David Harnden, an emergency physician at Presbyterian Hospital in San Francisco
joined Weil and Zinsberg as members of the conference's medical faculty. The Bay Area research team of David
B. Repke and Dale Thomas Leslie covered the chemistry of the hallucinogenic mushrooms while Richard
Rose, an archaeologist of the Maya Indian civilization from Tufts University, discussed artifacts thought to be related
to mycolatry (mushroom-worship) in Mesoamerica.
The botanical aspect was covered by Gaston Guzman, professor of mycology at the National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico,
probably the world's leading authority on the taxonomy of psychotropic mushrooms, who was ably
assisted by Dale Leslie. Later, Mr. Leslie teamed up with frequent Head contributor Jeremy Bigwood
to teach a course on hallucinogenic mushroom cultivation.
Carl A. P. Ruck and Danny Staples, professors of Greek at Boston University, joined Wasson and Hofmann in presenting
a bold new look into the religious life of our ancient Greek ancestors, about which we will learn more
in a moment.

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Carl A. P. Ruck, R. Gordon Wasson and Danny Staples Eleusian savants.
The faculty was completed by two Washingtonians,. W. Scott Chilton, professor of chemistry
at the University of Washington, discussed his work on the chemistry of toxin mushrooms. I
joined the faculty to give some insight into the arcane literature on hallucinogenic mushrooms.
The conference convened on the evening of Thursday, October 27, with Schultes in the opening talk leading a rapt audience through
the wonderful world of hallucinogenic plants. Schultes showed more than 100 slides of the most important hallucinogenic plants.

Richard Evans Schultes and Jonathan Ott sharing a moment.
Norman Zinsberg followed Schultes, speaking on the sociology of recreational
drug use. I brought the introductory session to a close with a "readers guide to hallucinogenic mushrooms,"
which extolled the virtues of the work of Wasson, Schultes and Hofmann.
Unveiling of the Secrets of
the Greek Mysteries
It was with great excitement that I approached the microphone to open Friday morning's session, for
Wasson, Hofmann and Ruck were that morning to reveal a bold---some would say astounding---new theory, which would for
the first time ever place the sacred mushrooms among out venerated cultural ancestors---the ancient Greeks of the
classic period.
This was new to everyone. I and my most intimate associates had been apprised of
this some months in advance, but no one in the audience, not even Dr. Schultes, knew what was soon be revealed that morning.
In my nervous excitement, I hastily introduced Wasson, who read "My Road
to Eleusis," the first chapter of his forthcoming book, The Road to Eleusis--Unveiling the
Secret of the Mysteries. He, Hofmann and Ruck are publishing the book through Harcourt, Brace,
Jovanovich.
To the delight of the audience, Wasson led us on a sentimental journey through his past,
a remarkable odyssey that led him from his first interest in mushrooms (in 1926, at the age of 28) throughout the world,
to the pinnacle of what will be regarded as one of the major scientific discoveries of our
century. With precision and perspicacity, in moving language of great beauty, Wasson reverently described the sacred mushroom
cult he discovered in Mexico, and waxed poetic on the remarkable virtues of the mushrooms.
The delightful chapter that Wasson read was adapted from a 1960 talk (subsequently
published by the Botanical Museum Leaflets of Harvard University) in which Wasson suggested a relationship between
the Mexican sacred mushroom cult and the ancient Greek Eleusinian Mysteries. I had always regarded this paper to
be Wasson's best, and one of the major spiritual documents of our age, so
the reader can imagine my tremulous state as I sat transfixed in the audience, immersed in Wasson's measured intonation of a
text I knew by heart.
The Eleusinian Mysteries were celebrated every year in the fall, and held sway over the ancient Greeks
for two millennia. A secret lay at the heart of the Mystery. While everyone speaking of Greek and having a price of admission
could be initiated into the cult, no one, under penalty of death, could reveal the secret of the Mysteries.
Two, hierophantic families controlled the cult and the sanctuary at Eleusis, including a large hall,
the telesterion, in which the initiates beheld a great vision which was, "new, astonishing, inaccessible to
rational cognition." For almost two thousand years an annual procession of pilgrims from all over the civilized world
attended the Mysteries, until a rival cult, the early Christians, drive the Mystery into
extinction in the fourth Century of our era. The secret was not vouchsafed to us by the Christians.
Wasson drew our attention to the fact that the initiates at Eleusis drank a special potion,
the kykeon, before spending the night in the darkened telesterion and
seeing the great vision. No scholar had ever suggested that the kykeon was the heart
of it all, that it was a potion compounded of an hallucinogenic mushroom: the ergot fungus,
Claviceps purpurea.
Ancient Greeks Ate Lysergic Acid
Wasson left the stage to heartfelt applause and no doubt others,
like myself, were moved to tears. Wasson yielded the lectern to Albert Hofmann, who read
his chapter, "A Challenging Question," from the aforementioned book, seeking to answer Wasson's
question whether ancient man in Greece could have arrived at an hallucinogenic beverage from the ergot fungus.
It was Hofmann's pioneering work with the ergot fungus that made available several ergot
preparations used in medicine today and Hofmann of course prepared LSD from an ergot alkaloid. He was, in short,
a man singularly qualified to answer Wasson's question.

R. Gordon Wasson taking an outdoor break. Albert Hofmann standing tall and proud.
Hofmann answered yes, ancient man in Greece had the technology, like his counterparts in
Mexico, to prepare an hallucinogenic beverage from ergot. The reader may know that ergot regularly infests rye
and other grains and that during the Middle Ages, when infested grain was eaten in time of famine, outbreaks
of ergotism---a hideous disease characterized by gangrene of the extremities---occurred.
Ergotism is caused by overdose of ergot alkaloids, which are of two types:
toxic peptic alkaloids, which exert vasoconstrictive effects, and water soluble lysergic acid derivatives,
which are mostly psychoactive. By making a water infusion of the fungus, Hofmann said, ancient man in
Greece could have separated the psychoactive principles from the non-water soluble toxic
principles.
Hofmann adduced evidence to show that the Greeks were well aware of the psychoactive compounds
of ergot, and mentioned that the kykeon was compounded of water, a fragrant mint, and barley (infested with ergot,
according to the proposal before us). Hofmann speculated on how the hierophants in control of the secret of the potion
may have over the years selected special strains of ergot, particularly productive of psychoactive alkaloids.
Hofmann yielded the floor to Carl Ruck, who discussed the symbolism underlying the Eleusinian Mysteries: the
myth of Demeter and Persephone, a fertility myth of death and rebirth. Ruck detailed the myth and the
founding of the Mysteries of Demeter, which information was taken from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, an anonymous Seventh
Century-BC poem.
We learned from the 2600 year old poem that rebirth form death was the sign of redemption.
Ruck described the role of Triptolemus, an early apostle of Demeter's faith at Eleusis, whose sign was an ear of grain.
Triptolemus spread the Eleusisian faith, the art of the cultivation of grain---on which civilized life depended---and
the mystery of the rebirth into life of cultivated grain, following sowing in the cold dead of autumn.
Demeter and Persephone were the deified symbols of the rebirth of sown grain, while the ergot fungus that
grew on the grain allowed man a glimpse of the hereafter, of man's Redemption from Death.
Triptolemus' sacred barley was grown in the Rarian plain adjacent to Eleusis,
and was the principle ingredient in Demeter's potion, the kykeon. It was ergot growing on barley that accounted
for the hallucinogenic properties of the kykeon. The purple color of the ergot mushrooms was Demeter's
special color, often called Erysibe, "ergot."
Before a hushed audience, Ruck described how the initiates assembled each year in the darkened
telesterion of Eleusis, ingested the sacred kykeon and entered into ecstasy: to hear the special music
of the hierophants and at the climax to see phasmata of light enter the hall from a central chamber,
along with the vision of Persephone and her son returning from Hades---a vivid and miraculous redemption,
the sight of which was said to be the culminating experience of a lifetime.
For nearly two thousand years the annual celebration occurred and never was the secret
revealed, though encomiums of eminent Greeks like Sophocles, Pindar and Plato testified to the importance of the
Mysteries.
The Cycle of Death and Rebirth/Redemption has been a fundamental tenet of every religion and Cosmology in
man's civilized history---including and especially Christianity. Now the secret was revealed in
Port Townsend on the morning of October 28, 1977, some 1500 years after the last celebration of the
Eleusinian Mystery and more than 3000 years after the first!
That afternoon, a panel discussion was given by Wasson, Hofmann and Ruck.
They were joined on the stage by Schultes and Danny Staples, who translated the Homeric
Hymn to Demeter. In a spirited session, Participants were able to question the fathers of
the Psychedelic Age on the Eleusinian Mysteries, LSD, psilocybin and other topics.
Other Secrets Mushroomic

Gastón Guzmán and R. Gordon Wasson gathering ritual Earthy food for human consumption.
Photograph by John W. Allen
On Friday evening, Gastón Guzmán and Dale Leslie presented their class on
microscopic identification of hallucinogenic mushrooms, which was continued on
Saturday evening.

Gastón Guzmán presenting a class on the taxonomy of mushroom identification.
Photograph by John W. Allen
Then Jeremy Bigwood, Head Contributing Editor, and Dale Leslie presented their long-awaited course on cultivation
of hallucinogenic mushrooms, also continued on Saturday evening. To the delight of many and the consternation of a few,
hot-tempered Bigwood assailed the insidious "dung dealers" and other profiteers trying to make a fast buck from the cultivation of hallucinogenic
mushrooms. Many "dung dealers" were present in the audience!
In spite of the invectives of this disgruntled element, Bigwood and Leslie
(who both grow mushrooms strictly for scientific research projects) are the foremost
authorities on this topic, and they presented the latest techniques for optimizing yields and for
psilocybin production.

Jeremy Bigwood stands eyes glaring in awe at the success of this ethreal monumental gathering, while at the same time,
deploring the presence of "dung dealers" attempting to infect the consciousness of those present by their greed.
On Saturday morning, Scott Chilton began with a light-hearted look at his research into the chemistry
of the psychoactive Amanita species. Schultes again took the stage and discussed the
history of the psilocybin mushrooms of Mexico. Schultes was the first botanist to collect identifiable material
of the Mexican sacred mushrooms, and he explained how it came about that he, then Wasson, collected the mushrooms for
scientific study.
Saturday afternoon's session was directed toward the medical conferees, as David Harnden led off with
a cogent look at diagnosis and treatment of mushroom poisoning.
Andrew Weil then followed with an examination of the darker side of psychedelics, the occasional adverse reactions,
which he mostly ascribed to the improper set and setting.

Harvard's Andrew Weil and Mayan archaeologist Richard Rose.
The conference adjourned at Sunday noon, after a three-hour panel discussion in which Chilton,
Ott, Weil, Zinsberg, Guzmán, Leslie, Repke, Rose and Harnden fielded questions from the
audience.
But will the conference, like the Mysteries, be reborn and celebrated anew in the coming fall?
And what other mushroomic secrets await revelations? My associates and I are currently
working on the answers to these questions, startling answers that will be revealed in due course.

Albert Hofmann, Richard Evans Schultes, Unknown Girl, Gastón Guzmán with
rain coat and R. Gordon Wasson behind Dr. Guzmán.

DEA Pharmacologist and Alexander 'Sasha' Shulgin.
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