SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.X
September, 1932 No.9
GOETHE, FREEMASON
by: Unknown
Germany celebrates this year the Centennial of the death of her greatest
man of letters, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, as the United States celebrates the
bicentennial of the birth of George Washington, her greatest General, Statesman
and President.
Both were Freemasons!
It is a continual puzzle to Masons, why Washington's biographers so seldom -
almost never - mention either his Masonic correspondence, membership and Mastership; or the tremendous, if quiet, influence which
Freemasonry had upon his life, character and activities. The same puzzle exists
about the biographers of the great
Many of his biographers put great stress upon his stay in Strassburg
and his studies of Gothic Architecture, particularly under the tutelage of the
great thinker, Herder, who is credited with inspiring Goethe with his love -
even his veneration - for Gothic buildings. Freemasons will see in his stay in Strassburg, where the great Gothic minister dominated his
thought with its beauty, the progenitor of that desire to know more of the
Craft which had built it - a desire to be gratified when he was thirty-one
years of age. He was initiated in Lodge Amalia, at
Just how or why he became a Mason we do not know; neither can we know much of
what impression his initiation made upon him. For it must not be supposed that
the Masonry practiced then by the Lodge Amalia was
the Masonry we know; although doubtless it held some of our essentials.
The Lodge at
"The Rite of Strict Observance " was a
modification of Freemasonry, based on the Order of Knights Templar, and
introduced into
The seeds of death were sown in the Strict Observance by its very fundamental -
that the "Unknown Superiors " supposed to be
at its head, would communicate valued esoteric, not to say occult, secrets to
its initiates. Obviously, no such secrets were ever communicated, and on the
truth of history vanquishing the fiction that Strict Observance was really
connected with the Order of Chivalry, the Rite died.
Luckily for Goethe's feeling for the Ancient Craft (?) had the advantage of a
great admiration for Lessing - indeed, for all we
know to the contrary, it may have been Lessing's love
for Freemasonry which first led Goethe to seek the light. Goethe was far too
broad- minded a man, and much too deep a thinker, to condemn all that he found
good in the Lodge at Weimar, merely because it dropped from under his feet
almost as he secured a foothold!
Two years after Goethe's initiation, the Rite of Observance received its death
blow, and Frederich Ludwig Schroeder, one of
His theory was that, despite the traditions of the Steinmetzen,
Freemasonry had begun in Gothic
Otto Caspari, historian, Goethe admirer and Masonic
enthusiast, couples Goethe and Schroeder in the change of the working of Lodge Amalia. He says:
"Frederich Ludwig Schroeder was the man who,
meantime, made his appearance as the reformer of Freemasonry. He also went to
"Jachin and Boaz " may be found in any good
Masonic Library. The modern Freemason will miss much that he knows in its
pages, and find much that he does not know as Masonry; but he will see that many
essential Masonic principles are therein set forth.
Goethe remained a member of Amalia Lodge to the day
of his death. What was to him the "new system "
must have made a far greater appeal than the Rite of Strict Observance. Shortened,
abbreviated, scanty as is the Masonry set forth in "Jachin
and Boaz, " to us who are heir of the rich ritual and symbolism of
Preston, Oliver, Desaugliers et al; it is yet
Masonic, which the Strict Observance can hardly be considered to be in the
light by which we moderns see. At any rate, Goethe embraced the Schroeder
system as the real and Ancient Freemasonry, and it was this which influenced
both his life and his writings.
Because Goethe was a follower of Spinoza, ignorant fanatics have falsely
accused him of atheism; a charge as ridiculous as it is unfounded. No one today
finds Spinoza atheistic; no one ever read Goethe to find anything but a humble
man marveling at the greatness of a nature he could
not comprehend. Goethe stands awestruck before creation; his characters are
often blinded by the magnificence of the cosmos. Goethe revered the Bible;
merely because he could not accept the narrow definition of God and heaven
which were the professions of his time, he has been thought by the ignorant to
have denied the God all his works praise by their spirit of reverence for
nature and its miracles.
Throughout the works of this greatest of German poets - a genius so stupendous
that he is not infrequently bracketed with Shakespeare - are countless Masonic
thoughts, ideas, references and allusions. Some of these, like those found in
Kipling, are evidently conscious and intentional. Others - and these the
Masonic student of Goethe loves best - are as evidently without intent; they
are but the breathing into poem or drama of those ideas of life, death. hereafter, moral principles and ethical doctrine, which,
inculcated by Freemasonry, were a part of Goethe's life.
To English speaking Masons Goethe's best known Masonic work is the short poem
"Masonic Lodge. " It can be found in any
collection of Goethe's works, and in Volume Twenty of the Little Masonic
Library. It is given in full here, not only for purposes of short discussion,
but because, by some unaccountable and distressing error, the first five lines,
which are the keynote of the whole poem, are omitted in the (1929) Clegg
edition of Mackey's Encyclopedia.
The Masons's ways are A Type of Existence
And his persistence Is as the days are
Of men in this world. The future hides it
Gladness and Sorrow, We press still thorow,
Naught that abides in it Daunting us - onward.
And Solemn before us Veiled, the dark portal,
Goal of all mortal; Stars are silent o'er us
Comes boding of terror, Comes phantasm and error
Perplexes the bravest With doubt and misgiving.
But heard are the voices - Heard are the Sages,
The Worlds and the Ages; "Choose well; your choice is
"Brief and yet endless; "Here eyes do regard you
"In eternity's stillness; "Here is all fullness,
"Ye have to reward you, "Work, and despair not. "
The word "thorow (first stanza) is an obsolete
variant of thorough meaning "through ", "forward, "
"ahead, " or "onward. "
No short poem could more beautifully express the Masonic legend and doctrine;
of continuity from "time immemorial; " of hope so great that though
we ascend the Winding Stair of life without knowing whether gladness or sorrow
are hidden in the future, still we climb, pressing ever onward, undaunted; of
the terror and fear of the "grim tyrant, " the voiceless grave, the unrevealed mystery; of the comfort and hope of the immortal
voices from sage, experience, history and nature; of those "eyes "
which "regard you " from beyond - does not Freemasonry teach of an
All Seeing Eye? - of that "all fullness " of
the future which is ours if we "choose well " - choice brief as a
moment, result endless as eternity! And finally, that courageous, inspiring
closing admonition - "work " - and despair
not! "
It is impossible to compress the mighty allegorical drama of Faust into a paragraph
as to do the same for Hamlet. Goethe did not invent the character of Faust, nor
did the legend of his "selling himself to the devil. "
Faust was an actual historical character, a "scoundrelly
magician and astrologer " about whom many legends
clustered. In 1587, Faust appears as the hero of a popular book in the pride of
his strength and knowledge. He sells his soul to the devil in return for a life
of pleasure, luxury and gratification of desire on earth. Goethe added to the
old legend a tender and tragic love story and wove into it a philosophic
content entirely foreign to the material which began as an old wives tale,
expanded into a plot for puppet shows, and finally became a popular book. He
makes of Faust a student and a thinker, but also a man, with all of man's
desires. Mephistopheles is the wile and specious tempter; Margaret is part of
the bait. Throughout the tragedy the struggle for ascendancy between good and
evil is made manifest, just as in the Masonic drama. It is here that the keen
student of Freemasonry and the lover of Goethe finds
so many contacts between mind of the poet and teachings of Freemasonry. As in
the Legend of Hiram Abif, Faust at last finds that
evil may not forever strive successfully with good; his final and greatest satisfaction
is not in selfish pleasure, which means death for the soul, but in work for
humanity.
Difference of language, of Rite, and of age; make Masonic parallels in Goethe's
works and the story and ritual we know, anything but literal. Such a study of an
author is not for the literal minded. To read Goethe literally is on a par with
scanning Hamlet's soliloquy for knowledge of the physical phenomena of sleep! To
discuss the Legend of Hiram Abif from a literal
standpoint is wholly to miss its significance and its beauty. Goethe makes of
his great character an allegory; allegorically, Faust and Hiram are not
unalike. Though one first resists while the other first yields to severe
temptation, in the end the same lesson is taught by both - that truth overcomes
error and evil, and that the divine is always within humanity do we but seek
far enough.
However, it is not only in Faust, the greatest of his works, that the
interested Freemason will find the influence of the gentle Craft upon the great
German poet. Wilhelm Meister's progress is through what may be called a series
of Apprenticeships (at least they are periods of learning) to a stage of
"further light " in which he learns that only by reverence for God,
man and self can a firm character foundation be builded.
Werther, Edmont and Gotz von Berlichingen, are all
exemplars of thee poet's concern for inner spiritual freedom. Iphigenia denies
the traditional barriers of race and religion, just as does Freemasonry today
(and has ever since the Mother Grand Lodge of 1717). Both poet and Fraternity
contend for the right of the individual to erect his own spiritual plumb line,
as told by Amos of the Jehovah of old who said, "I will set a plumb line
in the midst of my people
The difference is that we know Goethe to have been an interested, thoughtful
and zealous Freemason; Lodge Amalia celebrated the
fiftieth anniversary of his initiation with the aged but still vigorous poet
taking part in the celebration. Of this important event in Goethe's life,
Brother Otto Caspari has beautifully written:
"On to old age he remained the intellectual center
of Amalia Lodge. It was a sacred and hollowed day
when Goethe celebrated his fiftieth anniversary in the
"It must have been an impressive moment, when the grand old Mason, after
receiving numerous ovations, responded by citing that Masonic poem which shows
us clearly how he, an aged man, had retained eternal youth and love in his
heart. He praised Freemasonry as the sublime and everlasting union of humanity.
" The greatest of men have to die; Goethe was
called to the Celestial Lodge above on March 22, 1832.
Pathetically, yet most beautifully, his last words were Masonic - Masonic in
the language of the Craft of all Freemasons of all lands and all Rites know. Perhaps
this cry was but a physical craving for increased illumination as his eyes
failed him. But thinking of his life, and the stupendous gifts he made to mankind,
the urge to learn, to know, to reach out into the unknown for the solution of
all mystery, which breathes through many of his poems and dramas, it is
difficult to think of them except as symbolic of the man, his works, his
Freemasonry and his character.
With his last breath, Goethe cried the immortal phrase "More Light! "
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