Classic Audiobook Collection - Dr. John Dee - Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer by G. M. Hort ~ Full Audiobook [biography]
Episode Date: April 16, 2024Dr. John Dee - Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer by G. M. Hort audiobook. Genre: biography In Dr. John Dee - Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer, G. M. Hort offers a compact, atmospheric portrait of on...e of Tudor England's most controversial minds: John Dee (1527-1608/9), a learned mathematician and astronomer who also pursued astrology, alchemy, and spiritual inquiry. Set against the rivalries, fears, and ambitions of Elizabeth I's court, the narrative follows Dee's rise from brilliant scholar to sought-after adviser, tracing how his passion for hidden knowledge won him both powerful patrons and dangerous suspicion. At Mortlake, Dee builds a formidable library and laboratory, while his interests range from practical navigation and imperial planning to experiments meant to probe the boundary between nature and the unseen. Hort frames Dee as a man pulled between two worlds - rigorous learning and mystical aspiration - and shows how rumor, politics, and religious anxiety can transform intellectual curiosity into an accusation of sorcery. As Dee's quest intensifies, the book explores the personal cost of seeking certainty in an uncertain age, and the uneasy legacy of a figure who helped shape the Elizabethan imagination even as he struggled to protect his name and livelihood. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:17:20) Chapter 02 (00:34:35) Chapter 03 (00:56:24) Chapter 04 (01:08:24) Chapter 05 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Chapter 1 of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer
Chapter 1
The subject of this sketch cannot claim to rank among the world's successes.
He was indeed one of those who court failure rather than success,
who occupy themselves instinctively with the things which are too hard for them
rather than with those they can accomplish with ease and dignity.
Dr. D.'s lot was cast, moreover, in troubled and baffling circumstances.
He suffered much from his enemies, and still more from his false friends.
Popular prejudice and popular ignorance, which were busy with his name in his lifetime,
continued to pursue it long after his death.
Butler's Houdabrus contains a vicious caricature of him,
and writers more serious and restrained than Butler have done less than justice to his character and work,
content to accept the floating tradition that blackened the one and dismissed the other as negligible.
Yet it is difficult to see how even the most hostile
of them could have read the story of his life, especially those parts of it which he himself has
narrated, without feeling some measure of sympathy and respect for this eager enthusiast and patient
scholar, so devout yet so daring, so gentle of heart, yet so inflexible of purpose. The man was, in
truth, a hero in his way. He was also an occult student of no mean order, and there is a sense in which
we may count his failures in that quest, to which he sacrificed his best years and powers,
and his fair fame also, as higher and worthier than many an acknowledged success.
John D. was born on July 13, 1527, in London, where his father, Roland D., a gentleman of ancient
Welsh descent, but apparently of no great fortune, held a minor post in the royal household.
We can form but a vague picture of the future philosopher's early childhood in Tudor London.
The times were tempestuous and transitional, and the political and religious troubles many,
The execution of Fisher and Moore took place, for example, when young John was eight years old,
and the passionate discontent with the enforced religious changes broke forth in the unsuccessful insurrections of the succeeding year, 1536.
But children, as a rule, trouble themselves but little with public events,
except insofar as their own lives are affected by some particular penalty or privilege.
We may safely surmise that the principal shadow on Dee's childhood was one which, unfortunately,
was never to be very far from him in mature life, the shadow, namely, of narrow means and financial
difficulty. Roland D. was apparently rather shabbily treated by his royal master. The advancement for which
he looked never came, and his post as a gentleman server could have been neither very important
nor very remunerative. What he and his wife Jane, whose maiden name, was wild, and who seems
to have been always a loving and beloved mother to her gifted son, thought of the religious changes we do not hear.
It would appear that Dee had a religious upbringing, such as the times afforded.
About the year 1537, when the greater monasteries were waiting the doom that had overtaken the lesser ones,
the boy was sent to the Chantery school at Chelmsford, were the worthy Chantery priest,
Peter Willey, with whose honest conversation even the king's commissioners some years later could find no fault,
grounded him in the elements of Latin grammar.
In this quiet little market town, by the slow-moving river Chelmer,
the mind and manners of young John must have received some lasting impression from what he there saw
and shared of the stately ritual of the old religion.
He, together with other little scholars, must have heard many masses said and sung at those chantry altars,
whereof we know that one of them was dedicated to our Lady St. Mary, and won to Corpus Christi.
He must often have served his tutor and other priests in the capacity of altar-boy,
and grown familiar with the details of the great mystic ceremony, which
more than any other links the living with the dead, the scene with the unseen.
We may conjecture that his school days were happy ones,
and that he loved both his tutors and his tasks.
On the other hand, the cravings of his eager brain for what, in after years,
he described as good learning, must have been but ill-satisfied at Chelmsford.
The grammar schools of that day were truer than they are now to their limiting name.
They aimed at little more than familiarizing the school.
scholar with the language in which his future studies at the university would have to be pursued.
The universities, indeed, took the place of the modern upper schools, and boys entered as
undergraduates at what we should call a very immature age. D. himself was only 15 when he left
Chelmsford for Cambridge, and entered as a student at St. John's. The reputation of St. John's
stood high among its fellows. It took its origin and its name from the 12th century house of
Boston canons, but as a college it was comparatively new, and had won the special
accommodation of Erasmus, who had discerned in it sound learning in a truly
evangelical spirit, the result of the fostering care of the enlightened and saintly
Bishop Fisher, whose work lived after him, though he himself was gone.
He or D entered, like other newcomers, on the scholastic trivium, the three-year's
course of grammar, logic, and rhetoric, which in all medieval universities was followed by
the quadrivium, the four years devoted to the more practical sciences of mathematics, geography,
music, and astronomy. In his own words, he gave himself vehemently to study. University life in those
days was a strange yet unwholesome mixture of rigid discipline and wide freedom. A student, provided
he obeyed certain elementary communal rules as to attendance at lectures, chapel, and the like,
could dispose of his time much as he wished. Dee was certainly not one of those who wandered
flown with insolence and wine in the streets after nightfall, or laughed and idle through the lectures
which their ignorance of the language in which these were delivered made unintelligible to them.
At one time he only spared himself four hours for sleep and two for meals and recreation.
The rest, apart from the unavoidable attendances at divine service, the compulsory chapels of a later
day, was devoted wholly to his books. He had the blended fervor and patience of the true scholar.
Those were their days when the new learning was, by seeming contradiction,
turning men's thoughts more and more towards the wisdom of the ancient world.
For centuries the Greek authors had been read, where read at all, in Latin translations.
Now scholarship had rediscovered that wonderful tongue of antiquity which in our days
has been in danger of some neglect as a musty, dusty heritage,
but which to Erasmus and his followers was an enchanted key to the doors of all knowledge,
the hallmark of advanced, ever-advancing knowledge.
Of Roger Ascham, some 12 years Dee's senior and himself a St. John's man,
we hear that his lamp was often burning before daybreak,
that he curtailed his sleep to study Greek.
We can be fairly sure that Dee himself had a like habit.
In 1546, he was appointed under-reader of Greek,
at the newly founded Trinity College,
where Robert Pember, Ascham's tutor, was principal reader in the same sense.
subject. Dee was also made a fellow of Trinity, and earlier in the same year he had graduated
as BA at his own college. A curious little incident may be recorded here, since it has something
of the prophetic about it. The Greek students at Trinity, the pupils, of course, of Pember and Dee himself,
were to give a representation of the Paxe of Aristophanes, and the young under-reader, then but a youth of
19, took upon himself the task of stage management and planned a realistic stage effect, the
actual assent or flight of Trugaeus, the vine dresser, mounted on his great scyrab or dung beetle,
from the stage to the palace of Zeus, situated somewhere in the roof.
The mechanical contrivances by which this was accomplished was probably suggested to D
by the accounts he had read of the devices of the Athenian stage, devices which, as we know,
were of the crudest description, such, for instance, as the use of the upper windows at which
an actor could suddenly appear, or of high ledges to which, when he represented a supernatural being,
he could be hoisted by a crane. It is incredible that an Athenian audience should have estimated
such obvious illusions at more than their face value. Indeed, historians are fond of reminding us
that to eke out such scanty effects and to obtain the correct dramatic thrill, a strong imagination
must have been necessary in the spectators. D's audience seems to have used its imagination
in a different and more disastrous manner.
It was, we are told, this piece of boyish ingenuity and clever handicraft
that gave rise to the first of those rumors of sorcery,
whose vain reports, as Dee himself calls them,
which were so long destined to darken our scholar's reputation
and, more than once, to endanger his life.
Very likely the reproach was at first only flung at him as a jest by some fellow scholar.
But in those days, sorcery was too serious a matter to make a jest of.
we sometimes loosely supposed that the medieval superstitions concerning witchcraft and black magic had died down in tudor times and that their notorious revival under the learned fool james i was a new and dreadful development due to him and his fanaticism
it is true that in the all too eventful reigns of henry the eighth and his sons and daughters the fear of sorcery was kept somewhat in the background owing to the multitude of other causes for fear the frenzy against heresies seditions and treasons
and the many more convenient pretexts for putting unpopular people to death.
But the belief in sorcery remained a dreadful reality.
An act against sorcery, with terrible penalties attached to his practice, stood in the statute book.
In 1541, D's last year at Chelmsford, a certain Welsh minstrel had been denounced as a false
prophet and put to death on that charge.
The mere claim to any sort of supernatural powers might become at any time unspeakably dangerous
to the claimant, so we can easily understand how the just of Dee's friends might turn to a weapon
for his enemies, and how he must have resented and feared the imputation. At first, however, it could
have done him but little harm. He had in those days more friends than enemies, and moved in an
academic society which popular superstition could not absolutely dominate. What he himself
calls his boyish attempts and exploits scholastical, one for him much favorable notice,
and his energies led him on to ever greater efforts and achievements.
About this time he began to be occupied with practical astronomy
and took countless observations of the heavens.
Then, in May of 1547, his 20th year,
his increasing thirst for knowledge carried him to the low countries,
to the great University of Louvain,
the resort of so many learned men, mathematicians, and philosophers.
Among the friendships he made at that time,
that with the famous Gerardus Mercator seems to
have been the most fruitful and significant. Mercator is remembered even by the general reader as the
originator of a method of cosmographical projection in which latitude and longitude are indicated
by straight instead of curved lines to serve the purposes of navigation and steering by compass.
Dee brought back with him to England and to his university two of Mercator's globes, as well as
some astronomical instruments newly devised, which he presented to Trinity College.
His stay at Cambridge was short. Indeed, he seems to have returned there chiefly to take his MA degree
and to obtain from the authorities a written testimonial to his character and scholarship,
with which he could return to Louvain, where he was formerly entered as student in the summer of 1548.
The University of Louvain, founded in 1426 by John Duke of Brabant,
was, as Rastel tells us, one of the earliest and for a time by far the most famous home of the New Learning in Europe.
its federation of colleges included the collegium trillinge or college of three tongues for the study of greek latin and hebrew and its system of comparative honors which it seems to have been the first university to develop was a spur to the ambitious and promising scholar
it will be remembered also that such a scholar had in those days an advantage that he does not enjoy quite so freely now no university of europe but was a kind of native land to him in all of them the teaching was conducted
in a tongue which he already knew, the Esperanto of the learned Latin.
The young clerk from Cambridge, who had already friends from the town, found at Louvain a congenial
environment and gained, we are told, a great reputation as a mathematician and philosopher.
Mathematics, we can note in passing, were far more philosophical than they are in our time.
The teaching of Pythagoras as to the mystical meaning of numbers had deeply impressed medieval
scholasticism. The propositions of Euclid were often treated as parables,
and became the basis of conjectures and theories concerning those spiritual bodies of which the geometrical were types and shadows.
The mathematician of that day was no cut-and-dry materialist.
He thought, dreamed, and speculated from the visible to the invisible, guided therein by the maxim of St. Thomas Aquinas,
that the sources of knowledge are two, reason and revelation.
These studies at Louvain must have done much to feed his interest in occult matters.
In alchemy and astrology, he was now an eager explorer, nor does he seem to have been troubled
here by any reproach of sorcery.
Louvain had been indeed the home and refuge of the great alchemist Cornelius Agrippa, who had acted
as secretary and librarian to Margaret of Parma, and whose great book De Occulto Philosophia
had been published at Antwerp in 1531.
The opinions of Agrippa, who in this book defends the practice of magic as one of the lawful ways
by which man can attain to a knowledge of God and nature,
evidently made a lasting impression upon the restless yet profoundly religious mind of D.
Throughout his life, this view of occult practices as being no hindrance to a devout faith,
and in some cases a positive aid to it, remain strong and clear in him.
But of this we will have occasion to speak at more length later on in his story.
At Louvain, occultism was but one of his many interests.
He taught logic, arithmetic, and the use of the work.
globes and was visited by great men, a noble crowd, as Isaac Disraeli calls them, from the
court of Charles V, then resident at Brussels. He himself, narrating years afterwards to Queen Elizabeth's
commissioners the story of those proud days, says that his fame had even wider wings. Beyond the
Seas was a good opinion conceived of my studies mathematical and scholastical, and probably those
who saw and spoke with him conceived a good opinion of more than his attainments. Albury described
him even in his worn old age as a singularly handsome man. In youth he must indeed have been goodly to
look on, with that tall, slender figure of his, regular chiseled features, fair skin, and bright color.
The melancholy, austere expression with which the portrait in the Ashmolean Museum has familiarized
us could not have been natural to him then. Among his supernormal gifts, we cannot reckon
pre-vision of his own misfortunes, and it must have been full of self-confidence and exuberant hope that,
summer of 1550 just after his 23rd birthday, he left Louvain and set out on his homeward journey to
England, pausing on his way at Paris, the seat of another great university, and an ideal showcase
for a scholar of parts. In Paris, Dee tarried for some months. His fame had preceded him there,
and he was able, during his stay, considerably to add to it. At the College of Reims, one of the
University Federation of Forty-odd colleges, and named after its founder, Gide Roy, Archbishop of Reims,
he gave a course of lectures on Euclid, free to all who chose to attend,
an innovation in the educational methods of those days.
We have already spoken of the philosophical and mystical element
that the scholars of the time discerned in mathematics.
In D's teaching, this element must have bulked very large,
even as we know it did in the preface,
which he wrote in later years for the first English edition of Euclid.
A great audience flocked to hear him.
The hall of the college would not hold the eager,
crowd, and many climbed the outer walls and looked in at the windows.
The university grew anxious to keep this brilliant bird of passage.
Dee was offered a professorship of mathematics and a stipend of 200 crowns,
but mere routine work, however honorable, was never, either now or later, greatly to his
mind.
He refused the post and pursued his journey toward England, where he probably knew that Sir John
Cheek, another of the Greek scholars of St. John's College, and now tutor to the young
King Edward the 6th, was ready to stand his friend at court.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer by G.M. Hort.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 2. There is no actual warrant for the very general belief that Dee took at Louvain,
the doctor's degree which had not been conferred on him at Cambridge. The chances are that
the title doctor, so inseparable for,
from his name in afterlife and in the popular idea of him,
was merely bestowed in its original complementary sense
when it had become evident that he was verily and indeed doctus or learned.
As doctor, he was doubtless known at the Court of Edward V.
Towards the close of the year 1551, Sir John Cheek introduced him to Secretary Cecil
and accepted on behalf of his royal pupil two manuscript treatises on astronomical subjects,
which Dee, already an industrious writer, had dedicated to the
the young king. A yearly pension of a hundred crowns was now granted him by Edward. This was exchanged,
not very profitably, as it afterward appeared, for the lay rectorship of Upton-on-severon in Worcestershire,
and Long-Ladenham in Lincolnshire. Soon after we hear of Dees refusing the offer of a lectureship
in mathematical science at the University of Oxford. He was seemingly content with his income from
the aforesaid rectorships, and with the patronage of the Duchess of Northumberland,
which he enjoyed at this time writing at her request,
a treatise on the cause of tides and another on the heavenly bodies.
The Duchess's ill-fated husband, the father-in-law of Lady Jane Gray,
is better known to the general reader as an ambitious politician than as a literary student.
But he was actually a man of considerable culture, a friend of Ashkenes,
and for a short time, Chancellor of the University of Cambridge.
D may well have believed that, in the shadow of such powerful patrons,
he would be able to live a life of learned leisure, independent of formal appointments,
and devoted more and more to his favorite lines of study.
What those lines were and how increasingly he was attracted to them was soon to appear.
In 1552, Jerome Chardin, the famous physician of Padua, visited England and lodged at the
house of Sir John Cheek, where Dee must frequently have seen and talked with him.
Cardan was then in his prime, an occultist, surrounded by all the mysterious glitius,
glamour of Padua, the supposed school of the necromanic art, with an intense belief in his
own powers and a keen commanding intellect. He had been invited to prescribe for the young king,
whose health gave increasing anxiety, and since astrology was then a recognized aid to medicine,
he drew the horoscope of the royal boy. His report was cautious enough. He prophesied the
possibility of a long life if certain dangers from grave illnesses could be surmounted,
but to Sir John Cheek himself an astrologer, and to Sir John,
john's learned young friend the english scholar of louvain we can easily imagine that he spoke more freely both on this and on kindred matters d was considerably chardin's junior and may well have looked up to him with something of a disciple's reverence
eager to learn with the italian on his part would not have been unwilling to teach the range of their discussions may be guessed when we remember the supernormal powers that shardin claimed to possess and to exercise at will he could he declared project his soul out of a
body. He had a peculiar kind of clairvoyant vision. He practiced divination and dreamed prophetic
dreams. Also, and this is a fact particularly significant in the light of D's after history,
Cardam believed himself to be accompanied by a genius or guardian spirit, like the Damon of Socrates,
which gave him counsel and assisted him in his undertakings. At the same time, he was a bold and
independent thinker, by no means credulous nor bound by the accepted superstitions of his time. For instance,
he confidently pronounced witchcraft to be a form of insanity,
and in physical science and his own profession of medicine,
he anticipated many modern theories and methods.
The whole life of this remarkable and in his last year's unfortunate man
is of unusual interest,
but we are here concerned only with his influence
on the gentler, less enterprising spirit of D,
and with the stimulus and inspiration his companionship
must have given to the younger man.
From this time, the bent of D studies is no longer in doubt,
henceforth we see him committed for good or ill to the pursuit of occult knowledge.
The troubles following on the death of Edward V.
6th, which took place soon after Cardan's return to Italy, could not have failed to distress
and disturb the peace-loving scholar.
Northumberland's tragic fate must have been also a blow to him, but the new queen
seems to have been kindly disposed to the son of Roland Dee, and she had sufficient
culture to respect and patronize his learning.
Apparently, Dee was invited by the queen to draw her horoscope.
At any rate, he did draw it, and in due time, that of her Spaniard bridegroom also.
The favor, however, of the elder sister was not destined to advance his fortunes very far.
His eyes and thoughts were already turning toward the younger, and soon with the connivance
of her personal servants, the young astrologer royal, entered into correspondence with
the Princess Elizabeth in her semi-captivity at Woodstock.
It was inevitable that he should wish to know what the story was.
stars predicted for her future, whether to the daughter of Anne Boleyn a better fate was promised
than to the daughter of Catherine of Aragon, inevitable also that Elizabeth should be eager to hear
anything that could raise her hopes, or at least allay her fears. D. drew her horoscope,
then seemingly was imprudent enough to show her that of her sister, and to discuss with her the
differing aspects of the planets in the two maps. Such discussions in the case of royal personages
are easily suspected to be treasonable,
and again we hear the ominous cry of black magic,
more dangerous now,
and urged with a more malignant will.
There is a wild tale of children whom Dee had bewitched,
and even of enchantments directed against the queen's life.
Dee's lodging in London were searched,
and his papers in person seized.
All the cumbers machinery of the law was brought against him,
and even after he had been acquitted by the Star Chamber on the charge of treason,
it seemed as if the popular accusation of heresy
would give his enemies their will.
He was very near the flames,
with him in the Bishop of London's prison,
sharing his room and his very bed
with one Barthlet Green,
a meek religious man,
but a suspected heretic,
and to his inexpressible horror,
Dee saw his companion in misfortune
dragged forth to his terrible doom.
The passionate sympathy he showed
could have done his own cause little good,
but it is to Mary's credit
that she recognized
that there was no substantial evidence against
He had, as Disraeli phrases it,
no leisure to become a heresy arc.
And though he doubtless held but loosely by the faith in which he had been brought up,
he could have had no violent animus against it.
His learning and divinity seems even to have won the confidence of Bishop Bonner,
though the story that he assisted the bishop to examine some suspected heretics
is now generally discredited.
When set at Liberty again, Dee occupied himself for a while with projects for founding a state
National Library, and he drew up and presented to the Queen a supplication for the recovery and
presentation of ancient writers and monuments. His own library was by this time considerable, so too,
in spite of or perhaps because of his late misfortunes, was his reputation as an astrologer and a
sage. The rest of Mary's troubled reign passed for him peacefully enough. He lodged in London,
though we do not know in what quarter, pursued his studies and eked out the modest income that
came from his rectorships by drawing horoscopes and giving astrological advice to people of all
classes who came to consult him. In 1558, Queen Mary died, and her younger sister, remembering the
sage whose prophecies had beguiled her dark hour, at once sent for Dee to come to court and to
calculate a favorable day for her crowning. D named January 14, 1559, and was, from this time on,
as his biographer, Miss Charlotte Fell Smith, expresses it.
continually busied about one thing or another at the fancy of the queen this was not perhaps in itself undesirable d's attachment to elizabeth seems to have been quite sincere and he was never unwilling then or later to come at her bidding to give his judgment on any strange circumstance which troubled her
such as the discovery in lincoln's infields of a wax image of herself with significant pins driven through its heart the appearance of a great comet and so on but elizabeth had much of the tutor close-fistedness and her astrologer's services were not substantially repaid
and he seems to have grown weary of his ambiguous position it is also possible that the statute against sorcery a re-enactment of the former statute of henry the eighth passed in fifteen sixty two had some influence on his desire again to leave london
Sir Walter Scott and other authorities think this act was chiefly aimed against those who falsely pretended to be magic
and it was not intended to convict anyone seriously of sorcery, but a man who had been twice accused of black magic may well have felt uneasy while such legal machinery was in motion.
Dees expressed object in this new journey abroad was to take to the great printing press of Antwerp some of his more important manuscripts,
among them monas hieroglyphica.
That curious Kabbalistic treatise on the elements which Mr. Arthur Waite has reminded us
had much to do with the later tradition of Dee as the founder of the Rosicrucian Brotherhood.
The tradition, however, as Mr. Waite shows, is quite spurious,
and in any case the monas, an unpractical mystical work which says little or nothing
of the means by which alchemy was to attain its ends, cannot be said to support it.
In these dissertations on the primal monad, the mortal and immortal,
mortal atom, and the horizon of eternity, we are in the region of pure theory.
Later writers employed the symbols used by D in their own utilitarian alchemical works,
and D got the credit of the association.
But the monas, useless as proof of D's Rosicrucianism, has a value of another kind.
It serves to show that its author, however, under stress of circumstances in later life,
he may have prostituted his gifts and used spiritual things for material ends,
was really unworldly, a lover of wisdom for wisdom's sake, a dreamer and a thinker.
The book was dedicated to the Emperor Maximilian II, and Dee presented him with a copy,
which was apparently graciously accepted.
On June 1564, its writer returned to England.
He was kindly received by the Queen, who, as he says, deigned to become a scholar in his book,
and greatly comforted and encouraged him.
preferment however though promised did not come and in the preface which d wrote for henry billingsley's
elements of euclid published by an english press in 1570 the disappointed scholar bitterly laments the reproach
and suspicion under which he still labors honest students and modest christian philosopher he significantly says
are counted as magicians and conjurers he that seeketh by st paul's advertisement in the creature's
properties and wonderful virtues to find just cause to glorify the earth
eternal and almighty creator, is condemned as a companion of hell hounds and a caller and conjurer of wicked,
damned spirits. This sounds preposterous language to be applied to one so high in royal favor as
D then was. Even in those days of ferocious superstition, the violent prejudice against him and the
dark construction persistently put upon all his actions seem in need of some explanation. In the preface,
he infers that it is his scientific studies and experiments, so much beyond his age, that have blackened
his character in the popular eye, and there is, beyond doubt, considerable truth in this.
But as all the learned men of his time did not suffer, even among the ignorant, the same dark
reproach, and as astrology and alchemy had, with some reservations, a recognized place among
the sciences, we must find the explanation of Dee's peculiar popularity in his increasing
obsession with what we now call the psychic. In the atmosphere of mystery which surrounded his
attempts to develop those supernormal powers which he believed to exist in man and to be capable of
lawful use. One of the faculties which he believed that he himself possessed was that of discovering
hidden treasure. He offered to use this in the service of the state and told Cecil, now Lord
Burley, that if he were allowed to exercise his gift under the protection of the royal letter
patent, he would do his utmost to discover mines of gold and silver for her grace's only use.
It is to be remembered that the ancient belief that treasure buried in the earth was in the keeping of demons, and only to be discovered by their help, still influenced the opinion of those days in regard to treasure hunting.
The statutes against sorcery made the discovery of hidden treasure by the aid of magic, a penal offense, punishable if persisted in, by death itself.
D's anxiety for a license from the state is therefore very explainable, and there is a certain boldness even in his cautious proposal.
he practically sets aside the idea that such discoveries come under the head of magic and will see in them nothing but the lawful putting forth in a scientific well-trained way of supernormal powers with which human nature itself is dowered
elizabeth's astrologers still enjoyed the royal favor she was gracious and friendly in all their dealings with him and made him occasional gifts of money but his researches in which he now needed paid assistance were greatly hindered by lack of funds there is little doubt that it was his desire for knowledge
rather than avarice, which made him hanker for hidden hordes.
Little or nothing seems to have come of his request,
though a later grant to him of a royalty on mines may have been an indirect result of it.
Fortunately for him, he had now a roof of his own.
His widowed mother owned a house at Mortlake,
and this she practically seated to her son,
only reserving a set of rooms in it for her own use.
The Thameside village of Mortlake was then a village indeed,
near enough to London to make it easy of access by the river to which the Garden of Mistress Dee's house sloped down,
yet remote enough for the solitude and freedom from interruption,
that the scholar, now past middle age and sobered by several disappointments, desired to secure.
Here Dee worked ceaselessly in his library and laboratory,
and received with due dignity the visits of his royal patroness and of the great folk who sought his counsel.
Here also, in 1574, he married as his first wife,
a young woman of whom we know nothing save that she died in the following year and was buried in Mort Lake Churchyard on the very day of one of the Queen's informal unexpected visits.
Elizabeth on this occasion refused to enter the house of mourning, but dismounted from her horse in a field nearby, in order that Dee might show her the curious properties of a convex mirror.
After being a widower for two years, Dee married Jane Fromond, Lady in waiting to Lady Howard of Effingham, who was to be the mother of his eight children, and his face,
and beloved companion for many years, though she was considerably his junior. About a month before her
eldest grandchild's birth, which happened on his father's 52nd birthday, Mistress Dee made over to her
son in due legal form her house and lands at Mortlake. She continued, however, to live in the house,
where in 1580, Dee records her godly end at the age of 77. These years at Mortlake were not
unprosperous. D produced a good deal of literary work of a more practical sort,
wrote a treatise on naval defense, and made some geographical researches of which Berlis
spoke highly to the Queen. Navigators employed him to draw up instructions for their course,
and Elizabeth graciously received some charts and maps, which he had made with wonderful
skill and mathematical accuracy. These were designed to set forth the Queen's title,
Two Undiscovered Countries. He was also employed in making the calculations necessary for the
proposed reform of the calendar. But D was one of those in whom many normal tastes and
interests may exist and flourish without weakening the bonds of the inner life or the claims of
the ruling passion. It was still in darkness that he sought for light, from silence that he
asked a message. In his private diary, among numerous notes of domestic and political matters,
we get, ever and anon, a brief reference to things psychic, to some sign, real or supposed,
that had reached him from the other world.
he carefully records dreams mysterious wrappings and the like but these chance phenomena which might come unasked to any man do not satisfy his intense desire for real intercourse with the unseen an intercourse which he hopes to establish by other means
the diary from may twenty five fifteen eighty one has this significant entry we have now to consider at great length the nature of that clairvoyant vision and the reasons for which d sought to obtain it end of chapter two
Chapter 3 of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer
By G. W. Hort. This Livervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 3. D. had been now some 12 years in the Riverside House of Mortland.
They had not been obscure or isolated years, including, as they did, a journey abroad on some
unnamed business of the Queens, continual marks of court favor, and the frequent visits of
important people. Nor had they been mentally idle ones. Apart from his public services, the scholar
had been indefatigable in his researches, striving always to increase his store of good learning,
experimenting with his scientific instruments, and adding to his library of other men's wisdom,
manuscript works of his own. He had arrived at an age when the student and thinker looks for some
definite result of his study and thought, when he is, as a rule, sufficiently wearied with the path
to desire a sight of the gold.
There are not sufficient grounds to infer with some of his critics
that Dee was obsessed by the old alchemical ambitions
of finding the philosopher's stone and the elixir of life.
But the discovery of these and kindred secrets may well have appeared to him
as a possible solution of his financial embarrassments
and as an opening to a way of freedom for still greater quests.
A good deal of the work done at Mortlake must have had a practical purpose in view.
but Dee did not feel that the alchemical experiments made by him and the young assistants he hired to work with him were carrying him fast enough towards the wished-for heights.
The idea of access to certain stores of wisdom which God had withheld from man, but had presumably given to spiritual creatures of a higher order, had long attracted him and had gained, with advancing years, increasing power over his mind, as he himself pathetically phrased it to Edward Kelly in the first days of that notorious fellowship.
He had, long been desirous to have help in his philosophical studies through the company and information of the angels of God.
Here we see the influence of his astrological studies, studies which, when intelligently pursued, must needs widen the spiritual outlook.
Magic, vulgarly so called, he utterly repudiated.
He was, he declared, neither studied nor exercised in it.
And insofar as magic professes to accomplish or discover anything independently of the will and help of God,
he spoke the truth. In the strict sense of the word he never practiced magic. He merely practiced
certain means by which, as he believed, the spiritual part of him might be aroused and put into
communication with the spiritual world and those who inhabited it.
Christolomancy, the time-honored practice of inducing visions by gazing into a clear depth,
may well have commended itself to him as one of the most venerable of such means,
hallowed, as it were, by generations of devout seekers after hidden truths.
He had always, besides, taken a keen interest in the science of optics, then making such bold strides
in unexpected directions, and he already possessed some curious mirrors of which strange
possibilities he must have been aware, and over which he must have often mused. Had he himself
any faculty of seership, a fleeting glimpse of it is suggested by the entry in the diary.
But from the first it is evident that he knew his limitations, knew that this was a path
to knowledge he would not be able to tread alone. It is in accord with occult tradition that the
gift of vision belongs but to a few, and those few not necessarily of the highest intelligence
or profoundest learning. The seer, in his purely intuitive faculty, might well be the mere
instrument of lofty purposes, which he did not really understand or share. Experience also tended to
show that seership was a power more often displayed in the young and immature than in the old and
experienced. So C sought for a scryer among his youthful disciples and assistants, and he was soon
convinced that he had found what he wanted, in one Barnabas Saul, who, with the pious pomp and
circumstance always so dear to him, he proceeded to consecrate as his scryer.
He is a shadowy figure enough, this forerunner of a greater medium, this young lay preacher
turned a cultist, who, later under the terror of the law, was to repudiate the powers he
had claimed, and to slip back into the obscurity from which Dee had drawn him.
Saul served the doctor in the capacity of sear for a little more than two months.
His scrying was done with a globular crystal, described by Dee as my stone in a frame which was given me of a friend,
and placed according to a reported supernatural injunction where the rays of the sun could fall upon it.
When in later days Dee showed this stone to Kelly, he told him of his belief that certain good angels were answerable to it.
In other words, in the habit of manifesting either in or near it.
I was once willed by a scryer to call for the good name of Aniel to appear in that stone to my own sight.
This curious remembrance suggests Saul's power of conveying to Dee his own sense of vision,
but it also suggests the part played in the invocations by Dee's own will and knowledge.
It was certainly he and not Saul who identified the apparition with Aniel,
the answering angel who in the Talmudic tradition often made God's secrets known to men.
And it was quite as certainly Dee's subliminal mind that transmitted the strange,
significant message of Aniel that many things should later be revealed to Dee,
not through Saul, but through a seer who should succeed him and be assigned to the stone.
This prophecy was not long in fulfillment.
Early in the spring of 1582, Saul was brought before the judges at Westminster on some charge,
which, whether one of sorcery or not, involved perilous inquiries into his occult practices.
The young man thought it safer to disown his psychic gifts, and also, it seems, to slander
the sage in whose service he had been using them. He indeed parted on ill terms, but the unpleasant
episode had not quenched these devout desires. Only two days after Saul's departure, the scholar's
diary records the coming of another guest, who was introduced as the friend of a certain
Mr. Clerkson, and who gave the name Edward Talbot.
The stranger, who was about 27 years of age, I once began to speak of occult matters,
and when he declared himself willing and desirous to see or show something in spiritual practice,
the scholar eagerly produced the showstone, and told, as aforesaid, the tale of its powers
as an instrument of vision. In a short time the young man, kneeling devoutly before it, was praying
with apparent sincerity that sight might be given to him therein, while the elder, kneeling or sitting a little
apart, earnestly invoked the help of God and his good creatures for the furtherance of the action.
Of this seance, the first of many with the same seer, D. records with joyful triumph that,
before it had lasted fifteen minutes, an angel, Uriel, the spirit of light, appeared in the stone.
So began the long association of our scholar with one who was so deeply to influence his life.
It is an association which irresistibly recalls Hans Anderson's story of the learned man and
his ambitious shadow, which, by the dint of trading on its owner's kindliness, contrived to make
itself appear the more substantial and important personality of the two.
Edward Kelly, alias Talbot, there is considerable doubt as to which was his true name,
was a born adventurer with, as it would seem, the ingenious brain and personal charm which
many of his kind possess.
Miss Charlotte Fell Smith, in her life of deed, rightly says that sober fact and wild romance
are so inextricably mixed in Kelly's story that it is difficult to know what to believe.
But at any rate, the traditions of his career are hardly those that would have grown up
around an upright or high-principled man.
He had been an apothecary's apprentice, then, according to the commonly received story,
a forger and coiner, who, in the barbarous fashion of the times, had been condemned to lose his
ears and to stand in the pillory.
For some time before his coming to Dee, he had led a wandering life, in the course of which
his necromanic practices had included the digging up of a corpse in a Lancashire churchyard and the summoning
of the spirit of the dead man to reply to certain questions. Later, either in the wilds of whales or at Glastonbury
and Somerset, the Mystic Avalon, he was said to have found an alchemical manuscript of priceless value,
as well as some of the famous powder of projection, which the adepts used in their attempted
manufacture of gold. It would have been strange indeed if one in possession of such treasures,
and was so glib a tongue in talking of them and of his own psychic powers had failed of a welcome in the house at Mortlake.
Even if Dee guessed at the unedifying episodes in his new friend's past,
the elder man's natural charity and kindliness led him to discount them,
or even to regard them as an additional reason for showing benevolence to one who had already paid so dearly for his errors,
and who was so young and gifted enough to amend his life.
It was Mistress Dee who was troubled with premonitions of disqualance of disqualification.
disaster. Until now, despite the slanders of the ignorant and the many annoyances from lack of
money, the family life of the Dees had a certain tranquility and decent order. In the course of it,
an aged and honored mother had made a godly end. Children had been brought to the font of baptism,
faithful servants had been duly and justly paid, and the master of the house, for all the shadow
and black art that lay upon his studies, had been known as a pious and upright gentleman,
whom Barnabas Saul had not, after all, been able to involve in his recent disgrace.
Now, the faithful wife dimly felt that this comparative peace and safety was about to be withdrawn,
that her learned, unworldly husband was about to enter on a darker and more dangerous phase of study,
under the leadership of this penniless but ingenuous stranger,
with his strange air of authority and supernormal knowledge,
and his violent, moody temper, which he took so little pains to conceal.
She showed from the first a great dislike and distrust of Kelly, the name by which he soon came to be known in the household.
But his wife's resentment, though there was evidence that Dee was much grieved and disturbed by it,
was powerless against the growing influence of so wonderful and satisfactory a seer.
Angelic visions in the showstone came thick and fast now.
Angelic voices sounded often in the little inner room, once a bedchamber,
where the philosopher, withdrawn from the household's comings and going,
and denied to even important guests gave himself over more and more to the life of dreams.
There were not wanting all the magical accessories of ceremonial scrying.
By the end of the spring, Kelly had obtained, with D's aid and approval,
the so-called table of practice, on which the stone was to be set
with a red silk cloth of peculiar make spread under it,
and an inscribed tablet of wax to serve as a pedestal.
The legs of the table itself were also to be supported by similar but smaller,
tablets of wax. Then in late autumn came the acquisition of another crystal, called from the
circumstances of its giving the angelical stone. Towards sunset, in the November of 1582, in the western
window of the laboratory, there came to Dee's trance eyes a vision of a child angel, bearing in
his hands a bright object, clear and glorious, of the bigness of an egg.
Later, Dee spoke to the Emperor Rudolf of this crystal as a gift of Uriel, the spirit of light,
and said that it was of greater value than any earthly kingdom.
It is almost certain that this showstone, however obtained,
is the one still to be seen in the British Museum,
together with three of the inscribed tablets of wax.
Of these mystic seals it should here be mentioned that they bore,
on their upper sides the familiar cabalistic figure of interlaced triangles,
the so-called pentangle or seal of Solomon, together with the seven hidden names of God,
and the names of certain angels and spirits.
The table of practice, which was made of sweet wood and was two cubits or about three feet
in height, was also inscribed with sacred characters and with a mystic cruciform sign.
In the accounts of the sittings, we sometimes hear, moreover,
of the curtain of the stone, but this was seen in the crystal and belonged not to the material
but to the psychic accessories. The peculiar clouding of the stone which precedes the vision,
and follows after his departure, is familiar to all crystal gazers.
Stress has often been laid on the fact that Dee himself saw little or nothing. We have his own
regretful statement, you know, I cannot see or scribe, but although both the character of his
gift and the imperiousness of his temper made Kelly seem the leading spirit in this strange
partnership. D, the careful recorder, eager questioner, and learned interpreter was still, in a sense,
the dominant force. The complaint of Kelly that the spirits address him in learned tongues,
which are incomprehensible to him, is, to say the least of it, significant. And the angelic
visitants were certainly more likely to have used D than Kelly for such a message addressed to the
younger man as this, quote, thou, O youngling, but old sinner, why dost thy suffer thy blindness to
increase? Why not yield thy limbs to the service and fulfilling of the eternal verity?
Pluck up thy heart and follow the way that leadeth to the knowledge of the end.
End quote. Again, on an occasion of Dee's absence, we hear of Kelly's unsuccessful attempt to summon
a spirit known as Medicina, who had in Dee's presence, previously.
appeared in the crystal. We have to bear in mind that the phenomenon of these seances cannot be
explained as mere crystallimancy. The crystal purports to give no more than a fleeting vision
of some future or far-off event. It utters no voice, and the figures that move in its dream-like
scenes are silent as puppets. Here the part played by the crystal irresistibly reminds us of the
cabinet of modern spiritualistic seances. It is, generally speaking, a place from which materialized
spirits emerged, and to which, having made themselves known, and conversed for a while,
they again return. The language in D's Liber Mysterium, or Book of Mysteries, otherwise known as
the spiritual diary, in which the record of the transactions is set down, is often vague and ambiguous,
but at least it leaves us in no doubt that the spiritual creatures were heard as well as seen,
and that many of them manifested themselves outside the limits of the crystal.
D, if he never actually saw them, was conscious of their presence, and, as we have already said,
there were many occasions when he, not Kelly, seems to have been the mouthpiece of their messages.
There is no doubt that he also had mediumistic gifts, though not of the showier order.
Equally, there is no doubt that he did not knowingly employ those gifts in mere necromancy.
The spirits he wished to converse with were not spirits of the dead, but the living angels of God,
the higher ranks of creatures.
But although the scrying now took up so much time and thought, and was rewarded by such frequent visions,
it could not be said to be of much practical assistance in D's involved personal affairs.
We know that he expected that it would be, and that he repeatedly put questions to the apparitions upon matters that troubled him.
For instance, the refusal of the Queen's advisors to reform the calendar according to the calculations he, D, had made,
and the baffling characters of some manuscripts of Kelly's, which were supposed to be related to hidden treasure,
or the means of manufacturing gold.
Worldly anxieties were natural, since his debts at this time amounted to 300 pounds.
But the spiritual voices answered him but vaguely.
Even Michael, the spirit of wisdom, who frequently appeared in and sometimes outside the limits
of the crystal, said little that could be used for practical guidance.
He gave but mystic encouragements and counseled faith in patience.
Nor did the scryer invariably have sight of such heavenly apparitions.
Mary's spirits of fantastic dress and foolish speech
came and went and vexed the grave scholar with occasional ribaldries
yet withal Dee's confidence remained unbroken
His profound piety probably made him blame himself that knowledge was withheld
When the spirit known as Medicina finally said
That there were no secrets save those that were buried in the shadow of men's souls
He voiced Dee's own belief that God desired to hide nothing from the faithful secret
and to Kelly's frequent outbursts of angry impatience and threats to leave the unprofitable
scrying and to follow some study whereby he may live, the scholar answered with firm serenity
that he, for his part, was content to wait God's time.
The seances interrupted by occasional journeys of Kellys, ostensibly with the object of
seeking hidden treasure, had continued for about a year when there came a new development.
A distinguished foreign guest of the queen, the Polish nobleman, Aldebert's,
Lasky sent word to Mortlake that he desired to visit D to see his books and to talk with him
of magic, a subject of which he, Lasky, professed to be a student. The poll was by all accounts
and intriguing and not particularly honest politician who had taken French bribes in the matter of
the election of Henry III of France to the crown of Poland, and who had aspired to that crown himself.
His chief concern was to obtain money to further his ambitious schemes, and if money could be got by
magical means, he was willing to patronize magicians. But he was a handsome and gracious-mannered man,
and seems to have made a good impression at the house by the river, where, after having been introduced to Dee by
Lester, in the Earl's own apartments, he presented himself with only two attendants and graciously
tarried supper. Again, a month later, he came more ceremoniously by water, in a barge road by the
queen's men, and other visits followed. Dee had to apply to the queen for funds to entertain this new patron,
but the Polish prince professed to desire help from the spiritual creatures
and made flattering promises that he would reward their agents.
A spirit known as Mademi, who appeared about this time in the shape of a pretty female child
and another feminine spirit called Galva were questioned about the prince's political prospects.
In Lasky's presence also, Kelly professed to summon Lasky's own guardian angel
and to learn of him concerning his charge.
A good deal of practical information here mixes with mystical.
laski was told of burleigh's dislike of him and of possible danger if he remained in england d also received mysterious warnings through madimi of his own danger from spies who suspected the pole of treason and hated d as well
burleigh and walsingham were said to be joined together against d this house might be entered and searched in addition to these causes for anxiety d was getting seriously distressed by the behavior of kelly who was again threatening to depart
calling himself unfairly treated and throwing himself into such mad fits of rage that d sincerely believed him possessed by evil spirits to get rid of these a form of exorcism was gone through by
an interesting spiritual creature who in this and other matters shows d's mental influence on the seances and who on one occasion described d's faith and imagination as a kind of sight as a kind of sight
perfecter than Kelly's.
Kelly professed himself much benefited by the exorcism,
but his deliverance was short-lived.
For a little later, Dee's diary records another wild fit of rage.
Dee's habitual gentleness doubtless emboldened the younger man
to put no curb on his outbursts.
Kelly had another easy victim, too,
and the young wife, whom he had married,
shortly after his arrival at Mortland,
professedly at the command of the spirits,
and without even the pretense of affection.
Mistress Kelly also became an inmate of the philosopher's hospitable house, where Mistress Dee pitied and befriended her,
but must have felt her presence an additional burden on Dee's already heavily taxed resources.
Indeed, those resources were becoming more and more insufficient for what was required of them.
In his devotion to the crystal, Dee seems to have largely neglected his astrological work,
and did not, as in earlier years, add to his income by drawing the horoscopes of all in sundry.
Kelly put him to continual expense.
The queen was friendly, but the light of a royal countenance is not enough to live by.
Altogether, the hour seemed ripe for some new venture, such as had been of late foreshadowed
by the spirit voices.
Lasky was returning to Poland and was eager to take his new friends with him to employ the
supernatural wisdom to which they seem to have access, in furtherance of his fortunes
and the manufacturer of the much-needed gold.
It was a wild project, and there is some suggestion that derecognized its wildness,
but Kelly urged him on, and after all he was himself an incurable optimist and lover of noble patrons.
In 1583 on the afternoon of September 21, which he does not forget to note was the calendar feast of St. Matthew,
he left Mortlake, neglecting in characteristic fashion to arrange his financial affairs,
and apparently believing that his absence would not extend over more than a few months.
He was accompanied by his wife and three children, by the Kellys, and some servants.
The party was joined by Lasky and his own attendance, and together they set out for Holland, en route for Poland.
End of Chapter 3
Chapter 4 of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer by G.M. Hort.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 4
The long journey which began ominously enough with a narrow escape from shipwreck was continued overland with many hardships and delays.
Travel in those days of cumberous traveling coaches was not, at the best, easy,
and these travelers were further encumbered with women, children, and heavy baggage.
No wonder that, in a strange vision of Kellys at Lubbock, which they reached early in November,
an apparition in kingly raiment exhorted Dee to pluck up his heart and pine not away with
inward groaning.
This apparition, one of a company of eleven, seems rather to have been a phantasm of the living
than a messenger from the other world,
and to have represented some royal patron
who was waiting to receive and reward the travelers.
But Dee obviously distrusted the dazzling promises of riches and fame,
and asked him pathetic words for guidance.
Winter was setting in, and traveling was increasingly toilsome.
There was a suggestion that Lasky should go on before,
leaving the others to follow, when spring came.
But D thought this would be unfair to the prince,
and so they made shift to push forward.
In the vision at Lubeck,
Dee also received dark warnings
about the house at Mortlake,
left in the ineffective charge
of Mistress Dee's brother.
It may be that thy house may be burnt.
As a matter of fact,
though the house was still standing,
it was, at or about this time,
broken into by a hostile mob,
which destroyed all it could lay hands on
of the magician's precious books and instruments.
Still, no thought of returning
seems to have entered into Dee's mind. Early in February they reached Alaska, the prince's estate,
near Krakow. And here again came visions in the crystal, and presently news, through the voice of
Madimi, that all was well at Mortlake, and that the queen was still Dee's friend. At Krakow,
whether the travelers soon removed, Kelly, in his anxiety about money, tried to scry alone,
but was reproved and baffled by a spirit known as Nalvich. The description of this spirit,
by the way, recalls the young king Edward V. So possibly we have here an invocation of the dead.
Then followed some weeks of investigations after Dee's own heart. Nalvich and Gabriel spoke in some
mystical language and gave mystical information which Kelly did not understand and which filled him
with angry impatience. Again he declared that he would scry no more, and again Dee persuaded and
calmed him. The old Polish town of Krakow must have held much that was that was
was congenial and inspiring to Dee. The travelers lodged near a church, and the angelic voices
counseled to acts of ceremonial piety, such as churchgoing, and the observance of holy days,
things always dear to the pious scholar. At Crackow also came the curious vision of four castles,
which a spirit known as Ave interpreted as watch towers provided against the devil.
There was a castle for each point of the compass, and each was in the care of a mighty angel,
so that the whole world appeared in the vision as under the protection of these invisible citadals and their garrisons.
Much time and trouble were spent in drawing an elaborate diagram representing all this,
and Dee would have been content to hear much more of the good angels, their names and functions,
but Lasky was already restless at the lack of practical results,
and with a view to hastening these, insisted that Dee and Kelly should proceed to Prague,
and see the Emperor Rudolf, son of that maximin,
million, to whom Dee had dedicated his monas. To Prague they went accordingly in the late summer,
leaving the women and children in Crocow. But Rudolph, an eccentric and moody man,
heard with thinly veiled impatience Dee's long and rambling story of angelic visions,
and Uriel's reported message to himself to forsake his sins and turn to God, could have done
little to increase his cordiality. He was civil, but committed himself to nothing,
and in spite of the friendship formed with Dee by Dr. Curdeus, alerted member of
the council, and much kindness from the Spanish ambassador, the stay in Prague was not profitable.
It was, however, a prolonged stay. The women and children came on from Krakow, and in the spring of
54, another son was born to Dee, to be named Michael after the great archangel, and to receive
baptism in Prague Cathedral. Dee urged on Rudolph the great opportunity the emperor was neglecting.
He and Kelly, if Rudolph would but be their patron, would use the power of projection to enrich
him beyond the dreams of avarice. But Rudolph remained cold and, as courteous said to Dee,
regarded such things as impossible a belief without proof. In April 1584, return was made for a short
time to Poland, and at Crackow, Lasky presented his protegees to King Stefan Bathorai, generally known as
Stephen the Great. Stephen received them courteously, and some experiments with the crystal were
attempted in his presence, but these were apparently not successful.
At any rate, Stephen was even more unresponsive than Rudolph, and the wanderers had no choice
but to return once more to Prague. And here they were not to be suffered to rest. The Pope's
nuncio at Rudolph's court was thundering now against the scandal of their presence, and the
magicians were bidden to quit the city and the emperor's dominions within six days. At this crisis
of indignity, however, they found a new patriot and a new refuge. Count Wilhelm Rosenberg,
Visroy of Bohemia, interested himself with Rudolph in their behalf, and invited them to his castle in Tribal or Tribona, in South Bohemia.
This was a pleasant place surrounded by pleasant country, and Dee records with satisfaction the goodly chapel next my chamber, where the scrying was resumed.
A few months later, Dee received an invitation from the Emperor of Russia to enter his service and to come to live at his court at Moscow, but the scholar, though highly gratified, refused.
He desired no engagement that would bind him to a foreign prince, and under Rosenberg's protection
he was enjoying comparative peace and comfort. At Tribona, progress of a kind seems at last to have been
made. Kelly's much-talked of powder of projection is said to have produced gold, and Dee rejoiced
in his companion's triumph, and wrote of it exultingly to Walsingham. But now Kelly was finally
resolved to have done with the crystal gazing, the full record of which, both at Mortlake and abroad,
had been kept by Dee in the aforementioned book of mysteries or spiritual diary.
We may here say of this remarkable book that it is strange that anyone who carefully read it
could have subscribed to the theory, once popular, that Dee made use of the mystical method
of writing to conceal political secrets, and that he accompanied Lasky to Poland as Elizabeth's
agent and political spy. For the records could only have been kept by a true enthusiast,
a spiritualist of deepest sincerity in faith.
while kelly gazed into the showstone d would often be wrapped in prayer suspending his duties of noting what was seen and heard to murmur fervent intercessions for himself and others now in english now in latin and always indignified and reverent words
he could idealize the crudest details of the actions as when a certain spirit who appeared wearing jewelry asked if they thought her a jeweller's wife and d answered calmly that they thought her the messenger of him who purchased the jewels of eternal bliss
by the jewel of his precious blood.
Here and in many another place,
Dee does not seem far from the standpoint
of those mystics who allegorized
the philosopher stone itself
into a type of Christ.
But for Kelly,
spiritual studies were valuable
according to their power
of increasing material comforts.
He had never loved visions for their own sake,
and now they were an obvious waste of time
that might be profitably spent on transmutation.
In vain, the angelic voices told him
that his gift of clairvoyancy was of more worth than earthly treasure. He remained obdurate,
and Dee reluctantly consecrated with his habitual prayers for God's blessing on the work,
young Arthur D. and his ste. But Arthur, who was only between seven and eight years of age,
proved a very poor substitute. His bewildered child eyes saw nothing of significance in the crystal.
Then Kelly was persuaded to cry once more, but felt or professed to feel reluctance to tell his vision.
It was certainly a subject for shame, as Dee calls it, a hard and impure doctrine.
According to Kelly, Medimi, and a spirit known to them as ill, were persistently counseling
that he and D must share all things in common, not accepting their two wives.
Both in and out of the crystal they had appeared to him, conveying this message by dumb show
and by words.
And Uriel, the spirit of light, the angel of God, had also appeared with the same horrible counsel.
d was confounded he does not seem to have accepted the explanation which most spiritualists of his piety would accept nowadays namely that such evil advice came from demons disguised in the shape of angels of light
He preferred, after the first horrified protests, to view the idea as an allegory of closer spiritual union among the four, and he drew up a document which was a virtual consent in which the four signed.
He has been vehemently blamed for this, but, deluded as he was, we must acquit him of all evil intentions, and so far as we know, there was no attempt on the part of anyone of the four to carry out the impotent suggestion.
Kelly and Dee was fully occupied with more ambitious projects.
As Miss Fell Smith observes, he had no idea of sharing anything with his master.
The great secret of transmutation he kept jealously to himself,
and cunningly increased his own prestige with Rosenberg,
in whose eyes the older sage, with his slow, painstaking methods,
was gradually becoming a mere shadow of the younger, bolder one.
Dee was never invited now to share the alchemical counsels of the Count and Kelly.
The scrying in the Goodly Chapel was entirely at an end.
Saddened and humiliated, D's thoughts turned towards England,
whither Elizabeth had already invited him to return.
He wrote her a stately letter congratulating her on the defeat of the Spanish Armada,
then, in the spring of 1859, gathered his goods together,
and set out from Trebona with his family,
further now increased by the birth of another son, Theodore.
They had been at Trebona a year and a half.
Another year and three quarters was to elapse before they reached England,
so that their absence extended altogether to six years.
Dee fully expected Kelly to join and embark with him,
and after a sojourn of several months in Bremen,
waited long for the younger man at State, the port of Bremen.
But he waited in vain.
Kelly had no intention of returning to England,
and later return was put out of his power.
D. in England was to hear from time to time,
dazzling rumors of his success in the making of gold,
and of honors he could never have hoped to gain in his own native country.
Later came a story of swift and sudden disgrace, imprisonment,
and finally death in prison, possibly by violence, possibly by his own hand.
Characteristically, the old scholar mourned for his treacherous friend,
saw him sometimes in dreams,
and in his own last days spoke regretfully of the wondrous things they had experienced together.
But they never met again,
The Strange Fellowship was ended.
It is hardly necessary to say that of the annual sum of money promised to Dee when he left Bohemia,
not a penny was ever received.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 5
The Christmas of 1589 saw Dee Bauer
in his own house at Mortlake. A few days previously he had been graciously received by Elizabeth
in audience at Richmond, and the bitter memory of his humiliating experiences must have been somewhat
softened by her kindness, and by that of friends like Adrian Gilbert, who came at once to visit him
and to offer him help. But his financial situation was sufficiently alarming. He had lost,
through his own carelessness of not arranging for their payment to him when abroad, the small
revenues from his lay rectorhips. Many of his most valuable books and instruments had been destroyed
in the mob's attack on his house, and there was very naturally no sign of the promised supplies from
Bohemia. All his children were still young, and a few months after the return to Mortlake, another daughter
was born. Bestirring himself again in the quest for performance, Dee asked, as he had asked many
years before, for the mastership of the Hospital of Holy Cross, Winchester. But though influential
persons interested themselves on his behalf, the matter, like many other, came to nothing.
Full and free permission from Elizabeth to continue his alchemical experiments without hindrance
from the laws and force against magic was, however, a consolation of sorts. He still believed
that Kelly, with whom he had some correspondence, might eventually return, or failing that, that
he himself might discover the great secret of transmutation by his own efforts. He gave himself
earnestly to his old studies, in which the queen still took some gracious interest, and no doubt
he also earned something by the drawing of horoscopes and other astrological work. But it was a
painful struggle, as he himself says, he was stinted in food and clothing, devoured by usurers,
and daily put to shame. At last, towards the end of 1592, the queen in response to the queen, in response
to his desperate petition, sent to Mortlake two commissioners, Sir John Woolley, and Sir Thomas
Gorgeous, to hear his statement of affairs and to report to her. D drew up for them that lengthy
autobiographical statement known to us as the compendious rehearsal, and as he read it to them
in his library at Mortlake, we may well believe that his voice often faltered with emotion
and the sense of what he had suffered. He who had given his life to the pursuit of knowledge,
who had ever met all truth sincerity fidelity and piety to god queen and country saw himself in advancing age without provision for today or prospect for tomorrow yet as he said there was a very easy remedy for his lamentable case
the queen could bestow on him some office with due maintenance attached the queen did immediately send him a hundred marks and though preferment still hung fire there is evidence that the ecclesiastical prejudice against the spiritualistic philosopher was not
quite such a barrier to it as formally. Archbishop Whitgift showed him some respect and
kindness, and at length, through his good offices, Dee was recommended to the wardenship of Christ's
college, Manchester, and actually obtained it. The Manchester of Tudor Times was already one of the
most thriving and populous of English provincial towns, or, as they were then commonly called,
villages. Thanks to the Flemish weavers who settled there in the reign of Edward III,
it boasted a busy trade, a cloth mill, and a market. The college, a pre-Reformation foundation,
which had provided priests and other spiritual necessities for the growing town, had been
recently granted a new charter with the warden, four fellows, two chaplains, and choristers.
It seemed likely to provide a congenial retreat for a man of learning, and Dee took the long
journey northward in a mood of gratitude and hope, though it must have been somewhat of a wrench
to leave Mortlake, where, since the return to England, three little daughters had successfully
been born to him, and Michael, the son born at Prague, had died of some childish illness.
The old house, too, was full of memories of Kelly and the crystal gazing.
Dee may well have felt that he was leaving much of his real life behind him in the grave of those
four walls, which indeed is very much our feeling also.
As warden of Manchester College, Dee seems little more than a shadow of his true self.
That tall, slender figure in the scholar's loose-sleeved gown seems grotesquely out of place
with the busy Lancashire village for a background.
Soon he himself was complaining bitterly of the continual interruptions to his beloved studies
by the cares and cumberes of this defaced and disordered college,
which had not even gained him freedom from money troubles,
but, on the contrary, involved him in money troubles of its own.
own. The revenues had sadly shrunk and were, through the continual disputes over tiths and lands
still shrinking. The warden was still supposed to be in priest's orders, and D, as a layman, had to pay
curates to fulfill such priestly duties as had survived to Anglican times. And in the society
into which he was now thrown, there was little demand for the gifts which he esteemed above all
others, and found his greatest happiness in using. The sleepy post-medieval college, and he was a
and the expanding township were both of them provincial in their own way.
Both had their own narrow bigotry.
The new warden received some odd tributes to his occult learning.
We hear of him as lending books on demonology out of his library to puzzle justices
to assist them in examining and sentencing supposed witches,
and as being consulted about a case of possession in which one heartily, a conjurer,
had made himself notorious.
These curate the Reverend Matthews,
Palmer, denounced as imposter, Hartley's attempts to cast the evil spirits out of a poor woman
and her children, who were grievously troubled with Fitz, and Dee himself sent for Hartley
and sharply rebuked him, with the result we are given to understand of a temporary
improvement. Dee, however, did not himself attempt the act of exorcism, but left it to a
godly preacher. Probably his medical knowledge told him that epilepsy and not Satan was at the root
of the trouble. With popular superstition and ignorance, he had never had more sympathy than the majority
of learned men. The struggle to live went on. The fellows of the college do not seem to have been
on very good terms with their warden, and there were continual disputes with them and with the tenants of the
college lands. The warden, however, did a little farming of his own land, and visits from friends
from London as well as a lengthy stay he himself made in London to transact college business,
varied the monotony of the provincial years.
The happenings of this later period are not narrated with the old fullness in his diary,
but we get occasional glimpses of his inner life.
Still he records dreams which may possibly prove prophetic.
Still he meditates on occult works, which he yet means to write,
and on the triumph that may yet crown his alchemical researches.
We know also that he had occasional resort to the crystal,
sometimes with the aid of a Mr. Francis Nichols,
who had been one of his astrological pupils at Mortlake,
sometimes with Bartholomew Hickman,
the son of an old acquaintance,
whose mediumistic powers deed had apparently detected years ago,
when Bartholomew was a lad in his father's house.
So the years drifted on.
Theodore, the boy born at Tribona,
followed Michael to an early grave,
but the other young D's were growing up.
Some time in 1602, Arthur,
the child once consecrated as Scrier,
who in later life studied in practice medicine,
and became the close friend at Norwich to Sir Thomas Brown, married the daughter of a Manchester
Justice of the Peace, and Dee had the horoscopes of the young grandchildren to draw.
Arthur seems to have been an affectionate and dutiful son, and of great comfort to the old scholar
in the still darker times that was to follow on this interval of peace.
The spring of 1603 saw the death of Elizabeth, and with her died all hope of further preferment.
Indeed, Dee seems to have believed his life in actual danger,
from the new act against witchcraft,
and the horrible zeal with which James and his advisors administered it.
He drew up in passion petitions to the king
to be cleared of the infamous slanders
that represented him as the conjurer and caller of devils.
They went unregarded, but there was no definite attempt to molest him.
It may even be that James felt a certain respect for him
or feared his mysterious powers.
There is a story, though not a very well authenticated one,
that Dee or Kelly had foreseen in the crystal the gunpowder plot, the faces of the traitors,
and the intended fate of the king in Parliament.
At any rate, the new government seemed content to leave the old man to die in peace.
One sharp in crowning sorrow was to follow.
In the spring following Elizabeth's death, the plague came to Manchester,
perhaps, as Miss Fell Smith conjectures, some of her children were also victims.
At least we do not again hear anything of the three younger girls.
catherine the eldest survived to minister tenderly to the strickened man round whom the mortal shadows were thickening whose long life vulgarly supposed to be one of the results of alchemical skill was fast drawn to its close
but there was to be light at even tide with every possible door of worldly advantage closed and with even the manchester wardenship perforce resigned through broken health and increasing infirmities the old hope of intercourse with the invisible was rekindled
About a year after Elizabeth's death, while Dee lay ill in London, there came to his scrier,
Bartholomew Hickman, a sight of God's blessed creature, Raphael, the angel of healing,
and Dee received comfort and reassurance about his physical state.
In the summer of the same year, when the old man, with his daughter, was lodging in an inn
at Westminster, the vision came again, bringing this time a more definite message of health and vigor
restored, and of a long journey to friends beyond the sea, where all that Dee had so long desired
to know should be maimplained to him. The secrets of transmutation, and greater secrets still.
True to his old careful habit, Dee had many questions to ask about the manner and companions
of that journey. His weakening mind is still occupied with many trifling details, yet at the last,
all doubts and troubles seem of a sudden to be resolved.
At Raphael's bidding, he renounces his anxiety about the monies that he should have received from the Emperor Rudolf.
The emperor of all emperors will be thy comfort.
Thou hast no more need of Rudolph, says the angelic voice.
It has been well observed that in these last seances it is the voice, not the appearance of the messenger, of which we hear most.
In earlier years, Dee, who could neither see nor scry, was troubled at his limitations,
and resorted eagerly to clairvoyance, to transcend them.
He had never really quite believed that the vision of faith and imagination was perfecter
than Kelly's gift of seership.
Now it is his own psychic powers that seems summoned and aroused.
The subjective has become of more importance than the objective.
He sees with the soul.
The words of Raphael were not long in fulfillment.
Dee had truly no more need of Rudolph.
nor of any earthly thing and in december sixteen o three the long journey beyond the seas of time was indeed taken it is pleasant to think that the love and care of a faithful little circle of his son and daughter of bartholomew hickman and another disciple john pontoys
surrounded him to the last and that death came to him at quiet mortlake where in spite of all the slanders his memory was not unhonoured by the village folk one of whom spoke of him to his kinsman aubbery as the great peacemaker among quarrelsome neighbours and as a mighty good man
we have spoken of the injury inflicted on d's posthumous reputation by popular prejudice and ignorance perhaps also occultists and mystic themselves are inclined to give him less than his due
He so often fell short of his lofty aims, and it is easy to forget how lofty those aims and
truth were, and how his very failures were in part the failures of one whose vision was beyond
that of his age. His very knowledge and eager, speculative mind often proved a hindrance
to practical attainments. It has been said that Dee was a spiritualist rather than an occultist,
but even so he brought to his spiritualism some high, far-reaching thoughts from his occult state.
studies. He investigated spiritualism as an astrologer who had not forgotten the nobler lessons of his
art, and his belief in the might of stars and angels, saved him from too blind a belief in the
wisdom of the spirits of the earthbound dead. His own words to Kelly aforequoted are his own
best apologia. It was in truth the company and information of the angels of God that he sought,
and if he did not always take the best means to attain it, his desire that infinite is
which a great mystic has described as more pleasing to God than any finished work, burned
high and true to the last. In an age at once superstitiously credulous and superstitiously
skeptical, he upheld the great tradition that human nature itself contains the germs of
supernormal faculties which, rightly understood and developed, may establish a real communication
with the spiritual world. We may say with some justice that he himself did not use those faculties
to any great prophet.
But he passed on the torch.
Modern psychical research owes something to his memory.
End of Chapter 5.
End of Dr. John D. Elizabethan Mystic and Astrologer.
By G.M. Hort.
