Bibliographic record
Arthur Westcott, Life and Letters of Brooke Foss Westcott, vol. 1 (London: Macmillan, 1903).
Use on this site
Societies, psychical interest, and heresy controversies
Key topics
Hermes, Ghostly Guild, Eranus, protests of orthodoxy
Why it matters
This volume preserves both reverent memory and controversial detail.
p. 47 — The Philological Society and Hermes
This page matters because the Hermes name appears in Westcott’s own biographical trail and because “Hermes” is not a neutral ornament once the wider esoteric background is remembered. Hermes Trismegistus became a stock authority in Hermetic, Rosicrucian, occult-revival, ceremonial-magic, and some Masonic / esoteric streams. A Bible-following reader therefore has reason to pause when the Hermes name appears in a setting already connected to secrecy and supernatural inquiry.

The society took the name of “Hermes.” … The Eleatic School of Philosophy …
p. 117 — Westcott’s leading part in the Ghostly Guild
This is one of the clearest memoir statements tying Westcott personally to the Ghostlie Guild. The son does not describe a casual bystander. He says Westcott devoted himself to the society, took a leading part, and drafted the inquiry circular.

The “Ghostlie Guild,” which numbered among its members … was established for the investigation of all supernatural appearances and effects. Westcott took a leading part in their proceedings, and their inquiry circular was originally drawn up by him.
p. 119 — No good result from the investigations
The memoir also records the later judgement that the investigations produced no worthwhile result. Defenders often emphasize that sentence. It deserves to be remembered, but it does not erase the earlier fact of organized participation.

No good came from the investigations of the Ghostly Guild.
p. 222 and p. 256 — heresy questions
The memoir preserves both protest against imputations of heresy and the report that a pamphlet was suppressed after episcopal review. That combination is exactly why the question remains disputed.
Source page
Heresy controversies
Read the explanatory page that compares direct evidence, later protest, and what can safely be concluded.