Rosicrucius had been made fashionable by the Abbé de Villars who was assassinated in 1675. His

Comte de Gabalis

was a popular little book in the

Spectators

time. I suppose I need not inform my readers that there never was a Rosicrucius or a Rosicrucian sect. The Rosicrucian pamphlets which appeared in Germany at the beginning of the 17th century, dating from the Discovery of the

Brotherhood of the Honourable Order of the Rosy Cross

, a pamphlet published in 1610, by a Lutheran clergyman, Valentine Andreä, were part of a hoax designed perhaps originally as means of establishing a sort of charitable masonic society of social reformers. Missing that aim, the Rosicrucian story lived to be adorned by superstitious fancy, with ideas of mystery and magic, which in the

Comte de Gabalis

were methodized into a consistent romance. It was from this romance that Pope got what he called the Rosicrucian machinery of his

Rape of the Lock