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Vril

The Coming Race is a novel by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, published anonymously in 1871. It has also been published as Vril, the Power of the Coming Race.

The Coming Race
Cover of one 1871 Blackwood "edition"[1]
AuthorEdward Bulwer-Lytton
CountryUnited Kingdom
GenreScience fiction novel
PublisherWilliam Blackwood and Sons
Publication date
May 1871[2]
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages292[3]
OCLC7017241
823.8
LC ClassHX811 1871 .L9[3]
TextThe Coming Race at Wikisource

Some readers have believed the account of a superior subterranean master race and the energy-form called "Vril", at least in part; some theosophists, notably Helena Blavatsky, William Scott-Elliot, and Rudolf Steiner, accepted the book as based on occult truth, in part.[4] One 1960 book, The Morning of the Magicians by Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels, suggested that a secret Vril Society existed in Weimar Berlin.

History

The original, British edition of The Coming Race was published anonymously in May 1871, by Blackwood and Sons of Edinburgh and London.[2] (Blackwood published four more "editions" in 1871.)[1] Anonymous American and Canadian editions were published in August, as The Coming Race, or The New Utopia, by Francis B. Felt & Co. in New York and by Copp, Clark & Co. in Toronto.[5][6] Late in 1871 Bulwer-Lytton was known to be the author.[citation needed] Erewhon, which was also published anonymously in March 1872, was initially assumed to be a Coming Race sequel by Bulwer-Lytton. When it was revealed that Samuel Butler was the writer in the 25 May 1872 issue of the Athenaeum; sales dropped by 90 percent.[7]

Plot summary

The novel centres on a young, independent, unnamed, wealthy traveller (the narrator), who visits a friend, a mining engineer. They explore a natural chasm in a mine which has been exposed by an exploratory shaft. The narrator reaches the bottom of the chasm safely, but the rope breaks and his friend is killed. The narrator finds his way into a subterranean world occupied by beings who seem to resemble angels. He befriends the first being he meets, who guides him around a city that is reminiscent of ancient Egyptian architecture. The explorer meets his host's wife, two sons and daughter who learn to speak English by way of a makeshift dictionary during which the narrator unconsciously teaches them the language. His guide comes towards him, and he and his daughter, Zee, explain who they are and how they function.

The hero discovers that these beings, who call themselves Vril-ya, have great telepathic and other parapsychological abilities, such as being able to transmit information, get rid of pain, and put others to sleep. The narrator is offended by the idea that the Vril-ya are better adapted to learn about him than he is to learn about them. Nevertheless, the guide (who turns out to be a magistrate) and his son Ta behave kindly towards him.

The narrator soon discovers that the Vril-ya are descendants of an antediluvian civilization called the Ana, who live in networks of caverns linked by tunnels. Originally surface dwellers, they fled underground thousands of years ago to escape a massive flood and gained greater power by facing and dominating the harsh conditions of the Earth. The place where the narrator descended houses 12,000 families, one of the largest groups. Their society is a technologically-supported Utopia, chief among their tools being an "all-permeating fluid" called "Vril", a latent source of energy that the spiritually elevated hosts are able to master through training of their will, to a degree that depends on their hereditary constitution. This mastery gives them access to an extraordinary force that can be controlled at will. It is this fluid that the Vril-ya employ to communicate with the narrator. The powers of the Vril include the ability to heal, change, and destroy beings and things; the destructive powers in particular are immense, allowing a few young Vril-ya children to destroy entire cities if necessary.

Men (called An, pronounced "Arn") and women (called Gy, pronounced "Gee") have equal rights. The women are stronger and larger than the men. The women are also the pursuing party in romantic relationships. They marry for just three years, after which the men choose whether to remain married, or be single. The female may then pursue a new husband. However, they seldom make the choice to remarry.

Their religion posits the existence of a superior being but does not dwell on his nature. The Vril-ya believe in the permanence of life, which according to them is not destroyed but merely changes form.

The narrator adopts the attire of his hosts and begins also to adopt their customs. Zee falls in love with him and tells her father, who orders Taë to kill him with his staff. Eventually both Taë and Zee conspire against such a command, and Zee leads the narrator through the same chasm which he first descended. Returning to the surface, he warns that in time the Vril-ya will run out of habitable space underground and will claim the surface of the Earth, destroying mankind in the process, if necessary.[8]

Vril in the novel

The uses of Vril in the novel amongst the Vril-ya vary from destruction to healing. According to Zee, the daughter of the narrator's host, Vril can be changed into the mightiest agency over all types of matter, both animate and inanimate. It can destroy like lightning or replenish life, heal, or cure. It is used to rend ways through solid matter. Its light is said to be steadier, softer and healthier than that from any flammable material. It can also be used as a power source for animating mechanisms. Vril can be harnessed by use of the Vril staff or mental concentration.

A Vril staff is an object in the shape of a wand or a staff which is used as a channel for Vril. The narrator describes it as hollow with "stops", "keys", or "springs" in which Vril can be altered, modified, or directed to either destroy or heal. The staff is about the size of a walking stick but can be lengthened or shortened according to the user's preferences. The appearance and function of the Vril staff differs according to gender, age, etc. Some staves are more potent for destruction; others, for healing. The staves of children are said to be much simpler than those of sages; in those of wives and mothers, the destructive part is removed while the healing aspects are emphasised.

Literary significance and reception

The book was quite popular in the late 19th century, and for a time the word "Vril" came to be associated with "life-giving elixirs".[9] The best known use of "Vril" in this context is in the name of Bovril (a blend word of Bovine and Vril).[10] There was even a Vril-ya Bazaar held at the Royal Albert Hall in London in March 1891.[11][12]

It also had a strong influence on other contemporary authors. When H. G. Wells' novella The Time Machine was published in 1895, The Guardian wrote in its review: "The influence of the author of The Coming Race is still powerful, and no year passes without the appearance of stories which describe the manners and customs of peoples in imaginary worlds, sometimes in the stars above, sometimes in the heart of unknown continents in Australia or at the Pole, and sometimes below the waters under the earth. The latest effort in this class of fiction is The Time Machine, by HG Wells."[13]

Recent research has shown that Bulwer-Lytton developed his ideas about "Vril" against the background of his long preoccupation with occult natural forces, which were widely discussed at that time, especially in relation to animal magnetism or, later, spiritualism.[14] In his earlier novels Zanoni (1842) and A Strange Story (1862), Bulwer-Lytton had discussed electricity and other "material agents" as the possible natural causes for occult phenomena. In The Coming Race, those ideas are continued in the context of a satirical critique of contemporary philosophical, scientific, and political currents. In a letter to his friend John Forster, Bulwer-Lytton explained his motives:

I did not mean Vril for mesmerism, but for electricity, developed into uses as yet only dimly guessed, and including whatever there may be genuine in mesmerism, which I hold to be a mere branch current of the one great fluid pervading all nature. I am by no means, however, wedded to Vril, if you can suggest anything else to carry out this meaning namely, that the coming race, though akin to us, has nevertheless acquired by hereditary transmission, etc., certain distinctions which make it a different species, and contains powers which we could not attain to through a slow growth of time; so that this race would not amalgamate with, but destroy us. [...] Now, as some bodies are charged with electricity like the torpedo or electric eel, and never can communicate that power to other bodies, so I suppose the existence of a race charged with that electricity and having acquired the art to concentre and direct it in a word, to be conductors of its lightnings. If you can suggest any other idea of carrying out that idea of a destroying race, I should be glad. Probably even the notion of Vril might be more cleared from mysticism or mesmerism by being simply defined to be electricity and conducted by those staves or rods, omitting all about mesmeric passes, etc.[15]

Bulwer-Lytton has been regarded as an "initiate" or "adept" by esotericists, especially because of his Rosicrucian novel Zanoni (1842). However, there is no historical evidence that suggests that Bulwer-Lytton can be seen as an occultist, or that he has been the member of any kind of esoteric association. Instead, it has been shown that Bulwer-Lytton has been "esotericized" since the 1870s. In 1870, the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia appointed Bulwer-Lytton as its "Grand Patron." Although Bulwer-Lytton complained about this by letter in 1872, the claim has never been revoked. Other claims, such as his membership in a German masonic lodge Zur aufgehenden Morgenröthe, have been proven wrong.[16]

Those claims, as well as the recurrent esoteric topics in Bulwer-Lytton's works, convinced some commentators that the fictionalised Vril was based on a real magical force. Helena Blavatsky, the founder of Theosophy, endorsed this view in her book Isis Unveiled (1877) and again in The Secret Doctrine (1888). In Blavatsky, the Vril power and its attainment by a superhuman elite are worked into a mystical doctrine of race. However, the character of the subterranean people was transformed. Instead of potential conquerors, they were benevolent (if mysterious) spiritual guides. Blavatsky's recurrent homage to Bulwer-Lytton and the Vril force has exerted a lasting influence on other esoteric authors.[17]

When the theosophist William Scott-Elliot describes life in Atlantis in The Story of Atlantis & The Lost Lemuria (first ed.), 1896, the aircraft of the Atlanteans are propelled by Vril-force.[18] His books are still published by the Theosophical Society. Scott-Elliot's description of Atlantean aircraft has been identified as an early inspiration for authors who have related the Vril force to UFOs after World War II.

George Bernard Shaw read the book and was attracted to the idea of Vril, according to Michael Holroyd's biography of him.

French writer Jules Lermina included a Vril-powered flying machine in his 1910 novel L'Effrayante Aventure (Panic in Paris).

In his 2011 book of correspondences with David Woodard, Swiss writer Christian Kracht discusses his longstanding interest in Vril.[19]: 166–171  David Bowie's 1971 song "Oh! You Pretty Things" makes reference to the novel.[20]

Stage adaptation

A stage adaptation of the book was written by journalist David Christie Murray and magician Nevil Maskelyne. The production premiered at Saint George's Hall in London on 2 January 1905. Both Nevil Maskelyne and his father John Nevil Maskelyne collaborated on the special effects for the play. The play did not meet with success and closed after a run of eight weeks.[21]

Vril Society

Willy Ley

 
Willy Ley (right) in a discussion with Heinz Haber and Wernher v. Braun, 1954

Willy Ley was a German rocket engineer who had immigrated to the United States in 1937. In 1947, he published an article titled "Pseudoscience in Naziland" in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction.[22] He wrote that the high popularity of irrational convictions in Germany at that time explained how Nazism could have fallen on such fertile ground. Among various pseudoscientific groups he mentions one that looked for the Vril: "The next group was literally founded upon a novel. That group which I think called itself 'Wahrheitsgesellschaft' – Society for Truth – and which was more or less localised in Berlin, devoted its spare time looking for Vril."

Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels

The existence of a Vril Society was alleged in 1960 by Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels.[23] In their book The Morning of the Magicians, they claimed that the Vril-Society was a secret community of occultists in pre-Nazi Berlin that was a sort of inner circle of the Thule Society. They also thought that it was in close contact with the English group known as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. The Vril information takes up about a tenth of the volume, the remainder of which details other esoteric speculations, but the authors fail to clearly explain whether this section is fact or fiction. Historians have shown that there has been no actual historical foundation for the claims of Pauwels and Bergier, and that the article of Willy Ley has only been a vague inspiration for their own ideas. Nevertheless, Pauwels and Bergier have influenced a whole new literary genre dealing with the alleged occult influences on Nazis which have often been related to the fictional Vril Society.[24]

In his book Monsieur Gurdjieff, Louis Pauwels[25] claimed that a Vril Society had been founded by General Karl Haushofer, a student of Russian magician and metaphysician Georges Gurdjieff.

Publications on the Vril Society in German

The book of Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels was published in German with the title: Aufbruch ins dritte Jahrtausend: von der Zukunft der phantastischen Vernunft (literally Departure into the Third Millennium: The Future of the Fantastic Reason) in 1969.

In his book Black Sun, Professor Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke refers to the research of the German author Peter Bahn. Bahn writes in his 1996 essay, "Das Geheimnis der Vril-Energie" ("The Secret of Vril Energy"),[26] of his discovery of an obscure esoteric group calling itself the "Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft", which revealed itself in a rare 1930 publication Vril. Die Kosmische Urkraft (Vril, the cosmic elementary power) written by a member of this Berlin-based group, under the pseudonym "Johannes Täufer" (German: "John [the] Baptist"). Published by the influential astrological publisher, Otto Wilhelm Barth (whom Bahn believes was "Täufer"), the 60-page pamphlet says little of the group other than that it was founded in 1925 to study the uses of Vril energy.[27] The German historian Julian Strube has argued that the historical existence of the "Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft" can be regarded as irrelevant to the post-war invention of the Vril Society, as Pauwels and Bergier have developed their ideas without any knowledge of that actual association.[28] Strube has also shown that the Vril force has been irrelevant to the other members of the "Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft," who were supporters of the theories of the Austrian inventor Karl Schappeller (1875–1947).[29]

Esoteric neo-Nazism

After World War II, a group referred to by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke as the Vienna Circle elaborated an esoteric neo-Nazism that contributed to the circulation of the Vril theme in a new context.[30] In their writings, Vril is associated with Nazi UFOs and the Black Sun concept. Julian Strube wrote that a younger generation related to the Tempelhofgesellschaft, has continued the work of the Vienna Circle and exerts a continuous influence on the most common notions of Vril. Those notions are not only popular in neo-Nazi circles but also in movies or computer games, such as Iron Sky, Wolfenstein, and Call of Duty.[11]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Blackwood published five "editions" dated 1871, all 292 pages (perhaps impressions or printings of one edition), one in 1872, and two in 1873, 280 pages. See WorldCat library records indexed as 1871 to 1874 ("Formats and Editions ..."). For instance, records OCLC 943154319, 7791481, and 946735485, report copies of the 2nd, 5th, and 8th editions.
  2. ^ a b Classified advertisement (Publications). The Manchester Guardian, 15 May 1871, p. 1. Quote in full, with original layout and approximate typography:
    This day is published,
    THE COMING RACE. In one volume octavo,
    price 10s. 6d.
    William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London.

    Five days later The Scotsman published a version of the data, as "This day", above an excerpt from a review in the Daily News (p. 8). In The Observer for 21 May it was "Just published" (p. 1).

  3. ^ a b "The coming race" (first edition). Library of Congress Online Catalog. Retrieved 2017-12-20.
      Apparently that record reports a copy of the 1st "edition" where LCCN 09-12503 reports a copy of the 4th "edition", perhaps 1st and 4th printings of the first edition.
  4. ^ Strube (2013), 55–123.
  5. ^ Classified advertisement (New Publications). The New York Times, 9 August 1871, p. 6. Quote: "Published This Day". Price $1.25.
  6. ^ Classified advertisement (Books and Stationery). The Globe (Toronto), 8 August 1871, p. 2. Quote: "Ready in a Few Days". Price 50 cents (C$0.50).
  7. ^ Redfield, Marc (1996). Phantom Formations: Aesthetic Ideology and the Bildungsroman. Cornell University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-8014-3236-1.
  8. ^ Bulwer Lytton, Edward. "Vril: The Power of the Coming Race". wikisource.com. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  9. ^ Seed, David; Bulwer‐Lytton, Sir Edward (2007) [1870], The Coming Race, Wesleyan University Press, pp. xvii, 159.
  10. ^ Hadley, Peter (1972), A History of Bovril Advertising, London: Bovril, p. 13.
  11. ^ a b Strube (2013), 48ff.
  12. ^ "'The Coming Race' and 'Vril-Ya' Bazaar and Fete, in joint aid of The West End Hospital, and the School of Massage and Electricity". Royal Albert Hall. 27 August 2019. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  13. ^ HG Wells' The Time Machine reviewed - archive, 1895 HG Wells | Books | The Guardian
  14. ^ Strube (2013), 13–44.
  15. ^ Lytton, Victor Alexander Robert (1913), The Life of Edward Bulwer Lytton, First Lord Lytton, vol. 1, London: Macmillan and Co., p. 466f.
  16. ^ Strube (2013), 55–74.
  17. ^ Strube (2013), 69ff., 77ff.
  18. ^ de Camp, L Sprague (1954), Lost Continents (first ed.), p. 67.
  19. ^ Kracht, C., & Woodard, D., Five Years (Hanover: Wehrhahn Verlag, 2011), pp. 166–171.
  20. ^ Pegg 2016, p. 167.
  21. ^ Steinmeyer, Jim (2004), Hiding the Elephant: How Magicians Invented the Impossible and Learned to Disappear (trade paperback), Carrol & Graf, pp. 184–85.
  22. ^ Ley, Willy (May 1947), "Pseudoscience in Naziland", Astounding Science Fiction, 39 (3): 90–98.
  23. ^ Goodrick-Clarke (2002), 113.
  24. ^ Strube (2013), 126–142.
  25. ^ Pauwels, Louis, Monsieur Gurdjieff (in French), FR: Amazon, ASIN 2226081968.
  26. ^ Bahn, Peter (1996), "Das Geheimnis der Vril-Energie: Berichte und Erfahrungen zu einer mächtigen Naturkraft", in Schneider, Adolf; Schneider, Inge (eds.), Neue Horizonte in Technik und Bewusstsein : Vorträge des Kongresses 1995 im Gwatt-Zentrum am Thunersee, Bern: Jupiter-Verlag A.+l. Schneider, pp. 137–46, ISBN 978-3-906571-14-0.
  27. ^ Täufer, Johannes (1930), ""Vril" Die Kosmische Urkraft Wiedergeburt von Atlantis", Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Reichsarbeitgemeinschaft "Das kommende Deutschland" Zentralbüro (in German), Berlin: Astrologischer Verlag Wilhelm Becker. See image in German Wikipedia
  28. ^ Strube (2013), 126–140.
  29. ^ Strube (2013), 98–123.
  30. ^ Goodrick-Clarke (2002).

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Sünner, Rüdiger (2001). Schwarze Sonne: Entfesselung und Mißbrauch der Mythen in Nationalsozialismus und rechter Esoterik. Freiburg: Herder.

External links

  • The Coming Race at Project Gutenberg – transcript of unidentified edition that was published as "by Edward Bulwer, Lord Lytton"
  • Vril, The Power of the Coming Race, Sacred-texts.com – transcript of another unidentified edition
  •   The Coming Race public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • The Coming Race title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • , Laesie works, archived from the original on 10 October 2004.
  • Conspiracy archive, Vril Society.
  • The Development of the German UFOs from before WW2, Galactic server.
  • "The Nazi Connection with Shambhala and Tibet", Kala chakra, Study Buddhism.

vril, other, uses, disambiguation, coming, race, novel, edward, bulwer, lytton, published, anonymously, 1871, also, been, published, power, coming, race, coming, racecover, 1871, blackwood, edition, authoredward, bulwer, lyttoncountryunited, kingdomgenrescienc. For other uses see Vril disambiguation The Coming Race is a novel by Edward Bulwer Lytton published anonymously in 1871 It has also been published as Vril the Power of the Coming Race The Coming RaceCover of one 1871 Blackwood edition 1 AuthorEdward Bulwer LyttonCountryUnited KingdomGenreScience fiction novelPublisherWilliam Blackwood and SonsPublication dateMay 1871 2 Media typePrint hardcover Pages292 3 OCLC7017241Dewey Decimal823 8LC ClassHX811 1871 L9 3 TextThe Coming Race at WikisourceSome readers have believed the account of a superior subterranean master race and the energy form called Vril at least in part some theosophists notably Helena Blavatsky William Scott Elliot and Rudolf Steiner accepted the book as based on occult truth in part 4 One 1960 book The Morning of the Magicians by Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels suggested that a secret Vril Society existed in Weimar Berlin Contents 1 History 2 Plot summary 2 1 Vril in the novel 3 Literary significance and reception 4 Stage adaptation 5 Vril Society 5 1 Willy Ley 5 2 Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels 5 3 Publications on the Vril Society in German 5 4 Esoteric neo Nazism 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThe original British edition of The Coming Race was published anonymously in May 1871 by Blackwood and Sons of Edinburgh and London 2 Blackwood published four more editions in 1871 1 Anonymous American and Canadian editions were published in August as The Coming Race or The New Utopia by Francis B Felt amp Co in New York and by Copp Clark amp Co in Toronto 5 6 Late in 1871 Bulwer Lytton was known to be the author citation needed Erewhon which was also published anonymously in March 1872 was initially assumed to be a Coming Race sequel by Bulwer Lytton When it was revealed that Samuel Butler was the writer in the 25 May 1872 issue of the Athenaeum sales dropped by 90 percent 7 Plot summary EditThe novel centres on a young independent unnamed wealthy traveller the narrator who visits a friend a mining engineer They explore a natural chasm in a mine which has been exposed by an exploratory shaft The narrator reaches the bottom of the chasm safely but the rope breaks and his friend is killed The narrator finds his way into a subterranean world occupied by beings who seem to resemble angels He befriends the first being he meets who guides him around a city that is reminiscent of ancient Egyptian architecture The explorer meets his host s wife two sons and daughter who learn to speak English by way of a makeshift dictionary during which the narrator unconsciously teaches them the language His guide comes towards him and he and his daughter Zee explain who they are and how they function The hero discovers that these beings who call themselves Vril ya have great telepathic and other parapsychological abilities such as being able to transmit information get rid of pain and put others to sleep The narrator is offended by the idea that the Vril ya are better adapted to learn about him than he is to learn about them Nevertheless the guide who turns out to be a magistrate and his son Ta behave kindly towards him The narrator soon discovers that the Vril ya are descendants of an antediluvian civilization called the Ana who live in networks of caverns linked by tunnels Originally surface dwellers they fled underground thousands of years ago to escape a massive flood and gained greater power by facing and dominating the harsh conditions of the Earth The place where the narrator descended houses 12 000 families one of the largest groups Their society is a technologically supported Utopia chief among their tools being an all permeating fluid called Vril a latent source of energy that the spiritually elevated hosts are able to master through training of their will to a degree that depends on their hereditary constitution This mastery gives them access to an extraordinary force that can be controlled at will It is this fluid that the Vril ya employ to communicate with the narrator The powers of the Vril include the ability to heal change and destroy beings and things the destructive powers in particular are immense allowing a few young Vril ya children to destroy entire cities if necessary Men called An pronounced Arn and women called Gy pronounced Gee have equal rights The women are stronger and larger than the men The women are also the pursuing party in romantic relationships They marry for just three years after which the men choose whether to remain married or be single The female may then pursue a new husband However they seldom make the choice to remarry Their religion posits the existence of a superior being but does not dwell on his nature The Vril ya believe in the permanence of life which according to them is not destroyed but merely changes form The narrator adopts the attire of his hosts and begins also to adopt their customs Zee falls in love with him and tells her father who orders Tae to kill him with his staff Eventually both Tae and Zee conspire against such a command and Zee leads the narrator through the same chasm which he first descended Returning to the surface he warns that in time the Vril ya will run out of habitable space underground and will claim the surface of the Earth destroying mankind in the process if necessary 8 Vril in the novel Edit The uses of Vril in the novel amongst the Vril ya vary from destruction to healing According to Zee the daughter of the narrator s host Vril can be changed into the mightiest agency over all types of matter both animate and inanimate It can destroy like lightning or replenish life heal or cure It is used to rend ways through solid matter Its light is said to be steadier softer and healthier than that from any flammable material It can also be used as a power source for animating mechanisms Vril can be harnessed by use of the Vril staff or mental concentration A Vril staff is an object in the shape of a wand or a staff which is used as a channel for Vril The narrator describes it as hollow with stops keys or springs in which Vril can be altered modified or directed to either destroy or heal The staff is about the size of a walking stick but can be lengthened or shortened according to the user s preferences The appearance and function of the Vril staff differs according to gender age etc Some staves are more potent for destruction others for healing The staves of children are said to be much simpler than those of sages in those of wives and mothers the destructive part is removed while the healing aspects are emphasised Literary significance and reception EditThe book was quite popular in the late 19th century and for a time the word Vril came to be associated with life giving elixirs 9 The best known use of Vril in this context is in the name of Bovril a blend word of Bovine and Vril 10 There was even a Vril ya Bazaar held at the Royal Albert Hall in London in March 1891 11 12 It also had a strong influence on other contemporary authors When H G Wells novella The Time Machine was published in 1895 The Guardian wrote in its review The influence of the author of The Coming Race is still powerful and no year passes without the appearance of stories which describe the manners and customs of peoples in imaginary worlds sometimes in the stars above sometimes in the heart of unknown continents in Australia or at the Pole and sometimes below the waters under the earth The latest effort in this class of fiction is The Time Machine by HG Wells 13 Recent research has shown that Bulwer Lytton developed his ideas about Vril against the background of his long preoccupation with occult natural forces which were widely discussed at that time especially in relation to animal magnetism or later spiritualism 14 In his earlier novels Zanoni 1842 and A Strange Story 1862 Bulwer Lytton had discussed electricity and other material agents as the possible natural causes for occult phenomena In The Coming Race those ideas are continued in the context of a satirical critique of contemporary philosophical scientific and political currents In a letter to his friend John Forster Bulwer Lytton explained his motives I did not mean Vril for mesmerism but for electricity developed into uses as yet only dimly guessed and including whatever there may be genuine in mesmerism which I hold to be a mere branch current of the one great fluid pervading all nature I am by no means however wedded to Vril if you can suggest anything else to carry out this meaning namely that the coming race though akin to us has nevertheless acquired by hereditary transmission etc certain distinctions which make it a different species and contains powers which we could not attain to through a slow growth of time so that this race would not amalgamate with but destroy us Now as some bodies are charged with electricity like the torpedo or electric eel and never can communicate that power to other bodies so I suppose the existence of a race charged with that electricity and having acquired the art to concentre and direct it in a word to be conductors of its lightnings If you can suggest any other idea of carrying out that idea of a destroying race I should be glad Probably even the notion of Vril might be more cleared from mysticism or mesmerism by being simply defined to be electricity and conducted by those staves or rods omitting all about mesmeric passes etc 15 Bulwer Lytton has been regarded as an initiate or adept by esotericists especially because of his Rosicrucian novel Zanoni 1842 However there is no historical evidence that suggests that Bulwer Lytton can be seen as an occultist or that he has been the member of any kind of esoteric association Instead it has been shown that Bulwer Lytton has been esotericized since the 1870s In 1870 the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia appointed Bulwer Lytton as its Grand Patron Although Bulwer Lytton complained about this by letter in 1872 the claim has never been revoked Other claims such as his membership in a German masonic lodge Zur aufgehenden Morgenrothe have been proven wrong 16 Those claims as well as the recurrent esoteric topics in Bulwer Lytton s works convinced some commentators that the fictionalised Vril was based on a real magical force Helena Blavatsky the founder of Theosophy endorsed this view in her book Isis Unveiled 1877 and again in The Secret Doctrine 1888 In Blavatsky the Vril power and its attainment by a superhuman elite are worked into a mystical doctrine of race However the character of the subterranean people was transformed Instead of potential conquerors they were benevolent if mysterious spiritual guides Blavatsky s recurrent homage to Bulwer Lytton and the Vril force has exerted a lasting influence on other esoteric authors 17 When the theosophist William Scott Elliot describes life in Atlantis in The Story of Atlantis amp The Lost Lemuria first ed 1896 the aircraft of the Atlanteans are propelled by Vril force 18 His books are still published by the Theosophical Society Scott Elliot s description of Atlantean aircraft has been identified as an early inspiration for authors who have related the Vril force to UFOs after World War II George Bernard Shaw read the book and was attracted to the idea of Vril according to Michael Holroyd s biography of him French writer Jules Lermina included a Vril powered flying machine in his 1910 novel L Effrayante Aventure Panic in Paris In his 2011 book of correspondences with David Woodard Swiss writer Christian Kracht discusses his longstanding interest in Vril 19 166 171 David Bowie s 1971 song Oh You Pretty Things makes reference to the novel 20 Stage adaptation EditA stage adaptation of the book was written by journalist David Christie Murray and magician Nevil Maskelyne The production premiered at Saint George s Hall in London on 2 January 1905 Both Nevil Maskelyne and his father John Nevil Maskelyne collaborated on the special effects for the play The play did not meet with success and closed after a run of eight weeks 21 Vril Society EditWilly Ley Edit Willy Ley right in a discussion with Heinz Haber and Wernher v Braun 1954 Willy Ley was a German rocket engineer who had immigrated to the United States in 1937 In 1947 he published an article titled Pseudoscience in Naziland in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction 22 He wrote that the high popularity of irrational convictions in Germany at that time explained how Nazism could have fallen on such fertile ground Among various pseudoscientific groups he mentions one that looked for the Vril The next group was literally founded upon a novel That group which I think called itself Wahrheitsgesellschaft Society for Truth and which was more or less localised in Berlin devoted its spare time looking for Vril Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels Edit The existence of a Vril Society was alleged in 1960 by Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels 23 In their book The Morning of the Magicians they claimed that the Vril Society was a secret community of occultists in pre Nazi Berlin that was a sort of inner circle of the Thule Society They also thought that it was in close contact with the English group known as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn The Vril information takes up about a tenth of the volume the remainder of which details other esoteric speculations but the authors fail to clearly explain whether this section is fact or fiction Historians have shown that there has been no actual historical foundation for the claims of Pauwels and Bergier and that the article of Willy Ley has only been a vague inspiration for their own ideas Nevertheless Pauwels and Bergier have influenced a whole new literary genre dealing with the alleged occult influences on Nazis which have often been related to the fictional Vril Society 24 In his book Monsieur Gurdjieff Louis Pauwels 25 claimed that a Vril Society had been founded by General Karl Haushofer a student of Russian magician and metaphysician Georges Gurdjieff Publications on the Vril Society in German Edit The book of Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels was published in German with the title Aufbruch ins dritte Jahrtausend von der Zukunft der phantastischen Vernunft literally Departure into the Third Millennium The Future of the Fantastic Reason in 1969 In his book Black Sun Professor Nicholas Goodrick Clarke refers to the research of the German author Peter Bahn Bahn writes in his 1996 essay Das Geheimnis der Vril Energie The Secret of Vril Energy 26 of his discovery of an obscure esoteric group calling itself the Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft which revealed itself in a rare 1930 publication Vril Die Kosmische Urkraft Vril the cosmic elementary power written by a member of this Berlin based group under the pseudonym Johannes Taufer German John the Baptist Published by the influential astrological publisher Otto Wilhelm Barth whom Bahn believes was Taufer the 60 page pamphlet says little of the group other than that it was founded in 1925 to study the uses of Vril energy 27 The German historian Julian Strube has argued that the historical existence of the Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft can be regarded as irrelevant to the post war invention of the Vril Society as Pauwels and Bergier have developed their ideas without any knowledge of that actual association 28 Strube has also shown that the Vril force has been irrelevant to the other members of the Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft who were supporters of the theories of the Austrian inventor Karl Schappeller 1875 1947 29 Esoteric neo Nazism Edit Main article Esoteric Nazism After World War II a group referred to by Nicholas Goodrick Clarke as the Vienna Circle elaborated an esoteric neo Nazism that contributed to the circulation of the Vril theme in a new context 30 In their writings Vril is associated with Nazi UFOs and the Black Sun concept Julian Strube wrote that a younger generation related to the Tempelhofgesellschaft has continued the work of the Vienna Circle and exerts a continuous influence on the most common notions of Vril Those notions are not only popular in neo Nazi circles but also in movies or computer games such as Iron Sky Wolfenstein and Call of Duty 11 See also EditAether classical element Aether theories Agartha a legendary kingdom that is said to be located in the Earth s core popular with 19th and 20th century occultists theosophists Animal magnetism Bovril aliment Energy esotericism Etheric body spirituality Etheric plane spirituality Jules Verne Kerry Bolton author of The Nexus The Mound by H P Lovecraft from a short description by Zealia Bishop underground civilization fiction apparently clearly inspired by Lytton set in the southwestern U S part of the Cthulhu Mythos Mysticism Nazism and occultism Nazi UFOs Odic fluid The Phantom Empire film serial with a similar theme that was perhaps inspired by Lytton and in turn an inspiration on Richard Sharpe Shaver s work Prana Qi Richard Shaver claimed to know of a civilization such as that depicted in Vril Stanislav Szukalski developed strange theories about Earth being ruled by a race called the Sons of Yeti Thule Unidentified flying object Us 2019 film directed by Jordan Peele depicts a race of subterranean machine like humans designed to copy their counterparts on the surface Wilhelm Reich s Orgone energy Southern Television broadcast interruption Vrillon television hoax References EditNotes a b Blackwood published five editions dated 1871 all 292 pages perhaps impressions or printings of one edition one in 1872 and two in 1873 280 pages See WorldCat library records indexed as 1871 to 1874 Formats and Editions For instance records OCLC 943154319 7791481 and 946735485 report copies of the 2nd 5th and 8th editions a b Classified advertisement Publications The Manchester Guardian 15 May 1871 p 1 Quote in full with original layout and approximate typography This day is published THE COMING RACE In one volume octavo price 10s 6d William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh and London Five days later The Scotsman published a version of the data as This day above an excerpt from a review in the Daily News p 8 In The Observer for 21 May it was Just published p 1 a b The coming race first edition Library of Congress Online Catalog Retrieved 2017 12 20 Apparently that record reports a copy of the 1st edition where LCCN 09 12503 reports a copy of the 4th edition perhaps 1st and 4th printings of the first edition Strube 2013 55 123 Classified advertisement New Publications The New York Times 9 August 1871 p 6 Quote Published This Day Price 1 25 Classified advertisement Books and Stationery The Globe Toronto 8 August 1871 p 2 Quote Ready in a Few Days Price 50 cents C 0 50 Redfield Marc 1996 Phantom Formations Aesthetic Ideology and the Bildungsroman Cornell University Press p 170 ISBN 978 0 8014 3236 1 Bulwer Lytton Edward Vril The Power of the Coming Race wikisource com Retrieved 25 June 2016 Seed David Bulwer Lytton Sir Edward 2007 1870 The Coming Race Wesleyan University Press pp xvii 159 Hadley Peter 1972 A History of Bovril Advertising London Bovril p 13 a b Strube 2013 48ff The Coming Race and Vril Ya Bazaar and Fete in joint aid of The West End Hospital and the School of Massage and Electricity Royal Albert Hall 27 August 2019 Retrieved 29 March 2021 HG Wells The Time Machine reviewed archive 1895 HG Wells Books The Guardian Strube 2013 13 44 Lytton Victor Alexander Robert 1913 The Life of Edward Bulwer Lytton First Lord Lytton vol 1 London Macmillan and Co p 466f Strube 2013 55 74 Strube 2013 69ff 77ff de Camp L Sprague 1954 Lost Continents first ed p 67 Kracht C amp Woodard D Five Years Hanover Wehrhahn Verlag 2011 pp 166 171 Pegg 2016 p 167 sfn error no target CITEREFPegg2016 help Steinmeyer Jim 2004 Hiding the Elephant How Magicians Invented the Impossible and Learned to Disappear trade paperback Carrol amp Graf pp 184 85 Ley Willy May 1947 Pseudoscience in Naziland Astounding Science Fiction 39 3 90 98 Goodrick Clarke 2002 113 Strube 2013 126 142 Pauwels Louis Monsieur Gurdjieff in French FR Amazon ASIN 2226081968 Bahn Peter 1996 Das Geheimnis der Vril Energie Berichte und Erfahrungen zu einer machtigen Naturkraft in Schneider Adolf Schneider Inge eds Neue Horizonte in Technik und Bewusstsein Vortrage des Kongresses 1995 im Gwatt Zentrum am Thunersee Bern Jupiter Verlag A l Schneider pp 137 46 ISBN 978 3 906571 14 0 Taufer Johannes 1930 Vril Die Kosmische Urkraft Wiedergeburt von Atlantis Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Reichsarbeitgemeinschaft Das kommende Deutschland Zentralburo in German Berlin Astrologischer Verlag Wilhelm Becker See image in German Wikipedia Strube 2013 126 140 Strube 2013 98 123 Goodrick Clarke 2002 Bibliography Goodrick Clarke Nicholas 2002 Black Sun Aryan Cults Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 3155 0 Strube Julian 2013 Vril Eine okkulte Urkraft in Theosophie und esoterischem Neonazismus Paderborn Munchen Wilhelm Fink ISBN 978 3770555154 Further reading Sunner Rudiger 2001 Schwarze Sonne Entfesselung und Missbrauch der Mythen in Nationalsozialismus und rechter Esoterik Freiburg Herder External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Vril The Power of the Coming Race The New Utopia The Coming Race at Project Gutenberg transcript of unidentified edition that was published as by Edward Bulwer Lord Lytton Vril The Power of the Coming Race Sacred texts com transcript of another unidentified edition The Coming Race public domain audiobook at LibriVox The Coming Race title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Secret Flying Discs of the Third Reich Laesie works archived from the original on 10 October 2004 Conspiracy archive Vril Society The Development of the German UFOs from before WW2 Galactic server The Nazi Connection with Shambhala and Tibet Kala chakra Study Buddhism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vril amp oldid 1117821868, 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