The Glastonbury Archive
proudly presents


The Archive of

Stanley Messenger

philosopher, mystic, cereologist and elder

Stanley Messenger


Contents

By Mike Jones and others, 2006

Their Unrecognised Paranormality, 2001

a metaphysical discourse, 1968

about the Steiner movement

about the celestial order, 1981

a review of a book by Rudolf Steiner, 1998

a metaphysical novel, 1983 (ten pages)

a history from the future

a book about multidimensional intelligences, 1996

a poem, 1951

Soundfiles, musical notation (1960s) and thoughts

a two-part exposition of Stanley's vision of crop circles, around 1995

cereological evolution, 1992

the secret of the circlemakers, 2003

a talk from the Glastonbury Symposium, 1998

a corn circle adventure, 1999



Stanley Messenger is a philosopher and metaphysician, turning 90 in February 2007, dedicated to the healing of perception. Now finally retired from active service, he lives in Glastonbury, England.

With an esoteric background in Anthroposophy, he has been well known as an individualistic thinker in this and all areas of interest he pursued. He has worked in the theatre and in teaching. In recent decades, apart from living in Glastonbury, he has also lived in Languedoc, France and the Scots Highlands, making periodic visits to USA.

He has been amongst other things a cereologist, with many profound observations on the nature of the crop circle phenomenon, serving as a mainstay speaker at the Glastonbury Symposium. He spent decades studying butterflies, seeing them as very special representatives of the elemental kingdom. His understandings of history, the natural world, human society and the cosmos have been erudite and enlightening to all who hear his discourses.

This archive seeks to leave written footprints of his thoughts, learning and insights. He was more a speaker than a writer, so this sample of his work is simply made up of those of his thoughts he did get down in writing.

At his final talk at the Glastonbury Symposium in 2005, he talked of death he told his friends in the audience, "When I go, please keep talking to me! Just because I'm not here, it doesn't mean I am not around!".


Look through these pieces online, then print out those that interest you for proper reading on paper.


Stanley is now too old to answer e-mails and calls. Concerning the material on this site, please contact .


A big thank you to Sarah Soden for transcribing much of this work, to Marcus Tristan Heathcock for his contributions, and to Meleeshka, for her dedicated work in caring for Stanley in his last phase of life.

Stanley Messenger

The Archive of Stanley Messenger