Four Generations
Mar. 29th, 2007 09:48 amEdward Bulwer Lytton was an Victorian politician, occultist and writer, famous for starting a novel with the words "it was a dark and stormy night". His best known book is the Last Days of Pompeii. He also wrote "The Haunted and the Haunters"- one of the best English ghost stories.
His son Robert Bulwer Lytton wrote poetry under the pen-name Owen Meredith. As viceroy of India in the late 1870s he presided over a famine which killed millions. His laissez-faire attitude to the suffering of his "subjects" has been described as "genocidal".
Robert's daughter Emily married Edwin Lutyens, the architect of New Delhi. She was a theosophist and acted as foster-mother to the theosophical "World Teacher" Jiddu Khrishnamurti.
Emily's daughter Mary Lutyens was Khrishnamurti's disciple and biographer. She also wrote The Lyttons in India- a book about her grandfather the viceroy.
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Date: 2007-03-30 10:33 pm (UTC)I must blushingly confess I haven't read much Lytton at all, so your knowledge of his opinions is very likely far better than mine. And we do know for a fact that a number of people of his era practiced magic as a solitary discipline, so your guess has a good foundation to stand on.
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Date: 2007-03-31 07:52 am (UTC)Having looked a bit into the history of Wicca, I'm as sceptical as you are about hidden orders and secret traditions. Isn't it the thing that makes the Golden Dawn distinctive that it was the first magical order of the modern era?
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Date: 2007-04-01 12:54 am (UTC)Prior to the HB of L, the German magical and alchemical order "Orden Des Gold- und Rosenkreutz" was active during a chunk of the 18th century, from the late 1750s to some time during the Napoleonic wars. We don't have a clear record of when it folded but its last recorded activity seems to have been around 1797. I don't know that it had much influence in England or America, unlike either the GD or the HB of L, but it had a lot of impact on the Continent.
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Date: 2007-04-01 08:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-04-01 10:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-04-01 10:40 pm (UTC)Also, for some reason, a fair number of American occultists of the 19th century don't seem to be generally very well known, even in America. There are exceptions, of course, as with every rule.
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Date: 2007-04-01 10:43 pm (UTC)Sorry, that should be I'm NOT positive I'm right. :-p
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Date: 2007-04-02 07:59 am (UTC)But, it's true, the books and articles on magical history I've read never even glance at the USA. They treat the magical revival of the 19th century as- almost exclusively- an Anglo-French affair.
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Date: 2007-04-02 07:31 pm (UTC)