
Shaver physically entered these caverns? Had he donned a
helmet and experienced the life of a Lemurian? Had he
viewed Deros on a visi-screen? Had he left behind foot-
prints in the dust? The answer, in Palmer’s view, was no.
Nor was there any evidence for the existence of such cav-
erns. “Since 1944, when I first contacted Shaver, I have yet
to find one inhabited cave, and one bit of mech [mechanical
devices] dug up.”
Nonetheless, Shaver was not making it all up. He had
undergone genuine experiences, Palmer believed. But those
experiences had been visionary in nature.
For clearly, said Palmer, Richard Shaver—during his
confinement as a mental patient—had experienced visions.
Perhaps they had come to him during trances (like the oth-
erworldly journeys of a shaman), or in the form of vivid
dreams. (“I considered my life half wasted,” wrote Shaver,
“if it were not for whatever it is that makes me dream.
Wonderful dreams, terrible dreams, all kinds of dreams.”)
The psychiatrists would have dismissed these experiences as
hallucinatory. But in fact, they were psychic events of a pro-
found nature. Shaver had not belonged in an asylum, insist-
ed Palmer. He “suffered from being a tremendous psychic
person,” who was able “to perceive the ordinarily unseen
aspects of our total existence.” His visions of a cavern world
had been a product of that ability.
Shaver’s response to this interpretation? No way! he told
Palmer. The cavern world was real, not a figment of his imag-
ination. He had descended into it bodily. The machines of
the Lemurians—the demonic Deros—Nydia and her band
of wanderers—all had possessed a material existence!
“I have been in the caves, and they exist,” he declared.
Most often, Shaver admitted, he had viewed them from
afar—via “telaug” rays that the Deros beamed at him. He
insisted, however, upon the tangible reality of the caverns.
And he insisted that he had visited them. “I have... touched
the machines.”
But Palmer was convinced that the visits had been vision-
ary, not physical. For he had discovered a strange book that
seemed to explain the Shaver Mystery.
•
The book was titled Oahspe: A New Bible. It was written
—or rather, channeled—by a dentist named John New-
brough. The son of a schoolteacher, Newbrough (1828–
1891) had a dental practice in New York City. He was also
a devotee of spiritualism, attending seances and interview-
ing mediums. For his passion was the pursuit of Truth.
He tells in the book of having awoken one night to find
the room illuminated by pillars of light. Beside his bed
stood an angel, who asked: “Would you like to perform a
mission for Jehovih [sic]?”
Newbrough acknowledged that he would.
“First,” said the angel, “you must live spiritually for ten
years. Then we will return and tell you what we want.”
Before departing, his visitor gave Newbrough a set of
instructions. He was to become a vegetarian. He was to lose
weight. (Newbrough weighed 250 pounds. A newspaper
article describes him as “a man of large stature, with dark,
dreamy eyes, and is very slow in his action.”) And he was to
engage in charitable works. Among them was the provision
of free dental care for the indigent.
For ten years Newbrough did as directed. Then the angel
returned. “You have passed our test.... Now we want you
to buy a typewriter and place it on this desk.”
The typewriter had only recently been invented. New-
brough purchased one. And for nearly a year, at his home
on West 34th Street, he engaged in automatic writing. Each
morning he would rise before dawn; sit at his Sholes type-
writer in the dark; enter a trance; and type away on the semi-
circular keyboard. His fingers flying, Newbrough produced
page after page. What was he doing? He was channeling an
angel—taking dictation from an otherworldly being.
Finally, in 1882, Newbrough self-published the result.
Oahspe was nearly a thousand pages long. It was illustrated
(with drawings likewise produced in the dark). And it con-
tained the religious and philosophical material that the
angel had dictated to him.*
A new edition was issued by Kosmon Press in 1936. The
publisher describes Newbrough as “the instrument through
which was communicated to the world,” and gives
this summary of its contents:
The outermost sphere, the angel had revealed, is called
Etherea. It is the ultimate destination for the souls of the
dead. They must work their way towards it, evolving spiri-
tually and shedding base elements. Upon reaching Etherea,
they become angels—beings of pure spirit—and dwell in
paradise.
But some souls must remain in the innermost sphere
until purged of their wickedness. These souls are called dru-
jas. Their wickedness has transformed them into demons.
Thus, the innermost sphere is a hellish place.
When Palmer read about the drujas, he had a sudden
insight. The Deros! Surely they were one and the same. And
that innermost sphere? The cavern world!
Moreover, he found this passage in Oahspe: “The drujas
rule over this mortal, and his neighbors call him mad,
and they send him to a madhouse.” A perfect description of
Shaver.
The caverns, Palmer realized, were above us, not below.
They were the initial portion of the astral world. And Shav-
er had indeed gone there—in a series of visions.
Locked up in an asylum, he had escaped in his astral body.
And he had visited another plane of existence.*
Palmer arrived at these conclusions after reading Oahspe.
And the “New Bible” so impressed him that he published
an edition of it. (The copyright had expired.) “The Great-
est Book of the Age,” he billed it. “ bridges the gap
between the Seen and the Unseen worlds.”
He had solved the Shaver Mystery—by invoking an even
greater mystery.
•
Until his death in 1977, Ray Palmer remained active as
a publisher and editor. But he was a prolific writer, too.
From his typewriter came a stream of lively editorials;
replies (sometimes lengthy) to the letters that he printed;
and rewrites of articles. To his family, the clatter of his type-
writer must have seemed incessant. (He claimed to have
once written a novel in 23 hours.) Palmer boasted of having
produced three million words during his lifetime.
His writing was feisty and folksy. And his magazines
were unabashedly sensationalistic. They reported on mys-
terious creatures, or explored the paranormal, or promoted
some theory—about flying saucers, the Inner Earth, a gov-
ernment conspiracy. He was sincere in these enthusiasms.
At the same time, he was a literary showman—the P. T.
Barnum of the publishing world.
Palmer was fond of stirring up controversy. In an article
titled “Who Was Ray Palmer?” Martin Gardner sees him as
a kind of trickster:
One of those who knew him well was his assistant editor.
In an interview, Howard Browne talks about the tempera-
ment of his boss:
•
In 1962 Shaver left Wisconsin; moved with his wife to
Summit, Arkansas; and embarked upon a new career—as a
“rock artist.”
For he had made a startling discovery. Using a laser device,
the Lemurians had recorded images inside rocks. (The pro-
cess was called rokfogo.) By slicing the rocks into slabs—
with a diamond saw—and exposing the grain, Shaver was
able to reveal these images. Depicted were monsters, mer-
maids, naked women. “What they are,” he said, “are huge
libraries of picture rocks and they are very common, very
valuable and very easy to see.”
Others were unable to discern the images. But by staring
intently, Shaver could see them—emerging from patterns
in the grain. And he sought to market these Pre-Deluge Art
Stones, as he called them. He advertised them in UFO
magazines, and sold them from his yard. A sign out front
welcomed customers to his rock shop.
Few of the Pre-Deluge Art Stones were sold. But Shaver
moved on. With an opaque projector, he projected the slabs
onto specially treated canvas. The “magnetic force” of the
light, he explained, left an imprint on the canvas. The for-
mer art student then meticulously applied paint, to “bring
out” or “develop” the image. These paintings were likewise
offered for sale.
Though it had faded from the scene, the Shaver Mystery
still had fans. Some of them came to visit Shaver—made a
pilgrimage to his home in Arkansas. They viewed the paint-
ings and toured his studio (located in a shack behind the
house). They nibbled on refreshments that Dorothy brought
out. And they chatted with the man who had been to the
caverns, and who was still learning things about the Lemur-
ians. According to one fan, he “lived in a wonderful world
of his own making.”
That is to say, he was as loony as ever.
Thus did Richard Shaver spend his final years—busy in
his studio, tended by a loyal wife, and largely forgotten.*
•
The Shaver Mystery began with Ray Palmer retrieving a
letter from a wastebasket. It continued for several years, in
the pages of Amazing Stories and elsewhere. And it remains
a controversial episode in the annals of science fiction.
So what was the Shaver Mystery all about?
Palmer himself sums it up (with his usual hyperbole):
The Shaver Mystery stands in a unique position, a piv-
otal point in modern philosophy, possibly the answer to
most of the enigmas of all times.
What is the Shaver Mystery? There are many theories.
There are those who support Shaver in his materialistic
honeycomb of caverns the world over, heritage of a Titan-
Atlan race which fled a poisoned world over 12,000 years
ago. There are those who call his caverns the “astral,” his
dero the spirits of the dead. Some say it is “another dimen-
sion,” another realm of life alongside ours, invisible under
ordinary circumstances....[But] the Shaver phenomena are
, no matter how opinion of their nature varies!
shaped hovercraft, and other marvels.... Shaver thought
Merritt had seen the caves but could only mention them in
fiction. One might also suspect that Merritt’s novels had
influenced Shaver’s beliefs.
But I will stick to one thing, they are caves and tunnels. I
have seen them with my own eyes....If you want to say
these caves and tunnels are not under our feet, but over our
heads, in a sort of “another dimension” of this world of ours,
perhaps you may be right! But nonetheless, it is part of this
earth of ours, of this planet.
21.
Margaret Rogers
I
a letter from Mrs. D. C. Rogers. A reader in San Antonio,
Texas, she was writing in regard to the Shaver Mystery:
They are in face and form like earth peoples, but much
larger and more beautiful.. .. I am grateful to them for they
took me, a broken, sick, sinful dope-ridden and hopeless
woman and placed me under rays and brought me back to
health.
Tell more she did. For three months later, Palmer informed
his readers of a forthcoming piece:
sent it with the same sincerity. Read it and decide for your-
self.”
Her tale begins on a wintry afternoon in Mexico City.
Margaret Rogers was standing at her usual spot outside the
American Club on Bolivar Street. A cold wind was blowing.
Shivering and emaciated, Maggie (as she was known) was
begging for money. She needed four pesos—three for a
gram of heroin, one for a room for the night.
Sunk in misery, Maggie—“an outcast, thirty-nine years
old, a slave of the drug”—pulled her cape about her. And
she was murmuring a prayer, when a hand touched her
shoulder. She looked up to see Dr. Kelmer of the Electro-
therapy Institute.*
Dr. Kelmer had never passed by without giving her
money. On this occasion he handed her a five-peso coin.
But then a strange glint entered his eye; and the doctor
dropped more coins into her hand. He told her to get some-
thing to eat and to groom herself. And he intimated that a
permanent solution to her ills might be in the offing.
Maggie bought heroin that night. But the following
night none was available, due to a police crackdown. And
she was suffering pangs of withdrawal, when a car pulled
up alongside her. At the wheel was Dr. Kelmer.
They drove off together into the night. The doctor gave
her a vial to drink, containing a potion. She drank and im-
mediately fell asleep.
When she awoke, the car had stopped. The moon was
shining on mountainous terrain. Dr. Kelmer got out the car.
Feeling ill, Maggie tumbled out after him.
The doctor comforted her. Then he stood before a mass
of foliage that grew against a rock wall, raised his arms, and
began to chant.
cakes, and a cup filled with green liquid. Mira pointed
invitingly to the cup. Not wishing to offend, Maggie took
a sip—then eagerly gulped down the rest of this “nectar of
the gods.” When she returned it to the cart, the cup instant-
ly refilled itself.
Mira explained the situation. Six days ago, Maggie had
been brought in from the outside, to be cured of drug addic-
tion. The cure had been successful. She would soon be
shown about—by Mira, who would serve as a mentor. She
would also be taught certain things by “our wise men.” But
for now, it was important that Maggie rest and recover.
And with that, Mira bowed and left the room.
When she returned, it was with another giant. She intro-
duced Arsi, her fiancee. Young, blond, and handsome, he
was a head taller than Mira. His outfit was similar to hers,
though with a sun ornament on the helmet, rather than
wings.
Speaking into the disk, he welcomed Maggie. And Arsi
now took up the explaining. Maggie had been brought to a
subterranean world, he said—the home of a race of giants,
known as the Nephli. Though raised in the surface world,
Arsi was a Nephli. He had earned a living on the surface as
a lawyer. Then one day he had simply disappeared, and
returned to his ancestral home for “renewal.”*
He turned to the wall. The room went dark and the wall
lit up—with images of an older Arsi, emerging from an
office building. His face was lined with care and darkened
with disillusionment. Then the scene dissolved into images
of Maggie—begging on the street, talking with Dr. Kelmer,
seeking out heroin.
Maggie began to weep—tears of gratitude for the new
life she had been given.
“What have I done good in my life,” she asked, “to
deserve such help?”
The lights came back on. When her tears had subsided,
Arsi reassured Maggie. She had simply been unfortunate,
he said. Her weakness was a human trait; and the Nephli
were glad to have been of assistance. Free of addiction, she
would soon be returning to the surface. There she could
perform similar acts of kindness, as a kind of penance. And
someday, if she desired, she could return to the cavern
world.
Wishing her jelis sur Tamil (“God’s blessings”), Arsi left
the room.
There followed a long soothing bath and a breakfast of
fruits. Then it was time for Maggie to see the doctor. In a
two-seated bullet car—a sleek, wheelless vehicle that zipped
through tunnels—Mira drove her to a medical facility. The
doctor examined Maggie and pronounced her recovered.
But it was not yet time to return home. With Mira and
Arsi as guides, Maggie spent several weeks touring and
learning about the subterranean home of the Nephli. She
discovered that they used the barter system—money did
not exist among the Nephli. She was shown the gajova, or
Chamber of Machines. And Maggie visited the central
library, admiring its extensive collection. While there, she
was given several printed items as mementos.*
One day, Mira and Arsi took her on an excursion. In a
merry mood, the three had piled into a bullet car, along
with some young people, and sped through a long tunnel.
They emerged in countryside—open roads, fields of grain,
forests of tall trees. A small sun hovered overhead, in a “sky”
that was the roof of a colossal cavern. In the distance was a
ring of mountains; and beyond them, an eerie red glow.
Finally they glimpsed a tower, in which a bell was tolling—
at which point they headed back, stopping on the way for
a picnic lunch. The tower, Maggie later learned, marked a
—influenced by malevolent entities—had rejected the wise
rule of the Nephli. Rather than fight these rebels (our own
ancestors), the Nephli had retreated to the cavern world.
They had enlarged it—using robot labor and a “fire-blower”
—and had created an artificial sun. They intended, however,
to return someday to the surface and resettle there.
As for government, they were ruled by a high priest. He
represented the supreme god Tamil, whom the Nephli wor-
shipped in their Great Temple.
And Maggie learned that many Nephli secretly resided on
the surface. But how, she asked, could a giant fail to attract
attention? Mira laughed at the question, and described a
ray that the Nephli used to reduce or enlarge themselves.
To her surprise, Maggie learned too that her own grand-
father had been a Nephli. The grandfather had fallen in
love with a surface woman, whom he had glimpsed from
afar on a television screen. Reducing himself in size, he had
moved to the surface, sought the woman out, and married
her. Upon her death, he had returned underground to await
her renewal.*
Maggie was amazed by all that she saw and learned in the
subterranean world. But the high point of her stay was a
wedding—the marriage of Mira and Arsi. It took place in
the Great Temple; and Maggie was invited to attend.
She watched as Mira and Arsi walked down the aisle. They
approached the altar, behind which were silver drapes, and
knelt there with their heads bowed.
Suddenly the drapes seemed to dissolve. Revealed was a
dazzling light. Within the light was a gigantic hand.
Beams of light shot out from the hand, striking their
heads. Then the hand and the light faded away, and the
drapes reappeared.
And during her last days in the cavern world, Maggie got
to witness a renewal. Three surface dwellers were escorted
into a chamber. They lay down in front of a tall stone,
which glowed and became transparent. Within a day the
three were young again.
Finally it was time for Maggie to return home.*
Her mentors returned her “surface clothes”; gave her a
jeweled box (to sell for cash); and assured her that one day
she would come back to them. A tearful farewell ensued.
Then Maggie was taken back to the cave in which Dr. Kel-
mer had left her. The gate slid open and she stepped out
into sunlight.
“Adios and good luck,” said Mira.
And she was soon back in Mexico City—staying with a
friend (who gave her money in exchange for the box), and
starting a new life.†
“This is my story,” she concludes her tale, “a vindication
of my friends, the Nephli, and a tribute to .”
So—what are we to make of this tale? A number of pos-
sibilities come to mind:
1. The title—“I Have Been in the Caves”—is to be taken
literally. Rogers was physically in the cavern world.
2. Her account is of a visionary experience—one induced
perhaps by drugs. (Or by treatment at the Electro-
therapy Institute.)
3. It is a parable, expressive of her spiritual views.
4. It is pure fiction, published (and conceivably even
written) by Palmer to enhance the Shaver Mystery.
In any case, a year later—in the February 1948 issue—
Palmer announced the following:
22.
Lobsang Rampa
T
writers on mystical matters. From Madame Blavat-
sky to Saint-Yves d’Alveydre to Doreal, these authors
have guided us through the shadowy vales of arcane knowl-
edge. They have unlocked for us the storehouse of ancient
wisdom, and helped us to navigate the borderlands of experi-
ence. Yet none of them has been so prolific, so authoritative,
so exotic—and, alas, so dubious—as Lobsang Rampa, the
Tibetan lama.
With his shaven head, penetrating gaze, and monkish
robes, Dr. Rampa (he claimed a degree from the Chungking
School of Medicine) was a forbidding figure. He was also a
major source of esoteric knowledge. Described as “a true
mystic and trailblazer of the New Age,” Rampa published
a score of books—about his training as a lama, his adven-
tures in Tibet and elsewhere, and the occult practices of
Tibetan Buddhism.
In these books he discusses such topics as astral travel
(“Most lamas do it, and anyone who is prepared to use some
patience can indulge in the useful and pleasant art”), telep-
athy, clairvoyance (“Because of my power of clairvoyance, I
was able to be of a great assistance to the Inmost One [the
Dalai Lama] on various occasions”), the Akashic Records,
human auras (“From their auras I could divine their
thoughts; what ailed them, what their hopes and fears
were”), reincarnation, the afterlife, Atlantis, UFOs, levita-
tion, abominable snowmen (“my old friends”), and the Inner
Earth.
When not writing, he spent time casting horoscopes,
reading Tarot cards, and gazing into a crystal ball. Lobsang
Rampa was a repository of the secret wisdom of the Orient,
as well as its leading purveyor; and as such, he helped to
launch the New Age movement. He sold millions of books;
had a profound influence; and became—with that shaven
head and penetrating gaze—the very icon of Eastern wis-
dom. And (as might be expected) he was controversial.
The controversy began with his first book. The Third
Eye: The Autobiography of a Tibetan Lama was published in
1956 by Secker & Warburg, a respected British house. But
the road to publication had not been smooth. Having paid
Rampa (or Dr. Kuon Suo, as he was then known) a modest
advance, Secker & Warburg began to have doubts as to the
authenticity of his writing. They decided to have the man-
uscript evaluated by experts.
The results were dismaying. In the view of one Tibet
scholar, the book was “a fake built from published works and
embellished with a fertile imagination.” Another declared:
“This fellow is a complete impostor, and he’s probably never
been in Tibet. ...He should be properly unmasked.” The
consensus was that The Third Eye was a fraud.
Years later, Agahananda Bharati, one of the evaluators,
would recall his reaction to the manuscript:
an attempt to obtain confirmation of the Author’s state-
ments the Publishers submitted the MS. to nearly twenty
readers, all persons of intelligence and experience, some
with special knowledge of the subject. Their opinions were
so contradictory that no positive result emerged. . . .
The many personal conversations we have had with
[Rampa] have proved him to be a man of unusual powers
and attainments. Regarding many aspects of his personal
life he has shown a reticence that was sometimes baffling;
but everyone has a right to privacy....
For these reasons the Author must bear—and willingly
bears—a sole responsibility for the statements made in his
book.
Rampa was residing at the time in a rented villa overlook-
ing Dublin Bay. (He had moved to Ireland to avoid the
British authorities, who were demanding to see his Tibetan
passport or a residency permit.) Pleading illness, the author
refused to meet with reporters, who were descending on the
villa. But his wife (who would later claim to have been mis-
quoted) had told the Daily Mail: “The book is fiction. He
had tried to get a number of jobs without success. We had
to have money to live. So he was persuaded to write the
book. We depend upon its sale for money.”
The story spread to other newspapers; and “the bogus
lama” became the brunt of widespread mockery and abuse.
The Daily Mail interviewed a television producer who had
once met with Rampa. “No normally intelligent person
could believe he was Tibetan,” said the producer. “He
seemed to be a gentleman, but harmless and lonely and
completely lost in the fantastic role he had set himself.”
More facts emerged about Cyril Hoskin. He had been
born in Devonshire in 1910; had apprenticed in his father’s
plumbing shop; and had been employed most recently as a
clerk at a correspondence school. According to a co-worker
there, Hoskin had suddenly “gone Eastern”: shaving his
head, changing his name to Kuon Suo, and becoming
obsessed with Oriental culture. His odd behavior alienated
those around him; and eventually Hoskin quit his job and
became a free-lance journalist.
Because he refused to speak directly with the press, no
further information about Rampa was forthcoming. His
household in Ireland, it was learned, consisted of his wife
Sarah; a young woman named Sheelagh Rouse, who served
as his secretary;* and several Siamese cats.
The lama was down, but not out; and almost immedi-
ately he was fighting back. Initially, he offered a plausible
explanation: he (Cyril Hoskin) had ghostwritten The Third
Eye in behalf of a genuine Tibetan lama. But the next day,
the beleaguered author—in a tape-recorded statement to
the press—dramatically changed his story.
A few years before, Hoskin claimed, he had fallen out of
a tree and suffered a concussion. Upon regaining his senses,
he was no longer Cyril Hoskin. Rather, he was Lobsang
Rampa. The astral spirit of a Tibetan lama had taken over his
body!
This new explanation failed to satisfy the press, who con-
tinued to hound “the plumber from Lhasa.” Such was the
turmoil that, within a year, Rampa and his household had
fled Ireland and moved to Canada. There he would reside
for the remainder of his life (with the exception of a brief
stay in Uruguay). And there he would carry on as a purveyor
of Eastern wisdom.
Over the next twenty years Lobsang Rampa would write
and publish a steady stream of books. While none sold as
well as The Third Eye, his books found readers among the
burgeoning New Age subculture. In 1960 his third book
was published. Titled The Rampa Story, it includes a detailed
account of his transmigration into the body of an English-
man.
That transmigration, we are told, took place in the late
1940s. Hoskin—unemployed, depressed, friendless, and
disgusted with the class system in Great Britain—had
climbed a tree in his backyard, in order to photograph an
owl. As he crawled out on a branch, it broke; and Hoskin
plunged to the ground, knocking himself unconscious.
strange. I felt his eyes boring into my very soul, into the being,
the self I did not expose, almost did not know or recognize so used
was I to covering up, to pretending, to denying. It was as though
I was standing there with my soul stark naked, no pretense, no
protection. I had never experienced anything like it before, and
never have since.” (From her Twenty-Five Years with T. Lobsang
Rampa)
Hoskin found himself in the astral plane. A Tibetan lama
approached; smiled and assured him there was nothing to
fear; and asked if he would be willing to vacate his body. It
was needed by another lama, who was failing in health but
who had a mission to fulfill: the bringing of Eastern wisdom
to the West.
The benefits were explained to Hoskin. By donating his
body, he could aid mankind and lend a purpose to his hith-
erto “mediocre life.” Moreover, he could wipe away his
karma and end his cycle of rebirths. For he would be guar-
anteed immediate passage to the Land of Golden Light.
Hoskin expressed tentative interest. But first he wanted
to see the Land of Golden Light. Instantly he was granted
a vision of the place—and it was glorious beyond descrip-
tion. He agreed to the proposal.
The details were worked out. Among other things, Hos-
kin agreed to grow a beard (the incoming lama insisted on
having one). And a month was allowed to pass, for him to
consider his decision.
Then, according to plan, Hoskin climbed the tree again,
and purposely fell from it. He struck his head and found
himself back in the astral plane. There a team of lamas per-
formed the operation. Cyril Hoskin was released from his
body and dispatched to the Land of Golden Light. And
into this host body was inserted Lobsang Rampa.
Meanwhile, Sarah Hoskin had spotted her husband
lying on the ground. She came running from the house and
cried: “Oh, what have you done now?” She roused Cyril (or
rather Rampa) and helped him to stagger into the house.
The next few days were difficult, Rampa tells us in The
Rampa Story. The lama was trying to get used to his new
body. He would teeter, walk backwards, stumble, lurch
about like a mechanical man. (One problem was that the
body was too small for the sturdy Tibetan.) And he sought
to explain to Sarah what had happened.
If the transmigration of a lama into an Englishman’s
body was a notable event, no less notable was the reaction
of the Englishman’s wife. “After the changeover,” she would
admit, “it was a strange feeling for both of us.” Yet despite
the initial shock, Sarah was able to accept the situation. She
was married now to a Tibetan lama.
approach him. And his mailbox overflowed, with letters
from seekers of spiritual advice. The attention drove him
further into seclusion; and Rampa—guarding his privacy in
a succession of residences—became a kind of celebrity her-
mit.
Both the press and the Tibet scholars were still denounc-
ing him as a fake. Rampa had harsh things to say about
each. He held the scholars in particular contempt:
Publications. It is an account of Rampa’s visit to that leg-
endary place.*
In several of his books Rampa describes subterranean
experiences. In The Third Eye he is taken, as part of his ini-
tiation into lamahood, to a cavern deep beneath the Potala
Palace. There he is shown the preserved bodies of giants;
and he has a vision of the antediluvian world in which such
giants flourished. In The Cave of the Ancients he visits a cav-
ern filled with artifacts of an ancient civilization—enigmat-
ic machines from the days of Atlantis. In As It Was! he is led
through a tunnel whose walls are inscribed with strange
pictographs. The tunnel ends at a blank wall—the sealed
entranceway, he is told, to the Inner Earth.
And years later, Rampa was deemed worthy of journey-
ing to Agharta—an experience he describes in My Visit to
Agharta.
The book opens with Rampa flying, in a UFO, to a cave
in the Himalayas. There he is reunited with his old master,
Mingyar Dondup. In the darkness of the cave, the two
lamas drink tea and chat.
Then Dondup reveals a secret passageway. And he leads
Rampa into the depths of the mountain. After some adven-
tures (involving a guide named Leo, beast men, and a kid-
napped woman), they board a hovercraft and are taken
deeper still into the earth.
They disembark in a cavern, which is lit by a swirling
column of light. This vortex, explains Dondup, is the
entranceway to Agharta—“the passageway through time
* My Visit to Agharta has a shadowy provenance. According to
the publisher, the manuscript was discovered among the papers
of a bookstore owner who had befriended Rampa. But how much
—if any—of the book was actually written by Rampa remains a
subject of debate. Karen Mutton (author of Lobsang Rampa: New
Age Trailblazer, an impressively researched biography of Rampa
and the source of much of my information about him) believes
that “the authenticity of this book is highly questionable.” At the
same time, she deems it to be “a worthwhile addition to any
Rampa library.”
and space that connects the inner world with ours.”
And into the vortex are marching hundreds of people—
enlightened souls and spiritual teachers from throughout
the ages. These men and women are gathering in Agharta.
Rampa recognizes—and is awed by—such figures as Mad-
ame Blavatsky, Joan of Arc, and Nostradamus.
Rampa and Dondup join the march. As they enter the
vortex, their rate of vibration is increased. And instantly
they find themselves on a mountainside. They have entered
the kingdom of Agharta.
The mountain overlooks lush forests and sparkling riv-
ers. In the sky is a small sun, which bathes the landscape in
a golden light. Crystal cities are visible in the distance.
Agharta is a center of cosmic power, says Dondup. Its
capital is Shambhala, a city inhabited by “extraordinary
beings who vibrate at the highest frequencies of the Uni-
verse.”
Suddenly the sun begins to spin and emit colored rays.
And the sun speaks. In a booming voice, it delivers a mes-
sage for the spiritual teachers to convey to mankind. As he
listens, Rampa is filled with love and understanding.
And he has an epiphany. “It may sound simplistic,” he
says to Dondup, “but the answer to all questions is love.”
Finally, he departs from Agharta and returns home in a
UFO. (Dondup remains behind, to study with the Ascend-
ed Masters.)
And that is the story told in My Visit to Agharta. With
this posthumous publication, Rampa concluded his career
as a purveyor of Eastern wisdom.
•
What are we to make of that career?
Its achievements were undeniable. Lobsang Rampa helped
to launch the New Age movement. (In The Third Eye, a
high-ranking lama appears in a crystal ball and announces:
“We are on the threshold of a New Age, an Age wherein it
is intended that Man shall be purified of his dross and shall
live in peace with others and himself.”) Rampa promoted
an interest, both spiritual and political, in Tibet. (The
Third Eye is still in print, and remains the most widely read
book about Tibet.) He introduced the wisdom of the East
(from Abhinivesha to Zen) to countless readers. And he
took those readers to exotic places (lamaseries, the cave
beneath the Potala, Agharta).
Yet the question remains: Was Lobsang Rampa a Tibetan
—that is to say, a transmigrated lama? Or was he merely
Cyril Hoskin—an Englishman engaged in a literary mas-
querade?
The Dalai Lama was once queried as to Rampa’s genuine-
ness. His secretary responded: “I wish to inform you that
we do not place credence on the books written by the so-
called Dr. T. Lobsang Rampa. His works are highly imagi-
native and of a fictional nature.”
And according to Warburg, his original publisher, Rampa
became “psychopathic and swallowed his own fantasies.”
(His Canadian publisher was more discreet, describing
Rampa simply as “very different, very special.”)
On the other hand, Sheelagh Rouse, his devoted secre-
tary, saw him as “a personage who defies our present stage
of understanding.” And his biographer, Karen Mutton, set
out to portray him “not as a fraud but a genius of the highest
order who exerted an enormous influence on the New Age
movement.”
Rampa himself, responding to accusations of fakery,
asserted: “No one has ever been able to prove me a fraud; for
every ‘expert’ who claimed that I was such—three or more
attested to my complete genuineness.”
And his final word on the matter was simply this: “What
does it matter I am, it is what I that is impor-
tant.”*
Still, one has to wonder: Who was this man? And the
closest Rampa ever came to addressing that question may
have been in the following passage. Mingyar Dondup is
telling a tale, about a monk who believed himself to be a
prince:
resided in the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains.
Those mountains may have reminded him of the
Himalayas, whence his astral spirit (or at least his literary
persona) had come.
23.
Walter Siegmeister
D
. -
in nutritional and metaphysical circles during the
1950s. Health-food devotees knew him for his
booklets—self-published and distributed by mail—about
herbal elixirs, vegetarianism, the dangers of pesticides;
while those with more philosophical interests had read his
biography of Pythagoras or his writings on the Essenes.
But then he began to write about a new and problematical
subject. Previously, his detractors had deemed him a crank;
now they questioned his sanity. For Bernard was claiming that
the earth was hollow; that its depths could serve as a refuge
from radioactive fallout; and that located in those depths was
an advanced civilization—a utopian society. Moreover, this
realm could be reached, he believed, via tunnels in Brazil—
the country in which he was residing as an expatriate.
Who was Dr. Raymond Bernard, A.B., M.A., and Ph.D.
(the credit that appeared on his writings)? As his associates
knew—and as the U.S. postal authorities had yet to discover
—he was in fact Walter Siegmeister.
Born in 1903, Siegmeister had grown up in Harlem and
Brooklyn, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants. His father,
a surgeon, was a scoffer at religion and a socialist (“an anar-
chist,” according to Elie, the younger son); and Walter was
exposed to the radicalism of his parents’ circle of friends. (It
included Emma Goldman, the well-known anarchist.) After
graduating from Columbia, Walter became a vegetarian;
attended public lectures on Theosophy, spiritualism, and
the like; founded a “nature colony” in the Catskills; and
finally, in 1932, received a doctorate in education.*
* For much of this information, I am indebted to Leonard Leh-
man of the Elie Siegmeister Society, who is writing a biography
of the brother who became a composer.
His thesis was on the pedagogy of Rudolf Steiner
(founder of the Waldorf Schools); and Siegmeister would
seem to have been planning a career in education. But
instead, he traveled to South Florida, purchased land, and
founded another nature colony.*
The Lake Istokpoga Colony, as he named it, was located
in the township of Lorida, Florida. It was dedicated to veg-
etarianism, organic farming, and simple living. Siegmeister
divided the land into plots and offered them for sale to
prospective colonists.
As it turned out, few plots were ever sold; and the pop-
ulation of the colony remained small. But related ventures
kept Siegmeister busy. He published a newsletter called Diet
and Health; wrote tracts; railed against meat-eating, sugar,
and pesticides; and sold health foods by mail-order—in
particular, a syrup containing lecithin. In the newsletter,
questions about diet and health were answered by “Dr.
Siegmeister.” (He did have that doctorate.) And he began
to formulate a philosophy—a “new scientific religion of
hygiene and eugenic living” that he called Biosophy.†
As might be expected, the farming efforts were a failure.
Some of the colonists became disillusioned and left. And a
more serious problem arose. Sometime in the late 1930s,
Siegmeister ran afoul of the law. The specifics of the case are
obscure. But the Food and Drug Administration either
threatened or actually instituted legal proceedings against
him, in connection with the “naturopathic cures” that he
was selling by mail. The syrup with lecithin seems to have
prompted the action. Accused of fraud and misuse of the
mails, Siegmeister was forced to curtail his activities.
These legal difficulties propelled him into a new phase
of his career. Previously, he had been a simple advocate of a
healthful diet. Now he saw himself as an embattled crusader,
persecuted by a government that engaged in censorship and
suppression and colluded with powerful interests. Seeking
to avoid its grasp (and that of “the Moloch of commercial-
ism and materialism as this civilization is”), he began to
wander from place to place—in the U.S., Central America,
and South America.
He did not cease to write and publish his booklets. But
he was forced to do so using pseudonyms. For the postal
authorities, at the behest of the Food and Drug Admin-
istration, had put his name on a list. Walter Siegmeister was
forbidden to use the U.S. mails to distribute either his
health-food products or his publications.
His wandering began in 1940 with a trip to Panama,
where he got involved with a back-to-nature community.
Then it was on to Ecuador, where he sought to establish a
fruitarian colony. Its stated aim was “regeneration”—via a
diet of fruit, nuts, and yoghurt—and the creation of a new
race of men. Siegmeister was described by a visiting jour-
nalist as “holder of three degrees from Columbia and New
York Universities, and known for his research in eugenics,
biochemistry and endocrinology.” He possessed “the most
unusual eyes I’ve ever seen—brown, extraordinarily large
and of such depth and fire that they draw one’s attention
inexorably. Yet the manner of the man is one of meekness
and solemnity.”
But the colony was short-lived; and the handful of
colonists dispersed. One of the them was Johnny Love-
wisdom, as he called himself. Lovewisdom (who had also
been at Lake Istokpoga) would go on to become a health-
food crusader in his own right.*
By 1945 Siegmeister was back in Florida. In that year he
hired a secretary: Guy Harwood, a vegetarian from Jackson-
ville. Harwood was given the job of printing and mailing
out a study course—in defiance of the postal ban. Some-
what mystified by his employer, Harwood relates that Sieg-
meister “dressed like a rabbi”: all in black, with a hat, long
hair, and a full beard.†
Apparently, he was living at this time on his property in
Lorida. But it wasn’t long before Siegmeister was on the
move again. Harwood describes the abrupt departure:
Food You Eat? and Super-Health thru Organic Super-Foods.
Mindful of the postal injunction (and of the postal author-
ities who were looking for him), he kept his name off these
publications. Instead, they were credited to “Dr. Robert
Raymond, A.B., M.A., and Ph.D.”*
Then the wandering resumed. During the next eight
years, Siegmeister resided in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guate-
mala, and other places. In Guatemala he wrote as “Dr. Uriel
Adriana, A.B., M.A., and Ph.D.” and tried unsuccessfully
to start a colony.
But finally, in 1955, he found a home—in Brazil. He
purchased 2000 acres of land on an island near Joinville, in
the southern state of Santa Catarina. And there Siegmeister
founded his most ambitious colony yet. He called it the
New California Subtropical Settlement, and began looking
for settlers. “Here,” he wrote, “I am establishing a settle-
ment of American vegetarians, organic gardeners, and ad-
vanced thinkers anxious to live in a part of the world where
alone a New Age can arise.”
The number of persons who bought plots of land is not
known. But some were locals from Joinville. These Brazil-
ians welcomed the offer of inexpensive land. They joined
the colony solely as farmers; the “advanced thinking” they
left to others.†
Siegmeister advertised in magazines such as Fate. In one
ad, he combined the search for colonists with the marketing
* At Lake Istokpoga Siegmeister had been associated with
George R. Clements. A naturopath and philosopher, Dr. Clements
(1879–1970) must have had similar problems with the postal
authorities. For he would publish as Professor Hilton Hotema,
Dr. Karl Kridler, and Kenyon Klamonti.
Reviewing one of his publications, Siegmeister wrote: “If mod-
ern society was not controlled by Money Kings whose henchmen
govern our educational institutions, the press, the church, etc.,
Professor Hilton Hotema would be considered as one of the great-
est scientists of our day.”
† When the colony began to disband in 1965, it consisted of an
estimated twenty-five to thirty persons.
of his latest health product:
The first was to escape to South America. For the testing
was being carried out in the northern hemisphere. The pre-
vailing winds would keep fallout from drifting southward.
The second was to escape into Outer Space—aboard a
flying saucer. Such a solution, he admitted, might seem like
“fantastic science-fiction at first glance.” But Siegmeister
thought it possible that the flying saucers were here to save
us.*
And the third alternative? To escape into the earth.
Escape from Destruction (which includes a discussion of
the basic tenets of Biosophy) was published in 1956. The
following year Siegmeister was browsing in a Sao Paulo
bookstore. And he came upon a book about Agharta and
flying saucers, written by O. C. Huguenin, a Brazilian The-
osophist. According to Huguenin, flying saucers did not
come from Outer Space—that was a cover story; they orig-
inated in Agharta. Concerned about nuclear testing, the
Aghartans were monitoring the situation.
Huguenin described their society:
he had learned more about the Aghartans. They worshipped
the Great Mother, he tells us, and were matriarchal. They
had no disease, no crime, no money, no class distinctions.
They did not engage in sex. (Vital energies were channeled
instead to the brain.) They were fruitarians. And they lived
for thousands of years, yet remained youthful in appearance.
The book concludes with a sales pitch for banana meal.
Siegmeister was convinced that a utopia called Agharta
existed inside the earth; that it could provide a refuge from
the ills of the twentieth century; and that it represented the
ideals to which he had devoted his life.
Accordingly, he determined to visit it.
But first he had to locate one of those tunnels. He was
sure they existed. For in addition to de Souza’s testimony,
he had elicited that of others. Two ranchers, for example,
told him of entering a tunnel and catching a glimpse of sub-
terraneans. And according to locals, the choral singing of
Atlanteans—issuing from within a mountain near Joinville
—could be heard regularly.
Siegmeister knew that such reports might be fictitious.
(He was particularly wary of individuals who offered to
guide him to a tunnel entrance, with their fee to be paid in
advance.) But “where there’s smoke there’s fire,” he insisted.
And he hoped to soon be entering the tunnels.
Finally he made this announcement:
The writer is now organizing an expedition, known as the
Aghartan Expedition, for the purpose of investigating these
tunnels, with the object of reaching the subterranean cities
to which they lead, after which he hopes to establish con-
tact with the still-living members of the Elder Race of At-
lanteans and arrange for bringing qualified persons to them
to establish residence in their cities in a World Free from
Fallout.*
* Among the qualifications for establishing residence in Agharta
was that one be vegetarian, nonsmoking, and sexually continent.
(Siegmeister’s attitude toward sexual relations? According to his
brother, he claimed to have “been through that stage and was
beyond it.”)
In 1961 he wrote to Guy Harwood:
Hollow Earth—a rewriting and expansion of those two
works. The Hollow Earth would be his first book to be
reprinted by a commercial publisher, and to find a wider
audience.*
But Siegmeister would not be around to enjoy its success.
For in the summer of 1965, he either died of pneumonia or
disappeared into the tunnels. Both rumors circulated; and
none of his correspondents could learn what had happened.
He had ceased to be heard from. And letters to him were
returned, stamped “deceased.”†
So which was it? Had he died of pneumonia? Or as an ad
for The Hollow Earth would ask:
24.
Dianne Robbins
I
, -- —
that “even with all my degrees and all my education, I
still couldn’t make sense of my life on Earth”—took up
meditation, and “began receiving inner guidance.”
A year later, Robbins was listening to the song “I Know
You’re Out There Somewhere,” when she had an epiphany.
Another world, she suddenly knew, was waiting to commu-
nicate with her. On her Web site, she describes what ensued:
Hollow Earth, and the Ascended Masters? How did all of
that come about?
It began, explains Robbins, with a newsletter that she
received. The newsletter was published by one Sharula
Dux, who resided in Santa Fe. Dux claimed, however, to be
a native of Telos, a city located beneath Mount Shasta. The
newsletter described life in Telos.*
Mentioned in the newsletter was Adama, the high priest
of Telos. For some reason, the name stuck in Robbins’s
thoughts. Then one day something startling occurred:
on the surface at your desk taking this dictation, but in con-
sciousness you are with us inside the Hollow Earth. You are
literally in two places at once. Do you understand multi-
dimensionality now? Now that you are in both places
simultaneously, we will show you around “our place.”
Isolated from the outside world and its ills, the Telosians
live in peace and prosperity. They are both spiritually and
technologically advanced. Thanks to their vegetarian diet
and positive outlook, they experience no sickness or aging.
(The eldest inhabitant of the city, according to Adama, is
30,000 years old!) Their governing body is a Council of
Twelve, comprised of Ascended Masters. Money is non-
existent, the means of exchange being barter. There is no
crime; and therefore, no need for police or locks on doors.
The Telosians take long walks; sing and dance after meals;
picnic and attend concerts. And they radiate unconditional
love.
In short, hidden beneath Mount Shasta is an advanced
civilization. And by channeling its high priest, Dianne
Robbins has brought Telos to our attention.
Her second book was The Call Goes Out: Messages from
the Earth’s Cetaceans (1997). It is a compilation of messages
from whales and dolphins. These intelligent—and surpris-
ingly articulate—creatures implore us to stop polluting the
sea. They plead with us to stop harming them. And they
beg us to free those whales and dolphins being held in cap-
tivity. Featured are communiqués from Corky, a whale
imprisoned in Sea World.
And Robbins’s latest book is Messages from the Hollow
Earth (2003). The messages are from Mikos of the Library
of Porthologos. The library is located in the city of Catharia,
deep within the Hollow Earth. It houses writings from
throughout the Universe, engraved on crystals. The pur-
pose of the library, says Mikos, “is to give guidance to the
manufacturing facilities, and parkland. And the fifth level—a
mile beneath the mountain—is a nature preserve, with lakes, tall
trees, and wild animals. The animals include many that are
extinct on the surface, such as mastodons, saber-toothed tigers,
and dodos. Raised to be nonviolent and vegetarian, these animals
are of no danger to visitors.
Other information provided by Sharula Dux corroborates that
channeled by Robbins—though skeptics will insist that Robbins’s
account derives from Dux’s.
evolution of a society and a planet so that the people can
live and evolve in peace and prosperity—not negativity and
war.”*
Mikos explains to Robbins why subterranean civiliza-
tions are peaceful:
All our lives have been spent in peace and bliss, due to our
location. We exist here in peace and tranquility because of
the proximity to the heartbeat of Mother Earth. The more
deeply one goes into the Earth, the more deeply one feels
the beat of the Earth.
When you open to the fact that you and the Universe are
one, you will awaken to all that you are and begin to expand
your horizons and literally grow in size—height and width.
Your mind and body are connected... . Expand your
thoughts, and you expand your world; expand your world,
and your body responds in spurts of growth and renewal.
25.
Rodney Cluff
A
Russian port of Murmansk. Its hundred or so mem-
bers will be traveling on the Yamal, a nuclear-
powered icebreaker. Most of those aboard will have paid
about $20,000, as their share of the cost. All will be antici-
pating a unique adventure. But none more so than Rodney
Cluff, the organizer of the North Pole Inner Earth Expedi-
tion.
A retired government employee, Cluff has been planning
this ambitious endeavor from his home in Arizona. His
interest in the Inner Earth is long-standing. As a young man,
he spotted an ad in a tabloid newspaper for The Hollow
Earth (by Dr. Raymond Bernard, A.B., M.A., and Ph.D.).
He sent away for it, read it, and was hooked. Since then, he
has read virtually everything written on the subject. Of par-
ticular interest was The Smoky God. For Cluff intends to sail
in Olaf Jansen’s wake, to the rim of the North Polar open-
ing, and possibly beyond.
Cluff is the author of World Top Secret: Our Earth Is
Hollow! * The book is the result of his years of research. It
begins with scientific evidence in support of a hollow earth,
and of a North Polar opening. Included are satellite photos;
analysis of the accounts of polar explorers; interpretation of
earthquake data; explanations of gravity, electromagnetism,
and the Aurora Borealis. The technical discussions can be
difficult to follow. But Cluff ’s mastery of this material is
impressive.
The North Polar opening, he insists, is the gateway to a
hidden world. For within the earth are an ocean and a con-
tinent. Moreover, the interior of the earth has a temperate
climate—thanks to the presence of a small central sun. As
evidence, he cites a curious fact: fish and birds in the Arctic
has been known to migrate northward. They would do so
only to benefit from warmer feeding grounds. And those
mammoths that have been found in northern Siberia,
frozen in the ice? Cluff rejects the standard explanation,
that they perished there thousands of years ago. In his view,
mammoths have survived into the present. They roam that
interior continent; and their remains occasionally wind up
in Siberia.
Cluff believes that there is “a substantial amount of sci-
entific, historical, and scriptural evidence” to support the
hollow-earth theory. And among the evidence is the testi-
mony of two explorers: Admiral Byrd of the U. S. Navy and
fisherman Olaf Jansen.
Admiral Byrd actually entered the North Polar opening,
according to Cluff; but his testimony has been suppressed
by the government. In February 1947, Byrd piloted a plane
north from a base in Alaska. He flew beyond the North Pole
and over the Arctic Ocean. To his astonishment, says Cluff,
he found himself flying over “a land covered with vegeta-
tion, lakes and rivers and even saw a prehistoric-type mam-
moth in the underbrush.” His flight had taken him into the
polar opening. And there he discovered a continent.
But then the inevitable happened:
The testimony of Admiral Byrd may have been sup-
pressed; but it was too late to suppress that of Olaf Jansen.
A century earlier, the Norwegian fisherman had sailed into
the North Polar opening. There he encountered members
of an advanced civilization. He was taken on a tour of their
cities, and introduced to their ruler. On his deathbed Jan-
sen entrusted a manuscript—an account of his voyage—to
novelist Willard George Emerson. Emerson edited the text
and published it as The Smoky God.
The Smoky God has served as the inspiration for the voy-
age that Cluff is planning. For he hopes not only to find
the polar opening, but to make contact with that advanced
civilization.
Here is an ad for Cluff ’s book, taken from his Web site:
Earth Is Hollow!—plus 5 more revealing chapters which
prove and establish with evidence upon evidence that Our
Earth is Hollow and inhabited within by a race of
.
How to Visit the Inner
Earth
A
-
tive exciting. Who knows what hidden things
you may behold—what unique beings you may en-
counter—what advanced civilization you may discover. Are
you interested in such an adventure? If so, here’s how to
proceed.
First, locate an entrance to the Inner Earth. Surprisingly,
there are many of them. Almost all are in caves.*
Once you have located an entrance, assemble your gear.
It should include the following:
(for leaving a trail in the cave)
(the central sun can be bright)
How will you know that you’ve actually entered the Inner
Earth? Simple—you’ll encounter one of those mysterious
lights. I am shown here approaching such a light. I advance
with caution. For the source of the light could be anything—
the flashlight of a fellow visitor...the torch of a Lemurian.. .
the campfire of a band of Teros...a luminous creature. Or
even a Master, whose aura makes him a beacon in the dark.
Now sit down and bathe yourself in the light that ema-
nates from it. Let this light flow into your soul. Drink
deeply of this elixir. And your soul with fill with Cosmic
Energy.
Reactions to Etidorhpa
I
Etidorhpa—“the Strange History of a Mysterious Being”
—to newspapers, journals, and select individuals. The
preface was credited to Lloyd; but the author of the work
itself was not identified. It was widely, and favorably,
reviewed. Some deemed it to be a work of fiction:
The work stands so entirely alone in literature, and possess-
es such a marvelous versatility of thought and idea, that, in
describing it, we are at a loss for comparison. In its scope it
comprises alchemy, chemistry, science in general, philoso-
phy, metaphysics, morals, biology, sociology, theosophy,
materialism, and theism—the natural and supernatural.
. .. It is almost impossible to describe the character of the
work. (Chicago Medical Times)
ellyn Drury, or the mysterious stranger.*
Found Manuscripts
A
claims have acquired, rather than written. Sup-
posedly, it was left on his doorstep, or discovered in
an attic, or handed to him by a stranger. The author may
take credit for editing or translating the text; but that is the
extent, he insists, of his contribution.
The following are some examples.
learn who had shipped the trunk to her, or if Mary Russell
was still living. Despite these uncertainties, she set out to
edit and publish the manuscripts.The Beekeeper’s Apprentice
was the first to appear, in 1994. (Nine more would follow.)
So is it a novel? Moreover, is it a novel by Laurie King her-
self—one that employs the literary device of a found man-
uscript? In her preface, King issued a denial:
The first thing I want the reader to know is that I had noth-
ing to do with this book you have in your hand. Yes, I write
mystery novels, but even a novelist’s fevered imagination
has its limits, and mine would reach those limits long
before it came up with the farfetched idea of Sherlock
Holmes taking on a smart-mouthed, half-American, fifteen-
year-old feminist sidekick.
She
dom in Africa. He and his companions become entangled
with Ayesha, the ruler of the kingdom. Ayesha is an Egyp-
tian sorceress, thousands of years old yet beautiful—and
whose gaze is hypnotic. Romance and adventure ensue.
Haggard went on to publish more such tales (though
none of the successors involved a found manuscript). He
has been called the father of the lost-world novel.
denly turn up. But what truly aroused their suspicion was
the unavailability of the manuscript. This “extraordinary
find,” which Selbourne had supposedly translated and edit-
ed, was not available for examination.
The manuscript, explains Selbourne in his introduction
to the book, had been in the possession of an Italian Jewish
family for generations. Subsequently, it was acquired by the
present owner. This man approached Selbourne, a political
scientist living in Italy, and offered to show it to him.
Intrigued, Selbourne visited the man’s home and viewed the
manuscript. It consisted, he says, of 280 leaves, bound in
vellum. The handwriting was italic. The text was medieval
Italian.
According to Selbourne, the owner gave him permission
to translate and publish the contents of the manuscript.
However, on account of unresolved ownership issues, cer-
tain conditions had to be met. The owner’s name could be
not revealed; the manuscript could not be removed from his
house, or even photocopied; and no mention could be made
of its location. Selbourne agreed to these conditions. And
working in the owner’s home, he translated the text.
But the skeptics found this story dubious, and demanded
to see the manuscript. And when Selbourne refused to reveal
its whereabouts—“a matter of honor and of gratitude,” he
said—they accused him of fraud. Obviously, they conclud-
ed, there was no medieval manuscript. The City of Light was
a work of fiction, masquerading as a factual account.
Yet why would Selbourne—a “distinguished academic,”
according to his publisher—have perpetrated such a fraud?
Various theories were put forward. His motivation was mer-
cenary: he wanted to create a stir and sell books. Or he
wanted a platform for his unorthodox political and social
views. (Political debates—between the sages and merchants
of Zaitun—are a feature of the book.) Or he was seeking
revenge on the academic world. (Selbourne had lost his
teaching job at Oxford, on account of those views.)
But Selbourne did not lack supporters. A professor at the
University of London remarked:
He told me, looking me in the face, that this is genuine. I
tend to believe in what people tell me. I believe him an
honorable man, but some of the criticisms are fairly diffi-
cult to counter. What we’re all waiting for is him to come
out of his corner with his manuscript.
The Book of Deuteronomy
A History of New-York
paragraph about Mr.Diedrich Knickerbocker, who was miss-
ing so strangely some time since. Nothing satisfactory has
been heard of the old gentleman since; but a very curious
kind of a written book has been found in his room, in his
own handwriting. Now I wish you to notice him, if he is
still alive, that if he does not return and pay off his bill for
boarding and lodging, I shall have to dispose of his book to
satisfy me for the same.
have in press, and will shortly
publish,
-,
In two volumes, duodecimo. Price Three Dollars.
Containing an account of its discovery and settlement,
with its internal policies, manners, customs, wars, &c.,
&c., under the Dutch government, furnishing many curi-
ous and interesting particulars never before published, and
which are gathered from various manuscript and other
authenticated sources, the whole being interspersed with
philosophical speculations and moral precepts.
This work was found in the chamber of Mr. Diedrich
Knickerbocker, the old gentleman whose sudden and mys-
terious disappearance has been noticed. It is published in
order to discharge certain debts he has left behind.
Thus was launched the career of the father of American
literature—with a found manuscript.
Ben and Me
The Zohar
he himself compile the Zohar (drawing on a variety of oral
and written sources)—and then, to lend it an aura of au-
thority, ascribe the work to ben Yohai (though a portion of
it may indeed have originated with the sage)?
As the debate continued, conflicting testimony emerged.
A detractor claimed that, after de Leon’s death, his widow
had denied the existence of the manuscript. But also report-
ed was a statement by de Leon: he had sworn under oath
that “the ancient book written by Simeon ben Yohai” was
in his possession.
So who wrote the Zohar—the second-century sage or
the medieval Kabbalist? (Or did many hands contribute to
it—a collaboration down through the ages?) The jury is still
out.
In an introductory note, I describe my acquisition of the
manuscript:
as a suspect:
Other books by Professor Solomon:
To download a free copy of this book, go to:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/lobookpage.html
“The Book of King Solomon”
A life of King Solomon, written by his court historian!
Translated and Annotated by Professor Solomon
King Solomon reigned in Jerusalem, from 973 to 933,
and was deemed to be the wisest of men. These tales
chronicle his life and legend.