While Inferno was an unexpected place to find
independent confirmation of some of my ideas about games cult members play, I
was not at all surprised to find yet another example of the ‘falling for a
false image and going from worship to total disillusionment' syndrome or to see
that Strindberg’s ‘friends’ usually turned into what he called false friends,
faithless friends, former friends and enemies!
Feuding occultists are nothing new either.
Part I ended with the start of what
Strindberg called a ‘paper war’, with Strindberg’s secret friend and benefactor
revealing his true intentions and threatening to call on occult powers to force
Strindberg to accept the theosophist Madame Blavatsky as his teacher.
So what did Strindberg do next?
Strindberg’s counter-threat
Strindberg’s response to the threat shows
that the two men deserved each other! Like really does attract like.
Strindberg replied that he would call on
occult powers of his own if the secret friend tried to interfere with his
destiny! As a warning, he told his secret friend about what had happened ten years
earlier to a man who tried to influence him against his will. This man sounds
rather like the secret friend:
“This man...in spite of his display of sympathy, was not really my well-wisher. An absolute tyrant, he wanted to interfere with my destiny, to tame and subdue me, in order to show me his superiority.”
Same game, different player it seems. This
man received some severe, family-related blows; Strindberg suggests that he brought
this trouble on himself because he played with fire when he tried to interfere
in Strindberg’s life.
The secret friend did not give up easily; he was
not deterred by this implied threat.