Joséphin Péladan,
the Catholic Rosicrucian
We have seen from their
correspondence how Joséphin Péladan was responsible for introducing Stanislas
de Guaita to the Rosicrucian tradition via an esoteric group in Toulouse, which
led on to their working alongside Papus and his associates as they made inroads
into the Isis lodge of the Theosophical Society in Paris. In a relatively short
space of time there came the establishment of the C.I.E.E. training
organisation, l’Initiation journal, a renewed Martinist Order and a
newly conceived Kabbalistic Order of the Rose Cross.
However, along with this there were a number
of internal contradictions that began to come to the fore. In part due to the inexperience
and big egos of some of the parties involved but due more fundamentally to the
roots of their esoteric assumptions. There was a great divide of occult
traditions and aspirations between the great provincial centres in the south
(Lyons, Toulouse, and so on) and Paris in the north. And particularly so with the
Péladan family.
For most of the 19th
century France was riven with counter-revolutionary movements of a romantic kind, looking for some kind of return
of monarchy – such as the rumoured survival of Louis XVII, son of the
guillotined Louis XVI. A situation broadly equivalent to the Stuart
cause in Great Britain with its romantic Bonnie Prince Charlie and toasts to
the “king over the water” after the Hanoverian succession, and it gave vitality to a number of
quasi-masonic societies with various degrees of political aims behind their
charitable pretensions.
Joséphin’s father, Louis-Adrien Péladan
(b.1815) was a vigorous propagandist and journal proprietor in support of this
kind of movement and, being staunchly Roman Catholic with it, had a penchant
for arguments relying on mystical visions, apparitions and prophecies. There is
an historical irony in his deep Catholic religiosity, for at the revocation of
the Edict of Nantes in 1685, his branch of the family had been forcibly
converted to the Catholic faith, whilst other branches, despite persecution, had
remained Protestant.
Anyhow, whatever beliefs
Louis-Adrien held he stuck to passionately, and the same went for his sons
Adrien (b.1844) and Joseph-Aimé, or Joséphin (b.1858). The 14 year gap between
the birth of the two sons seems to have led almost to a hero worship of the
younger for the elder, exacerbated by the latter’s tragic death.
Adrien was dedicated to a medical career,
although there is a degree of uncertainty
about his educational attainments en route to it, that range from a family
version of a child prodigy, whose academic work was so brilliant that his
examiners sometimes could not understand it, to medical records that imply that
it was barely up to pass standard. Or it may have been a result of his
enthusiasm for animal magnetism and the practice of homeopathy of which he
became one of the first practitioners.
However, for Adrien Péladen it was a
choice of career that ended in disaster, for at the age of 41 he died of
strychnine poisoning, the result of a massive overdose, erroneously prepared by
a German pharmacist. Joséphin Péladan was so embittered by this that he
condemned the man in no uncertain terms in the dedication to Curieuse, his
second novel, published shortly afterwards.
“A mon frère et
à mon maitre le docteur Adrien Péladan Fils, empoisoné le 29 septembre 1885 par
le pharmacien Wilmar Schwabe, de Leipzig, qui lui avait envoyé au lieu de la
troisième décimale demandée, une première de strychnine, c’est-á-dire la mort
de 1250 personnes. (To my brother
and teacher, Dr Adrien Peladan Jnr, poisoned on 29th September 1885
by the pharmacist Wilmar Schwabe of Leipzig, who instead of the thousandth part
of strychnine ordered, sent him a tenth; enough to kill 1250 people.)
But Péladan’s bitterness went deeper
than personal resentment or brotherly grief. He could never forgive the Germans
for being the cradle of Protestantism, that he saw as “Deformation”
rather than Reformation, or the ‘lavatorial ideas’ of philosophers such
as Hegel. So it was tempting to flirt with ideas such as religiously or
politically motivated assassination. Indeed Stanislas de Guaita had to ask him
to be more cautious in their correspondence. The Franco-Prussian war might have
been over for fifteen years but Prussian power was still to be feared in
occupied areas such as Lorraine.
Oddly enough, after the success of Le
Vice suprême, Joséphin found his
novels (and there were eventually twenty one of them in La Décadence latine series)
to be highly popular in German translation, and thus in the bizarre situation of
detesting a large section of his readers. The main target of his satire had
always been ‘Latin thought’.
“Anti-psychism has become the very
character of Latin thought,” says the hero mage Merodack, “they violate
concepts inversely. The mystics of our time are perverse; the believers
superstitious; the virtuous inert. They laugh at the real presence in the
Eucharist but believe in that of spirits in tables. They pass from the divine
right of the king to the divine right of the people. From the injustice of the
aristocracy to the ignominious aristocracy of the stock market.”
However he found no great conflict
between occult speculation and religious belief. As we have seen, the Catholic
authorities took a somewhat relaxed, if distant, attitude to Eliphas Levi’s works
on magic.
So Joséphin Péladan was not opposed
to the esoteric per se. He simply saw it as having its proper place within
established religion rather than outside it. After
all there can well be a small divide between the doctrine of the communion of
saints and the imaginal contacts of the occult aspirant with tested and trusted
inner contacts.
Thus he found no difficulty in
co-founding , with Stanislas de Guaita, and later Papus and his friends, l’Ordre
Kabbalistique de la Rose-Croix (the Kabbalistic Order of the Rose Cross). Although
as he observed prominently at the beginning of his 1892 book Comment on
Devient Mage (How to Become a Magus): “I believe and proclaim that the Roman
Catholic and apostolic church is the True one. I profess to be its son and
devote my mind and my heart to it. I recognise the infallibility of the Pope
when he pronounces upon dogma “Ex cathedra” and “Urbi et Orbi”. That my
conscience and my knowledge embrace no heterodoxy, I am ready to burn my work
with my own hands should the infallible Peter judge it to be wrong or
untimely.”
And in a Foreword addressed to “A
Contemporary Young Man” he writes: “Before
1891 Magic was absent from French culture: I have brought light and glory to
it, not by risky and dangerous pacts, but in a form of art that does not engage
the sacred science in possible mistakes.”
Whatever the truth of this, the
problem the others found with Joséphin Péladan was his tendency to make public
pronouncements off his own bat without feeling the need to consult them on the
matter. Thus in May 1890 he embarrassed everyone with a high handed
condemnation of an important socialite Mme. Salomon de Rothschild who had
recently purchased a property containing a chapel and small building associated
with the writer Balzac and demolished them. His Rosicrucian Excommunication
de la femme Rothschild commences: “For these crimes, We declare this woman
infamous, and those who bear her name unless they publicly disavow her actions,
and forbid others to receive her or even to greet her, and if she enter a church,
a library, a museum, or concert have the right to expel her, and that any
artist that works for her be regarded a renegade – in the name of all religions
and arts, the decision of the Rose Cross.”
Naturally neither Papus nor
Stanislas de Guaita could remain indifferent to this. Papus particularly
because he relied to an increasing extent on attracting and influencing ‘big
names’ in his general esoteric mission.
Similarly Péladan sent a letter to
the Archbishop of Paris protesting about the move to allow bull fighting in the
city as a tourist attraction. Although his protest was not so much on account
of cruelty to animals but the moral degradation of women who went to watch it,
on the grounds that they went in search of a sexual thrill from the spectacle.
However, he felt strongly enough in
June 1890 to approach his fellow members of the Supreme Council of the
Kabbalistic Order of the Rose Cross to express some of his concerns. He confirmed his commitment to a Hermetic
philosophy but, despite the largely Protestant stance of the 16/17th
century Rosicrucian manifestoes, sought to concentrate upon Catholic tradition
and the expression of the spiritual in the arts.
All of which led him to break away publicly
early next year, proclaiming himself Grand Maïtre et Hiérarque suprême du
Tiers Ordre de la Rose Croix Catholique (Grand Master and Supreme Hierarch
of the Third Order of the Catholic Rose Cross) and commitment to a new
organisation La Rose Croix du Temple at du Graal (the Rose Cross of the
Temple and the Graal).
By now the others felt things had
gone far enough and publicly proclaimed that a resigned member of their
Council, Mr Joséphin Péledan, had
founded a schismatic sect of which he proclaimed himself Grand Master
and Arch Mage, claiming instransigent ultramontanist principles, obedience to
the Holy See etc., that was diametrically opposed to those principles ever
professed by the illuminated brothers of the Rose Cross.
This might have been regarded in other places and at
other times as no more than the rustling in a couple of obscure esoteric
dovecots, but national attention came when, under the headline “The War of the
Roses”, Le Figaro took up the story of this dispute between two high
handed esoteric brotherhoods with ridiculous assumptions of their own
importance,
It is something of an irony that the
placing of l’Initiation on the Papal Index came after this
turmoil and had little to do with it, coming almost by accident on account of
some articles on Gnosticism which for some reason the Church deemed a greater
threat to faith and morals than magic and psychism. Gnosticism would begin to
attract the attention of Papus and his friends a little further down the line.
However Péladan’s initiative developed a wider and
healthier public image with a series of expositions of “Symbolist” art. The
term has since tended to be taken over to mean the work of Gauguin and his
associates, but it originally signified the use of evocative symbols in art.
The most famous examples that may come to mind are probably the highly
evocative pictures such as Semele and Zeus, or Salome and the head of John the
Baptist – by Gustave Moreau (1826-98) – whom Péladan had earlier supported in his
art journalism.
From 1892 to 1897 a series of ‘Salons de la Rose
Croix’ appeared annually in various locations with varying degrees of success,
featuring avant garde music by Erik Satie, sculpture, poetry readings and
dramatic and operatic performances, some written by Péladan himself. Gradually they
petered out, Péladan not even bothering to turn up to the last two, as he and
they slipped from memory, until he died, by now an almost forgotten figure, in
1918.
Nonetheless there remains a society devoted to his
memory, although his work has never, so far as I can discover, ever appeared in
English. At his best, a combination of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw in
my estimation, with a facility to shock and amuse and wonder how far to take
seriously. And I find works of art in the Moreau tradition, which includes a
number of Belgian artists verging toward surrealism, usually worth seeking out.
It is possible we have not heard the last of any of
these characters.
2 comments:
“Sons Of Hermes” is a fascinating and informative series: thank you very much for it!
Regarding translations of Péladan, there is a long extract in English from A Coeur perdu (1888)— the third volume of Peladan’s fourteen volume epic Nebo— translated with an introduction by Jennifer Birkett in the anthology “The Decadent Reader” published by Zone Books (New York) in 1998.
Thanks again for your thoughtful and knowledgeable writings.
Many thanks Alvin, and to others who have commented. The series is of course first and foremost a labour of love, but it is also very rewarding to know that there are a few appreciative readers who share it.#
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