[258.] See G.M. Trevelyan, England under the Stuarts, pp. 32, 33, and James Howell, Familiar Letters (edition of 1753), pp. 49, 435. James Holwell was clerk to the Privy Council of Charles I.
[259.] Th.-Louis Latour, Princesses, Dames el Adventurières du Règne de Louis XIV, p. 278 (Eugène Figutère, Paris, 1923).
[260.] Ibid., p. 297.
[261.] Ibid., p. 306.
[262.] Oeuvres complètes de Voltaire, Vol. XXI. p. 129 (1785 edition); Biographie Michaud, article on Glaser.
[263.] This assertion finds confirmation in the Encyclopædia Britannica, article on the Rosicrucians, which states: "In no sense are modern Rosicrucians derived from the Fraternity of the seventeenth century."
[264.] Jewish Encyclopædia, article on the Cabala.
[265.] A Free Mason's Answer to the Suspected Author of a Pamphlet entitled "Jachin and Boaz," or an Authentic Key to Freemasonry, p. 10 (1762).
[266.] Quoted by R.F. Gould, History of Freemasonry, I. 5, 6.
[267.] Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man, p. 1 (1910).