practice of sorcery in the middle ages. She was
surprised to learn that she was not only a believer,
but was apparently an adept in all the esoteric arts.
But the subject being quite new to her, she followed
with difficulty his account of a very successful evocation
of the spirit of a mediaeval alchemist, a Fleming of
the fourteenth century, and wonder often interrupted
her attention. She could not reconcile herself
to the belief that he was serious in all he said,
and he often spoke of the Kabbala, which apparently
was the secret ritual of a sect of which he was a
member, perhaps a priest. Between whiles she
thought of the indignation with which Owen would hear
such beliefs. Then tempted as by the edge of
an abyss, she admired Ulick’s strange appearance,
which helped to make his story credible. She could
no longer disbelieve, so simply did he tell his tales,
his white teeth showing, and his dark eyes rapidly
brightening and clouding as he mentioned different
spells and their effects. But so illusive were
his narratives that she never quite understood; he
seemed always a little ahead of her; she often had
to pause to consider his meaning, and when she had
grasped it, he was speaking of something else, and
she had missed the links. To understand him better
she attempted to argue with him, and he told her of
the incredible explanation that Charcot, the eminent
hypnotist, had had to fall back upon in order to account
materialistically for some of his hypnotic experiments,
and she was forced to admit that the spiritualistic
explanation was the easier to believe.
She was most interested when he spoke of the College
of Adepts and the Rosicrucians. Life as he spoke
seemed to become intense and exalted, and the invisible
seemed on the point of becoming visible when he told
her how the brotherhood greeted each other with, “Man
is God, and son of God, and there is no God but man.”
He repeated all he could remember of their terrible
oath. The College of Adepts, she learned, was
the antithesis of the monastery. The monastery
is passive spirituality, the College of Adepts is
active spirituality; the monastery abases itself before
God, the Adepts seek to become as gods. “There
is a spiritual stream,” he said, “that
flows behind the circumstance of history, and they
claim that all religions are but vulgarisations of
their doctrine. The Adept, by conquering passion
and ignorance, attains a mastery over change, and
so prolongs his life beyond any human limit.”
She begged Ulick not to forget to bring the book of
magic which contained the oath of the Rosicrucians.