[505.] Thus Zwack (alias Cato) writes: "We have not only hindered the enlistings of the Rose-Croix but rendered their very name contemptible."--Originalschriften, p. 8.
[506.] Originalschriften, p. 363. The word Illuminism is always represented by this symbol in the correspondence of the Illuminati.
[507.] Ibid., p. 202.
[508.] Ibid., p. 331.
[509.] A. E. Waite, "Freemasonry and the Jewish Peril," in The Occult Review for September 1920, p. 152.
[510.] Mémoires de Mirabeau écrats par lui-même, par son père, son oncle et son fils adoptif, et prècédés d'une étude sur Mirabeau par Victor Hugo, Vol. III. p. 47 (1834).
[511.] I have expressly made use of M. Barthou's résumé instead of making one of my own, lest I should be said to have made judicious selections in order to suit the purpose of showing the resemblance between this Memoir and the passage from Mirabeau's other writings which follows. But M. Barthou's impartiality cannot be impugned, for he appears to know nothing about the Illuminati or Mirabeau's connexion with them, and regards the Memoir in question as solely the outcome of Mirabeau's mind which had "ripened" since 1772.
[512.] F. Barthou, Mirabeau, p. 57.
[513.] In the Memoir drawn up by Mirabeau quoted above we find this passage: "It must be a fundamental rule never to allow any prince to enter the association were he a god for virtue."--Mémoires de Mirabeau, III. 60.
[514.] Histoire de la Monarchie Prussienne, V. 99.