Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 06: Paris eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 06.

Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 06: Paris eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 06.

In reality such proceedings miss the end for which they are undertaken, and the Pope, in spite of his infallibility, will not prevent his persecutions from giving Freemasonry an importance which it would perhaps have never obtained if it had been left alone.  Mystery is the essence of man’s nature, and whatever presents itself to mankind under a mysterious appearance will always excite curiosity and be sought, even when men are satisfied that the veil covers nothing but a cypher.

Upon the whole, I would advise all well-born young men, who intend to travel, to become Freemasons; but I would likewise advise them to be careful in selecting a lodge, because, although bad company cannot have any influence while inside of the lodge, the candidate must guard against bad acquaintances.

Those who become Freemasons only for the sake of finding out the secret of the order, run a very great risk of growing old under the trowel without ever realizing their purpose.  Yet there is a secret, but it is so inviolable that it has never been confided or whispered to anyone.  Those who stop at the outward crust of things imagine that the secret consists in words, in signs, or that the main point of it is to be found only in reaching the highest degree.  This is a mistaken view:  the man who guesses the secret of Freemasonry, and to know it you must guess it, reaches that point only through long attendance in the lodges, through deep thinking, comparison, and deduction.  He would not trust that secret to his best friend in Freemasonry, because he is aware that if his friend has not found it out, he could not make any use of it after it had been whispered in his ear.  No, he keeps his peace, and the secret remains a secret.

Everything done in a lodge must be secret; but those who have unscrupulously revealed what is done in the lodge, have been unable to reveal that which is essential; they had no knowledge of it, and had they known it, they certainly would not have unveiled the mystery of the ceremonies.

The impression felt in our days by the non-initiated is of the same nature as that felt in former times by those who were not initiated in the mysteries enacted at Eleusis in honour of Ceres.  But the mysteries of Eleusis interested the whole of Greece, and whoever had attained some eminence in the society of those days had an ardent wish to take a part in those mysterious ceremonies, while Freemasonry, in the midst of many men of the highest merit, reckons a crowd of scoundrels whom no society ought to acknowledge, because they are the refuse of mankind as far as morality is concerned.

In the mysteries of Ceres, an inscrutable silence was long kept, owing to the veneration in which they were held.  Besides, what was there in them that could be revealed?  The three words which the hierophant said to the initiated?  But what would that revelation have come to?  Only to dishonour the indiscreet initiate, for they were barbarous words unknown to the vulgar.  I have read somewhere that the three sacred words of the mysteries of Eleusis meant:  Watch, and do no evil.  The sacred words and the secrets of the various masonic degrees are about as criminal.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 06: Paris from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.