|
 |

Whatsoever is published, and made known to everyone,
concerning our Fraternity, by the foresaid Fama, let no man esteem lightly
of it, nor hold it as an idle or invented thing, and much less receive
the same, as though it were only a mere conceit of ours. It is the Lord
Jehovah (who seeing the Lord's Sabbath is almost at hand, and hastened
again, his period or course being finished, to his first beginning)
doth turn about the course of Nature; and what heretofore hath been
sought with great pains, and daily labour, is now manifested unto those
who make small account, or scarcely once think upon it; but those which
desire it, it is in a manner forced and thrust upon them, that thereby
the life of the godly may be eased of all their toil and labour, and
be no more subject to the storms of inconstant Fortune; but the wickedness
of the ungodly thereby, with their due and deserved punishment, be augmented
and multiplied.
Although we cannot be by any suspected of the least heresy,
or of any wicked beginning, or purpose against the worldly government,
we do condemn the East and the West (meaning the Pope and Mahomet) blasphemers
against our Lord Jesus Christ, and offer and present with a good will
to the chief head of the Roman Empire our prayers, secrets, and great
treasures of gold.
Yet we have thought good, and fit for the learned's sakes,
to add somewhat more to this, and make a better explanation if there be
anything too deep, hidden, and set down over dark in the Fama, or for
certain reasons were altogether omitted, and left out; hoping herewith
the learned will be more addicted unto us, and be made far more fit and
willing for our purpose.
Concerning the alteration and amendment of Philosophy,
we have (as much as this present is needful) sufficiently declared, to
wit, that the same is altogether weak and faulty; yet we doubt not, although
the most part falsely do allege that she (I know not how) is sound and
strong, yet notwithstanding she fetches her last breath and is departing.
But as commonly, even in the same place or country where
there breaketh forth a new a unaccustomed disease, Nature also there discovereth
a medicine against the same; so there doth appear for so manifold infirmities
of Philosophy the right means, and unto our Patria sufficiently offered,
whereby she may become sound again, which is now to be renewed and altogether
new.
No other Philosophy we have, than that which is the head
and sum, the foundations and contents of all faculties, sciences, and
arts, the which (if we will behold our age) containeth much of Theology
and medicine, but little of the wisdom of the law, and doth diligently
search both heaven and earth: or, to speak briefly thereof, which doth
manifest and declare sufficiently Man, whereof all learned who will make
themselves known unto us, and come into our brotherhood, shall find more
wonderful secrets by us than heretofore they did attain unto, and did
know, or are able to believe or utter.
Wherefore, to declare briefly our meaning hereof, we
ought to labour carefully that there be not only a wondering at our meeting
and adhortation, but that likewise everyone may know, that although we
do not lightly esteem and regard such mysteries and secrets, we nevertheless
holde it fit, that the knowledge thereof be manifested and revealed to
many.
For it is to be taught and believed, that this our unhoped
(for), willing offer will raise many and divers thoughts in men, unto
whom (as yet) be unknown Miranda sexta aetatis, or those which by reason
of the course of the world, esteem the things to come like unto the present,
and are hindered through all manner of importunities of this our time,
so that they live no otherwise in the world, than blind fools, who can,
in the clear sun-shine day discern and know nothing, than only by feeling.
Now concerning the first part, we hold this, that the
meditations, knowledge and inventions of our loving Christian Father (of
all that, which from the beginning of the world, Man's wisdom, either
through God's revelation, or through the service of the angels and spirits,
or through the sharpness and depth of understanding, or through long observation,
use, and experience, hath found out, invented, brought forth, corrected,
and till now hath been propagated and transplanted) are so excellent,
worthy and great, that if all books should perish, and by God's almighty
sufferance, all writings and all learnings should be lost, yet the posterity
will be able only thereby to lay a new foundation, and bring truth to
light again; the which perhaps would not be so hard to do as if one should
begin to pull down and destroy the old ruinous building, and then to enlarge
the fore court, afterwards bring lights into the lodgings, and then change
the doors, stair, and other things according to our intention.
But to whom would not this be acceptable, for to be manifested
to everyone rather that to have it kept and spared, as an especial ornament
for the appointed time to come?
Wherefore should we not with all our hearts rest and
remain in the only truth (which men through so many erroneous and crooked
ways do seek) if it had only pleased God to lighten unto us the sixth
Candelbrium? Were it not good that we needed not to care, not to fear
hunger, poverty, sickness and age?
Were it not a precious thing, that you could always live
so, as if you had lived from the beginning of the world, and, moreover,
as you should still live to the end thereof? Were it not excellent you
dwell in one place, that neither the people which dwell beyond the River
Ganges in the Indies could Hide anything, nor those which in Peru might
be able to keep secret their counsels from thee?
Were it not a precious thing, that you could so read
in one only book, and withal by reading understand and remember, all that
which in all other books (which heretofore have been, and are now, and
hereafter shall come out) hath been, is, and shall be learned and found
out of them?
How pleasant were it, that you could so sing, that instead
of stony rocks you could draw the pearls and precious stones, instead
of wild beasts, spirits, and instead of hellish Pluto, move the might
princes of the world.
O ye people, God's counsel is far otherwise, who hath
concluded now to increase and enlarge the number of our Fraternity, the
which we with such joy have undertaken, as we have heretofore obtained
this great treasure without our merits, yea without our hopes, and thoughts,
and purpose with the like fidelity to put the same in practice, that neither
the compassion nor pity of our own children (which some of us in the Fraternity
have) shall draw us from it, because we know these unhoped for goods cannot
be inherited, nor by chance be obtained.
If there be somebody now, which on the other side will
complain of our discretion, that we offer our treasure so freely, and
without any difference to all men, and do not rather regard and respect
more the godly, learned, wise, or princely persons, than the common people;
those we do not contradict, seeing it is not a slight and easy matter;
but withal we signify so much, that our Arcana or secrets will no ways
be common, and generally made known. Although the Fama be set forth in
five languages, and is manifested to everyone, yet we do partly very well
know that the unlearned and gross wits will not receive nor regard the
same; as also the worthiness of those who shall be accepted into our Fraternity
are not esteemed and known of us by Man's carefulness, but by the Rule
of our Revelation and Manifestation. Wherefore if the unworthy cry and
call a thousand times, or if they shall offer and present themselves to
us a thousand times, yet God hath commanded our ears, that they should
hear none of them: yea God hath so compassed us about with his clouds,
that unto us his servants no violence or force can be done or committed;
wherefore we neither can be seen or known by anybody, except he had the
eyes of an eagle. It hath been necessary that the Fama be set forth in
everyone's mother tongue, because those should not be defrauded of the
knowledge thereof, whom (although they be unlearned) God hath not excluded
from the happiness of this Fraternity, the which shall be divided and
parted into certain degrees; as those which dwell in the city of Damascus
in Arabia, who have a far different politick order from the other Arabians.
For there do govern only wise and understanding men, who by the king's
permission make particular laws; according unto which example also the
government shall be instituted in Europe (whereof we have a description
set down by our Christianly Father) when first is done and come to pass
that which is to precede. And thenceforth our Trumpet shall publicly sound
with a loud sound, and great noise, when namely the same (which at this
present is shown by few, and is secretly, as a thing to come, declared
in figures and pictures) shall be free and publicly proclaimed, and the
whole world shall be filled withal. Even in such manner as heretofore,
many godly people have secretly and altogether desperately pushed at the
Pope's tyranny, which afterwards, with great, earnest, and especial zeal
in Germany, was thrown from his seat, and trodden underfoot, whose final
fall is delayed, and kept for our times, when he also shall be scratched
in pieces with nails, and an end be made of his ass's cry, by a new voice.
The which we know is already reasonable manifest and known to many learned
men in Germany, as their writings and secret congratulations do sufficiently
witness the same.
We could here relate and declare what all the time, from
the year of Our Lord 1378 (in which year our Christian Father was born)
till now, hath happened, where we might rehearse what alterations he hath
seen in these one hundred and six years of his life, which he hath left
to our breathren and us after his decease to peruse. But brevity, which
we do observe, will not permit at this present to make rehearsal of it,
till a more fit time. At this time it is enough for those which do not
despise our declaration, having therefore briefly touched it, thereby
to prepare the way for their acquaintance and friendship with us.
Yet to whom it is permitted that he may see, and for
his instruction use, those great letters and characters which the Lord
god hath written and imprinted in heaven and earth's edifice, through
the alteration of government, which hath been from time to time altered
and reviewed, the same is already (although as yet unknown to himself)
ours. And as we know he will not despise our inviting and calling, so
none shall fear any deceit, for we promise and openly say, that no man's
uprightness and hopes shall deceive him, whosoever shall make himself
known unto us under the seal of secrecy, and desire our Fraternity.
But to the false hypocrites, and to those that seek other
things than wisdom, we say and witness by these presents publicly, we
cannot be made known, and be betrayed unto them; and much less they shall
be able to hurt as any manner of way without the will of God; but they
shall certainly be partakers of all the punishment spoken of in our Fama;
so their wicked counsels shall light upon themselves, and our treasures
shall remain untouched and unstirred, until the Lion doth come, who will
ask them for his use, and employ them for the confirmation and establishment
of his kingdom. We ought therefore here to observe well, and make it known
unto everyone, that God hath certainly and most assuredly concluded to
send and grant to the world before her end, which presently thereupon
shall ensue, such a truth, light, life, and glory, as the first man Adam
had, which he lost in Paradise, after which his successors were put and
driven, with him, to misery. Wherefore there shall cease all servitude,
falsehood, lies, and darkness, which by little and little, with the great
world's revolution, was crept into all arts, works, and governments of
men, and have darkened the most part of them. For form thence are proceeded
an innumerable sort of all manner of false opinions and heresies, that
scarce the wisest of all was able to know whose doctrine and opinion he
should follow and embrace, and could not well and easily be discerned;
seeing on the one part they were detained, hindered, and brought into
errors through the respect of the philosophers and learned men, and on
the other part through true experience. All the which, when it shall once
be abolished and removed, and instead thereof a right and true rule instituted,
then there will remain thanks unto them which have taken pains therein.
But the work itself shall be attributed to the blessedness of our age.
As we now willingly confess, that may principal men by
their writings will be a great furtherance unto this Reformation which
is to come; so we desire not to have this honour ascribed to us, as if
such work were only commanded and imposed upon us. But we confess, and
witness openly with the Lord Jesus Christ, that it shall first happen
that the stones shall arise, and offer their service, before there shall
be any want of executors and accomplishers of God's counsel; yea, the
Lord God hath already sent before certain messengers, which should testify
his will, to wit, some new stars, which do appear and are seen in the
firmament in Serpentario and Cygno, which signify and give themselves
known to everyone, that they are powerful Signacula of great weighty matters.
So then, the secret his writings and characters are most necessary for
all such things which are found out by men. Although that great book of
nature stands open to all men, yet there are but few that can read and
understand the same. For as there is given to man two instruments to hear,
likewise two to see, and two to smell, but only one to speak, and it were
but vain to expect speech from the ears, or hearing from the eyes. So
there hath been ages or times which have seen, there have also been ages
that have heard, smelt, and tasted. Now there remains yet that which in
short time, honour shall be likewise given to the tongue, and by the same;
what before times hath been seen, heard, and smelt, now finally shall
be spoken and uttered forth, when the World shall awake out of her heavy
and drowsy sleep, and with an open heart, bare-head, and bare-foot, shall
merrily and joyfully meet the new arising Sun.
These characters and letters, as God hath here and there
incorporated them in the Holy Scriptures, the Bible, so hath he imprinted
them in all beasts. So that like as the mathematician and astronomer can
long before see and know the eclipses which are to come, so we may verily
foreknow and foresee the darkness of obscurations of the Church, and how
long they shall last. From the which characters or letters we have borrowed
our magic writing, and have found out, and made, a new language for ourselves,
in the which withal is expressed and declared the nature of all things.
So that it is no wonder that we are not so eloquent in other languages,
the which we know that they are altogether disagreeing to the language
of our forefathers, Adam and Enoch, and were through the Babylonical confusion
wholly hidden.
But we must also let you understand that there are yet
some Eagles' Feathers in our way, the which do hinder our purpose. Wherefore
we do admonish everyone for to read diligently and continually the Holy
Bible, for he that taketh all his pleasures therein, he shall know that
he prepared for himself an excellent way to come to our Fraternity. For
as this is the whole sum and content of our rule, that every letter or
character which is in the world ought to be learned and regarded well;
so those are like unto us, and are very near allied unto us, who do make
the Holy Bible a rule of their life, and an aim and end of all their studies:
yea to let it be a compendium and content of the whole world. And not
only to have it continually in the mouth, but to know how to apply and
direct the true understanding of it to all times and ages of the world.
Also, it is not our custom to prostitute and make so common the Holy Scriptures;
for there are innumerable expounders of the same; some alleging and wresting
it to serve for their opinion, some to scandal it, and most wickedly do
like it to a nose of wax, which alike should serve the divines, philosophers,
physicians, and mathematicians, against all the which we do openly witness
and acknowledge, that from the beginning of the world there hath not been
given unto men a more worthy, a more excellent, and more admirable and
wholesome Book than the Holy Bible. Blessed is he that hath the same,
yet more blessed is he who reads it diligently, but most blessed of all
is he that truly understandeth the same, for he is most like to God, and
doth truly understandeth the same, for his most like to God, and doth
come most near to him. But whatsoever hath been said in the Fama concerning
the deceivers against the transmutation of metals, and the highest medicine
in the world, the same is thus to be understood, that this so great gift
of God we do in no manner set at naught, or dispise it. But because she
bringeth not with her always the knowledge of Nature, but this bringeth
forth not only medicine, but also maketh manifest and open unto us innumerable
secrets and wonders. Therefore it is requisite, that we be earnest to
attain to the understanding and knowledge of philosophy. And moreover,
excellent wits ought not to be drawn to the tincture of metals, before
they be exercised well in the knowledge of Nature. He must needs be an
insatiable creature, who is come so far, that neither poverty nor sickness
can hurt him, yea, who is exalted above all other men, and hath rule over
that, the which doth anguish, trouble and pain others, yet will give himself
again to idle things, as to build houses, make wars, and use al manner
of pride, because he hath gold and silver infinite store.
God is far otherwise pleased, for he exalteth the lowly,
and pulleth down the proud with disdain; to those which are of few works,
he sendeth his holy Angel to speak with them, but the unclean babblers
he driveth in the wilderness and solitary places. The which is the right
reward of the Romish seducers, who have vomited forth their blasphemies
against Christ, and as yet do not abstain from their lies in this clear
shining light. In Germany all their abominations and detestable tricks
have been disclosed, that thereby he may fully fulfill the measure of
sin, and draw near to the end of his punishment. Therefore one day it
will come to pass, that the mouth of those vipers will be stopped and
the triple crown will be brought to nought, as thereof at our meeting
shall more plain and at large be discoursed.
For conclusion of our Confession, we must earnestly admonish
you, that you put away, if not all, yet the most books written by false
Alchemists, who do think it but a jest, or a pastime, when they either
misuse the Holy Trinity, when they do apply it to vain things, or deceive
the people with most strange figures, and dark sentences and speeches,
and cozen the simple of their money; as there are nowadays too many such
books set forth, which the Enemy of man's welfare doth daily, and will
to the end, mingle among the good seed, thereby to make the Truth more
difficult to be believed, which in herself is simple, easy, and naked,
but contrarily Falsehood is proud, haughty, and coloured with a kind of
lustre of seeming godly and of humane wisdom. Ye that are wise eschew
such books, and turn unto us, who seek not your moneys, but offer unto
you most willingly our great treasures. We hunt not after your goods with
invented lying tinctures, but desire to make you partakes of our goods.
We speak unto you by parables, but would willingly bring you to the right,
simple, easy and ingenuous exposition, understanding, declaration, and
knowledge of all secrets. We desire not to be received by you, but invite
you unto our more than kingly houses and palaces, and that verily not
by our own proper motion, but (that you likewise may know it) as forced
unto it, by the instigation of the Spirit of God, by his admonitions,
and by the occasion of this present time.
What think you, loving people, and how seem you affected,
seeing that you now understand and know, that we acknowledge ourselves
truly and sincerely to profess Christ, condemn the Pope, addict ourselves
to the true Philosophy, lead a Christian life, and daily call, entreat
and invite many more unto our Fraternity, unto whom the same Light of
God likewise appeareth? Consider you not at length how you might begin
with us, not only by pondering the Gifts which are in you, and by experience
which you have in the word of God, beside the careful consideration of
the imperfection of all arts, and many other unfitting things, to seek
for an amendment therein; to appease God, and to accommodate you for the
time wherein you live. Certainly if you will perform the same, this profit
will follow, that all those goods which Nature hath in all parts of the
world wonderfully dispersed, shall at one time altogether be given unto
you, and shall easily disburden you of all that which obscureth the understanding
of man, and hindereth the working thereof, like unto the vain eccentrics
and epicycles.
But those pragmatical and busy-headed men, who either
are blinded with the glittering of gold, or (to say more truly) who are
now honest, but by; thinking such great riches should never fail, might
easily be corrupted, and brought to idleness, and to riotous proud living,
those we desire that they would not trouble us with their idle and vain
crying. But let them think, that although there be a medicine to be had
which might fully cure all diseases, nevertheless those whom God hath
destined to plague with diseases, neverthelesss those whom God hath destined
to plaque with diseases, and to keep under the rod of correction, such
shall never obtain any such medicine.
Even in such manner, although we might enrich the whole
world, and endue them with learning, and might release it from innumerable
miseries, yet shall we never be manifested and made known unto any many,
without the especial pleasure of God; yea, it shall be so far from him
whosoever thinks to get the benefit and be partaker of our riches and
knowledge, without and against the will of God, that he shall sooner lose
his life in seeking and searching for us, than to find us, and attain
to come to the wished happiness of the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross.
|