This first scholarly
work on Randolph includes the full text of his two most important manuscripts
on sexual magic.
This is a superb piece
of work. It is the only book that I know of about Randolph, who is generally
considered a notable curiosity of nineteenth-century esotericism, but whom the
author establishes as an absolutely central and pivotal historical character.
This historiography is masterful--meticulously detailed and coherently
presented. This is an important book, filling a gap that wasn't previously
known to have been so substantial. It's well written, a tour de force at
amassing the data. It is a must read." -- Dan Merkur, author of Gnosis: An
Esoteric Tradition of Mystical Visions and Unions
This is the fascinating
story of Paschal Beverly Randolph, an African American who carved his own
eccentric path in the mid-nineteenth century from the slums of New York's Five
Points to the courts of Europe, where he performed as a spiritualist trance
medium. Although self-educated, he became one of the first Black American
novelists and took a leading part in raising Black soldiers for the Union army
and in educating Freedmen in Louisiana during the Civil War. His enduring claim
to fame, however, is the crucial role he played in the transformation of
spiritualism, a medium's passive reception of messages from the spirits of the
dead, into occultism, the active search for personal spiritual realization and
inner vision.

From his experiences in
his solitary travels in England, France, Egypt and the Turkish Empire in the
1850s and 1860s, he brought back to America a system of occult beliefs and
practices (the magic mirror, hashish use and sexual magic) that worked a
revolution. The systems of magic he taught left their traces on many subsequent
occultists, including Madame Blavatsky and her Theosophical Society, and are
still practiced today by several occult organizations in Europe and American
that carry on his work. This is the fist scholarly work on Randolph and
includes the full text of his two most important manuscript works on sexual
magic.
"It is
fascinating, because the subject's life was filled with dramatic adventure and
hardship, and touched upon so many issues of the day. Deveney's work is important
in itself as a ground-breaking study of an intriguing character. I can think of
no figure in nineteenth-century Western esotericism who has been more unjustly
ignored than Randolph. Deveney rescues him from obscurity in this biography,
which will be regarded as authoritative for many years to come." -- K.
Paul Johnson, author of Initiates of Theosophical Masters and The Masters
Revealed: Madame Blavatsky and the Myth of the Great White Lodge.
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