Caldero 106
Caldero 106
Caldero 106
In today’s age of media witches, cloak-flappers and magical wannabes it is relatively unusual to find
someone in the esoteric world who shuns the limelight of publicity. In the past such a person was Madeline
Montalban (1910–1982), who was described during her lifetime as ‘the best ceremonial magician in
London’, yet she could have walked into the Atlantis and Watkins bookshops and passed unrecognised by
browsing customers. Twenty years after her death it is time to examine her life, magical career and lasting
legacy. For this writer, it is a personal story, as I knew Madeline for the last fifteen years of her life and
was one of her students.
Madeline did not write any major books on the occult during her life and her public appearances at
esoteric gatherings were rare. In the late 1960s, when I first met her, she was a virtual recluse hardly ever
venturing out, even though she lived within a stone’s throw of the bustling West End of London. However
she welcomed selected visitors, while largely avoiding social contact with other practitioners, and the
parties she held for students and friends were lavish affairs. Despite her public aloofness, Madeline was
loved, respected and, when she was suffering from one of the occasional mood swings that often led to her
famous rages, sometimes feared by her small coterie of senior students and personal friends who belonged
to her magical Order of the Morning Star (Ordo Stella Matutina).
Because Madeline refused to jump on the occult merry-go-round an aura of mystery, speculation and
myth grew up around her. Often she deliberately encouraged this and sometimes even her closest friends
found it difficult to separate the real person from the manufactured legend. She had a low boredom threshold
and did not suffer fools lightly. In common with most magicians whose patron is Hermes, she could easily
adopt the persona of the trickster and sometimes the agent of chaos. This dangerous combination, together
with her unusual teaching methods, led to some interesting and quite exciting incidents.
If Madeline did not believe a would-be student was sincere when they sought her out she could be quite
cruel. I was present on more than one occasion when she told an open-mouthed seeker that her students
became so advanced on the magical path that they could levitate and emulate Jesus by walking on water!
This was a test of their gullibility level, but people who did not understand this way of teaching went away
muttering that she was a charlatan and a mad woman. They had obviously failed the test. In fact she was
employing the old occult trick of turning reality on its head and seeing if anyone noticed.
Her motto was “Accept nothing. Question everything” and in the crazy world of the occult it is one
worth remembering. It is wise advice that has served me well over the years. Because of her often eccentric
and bizarre attitude, people either loved or hated Madeline. However those who tolerated her odd ways
and were accepted as her students soon found out she acted as a catalyst that transformed their lives. This
is a sign of a good occult teacher and she certainly influenced my life and the direction I took on the Path
at an early age.
......................................
Readers interested in Madeline Montalban’s teachings are recommended to read The Pillars of Tubal Cain and the Book of
Fallen Angels by Michael Howard, published by Capall Bann and Julia Phillips’ Madeline Montalban, The Magus of St. Giles,
published by Neptune Press. The two latter titles were published after this article was written in 2002.