За книгата ,,Мојот Велес,, на Никифор Смилевски


Книгата ,,Мојот Велес,, на  новинарот  Никифор Смилевски, кој на хартија е во пензија,  беше неодамна промоворана  во велешката  библиотека.  Во ова дело тој донесува 13 текста за дела, личности и настани од историјата на градот, помалку познати а кој авторот ги истражувал.  
Раскажува за Невенка  Вујиќ - голема љубов на Рацин, за поп Данаил, за последната фотографија на Коле Неделковски, за фотографиите на Пингов и Поп Јорданов  - солунските атентатори , за Андреја Дамјанов, првиот фотограф   велешанецот  Хаџи Косте, кој само  по 16 години од изумот на фотографот сликал со  него, за  првите македонски дипломати браќата Петкович родени во Башино село ...   
Оваа книга е исполнување на моето ветување, дека морам  нешто  да  дадам и  оставам за  мојот Велес.   Акцент е ставен на периодот  од  19-ти век, време на  преродбата, кое остави силен траг во  живеењето.   До податоците дојдов со читање на стари документи и преку разговори со нивните блиски - изјави авторот Смилевски, порано вработен како новинар дописник на Македонското радио од Велес.  Тој со неговите дела, остави силен траг во живеењето и историјата  на градот.  
Никифор е познат во македонската  јавност, оти  го истражуваше потеклото на македонските народни  песни а малкумина  знаеја дека личностите и настаните се вистински и постоеле.  Во оваа книга продолжува со пишувањето и истражувањето,    што  претставува значаен  момент од историјата на Велес . Сите негови книги донесуваат ретки истражувања кои на друго место не можат да се најдат -  рече  промоторот Марко Китевски.

abvedit четвртак, 31. октобар 2019.
The Cult of the Imperfect






STILL FROM TRAILER FOR CASABLANCA, 1942.

The Count of Monte Cristo is one of the most exciting novels ever written and on the other hand is one of the most badly written novels of all time and in any literature. The book is full of holes. Shameless in repeating the same adjective from one line to the next, incontinent in the accumulation of these same adjectives, capable of opening a sententious digression without managing to close it because the syntax cannot hold up, and panting along in this way for twenty lines, it is mechanical and clumsy in its portrayal of feelings: the characters either quiver, or turn pale, or they wipe away large drops of sweat that run down their brow, they gabble with a voice that no longer has anything human about it, they rise convulsively from a chair and fall back into it, while the author always takes care, obsessively, to repeat that the chair onto which they collapsed again was the same one on which they were sitting a second before.

We are well aware why Dumas did this. Not because he could not write. The Three Musketeers is slimmer, faster paced, perhaps to the detriment of psychological development, but rattles along wonderfully. Dumas wrote that way for financial reasons; he was paid a certain amount per line and had to spin things out. Not to mention the need—common to all serialized novels, to help inattentive readers catch up on the previous episode—to obsessively repeat things that were already known, so a character may recount an event on page 100, but on page 105 he meets another character and tells him exactly the same story—and in the first three chapters you should see how often Edmond Dantès tells everyone who will listen that he means to marry and that he is happy: fourteen years in the Château d’If are still not enough for a sniveling wimp like him.

Years ago, the Einaudi publishing house invited me to translate The Count of Monte Cristo. I agreed because I was fascinated by the idea of taking a novel whose narrative structure I admired and whose style I abhorred, and trying to restore that structure in a faster paced, nimbler style, (obviously) without “rewriting,” but slimming down the text where it was redundant—and thereby sparing (both publisher and reader) a few hundred pages.

So Dumas wrote for a certain amount per page. But if he had received extra pay for every word saved would he not have been the first to authorize cuts and ellipses?

An example. The original text says:


Danglars arracha machinalement, et l’une après l’autre, les fleurs d’un magnifique oranger; quand il eut fini avec l’oranger, il s’adressa à un cactus, mais alors le cactus, d’un caractère moins facile que l’oranger, le piqua outrageusement.

A literal translation would go like this:


One after another, Danglars mechanically plucked the blossoms from a magnificent orange tree; when he had finished with the orange tree he turned to a cactus, but the cactus, a less easy character than the orange tree, pricked him outrageously.

Without taking anything away from the honest sarcasm that pervades the excerpt, the translation could easily read:


One after another, he mechanically plucked the blossoms from a magnificent orange tree; when he had finished he turned to a cactus but it, being a more difficult character, pricked him outrageously.

This makes thirty-two words in English, in contrast to forty-two in French. A savings of roughly 25 percent.

Or take expressions such as comme pour le prier de le tirer de l’embarras où il se trouvait (as if to beg him to get him out of the difficulty he found himself in). It is obvious that the difficulty someone wants to get out of is the difficulty he actually finds himself in and not another, and it would suffice to say, “as if to beg him to get him out of difficulty.” More words saved.

I tried, for a hundred pages or so. Then I gave up because I began to wonder if even the wordiness, the slovenliness, and the redundancies were not part of the narrative apparatus. Would we have loved The Count of Monte Cristo as much as we did if we had not read it the first few times in its nineteenth-century translations?

Let’s go back to the initial statement. The Count of Monte Cristo is one of the most exciting novels ever written. With one shot (or with a volley of shots, in a long-range bombardment), Dumas manages to pack into one novel three archetypal situations capable of tugging at the heartstrings of even an executioner: innocence betrayed, the persecuted victim’s acquisition—through a stroke of luck—of a colossal fortune that places him above common mortals, and finally, the strategy of a vendetta resulting in the death of characters that the novelist has desperately contrived to appear hateful beyond all reasonable limits.

On this framework there unfolds the portrait of French society during the “Hundred Days” and later during Louis Philippe’s reign, with its dandies, bankers, corrupt magistrates, adulteresses, marriage contracts, parliamentary sessions, international relations, state conspiracies, the optical telegraph, letters of credit, the avaricious and shameless calculations of compound interest and dividends, discount rates, currencies and exchange rates, lunches, dances, and funerals—and all of this dominated by the principal topos of the feuilleton, the superman. But unlike all the other artisans who have attempted this classic locus of the popular novel, the Dumas of the superman attempts a disconnected and breathless state of mind, showing his hero torn between the dizziness of omnipotence (owing to his money and knowledge) and terror at his own privileged role, tormented by doubt and reassured by the knowledge that his omnipotence arises from suffering. Hence, a new archetype grafted on to the others, the Count of Monte Cristo (the power of names) is also a Christ figure, and a duly diabolical one, who is cast into the tomb of the Château d’If, a sacrificial victim of human evil, only to arise from it to judge the living and the dead, amid the splendor of a treasure rediscovered after centuries, without ever forgetting that he is a son of man. You can be blasé or critically shrewd, and know a lot about intertextual pitfalls, but still you are drawn into the game, as in a Verdi melodrama. By dint of excess, melodrama and kitsch verge on the sublime, while excess tips over into genius.

There is certainly redundancy, at every step. But could we enjoy the revelations, the series of discoveries through which Edmond Dantès reveals himself to his enemies (and we tremble every time, even though we already know everything), were it not for the intervention, precisely as a literary artifice, of the redundancy and the spasmodic delay that precedes the dramatic turn of events?

If The Count of Monte Cristo were condensed, if the conviction, the escape, the discovery of the treasure, the reappearance in Paris, the vendetta, or rather the chain of vendettas, had all happened within two or three hundred pages, would the novel still have an effect—would it pull us along even in those parts where the tension makes us skip pages and descriptions? (We skip them, but we know they are there, we speed up subjectively but knowing that narrative time is objectively dilated.) It turns out that the horrible stylistic excesses are indeed “padding,” but the padding has a structural value; like the graphite rods in nuclear reactors, it slows down the pace to make our expectations more excruciating, our predictions more reckless. Dumas’s novel is a machine that prolongs the agony, where what counts is not the quality of the death throes but their duration.

This novel is highly reprehensible from the standpoint of literary style and, if you will, from that of aesthetics. But The Count of Monte Cristo is not intended to be art. Its intentions are mythopoeic. Its aim is to create a myth.

Oedipus and Medea were terrifying mythical characters before Sophocles and Euripides transformed them into art, and Freud would have been able to talk about the Oedipus complex even if Sophocles had never written one word, provided the myth had come to him from another source, perhaps recounted by Dumas or somebody worse than him. Mythopoeia creates a cult and veneration precisely because it allows of what aesthetics would deem to be imperfections.

In fact, many of the works we call cults are such precisely because they are basically ramshackle, or “unhinged,” so to speak.

In order to transform a work into a cult object, you must be able to take it to pieces, disassemble it, and unhinge it in such a way that only parts of it are remembered, regardless of their original relationship with the whole. In the case of a book, it is possible to disassemble it, so to speak, physically, reducing it to a series of excerpts. And so it happens that a book can give life to a cult phenomenon even if it is a masterpiece, especially if it is a complex masterpiece. Consider the Divine Comedy, which has given rise to many trivia games, or Dante cryptography, where what matters for the faithful is to recall certain memorable lines, without posing themselves the problem of the poem as a whole. This means that even a masterpiece, when it comes to haunt the collective memory, can be made ramshackle. But in other cases it becomes a cult object because it is fundamentally, radically ramshackle. This happens more easily with a film than a book. To give rise to a cult, a film must already be inherently ramshackle, shaky and disconnected in itself. A perfect film, given that we cannot reread it as we please, from the point we prefer, as with a book, remains imprinted in our memory as a whole, in the form of an idea or a principal emotion; but only a ramshackle film survives in a disjointed series of images and visual high points. It should show not one central idea, but many. It should not reveal a coherent “philosophy of composition,” but it should live on, and by virtue of, its magnificent instability.

And in fact the bombastic Rio Bravo is apparently a cult movie, while the perfect Stagecoach is not.

“Was that cannon fire? Or is my heart pounding?” Every time Casablanca is shown, the audience reacts to this line with the kind of enthusiasm usually reserved for football matches. Sometimes a single word is enough: fans rejoice every time Bogey says “kid” and the spectators often quote the classic lines even before the actors do.

According to the traditional aesthetic canons, Casablanca is not or ought not to be a work of art, if the films of Dreyer, Eisenstein, and Antonioni are works of art. From the standpoint of formal coherence Casablanca is a very modest aesthetic product. It is a hodgepodge of sensational scenes put together in a rather implausible way, the characters are psychologically improbable, and the actors’ performance looks slapdash. That notwithstanding, it is a great example of filmic discourse, and has become a cult movie.

“Can I tell you a story?” Ilsa asks. Then she adds: “I don’t know the finish yet.” Rick says: “Well, go on, tell it. Maybe one will come to you as you go along.”

Rick’s line is a kind of epitome of Casablanca. According to Ingrid Bergman, the film was made up piecemeal as filming progressed. Until the last minute, not even Michael Curtiz knew if Ilsa would leave with Rick or Victor, and Ingrid Bergman’s enigmatic smiles were because she still did not know—as they were filming—which of the two men she was really supposed to be in love with.

This explains why, in the story, she does not choose her destiny. Destiny, through the hand of a gang of desperate scriptwriters, chooses her.

When we do not know how to deal with a story, we resort to stereotypical situations since, at least, they have already worked elsewhere. Let’s take a marginal but significant example. Every time Laszlo orders a drink (and this happens four times), his choice is always different: (1) Cointreau, (2) a cocktail, (3) cognac, (4) whisky—once, he drinks champagne but without having ordered it. Why does a man of ascetic character demonstrate such inconsistency in his alcoholic preferences? There is no psychological justification for this. To my mind, every time this kind of thing happens, Curtiz is unconsciously quoting similar situations in other films, in an attempt to provide a reasonably complete range.

So, it is tempting to interpret Casablanca the way Eliot reinterprets Hamlet, whose appeal he attributes not to the fact that it is a successful work, because he considers it to be among Shakespeare’s less felicitous efforts, but to the imperfection of its composition. According to Eliot, Hamlet is the result of an unsuccessful fusion of several previous versions, so the bewildering ambiguity of the main character is due to the difficulty the author had in putting together several topoi. Hamlet is certainly a disturbing work in which the psychology of the character strikes us as impossible to grasp. Eliot tells us that the mystery of Hamlet is clarified if, instead of considering the entire action of the drama as being due to Shakespeare’s design, we see the tragedy as a sort of poorly made patchwork of previous tragic material.

There are traces of a work by Thomas Kyd, which we know indirectly from other sources, in which the motive was only that of revenge; and the delay in taking revenge was caused only by the problem of assassinating a monarch surrounded by guards; moreover, Hamlet’s “madness” is feigned, the aim being to avert suspicion. In Shakespeare’s definitive drama the delayed vengeance is not explained—with the exception of Hamlet’s continuous doubts, and the effect of his “madness” is not to lull but to arouse the king’s suspicions. Shakespeare’s Hamlet also deals with the effect of a mother’s guilt on the son, but Shakespeare was unable to impose this motif upon the material of the old drama—and the modification is not sufficiently complete to be convincing. In several ways the play is puzzling, disquieting as none of the others is. Shakespeare left in unnecessary and incongruent scenes that ought to have been spotted on even the hastiest revision. Then there are unexplained scenes that would seem to derive from a reworking of Kyd’s original play perhaps by Chapman. In conclusion, Hamlet is a stratification of motifs that have not merged, and represents the efforts of different authors, where each one put his hand to the work of his predecessors. So, far from being Shakespeare’s masterpiece, the play is an artistic failure. “Both workmanship and thought are in an unstable condition … And probably more people have thought Hamlet a work of art because they found it interesting, than have found it interesting because it is a work of art. It is the Mona Lisa of literature.”

On a lesser scale, the same thing happens in Casablanca.

Obliged to invent the plot as they went along, the scriptwriters threw everything into the mix, drawing on the tried and tested repertoire. When the choice of tried and tested is limited, the result is merely kitsch. But when you put in all the tried and tested elements, the result is architecture like Gaudí’s Sagrada Familia: the same dizzying brilliance.

Casablanca is a cult movie because it contains all the archetypes, because every actor reproduces a part played on other occasions, and because human beings do not live a “real” life but a life portrayed stereotypically in previous films. Peter Lorre drags behind him memories of Fritz Lang; Conrad Veidt envelops his German officer with a subtle whiff of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. Casablanca pushes the feeling of déjà vu to such a point that the viewer even adds elements to the film that only appear in later films. It wasn’t until To Have and Have Not that Bogart took on the role of the Hemingway hero, but here he “already” reveals Hemingwayesque connotations for the simple fact that Rick has fought in Spain.

Casablanca stages the powers of narrativity in the natural state, without art stepping in to tame them. And so we can accept that characters have changes of mood, morality, and psychology from one moment to the next, that conspirators cough to break off their talk when a spy approaches, and that ladies of the night weep on hearing “La Marseillaise.”

When all the archetypes shamelessly burst in, we plumb Homeric depths. Two clichés are laughable. A hundred clichés are affecting—because we become obscurely aware that the clichés are talking to one another and holding a get-together. As the height of suffering meets sensuality, and the height of depravity verges on mystical energy, the height of banality lets us glimpse a hint of the sublime.

—Translated from the Italian by Alastair McEwen



Umberto Eco (1932–2016) was an internationally acclaimed writer, philosopher, medievalist, professor, and the author of the best-selling novels Foucault’s Pendulum, The Name of the Rose, and The Prague Cemetery, as well as children’s books. His numerous nonfiction books include Confessions of a Young Novelist, Six Walks in the Fictional Woods, and The Open Work. He was a recipient of the Premio Strega, Italy’s highest literary prize; the Princess of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities; and a Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur from the government of France.

Alastair McEwen is an award-winning literary translator. After nearly forty years in Italy he now lives in his native Scotland.

Excerpted from On the Shoulders of Giants, by Umberto Eco, published by Harvard University Press. English translation copyright © 2019 by La Nave di Teseo Editore, Milan. Published in the United States by Harvard University Press, 2019. Used by permission. All rights reserved.




abvedit уторак, 29. октобар 2019.
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of the Dog
A Comprehensive Natural History of British Dogs
and Their Foreign Relatives, With Chapters on Law,
Breeding, Kennel Management, and Veterinary Treatment
by
Robert Leighton




Vol. 2
A Review of
the Literature
of Phosphorus
Compounds in
Animal Metabolism
by
E. B. Forbes


Neely's
Parliamentary
Practice
by
Thomas B. Neely


The Rainbow
and the Rose
by
E. Nesbit


Sweet
Mace
A Sussex Legend of the Iron Timesby
George Manville Fenn
Vol. 3 of 3
Great Debates in
American History
From the Debates in the British Parliament on the
Colonial Stamp Act (1764-1765) To the Debates
in Congress at the Close of the Taft Adminstration
(1912-1913); State Rights (1798-1861), Slavery (1858-1861)
by
Marion Mills Miller




Vol. 5 of 14
Handbook to the
Mediterranean
Its Cities, Coasts and
Islands, for the Use
by
Robert Lambert Playfair



The Slavery
Question
Speech of Hon. C. C. Washburn, of
Wisconsin; Delivered in the U. S. House
of Representatives, April 26, 1860
by
Cadwallader Colden Washburn



Lectures on
Ecclesiastical
History
To Which Is Added, an Essay on
Christian Temperance and Self-Denial
by
George Campbell




Vol. 2 of 2
The Book
of the Dead
With Twenty-Five Illustrationsby
British Museum



The Lost Language
of Symbolism
An Inquiry Into the Origin of
Certain Letters, Words, Names,
Fairy-Tales, Folklore, and Mythologies
by
Harold Bayley




Vol. 1
The Seven
Principles
of Man
by
Annie Wood Besant


Magic PlantsBeing a Translation of a Curious
Tract Entitled De Vegetalibus Magicis
by
Johann Heinrich Heucher



The Master
Secret
by
Albert Boynton Storms


Developing
Mental
Power
by
George Malcolm Stratton


The Chaldean
Account of Genesis
Containing the Description of the Creation, the Deluge,
the Tower of Babel, the Destruction of Sodom, the Times
of the Patriarchs, and Nimrod; Babylonian Fables, and
Legends of the Gods; From the Cuneiform Inscriptions
by
George Smith



The Devil's
Rebellion and
the Reason Why
by
Charles Fremont May


The Book of Adam and Eve,
Also Called the Conflict
of Adam and Eve With Satan
A Book of the Early Eastern Church, Translated
From the Ethiopic, With Notes From the Kufale,
Talmud, Midrashim, and Other Eastern Works
by
Solomon Caesar Malan



Thinking
for Results
by
Christian D. Larson


The Pythagorean
Triangle
Or the Science of Numbersby
George Oliver



The Secret
of Plato's
Atlantis
by
John Francis Arundell of Wardour


AtlantisThe Antediluvian Worldby
Ignatius Donnelly



Irish Druids
and Old Irish
Religions
by
James Bonwick


The Mythology
of Ancient
Britain and
Ireland
by
Charles Squire


Clairvoyance and
Occult Powers
Including Clairvoyance, Clairaudience, Premonition
and Impressions, Clairvoyant Psychometry, Clairvoyant
Crystal-Gazing, Distant Clairvoyance, Past Clairvoyance,
Future Clairvoyance, Second-Sight, Prevision
by
Swami Panchadasi



The Power
of Gems
and Charms
by
George H. Bratley


Babylonian Magic
and Sorcery
Being "the Prayers of the Lifting of the Hand,"
the Cuneiform Texts of a Group of Babylonian
and Assyrian Incantations and Magical Formulæ
by
Leonard W. King



Myths and
Legends of
Babylonia
and Assyria
by
Lewis Spence


The Book
of Witches
by
Oliver Madox Hueffer


The Secret
Societies of All
Ages and Countries
A Comprehensive Account of Upwards of One Hundred and
Sixty Secret Organisations, Religious, Political, and Social,
From the Most Remote Ages Down to the Present Time
by
Charles William Heckethorn




Vol. 2 of 2
The Gift of
the Spirit
A Selection From the
Essays of Prentice Mulford
by
Prentice Mulford



Bible Myths and
Their Parallels in
Other Religions
Being a Comparison of the Old and New Testament
Myths and Miracles, With Those of Heathen Nations of
Antiquity, Considering Also Their Origin and Meaning
by
Thomas William Doane



How We Got
Our Bible
by
John Paterson Smyth


The Celtic
Dragon Myth
With the Geste of
Fraoch and the Dragon
by
John Francis Campbell



Three Thousand
Years of Mental
Healing
by
George Barton Cutten


A Comparison of
Egyptian Symbols
With Those of
the Hebrews
by
Frédéric Portal


The Lost
Lemuria
With Two Maps Showing Distribution
of Land Areas at Different Periods
by
W. Scott-Elliot



Cryptographyby
André Langie


The Works of Flavius
Josephus, the Learned and
Authentic Jewish Historian
and Celebrated Warrior
With Three Dissertations, Concerning Jesus Christ,
John the Baptist, James the Just, God's Command to
Abraham, &C., And Explanatory Notes and Observations
by
Flavius Josephus



The Book of
Talismans,
Amulets and
Zodiacal Gems
by
William Thomas


History of
Egypt, Chaldea,
Syria, Babylonia
and Assyria
by
Gaston Maspero



Vol. 1
Power of
Mental Imagery
Being the Fifth of a Series of Twelve Volumes
on the Applications of Psychology to the
Problems of Personal and Business Efficiency
by
Society of Applied Psychology



A History of the
Colonization
of Africa by
Alien Races
by
Harry Hamilton Johnston


The Dead
Have
Never Died
by
Edward C. Randall


The Symbolism
of Freemasonry
Illustrating and Explaining Its Science and
Philosophy, Its Legends, Myths and Symbols
by
Albert Gallatin Mackey



The Ancient
Mysteries and
Modern Masonry
by
Charles Henry Vail


The Book of the
Secrets of Enoch
Translated From the Slavonicby
William Richard Morfill



Witch, Warlock,
and Magician
Historical Sketches of Magic and
Witchcraft in England and Scotland
by
W. H. Davenport Adams



The Temple
of Solomon
A Study of Semitic Cultureby
Phillips Endecott Osgood



The Art of
Being Alive
Success Through Thoughtby
Ella Wheeler Wilcox



Four Hundred
Humorous
Illustrations
by
John Leech
Reincarnation
a Study of
Forgotten Truth
by
E. D. Walker


The Secret
Doctrine
The Synthesis of Science, Religion,
and Philosophy; Cosmogenesis
by
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky




Vol. 1
Mystic Masonry, or the
Symbols of Freemasonry
and the Greater
Mysteries of Antiquity
Supplemental Harmonic Seriesby
Jirah Dewey Buck




Vol. 5
Tammuz
and Ishtar
A Monograph Upon Babylonian Religion and
Theology, Containing Extensive Extracts From the
Tammuz Liturgies and All of the Arbela Oracles
by
Stephen Langdon



Pennsylvania
Genealogies
Scotch-Irish and Germanby
William Henry Egle



A Book of Images
Drawn by W.
T. Horton and
Introduced
by W. B. Yeats
by
William Thomas Horton


Paganism
Surviving in
Christianity
by
Abram Herbert Lewis


Letters on
Demonology
and Witchcraft
by
Walter Scott


American
Ancestry
Giving Name and Descent, in the Male Line, of
Americans Whose Ancestors Settled in the United States
Previous to the Declaration of Independence, A D. 1776
by
Thomas Patrick Hughes




Vol. 4
Illustrations
of Masonry
With Additions, Explanatory Notes,
and the Historical Portion Continued
From 1820 to the Present Time
by
William Preston



Latin for
Beginners
by
Benjamin L. D'ooge


Magic and
Fetishism
by
Alfred C. Haddon


History of the Knights
Templars of Canada, From the
Foundation of the Order in A.
D. 1800 to the Present Time
With an Historical Retrospect of
Templarism, Culled From the Writings
of the Historians of the Order
by
John Ross Robertson



The Complete Herbalist,
or the People Their Own
Physicians by the Use
of Nature's Remedies
Describing the Great Curative Properties
Found in the Herbal Kingdom
by
Oliver Phelps Brown



The Pioneers of
Massachusetts
A Descriptive List, Drawn From Records
of the Colonies, Towns and Churches,
and Other Contemporaneous Documents
by
Charles Henry Pope



Fifty
Ancestors
Who Came to New
England From 1620 to 1650
by
Henry Lincoln Clapp



CagliostroThe Splendour and Misery
of a Master of Magic
by
W. R. H. Trowbridge



History of
Freemasonry
From Its Rise Down to the Present Dayby
J. G. Findel



The True Story of
the Exodus of Israel
Together With a Brief View of
the History of Monumental Egypt
by
Heinrich Karl Brugsch



Teutonic
Mythology
Gods and Goddesses of the Northlandby
Viktor Rydberg




Vol. 2 of 3
Fourteen Lessons
in Yogi Philosophy
and Oriental
Occultism
by
Yogi Ramacharaka


The Doctrine
and Literature
of the Kabalah
by
Arthur Edward Waite


The Secret
Societies of All
Ages and Countries
A Comprehensive Account of Upwards of One Hundred and
Sixty Secret Organisations, Religious, Political, and Social,
From the Most Remote Ages Down to the Present Time
by
Charles William Heckethorn




Vol. 1 of 2
Myths
of China
and Japan
by
Donald Alexander Mackenzie


Law of
Thought
by
Arthur Silva White


Latin Mastered
in Six Weeks
A New Method of
Teaching the Language
by
Charles Théophile de Brisay



Clairvoyance and
Thought-Transference
Auto Trance and Spiritualism;
Psychometry and Telepathy
by
L. W. De Laurence



Alchemy, Its
Science and
Romance
by
John Edward Mercer


The Hindu-Yogi
Science of Breath
A Complete Manual of the Oriental
Breathing Philosophy of Physical, Mental,
Psychic and Spiritual Development
by
Yogi Ramacharaka



Aristotleby
A. E. Taylor


Traces of a Hidden
Tradition in
Masonry and
Mediæval Mysticism
Five Essaysby
Isabel Cooper-Oakley



First Steps
in Latin
A Complete Course
in Latin for One Year
by
R. F. Leighton



The Secret Warfare of
Freemasonry Against
Church and State
Translated From the Germanby
Georg Michael Pachtler



Vital
Magnetic Cure
An Exposition of Vital Magnetism,
and Its Application to the Treatment
of Mental and Physical Disease
by
Magnetic Physician



Socratesby
John Thomas Forbes


Light on the
Old Testament
From Babel
by
Albert Tobias Clay


Platoby
A. E. Taylor


The Genius
of Masonry
Or a Defence of the Order, Containing Some Remarks
on the Origin and History; The Uses and Abuses
of the Science, With Some Notices of Other Secret
Societies in the United States, in Three Lectures
by
Samuel L. Knapp



Notes on
Witchcraft
by
George Lyman Kittredge



Vol. 18
Studies in
Magic, From
Latin Literature
by
Eugene Tavenner


The Physics
of the Secret
Doctrine
by
William Kingsland


New First
Latin
Reader
by
John Henderson


Handbook
of Bible
Geography
by
George Henry Whitney


The Secret
Tradition in
Freemasonry
And an Analysis of the Inter-Relation Between the
Craft and the High Grades in Respect of Their Term
of Research, Expressed by the Way of Symbolism
by
Arthur Edward Waite




Vol. 2 of 2
Babylonian
Religion and
Mythology
by
L. W. King


Thrice-Greatest
Hermes
Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis; Being a Translation
of the Extant Sermons and Fragments of the Trismegistic
Literature, With Prolegomena, Commentaries, and Notes
by
George Robert Stow Mead




Vol. 1
Masonry
Ilustrated
The Complete Ritual of the Ancient and
Accepted Scottish Rite Profusely Illustrated
by
Jonathan Blanchard




Vol. 2
LuciferA Theosophical Magazine Designed to
"Bring to Light the Hidden Things of
Darkness"; March, 1895-August, 1895
by
Annie Besant




Vol. 16
The Secret
Doctrine
The Synthesis of Science,
Religion, and Philosophy
by
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky




Vol. 3
The Text Book of
Cryptic Masonry
A Manual of Instructions in the
Degrees of Royal Master, Select
Master and Super-Excellent Master
by
Jackson H. Chase



Scottish
Myths
Notes on Scottish
History and Tradition
by
Robert Craig Maclagan



Secret
Societies
A Discussion of Their
Character and Claims
by
David Macdill



The Religions of
the Ancient World
Including Egypt, Assyria and Babylonia,
Persia, India, Phœnicia, Etruria, Greece, Rome
by
George Rawlinson



The Church
History of the
First Three
Centuries
by
Ferdinand Christian Baur



Vol. 1
The
Self-Educator
in Latin
by
William Alfred Edward


The History
of Atlantis
by
Lewis Spence


The
Existence
of God
by
Canon Moyes


Elementary
Greek
An Introduction to the
Study of Attic Greek
by
Theodore Chalon Burgess



On the Origin
of Free-Masonry
Posthumous Workby
Thomas Paine



The Tree
of Life
An Expose of Physical Regenesis
on the Three-Fold Plane of Bodily,
Chemical and Spiritual Operation
by
George W. Carey



How to
Learn Easily
Practical Hints on Economical Studyby
George van Ness Dearborn



The Babylonian Story
of the Deluge and
the Epic of Gilgamish
With an Account of the
Royal Libraries of Nineveh
by
Ernest Alfred Wallis Budge



Principia
Latina
An Introduction to the Latin Languageby
Charles D'urban Morris



Bookbinding
for
Beginners
by
Florence Ordway Bean


A Short
Masonic History
Being an Account of the Growth of Freemasonry,
and Some of the Earlier Secret Societies
by
Frederick Armitage




Vol. 1
The Scottish
Master Mason's
Handbook
by
Frederick Joseph William Crowe


First Latin
Reader
Including

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