At long intervals have appeared in Europe certain
men whose rare intellectual endowments, brilliant conversation, and mysterious
modes of life have astounded and dazzled the public mind. The article now
copied from All the Year Round relates to one of these men the
Count St. Germain. In Hargrave Jennings curious work, The Rosicrucians,
is described another, a certain Signor Gualdi, who was once the talk of
Venetian society. A third was the historical personage known as Alessandro
di Cagliostro, whose name has been made the synonym of infamy by a forged
Catholic biography. It is not now intended to compare these three individuals
with each other or with the common run of men. We copy the article of our
London contemporary for quite another object. We wish to show how basely
personal character is traduced without the slightest provocation unless
the fact of ones being brighter in mind, and more versed in the secrets
of natural law can be construed as a sufficient provocation to set the slanderers
pen and the gossips tongue in motion. Let the reader attentively note
what follows. The writer in All the Year Round says:
This famous adventurer [the Count St. Germain] is supposed to have been
a Hungarian by birth, but the early part of his life was by himself carefully
wrapped in mystery. His person and his title alike stimulated curiosity.
His age was unknown and his parentage equally obscure. We catch the first
glimpse of him in Paris, a century and a quarter ago, filling the court
and the town with his renown. Amazed Paris saw a man apparently of
middle age a man who lived in magnificent style, who went to dinner
parties where he ate nothing, but talked incessantly and with exceeding
brilliancy on every imaginable topic. His tone was perhaps over trenchant the
tone of a man who knows perfectly what he is talking about. Learned, speaking
every civilized language admirably, a great musician, an excellent chemist,
he played the part of a prodigy, and played it to perfection. Endowed with
extraordinary confidence or consummate impudence, he not only laid down
the law magisterially concerning the present, but spoke without hesitation
of events 200 years old. His anecdotes of remote occurrences were related
with extraordinary minuteness. He spoke of scenes at the court of Francis
I. as if he had seen them, describing exactly the appearance of the king,
imitating his voice, manner and language, affecting throughout the character
of an eye-witness. In like style he edified his audience with pleasant
stories of Louis XIV., and regaled them with vivid descriptions of places
and persons. Hardly saying in so many words that he was actually present
when the events happened, he yet contrived, by his great graphic power,
to convey that impression . . . intending to astonish, he succeeded completely.
Wild stories were current concerning him. He was reported to be 300 years
old, and to have prolonged his life by the use of a famous elixir. Paris
went mad about him. He was questioned constantly about his secret of longevity,
and was marvellously adroit in his replies, denying all power to make old
folks young again, but quietly asserting his possession of the secret of
arresting decay in the human frame. Diet, he protested, was, with
his marvellous elixir, the true secret of long life, and he resolutely
refused to eat any food but such as had been specially prepared for him oatmeal,
groats and the white meat of chickens. On great occasions he drank a little
wine, sat up as late as anyone would listen to him, but took extraordinary
precautions against the cold. To ladies he gave mysterious cosmetics to
preserve their beauty unimpaired; to men, he talked openly of his method
of transmuting metals, and of a certain process for melting down a dozen
little diamonds into one large stone. These astounding assertions were
backed by the possession of apparently boundless wealth, and a collection
of jewels of rare size and beauty.
From time to time this strange being appeared in various European capitals,
under various names, as Marquis de Montferrat, Count Bellamare, at Venice;
Chevalier Schoening, at Pisa; Chevalier Weldon, Milan; Count Soltikoff,
at Genoa; Count Tzarogy at Schwalbach, and, finally, as Count St. Germain
at Paris; but, after his disaster at the Hague, no longer seems so wealthy
as before, and has at times the appearance of seeking his fortune. At Tournay,
he is "interviewed" by the renowned Chevalier de Seingalt, who
finds him in an Armenian robe and pointed cap, with a long beard descending
to his waist, and ivory wand in hand the complete make-up of a necromancer.
St. Germain is surrounded by a legion of bottles, and is occupied in developing
the manufacture of hats upon chemical principles. Seingalt being indisposed,
the Count offers to physic him gratis and offers to dose him with an elixir,
which appears to have been æther; but the other refuses, with many
polite speeches. It is the scene of the two augurs. Not being allowed to
act as physician, St. Germain determines to show his power as an alchemist,
takes a twelve-sous piece from the other augur, puts it on red-hot charcoal,
and works with a blow-pipe, the piece of money is fused and allowed to
cool. "Now," says St. Germain, "take your money again."
"But it is gold." "Of the purest." Augur No. 2 does
not believe in the transmutation and looks on the whole operation as a
trick; but he pockets the piece, nevertheless, and finally presents it
to the celebrated Marshal Keith, then governor of Neuchatel.
Again, in pursuit of dyeing and other manufacturing schemes, St. Germain
turned up at St. Petersburg, Dresden and Milan. Once he got into trouble,
and was arrested in a petty town of Piedmont on a protested bill of exchange;
but he pulled out a hundred thousand crowns worth of jewels, paid
on the spot, bullied the governor of the town like a pickpocket, and was
released with the most respectful excuses.
Very little doubt exists that during one of his residences in Russia,
he played an important part in the revolution which placed Catherine II.
on the throne. In support of this view, Baron Gleichen cites the extraordinary
attention bestowed on St. Germain at Leghorn, 1770, by Count Alexis Orloff,
and a remark made by Prince Gregory Orloff to the Margrave of Onspach during
his stay at Nuremberg.
After all, who was he? the son of a Portuguese king or of a Portuguese
Jew? Or did he in his old age tell the truth to his protector and enthusiastic
admirer, Prince Charles of Hesse Cassel? According to the story told by
his last friend, he was the son of a Prince Rakoczy of Transylvania, and
his first wife a Tekely. He was placed, when an infant, under the protection
of the last of the Medici. When he grew up and heard that his two brothers,
sons of the Princess Hesse Rheinfels, of Rothenburg, had received the names
of St. Charles and St. Elizabeth, he determined to take the name of their
holy brother St. Germanus. What was the truth? One thing alone is certain,
that he was a protégé of the last Medici. Prince Charles,
who appears to have regretted his death, which happened in 1783, very sincerely
tells us that he fell sick, while pursuing his experiments in colours at
Ekrenforde, and died shortly after, despite the innumerable medicaments
prepared by his own private apothecary. Frederick the Great, who, despite
his scepticism, took a queer interest in astrologers, said of him, "This
is a man who does not die." Mirabeau adds epigrammatically, "He
was always a careless fellow, and at last, like his predecessors, forgot
not to die."
And now we ask what shadow of proof is herein afforded either that St.
Germain was an "adventurer," that he meant to "play the part
of a prodigy," or that he sought to make money out of dupes. Not one
single sign is there of his being other than what he seemed, viz., a possessor
of ample means to support honestly his standing in society. He claimed to
know how to fuse small diamonds into large ones, and to transmute metals,
and backed his "assertions" by the possession of apparently boundless
wealth and a collection of jewels of rare size and beauty. Are "adventurers"
like this? Do charlatans enjoy the confidence and admiration of the cleverest
statesmen and nobles of Europe for long years, and not even at their deaths
show in one thing that they were undeserving? Some encyclopædists
(see New American Cyclopædia xiv. 266) say: "He
is supposed to have been employed during the greater part of his
life as a spy at the courts at which he resided." But upon what
evidence is this supposition based? Has anyone found it in any of
the state papers in the secret archives of either of those courts? Not one
word, not one shred of fact to build this base calumny upon, has ever been
found. It is simply a malicious lie. The treatment this great man, this
pupil of Indian and Egyptian hierophants, this proficient in the secret
wisdom of the East, has had from Western writers, is a stigma upon human
nature. And so has the stupid world behaved towards every other person who,
like St. Germain, has revisited it after long seclusion devoted to study,
with his stores of accumulated esoteric wisdom, in the hope of bettering
it, and making it wiser and happier.
One other point should be noticed. The above account gives no particulars
of the last hours of the mysterious Count or of his funeral. Is it not absurd
to suppose that if he really died at the time and place mentioned, he would
have been laid in the ground without the pomp and ceremony, the official
supervision, the police registration which attend the funerals of men of
his rank and notoriety? Where are these data? He passed out of public sight
more than a century ago, yet no memoir contains them. A man who so lived
in the full blaze of publicity could not have vanished, if he really
died then and there, and left no trace behind. Moreover, to this negative
we have the alleged positive proof that he was living several years after
1784. He is said to have had a most important private conference with the
Empress of Russia in 1785 or 1786, and to have appeared to the Princess
de Lamballe when she stood before the tribunal, a few moments before she
was struck down with a billet, and a butcher-boy cut off her head; and to
Jeanne Dubarry, the mistress of Louis XV. as she waited on her scaffold
at Paris the stroke of the guillotine in the Days of Terror of 1793.
A respected member of our Society, residing in Russia, possesses some
highly important documents about Count St. Germain, and for the vindication
of the memory of one of the grandest characters of modern times, it is hoped
that the long-needed but missing links in the chain of his history may speedily
be given to the world through these columns.
[Vol. II. No. 8, May, 1881.]
H. P. Blavatsky
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