Eliphas Levi, born Alphonse Louis Constant, (1810 75) was instrumental in the revival of Western occultism in the nineteenth century, and published several influential books on magic that are also reissued in this series. This posthumous publication (1896) is a translation by William Wynn Westcott, co-founder of the 'Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn', of an unpublished French manuscript by Levi, then owned by the spiritualist Edward Maitland. It includes eight of the author's drawings. Each short chapter outlines the meaning of one of the twenty-two tarot trumps and is followed by a brief...
Eliphas Levi, born Alphonse Louis Constant, (1810 75) was instrumental in the revival of Western occultism in the nineteenth century, and published se...
'A pioneer of modern anthropology', A. C. Haddon (1855 1940) contributed to the fields of embryology and evolutionary science before turning his interests to human civilisation and its history. In this work, first published in 1910, Haddon makes use of his wide-ranging knowledge of folk rituals and religious beliefs to introduce readers to basic principles of sympathetic magic, divination, talismanic powers and fetishism. A strong believer in the importance of preserving local religious practices and beliefs, Haddon uses the work to document customs from Britain to West Africa, America to...
'A pioneer of modern anthropology', A. C. Haddon (1855 1940) contributed to the fields of embryology and evolutionary science before turning his inter...
Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin (1805 71) is often called the father of modern conjuring. His name was later adopted by magician and escape artist Harry Houdini, whose highly sceptical expose of Victorian spiritualism is also published in this series. The best-known magician of his time, Robert-Houdin toured France, England and Germany, performed for Queen Victoria, and was sent to French Algeria by Napoleon III to demonstrate the perceived superiority of French magic to the local shamans. This book, originally published in 1868, is devoted primarily to coin and card tricks, but Robert-Houdin also...
Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin (1805 71) is often called the father of modern conjuring. His name was later adopted by magician and escape artist Harry Hou...
After the execution of the Samuels family known as the Witches of Warboys on charges of witchcraft in 1593, Sir Henry Cromwell (grandfather of Oliver Cromwell) used their confiscated property to fund an annual sermon against witchcraft to be given in Huntingdon (Cambridgeshire) by a divinity scholar from Queens' College, Cambridge. Although beliefs about witchery had changed by the eighteenth century, the tradition persisted. Martin J. Naylor (c. 1762 1843), a Fellow of Queens' College and the holder of incumbencies in Yorkshire, gave four of the sermons, on 25 March each year from 1792 to...
After the execution of the Samuels family known as the Witches of Warboys on charges of witchcraft in 1593, Sir Henry Cromwell (grandfather of Oliver ...
This is the final book written by the seventeenth-century occultist and alchemist, Thomas Vaughan (1621 66). Originally published under Vaughan's penname, Eugenius Philalethes, in 1655, the work found a new audience in the Rosicrucian circles of the nineteenth century, when William Wynn Westcott, Supreme Magus of the Society, republished the volume in 1896 with a commentary by an associate, S. S. D. D. 'I have read many Alchemical Treatises', its annotator comments, 'but never one of less use to the practical Alchemist than this.' For its later readers, however, the value of the text lay in...
This is the final book written by the seventeenth-century occultist and alchemist, Thomas Vaughan (1621 66). Originally published under Vaughan's penn...
Chemist and illusionist John Henry Pepper (1821 1900) lectured at the Royal Polytechnic Institution in London, and incorporated experiments, illusions and magic lanterns into his popular science lectures. In 1862 he developed a stage-show illusion called 'the ghost'. This involved using strategically placed pieces of glass and specific lighting in order to create the illusion of ghostly figures on stage. The illusion was immensely popular in the second half of the nineteenth century it was visited by royalty, and Pepper's show toured to America, Canada and Australia. In this book, first...
Chemist and illusionist John Henry Pepper (1821 1900) lectured at the Royal Polytechnic Institution in London, and incorporated experiments, illusions...
This book, translated and edited by the occultist Samuel Liddell Mathers (1854 1918) and published in 1889, introduced to Victorian England an important work of Renaissance esoterica. Purportedly the deathbed testament of King Solomon to his son, distilling all the angelic wisdom he received in his lifetime, it provided its readers with detailed instructions in conjuring, divining and summoning God's power to work 'experiments', or spells. For Mathers, it represented 'the fountain-head and storehouse of Qabalistical Magic' and formed a central part of his efforts to lend scholarly...
This book, translated and edited by the occultist Samuel Liddell Mathers (1854 1918) and published in 1889, introduced to Victorian England an importa...
First published in 1869, this book describes the spiritualist activity of Scottish-born Daniel Dunglas Home (1833 86), who emerged as a medium in the United States in the wake of the Fox sisters' alleged 'spirit rappings' in the mid-nineteenth century. Written by the Irish journalist and politician Windham Thomas Wyndham-Quin, Lord Adare (1841 1926), who befriended Home in 1867, the book records Adare's observations of seventy-eight spiritualist sittings over two years, and reports verbatim the conversations between Home and the spirits with whom he was allegedly in contact. Adare also...
First published in 1869, this book describes the spiritualist activity of Scottish-born Daniel Dunglas Home (1833 86), who emerged as a medium in the ...
The philosopher and literary author Isaac Taylor (1787 1865) published this book anonymously in 1836. The work is a development of two earlier works: Saturday Evening (1832) and Natural History of Enthusiasm (1829), all three attempts to provide a philosophy to deal with the major problems and spiritual questions of the day. The popularity of Physical Theory led to Taylor relinquishing his previous anonymity. The work is a religious and philosophically speculative exploration of the possible paths of knowledge to information regarding the future existence of human beings. Taylor believed that...
The philosopher and literary author Isaac Taylor (1787 1865) published this book anonymously in 1836. The work is a development of two earlier works: ...